Lowell High School - Red and White Yearbook (San Francisco, CA)
- Class of 1956
Page 1 of 294
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 294 of the 1956 volume:
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E , i r 2 1 3 J 4 R I CENTENNIAL EDITION HITE PUBLISHED BY LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT ASSOCIATION, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA VOLUME 83 JUNE 195 6 SUPERIQR SCHCDLARSHIP Lowell's most cherished tradition is good scholarship. Most students who come to this school do so in order to pre- pare themselves for college and a professional or business career. About 90 per cent of the students continue on to college after graduation. The University of California and Stanford University are the goals of most Lowellites. As a result, during the past 10 years, 53 per cent of the students going to U.C. from the San Francisco public schools are from this school, During the same period Lowell has accounted for 75 per cent of the students accepted from San Francisco by Stanford Uni- versity. The U.C. Medalists Qfor highest grades at the University of California over a four-year periodj in 1953 and 1954 were Lowell graduates. In 1856 . . . if The Vigilance committee brought law and order to San Francisco. Education was extended to the secondary level. 5 Di 1 ,: lqullq, f 1 ' . Y .. in .-1 -- --, - K l ' E f Q ' I., uni , wi L H I , ' , in H M ., 7 :U 7 Q' , sigf ykyfw Il, ,L il , X Q.. 1 Q . A ' fix'-L -9' ' l N, ' i I U, . ' fgeiilw IT!! t 52855 f ,fy , W n1JJ 9' T nilgqluilf, 'j ,Jl ..a. ., ,5 . S , f- ' ef , , ' 3 r Af M1 - v---s we .sf-22:5 E - v I Q i U ECQQALLED SPIRIT Lowellites have always taken pride in their school spirit. It is a tradition that goes back 100 years. This unequalled spirit has been displayed on the athletic Held, in the stands while supporting either a winning or a losing team, and in every phase of school activity. Perhaps the truest indication of real school spirit is the continued interest and support given to the school by mem- bers of the alumni, and the fact that undergraduates and alumni alike are proud to have their names associated with Lowell High School. Q' its T E-:,q?,-Xf::yn.i ef r r I n 186 7 . . . San Francisco organized its first paid Ere department and the color- ful era of the rival volunteer units came to an end. UN SELEISI-IN ESS SERVICE . K Ana: in ,E-M11 we lv ll f E -, N my . E l YQ fi f ' H K 'IMA 2 ,A S.. T--R ,S x i3 'mtl ' Hiya ,nal if . - ww- -.v , -. K' , Ll' K l Y' fr q . ' E we gf' dial Q 5 . sizing- , , :-+ 1 5 'qf6..'.' ir..if1W-'-- V ff Q , '- - 3 r -I ff A' X . 5 jf- 'Q ,ff- ff A 60.53, if--,A f- ...-'- l ,f ' an .f 1:- ' i V' ' , 4' :RN ae Q In 1373 . . . The world's first cable car started. operating in San Francisco. The ferry building was constructed. 'ywy I K i r Shield and Scroll members display the huge stack of gifts collected in the Christmas drive. The Christmas Drive is one of the newer traditions at Lowell. Each year at Christmas, the two service societies, the Shield and LH and the Scroll and Ll' sponsor this drive. In the true Christmas spirit, all of the students donate gifts which are distributed to various hospitals and agencies. This year, the student body responded to the slogan Bring Happiness to Othersn by contributing over 3,500 gifts-surpassing the donation of any one of the previous years. This year the gifts were distrib- uted to the Sunshine School, the Langley Porter Clinic, the St. Francis Day Home, and the Sonoma State Hospital. 5 r fl FRIE DLINESS TO OTHERS Members of the Scroll doing the traditional Spring Dance are Al Katsuyama, Bob Minney, Guy Erb, Tom Caylor, john Debenham, A1 Clark, and jim Nolan. A sincere effort is made each semester to extend a feeling of friendli- ness to all newcomers to Lowell. The Big Brothers and Big Sisters are on hand at the start of the term to give an individual welcome to every new Lowellite. The Newcomers' Reception is the general student body's salute of welcome to students that are new to Lowell. A tradition that has grown out ofithis latter event is the Spring Dance put on by the Scroll boys. Many of San Francisco's most famous doctors, lawyers, and busi- nessmen can recall their participation in this dance 10, 20, or even 30 years ago. CSee the Scroll boys of 1925 elsewhere in this boolcj v I V p 'lin-Es! ,Q :E lily! fl fses ef' E . l r l 4 qt. L-f.,Ef! Ti za i- f if Lfwwg dmmmmmmmkimwmmm In 1886 . .. San Franciscans starred to become sports-minded. Bicycle riding was the most popular sport and chief means of transportation. Mm. . .. a,s..Mmmf.-ew ,vrz.,M....w2s2a..... sgsur..,.zzgi.sse2:mlQ:1Lzegggq , W U:it.Z5-Mgesgciiitsfiaegz ng. ,u,1- in .b,b mf za5itfsiiwffafzztzizznfzasiia X ' rf' sim 4 w . 'sw s 4 -vi sx,xfeqkW'A4nqi.vi, QePq?3.i Uf'Qf 1 ma:sfiffigztreiiifielkitl 'ilxwrwlf w:zfrsSH? lim?if iii if: GGCDD SPORTSMA - SHIP i s t V. VLV, K, V,.. In V in , .t j g - J AX ,, Q rk-4' ilg gk. E ltr' is X i5Ii4:xJh 5f it 1 ' 'E x-Q. '1.iiii T:,:.:'-j,,,i- '. . 1'-Q1 jst? f lg y 'ti i' 1Qf: ...AA K h Y w,.,,j X , K -N' in -- L 1,4 l , H, . ' ,,'A 15'-ij ijt' I if f fl f 'IAL 1 I 7.7 1 , V H 3: . V 1g94i,'? F . San Franciscans llocked to Golden Gate Park to visit the Midwinter , Fair., The park became the city's p favorite playground. . A f , Cheerleaders who help to generate the great Lowell spirit are Key Bley, Tonv Mathios, and Charles Levin. The song leaders are Karen Guthrtz and joni Swimmer fmiddle rawj and Elaine Klein and Carole Morrison. Lowell students have always accepted the premise that school spirit is worthwhile only when supplemented by good sportsman- ship. Good sportsmanship means recognition of the leadership of those in chargeg it means accepting the will of the majorityg it means sincere respect for oneis opponentsg and it means being a humble winner and a gracious loser. All real Lowellites subscribe to the above definition of good sportsmanship and recognize it as being far more important than mere success in any endeavor. ' H ,ft2i1,3f:J?2fQ1:z7ri.f ZQ:jeL'Xizi:2152EmM -1',fsifT'wg:iW MWJyiwfrsifiwsrzt.wvzifmur zwsrfwsmzznzzf Janaizsqfgzwzszsswyi, A i, z - r...w--,t,i.t,: , M U L, My VJ- ,,,vfy,,stM,t V ,, 3mf,,,,W 5591447-it rise? Gael, 4 , ,:,ig3gQ:gQ': 51 Q gi A ii 3151162 av-eezmzawwfiiiza ggi age-st2 :f2?2f5?aft:22:A .. , gf: - 22 5 W 6 59 Egg 1, , Q it W,M.af.Wiii,,,.5,q 7 Newia:fgJa'QgsQz:2:szf:,:mu.a is ,1 Q fe f'gIi1f?f f Lzmiiz 'V , 'If if mf: W-five 'ef 'iililzat Q J MEM wwwfww he-e,,,,5,W,, za' 4 c'i'5f2a5z:i 2a L5:Af.f2.,w.,l .gaming jfi g,wwr,,,, ,mr,,.wm.s,tr,.: , , , W gawrzszrziaggtysfaf wesffiszfgmif M ati wwfzfeizzzfgrzztmetez my r t 5 it is ws V ff W 4 ,g 3 Q4 tg .gg gy WW W A-, it if z 4 H M' , , f M it wt Mr' ZW W1 ff 4 it fr, QW' Mawww HL W fi ,,,,, i or to A V' W f7 7 'f7'3 ,mWZ H' fmt.f5 Z'n? S7?Uf f '- ffflflilws .swam fwfr wwf W, www , .WW 4 My ,N,.,.,,,, ,.,, Qywwggegggggggggegggfyifissiitr ,f Y : , A-M 'tg vetfxzwetizayggfggy3:36' . ...... ZZQBM3 at e Mar. , ,, M M at ggaggafsssggf a witty 5' , t?ffZf2m Q' Q Mgt s'ff::ags11f--11 ' tartiffi ., :sa M. 1 Q n VX M60 .4-awww, ,,., 0 ff we-,. iff, ,nas fi r, A fwismtitfgffazfsizfvsavftzsatwfissltr:,itfagtiiefegffwmiQW..,-7 V fNs,2'gMwfwf . X r as , :Migxtirrifiggggizggggeaff:tw 5t,3,m::53g355i.5iW,f,A , tit,-Vlvumslggr. 12575 LW Ut i miifzrgeggssigzfjgagqirgfziegyztfggcfim: Hum Mwst' sf, wwe My at ps lv 1 5 as i Y 1 sm: -our s as st' . at N if W 41 9 'S MEM M 5 'wa 2 Us V 'R 2796 Q gg X 1 tt Q N .1 .2 ,A M ,t ta. ,,,,, .V , .V -' A an we?r2Z?'fHZ5Qf25Sf5Z223fts1w:i A.iusiisihwriiifomiz ,, i it ??v?9?3 ifg2s52ss ?M:v?r5531g 22,3Ja.a,zese? Q 4 5 A high sense of responsibility and trust- worthiness has been developed in Lowellites through student government and student con- trol. Students are given a voice in the school administration through an executive board and a student council. Students have traditionally accepted the re- sponsibility by conscientious efforts to adopt democratic policies and give their Whole- hearted support to school authorities. The Lowell Executive Board meets to discuss school activities. 1 kb V L . , i, ' ' ' swf- n ,- A - .4 ,ef , ,- t V '5 Wm' F 1' X i 1, M Z 2 Q ,I fl D 7,52 , , e 1 V 51: um.:-7, .fNt,.,Y: I, if -as ' ' y ff ' Wi 'qlfrj' ,gzip wx y s c A ff, I 2 -n -ar .2 L 'i 'QI v ' W n' ': .E 11:1 1 K ,, fti.ii, t riti t xt J 'i,l fZ7ffW 5 wggggfiwrftbi W W , - . .1 ,, K e.aMN,..s 4 ,t . W, Q 4 Q . . , Nw, , W. .i.r,,mr..-M7,,.W,,Z,Q,Qt,, H smut 1 s . o o V ..sW..Atwews,sWa ' -:.m:'2fJ2::fi,,,,,tA fv,.tt,s.frsz.mss RWM it 1 few- ws - - k ma.w3WMw,t.i 33,,t.,,sgwmm2s,,,r.rW2,1M,s.i,...,. 4 . as Wt W t E34 we W is A Q - auewgisg4.4,mutmzswsislea-itrr,ir:s.wtssraaaiis Qsrtaarstaaissmur ritasassemswiiesfasisirzl tmsiswassiitiaisi rsrareiiissisawm rf Q H were 332 3' iitrft' H 2 3 . .,.,,, ,mlm s W-f-P, 8 s ifljilifffiflifdiiigii it s 7T.225i3i5i3Z5SEiffl5?s12?iiffff' -, n'7t.T?-,, LM::a1,::.q, ' ' 'Lt1:'fi?' f hg'7 ,,4 tl' 'gig X.: s ' i - p tl fl ells ' -tg u ' 1 at N -'sf 1 1 t, , i ltd lie , 1 4 4 ef 'tri :rv 5-,ct it Q A 'Wal -if r - 1 ' 'U' :fu-My: I '76 7. '5 My , .f 9' MSQW' ' -A . .1 'gg 'lg r H so .libfmi ypmfe aepq5igssa1Srs Students know they must follow certain rules in checking out library books, just as they must follow other rules so that the school may operate smoothly. aw , i VVI-IOLEHEARTED SUPPORT OF RULES A D REGULATIONS Lowellites have consistently proved themselves to be good citizens through their wholehearted support of rules and regulations. A large school can not function properly unless all students recognize the need for definite rules in conducting a fire drill, using the proper stairways at X all times, getting to class on time, and for a hundred other routine func- tions during the day. Students traditionally recognize the democratic concept that laws, rules, and regulations are made to be respected by everyone, Although Lowell students are housed in a 43-year-old building lacking most of the advantages and conveniences of most modern high schools, the students and staff strive to take the best possible care of the old red btickpilej' as they affectionately call the school, A good example of this is Car- nival Day . Each year dozens of booths and other structures are built in the court and yards, making sure that all con- struction is carried on without damage to any permanent in- stallations. By nightfall, all booths are dismantled, the yards are cleaned, and the court and yards are back to their former state. ' K Carnival Day is a highlight of the spring semester l i Panoramic view of the 1955 Football Pageant. REGARD FUR CO DUCT Sc APPEARANCES nun :QIIF AT ALL TIMES Regard for conduct and appearance at all times is an ingrained Lowell tradition. Students have always realized that ir is the responsibility of every individual Lowellite to keep his conduct and appearance above re- proach at all times if Lowell is to continue to maintain its reputation in this respect. Lowellites have kept this awareness with them at all times, whether they be studying in the classroom, cheering at a rally, performing on the playing field, or marching in a parade. cg Wlrgwvv k KY f Y if n .r :X - kr K , i ii Fl-i Fil i -i , 'H-N' L r L , s sy,,.,,,. i ipi, y W y p Bl ,ai 1 .,.,,,., P4 ' The , Sand Franciscoffbalcland Bay V 'I'C2S '- M N ' ff, L ' Bridge' is opened The Golden -'i ' l Gate Brxclge was completed the 'N' ,,,, ma A -Q , following year RIS : Q' I in ' giffitfi 5555 393' ezxzgfsiii aj gsgswg t A wzziw-3 G affine' s' an,1:2:::1f2 s 2 X ig? with :zsimsu 2 wifififw ,wwwz sg.2:g:::tZmsg 4 3QS,fZi2'iZiYZi5wi3.wf'gffi5ff1 awww -Wenham 153 vafgrzi iss S' 'Q H in ,, s wgsgqzfzsfz X 31 5 Z Q E F ' P W? 5i'5E9if:tw'ff5fEi': ,fgsgwzgisawiiss W Q. .ah Miilifgfzgisiitw ,, .wmwgwwmas,,Ms.mua,, s .. 5 ws s s Q- as asm 6 6 sat . Q , LOYALTY T0 SCHQOL CENTENNIAI. COMMITTEE Dr. Randolf Floodg james Livingstoneg Edwin Conng Mrs. Wfalter Nielandg Miss Gladys Lorigang J. A. Perinog Ivan Barkerg judge john B. Molinarig Miss Edith Penceg J. Max Mooreg judge Alvin Wfeinbergerg Stanley J. Bernardg Richard Gockg Richard Bishopg Mrs. Richard Nason jr. S!ii1nli11g.' Robert J. Buekleyg Herbert M. Chisholm. Lowellites graduate and attend colleges and universities throughout the country where they embrace new loyalties, but they still maintain an active interest in their high school Alma Mater, The biggest proof of this is the thousands of former Lowell students who are now participating in the Centennial Celebration. Graduates from as far back as the Class of 1880 are currently giving their time and financial support to see that the school's one hundredth birthday is properly observed. ts sb X In 19457, y. . f M .g San Francisco became the birth- place of the United' Nations, the hope of the world for .Peace in the future. ..ig,,, .r 4 uw. Q z.1.wmw.v.w t N za?e,a.fsf- .Maw ,sam fan- F 'P' . H- . ,,.ag:s.l..t Junior Red Cross members display some of the books, favors, and toys that have been made or donated by Lowellites. LOYALTY TO CCDMMU ITY Lowell students have always regarded community loyalty as an intrinsic part of school pride and loyalty. Students have given their continued aid and cooperation to such commu- nity projects as the United Crusade, the Red Cross, and the JACKIE program, through financial donations, assisting in publicity campaigns, and contributions of time and talent. The largest unit in San Francisco's Festival of Progress Parade this year was the Lowell aggregation. 1 ' g K , 1, - 7 ,r.r , iafgift tar , ff 3' it 'c t 1 1 , - , - ,Lf-:'++ 1 wwf--- ' 'Q' t t e -ssiigs? t ' t l sf-2f5:s ' t -f i 1 X c cssi y i A f s I 1 , A ' , EZi:ili.lllillli s 'gin I ,ig5SanfErancisco celebrates the open- ' W --ug . ss-, t r , i'i'1q',Qiiz?1 ofifhe cit 7st new International K mu... -' V -V, i ,,'u1v, H, AL 5k K VY 7 H z 1 iff t i ,Airportr ,A 1 ii ' f.. f i'5ff-.air H4 1 W i 1 , MI, fs , :QigTT,!:7i.ii:i 1 13 4 L t -V V-'X iiQg55gl1ffif 'ti The Lowell ROTC Color Guard LGYALTY TO TIG Lowell High School can point with pride to its record of achievement and loyalty to the nation in peace and wat. Along with contrib- uting members of the armed forces to support the country's efforts in five great wars since 1856, Lowellites led all other schools in the city in support of war bond drives during World Wars I and II. However, the greatest manifestation of the schoolls loyalty to the nation is the almost 21,000 worthy American citizens Lowell has graduated in the past 100 years. fu. In 1962 Lowell High School is now located Z ina ine new building in the Lake Merced area. ' we 4 WWW .fits R .gemwmw 25341413 ZX.. M t,f4 1 I ,W , ' u n a 1 , ' ' I .V c ' ' 'trtu in Il ,LA I I K , i A ,rgqruzii 'l ' iff i ii Wi 'di' ' L ' ' A ,R , A A 'M Q: ll '- - I , K I .5 I . ami I PL 'vb ' K ' V Fashions of the Gold Rush Days when San Fl'L1I1ClSCll'S first high school opened are modeled by Sonya Holudilotf, joan Tuhtan. Sally Ann Hough, and Sue lirorhard. 'S Sue Linder and Ann jones show what the well-dressed motorists were wearing around the turn of the Century. 4 The Twentieth Century lwrought athletic participation to the young ladies as well as men. Sondra Snow and Anita Wfash- ington show what the Lowell co-eds of the period were wearing at the beach, and Carolyn Perkins and Bar- bara Elmcin display the garb of the girls' basketball team. V , r I. , . uf 1 lx I 'X - Q lf-3. ,lg limi . -. 1' Qlfvffi t- - Y' M iq, 1 'S - X, 4.1, X vi R Q Xxlle y A , - f.-- 4 'Lv A hx ll' lr ' ' x 1 5 ll fl.. ' Mayall gtg, 5 i - ttt.- ,.. . I N u 1' , r in i ci .i G 3 2' gbibv-' i fa ll' tif--' U 'fre-3-K i gegiigajtt1:zstgafftfsrwwstzsz1Q:fir-MMI X ,wwifSQ52afYi:Wf2,'f::fiHsiQzf5'VwishU1itww:wfttssszxsgzzzsesfl f 22 The 1920's lvmuglmt wsnmc-n's suHc-rage, and short skirts. Pirturcil are Dnnnl Dowling, Barlwxim Bates, joan Burtun, and Nancy N-mon. Two Lowellitcs uf today, Carul Mel- mnn and Sylvia Nelson, show what the well dressed girl wears tu a tea. All set to root for the Lowell Indians are Joanne Davies and Marilyn l,cvy. XVill the Miss Lnwcll Of 2056 hunk like Miss l:LlHlI'.ll'HLl'i or Miss Can-- wumnnu QSUQ Bu.1'nJrllJ. TRADITIONS RE AI NCH GED F - , ,, ? , 1 F P x r p- T BLE OF CO TENTS BOOK I LOWELL'S TRADITIONS . . . HISTORY OF LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL . A TRIBUTE TO THE ALUMNI . . . IN MEMORIAM: A LIST OF GRADUATES KILLED IN WORLD WAR I AND WORLD WAR .II SPORTS HISTORY OF LOWELL . . . FACULTY LIST-1856 TO 1956 CENTENNIAL DATE BOOK . . . LOWELL SCRAPBOOK: A PICTURE STORY OF LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL .... BOOK II LOWELL 1956 THE ADMINISTRATORS . THE FACULTY AND STAFF STUDENT GOVERNMENT . STUDENT ACTIVITIES STUDENTS AT WORK SPORTS SECTION . . THE GRADUATING CLASSES . PAGE 2 PAGE 23 PAGE 45 PAGE 69 PAGE 71 PAGE 86 PAGE 113 PAGE 115 PAGE156 PAGE158 PAGE162 PAGE169 PAGEZIQ PAGE235 PAGE257 STAEE OE THE RED A D WHITE Ayforiute Editor Sporty Editor . Aftizfitief Editorf Sfdj Merrzherx . Afsocitzfe Editor S porty Editor . Alzzmrzi Editor . Photo Editor . EDITOR-GWEN DAVIS Fo!! Sttzjjl . . ROZ PERRY Senior Editor . . ANITA WASHINGTON . BOB STEWART Bufinefy 1'VItzmzger . . . CAROLE GOLD . . . . . . . JOYCE RICHARDS and BARBARA TEXIERA . SUE BARNARD, YVONNE DANDY, DAVID GREEN, JUDY ROSENTHAL, ARNELL SHOWS Spring Staff BARBARA TEXIERA Senior Editor . . . YVONNE DANDY RICHARD SOWARD Bltfirrefi Marzoger' . JOAN MENDELSON . . SUZY FRIEND Copy Editor . . . JUDY NAKAMOTO . SUE GINSBERG Adzfertifirzg . . . MIMI FRASER Staff Memherf DIANNE ADDINGTON, AL BENT, JEAN ERSKINE, JANE KAFANTARIS, KARINA KANG, MIKE LARSEN, LYNN MALFANTI, PATSY MOORE, CYNTHIA NICKELSON, JULIE PETERSEN, BARBARA SEELEY, LYNN VLAUTIN. JERRY FALK Photography ALAN MAY RICHARD POSADA Portraitf PLYMOUTH STUDIOS Cover KARINA KANG ROBERT JEUNG ADVISOR-ROBERT J. BUCKLEY Greetings From the Governor It is a pleasure for me to join in extending greetings to the alumni, students, and faculty of Lowell High School on the approaching centennial of their school's founding. As the oldest public high school in the Far West, Lowell has played a prominent part in the development of our State. The contributions its graduates have made to our culture and economy during the past 100 years have certainly been many and varied. The splendid tra- ditions and fine spirit which are characteristic of Lowell augur well for the future of your school as it embarks upon its second century of educational service in San Francisco. Cordially, GOODWIN J. KNIGHT Governor of California Governor Goodwin Knight lvlayor George Christopher Congmtulofing Lowell High School on tloe Occasion gf Its 100th Annioerymgf RESOLUTION No. 16367 Whereas, The members of this Board of Supervisors have noted with deep pride that during the year 1956 Lowell High School will celebrate the 100th anniversary of its founding, and Whereas, On August 16, 1856, Lowell High School, then known as Union Grammar School, under the guidance of its first principal, Ellis H. Holmes, was opened with an enrollment of 45 girls and 35 boys, and nhnwi, Throughout the years Lowell High School has maintained on the highest level its academic traditions and has made, and continues to make important cultural contributions to San Francisco, and today thousands of its graduates have taken their place in the public, professional and civic life of San Francisco and this Nationg and Whereas, Lowell High School, facing its second century of achievement, is meeting with vigor the challenge that the future holds, and its progressive program of study and training promises from its graduates accomplishments even surpassing the glow- ing record of its past, now, therefore, be it Qbsnlfnh, That the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco, in recognition of the notable contributions to the welfare and progress of San Francisco, which have been made by Lowell .High School, does hereby take this opportunity, on the eve of said institution's centennial celebration, to extend to the school, its faculty and its students, past, present and future, sincere congratulations, heartiest commenda- tions and the cordial wish that Lowell High School may Hourish forever. The foregoing Ruolution war introduced by Superoixor Francir McCarly and Adopted by ummimou: :foie of the Board of Supervirofr of the City and County of San Fnmcirco ax in regular meeting on Monday, january 30, 1956 Qtr or from ruidnu of Q I ' - d of Su 'Jon Clerk of tb: Board ofSupen1imr.r Mayor of tb: City and Cunt San Fran.-irra Superintendentis Message This year Lowell High School can look back one hundred years-almost as far back as can the city of San Francisco itself. The history of the one has not merely paralleled that of the other, the two have been intertwined and interdependent. The public support that the city gave to her first high school has come back in multiple returns down through the years. As San Francisco grew, so did the public school sys- tem on which the advancing city was so dependent. And in a true sense Lowell divided and subdivided as new high schools were established to serve the expan- sion of the city into its many corners. And in turn the mother school has had the satisfaction of seeing her high standards carried into school after school over the city. As proud as she may be of her past, Lowell's real glory may well rest in the years ahead. The situation that faces our nation in her recently acquired position of world leadership is one to tax the educational in- genuity of any high school, regardless of its past record. There is every indication 'that Lowell's next hundred years will 'be as significant as her past hundred. HAROLD SPEARS SIlPE1'fl7167Z6l'E7ll' of San Fmnfirm Public Srlaoolr J. A. PERINO HAROLD SPEARS Principals Message I am extremely proud to be associated with an educational institution that has served genera- tions of San Franciscans so well for one hundred years. Thousands of Lowellites have figured prominently in the growth and development of our great City by the Golden Gate. Future gen- erations of Lowellites will continue to bring honor upon themselves, their school, and their community. They will continue to develop a beautiful city as they live their lives and bequeath upon succeeding generations a challenge to greater things. You will agree with me, I am sure, that the journalism class and the instructor, Mr. Robert Buckley, have prepared a Centennial Yearbook that is a masterpiece. Lowell wishes to recog- nize them and to thank them deeply for their superb and prodigious effort. May the Alumni always look back over the years to the old school house, to their teachers, and to their schoolmates with the pleasant feel- ing of many happy memories. These are the mo- ments that bind Lowellites together. May the old grads and young grads always remain faith- ful and loyal to their old alma mater and to each other. J. A. PERINO Principal! J. E. WALLACE STERLING Graduates of Lowell High School have a fine record of achievement at Stanford University, and I am happy to have this opportunity to extend greetings to the student body and to alumni and other friends of the school. At the present time there are 70 undergraduate students enrolled at Stanford from Lowell, which has ranked among the principal con- tributors to Stanford's freshman classes over the years. The student body and faculty of Stanford University join me in extending Stanford's best wishes to Lowell High School on its 'hundredth anniversary. j. E. WALLACE STERLING Prerident, Stanford U fziveryity Congratulations to Lowell High School From 1 Stanford University and the University of California Lowell High School is not only the oldest high school on the Pacific Coast. It is also among the oldest of educational institutions of all types in the area, including colleges. Even more important, it has over the years judging by the record of its graduates at the University of California, done a consistently good job of teaching and guidance for young people. For example, only four high schools in the State have, since 1950, sent more graduates to the University of California, and the record of these students, in spite of their number, has been markedly above the average for all high school matriculants. This is a record which is worthy of centennial congratulations, and of which the students as well as the teaching staff and administration of Lowell High School may well be proud. ROBERT G. SPROUL Prefidefzt, U fziverfity of California ROBERT G. SPROUL ames Russell Lowell Lowell High School is proud to be named after such a distinguished American poet, educator, and diplomat as james Russell Lowell, Lowell was born in Cambridge Massachusetts in 1819 the descendant of a lon line 1 i , 8 of notable ancestors, and he was reared in surroundings favorable to the development of his gifts of intellectual power and high ideals of manhood. Lowell spent his childhood on his father's country estate, Elmwood on the Charles River. He attended Harvard University and Harvard Law School and was admitted to the bar at the age of 21. After the death of his wife in 1853, Lowell became professor of literature and modern languages at Harvard and held this position for over 20 years. During this time he was editor of the Allantir Monthly and joint editor of the North American Review. In 1875 Lowell resigned from Harvard to accept the position of Minister to Spain and in 1880 was transferred to London. He held this position until 1885. Through his poems and prose, especially the Bigelow papers, Lowell exerted a tre- mendous influence against the evils of slavery and as a literary critic he had few equals. Lowell died in 1891 at the age of 73. THE FIRST GRADUATING CLASS OF THE SAN FRANCISCO HIGH SCHOOL Top row: John Carrol, David R. McKee, James R. Estill, Robert Wilson, Frederick Elliott, Henry Gibbons, Jr., Patrick O. Bary. Botlom Row: Emma J. Swasey, Virginia Rosa Rabe, Adelia B, Kimbal, Mary A. Casebolt. The Histor of Lowell High School-1856-1956 The San Francisco of 1847, following the Mexican War which saw 'California transferred from Mexican rule to American control, was a tiny village with an official population of 458. However, forces were al- ready at work to provide an education for the hand- ful of children in this community which had just changed its name from Yerba Buena to the more im- posing t-itle of San Francisco. Samuel Brannan, owner of the San Francisco Slat, published an editorial noting that the village contained 56 children between the ages of five and fifteen who should be receiving some schooling. His advice was heeded, on April 3, 1848, the first public elementary school opened its doors. Thus began the story of public education in San Fran- cisco. Another event took place in 1848 which was to change the destiny of the entire West as well as San Francisco-the discovery of gold by james Marshall in January of that year. During the next few years the population of San Francisco was to take tremendous upward jumps so that by 1852 the population had passed the 56,000 mark. San Francisco had become a great city, growing so fast that it hardly had time to stop and catch its breath. San Francisco was also a city of many problems. People from all of the states of the Union and all of the countries of the world were descending upon this city which had become the gateway to the gold fields. This polyglot of humanity ran the gamut from edu- cators, clergymen, doctors, lawyers, and skilled crafts- men-who came to settle and grow with the west- to criminals, vagabonds, and other unprincipled ad- venturers whose only interest was to get their hands on some of the newly discovered gold, Even with all of the problems confronting the city, the educational movement continued to go forward. In 1851 the city elected its first superintendent of schools, Colonel Thomas J. Nevins, and before the end of the year had established three free public schools. In the following year four more schools were placed in operation. These educational steps had been taken in spite of the fact that many of the new arrivals were from coun- tries whose traditions regarded free public schools as charityi' schools, progress was made in spite of the fact that the city was swept by six major fires during this period, with one fire destroying 1500 buildings and doing more than 310,000,000 worth of damage, progress was made even though the criminal elements had seized control of the city government and it was necessary for the Vigilance Committee of 1851 to forcefully evict certain officials and restore law and order to the community. Yes, even in spite of the fact that San Francisco had barely enough funds to keep the wheels of government in motion, the campaign for better educational facilities went forward. In 1853 Superintendent Nevins made the bold sug- gestion that the time had arrived to consider the estab- lishment of a high school for boys and a seminary for girls. Those in opposition to the plan pointed out that even in the old established cities of the East, the free public high school was not an established institution. Boston, with its hundreds of years of educational tra- ditions, led the way by opening a public high school in 1821. Other communities were slow to follow the lead. New York City waited until 1847 before extending its educational system up to the high school level, and St. Louis in this year of 1853 had just ventured into the Held of secondary education. In 1854 Superintendent Nevins had sufhciently con- vinced the Board of Education that a high school was necessary, they issued a statement saying that a high school would be established the following year, but waited until July 10, 1856, before actually passing the resolution that set machinery in motion for oper- ating the school. Six days later the Board met and rescinded their res- olution. Certain Board members were convinced that a high school could not be legally made a part of the San Francisco Common School System. A compromise action taken was to continue with the plans to open the school, with no change in the course of study, but to change the name from The San Francisco High School and Ladies' Seminary to the Union Grammar School. The same admission rules were to remain in elfect. Recommended students from the city's grammar schools were to be admitted after successfully passing a Board of Education examination in orthography, reading, writing, vocal music, arithmetic, geography, English grammar, Spanish grammar, elocution, nat- ural philosophy, use of globes, and the history of the United States. Students were to be between the ages of 10 and 20 years of age. A student was to be allowed to complete a course started between these ages even though he might pass his twentieth birthday. On July 24 the Board of Education announced that teaching positions were open for the proposed high school and accepted 22 teaching applications. One month later 11 students from Principal Swett's Gram- mar School No. 1, 11 students from Principal Den- man's Grammar School No. 2, 25 students from Principal Holmes, Grammar School No. 3, 14 students from Principal Hammill's Grammar School No. 4, and two students from Principal Carleton's Gram- mar School No. 7 received notification that they had been promoted to the Union Grammar School. On August 25 the school opened its doors in rented quarters that belonged to the Wesleyan Church of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, located on Powell Street between Clay and Sacramento. Ellis H. Holmes had been selected as principal and teacher of mathematics. Two teachers had been hired fat 3550 per monthj to assist him. George W. Mimms was to be the instructor in natural science and Miss Anna C. Park was to be the female assisiant for the lower division. The day after the opening of the school Mr. Ewer of the Board of Education submitted the report defin- ing the course of study to be followed. Provisions had been made for this four year program: First year, first term. Reading alternating with gram- mar and analysis, writing alternating with drawing, arithmetic, geography, modern and mathematical, history of the United States, and natural philosophy. Second term same as first. Second year. This year was to include all of the sub- jects taught during the first year with arithmetic alter- nating with algebra, bookkeeping alternating with physical geography, plus ancient history, chemistry, and agriculture. In the second term algebra was to completely replace arithmetic. Third year. This year was to have algebra alternating The San Francisco High Sch00l's new building was constructed on the site of the school's temporary church quarters and dedicated In 1860. CLASS OF DECEMBER 15, 1859 PATRICK BARRY JOHN CARROLL MARY CASEBOLT FREDERICK ELLIOTT JAMES R. ESTILL HENRY GIBBONS JR. DELIA B. KIMBALL DAVID R. McKEE VIRGINIA R. RABE EMMA J. SWASEY ROBERT WILSON CLASS OF 1864 ANNA BARNARD TERESA BUCKMAN E. c. BURR AGNES CHALMERS FANNY M. CHENEY KATIE B. CHILDS GEORGE M. CIPRICO GEORGIANA E. COERAN CLARA A. CUMMINGS MARY GOLDSMITH W. HALE, JR. W. E. KING MARY F. KNOWLES LOUISA MORGAN ALBERTINA PLUMMER PHILENA s. SAWYER JANE SMITH CHARLES s. TILTON MARGARET M. WADE E. M. WILEY CLASS OF 1866 LOUIS FELSENTHAL EDWARD KNOWLES JAMES LANKERSHIM DAVID MALLOY MAURICE SCHMITT CLASS OF 1867 ABRAHAM P. BENJAMIN HENRY R. COLEMAN ROBERT COULTER FRANK McLENNAN HENRY MORTON STANLEY P. NEWSHAM FRANK PILLINGS JAMES STEIN FRANK SUMNER CLASS OF 1868 WILLIAM O. BANKS WILLIAM W. GAILHWAITE WILLIAM C. GIBBS ARTHUR A. HOOPER JOHN E. INCE EDWARD R. LAIDLEY EDWIN MASTICK DUNCAN MCNEE ALBERT MICI-IAELSEN NATHAN NEWMARK FRANK OTIS CHARLES PREBLE JOHN H. RYAN ADELBERT SHELDON BRADFORD W. SMITH JOHN C. WHITE ALFRED H. YOUNG CLASS OF 1869 THOMAS F. BARRY GEORGE A. BORDWELL WILLIAM CARSON WILLIAM DONOVAN SAMUEL FELLOWS ALBERT GERBERDING HARRISON A. JONES WALTER MALLOY JOSEPH MCCLOSKEY WILLIAM MOTT SIMON C. SCHEELINE HENRY SCHMITT FRANK STOHR WILLIAM WADE CLASS OF 1870 GEORGE BEAVER SAMUEL B. CHRISTY JOHN R. FARRELL ISAAC FREUD ROBERT Y. HAYNE JOSEPH O. HIRSCHFELDER FRANK HOLMES DWIGHT B. HUNTLEY A. WENDELL JACKSON JACOB REINSTEIN JOSEPH L. ROSS JOSEPH C. ROWELL ISAAC H. SOLOMON JOHN M. STILLMAN CHARLES STONE LOUIS TOBIAS 25 CLASS OF 1872 JOHN B. CLARKE EDMUND CONROY THOMAS FITZPATRICK JAMES GLENNON MEYER JACOBS CLASS OF 1873 EDWIN BOOTH EDWIN COWELS ARTHUR HAYNE WILLIAM MORRISON WARREN S. PALMER WILLIAM SHAW CHARLES YOUNG CLASS OF 1874 MYER CAHNA CARLTON EVERETYT JOSEPH HUTCHINSON FIESCO MANDLEBAUM CHARLES OVERTON WILLIE SOULE WILI.ILAM STINSON FRANK WHITCOMB CLASS OF MAY, 1875 W. C BRUNS JAMES O. CALLAGHAN THOMAS J. CONROY WALLACE A. CURRIER EDWARD W. CUSHEON HERBERT FOLGER WILLIAM F. FONDA BRYON J. HORTON HERMANN F. JANTZEN HENRY I. KILHEIMER H. W. M. LANDSBERGER GEORGE MASTICK EDWARD W. MCNALLY GEORGE P. MORROW FREMONT MORSE EDWARD M. MOTT EDMUND O'NEILL 'GEORGE T. RUDDOCK MOSES TICHNER GEORGE B. WILLCUTT GEORGE L. WILSON CLASS OF MAY, 1876 SIGMUND ACKERMAN WALTER CARY EDGAR CHAPMAN LOUIS B. CHAPMAN ABRAHAM A. D'ANCONA JOHN DAVIS MILTON EISNER JOSEPH B. EMMAL SAMUEL FABIAN CHARLES JACKSON HERMANN LIEKER JAMES K. LYNCH SOLOMON D. MAGNES CHARLES MOON MARK PLATSHEK WILLIAM SAWYER MICHAEL SEELIGSOHN JOHN M. SMITH CHARLES TUTTLE ALEXANDER WEIL XVILLIAM C. XVHITEHEAD CLASS OF MAY, 1877 WILLIAM ADAMS CHARLES O, ALEXANDER FELIX BETTELHEIM ANTOINE BOURNONVILLE HENRY DODGE DAVID EISEMAN DAVID FELSENTHAL WILLIAM KEEFE GEORGE LYMAN HENRY MANHEIM SETH MANN WILLIAM A. MCGREGORY RICHARD J. MURRAY I.EO J. NEWMARK EDWARD O'CONNOR OSGODD PUTMAN HENRY RAUFT EDWARD ROWELL BENJAMIN RUDDOCK LOUIS SLOSS JAMES A. SMITH LOUIS STRAUS DANIEL SUTER WILLIAM TAIT CHARLES VAIL FRANK WIDBER WILLIAM WIGGINS 26 with geometry, ancient geography, ancient history, physiology and hygiene, astronomy, and geology. Sec- ond term-geometry, ancient geography, modern his- tory, p-hysiology and hygiene, astronomy, and botony. Fourth Year. Trigonometry, modern history, botony alternating with natural history, intellectual philosophy alternating with moral philosophy, rhetoric alternating with logic, and Constitution of the United States alter- nating with political economy. Second term-same ex- cept botony, themes and forensics once a fortnight, French, Spanish, German, and declamation-each scholar once a month. QThere is some doubt as to how much foreign language was actually taught as certain members of the Board of Education vetoed a motion to hire a teacher of foreign language in August, 1856j. From the beginning, the citizens and newspapers al- ways referred to the Union Grammar School as the high school and there was no doubt in anyone's mind that its teaching was on the secondary level. On Janu- ary 8, 1858 the Board of Education ofiicially changed the name to San Francisco High School. By this time the school had survived initial criticisms that had threatened its existence. Those in opposition to the school had been exploiting the per pupil cost of the high school, 310 per month, against the figure of 33 per pupil per month, cost of the grammar schools. However, solid support from many of the leading citizens and Thomas S. King's Evening Bulletin the was the brother of the former editor, James King of Williams, whose death in 1856 led to the formation of the second San Francisco Vigilance Committee which freed the city from hoodlum rule once againj assured the continuation of the high school. Interest in the high school became more intense among the citizens of San Francisco as the day drew near for the graduation of the first class. During the month of December, 1859, when the annual examina- tions were given, huge crowds flocked to the Powell Street school to watch final examinations which were open to the public viewing. On December 14 the first class was graduated from the San Francisco High School. An impressive cere- mony took place with all of the graduates getting a chance to recite. Principal Holmes gave a short talk. He mentioned that the class originally included 13 girls and 27 boys. He added that it was not lack of scholarship that had reduced the class to 11 graduates but marriages and the fact that a number of students had dropped out to accept available teaching positions in the grammar schools of the city. i Former City Superintendent Harry B. James pre- sented the diplomas after a speech by State Superin- tendent of Public Instruction Andrew Moulder. Mr. Moulder claimed that the high school's course of study was equal to and more practical than that of most Eastern colleges. Two days later the school held its first graduation ball at San Francisco's Turn Verein Hall with nu- merous school and city ofiicials present, and a fine band furnished waltzes, polkas, and quadrilles to which the happy company kept time. The next important date in the school's history was the dedication of the new school building on Septem- ber 19, 1860, on the site of the old church building, which had been moved to the rear of the lot. A con- temporary account in the Evening Bulletin of that date stated, At one o'clock today a large company gathered in the High School Building on Powell Street, near Clay, which had just been rebuilt, enlarged and beau- tified. Our readers must remember now how the build- ing looked last fall--half brick, half wood, ungainly, inconvenient and no particular credit to the site it oc- cupied. It was erected originally for a church and for that purpose answered very well and looked well, until city improvements came with their new grades and marvelous changes, and this old house, revamped, was Panoramic view of San Francisco, taken in 1870, showing the high school in the foreground. , , . .i f -1.,,,gf1z.fJ 2211551 52,1-if ' v . . ,.,.f...wwefisi5ssa4eggei5t:?ij?:iv . . .. . , .. .Ma iaffia- -f will 2 i 'z-if ' . if . . S' HIG Sutter Street, between Gough and Octavia Streets. fit for neither church, school building, nor anything else. The account continued stating how the work had started last fall but was discontinued due to lack of funds, In May the sale of the School Bonds made the Board Hush again, and the work was resumed under a contract for 313,272 .... Original cost of the lot was 39,200. Grading and putting up a retaining wall cost a little over 33000. Furniture cost 31500.'l The exercises opened with a dedicatory prayer by the Rev. E. S. Lacy, followed -by a dedicatory song written by Bowman. Master Edward Thomas of the first class of the High School was the next speaker, then the pupils sang Sweet Summer Comes When All Is Bright. James Denman, the Superintendent of Schools, ad- dressed the gathering next. He detailed the slow growth into public favor of the high school, Of which failure in all quarters was predicted. He explained that when the school was opened in the old church, it was intended to be temporary, but that the departments financial embarrassment had delayed the new school until this date. He concluded with the remark that the new building, furniture, and improvements were go- ing to cost the city 328,000. Ani oration by Rev. Thomas Starr King, one of the great orators of his day and one of California'S two representatives in the National Hall of Fame, was next on the program. He felt that this was a proud day but that he would like to See the dome of the University crowning the public school system in this and every other statef' Thomas J. Nevins spoke saying that this day was the verification of his dream of eight years ago. Henry B. James gave an account of how the old u.,T-.Mc L. church had been raised and thrust back in the lot. In his detailed description of the new building, he said, Across the front of it, like the top line of a T, is a new brick structure with a mastic veneering in front and the undisguised brick at the end. The front is im- posing and handsome-there is no imposition as to the rest. Curved staircases lead the visitor directly to the second floor, where is the large hall, Hanked at the entrance of either side with a recitation room, and a gallery in the west end, for the excess of visitors on gala days, which when shut off by sliding doors, makes a good room for teachers' meetings, with abundant fa- cilities through the two stairways to provide drafts of air. All the rooms are bound with blackboards built in the wall. A convenient desk and a good seat is pro- vided for each pupil. In the basement are wash rooms, bonnet and cap rooms, a recitation room, separate rooms, yet to be furnished with gymnastic apparatus, and a long run of the softest sand in each yard, The view from the building, always except to the west, where a sand bank obstructs it, is really charming. The varnish will scarcely be dry and furniture in place this week, for which reason school will not actually be opened until about Tuesday nextf' The San Francisco High School then settled down to its task Of training scholars without any eventful happenings until June of 1864. In that month the girls were separated to another school, an old brick build- ing at Bush and Stockton Streets. Principal Holmes was transferred to the girls' school and G. W. Mimms was elevated to the position of principal of San Fran- cisco High School, which soon after took the name of Boys' High School. Up until 1868, when the University of California was established, little thought was given to the high school as a training ground for university studies, al- CLASS OF 1878 BERNARD BIENENFELD ZENAS UPHAM DODGE CHARLES E. DOUGHTY JOHN J. DWYER HARVEY M. EDMONDS WILLIAM HENRY EISKE THOMAS J. FLYNN FRANK J. FRAPOLLI JOHN E. GLENNON WILLIAM H. GRIsWoLD HENRY G. HANLEY GEORGE W. HARROLD EDGAR S. HOCHSTADTER JAMES H. HUMPHREYS EELIx LENGEELD SAMUEL M. B. LEvY SAMUEL LOUISSON SAMUEL J. MAGUIRE PRED MATTHEWS ALONZO G. MCEARLAND EDWARD D. OAKLEY EDWARD c. PEASE EDWARD s. PURDY JOSEPH E. ROBERTS HENRY RUDDOCK JOHN D. SHERWOOD PHILIP ZEMANSKY CLASS OF 1879 FRANK M. ANGELLOTTI HENRY J. BARBAT WILL E. CONNER CHAS. EULER EDWARD M. HARMON GEORGE H. HEALD JOHN M. HESSION WALTER P. JOHNSON OTTO C. KOBICKE WILLIAM G. LANIGAN ED. M. LOUISSON FRANK LYNCH JOHN W. MAILLIARD FRANK J. MCCONNELL ANDREW F . MCCREERY HARRY J. MORTON FERD. MOSEBACK, JR. GEORGE W. PEASE FRANK PETERSON JOSEPH B. POWNALL WILLIAM RIEGER ABRAHAM RUEF GEORGE A. ROUSSEL HARRY M. SCHILLER GEORGE H. UNDERWOOD CLASS OF 1880 HENRY ALEX SIMON BERLIN ROBERT O. EOKER FRANK E. BOOTH WILLIAM J. CARLIN EINLAY COOK cHAs. E. COOPER BANCROET G. DAVIS EDWARD DAVIS SAMUEL L. FOSTER GEORGE E. FRENCH DANIEL GAVIGAN GEORGE D. GIVENS FREDERICK I-IAASE CHARLES E. HILL EUGENE HOEEER WILLIAM G. HOUSTON EDWARD c. HUTCHINSON ALEXANDER DUMAS JONES WILLIAM J. JONES SAMUEL JOSEPH WILLIAM HENRY KEITH, JR EDWARD A. KOLE WILLIAM E. LARZELERE GEORGE H. LEMMAN DAVID LESZYNSKY ALBERT J. LOWENRERG CHARLES L. MATHIEU EMANUEL B. McCORMICK JOHN JARDINE MCEWEN CQOLOMON PEISER SAMUEL SONNENEERG HENRY SCHUSSLER HENRY COGSWELL STEVENS ARTHUR WHEEI.ER CLASS OF 1881 ALFRED ADELSDORFER ALLISON C. BONNELL SAMUEL F. BOOTH ALFRED BRAVERMAN FRANK DUNN GEORGE B. ELLIOTT HENRY P. FLINT GEORGE GARMLEY EDWARD L. GOETJEN A. K. HAPPERSBERGER EMANUEL S. HELLER RICHARD G. HILLMAN F . W. KAISER KEIZO KOYANA WILLIAM C. MARTIN CHARLES WALTER MARWEDEL CHARLES A. MCDONALD HENRY MEYER WILLIAM GORDON MUGAN FREDERICK PATEK EDYWARD PUTNAM ALBERT RAYMOND GEORGE ROTHGANGER MAXIMILIAN SALOMON WALTER A. SCOTT LUCIUS L. SOLOMONS GEORGE B. SOMERS CECIL STEWERT ABE STERN FRANK T. WAY CLASS OF MAY. 1882 GAsToN M. ASHE CHARLES L. BIEDENBACH G. F. BIGELOW GEORGE D. BOYD ARTHUR cAsTELAzo JOHN W. CLASSEN THOMAS E. CURRAN FRANK G. FINLAYSON FRANK FISHER CHARLES F. FITTZSIMMONS HARRY L. FORD JOHN F. HARROLD LINCOLN HUTCHINSON MELVILLE KLAUBER LOUIS KOHN BEVERLY LETCHER I. N. LIPMAN HERMAN MARKS FRANK W. MCEWEN JOHN MCMULLIN FRANK M. MICHAEL BEVERLY Y. MORRIS WILLIAM F. MURPHY JOHN N. POMEROY WILLIAM RIX LOUIS A. ROSENTHAL FREN. WILLIAM SEIBEL WILLIAM C. SHARPSTEIN JAMES H. STACK MICHAEL D. STEIN J. B. T. TUTHILL JACOB WAND ALFHONSE D. WEIL HENRY M. WHITELY HORACE M. WOOLLEY CLASS OF MAY, 1883 Boys WALTER J. BARTNETT GEORGE WALKER BATES JOHN F. BAUER CHARLES BISAGNO MILTON E. BLANCHARD RICHARD F. BOYLE SAMUEL G. BUCKBEE ISSAC CITRON CHARLES H. CROCKER ARTHUR D. CROSS SAMUEL S. CROWLEY JOSEPH H. CUNNINGHAM CLIFFORD A. DAVIS EUGENE J. DE SABLA, JR. J. WALLACE F. DISS SEWALL DOLLIVER GEORGE J. DOWNING PIERSON DURBROW PATRICK H. FARRELL CHARLES S. FAY WILLIAM E. FITZPATRICK JOHN L. FLAHERTY THOMAS F. FLEMING THOMAS A. GAMBLE JOHN H. GRAY, JR. WILLIAM L. GREENBAUM WARREN C. GREGORY JOHN F. HARPER RICHARD C. HARRISON WILLIAM C. HAY ANGELO M. HEVERIN WILLIAM KAHN WALTER KAUFMANN FRANK A. KINNE FRED S. LAFFERTY ROBERT S. LAMOTTE JOSEPH LANDO STEPHEN T. MATHER W. CLARENCE MCCULLOUGH BENJAMIN MCDOUGALL ADOLPH C. MILLER EDWARD F. MORAN OSCAR C. MORGAN SIGOURNY B. MORSE WILLIAM L. MURRAY JULIAN F. NEPPERT HARRY BOWEN RATHBONE HENRY RHINE EMMET RIXFORD BENJAMIN ROMAINE JOHN J. RUDDOCK 28 2-?f !4 .fff f .-'ff ,!,f' . M- MZ ------fr-iff TI' I If ,.,.-ff n'MT:1iii?f',, .. A U: .,,,.,.-f y-',,-f--f A,,.,,M:f-' A .--' ,If ,,..f J f Boys' High School after it had been enlarged in 1889 to take care of the increased enrollment. though several of the students had continued their education by going East for college work. Instead the school had been Considered as a final preparation for life. Principal Mimms served only one year before re- turning to his previous home in Massachusetts. He had been held somewhat in awe by the students because of his personal acquaintance with the great literary fig- ures of the day. He had attended Harvard with James Russell Lowell and had Oliver Wendell Holmes for a professor. Hawthorne, Emerson, Thoreau, and the Alcotts' were numbered among his friends. Theodore Bradley, a mathematics instructor at Boys' High, was made principal of the school. William T. Reid took over the principalship in 1875 and served in that capacity until 1881 when he resigned to accept the position of president of the University of California. Shortly after Mr. Reid started his prin- cipalship, the Boys' High School moved to a new lo- cation. In january of 1876 the school moved into a new three story structure on Sutter Street between Gough and Octavia. The new site covered all of a 50 vara lot, twice the space occupied by the Powell Street building. Another change during the Reid period was a divi- sion of the curriculum into a Classical Course and an English Course. Frederick H. Clark, later to be prin- cipal of Lowell High, was a student at this time. He described the course of study as follows: At this time the school was organized into two de- partments which might have been two separate schools so far as the daily life of the students was concerned. There were the English Department and the Classical Department, in each of which a rigid course of study was maintained for the three years. I enrolled in the English Department, but later, on my own accord, I sought the opportunity for training in Latin, and with the never-to-be-forgotten assistance of Mr. A. L. Mann, I carried on the study of Latin and Greek in addition to the regular studies of the English course. The basic studies in the English course were mathe- matics, Science Qphysics lirst and chemistry second, biological science being unknownj, ancient, European, and English history, and either French or German. Our course in English literature was mainly limited to Studying about authorsg any broad acquaintance with their writings was left to our own initiative. United States History was considered a grammar school study. There was an option course in bookkeeping given after 2:30 o'clock, so that if you 'wished this course you remained for a later dismissal. Many did so. In the Classical Department, Latin for three years and Greek for two years replaced much of the Science and all of the modern language work of the other de- partment. Most of the students in the Classical Depart- ment were looking forward to the traditional Bachelor of Arts courses in college. After the resignation of Mr. Reid, his brother-in- law, Francis A. Blackburn, who had been a Latin and Greek teacher in the high school, was elevated to the position of principal. He remained as principal until 1886 when he resigned to accept a professorship at the University of Chicago, which had just been estab- lished. i In one of his graduation addresses Mr. Clark men- tioned an event that took place under Principal Black- burn: An important step in the relation of high school to the University was taken in 1884, when the University of California established the accrediting system. By this system, a graduate of an accredited high school was admitted to the University upon the ptincipal's cer- tificate. But the high school must be accredited. This meant very complete and rigorous investigation of the actual teaching procedure in the schools by members of the University faculty. As the University at that time maintained not merely one, but three, and later four, sets of requirements, the planning of studies in the high school became more complicated. The Boys' High School was one of the first three to be accredited. QUp until this system was set up, it was not neces- sary to finish 'high school in order to get into the University of California. Numerous ambitious Boys' High students took the university examination before graduating from high school and in several cases even succeeded in gaining sophomore standing at once. Many of the brilliant Boys' High students are not list- ed in the class lists in this book because they were able to continue their higher education without 'waiting un- til graduation time.j Following Mr. Blackburn's resignation, James K. Wilson, principal of the Lincoln Grammar School, was given the high school post. At this time the school was organized into three departments: Classical, Latin- Scientific, and English. It is also the period in which the high school starts to look upon college preparation as one of its principal functions. More and more stu- dents entered the school with their ultimate aim a col- lege degree. fDuring the next several years other secondary schools were established in San Francisco to take care of other needs than college preparation. In 1884 a Commercial High School was established. In 1894 its name was changed to Polytechnic High when manual training was added to the school program. The Com- mercial High School which later became Commerce High School opened in 1900, Cogswell Mission High operated from 1890 until 1892. It reopened in 1898 as Mission High School. QNO other high schools opened in San Francisco until 1921 when Galileo High started. In 1928 Bal- boa High School opened. The last two San Francisco high schools to be established were George Washing- ton High in 1936 and Abraham Lincoln High in 1940.1 In 1888 Principal Wilson resigned from Boys' High to become president of a local bank. Frank Morton, a Latin teacher in the school was promoted to principal, a post he was to hold for 30 years. A year before this, girls had been allowed to enroll at Boys' High School in order to take such college prep courses as Latin and Greek, which had been discon- tinued at Girls' High. Under the circumstances a move was started to give the school a title other than Boys' High. In 1894 the name of the distinguished poet, educator, and diplomat, James Russell Lowell, was substituted for Boys' High. Without any ceremony the new name, Lowell High School, appeared on the Sutter Street building. In 1889 the high school had been enlarged to take care of the increased enrollment. However, the increase in size didn't enhance its beauty, according to John F. Swett, Lowell '97, recalling his impressions of the school: The building which reflected the spirit of the times in regard to school architecture, simply ignoring the aspect of a school, was painfully plain. We would call it a warehouse today. It had a frontage of about 100 feet on Sutter Street and extended north about 75 feet, with three stories, wooden throughout and no architectural adornment whatsoever. Grim and forbidding, it reached its gloomy, 'barn- like silhouette amid an otherwise rather attractive SURVEYING CLASS - 1890 Included in the surveying class of 1890 were, left to right, Walter Terry, Will Drew, Bert Hawks, Walter Burner, Abe Bienenfeld, Tom Eagleson, Albert Chandler, Eugene Holmes, Charles Week, and Martin J. Heller. JACOB SAMUELS WILLIAM W. SANDERSON EDWARD E. SAWYER JOHN H. SCHUTTE ARTHUR M. SHARP FRED F. SPRINGER JAMES J. THEOBALD JOHN F. UNDERWOOD EMILE B. VILLAIN JULIUS WANGENHEIM BRYANT L. XVATERHOUSE CLASS OF MAY, 1884 C. A. ADAMS M. A. ARTIGUES R. S. ATKINS F. H. BEAVER C. S. BLOOM S. H. BOARDMAN J. F. BONNELL F. T. BOWERS B. BROOKE L. L. BROWN W. V. BRYAN S. W. CLARKE C. F. DAMKROEGER T. D. DAVIDSON T. H. DOANE W. B. FIELDING M. GERSTLE L. GREENEBAUM B. HART S. M. HELLER H. M. HOLBROOK F. W. JACKSON M. KOSHLAND F. D. MADISON E. E. MANHEIM A G. . MERRILL A. B. MOULDER H. C. RAY T. C. RETHERS G. H. RIDDELL H. D. ROGERS F. P. SHELDON A. L. STETSON E. J. STRAUSS T. B. SUTLIFF C. E. TURNER S. S. WALLER H. E. WISE W. A. WISE WM. F. WOOD, JR. CLASS OF MAY. 1885 J. B. BATTEN J. M. BREWER J. A, BROSNAN L. E. CHENERY c. B. CLARK L. cook H. J.. coRDEs W. T. CRAIG J. 1. DELVALLE c. J. DURBROW J. A. EPHRAIM s. ERLANGER W. GERSTLE J. H. GovE M. L. GRUNBAUM H. GRUNDEL J. U. HALEY c. P. HANLEY 1. R. HASKIN W. H. HOLLIS c. E. HOLMES A. c. HooPER E. HousToN G. H. T. JACKSON H. J. JORY W. H. KESSING G, E. KINCAID E. P. LANDON ,Ep R. LASTRETO . LAZARUS G. K. LENFESTEY J. J. LERMEN F. M. MARTIN G. B. MCDOUGALL A. C. MCFARLAN S. MEYER F. D. A. MURPHY G. P. NEPPERT S. NEWMARK C. A. NOBLE A. PAINTER E. D. PEIXOTTO G. C. ROEDING F. ROSS T. A. ROTTANZI H. SACHS S. SCHWARTZ L. SINCLAIR N. SINCLAIR E. D. SWIFT S. J. THEISEN M. P. TOPLIZ R. E. F. TRAUTNER s. M. VAN WYCK, JR. F. J. WAIZMAN W. B. WATERMAN F. L. WHARFF A. C. WIDBER J. WOLF CLASS OF MAY. 1886 JOHN Q. ADAMS FRANCIS C. BAILEY WILLIAM D. BALL NICHOLAS BEATTY J. R. B. BOCKMAN CHARLES J. BONNELL DUNCAN J. CARY ROBERT T. CAUGHLAN GEORGE S. CORBELL CHARLES A. DEANE LYLE A. DICKEY FRANK W. DOUGHTY ALEXANDER FLETCHER WALTER F. GRIER T. BYRON HARKER M. L. HASKIN PHILIP HYDE ALBERT F. INCELI. JAMES J. LAWLER ISIDOR S. LESZYNSKY WILLIAM A. MEYER DANIEL A. PECK GIUSEPPE PEIXOTTO ARCHIE R. PIERCE HERMANN L. PROSHOLD BENJAMIN F. RIDEOUT W. A. ROWELL GUY R. SANCHEz JOSEPH SHELDON SOLOMON B. SICEMAN JOSIAH P. STOKES FRANK T. SWETT SAMUEL N. WALTER MARK H. WEAVER JACOB S. WEIL ROBERT EMMET WELSH GEORGE WILLES LAWRENCE F. WILSON NORMAN L. WILSON SAMUEL S. WOODS, JR. JOHN WORLEY FRED O. ZIMMERMAN CLASS OF JUNE. 1887 MILTON H. ATKINS WALTER BACI-IMAN ALEXANDER A. BERGEROT ANSON S. BLAKE CHARLES R. BLAKE GEORGE C. BOARDMAN, JR. HENRY BRODEK CHARLES H. BUCK JULIUS I. CAHN JOHN J. CASSIDY EDWARD L. CULIN JAMES W. DEALY CHARLES L. DOYCHERT ALBERT L. EHRMANN THOMAS E. EICHBAUM ROBERT BRUCE ELDER M. P. FLEISHMAN ROY GALLAGHER SAMUEL L. GOLCHER EDMOND GROS ALBERT W. GUNNISON SAMUEL W. HELLER FRANK T. HITTLE LESTER H. JACOBS HENRY KUGELER ROBERT L. MANN FRANK B. MARKS JAMES J. MCCARTY WILLIAM S. MCCLURE GEORGE O. MCMULLIN JAMES D. MEEKER HOWARD MELONE ED MOORE W. G. MORROW WM. G. MURPHY THOMAS W. RANSOM W. S. QUINLAN JOHN G. REIGER JOSEPH P. SCHULTZ LOUIS A. SCHWABACHER ALBERT W. SCOTT, JR. JOHN W. SLATER BURBANK SOMERS CHARLES F. STONE FRED R. TEMPLETON FRED WEIL W. H. WEISHEIMER EUGENE zEILE 30 group of homes. A dingy front door, rarely used, stood at the head of a short Hight of wooden steps which creaked painfully when visitors ventured upon them. The girls used a narrow side entrance on the west and the boys a passageway on the east leading to the school yard, a drab place, all Hoored over with rough boards, with sheds on the rear for protection from the rain. High board walls surrounded it as if to make any outlook or escape impossible. The exterior of the building was covered with rusty gray paint, darkened by the years, and I doubt if it ever had been repainted. It looked, when I entered in 1894, at least 50 years old although it had been used only 19 years. There were 12 classrooms, four to a Hoot. Desks were of pine, greyish brown in color, and much scarred by the jack knives of industrious students striving to leave to posterity the initials of their names, and some of these names became very famous. The desks were bolted to the floor and each had an ink-pot, as foun- tain pens were a rarity at that time. The blackboards which Surrounded the rooms were gray rather than black and erasers were worn by a decade of use. The teachers, desks were Small and plain with an opening in the middle, giving us an excellent view of the teacher's feet. One teacher, I recall, had unusually large ones and he had a girl in the class make a calico curtain to shield them from public view. There were no charts or maps and the walls were bare and unattractive. No flowers were ever seen in this gloomy building. Mr. Swett was sure that the academic advantages by far outnumbered the physical ones. THIRD CLASSICAL JUNIOR During the Morton period the school took on many of the characteristics that mark the present day school. This was the era in which an interscholastic sports pro- gram came into being, extra-curricular clubs were rec- ognized as part of school life, school publications be- gan, and a new teacher-pupil relationship was estab- lished. Regarding the latter, former principal Clark recalled: Under Mr. Morton, the general methods of discip- line were transformed. The old mechanical system of checks and demerits, of fixed penalties for petty of- fenses, was abandoned. Students were given to under- stand that they were expected to be responsible mem- bers of the community. If one'S behavior proved that he could not be accepted on this basis, the case was taken up as a vital matter of personal character and reputation, and as far as possible the co-operation of the home was enlisted in the procedure toward im- provement. Thus the school changed over from an in- stitution of autocratic authority, manifested through set rules and formulas upon a theoretically passive body of pupils, to a 20th century co-operative commu- nity, the autocrats gradually replaced, and the Student body growing into conscious activity. The forerunner of the present ROTC made its ap- pearance in the '80's. The organization, known as the Cadet Corps, was started by William C. Sharpstein Qlater to become a well-known San Francisco attorney? in 1882. At first it was a volunteer company without uniforms or rifles. After joining the National Guard, the State of California furnished the group with blue uniforms such as the Union infantry had worn in the - LOWELL HIGH 1893 Bottom row: Samuel Weil, Abe Rosenberg, Melville Lubosch, Harvey Marnir. Row two: I-I. F. Hamada, M. Blank- enstein, John McKee, Nathan Cahn, Honser Borishey, George Cleary, Henry Miller. Row three: Olga Von der Leith, Guerdon Hitton, Abbie Sheridan, Edna Aldersley, Florence Wyman, Grace Merry, Calbie Plunkett, Maggie Kennedy, Edith M. Pooley, Nettie Forbes. Row four: john Varney, Wm. Ede, Robert Hector, Lou Bell, Wm. Leurs, Mathew Harris, Wendell Brooks, Frank Dowbrowsky, Zerah Y. Howard, joseph Mathews, Robert Coulter. Top row: J. Rosenberg, Martin Meyer, Bailey Terrill, Emil Peters, McDonald, Sigmond Hess, Wfalter Rogers, E. Ferrea, Abe Meyer, Ernest Brand, Wesley Scott. FOOTBALL TEAM OF 1890-91 Lowell's lirst championship football team of 189091 consisted of the following: Top row: Charles Mish, Marc Anthony, George Dwyer flater fullback and captain of the varsity at Cornellj, Quinn, Miller, William Belcher, Thomas K. Code flater became one of Stanford's most famous quarterbacksl, and Milton D. Grosh iplayed end for Stanfordl. Middle row: Max Rosenfeld, William R. Dorr, Guy Kennedy fquarterback on the first U.C. team to play Stanfordj, Herbert L. Gunn, and Robjert M. Wilson. Reclining in ffoni: Morton R. Gibbons. Not pictured but on the squad were Baldwin, Painter, William E. Stuart, John F. Sheehan jr., Hall, and Edwin R. Zion. Civil War. The boys also received the old Springfield model rifles of that war with the long stocks and long bayonets at the end. ln 1898 the Lowell Cadet Corps was mustered into the Spanish-American War along with other California Guardsmen, and quite a few of the boys saw service in the Philippines. The Cadets were disbanded after the Spanish-American War and did not become a School activity until November, 1915, when Major joseph P. Norse, an instructor in history, Greek, and Latin reorganized an ROTC group at Lowell. The athletic program was started in the 1890's. An informal football league was organized in 1890 be- tween Hopkins Academy, Oakland High, Berkeley High, Alameda High, and Boys' High, with the latter taking the championship honors. An intramural program was going strong at the high school in the fall of 1893 with the various classes competing in a variety Of sports. The following year an organized Semi-Annual Inter-Class Field Day was held and became an established activity in the school. Lowell began a formal, full-scale interschool pro- gram in 1894 when the School joined the newly or- ganized Academic Athletic League. The A.A.L. in- cluded high schools from all Over the Bay Area and held its first field day on October 20, 1894. Oakland and Lowell fought it out for the championship with Oakland coming out on top. Lowell was more success- ful in bicycle racing, winning the first league meet in 1896, League 'baseball also began that year with Low- M ell losing out in the finals. The football league was started in '97, but it was not until 1900 that the Low- ell gridders, coached by Fielding H. Hurry-Upn Yost, were able to annex their first A.A.L. football cham- pionship. Physical education for the girls also became a reality, in the face of some strong opposition, during the l9O'S. Under the leadership of Miss Susan Kingsbury, ar- rangements were made with the Mission YMCA for Lowell girls to use that organizations facilities every Tuesday and Thursday after school and On Saturday mornings. Activities began in October, 1897, with basketball as the main sport along with some participa- tion in tennis. School clubs also became a recognized activity of the high school during the '90's. Probably the first group to receive this recognition was the Surveying Class. A group of boys taking the English Course in the Class of 1890 wanted to learn something about surveying, so they met as a group after school hours and worked on this activity along with their school work. The Lowell High Debating Society, which has continued down to the present day under the name of the Forensics Society, started in 1892 with Mr. F. H. Clark and Mr. E. A. Kellogg as the sponsors. Through the years this society has 'won more trophies and other honors than any activtiy at Lowell. Another early group was the Kappa Epsilon Club, organized in 1897 as the schoOl's first literary and social club by the members of the Greek Class of '98. CLASS OF JUNE, 1888 HARRY s. ALLEN HARRY A. ANDREWS BLANCHE L. BATES WALTER D. BLISS GEORGE D. BLOOD THOMAS D. BOARDMAN EDWARD BRANDENSTEIN CHARLES H. BRYAN MAURICE CAVANAGH MARY B, CLAYES ROBERT D. COHN JERRY J. CUDWORTH MARVIN CURTIS NELLIS R. DOWNIE OSCAR ELLINGHOUSE ALFRED I. ESBERG LOXWELL A. EUGLEY JOHN B. FRITSCHI PHILIP GODLEY LOUIS GOLDSTONE JAMES H. GRAY MABEL HALL ALICE HANKS ISADORE HARRIS CHARLES W. HASELTINE WILLIAM T. HESS EDWARD T. HOUGHTON ALEXANDER s. JARVIE ISHITARO KATSUKI ALBERT G. LANG XVILLIAM LEUBBERT ALBERT W. LYsER MINNIE MCKINNON SAMUEL MEYER CHARLES G. MICHENER THOMAS s. MOLLOY ROBERT H. MORROW JOHN B. PALMER JOHN s. PARTRIDGE JOHN T. PIDWELI. HENRY P. RETHERS I.OUIS SAMUELS JEWSUKE SHIMATA ALoNzO SLAVEN THEODORE s. SOLOMONS BURBANK G. SOMERS FRANK A. SOMERS WALLACE L. THOMPSON GEORGE TOPLITZ ARTHUR C. TURNER CLASS OF 1889 ALBERT ADLER MELVILLE s. BADT EUGENE H. BARKER IRMA BARKER ETHEL R, BRADSHAXV WM. I. BROBECK JAS. A. BROWN WILLARD E. BURR ALLEN M. CARPENTER W. MORRIS CARPENTER MAIDA CASTLEHUN BERTRAM H. COFFIN IDA A. COHEN GEO. W. CONROY FRANK C. DEACON ROY R. DEMPSTER WILL DENMAN JOHN A. FAULL. JR. GEO. H. FOULKS JAMES M. GAMBLE HARRY P. HAMMOND KATHERINE v. C. HARKER RALPH L. HATHORN ARTHUR C. HIXON FRANCES B. JOLLIFFE ALFRED C. KELLEHER LILLIE E. KEYS JESSE KOSHLAND DORVILLE LIBBY, JR. ELMO B. LIEB ALFRED S. LOWRY BURNS MCDONALD J. A. MARSH ROBERT E. NEWMAN HARRY M. PENTERGAST LLOYD N. PERT EDWIN C. PHELPS MURRAY A. POTTER HENRY E. RAYMOND LORING P. RIXFORD RICHARD SCHMIDT BENNO SCHUCKING FRANK M. SIMPSON ARTHUR W. STAUFFER H, N. STETSON HERBERT C. TILDEN MELVILLE S. TOPLITZ LAWRENCE E. VAN WINKIE ALBERT VILLAIN IRVIN J. XVIEL 31 CLASS OF 1890 WILLIAM M. ABBOTT MARY G. ALLEN HUGO K. ASHER ABRAHAM BERGLUND ABE M. BIENENFELD H. HOLBROOK BLINN SANFORD BLUM EDWARD H. BOYEN CHARLES BRANDENSTEIN H. HARDING BRAUN XVALTER B. BURNER ALBERT E. CHANDLER ELINOR A. CONDON JOSEPH E. CUTTEN EUGENE L. CUTTING JOSEPHINE DOWNEY WILLIAM J. DREW' HARRY S. DUTTON THOMAS EAGLESON STELLA B. EVERE TT CLARENCE L. FEUSIER HARRY S. FISHER MCCOY FITZGERALD LYMAN D. FOSTER HELEN B FRANK ELLA B. GLAZIER COSMOS GLOVER LEO W. GOLDSTONE SAMUEL GOSLINSKY MABEL GRAY STELLA GREENEBAUM BERTHELET H. HAXVKS CLARENCE L. HELLER MARTIN J. HELLER E. CLARENCE HOLMES WALTER S. HYDE STANLEY H, JACKSON ANGIE JACOBSON MARGUERITA T. KEOUGH LEON H. KRONTHAL ' HERBERT KULLMAN ARTHUR LACKMAN EDGAR M. LEVENTRITT JOHN F. MADDEN 1 I DAVID C. MANHEIM JOSEPH C. MEYERSTEIN HAMILTON L. MOULDER MABEI. L. NELSON ALFRED NEWMAN HARRY A. NOBLE SAMUEL F. POND ALFRED E. RAAS WALTER B. ROUNDTREE EDGAR L. ROURKE MAURICE V. SAMUELS EDWARD A. SELFRIDGE, JR. MARY E. SHAW E. LOUIS SHEPPARD LEON M. SOLOMONS ANITA D. SYMMES WALTER F. TERRY DAVID W. TODD AUGUSTA VESARIA LILIAN VESARIA NEWTON B. WALLER WILLIAM D. WATSON CHARLES A. WECK EDWIN W. WEIL HENRY WEIL CLYDE C. WESTOVER ALLAN K. WILSON EVERETT I. WILSON W. HOFFNER WINTERBERG HARRY M. WRIGHT EDWIN R. ZION AL ZOBEL CLASS OF 1891 ROSE ADLER ALMA ALBIN HERBERT W. ALLEN JEANETTE ANDERSON JESSIE M. ANDERSON HERBERT M. ANTHONY MARC ANTHONY BENJAMIN APPLE WILLIAM R. ARNOLD LIDA BALDWIN GIUSEPPI BIANCHI ARTHUR BRAND MYRTILE CERF EMILY M. CHAQUETTE TERENCE v. COLLIGAN CARRIE E. COLLINS EDWARD M. COMYNS FRANCES COOK HARVEY W. CORBETT CHARLES M. CROSS ROBINSON CROWELL WILLIAM R. DORR EMIL B. DREYEUS JOHN DUFF MATTIE DUNN WILLIAM R. ECKART 32 The first school publication, The Lowell, made its appearance in january, 1898. It was a 52-page monthly publication containing literary efforts of the students, editorials, sports news, a society column, and general school news. Lowell High School's musical organizations had their 'birth in 1902. The first school orchestra was formed that year. A Boys' Glee and finally a Girls, Glee Club were Started in 'O4. Student government at Lowell had its beginnings in 1898 when those students interested in athletics formed the Lowell High School Athletic Association. Representatives from all boys' Sports and the girls, basketball team had regular meetings to try and unify the sports program. Any student in the school could join the association by paying dues of 10 cents a month. In 1905 the athletic organization was disbanded and a new group, the Lowell High School Student Asso- ciation, was formed with delegates from all school ac- tivities, including class representatives, as Part of the board of directors. Since that date the students, with faculty guidance and supervision, have had the chief responsibility for extra-curricular activities. The turn of the century also saw important changes in school routine. In 1899 graduation exercises be- came semi-annual with the first winter class graduating in December of that year. In 1901 the curriculum was changed to a four-year course of study. For that reason the Class of December, 1903, included only seven graduates. These students had decided that they wished to complete only the three-year course and were al- lowed to do so. On April 18, 1906, the history of Lowell High School almost came to a conclusion when the city was rocked 'by an earthquake, followed by a fire that destroyed a huge portion of the city. Fortunately, the fire was halted at Van Ness Avenue and most of the Western Addition, including Lowell, escaped the flames. However, school activities came to a stand- still. A great many of the students were homeless and either moved elsewhere or dropped out of school to cope with their family problem of establishing a new San Francisco home. For a while the city government was forced to use the school for purposes other than schooling. Lowell became the police station of the area. As the june, 1906, edition of The Lowell stated it, Lowell dis- carded the sable robe of knowledge for the snowy draperies of justice and law. She threw open her 'classic halls, to the representatives of that goddess un- der whose dominion she was proud to Serve. The prin- cipal's Sanctum became the Sanctum of him who cap- tains the blue-clad guardians of the peace. In the class- room the judges dispensed justice to the trespasser of the law. judge Mogan held court in Room 8-that room for the last year the shelter of the departing classes of june, 1906. Ought we not be proud that while her children were exiled from her walls the des- tiny of the city was insured by that preservation of its peace which emanated from old Lowell? Graduation exercises were a bit different in june of 1906, too. All of the grammar schools, the evening high school, and the day high schools held a joint commencement exercise at the Music Stand in Golden Gate Park. Instead of the long-awaited senior ball, which had been planned for the Palace Hotel, the class held a picnic over in Marin County with some of the members of the class including a hike to the top of Mt. Tamalpais. Since 1900 the school's facilities have been taxed to their utmost with over-crowded classes being the rule. Finally a bond issue for a new Lowell was autho- rized in 1904. However, it was an unsuccessful at- tempt. In 1908 another -bond issue was placed before the voters, and this time funds were made available for the new high School. As yet the location for a new school had not been decided, When the movement for the new school first got underway, the proposed site was LaFayette Square. At the time of the bond issue, the understanding was that the new school would be CADETS OF '98 filling: Second Lieutenant Walter Buttenbach, Captain Charles Garfield Bartlett, and First Lieutenant Monroe E. Deutsch. Standing: Corporal Ed Adler, Sergeant Leonard Simon, Bugler Ed Worth, Corporal Kirke Sim son, Sergeant Alex Adler, Sergeant Harold Manor, Corporal Rolla Drake, Corporal Shirley Walker, Corporalp Sid Go dman, Corporal Winn Davidson, Corporal George Belden, and Corporal Hart Greensfelder. LOWELL JUNIOR CLASS - 1900 Row une: C, Doolittle, W. Boerike, R. Rherlow. Raw two .' A. McNic0l, J. Frank, A. Bush, C. Maryansky, C. Marks, L. Branch, Mr. Young, teacher, Cformer governor of Californiaj, H. Hoffman. Row three: E. Everts, M. Newheld, H. Wollenberg, A. Vail, E. Lee, H. Haber, Cno name.j. Rauf four: E. Young, H. Ruggles, L. Bufford, W. Rowley, B. Wollenberg, E, Purvine, J, DeBruhl. located on Octavia Street between Sutter and Bush. The city architect then went ahead with plans to 'build at Gough and Washington. There was a strong move- ment, headed by the faculty, to locate the school near Bush and Hyde Streets. An entire city block was avail- able on Hayes Street, between Ashbury and Masonic, so this is where the school was finally located. The present Lowell High School opened its doors in January of 1915, and the school was formally dedi- cated and the cornerstone laid on February 22, which is the birthday of James Russell Lowell as well as that of George W'ashington. Under the cornerstone were placed twenty-one documents concerning Lowell High including class lists and curriculum information. Su- perintendent Of Schools Alfred Roncovieri made the principal address. He said, in part, It belongs to schools like Lowell to cultivate a communal idealism, which will lift our city above merely sordid attain- ments and encourage it to center its desires upon a higher, richer value of life. Another impressive talk was given by Dr. Barbara Nachtrieb, representing the faculty, on the significance and the ideals of Lowell. After moving into their new building, Lowellites were pleased to discover that it contained a cafeteria, the first school cafeteria established in San Francisco. The caf', which was located at the front of the build- ing on the basement floor, opened on January 6. The staff had made preparations to handle 200 students, but before the lunch period was over, 400 pupils had taken advantage Of the opportunity to buy a good in- expensive lunch right at school Qaverage cost was 15 cents for boys and 11 cents for girlsj. Certain business organizations throughout the city expressed concern over the schOol's new commercial endeavor, and the North of Panhandle Improvement Club screamed, Undemocratic and Unfair competition' when the school opened an ice cream, soda water, and candy counter in August of 1913. Mayor James Rolph was called upon to investigate the dispute, and after in- specting the Lowell facilities and talking with im- provement club members, satisfied everyone by de- claring the cafeteria planned no further expansion and that it was a worthwhile new addition to the school system. Since then the school cafeteria has become an accepted part of schools at all levels in all parts of the country. The students quickly adjusted themselves in their new building, and the academic and activities program that had been carried on in the Sutter Street school continued to function and expand. The year 1915 saw increased interest in a new gadget called a radio. This brought about the organization of a Radio Club to challenge the popularity of the Reading Club, the Glee Club, and the Debating Club. In this same year The Lowell changed from a monthly magazine to a bi- weekly newspaper, in which form it has continued to the present day. The athletic program was expanding too, with the introduction of a rowing team and inter- class competition in swimming and tennis. And, when Lowellites were not busy with school, there was always the Pan-Pacihc Exposition out in the Marina District with its multitude of wonderful events. A hazing incident in 1916 almost ended all student rule at Lowell. On January 18 of that year the Board of Education passed a ruling abolishing all student control of activities and forbidding the collection of any GEORGE B. EDGAR SIDNEY M. EHRMAN MAYBELLE L. FEUSIER R. Y. FITZGERALD OSCAR H. FOLKERS HENRY S. FOOTE, JR. MORTON R. GIBBONS RUTH GILKYSON MORTIMER A. GOOKDIND MILTON D. GROSH EDWIN O. HAN WM. H. HAMILTON MANTON E. HAMMOND I-IENRIETTA M. HOLLAND LOUIS HONIG ALBERT J. HOUSTON GEORGE JOST N. KEDROLOVANSKY GUY R. KENNEDY EDGAR E. KLAUBER MAX LICHTENSTEIN CLARENCE M. LEAVY PAUL B. MANI-IEIM HATSUO MANO MAXWELL MCNUTT ARTHUR R. MEUSSORFFER SEIZO MISAKI EDWIN H. NORMAN ALLAN M. OSBORN SIG OTTENHEIMER P. I-I. QUINN MINNIE B. REYNOLDS EMILY P. RHINE FREDERICK D. RITCHIE CARRIE E. RIXFORD KATHERINE W. ROOT MAX L. OSENFELD SIGMUND SALOMAN EDITH SAMSON XVM. H. G. SCHULTE ARTHUR SELLER MABEL V. SMITH EDITH R. STEVENSON ERNEST J. STRACHAN WM. E. STUART OSCAR SUTRO S. ALBERTA SWAN WHITMAN W. SYMMES G. T. TANAKA CASPER W. TYLER HISANASUKE UKAI FLORA S. UPTON HAROLD VON DER LEITH SEYMOUR WATERHOUSE ELIAS H. WIEL J. ROBERT WILSON ALLEN G. WRIGHT K. S. YAMAGISHI CLASS OF MAY. 1892 JULIA L. BARKI-IAUs ROY BARNEY OLIVE s. BARTLETT IIARRIET E. BIENENEELD FRANCES E. BINGHAM AGNES BOWMAN LUCY BRADSHAW PHILIP L. BUSH ALICE M. BUTLER MILTON cHOYNsKI ETI-IEL CLEMENT JEssIE H. cox J. EARLY CRAIG ELIZABETIHI E. CUDWORTH SAMUEL D. DAVIS IDA DENICKE GEORGE E. DEVINE ANNIE E. DONOVAN GERALDINE G. DONOVAN VINCENT DONOVAN EDITH J. DUFFY GEORGE P. DYER ARTHUR J. EAOLEsoN MILTON H. EsBERo XVILLARD B. FEATI-IERSTONE HERBERT E. FISHBECK XVILLIAM GILLOGLEY JESSIE L, GORDON ARTHUR W. GRAY STEPHEN HAMMOND JULIAN HART EDITH HECI-IT CLARA HENRY CHARLES L. HILDDERBRECHT AIMEE HIRSTEL DORA HUFSCI-IMIDT POWER I-IUTCHINS H. A. JACOBS EMILY E. KING GEORGE B. LITTLEFIELD STELLA LOCAN MARTHA LOEWI GEORGE D. LOUDERBACK H. HARVEY LOY CECIL MACLEAN ELIZABETH MCDONALD EUGENE MEYER ALMA MICHALITSCHKE . CHARLES H. MILLER EDWARD MILLER CHARLES MISH A, L. MULLER ETHEL MURPHY SAM L. NAPHTALY JOSEPH O'CONNOR FERDINAND J, PECK EMMA PETERSEN WILLIAM PLUNKETT GUY W. RANSOM EDWARD G. RIDEOUT RAvONE R. ROGERS ELIZABETH SANDERSON FRANK E. SAXVYER MABEL SYMMES JOHN J. VAN NOSTRAND EMILE WHITE CHARLES M. WHITNEY WILLIAM S. WRIGHT ESTELLE M. YOUNG JOHANNA ZELINSKY cLAss or MAY. 1893 AGNES ADAMSON RUDOLPH c. ALTSCHUL GIOVANNI BACIGALUPI BEATRICQE BADT SELMA BADT ERNEST BAUGH HENRY R, BELL BERYL B. BISHOP MARGUERITE BLAKE LENA R. BLANCHARD LOUIS F. BLOCH HERBERT M. BUTLER EDNA CADXWALADER GERTRUDE CAMPBELL HOWARD C. CHADBOURNE JULIA COFFEY WILLIAM E. COLE CHARLES F. CRAIG JESSI CRANSTON TRACY R. CRAWFORD NORRIS K. DAVIS EDGAR M, DINKELSPIEL EMILY DRUM FABIUS T. FINCH EDWARD FISKE ALICE FRANK ELLIS W. R. FURBUSH EDWARD GIRZIKOXVSKY LOUIS GROSS GEORGE G. HALEY EDWIN C. HAMMER FRED C. HART ALICE M. HEALY E. FRANK HENRY EDWARD HOHFIELD GUSTAv A. HUEBNER MARY C. HUNTINGTON SOLOMON HYMAN FLORENCE INGALSBE ROMILDA JUDELL EUGENE P. KENNEDY ROBERT A. KINZIE AMANDA KRENZ SYLVAIN J, LAZARUS EDITH J. LINDSAY DANIEL J. MCCARTHY ELEANOR G. MFEWEN FRANK L. MCLELLAN JACOB S. MEYER ELSIE I.. MORAGHAN JAMES MURPHY RICHARD NEXYMAN SILVIO J. ONESTI HOMER C. PARKER CHARLES PATTON GERTRUDE PAUSON LEON E. PRESCOTT PALMYRE RAAS EI.I.IS N. RANDALL AMELIA ROSENTHAL ERWIN L. SAEDLER ELLA M. SCHNEIDER ADELE SCHXVARZSCHILD DAISY SCHXVEITZER XVILLIAM H. SCOTT MELVILLE SILVERBERG ANITA SLEEPER GEORGE SLEEPER GODFREY SMITH CHARLES A. SON MAY SOULE ARTHUR STETSON ALICE TAYLOR MAGGIE M. THOMAS OSCAR TOBRINER JESSIE G. TURNER BELLE VAN VLACK EDA VOLKMANN WILLIAM VOORSANGER DOUGLAS S. WATSON LUCIRETIA E. XVATSON ADOLPH L. WEIL EDWARD P. WOLF FRANKLIN B. XYORLEY LEAH S. YOUNG 34 student dues. This action, which meant the end of ath- letics, the school orchestra, and all school clubs, was appealed by the students who received strong support from alumni and Mayor Rolph. A few days later, the Board of Education advanced the necessary money to continue the athletic program, and a short while later granted permission for the school to continue an ac- tivities program. Other major events of that year were the organization of an ROTC program which has con- tinued to the present time, the beginning of a cam- paign for the construction of a new auditorium, and the transfer of Frederick Clark to the principalship of Mission High School. Francis Crofts, an instructor at Lowell since 1891, was elevated to Mr. Clark's former role of vice principal. School activities during 1917 and 1918 became of secondary importance after the outbreak of World War I. Many of the boys left school to volunteer for some branch of the service and joined the 600 mem- bers of the Lowell alumni who were already in the armed forces. Other students became active in Red Cross work, basket campaigns, paper drives, sweater knitting groups, and food conservation programs. Dur- ing one campaign for the Red Cross and Belgium Relief, Lowell students raised a total of 85,140 An influenza epidemic was a further complication in 1918, forcing the school to close down for a six-week period. Fol- lowing the Armistice, the Thrift Stamp Drive con- tinued for awhile with 322,689.28 in stamps being Sold in the final effort. Mr. Morton resigned the principalship in 1919 after serving the school in that capacity Since 1888, Mr. Clark, a former Lowell Student, history teacher, and vice principal of the school between 1888 and 1916, was recalled from Mission High to become the new Lowell principal. Another administrative change took place in the following year with the creation of a new position, that of dean of girls. Miss Eugenie Lacoste, who had been a teacher at Mission under Mr. Clark, was given the assignment. Miss Lacoste served in this capacity until 1946, during which time she Su- pervised the collection of Student body and class dues and acted as Sponsor of the Shield and L along with her other duties. As arbiter of dress and morals for the girls, Miss Lacoste faced two minor rebellions during the 192O's. On February 7, 1925, she decreed that no make-up would be worn in school, including lip-stick. Every morning the unhappy girls would pause a block away from school to remove all traces of make-up. Each day there would be another pause after leaving the A.A.L. CHAMPION LOXYIELL TRACK TEAM OF 1907 Row one: Reynolds MCI-lenry, George Maundrell, Pete Ibos. Ran' Mm: Douglass Barrows, Frank Bressi, j. Marion Read. Harold Bones Meyer. Henry Honey Raphael. Rau' fbrue: Floyd Clark, George Hammer, Clifford Jones, Wfallace Mitchell, Bill McRae, and Thomas Boarman Smith. Ron' four: F. N. Scatena, Franklin Lee, Ray- mond Flinn. school grounds while the girls repainted their faces. In August of 1928 a number of girls were sent home for coming to school barelegged, with instructions to return properly dressed. Long white or black stock- ings were the accepted attire of the period. One girl cited a ruling of Attorney General 'Webb, who had ruled in a similar dispute. Short stockings could be worn as long as their legs are clean, she challenged. Miss Lacoste informed the young lady, as she sent her on her way home, Mr, Webb is not running Lowell Highft Parents too, had some difficulty with the Lowell ad- ministration during the twenties, On February 24, 1921, a group of mothers, who had been meeting in private homes, petitioned Principal Clark for recogni- tion. He refused to sanction a Lowell Mothers Club, as he could see no need for such an organization. How- ever, he finally relented and gave his official blessings to the group in May of the same year. First PTA offi- cers were Mrs. Harriet H. Somers, president, Mrs. Carl Geilfus, vice president, Mrs. William Weichart, sec- retary, Mrs. Edmund Bath, treasurer, Mrs. C. Tietjen, corresponding secretary g and Mrs. H. L. Lobb, inan- cial secretary, The group affiliated with the San Fran- cisco Congress of Mothers and Parent-Teacher Asso- ciations in 1924 with 59 parents and teachers enrolled as charter members. First Lowell president under the charter was Mrs. F. W. Bradley. Since that time the PTA has been one of Lowell's most active and gen- erous organizations. Gifts to the student body from the PTA, in just the past few years, include money for library books and scholarships, a tape recorder, a piano, uniforms for the band, football blankets, and an elec- trical score board for the gym. Another Lowell activity, Gift Day, had its start in 1921 and was a popular event for a number of years. A group of students decided to observe Lowell's birth- day each year by making some improvement to the school. The initial project was a major overhaul. It included digging up the entire court and yard so that these areas could be used for athletic events, dancing, and other activities. The low seniors bought a new fence. The juniors bought 'bricks for a border around the court. The sophomores bought basketball goals, 1911 ORCHESTRA Row one: Seidkin. Row two: Miss Waibel, Elkins, Miss H. E. Math- ews, Rainey. Top row: Willats. Miss Bredesen, Miss Elkins, Miss Dolan, Miss H. Mathews, Miss Davies, Leister. Busse. and the freshmen contributed money to buy tools. The senior boys gave up their summer vacation to do the construction and resurfacing work with the senior girls providing the moral support and lunches every day for the workers, John McLaren, creator of Golden Gate Park, aided the project bygiving the school sev- eral hundred plants and shrubs for the court and hav- ing his gardeners plant them, The athletic program underwent a major change in 1921 when American football replaced rugby in the high schools. From that time football has managed to keep its ranking as the most popular school sport. In 1922 the girls' athletic program received two additions with the organization of a girls' crew and a girls' rifle team. The latter activity lasted only a few years, but the ROTC boys became interested in a rifle team and have maintained one right up to the present. A new course was added to the school curriculum in 1923 when dramatics was offered as a regular course with Mrs. Mary McDonald as the instructor. The fol- lowing year Mr. Samuel Polland took over the dra- matics department and is still serving in that capacity. Prevous to this time the school plays had been pro- duced under the sponsorship of the Reading Club as an all-student activity. Katherine Stone, Edith Pegice and Bess McArthur 191 . CLASS OF 1894 JESSIE M. ANDRUSS ADOLPH BAER GIOVANNI BACIGALUPI MARIE BARMAN FLORENCE E. BARNARD CENVFENNIA BARTO J. W. BEHRENDT JOHN J. BELSER SPENCER BISHOP EDWARD J. BROAD H. M. BLOCK GLENN BOVARD HELEN C. BOVARD ARMAND E. BRIGGS CHARLES M. BUFFORD T. CARMANY PAUL CASTELHUN BRUCE CORNWALL LILLIE CURLEY ARTHUR DANNENBAUM GRACE E. DIBBLE GEORGE P. DILLMAN KATE DONOVAN VERONICA A. DUFFICY ALMA E. DUFFY EMILY M. DYER T. F. EASTMAN GEORGE E. EBRIGHT P. A. EDGAR JOHN N. ELBERT EMILY M. ENGIVER MAURICE L. EUPHRAT ELLA FINK AGNES FLINT GEORGE S. FOLLANSBEE LAURA FRANK RUDOLPH FRANK JOHN M. GARFIELD ANSON M. GEORGE ADOLPHUS E. GRAUPNER ELSIE M. GUTHRIE MATILDA H. HAACK FRANK HANDLEY LOUISA E. HAYES LAWRENCE HOFFMAN MATAU ISHIZAKA ALICE P. JACKSON MALVINA JUDELL C. F. KIMBALI. CAMERON H. KING AGNES H. KNERR RANAR B. KNOX ' CELIA LEWISON BENJAMIN P. LILIENTHAL JOSEPH W. LEGGETT JULIUS N. LOHSE AGNES LYNCH DONALD MACLEAN H. L. McFARLAND LEWIS S. MEAD CLARKE MCCLISH MAY McKINLEY PHILIP C. MEYER BE-SSIE B. MURRAY M. NAKAMURA HARRY C. NEWMAN H. M. NEWMARK HARRY A. OVERSTREET ROLLIN K. PAGE LILLIAN PARKER W. N. PARRISH E. B. PERRIN ELLIOTT H. PIERCE ALDEN F. POTTER HENRY B. QUINAN WILLIAM F. RAMBO HATTIE REYMAN H, C. ROWLEY OSCAR SAMUELS NATHANIEL SANDERS CHARLOTTE SANDERSON MILTON SCHMITT MARY SCOTT BERENICE SCOVILLE DAISY R. SIMON ROY V. SIMPSON OTIS B. SPAULDING F. W. STADTMULLER CLARA M. STARK CARRIE STERN G. A. THEUREKAUF FRANK P. THOMAS EFFIE E. URQUHART GUY VAN SCHAICK W. E. voN DER LIETH LAWRENCE T. WAGNER ARTHUR WALDHEIMER THORNTON WATSON E. L. WEMPLE JR. BERTIN A. WEYL CLASS or June, 1a9s Josie ABRAHAM EDNA ALDERSLEY NANNETTE AMES FREDERIC J. ARMSTRONG w. H. BACHELDER EDWARD BAUMEISTER 1 1 1 35 4 ROBERT BELCHER EDNA BLUM EDITH BONNELL ERNEST BRAND BENJAMIN BROOKS JOHN K. BURKE ELSIE BURR PAUL CASTELHUN EMILIE CERF ESTHER CHAMBERLAIN HERBERT E. CLAYBURGH LOUISE N. CROCKER HARRY J. CROSS RALPH C. DANIELS NICHOLAS A, DENVIR OLIVER DIBBLE JENNIE DONNELLY EDWIN DOW NELSON A. ECKART WILLIAM EDE VIRGINIA ENGLISH SAUL EPSTEIN PERRY EVANS BESSIE FALVEY PHILIP J. FRANKLIN JESSIE E. FRETZ HOWARD FRIEDILANDER HARRY C. GAMAGE WALTER K. GIBBONS HARRY H. HEDGER SIGMUND HESS CHARLES J. HOUSTON WILLIAM H. HOUSTON ZERAH Y. HOWARD STANLEY INGALSBE HARRY J. KALISKY CONSTANCE LAWRENCE CALEB LEVENSALER EDWARD J. LYNCH JAMES A. MCKENZIE HARVEY Le F. MARVIN CORNELIA MCKINNE DONALD MCLAREN ALICE MEDINA EDNA B. McLELLAN ABE L. MEYER MARTIN A. MEYER HENRY M. MILLER CLARA MORDECAI JOSEPH J. PHILLIPS JOSEPH F. POHEIM JOHN H. POLHEMUS EDITH M. POOLEY SAXTON POPE CORA J. READ ABE ROSENBERG LELAND ROSENER BESSIE ROTHERMEL ALFRED C. RULOFSON LIONEL S. SCHMITT CHARLES A. SCHROTH WESLEY SCOTTT GUERDON SITTON WOODLEY B. SMITH ABBIE E. SOULE HORATIO W. STEBBINS WILLIAM E. STEVENS EARL SWAN HAROLD S. SYMMES LUCIA B. THOMPSON NELSON THOMPSON OLGA von der LEITH SAMUEL C. WIEL MORTON WOOD GEORGE J. YOUNG MINNIE H. YOUNG JOHN ZEILE CLASS OF 1896 RUDOLPH ABENHEIM FRANK w. AITKEN PHILIP B. ANSPACHER WILLIAM G. ANTONOVICH DAVID BACIGALUPI HERBERT BAILEY PERRY BOYER FREDERICK D. BOESE ANNETTE BRADSHAW LOUIS E. BREITSTEIN CLARENCE BRETHERICK LAURA CARMANY CLIFTON F. CHEMINANT LESTER B. CHEMINANT NETTIE CHEVRET FRANK COAKLEY ROBERT H. COLLINS JESSE C. COLMAN ARTHUR J. CROCKER HOSAPHER DANIEL MARY w. DENMAN CHARLOTTE de ROCHEMONT ROBERT W. DODD HAROLD R. EBRIGHT GEORGE P. FARLEY ISIDORE GOLDEN HENRY C. GRIGSBY OTTO H. HAHN CLARA HAMILTON 36 Publications also underwent a reorganization in 1923. Up until this time the staff of The Lowell had published a special edition in magazine form every six months to serve the dual purpose of school yearbook and literary magazine. After this, The Lowell staff pub- lished only regular editions of the school newspaper, and a separate staff was organized to publish the an- nual. The yearbook also received a new name, The Red and While, and eliminated the literary section of the book. Lowell High School had barely finished celebrating its tenth anniversary at the I-Bayes Street location when the first cries for a Hnew Lowell were raised. It was pretty generally agreed that the present site was not adequate to properly perform the functions of a mod- ern high school. The plant contained an auditorium that could barely seat 25 per cent of the student body, no library, inadequate classroom and office space, and no room for the construction of an athletic plant. A Board of Education announcement that a new high school was to be constructed at 18th and Anza and named Park-Presidio High School, and which would eventually take the place of Lowell, brought hundreds of protests from Lowell students and alumni. An alumni group organized for the purpose of pushing the Ewing Field site, on Masonic near Geary, as the logical spot for a new Lowell. In 1925 the PTA added their support to the alumni and organized a Lowell High School site and building committee to further this plan. Several sessions between the Lowell PTA and the Board of Education brought forth the an- nouncement by Superintendent of Schools Joseph M. Gwinn that the Lowell High School would be con- structed between 30th and 32nd Avenue from Geary to Balboa streets. This building was to be completed in 1929, at which time the present Lowell 'building was to be converted into a junior high school. By March of 1927 these Plans had been tabled and Low- ell's PTA was again petitioning the Board of Educa- tion for a new school site. At one of the PTA meetings, 600 persons signed a petition requesting the Board to reconsider Ewing Field as the home of a new Lowell. When the Ewing Field site was no longer available, the alumni and PTA groups started a Search for an- other possible location. In November of 1934 the Lowell PTA, headed by Mrs. Joseph Garry and Thomas D. Aitken, urged the Board of Education to consider the cemetary site between Turk and Geary and Arguello and Parker for a new Lowell. In describ- ing the present Lowell cafeteria and gyms, the com- mittee used the term regular dungeons and pointed out that the school had six showers for girls and six for boys and an enrollment of 2300 students. During the next several years, badly needed school construction in the outlying districts prevented the Board of Education from giving any further considera- tion to a new Lowell building. Thequestion was re- vived in 1944 when the Board authorized the Super- intendent of Schools to locate a new Lowell site, with the Laurel Hill Cemetary as a suggested area. On June 5, 1945, the Board authorized purchase of a new 31,250,000 Lowell. But, once again funds were needed elsewhere and no new Lowell was constructed. The current drive for a new Lowell High School, on school property located near Lake Merced, was accele- rated in 1953. At that time a petition containing 8,655 signatures was presented to the Board asking for the above mentioned site for a new Lowell which would be a four-year, non-districted, academic institution. In 1955 the Committee for a new Lowell, under the leadership of Judge John B. Molinari and J. Max Moore, expanded into the Lowell Centennial Com- mittee in order to make plans for celebrating the school's one hundredth birthday, along with keeping the movement for a new Lowell as a live issue. While the alumni and PTA of 1924 and '25 were concerning themselves with future improvements, the students were making the most of the available facili- ties. Along with establishing a fine academic record during the school year, the students were capturing a total of 13 championships in city-wide athletic com- petition. Other activities to occupy the students' time were the Debating Society, the Frank Norris Club, the Chemistry Club, the Biology Club, the Chess and When the great fire spread through San Francisco in 1906, Lowell High School was spared as the flames were halted a few blocks away at Van Ness Avenue. The authorities utilized the school as both a jail and courthouse. Pictured is the main office which became the Police Chief's headquarters. Checkers Club, the Music Club, the Radio Club, the Art Club, the Stamp Club, the Sea Scouts, the Camera Club, the Officers and Sergeants Club, and the Spanish Club. With a few exceptions, these clubs have con- tinued their activities up to the present time. Old time Lowellites were saddened in 1929 when the old Sutter Street Lowell-Boys' High School was torn down. The Board of Education had been using it as a warehouse, but obtained other storage Space l when the building was condemned as a tire hazard. The following year the current Lowellites were sad- dened by the news that Principal Clark was retiring. He was replaced by Francis Crofts, who had been asso- ciated with Lowell for the previous 39 years. Mr. Crofts had come to Lowell in 1891 as a professor of mathe- matics, made the head of the department in 1901, and vice principal in 1916. From the time of the resigna- tion of Principal Morton in 1918 until the appoint- ment of Mr. Clark in 1919, he served as acting prin- cipal of the school. The four years in which Mr. Crofts served the school were filled with activity. First event was the establish- ment of a library in 1931. In February Of that year the partitions between Rooms 204, 205, and 206 were torn out and the area transformed into a library. The library opened On October 31, 1931, with Miss Elizabeth Scott as librarian, and a collection of 3400 books. During the summer bungalows were built in the northwest corner of the school to replace the classroom Space taken up by the new library. Even with the new bungalow classrooms, Lowell had reached the point where it could no longer handle the 2300 students enrolled. SO in the fall of the next year it was necessary to send all members of the fresh- man class to the nearby Denman School for classes. During the following year some of the sophomores, as well as the freshmen, did their studying at Denman. During 1934 all of the Lowell students were re- moved from the Hayes Street building, A series of earthquakes in Southern California had caused serious GLADYS MOORE ELFREDA KELLOGG Cheer leader '26 First Girl Cheer Leader A girls' rifle team was organized in 1922, but was a popular activity for only Il couple of years. damage to Schools in that area and alerted the people of San Francisco to the need for earthquake-proof schools. On january 2, 1934, work was started on Lowell High and 2500 Lowellites were Sent to Galileo for an indefinite period. The Galileo students attended School during the morning hours and the Lowell stu- dents were there in the afternoon. This meant that the building was rarely available for many extra activities. On November 1, 1934, while the construction work was in progress, an 380,000 fire swept through Lowell and almost brought the schoOl's history to an abrupt end. However, firemen were able to get the blaze, which broke out in the upper Hoors of the school, under control and save the school. At first arson was sus- pected, but it was later established that the fire was due to accidental causes. Because of delays caused by the fire, the Lowell stu- dents were still at Galileo in june of 1935 when they were supposed to vacate. Even though Lowell was not ready for use, the students had to leave Galileo as the facilities there were needed to accommodate students from San Francisco junior College who were waiting to occupy their new building. SO in the fall of ,55 the Lowell students were Sent to another high school. This time arch-rival Poly was the new host, and the same half-day session situation continued. In December the information was received at Polytechnic that Lowell's plant would be ready the following month. This was the signal for classes to break up and all of the Lowell students to serpentine their way through the classrooms in celebration of the fact that they were finally return- ing to their own little red schoolhouse. When Lowell opened its doors in january 6, 1936, a new principal was in charge. Leroy H. Stephens, who had been at Lowell since 1909 as an instructor in his- tory and vice principal, was named to succeed the retir- ing Mr. Crofts. Hudson Monroe became the new vice principal. At this time another new organization, the Boys' Block L Society, was formed. lts initial reason for com- ing into being was for the members to serve as traffic boys before and after school. Biggest event of the year, though, was the announcement that 31 50,000 was now available for a new boys! gym. Construction started shortly after that and the gym, located in the northeast HARRY F. HOPPER PEARL HOSSACK JACOB J, HYER MYRA JEFFERS WILL A. JONES LILLIE JOSEPH ALEXANDER M. KIDD MILTON E. LANDS JOSEPH L. LILIENTHAL ANITA LYON ECCLESTON B. MARSH ELIZA MEKINNE ROBERT MOULTHROP JOHN M. O'BRIEN CHARLES A. O'CONNOR FRANK A. PEDLER PERCY PORTERFIELD WALTER PRICHARD MARION RIDING HARRISON L. ROBINSON EARLE E. ROGERS HARRY T. ROONEY GEORGE T, SHAW ALFRED C, SKAIFE WILLIAM J. STOCK WILLIAM D. STUBBS ERROL I.. J. TABER LIDA L. TALCOTT SEIICHI TAMURA NORMAN F. TITUS ETHEL M. WAGNER DORA WIELAND CLASS OF 1897 FRANK C. BAMERT HARRY I. BLACKMAN JAMES C. BLAIR BONIFIELD B. BOWMAN FLORA BRANDENSTEIN EDWARD BRICKELL FRANK BRIDGES ALICE BRUCE ERNEST BRUNE CARL BUNDSCHU VICTOR A. CAGLIERI JEROME M. COLMAN WALTER E. CONLIN ALICE M. COWDERY WILLIAM CRANSTON RENE CULLEN CORNELIUS G. DALL ANDREW DESSOUSLAVY ALVINA EISENMANN JOHN F. ENGLISH LILY FALCK LOUIS FERRARI ALICE E. FOLSOM EDWARD G. FORD MILLS FRASER HENRY A, FRIEDMAN S. FRIEDMAN AMBROSE A. GHERINI ELMA GOIN ALICE HALL FANNY HARRIES FRED B, HART CARL R. HINZ WESLEY N. HOHFELD MYRTLE J. JOSEPH BELLE KALLOCH LEO K. KENNEDY PAUL LEBENBAUM JULIA LESZYNSKY MONROE LEWIS ALBERT LUCHETTI EDITH L. MATTHEWS JOSEPH MAYER AGNES MCDONALD BLANCHE McKAY JAMES D. MEREDITH vINCENzA MILLEDGE ALBERT MOELLER FREDA A. MOORE HERBERT T. MOORE JAMES A. MORGAN EMMA M. NESFIELD MABEL NEWMAN vIOLET NIXON WALTER J. O'BRIEN M. LOUISE O'LAUGHLIN RUDOLPH A. SAELTZER FANNIE M. SANBORN IRVING H. SANBORN GEORGE H. SANDY PAUL F. SCHAFFNER BERTHA M. SHAW GIFFORD SOBEY EDGAR H. STACK DANIEL W. STADTMULLER JESSE STEINHART JOHN F. SWETT AMY TABRETT HENRY T. TICKNER MARION L. TOBRINER LILLIE VERSALOVICH LEON M. VOORSANGER ALBERT M. WALSH ESTELLE WEISHEIMER ADRIENNE WHITE HARRY J . WIEL FRANCES WILLIAMSON LOUIS J. WOERNER JULIA WOLTERS HARRIET O. ZINNS CLASS OF 1898 ALEX ADLER THOMAS AITKEN EMMA ALDERSLEY BLANCHE ANDERSON EDWIN H. ANDREWS TADINI BACIGALUPI WILLIAM B. BARRY GARFIELD C. BARTLETT RALPH BEEDE EDITH F. BERGSON PHILIP A. BILL GERTRUDE BILLINGS EDWARD F. BISHOP FRANK BISHOP H. BONIFIELD MARIE BOROUGH MARY BOWEN EDMUND BOYLE ORLANDO BOZIO WALTER BUETTGENBACH FRED CELLARIUS ALICE M. COLE NETTIE E. COX CLARK M. CRYOR HARRY DANNER MILTON S. DAVIS ALMA G. DAY MONROE E. DEUTSCH WILL R. DURBIN JEROME J. EPPINGER ASLEY R. FAULL JOSEPHINE FORNI GEORGE P. FULLER ULRICH GRAFF LEONARD HART CLARENCE F. HIRSHFELD HENRY A. HOLLZER MILLICENT JACOBS HERBERT L, KIMBALL BERTHA KLAUS BERNICE L. KOPPIKUS OSTROILO S. KUCICH BRUCE LARGE WALTER H. LEVY ROBERT B. MACDONALD FLORENCE A. MARINOVICH LEXIE MCDONALD HERBERT MCDONNELI. CHARLES L. MCKOWN FLORA MCLENNAN JESSIE M. MEIKLE WILLIAM G. MORRISON SAMUEL MURRAY JOSEPH NEWFIELD MARGARET M. NOON GEORGE R. PERKINS ARTHUR W. PERRY ROY D. PICKETT AIMEE A. POLLAK WILLIAM J. ROBERTS HERBERT D. ROTHCHILD W. W. ROTHCHILD PAULINE RYDER ANSLEY K. SALZ BOSXVORTH SAWYER LAURENCE S. SCHOENFELD RHODA SCHOENFELD STANLEY H. SHAFFER ETHEL H. SHUCK BLANCHE SIMON LEONARD SIMON SADDIE P. SMITHSON ROY J. SOMERS WILLIAM B. STADTFELD JAMES F. STRACHAN LEO SUSSMAN GUSTAVE H. TAUBLES SHIRLEY C. WALKER MOULTON WARNER CLASS OF JUNE, 1899 JULIUS AUERBACH BLANCHE A. BARISEAU NICHOLAS J. BARRY ADELAIDE G. BARTLETT EVELYN V. BAUGH HUBERT BAUGH EDGAR A. BEHLOW H. A. BEHRENS FRIDA BERG RENE BINE JEANNETTE BOARDMAN CHARLOTTE E. BRUCE WALTER B. BUNDSCHU EDWARD G. CAHILL WILLIAM P. CAUBU BARRY H. CERF CARL L. COOK 38 STUDENT BODY OFFICERS JUNE 1927 Row one: Sheldon Potter, Treasurerg Lucile Hansen, Vice Presidentg Stephen Garvin, Presidentg and Hamilton Hedge, Secretary. Raw two: Jack Curts, Editor The Lowellg Thomas Schulte, Athletic Managerg Wallace Moore, Manager of Cafeteria, George Chadwick, Business Managerg and Roy Greenfield, Editor The Red and White. corner of the schoolgrounds, was opened and dedi- cated on November 6, 1958. Another new Lowell tradition was established in 1958 when the first performance of the Varieties was presented. Since then this popular variety show has been a highlight of every fall semester. Numerous faculty and students were sporting beards when the spring '39 semester opened. The reason was that males all over San Francisco were growing beards as part of the celebration in connection with the open- ing of the San Francisco World Fair on Treasure Island, which turned out to be a good place to locate any Lowellite during the next two years. War clouds were on the horizon in 1941 with most of the boys being more concerned about the draft than the excitement of graduation. On December 8, 1941, the school was practically deserted as most students stayed home from school to listen to President Roose- velt's declaration of war. Shortly after, the school was a beehive of activity as everyone plunged into some phase of the war effort. The armory became a first aid station and most students enrolled in Red Cross courses of some type. Many of the boys started investigating their chances of joining some branch of the armed forces, while the girls joined the American Women's Volunteer Service and other groups aiding the war work. In 1942, 50 Lowell girls, under the supervision of Mrs. Myra Jor- dan and Miss Ruth Adams, dashed over to Pleasanton to harvest 200 tons of tomatoes that were about to spoil due to the shortage of manpower. The following year another group of Lowell girls went to Vacaville to MOTI-1ERs CLUB MEETING IN 1925 ' The group had just atnliated with the San Francisco Con- gress of Mothers and Parent-Teachers Associations. work the pear and peach crops. During the fall of that year, Lowell students gave 3300 pints of blood to the armed services, and just about every boy in the 1943 class graduated right into some military organiza- tion. Biggest project of the school was to 'buy enough war bonds to pay for a flying fortress. Before the end Of 1944, the sale at school had passed the 31,000,000 mark and a flying fortress named The Lowell Indian was heading for Germany. As World War II was drawing to a successful con- clusion, interest in the new world organization which was to be organized in San Francisco ran high. Lowell students were privileged to be in on the formation of this important event as a number of Lowellites took part as interpreters and guides for foreign visitors, and as messengers and ushers at the Opera House where the events took place. LOWELL-POLY CHAMPIONSHIP BASE- BALL GAME OF MAY 13. 1919 Principal Francis E. Crofts throws out First ball at championship game against Poly on May 13, 1919 at Ewing Field. We lost! By 1946, the school was once more on a peacetime basis, and grades, proms, and football games were again the main topics of conversation. In this year, Miss La- coste, the school's first dean of girls, retired, and Miss Gladys Lorigan, a former Lowell student, was trans- ferred from Galileo to Lowell to assume the duties of vice principal and dean of girls. Another administrative change took place in 1948 with the retirement of Mr. Stephens. Joseph Hill, who had been the vice principal at the High School of Com- merce, became LoWell's eleventh principal. Two years later Mr, Hill was transferred to Lincoln High School and Miss Edith Pence, who had been principal of Annex to main building built in 1931 after three classrooms had been made into a library. Girls' High School, became Lowellis chief adminis- trator. Miss Pence became the second Lowell graduate to take over the principalship of the school and the first woman to be appointed principal of a coeduca- tional public high school in San Francisco. The outbreak of the Korean War in 1951 caused international news to once more overshadow school events and again give the boys some concern about their draft status. A brighter note at this time was the birth of the annual prep football pageant which has continued to -the present time as the first major event of the fall semester for all San Francisco high schools. Hudson Monroe, vice principal and dean of boys since 1954, ended his long period of service to Lowell by resigning his position due to ill health. Head Coun- selor I-Benry Karpenstein took over the duties of acting dean of boys until the following year when Melvin Peterson was appointed to the position. He had been a vice principal at Balboa and Lincoln before taking over the post at Lowell. He had also taught mathe- matics and science at Lowell in 1936 'before entering the administrative field. Two highlights of 1952 at Lowell were the repaint- ing of the school's interior and the introduction Of the quick snack period. The paint job was completed during the summer and students returned in the fall to be greeted by pastel shades of pink and green School gym was built in 1938 at cost of 5110,000. ETHEL CROWE SIDNEY R. DANNENBAUM W. WINN DAVIDSON ALICE DOYIE EDITH DUFF ALICE C. DWYER CLARA LOUISE EDE HELENA FALCK E. RENE FAUCOMPRE RAE G. FLATOW FANNIE FRANK JOHN GALLAGHER WILLIAM J. GLEASON MORRIS N. GOLDTREE HAROLD HALL FRED W. HOLLMAN GERTRUDE HOLMES FRANK P. HOOPER ALBERT J. HOWELL ALICE B. HULSE LOREN L. HURSH GEORGE JANTZEN CAROLYN R. JONES SUSIE E. JORDON ROBERT KARMELENSKI HERMAN G. KARSKY HERMAN KRONENBERG EMILE J. LAPACHET EDGAR C. LEVEY BLANCHE LEWIS LOUIS S. LYONS PARKER S. MADDUX REGINA MAGINNIS HAROLD V. MANOR FLORENCE R. MCINERNEY RUBY MEYER HELEN NESFIELD CHARLES G. NORRIS E. MAUDE' POLLEXFEN JOHN REID JR. EDWARD B. ROBINSON WALDO T. SCHALLER JULIA M. SCOTT REGINALD W. SHAW BERNARD J. SHAY L. SHERMAN ANNIE SILVERBERG LESLIE W. STOCKER ETHYL M. TABER TOYO TAKEYAMA FRANK VAN DUZER HENRY C. VENSANO LYLA VINCENT ALFRED B. WEILER ALFRED F. WIELAND EDNA N. WILSON CLASS OF DECEIQLER. 1899 ADELAIDE BARTLETT FRIDA BERG MARTIN J. BORADORI WILLIAM C. EIDENMULLER ADOLPH KNOPH PAUL A. MCCARTHY ESTHER MIRSKY MINNIE MIRSKY ANNIE' SILVERBERG ETHEL M. WILSON GEORGE H. WILSON JR. CLASS OF JUNE. 1900 RAE ALDERSLEY ANNIE B. ATCHISON MARY D. BARRY ROGER L. BEAIs GEORGE E. BELVEL LOUISE BINGHAM MILTON J. BLAcKMAN LLOYD BOWMAN ARTHUR DANGERs CLARA DAVID EDWINA H. DAVIS JOSEPH A. DAVIS GENEVIEVE DE TURBEVILLE LULU H. FALKENAU MAVEL W. FURBUSH PAULINE GLAsER ARTHUR H. HALLORAN PERCY T. 1-IANNIGAN ARTHUR W. HARE MORTON E. HART MARY s. HICKMAN HAZEL M. HOFFMAN EDGAR M, HOWELL ALVIN HYMAN EUNICE c. 1EEEERs sAMUEL M. LEvENsON JOHN E, MACGAVIN ALLISTER MACKENZIE MILTON c, MAXWELL ALBERT MERRILL RENA B. MURRAY MORRIS RHINE GERTRUDE M. ROBINSON ALBERT ROsENsHINE VIRGINIA RYDER AARON sAPIRO NANNY scHMELIzKOPE 59 AMY SCI-IOENFELD FELITA M. SMITH BERTA UZ' SMYTH GEORGE O. SPENCER CHARLES STANBRIDGE ERNEST SULTAN ALFRED B. SWINERTON VIOLA C. VENNEKOHL NINA C. VENSANO DORINDA WHITTEN JULIAN M. WOLFSOHN CLASS OF DECEMBER 1900 MAUD E. BARRY LORRAIN CERE LAMBERT COBLENTZ DELPHINE DAGENAIS ELEANOR GASSOWAY GRIEEITH GASSOWAY REUBEN GOLDBERG JAMES J. GROOM ADELINE HARLAND ALEXANDER W. MACPHERSON FRANK MANDEL MARY I. MORTON LEOPOLD OPPENHEIMER VUHITMAN PRENTICE AMY SELIG CLASS OF MAY 1901 MARK A. ABRAMS HOWARD E. ADLER DELLA L. ATCHISON HAZELTON J. BARTER ESTHER BERNSTEIN KENNETH M. BROWN JEAN BRUNS MAZIE BURNS ALICE BURR WILLIAM H. BYINGTON JOHN CAHILL A. MABYN CHAPMAN MARIE CHESWORTH ROBERT A. CRAIG WILLIAM C. CRITTENDEN MARION B. DITTENHOEFER WILLIAM EULER THOMAS J. FLAHERTY WILLIAM H. GALLAGHER STEDMAN H. GRAY BRECKENRIDGE D. M. GREENE ELEANOR GWIN PHILIP HUBER JANE IRWIN AUGUSTUS C. KEANE WILLIAM H. KOBBE HARRY J. LAWTON FRED CLINTON LEWITT SAMUEL S. LILIENTHAL HENRY E. MARKS JESSIE H. MATHESON LEON MORRIS EMILE C. NATHAN MELVIN NICKELSBURG MAY E. PETERS J. SHELDON POTTER SADIE E. RANKIN DORA A. SAVAGE SARAH C. SCOTT HAROLD G. SHARP LAWRENCE SOLOMON NORMAN STINES ALFRED THOMPSON OTTO TINNEMANN RAYMOND TYLER ALFRED VINCENT WEPPER ANITA WIELAND CLASS OF DECEMBER 1901 EMMA THERESA BANKS PAUL BOVARD MABEL BURKE MONTE F. DERNHA M MINNIE M. ELLERV CAROLYN FOWLE HARRY M. HALL JOSEPH LUCEY MARGARET MCKENNIE THOMAS J. O'NEAL BESSIE PATTON HOWARD H. SALZ MILTON H. SALZ HELEN SINSHEIMER JOHN SKERRETT LUELLA M. SOMERVILLE GEORGE K. TANIGOSHI HENERY F. UNGEWITTER CLASS OF JUNE 1902 WILLIAM S. ADAMS ALDEN AMES TURID AUNE MILTON B. BADT ESTELLE G. BLACKMAN RUBY EDNA BLACKMAN WALTER BLOCH WILLIAM FAY BOERICKE CHARLOTTE AUGUSTA BRANCH 40 The present LOWeII High SCIIOOI Wh1Ch has been In use Since 1913 LAWRENCE BUFFORD HENRY H. BURTON MARY E. COLLINS BERTRAM FRIEDBERG JEROME J. FRIEDBERG DOUGLAS J. GRAHAM CHARLES WILLIAM HASS HAROLD HABER CECILIA HARDMAN ANNA HARTER ELLIS M. L. HARTMAN IDA BERTHA HUCK YAMATO ICHIKASHI JULIUS JACOBS HUGH SAXE JEWETT JOHN DAVID JONES JULIA MARGARET KERN SADIE GRACE KILPATRICK REGINALD A. KINGWELL HIROSHI KUBO EDMOND L. LEVY FRANK ARTHUR LINFORTH KAROL S. MARYANSKI GLADYS FRIEDA MEYER MELVILLE NEWFIELD MAY DOLORES OLIVER ROBERT DICKSON PIKE ALICE PURVINE HERMAN E. RAHLMANN LILLIAN REISS ALBERT ROSENBERG R. LLOYD ROWLEY MILTON H. SALZ HAROLD P. SHEELINE SYDNEY R. J. 'SCHLESINGER JEFFREY SCHWEITZER ROBERTA SEAMAN ROSE STRUNSKY R. ALFRED THEOBOLD EDWARD B. VAN SLOAN BERTHA WOLLENBERG HARRY LINCOLN WOLLENBERG CHARLES WURM EDNA EUGENIE YOUNG CLASS OF DECEMBER 1902 GIICHI AOKI THURMAN BANE OLIN M. BOYLE, JR. ARITHUR C. BUSH JOSEPH E. BYRNE ARTHUR B. DOMONOSKE CARROLL DOOLITTLE GEORGE C. JONES STELLA LESZYNSKY BESSIE MARKLE MORTON O. A. MCDONALD FREDERICK R. MUHLNER ETHEL ANNIE RODDA EDNA SAVAGE MARGUERITE SKEHEN HAZEL STEEN FREDERICK A. STEWART JULIA TANNER ALIDA VAIL JOHN WALL THYRzA L. WALTERS JOSEPHINE L. WELCH REUBEN J. WOOD CLASS OF JUNE 1903 RAYMOND ASHTON ROY A. BADT LONA THERESA BALDWIN IRWIN BARE WILLIAM WALLACE BEHLOW NAN BAMBERG MILTON BIRNBAUM ESTELLE BLACKMAN GUSTAV B. BLANKENBERG HULDA BLOCK JOHN E. CASSELL ELLIOT CHAPMAN PERCY A. CONVERSE LLOYD A. CRAIG CHARLES DANE JOHN DANE HARRY W. DARLING ISAAC DILLON JAMES DILLON VANCE P. EDWARDS NORMAN A. EISNER RAY K. ESTEP HARRY M. EULER HERBERT WALTER FELTON ROBERT HOWE FLETCHER, JR. CROSBY M. GASSAWAY S. EDGAR GOLDSMITH CLAIR GORDON JULIAN GREEN EERCY M. GRISWORL HENRY HIRSCH HART JAMES DARRELL HORAN CHARLES L. HUYCK BENJAMIN E. JORDAN HAROLD HITCHCOCK KELLEY JEANNETTE E. LEROUX MORRIS H. LEVY PHILLIP LEVY 41 SOL D. LEVY CAROL W. LIPPMAN HANS LISSER I-IAZEL LYONS HELEN GEORGE MANGELS RUBY C. MCFAUL RALPH H. MCLOUGHLIN ARTHUR C. W. MEYER CLARICE' S. MOISE HAZEL IRENE MOISE EDNA MOSES ELSE NOLDEKE ROY PAGE KINGSBURY E. PARKER EUSTACE M. PEIXOTTO FERNANDA DONA PRATT BERENICE FAYETTE RAYNEY ALFRED GOULD READING HOWARD E. RUGGLES JOHN F. RYERSON JOSEPH W. SCHOENBERG HARRY WILLIAM SCHREIBER ROSE L. SHAFSKY STIANLEY SHARP EARLE T. SIMPERS SILAS D. SINSHEIMER FLORENCE D. SOULE AGNES R. STEWART FREDERICK PARSONS TATUM PETER OTTO TUM SUDEN HELEN REBECCA WAGNER MAXIMILIAN WAIZMAN, JR. JOSEPH A. WIRTNER CHARLES WILLIN CLASS OF DECEMBER 1903 MATTIE J. BELVEL AUGUSTUS S. BRIGNOLE EDITH M. COOMBE ANTHONY S. DEVOTO JAMES P. LANGHORNE STUART CURTIS MORTON ANNA NICHOLSON SCOTT CLASS OF JUNE 1904 ALLAN H. ABBOTT FRANK HOWARD ABBOTT GERTRUDE ALBRECHT VERA M. ANDERSON ASLANG AUNE HAZEL M. BAUNER ANITA E. BEYFUSS NINA ALICE BEYFUSS T. ALLEN BONNER FAYE ALICE BRENEMAN HENRY CHESLEY BUSH WILLIAM A. CARRICK D. CHRISTOPHER CREIGHTON CONSTANCE M. DEWEY EVELYN L. DOUGI-ITY SADIE T. FALK GEORGE W. FRANK ROY N. FULLER OTTILIA LAURA GILLILAND ROY GOITHEIMER CHARLES P. GRACE EUGENE LUCIUS GRUNSKY LESTER GUNST MAURICE EDWARD HARRISON ROY G. HILLEBRAND JACK EDWARD HILLMAN EDITH V. HOLLINGSWORTH EDNA v. HORN EMILIE JOSEIPH EUGENE JUDA ALFRED KOHLBERG WALTER c. KRENZ ALBERT L. LAPACHET DAVID LIVINGSTON LEVY KATHRYN LINDSAY ROBERT F. MCDONALD WILLIAM C. MACKINTOSH HENRY G. MEHRTENS IDA P. MEIER LOUIS HAROLD MEYER FLORENCE MAY NACHTRIEB ERNEST HENRY NAST HARRY J. OSER JOHN J. PFISTER, JR. ALBERT A. RHINE MARY TERESA RYAN SIDNEY L. SCHWARTZ WILLIAM SEA, JR. FLORENCE IVY SIBLEY FELIX T. SMITH ELLA SONDHEIM GRACE' E. SORGENFREY WALTER D. SULTAN CLARA L. TAVERNER IRENE SCHOFIELD WALTER PAUL KIRKWOOD YOST LILLIAN B. ZOBEL CLASS OF JUNE 1905 EDITH ALLEN ESTELLE VAUX ANDERSON JAMES MILNE BARRY LEON SYLVESTER BLACKMAN ROBERT IVAN BLAKE 42 TRAFFIC PATROL S'41 The boys of the traffic control at Lowell in 1941 were under the fine training of Mr. Walsh and Mr. Johnston. Leading the boys is Kaj Blomquist. throughout the entire building. The quick Snack, which. is a 10 minute break every morning between pe- riods, has continued to the present time as a popular part of the school day. Another administrative change took place in 1954 when Mr. Peterson was appointed principal of Poly- technic and Dr. Alden Smith, who had formerly taught at Lincoln High and San Francisco City College, took over the duties of dean of boys. I The final administrative change to date took place last year with the announcement of the retirement of Miss Pence. Lowell's current principal, Mr. Perino, took over the principalship after having been at Wash- ington High as vice principal since 1950, He arrived just in time to get caught in the whirl of activity which has been going on at Lowell Since September of 1955 in preparation for the celebrating of the Lowell cen- tennial year. Former students and faculty members have left the school a rich heritage. They have accepted the changes in educational ideas and concepts that had to come about if progress in education was to be made. At the same time they have retained fine traditions of good scholarship, good citizenship, and good School spirit, qualities that need not be altered in the name of progress. Future generations of Lowellites can have no liner objective than to make the next one hundred years of the schoolis history as noteworthy as the first. WAR BOND RALLY IN LOWELL COURT The Court Rallies in 1942 and 1945, such as this One, were not to generate spirit for a sporting event, but to stimulate the War Bond sale. Over 31,000,000 in bonds were sold by students during the drive. A Salute to the Alumni Lowellites have made an extremely fine record of achievement in the fields of business, the arts, literature, medicine, law, education, public Service, military service, science, and entertainment during the past century. The following Section of the book is a salute to these men and women. Space does not permit us to enumerate all of the graduates who have achieved some success in these endeavors, it would mean listing almost all of the thousands of students who have attended the school throughout the years. However, we have tried to give you a glimpse at some of the more prominent personalities, plus a general cross section to show the schoOl's fine representation in all fields. M 4 A 105 ' IRQ? i ' ooo Tx il ' Y Sir 'se' A I Q' 5 Nt! tl -1 . .,. BEATRICE L. BOCARDE CORA R, BRANDT ELEANOR CECILIA BURNS MARIAN BURR FLORENCE WARD CARLISLE CEDRIC s. CERE LETITA M. CLYNE CLINTON C. CONRAD JOHN FREDERICK DORGELOH WILLIAM EARL DOUD PHILIP RIES FAYMONVILLE HERMAN EISCHER BELLE RUTH GLUCKMAN RICHARD s. GOLDMAN HERBERT S. GOOLD HAZEL FLORENCE GORDON WALTER HAAS STANLEY E. HINCELOT SAMUEL HODES GASKELL S. JACOBS HIRAM W. JOHNSON, JR. HAROLD ADELBERT KELLOGG JAMES H. LEWIS HERBERT EVERETT LONG MAE MAHONEY EVA LORINE MOLDRUP GRACE EVELYN MORIN sEIzO MOTOMURA JEANNETTE FIELD MOWBRAY PAULINE JEANNETTE NAST WILLIAM L. OSER vIOLET FRANCES OTTOMAN vIcToR EABIAN POLLAK FREDERICK WILLIAM PROSSER HARRY W. REIS HALSEY L. RIXEORD HYMAN ROSENTHAL EREDERIQUE ROTH ANNA H. REUTI-IER JUNE R. SCHLOSS MILTON HAROLD SEELIG EDITH SILBERSTEIN MARY J. TALBOT ALICE MERCEDES THOMPSON ETHEL VAN HAREN BRADLEY L. WALLACE MINA B. WIENER ROBERT YOUNG CLASS OF DECEMBER 1905 OTTO BARKAN FRANCES AGNES BAXTER MAYBELLE STYLES BLAIR LEE CRAWFORD EMILY MERCEDES DISBROW EMMA LEOPOLDINE DUDEN MARION R. ELLIS MAUDE FOLSOM GADE LUKE VICTOR GLAVINOVICH MARK GOLDSMITH RALPH E. HARE ETHEL JONES ELSIE F. KAHN LUCILE BUNDY KELLY GENEVRA S. LAMB GEORGE LESLIE LANG RUTH ELIZABETH LEWIS WILLIAM CLYDE MCDONALD PAIGE MONTEAGLE EDA C. PRIEN LIONEL DAVID PRINCE EDGAR S. REINHOLD ALFRED E. RONCOVIERI JOSEPH A. SAMPSON ALMA ANCHEL SON ' ALICE STERN ADOLPH A. TISCORNIA CLASS OF JUNE 1906 RENA c. BENDER NATHANIEL BERcOvITz MABELLE BLISS LOUISE CARLSON ELIZABETH DAVIS PERCY L. DAVIS HAZEL E. DONOHO GODFREY ELLINGER AMY T. ENEWOLD PEARL c. FENTON MABEL L. ERISBIE WILLIAM D. GARVIN TONE R. GRAY WILLIAM E. HANELL PAULINE E. HAYES SEIZO IMAI JAY JACOBS SHIRLIE A. KING LOWELL KRIGBAUM ALICE LEWIS MILTON LICKTENSTADTER VIOLET LINCOLN FLORENCE LOCKHART MARGARET MCGEE FERNANDO MONTIJO I HAROLD MYER HAZEL E. MYERS EDWIN NEWMAN SIGNE OLSEN 45 4 HAROLD H. OSBORN EDNA OWENS MABEL PAULSEN MARY ADA PENCE ESTHER ROSENTHAL WILLIAM ROTHSCHILD FRANCES SCALMANINI NATHANIEL SCHMULOWITZ EDITH SLACK PAUL V. SOLLMAN AGNES STRACHAN GRACE TOBIN RICHARD TUM SUDEN FAUN TUSKA JOSEPH VIZZARD PAUL H. WALDRAFF PETER J. WARD GRACE WOLPERT MADGE WOODMAN ELIZABETH M. WOLFE ELIZABETH WORLEY CLASS OF DECEMBER 1906 WILLIAMITA BAYLEY BEHREND BUCK HAZEL CLIFFORD WILLIAM CONLIN ELMJER T. CUNNINGHAM HENRY EHLERS LESTER FERGUSON ROSE GARDNER HARRY GJEBALLE BURNIETT HAMILTON NOBLE HAMILTON SAMUEL HOFFMAN YOSHIHARA KATIGAHORA HAROLD LACHMAN MARGUERITE LAW ROBERT LOUNTZ FLORENCE NEFF THOMAS PRING HARRIET ROWSON RUTH SLACK GEORGE SPERBECK WILLIAM STANIELS EDITH A. WILKINS FLORENCE WOOLL CLASS OF JUNE 1907 HAROLD CHESTER BOYD FRED BURNESS GOLDDE COHEN STANLEY CORCORAN EDWARD JOSEPH DUGGAN MARCIA FEE ANNA HOLM MINNIE HOUGH PETER IBOS MONROE B. JACOBS WILLIAM JACOBS ALCIE KO-HLBERG OTTILIA KOHLBERG ANDREW M. MASSIE OTIS MCALLISTER ARLINE MILLER CARL MORBIO HENRY MORSE MARY MOTE MINNPE MURTHIN KAIZO NAKA ROSE PAUSON HENRY RAPHAEL MONROE ROSENSHINE MARGARET BARBARA ROSS ARTHUR C. SAZE LORETTA A. SIMMONS BIETI-PEL W. SIMPSON ELAINE M. STANDISH ETHEL STERNBERG VERTHA VON DER N IENBERG SYLVAIN I. WEILL GEORGE WILLCUTT CLASS OF DECEMBER 1907 MYRLE BADT ALMA O. BOKEE J. TALLMADGE BOYER HELEN BRUCKMAN EMILY COFFIN ROY LEETE COLLINS EDITH MAY EWERS VERA HASLEHURST CLIFFORD JONES LILLIAN LEALE ANNA LIEBENTHAL BARBARA NACHTRIEB EDITH PENCE HERBERT H. PIPER EDWARD POLHEMUS GRACE REILLY N. F. SCATENA ADOLPH SCHMIDT FRED ST. GOAR CLARE TORREY CATHERINE WALKER INA POLSON WARWICK JULIAN WEISSBEIN 44 Lovvellites Give Public Service Hundreds of graduates of Lowell have chosen some phase of public service for a career and have estab- lished fine records of accomplishment at the national, state, and local levels. The cabinet of President Woodrow Wilson included Franklin K. Lane, Boys' High '82, as Secretary of the Interior. While holding this position, he induced one of his former classmates, Stephen Mather, I83, to come to work for his department. Mather became Director of National Parks and more than any other person is responsible for the fine national park system in the United States today. The complete story of his work in conservation is told in the book, Sieve Mather and the National Pazrkr by Robert Shankland. One of the members of the Lowell faculty, Florence Prag, also became an important figure on the national scene. She left Lowell to marry Congressman Julius Reverend Hitchcock Kelley was a member of the Class of 1903. Attorney General of California Edmund Brown was a member of the Class of 1923. Kahn in 1899. Upon his death, she served out his term of office and was reelected to Congress for two more terms. Another member of the Lowell faculty, C. C. Young, later became governor of California. Numerous former graduates have chosen the judicial branch of the federal government for their careers. This group includes Federal Judge William Denman, '89, Federal Judge Louis E. Goodman, '09g Federal Judge Henry A. Hollzer, '98, and Federal Judge Jack Partridge, '88. Lowellites have also gained prominence in state affairs. The incumbent Attorney General of California is Edmund Pat Brown who graduated from Lowell in 1923. He is now serving his second term after being re-elected in 1954. He received a total vote of 3,537,- 594, the largest vote cast for any candidate in that general election. Henry C. Vensano, '99, is a former San Francisco Director of Public Works, dam contractor and designer. Prominent members of the judiciary who attended Lowell include Federal Judge Louis E. Goodman, '09, Superior Court Judge John B. Molinari, '27, and Federal Judge William Denman, '89, Other former Lowellites to hold important state offices include William Martin Abbott, '90, former chief deputy to the attorney general, Frank M. Angel- lotti, '79, former Chief Justice of the California Su- preme Court, Milton B, Badt, '02, judge in the Nevada State courts, Frank Graham Finlayson, '82, California Supreme Court Justice, Edgar C. Levy, '99, Speaker in the State Assembly, Milton Marks, who served both as a city supervisor and member of the state assembly, M. C. Sloss, '86, California Supreme Court Justice, and James Sullivan, '19, who has served as a state assemblyman and superior court judge. Almost every important city office has been filled by a former Lowellite at one time or another. Boys' High graduate Eugene Schmitz was mayor of the city during the 1906 earthquake and fire. The city's current Chief Administrative Officer Tom Brooks attended a 7 Lowell in 1900. Alfred Roncovieri, '76, served San Francisco as a Supervisor and later as Superintendent of Schools. The following men have served in the city's judicial branch: Judge Alden Ames, '02, Judge Fletcher A. Cutler, '82, Judge Walter P. Johnson, Judge I, L. Harris, '88, Judge Sylvain Lazarus, '93, Judge Max- well McNutt, '91, Judge John B. Molinari, '27, Judge Harold Stanley Shaffer, '98, Judge Homer R. Silncer, Judge William F. Traverso, '12, Judge John Van Nostrand, '92, Judge Ernest Wagner, '24, and Judge Harold Wollenberg. The following graduates have filled other important city positions: Harold Boyd, '07, Controller, Robert A. Coulte, Captain in the Police Department, Charles Dullea, Chief of Police, Nelson A. Eckhart, '95, Chief Engineer and Manager of the S. F. Water Department, Stephen T. Mather, '83, became Director of National Parks during the Wilson administration. I-Ie popularized the parks, made them America's playgrounds and earned the title of father of the national park system. CLASS OF JUNE 1908 RAY BENJAMIN EUGENE BLOCK ARTHUR FRANKLIN BRIDGE MARION BROWN ROY S. CAMERON CORNELIA COGHLAN EVANDIER CORBIN ANNIE EPPENHEIMER ABRAHAM EPSTEIN ETHEL EVELETH GEORGE FRANKLIN KATHRYN GALLAGHER GIERTRUDE GIESTING RAMON GILBERT HAROLD HAVEN CHARLES WILLIAM HEYER HAZEL HILLER HENRY L. HOLZBERG EDWARD HUSSEY MANNELITA KOEFORD PAUL J. LEVY LOTTIE LOVATT ALFRED LUNDBERG MORTON MACKS ALICE F. MAXWELL REYNOLDS MCHENRY ALICE F. MORSE FRANKLIN W. OATMAN SOMIERS PETERSON J. MARION READ BERNARD ROSENTHAL CECILIA ROTH LULU RUEBKE FREDERICK M. SHIPPER ALMA WARD OLIVE WOLF CLASS OF DECEMBER 1908 EMMA BLACK MERVYN L. BRIENNER FRANCES BUCKLAND MURIEL BURNHAM ARTHUR CLARK ROSE MARGARET EICHEN HELEN FRISBIE OSCAR GEBALLE EMIL HOERCHNER WILLIAM HUSON RUTH KELLOGG JOSEPH LEOPOLD EDWARD MALONEY MILTON V. MOWBRAY, JR. CHARLES RANDALL GERTRUDE ROXBURGH ROSALIND SCHWARTZ ELSIE SHIRPSER LELAND STOLL TATARO WADA CHARLES WEATHERBE CLASS OF JUNE 1969 HELEN D. AYER HELEN BARE EEssIE M. CANTLEY MADGE GLENDENIN JULIAN D. coHN MARION CROSETT RUDOLPH DRESEL WILLIAM DUNCAN JOHN E. GARDNER LYMAN GRIMES SAMUEL GUNNISON MINNIE E. B. HAACK WANDELL HAMMON EDWARD HARRISON GERARD E HERRMANN GEORGE N. KEYSTON DANIEL KosHLAND SYDNEY LEvY ELLA M. MARTINE DANIEL T. MCCARTHY MAURIGE MCLAUGHLIN JAY MCLEAN WILL D. MCRAE WILLARD MoRToN THOMAS OKAWARA sHo osHIMA RAMDN POHLI ELWIN PURRINGTON CYRIL QUILL LEO J. RABINOWITZ JOHN M. REHEIscH RALPH ROONEY EDWARD sALoMoN RALPH SISSON ROBERT SMITH LELAND J. SPARKS IRWIN STEINBERGER CHARLES sr. GoAR JAMES L. UNDERHILL ROMNEY VAUGHAN EDWIN VOORHIES TRUE WATSON AGNES WELCH CLASS OF DECEMBER 1909 ROBERT ACKERMAN JOHN E. BETTENCOURT 45 CHARLOTTE BOCARDE CARL BRUNS GEORGE HAROLD CLOUD ILA COOMBE RAYMOND FLYNN LOUIS GOODMAN DOUGLAS I-I. HILLIKER JEANETTE JOSEPH HENRY K. KOTANI FLORENCE LAW' SYRIL LICHTENSTEIN FRANK NONAKA HARADEN PRATT WILLIAM QUARG ROBERT RANSOHOFF LESTER STERN WILLIAINI ULFELDES CLARA H. XVHITE CLASS OF JUNE 1910 MERCIE PERKINS ADAMS FRANK MEAD BACON ELSIE MAY BARKIS ELVINA BARTH ELIZABETH BATES HERBERT FRANK BAUER WANDA CAROLINE BECKER MARIANNE HAZEL BELL HILDA BRANDENSTEIN EDITH BRANDT WINIERED BRIDGE CATHERINE GARTHLEY BRUCE ATTALEE MAY BUCKINGHAM ALMEDA XVORTH CARD GEORGE HENRY CAVALIER CLAIRE COCHRANE LIZETTE HELEN CONLAN JOSEPH CAMERON CROSS ABLESS BRAY DICKENSON ELIOT HUFF DOWNING URSULA LORETTA DUANE WILLIAM FISCHER MILDRED AMY FITZGERALD ROLAND C. FOERSTER EDITH FRISBIE WILLIAM GRANAT ALBERT LOUIS GREEN FLORENCE ISABEL HALL RISABURO HAMAI JESSIE WINIFRED HARRIS MIRA ANITA HARRIS GEORGE HASHIBA JACK BLENNER HASSET THRU HICO HIRASAWA GEORGINA ELIZABETH IRVINE EARL EARNEST KELLY I. JUDSON KELLY ROBERT KOSHLAND BLBERT KRAMER HENRY A. R. KREUTZMANN MIYO KUSINOKI ANGENETTE DAVIS LAMSON ALFRED FURTH LEVI HARRY LEVY LAWRENCE LIVINGSTON LLOYD LINXIUOOD LIEB MILDRED LINCOLN CHARLES LLOYD LOWENBERG MILTON MARKS WALTER JOSEPH MARTENSON MAUROKU MATSUMOTO REDMOND PETER MCCARTHY PAUL MORTON MCCLOSKEY MARCELLA AMELIA MCILVAIN BERTHA AMELIA MILLER OTTILLE LILLIAN MILLER SYLVESTER WM. MILLER HARRIET LUCILE MORIN ALVINA BEATRICE MURRAY WILLIAM NEUBAUER EVERARD FRANKLIN OLSEN SATOAKI OSAKI KATHLEEN CLARISE OWENS HARRI-ET HORN PASMORE ABRAHAM RAPHAEL RICHARD MELDEN RIEDY MILTON ALBERT ROSENBAUM JULIETTE GOLDEN ROY ADELE LOUISE SALSBURY VESTINA PEARL SMITH ISADORE SOMMER AGNES JULIA SPILLUM ETHEL ADELAIDE WALTER EDNA JOSEPHINE WAND FREDERICK XVILLIAM WARD EUPHEMIA P. WARWICK ERNEST CHARLES WATSON FRIEDA HELEN XVESTPHAI. CLASS OF DECEMBER 1910 Boys FRED BARUCK BEN BLUMENAU LEONARD A. BOWHAY CLARENCE A. BULLWINKEL ALLAN COHN 46 A long list of Lowell graduates have given faithful service to the city of San Francisco as members of the Board of Supervisors, Former students on the present Board are Clarissa McMahon, Henry Rolph, and Francis McCarty. Cameron King, '94, Registrar of Voters, James Joseph Phillips, '95, Director of Property, Harry C. Ven- sano, '99, Director of Public Works, Ralph Wiley, '07, Director of the Department of Electricity, and Assessor Russell Wolden. Lowell has always been well represented on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. At the present time four members are from Lowell. They are Mrs. Clarissa McMahon, Francis McCarty, '26, James Sullivan, '19, and Henry R. Rolph, '32. Other recent members who served with distinction are Marvin Lewis, '24, who resigned from the Board to serve as the city's lobbyist in Washington, D.C.g Byron Mauzy, '79, and Jesse Coleman, '96, a former President of the Board. Although he never held public oflice, Milton Esberg, '92, has a fine record of public service. He was one of the originators of the Community Chest, founder and director of the San Francisco Opera Company, and served a term as a member of the Board of Education. Another former Lowellite, Tom Carroll, is now a Director with the Ford Foundation. The held of religion is represented by the Reverend Harold Hitch- cock Kelley, '03, Director of the Seamen's Church Institute of New York City, and Martin A. Meyer, '95, Rabbi at Temple Emanu-El. Edward Turkington, '16, has rendered public service as a Director of the S. F. Chamber of Commerce and as a Police Commissioner. James Sullivan, '19, has served as a member of the city's Fire Commission. Two other public spirited men were William Ab- bott, '90, who did an outstanding job while serving as Grand Exalted Ruler of Elks of the United States in 1920, and Warren Atherton, '08, who did some ine patriotic work as a National Commander of the Ameri- can Legion. James J. Sullivan, '19, has served San Francisco as za Fire Commissioner, and Ed Turkington. '16 fmfddlej is 3 former Police Commissioner. William Abbott, '90, fright! is a former Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elks. San Fmncisccfs Chief Administrator Thomas E. Brooks, former Police Chief Charles Dullea, and Ralph W. Wliley, former Chief of the Department of Electricity were all Lowell students. Russell Wolden, former Lowell student, has held the ottice of City Assessor since 1938. Marvin Lewis, 1924, attorney, is a former member of the Board of Super- visors and has served San Francisco as the uliicial lobbyist in Wfashington. Tom Carroll, Director of the Ford Foundation Fund. Joseph J. Phillips, '91 was the city's lirst Cameron H. King, '94, retired from his position Difectflf nf Pmpe-'ty' 3 lol' Created by the , . . V 7 as Registrar of Voters for San Francisco in 1947. new UW Chaffsf m WL' He had been active in city government for 47 years. BERTRAND FROI-IMAN LEWIS G. MACK GEORGE MCMAI-ION MELVILLE NATHAN STANLEY PARKER RALPH RABINOWITZ Girls CLARE A. COCHRANE DOROTHY COOPER RUTH CUNNINGHAM FLORA DEITTRICH NELLE F. DOUGLAS MARTHA GANS I-IARRIET GLIDDEN RUTH HEILFRON GRETCHEN HIGGINS SADIE HOLZBERG BLANCHE KOHLMAN METTA MAHLER BLANCI-IE MERRELL ETHEL RIGHETTI ETTA SCHALCK BLANCHE TOBIN I.UCILE VALENTINE ADDIE WALLACE RENA XXIILLCOX CLASS OF JUNE 1911 Boys In ROY BAIRD FREDERICK M. BISSINGER ESTO B, BROUGHTON FRANCIS CARDINALI GILBERT CATTELL XVILLIAM F. CHENEY JOHN COSTELLO CHESTER CRAMER CHARLES B. FOXYILER WALTER H. FROLICH RAYMOND J. GREENBERG THORNTON E. GRIMES CLARENCE HOFFMAN JOHN JACOBS FRED KANT JOHN L. LILIENTHAL CHARLES J. LINDGREN FRED G. MAGGS ALFRED MEYER GSUYE OIKAWA EDVUARD PARSONS JAMES ROSENBERG M. H. ROSENBERC LUIZI SANGUINETTI CHARLES SCALIONE HERMANN SCHUSSLER LOUIS SLOSS EARL N. STORY CHARLES E. STREET VINCENT P. TARANTINO LAVURENCE TAUSSIG ORLEN N. THOMPSON ALFRED J. XVILLARD Girls MARION ARENDT BEATRICE BARTI ETT KATHRYN BERBERT HARRIET BRADFORD HAZEL H, BRESLAUER ELIZABETH BULL VIRGINIA DAVIES ISABELLE DE MEYER LOIS DE VILBISS FLORENCE FRANKEL BERNADINE HAXYTHORNE EDITH HILDEBRAND AILEEN HYLAND ESTIELLE M. KANE CATHERINE KNOXWI ES ELIZABETH MENNIE BELLE MFYFR ISITA MORSE ELIZABETH PAGE GLADYS PHELAN CONSTANCE PURRINGTON VESTA READ MARGARET REDDIN MABEL RESTON DOROTHY REYNOLDS HISAO TOYAMA ,IUANITA VAN METER EVELYN VUAGENER CLASS OF DECEMBER 1911 Bovs WILLIAM R. DUBOIS GEORGE E. GOODALE JOHN M. GRAVES HARRY A. JONES LELAND LEEK CHARLES A. MARWEDEL JEAN MCMULLIN HENRY MEGER OSAME MURASHIGE OSGOOD MURDOCK , CHIYO OGAWA JAMIES RANSOHOFF WILLIAM SOMERS ROBERT M. UNDERHILL WILLIS WINTER Girls JANET AMPLETT IDA R. BLUM KATHERINE cRossLEY MARJERY DURBROW CLAIRE EVANS BERNHARDT EEST THELMA GLEESON FLORENCE ISAACS DEBORAH NEWMAN RUBY JEWELL GERTRUDE PORWANCHER MARJORIE RYAN GLADYS XVAIBEL CLASS OF JUNE 1912 Boys GEORGE BECKER ARNOLD R. BOWHAY STARR L. BRUCE FISHER BUCKINGHAM ROLLAND J. CALDER ANDREW CARRIGAN CHARLES EHRMAN WAL'I1EiR FARNLACI-IER EDWARD FULD MAURIOE HEPPNER BYRON JACKSON ARTHUR JOHNSTON MENDEL LEVIN HOMER LEVINSON GASTON LEVY FRED MATTHEWS VINCENT MEAD GEORGE MONTGOMERY ARTHUR OLSEN GEO. BALTZER PETERSON ADOLPH POSTEL WILLIAM S. RAINEY SAMSON H. ROSENBLATT GUENTHER SCHAECHE LEE SIMON ERNEST M. SMITH HOMER G. SUSSDORFF ARTHUR TELLEFSEN ARTHUR W. TOWNE JACK TUFTS ROY VAN VLIET HANS VON GELDERN JESSIE WI-II'I'1'TMiEYER CHARLES WING DAVID L. WOLF Girls GRACE ADAMS ENLALIA ARMENDAREZ MARGUERITE BARIEAU EMILY BLOCK ALICE BRODESEN MABEL CHATTERTON CAMILLA COLE SUSIE CONVERY HAZEL COOKE MARIE COSTELLO CORINNE CRONISE MYRTLE FRANZEN BEATRICE GAWNE DULCE GAWNE LEOTA GORTER AILEEN HAND LUCIA HARMS I-IELAH JONES FLORENCE KEELING FRIEDA KRUSE DORIS MCLOUGHLIN EDITH PERRY ESTHER RO'IlH HANNAH ROWELL BERTHA ROWEN ANITA SULLIVAN ANITA WALES JULIA WITT MARY WOOD CLASS OF DECEMBER 1912 Boys BERTRAM ARENDT JOHN W. BISSINGAER EDWIN BUSSE ERIC A. FALCONER HUGH T. FERGUSON LEON GUGGENHIME WALTER HELLER DANIEL HONIGSBERGER CECIL HUNTINGTON CHARLES W, JONES ISIDORE LEWIN RICHARD McLAREN ALEX MUNRO ELWOOD OLSEN 48 Lowellites in Literature Famed Biographer Irving Stone, '26. American literature is a great deal richer because of the contributions of a group of men and women who received their school education at Lowell and Boys' High. Included in this group are Dr. Peter Con- my, '20, Walter Le Leon, '02, Katherine Forbes, '23, Reuben Lucius Goldberg, '00, Howard J. Green, '10, Dr. Henry Hersh Hart, '03, Sam Hellman, '02, Fran- ces Jolliffe, '89, Edgar Kahn, '21, Terry Kilpatrick, '40, Marty Links, '56, Frank Mandel, '00, Charles Norris, '99, Dr. Harry Overstreet, '94, Dr. Saxon Temple Pope, '95, Josiah Royce, '68, Winthrope Ser- geant, Irving Stone, '26, and Sam Taylor. Published works of Dr. Conmy include: Hirtory of tbe Entrance Requireinentf of tbe Unizzerrity of Cali- fornia, 1928, Hiftory of Public Scbool Finance in Cali- fornia, 1937, Self Determination and Pari.r Peace C on- ference, 1941 , Public Scbool-Public Library Relation- rhipf, 1945, Studier in Englirb Education During tbe Eigbteentb Century, 1946, Tb-e Date of tbe Founding of San Francisco, 1947, A Centennial Evaluation of tbe Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 1948, Tbe Queen Dr, Peter Commy, '20, Chief Librarian, Oakland Public Libraries. Novelist Charles Norris, '99. fCourlefy S.F. Call-Bulletin! of tbe Avenue, tbe History of tbe St. Francis Cburcb, 1949. Walter De Leon started his career as an actor and spent seven years in musical comedy productions, dur- ing which time he wrote the book and music for two successful plays. He then spent a period in which he wrote stories for the Saturday Evening Port, Red Book, and other leading magazines. Since 1929 he has been writing screen plays. His more than 50 scripts have starred Bing Crosby, Paulette Goddard, Bob Hope, Jack Benny, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Betty Hutton, Eddie Bracken, and other top Hollywood actors. Katherine Forbes' stories includeA Fool'J H ell, Run- ning of tbe Tide, Tranffer Point, and Mama'f Bank Account, fwhich has been produced as a play, as a movie, and as a television serial under the title of I Remember Mamaj. Among Sam Hellman's notable works are Low Bridge, 1924, Toll Bridge, 1930, plus numerous stories for the Saturday Evening Port and Red Boob. Author-Playwright Katherine Forbes, '23. ,, ,L I The lirst of his many screen stories was Little Miss Marker, for Shirley Temple, and several stories for Will Rogers. Samuel Taylor is best known for The Happy Time, 1950, fwhich has been successfully produced as a Broadway play, and later as a motion picturej. y Irving Stone's 'best known novels are Pageant of youth, 1933 , Lust for Life, 1934 flife of Van Gogh, , Sailor on Horsehach 1938, Clife of Jack London,j, False Witness, 1940, Clarence Darrow for the De- fense, 1941, They Also Ran, 1943, Immortal Wife, 1944 Qlife of Jessie B. Fremontj, Adversary in the House, 1947 Qlife of Eugene V. Debsy , Earl Warren, 948, The Passionate journey, 1949 flife of john oblej , We S peah for Ourselves, 1950 fself-portrait f an Americanj , The President's Lady, 1951 Qlife of achel jacksonj. The principal works of Charles Norris: The Ama- teur, 1915, Salt, 1917, Brass, 1921, The Last of the Philistines, 1922, Bread, 1923, Pig Iron, 1925, Zelda Marsh, 1927, A Guest of Rohin Hood, 1929, Seed, FI930, Zest, 19333 Hands, 1935, Ivanhoe, 1936, Bricks Without Straw, 1938, In the Reign of the Grand Monarch fwritten at ten yearsj. Dr. Hart's books deal chiefly with the literature and culture of China. His story of the life of Marco Polo is considered the most authoritative account of this interesting historical figure. Dr. Pope became interested in writing following a ig game trip to Africa in which he did most of his unring with a bow and arrow. His books are A Med- ical History of the Ishi, A Study of Bows and Arrows, lThe Adventurous Bowman, and Hunting With Bow and Arrow. Some of Dr. Harry Overstreetls published books are Influencing Human Behavior, 1925, Ahout Our- selves-Psychology for Normal People, 1927, The Enduring Quest, 1931, We Move in New Directions, 1933, A Guide to Civilized Leisure, 1934, A Declara- tion of Interdependence, 1937, Town Meeting Comes to Town, 1938, Let Me Think, 1939, Leaders For Adult Education, 1940, Our Free Minds, 1941, The Mature Mind, 1949, Where Children Come First, Critic Frances jellilie, '96. Philosopher Josiah Royce, '68. 1949, The Great Enterprise--Relating Ourselves to the World, 1952. Some of Josiah Royce's best known books are The Religious Aspect of Philosophy, 1885, The Spirit of Modern Philosophy, 1892, The Feud of Oahyield Creeh, 1887, Studies of Good Will and Evil, 1898, A Study of American Character, 1886, The World and the Individual, 1900-1901, The Philosophy of Loyalty, 1908, The Prohlem of Christianity, 1913, The Hope of the Great Community, 1916, Lectures on Modern Idealism, 1919, and Fugitive Essays, 1920. Rube Gold-berg's chief claim to fame is his work as a cartoonist. He started in this capacity with the San Francisco Chronicle and San Francisco Bulletin, then went on to gain national recognition while working for the New York Evening Mail. However, he has also authored several books, the best known being Soup to Nuts and Is There A Doctor In The House? Marty Links is another Lowellite who has become an author via the cartoon route. Her Bohhy Sox, one of today's most beloved comic strips, is also available in book form. Howard Green started his career writing skits for vaudeville and musical revues. In 1941 he wrote a play called Beverly Hills, which played on Broadway in New York. Frances Iolliffe began her career as a very promising actress on Broadway, but later gave up her stage work to become one of the country's leading dramatic critics. She was also one of the leaders in the womenis suffrage movement. Edgar Kahn, a prominent San Francisco business- man, is best known in literature for his Cahle Car Days in San Francisco, a charming story of San Francisco in the latter part of the nineteenth century. Frank Mandel is the author of a long line of Broad- way successes. His best known efforts are the musical comedies and operettas Mary, No, No, Nanette, The Desert Song, Good News, The New Moon, and Follow Through, CLARENCE POTTER BERT F. RABINOWITZ JOHN SKINNER KENNETH SNELL SANFORD STEIN BERT THOMAS WILLIE TRAVERSO LYNN WARD PHILIP WASCERWITZ HENRY WOLFE Girls BELLE ELKINS SELMA GEBALLE EDITH GRIFFIN EMMA HYMSON FLORENCE PIIPER THEODORE SCHAERTZER ELFREDA SVENBERG MABEL G. TOLLES GERTRUDE VIZZARD HELEN WOOD CLASS OF JUNE 1913 Boys HIROSHI ABIKO FRANK M. ARMER WALLACE E. BARNES RUSSELL W. BELL ROBERT BERING REDDICK H. BICKEL HAROLD BLACK EDWARD BULLARD V LEON CARASSO MILTON H. COHN RAYMOND CROOK H. SYRIL DUSENBERG MARCUS J. ERWIN OLIVER C. FIELD ROBERT L. HARGROVE ISADORE HARRIS EMERSON B. HERRICK ERWIN HIRSCHFELDER JOSEPH HOOPER GEORGE HOTALING ERNEST KER LESTER M. KILGARIF KIRCHINO KODA SAMUEL LEWIS DANA MCEWEN ALBERT McGUINESS JOE MfEGER STANFORD OLSEN VINCENT QUARTARARO PROSPER REITER MARTIN ROSENBLATT FRANK ROSENTHAL CARLETON W. SCI-ILINGHYDE WALTER SCHOENFELD LELAND SMIRLE - PETER SOMMER HAROLD S. STEIN THOMAS P. TISSOT LESLIE UNDERHILL FREDERICK K. VERLEGER ROBERT WHITE EARL WILKINS WARREN WILSON EDWARD WISSER ROBERT WOODLAND K JULIUS F. ZEDERMAN Girls CAROLINE ABBOTT FRANCES BELL CONSTANCE BOESKEN PHOEBIE COLE MARIE H. CROWLEY MYRTLE V. FIT SCI-IEU DOROTHY GOODWIN ERNESTINE HERZ HAZIEL HOLLINGSWORTH SIMONA JACOBS MARION LONG MARTHA McCLOUGHRY ISABELLE MCCRACKIN ALTA McQUADE MYRTLE B. OSER ETHEL B. RAWLES GLADYS I. RESTON ELIZABETH M, RUGGLES CHARLOTT A SAWYER MILDRED THOMAS CHARLOTTE WOLF VERA WOOD CLASS OF DECEMBER 1913 Boys EUGENE BREYMAN GEORGE BROWN ALBERT C. BULL HENRY R, COLE MARTIN E. COLLUM EDWARD ELKINS CHESTER T. FERGUSON BLENNED GOLCHER HERBERT GRIEB SI DAI HAN YOUNG DAI HAN 49 THOMAS G. HANSON WILLIAM 'HELBUSH FRED C. JOHNSON MELVILLIE KAUFMAN HERBERT LANGHORNE LOUIS L. LESS ARTHUR LUCAS RAYMOND PASCH ALLISON REYMAN HAROLD RIVERS REUEL P. SNIDER MORRELL VECKI SEITARO WEMRA KRESCENZ WOLL Girls LAURIE L. BAYLEY EASTER BEEDE RUTH BRANDON CATHERINE C. CODY NELLIE COOK ELLA CRAWFORD VIVIAN ESTCOURT FLORENCE FORSBURG MILDRED FULCHER AURELIUS HERZOG LIDA C. KAHN LUCILLE A. KONOLD DOROTHY Le MAY ELEANOR MATHEWS EMIL POHLI BERTHA RICHARDSON MARJORIE RICHMOND IOLA RIESS HILDEGARDE ST. CLAIR RICHARD SHAINWALD GEORGIE H. TANNEN KATHERINE B. WALKER FLORENCE WARFORD CLASS OF JUNE 1914 Boys DAVID ANDERSON DONALD BATES WILLIAM BENDER FRANK BLAISDELL GEORGE BOCHMER FRED BROWNLEE ARTHUR CARFAGNI ROBERT CROOKS ABE EPSTEIN SADASUKE FUKAI VI-CTOR L. FURTH VIICTOR W. GALVIN LLOYD L. HARRIS GREGORY HARRISON CHARLES HICKOX WALTER HILDEBRAND ELKIN HYMAN JOE HYMAN HENRY V. JOHNS JOHN KINGSTON I-IERMAN MARCUS DONALD McKEE DANIEL MCMILLAN MAURIGE MELMON WILFRED METSON WILSON MEYER ED, K. MORAN CLYFFICE NEVIN MILTON OLENDER ALFRLEDO RIVERA BEVERLY ROBINSON EMANUEL ROSENT HAL ABE SCI-LMULOWITZ HENRY SEIDKIN EUGENE SELVAGE HENRY SILB-ERMAN MORRIS H. SILVERBERG CARL STEVER DANIEL STONE HAROLD STRICKLAND FOSHI TANAKA ARTHUR THOMPSON EDW. WAGENER HARRY WHITTHORNE CYRIL ZELINSKY JOSEPH ZIMMERMAN Girls MARJORILE CLARK DOROTHY COHtEN MARIA CALLARINO VALANCE S. COWAN ETHEL CUMMINGS ELINOR BURBROW HELEN F. FERGUSON CAROLYN FURTH ELEANOR JACKSON JOSIE MAESTRETTI ELIZABETH MANELLI MARY MCCABE ADRIAN MORIN HELEN PENNEFEATHER HELEN PIERSON DOROTHY ROWELL LOMITA SIEVERS BERTHA TAYLOR INEZ VAN ARSDALE ELISE WATROUS EDNA WEST 50 l Patsy Spears is following a dancing career and was State Champion baton twirler while at Lowell .... Patty Prichard is now singing star of her own TV program .... Blanche Bates, '88, is considered one of America's leading actresses. Graduates Gain Fame in the Arts Lowellites have been successful in just about every branch of the arts and the entertainment world. Some graduates who have gone on to fame on the legitimate stage include Blanche Bates, '88g Holbrook Blinn, '9Og Carol Channing, '39g William Gaxton, '08g Theo- dore Roberts, '8Ig Robert Warwickg and Don Peters, 39. Blanche Bates is considered 'one of the greatest act- resses that America has produced. For more than 50 years she was a top Broadway star, scoring in both comedy and drama, Some of her most memorable per- formances were as Cigarette in Under Two Flags, Cho Cho San, in Madame Butterflyg the girl in The Girl of the Golden WeJt,' and Yo San, in Darling of the Godr. Taming of the Shrew, School for Scandal, and The Three Murheteerr were some of her other hits. Holbrook Blinn was one of the brightest stars of Bob Hamilton, '37, is the organizer of the Bob Hamilton Trio, and has starred on TV, the stage, and in night clubs. his day with several London successes to his credit tr give him an international reputation. Some of hi: greatest Broadway roles were as Marc Anthony, ir juliur Caerar, Wing Shee, in The Cat and the Cherum and Pancho Lopez, in The Bad Man. He was the pro ducer as well as the star for a long run of Molnar': The Play? the Thing. Carol Channing is the latest Lowellite to become the toast of Broadway. Her first New York stage ap- pearance was in 1948 in a supporting role in the mu- sical, Lend an Ear. During this run she tried out for the lead in Gentlemen Prefer Blender and got the part which brought her overnight success. Following a long run in this show, she appeared in The Vamp and Woni derful Town and is now in Hollywood doing movii work. ' William Gaxton, who was known as Billy Gaxiola while at Lowell, has starred in such stage successei as The Mufie Box Revue, Connecticut Yankee, Fiftj Million Frenchmen, Of Thee I Sing, Anything Go-eil and Louisiana Purrhare. Some of his motion picture appearances have been in Bert Foot Forward, Some thing to Shout About, and Diamond Horfefhoe. Theo-, Charles Stem, '51, is the leader of one of San Francisco's finest bands. Robert Warwick is known for both his stage and screen work. Holbrook Blinn, '90, was one of Broadwav's best known stars as well as a producer. William Gaxton, '08, has starred in stage and screen successes. ICA!!-Bulletin Plzaiorj and in the Entertainment World ore Roberts and Robert Warwick, who was known as ob Bien at Lowell, are well known for both their stage and screen work. Roberts' most memorable portrayal was as Moses in The Ten Comfzzamdmentr, an early DeMille epic. One of Hollywood's finest directors is David But- ler, class of 1915. After leaving Lowell, where he was on the basketball and rugby teams, he headed for Hol- lywood and worked as a motion picture actor until 927. Since then he has been directing, with five Will ogers pictures, five Shirley Temple pictures, four Bob ope, two Bing Crosby, and a couple of Hope-Crosby Road pictures to his credit. , Bob Hamilton, '37, is probably the schools most famous choreographer. For several years his Bob Hamilton Trion was a high spot on television's Show Qf Showf. Since then he and his trio have been in great emand for television and night club work. Many ther recent grads have been making a name for them- selves in the dancing field. These include ballerinas Christine Bering, Nancy and Virginia Johnson, and Jocelyn Vollmar, and TV performers Gloria Unti, Judith Job, and Patsy Spears, The latter was state champion baton twirler while at Lowell. Other former students who have been successful in the field of radio and television as actors and announc- ers are Page Gilman, Sandy Spillman, Ernie Smith, Bruce Sedley, and Norman Craner. Patti Prichard, for- mer student body vice president, is the singing star of her own TV program. William E, Goetze has gone into the administrative end of radio and is now general manager of Station KFSD, San Diego. Numerous graduates have continued musical careers which were started here at School while members of the band or orchestra. Earl Bernard Murray, '42, the assistant conductor of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, was a musician with the group at the age of 16, He was the youngest member ever to join the or- chestra. In 1951, he was awarded the highest honor at Pierre MonteuX's conducting class at Hancock, David Butler, 1915, is one of Hollywood's finest directors. Jocelyn Vollmar has been a featured ballerina in the San Francisco Ballet. Sam Hellman is one of Hollywood's greatest screen writers. fCall-Bullezin Plaolorj M YYY CLASS OF DECEMBER 1914 Boys JOHN BAIRD PAUL BECK ROBERT J. BERNSTEIN FRED BOOLE EDWIIN BOOTH CHESTER BUTLER LEON CARRAU WILLIAM COCHRANE JAMES CONRADO CHARLES DUFFY JOSEPH FASSMAN ALBERT FINKELSTEIN WALTER FLYNN DOUGLAS GREGER EDWARD HART BERLIN HOLTZCLAW FRED HUNTINGTON JULIUS JOHNSON EDWARD JOSE SIMON KATTEN ELMER KEHRLEIN ABE LANGENDORF PHELPS LATIMORE AKIN LEAVY LEO LEVI HYDE LEWIS JOHN LIBBY DONALD MACKENZIE JAMES MERRITT IRWIN MEYER ALAN NICHOLS CHARLES O'BRIEN GAUDROSO PALOMAR JOHN J. SAMPSON ESMOND SCI-IAPIRO ERWIN SCHMITZER HALDANE SCOVEL MAURICE SEILER ADRIAN SOLOMON RALPH SPIEGL LOUIS SPIEGLEMAN EMANUEL STEIGMAN LAWRENCE H. THARP CHARLES W. TUTTLE CHARLES WEINSCHENCK HENRY ZIMMERMAN Girls BRITA ANDERSON PI-IYLLISS BATEMAN LORETT A CANTY GRACE CARTER BLANCHE CONNELLY RUTH FRANKLIN LOUISE GARDNER FLORENCE G. GILL LUCILE GRANICHER ALVAH HOLLINGSBERG MARGARET KANE PEARL KATZENSTEIN ROSALYND MARCACCI LILIAN MCGEE FLORENCE PICARD DOROTHY RIEDY DORA SCHNEER LYDIA SEIPEL GENEVIEVE SMITH DOROTHY SOULE SARAH TI-IRASHER NORMA WARD ELIZABETH WEISS CLASS OF JUNE 1915 Boys LINDLEY ABBOTT ALAN ACKERMAN ROY ARNHEIM WILSON B. BARNES WILLIAM C. BENNETT CESAR BERTHEAU ALEXANDER CALDER DONALD CAMPBELL WILLIAM CRAWFORD LEWIS EMERY JOHN B. FRANK RANDOLPH FLOOD KENDALL HATHORN LOTA HUNKIN ALBERT JACOBS LEONARD JACOBSON VICTOR H. JOHNSON ALBERT KROTOZYNER JAMES LEPLIN JOHN LEVISON ALEXANDER MCCONE ALVIN MCMAHON EMERY MITCHELL JOSEPH MOSS JAMES NAKADA ALLAN OSBORNE EDWIN PATTERSON FELIX PEARL JOSEPH POSNER WALTER PRATT ARTHUR RAEMSCH XVALTER 'ROI-IDE JAMES RUCKER HERBERT SCHULTZ RALPH SCOTT STUART SEATON BEVERLY SIMPSON STANLEY C. SMITH MELVILLE SPIEGL CARL SUNDBERG KIYOSHI TOGOSAKI HERBERT WILSON CHARLES WISSING KISHIRO YASUTAKE TAMATSU YATABE CHARLES ZAPPETTINI Girls MARION APPLETON ALICE BEPLER DOROTI-LEA BOTH-E ANNIE BRADOFSKY AMALIE BRICKWEDEZ OLIVE BRUNS RUTH CRAIG JOSEPHIN-E CUNEO ISABEL DALTON ELMIRA DOWDELL CAROLYN DUNCAN ROSANNA ECKHARDT RUTH ENLOW GLADYS GRANDI ELIZABETH HAAS JEAN HAMILL FAY HARRIS MARY HARRISON CHLOE HAWORTH FLORENCE JONES ' IRAS KOBICKE KINTA LAFITTE BEATRIOE LICHITENSTEIN NORMA 'LICHTENSTEIN BEATRICE LIGHT MARY LYCETTE MARGARET LYONS HAZEL MAUNDRELL HELEN MORRISSEY GLADYS MURRAY EVELYN MURTHIN LOUISE PLOEGIER RUTH RANDOLPH FRANCES REES EMILY RUSSELL CECILE RYAN DOROTHY SPRING SOPHIE STITES HENRIETTA STRAUSS LUCILLE THOMPSON ALMA THORNBURG FANNIE TONG JAQUELINE WHITE MARION WOOD CLASS OF DECEMBER 'l7, 1915 Boys HENRY ALTSHULER LELAND BARBER LINCOLN BATCHELDER JEROME BAYER LLOYD BERENDSEN RICHARD BERNDT SELLING BRILL ALBERT BROWN CLAUD COCHRANE WILLIAM CUPPLES FRANK DANERI CACHOT DAVIS WALTER FRIEDRICHS RICHARD FROWENFIELD SIDNEY GIDALOVITZ MACK GLASBR MALBONE GRAHAM ALVIN GREENBERG EBBERT HUGHES ALVIN HYMAN HARRY A. LASURE IRVING LEVY CHARLES LINDGRAEN JOSEPH MCBR-IDE ARTHUR MCKINNEY DIRAGIMAR MENDER LEONARD MORRISON WILLIAM MURDOCK LOUIS OVIEDO LESTER POWER HENRY SCHWARTZ EZRA SHAPEERO ALVIN SMITH HENRY SUZUKAWA CARLOS VOGEL Girls MINNIE BALL MARGARET BAUM ELSIE BRINK VERONICA BUCK ELIZABETH BUFFINGTON MAiRIE COHN VICTORIA CONRADO GRACE B. DALY MARGARET EAKIN 52 Representatives Maine. He is the musical director of the San Fran- cisco Ballet, and has appeared as guest conductor with many of the countryfs best known orchestras. Since 1953, he has been the director of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestras Youth Concerts. Other graduates who continued on in the concert field as instrumentalists are Cellist James Arkatov, Flutist Jack May, Pianists Michael Lietweizen and Nancy Olsen, and Violinists Zena Blair, Kent Rose, Terry Vannin, and Madison Devlin, Jr. Representing the field of popular music are Charles Stern, whose band has played for a number of school promsg Dave Van Kreidt, jazz composerg Jo Dodge, drummer, Steve Douglas, violin player with the Art Hickman band during the ragtime period, and Singer Ray Baldwin. Representing the school in the field of architecture is Harvey Wiley Corbett of -the Class of 1891. He gained national recognition in 1903 when he designed the Municipal Group of buildings in Springfield, Mass. He was awarded the Medal of Honor of the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architecture in 1908 for his work in designing churches, hospitals, and other buildings. His best known accomplishment is developing Rockefeller Center, for which project he served as senior architect. Adolf Schuman, '25, president of Lilli Ann Cor- poration, is one of the nationls noted dress designers. Reversing the usual trend, he was one of the first American designers to introduce this country's fashions to European markets. James Leong is a worthy representative of Lowell in the field of painting. He has just completed a fine mural, showing 100 years of Chinese Living in the West, for a housing development in Chinatown, He was recently awarded a Fullbright Fellowship for 1956 and 1957 and will spend the period studying in Mu- nich, Germany. Noted photographers who have attended the school include Walter Scott, who all graduates since the turn of the century know as the man who takes the semi- annual senior court picture, and Joe Rosenthal, who won a Pulitzer Prize in photography for his famous shot of the United States Marines raising the American flag on Iwo Jima. From ll Fields Kirk Simpson, a reporter for the Associated Press is another Lowellite who has won a Pulitzer Prizel His award was in the field of journalism and was madel for a tribute he had written to the Unknown Soldier. The message has been inscribed in bronze on the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington Cemetery. Winthrop Sergeant is best known for his religious articles in Life Magazine. Terry Kilpatrick is one of televisionis most promis- ing playrights. His scripts have been used on the G.E. Playhouse and other top TV dramatic shows. Norval Gillspie is another graduate who is gaining fame in the writing field. Many of his short stories have appeared in recent editions of Snnfef Magazine. All of San Francisco's major newspapers have re- porters who have received their training at Lowell. In- cluded in this group are Dick Pearce of The Examiner, Art Rosenbaum of The Chronicle, and Bill Burkhardt and Floyd Waters of the San Francirro News Many Lowellites have been successful in the maga- zine field. Albert L. Furth is the executive editor of Fortune magazine, and Leonard Agazelow holds an important editorial post with Argonaut Magazine. Pierre Salinger, who won several national writing awards for his exposes while working for the San Francisco Chronicle, is now writing for the Satizrday Evening Por! and other leading magazines. Some Lowellites have attained fame and fortune in other lands. Included in this group is Hilario Camino Moncado who left Lowfell in 1918 and returned to his native Philippine Islands to become one of the coun- try's leading political figures. He was founder of the Filipino Federation and an unsuccessful Presidential candidate in 1946. He liked to refer to himself as a six star general and in 1948 it was estimated that he had a million men in his private army. Mabel Gray, '90, is Lowell's answer to Grace Kelly. She, too, had a storybook romance which led to eleva- tion to the rank of nobility. Shortly after leaving school she met and married Charles Pellew, an Englishman attending Columbia University. He was also the sev- enth Vicount Exmouth, which gave her the title of Vicountess. After the Vicount's death, she successful- ly managed and presided over his huge estate for many years. Outstanding Business Leaders Among Schools Graduates Parker Maddux, '99, founder of the San Francisco Bank, and civic leader. While there are successful Lowellites in every held of activity, it is the business and industrial field where the greatest numbers of former students have proved to be unusually successful. One may visit any of the city's largest stores, manufacturing plants, financial institutions, or other business and industrial establish- ments, and it is a good bet that key personnel of the organization are Lowell grads. Here is a cross section of the group: Frank H. Abbott-President of the Sunset-McKee Printing Co. Star L. Bruce-Vice President of the Matson Navi- gation Co. Louis Bloch-Chairman of the Board of the Crown- Zellerbach Corp. Edward Bransten-President of the MJB Coffee Co. Samuel C. Buckbee-President of the Buckbee- Thorne Co. Joseph C. Boyd-Pres. of the Sutter Investment Co. James Barry-President of the Alabama Power Co. Former Lowellites J. D. Zellerbach, '09, president of the Crown Zellerbach Corporation, and Harold Zeller- bach, who attended Lowel in 1913, president of the Zellerbach Paper Comdpany, are also well known as art an music patrons. Richard Bishop-Former President of the San Fran- cisco Junior Chamber of Commerce. William Burrows-Exec. of the Bank of America. Marvin Bonds-Manager of the California Arts and Engraving Co. Frank E. Booth-Founder of the F. E. Booth Co., salmon packers. Eugene A. Breyman-Vice President of the Zeller- bach Paper Co. Anson S. Blake-President of the Oakland Paving Co. 8: Blake Paving Co. Arthur C. Bush-Executive of t-he American Can Co. Carl S. Brown-Chairman of the Board of Index Investment Co. Sam Sonnenberg, graduate of the class of 1880 with highest honors in scholarship. Oldest known living graduate of Lowell High fBoys'J at 93 years of age. Retired prominent busi- nessman. Paul Bissinger-President of the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce. Herbert Eugene Clayburg-Stock broker and part- ner of J. Barth 8: Co. Fred Cellarius-V. P, of the San Francisco Bank. Donald Campbell-Insurance broker. Lee Crawford-President of the American Institute of Banking. George E. Cameron-Pres. of the Santa Cruz Port- land Cement Co. C. H. Crocker-President and founder of the C. H. Crocker Bank. John Philip Coghlan-Construction business. Robert Caswell-Executive in the coffee business. Edward Conway-Building contractor. ANNA FELROTH BEVERLY FISHER ELEANOR GARDNER GENLEVIEVE GILES zoE GRANDI ELAH HALE VIOLET HOENIG GRACE HOLDER MILDRED JONES KATHLEEN KERR FERARD LErcEsTER TRACE LINDEN DoRoTHY MACKAY ELIZABETH MoRR1soN CHRISTINE NEIGER GLADYS PITTAN CONSTANCE RESTON ANNETTE RUGGLES MILDRED SMITH oENEv1EvE SPADER ERMA sTE1N . HELEN SUTHERLAND IRENE WARNEKE CLASS OF JUNE 9. 1916 Boys JOHN AICKER ACHILLE ALBOUZE CORDES ANKELE GRANT ATCHESON MORRIS BADT NICHOLAS S. BALLOU ALFRED BRESLAUER LOUIS CAHEN MONROE CAHN FORREST CAMPBELL EDWIN H. CARRIGAN MILTON CLARK WILLIAM CODES MARTIN DINKELSPIEL JACK DORN FRANK DOYLE WOOD ENGLISH LAWRENCE FRANKLE RUSSELL GREEN RALPH S. HALL ARTHUR HARZHELD WARREN HELLMAN BERT H. HENNIG JUNIOR KLAUSER EDWIN J. KOEPKE GEORGE F. KORN ANTON KROGER M AROEL LAPLACE ALVIN LOBREE JACK MACDONALD JOSEPH MEHERIN MERRILL MENSOR STANLEY MEUTZER ARTHUR MERCER WAYNE MILLINGTON LEWIS MORRISON STUART MORSEHEAD K. NAKABAYASHI SAICHI NAKAHARA DONALD NOYES WILLIAM NUNN GlEORGvE OVLEDO LOUIS PICCIRILLO HERBERT RABINOWITZ EUGENE REBSTOCK RUDOLPH -RENN BRITTON REY WALLIS RIESE ROLAND ROBERTS LEE ROSENBERG MAX SAN DIEGO EDWARD SARGENT ALLISON SCHOFIELD GUSTAV SCHWARTZ WALTER SHAW TOM SHILLOCK HU'BE-RT SOHER WILFRE-D STREET NEIL F. STULL ROLLIN TENNEY KAZNE TOGASAKI HAROLD WILLATTS Girls KATHERINE ARONSON ANNA BAZZURO MIGNON BEHM CONCETTA BELLANCA MARION BLACK BEATRICE BLANCHARD DOROTHY BROWNLOW VIOIJET CURRIER RUTH D. DUNCAN ELIZABEVIIH DUNN EVLELYN FAHEY HELEN FONG BERNICE HANLON RUTH HARDY KATHERINE HAWORTH HILDA HALISHER ELFRlEDA KELLOGG I-IILDA KROTOZYNER HAZIEL LEONARD RUTH LEVY HELEN R. MANNING SIBYL MCBRIDE LOVINDA MOON JANICE MORGAN GRACE MORRIS FLORENCE MOSES CECELIA O'BlRIEN DOROTHY PFORTNER GIERTRUDE RADEBAUGH VIRGINIA RICHMOND ANNIE SCHEFFSKY MAY SCOTT VIOLET SCOTT HARRIET SEARIGHT MARJORIE SELWOOD LISBETH SEWALL JASMINE SIDLOUSKI HELEN STRICKLAND ELEANOR TYRRELL FRANCES VAN BARNWELD AILEEN WALL ADRIEHNE WILLIAMS OLGA WILLIAMSON CLASS OF DECEMBER 15. 1916 Boys HARRY ABINANTI ALBERT BARUCH ANDREW BELLANCA EWALD BERENDSEN EDMOND BERGEROT ROBERT T. BOYD EOSTZER C-LUTTE DANIEL COI-BEN BERT L. COLLINS JOHN DAVITT LLOYD DINKELSPIEL WARRIEN DOBLE CHARLES DOE JOSEPH DOMB GEORGE DOUGLASS ARTHUR DUNNE ROSS DUNNINGAN B. JOSEPH EEIGENBAUM SIDNLEY FRANKLIN FRED GERKEN EDWARD HELLER LLOYD HEYNEMANN GEORGE HOOPER WILLIAM KOENIG LOUIS LALANNE HERBERT LLOYD D. C. LOS BANOS BEN MARSH RENFORTH MCBLRIDE LEO MEYER HOWARD RANSOHOFF GEORGE RICHARDSON HAROLD SAVILLE WILLIAM SHIELS LIONEL SORACCO YOSHIGI SUGIYAMA EDWARD TURKINGT ON SADAJI UTAHARA STANLEY VIERNEY VOYNE VUCOSAVLIEVICH HAROLD WAIXEL RIEGINALD WILSON BERNARD WOLF ALEX ZABALDANO Girls ROSALIE BOKCK RUTH CURRI-E G-ERALDINIE CUITIHBERT ELLEN HINDES JEANNETTE KIEARNEY ELSA KLUEGIEL GERTRUDE LACHMAN BEATRIGE LERCARA ELIZABETH MACARTHUR JIENNIE MILLER ELIZABETH MUIR H. LOUISE NELSON CAROLYN OBiER HELEN PHIELPS MARGARET PRIDDLE ALICE REILLY GEORGIA RICHMOND LRIENE SELLECK EVA TIPPETT PIEARL WOLF RUTH WOLLWEBER CLASS OF JUNE 8. 1917 Boys LELAND AYER HAROLD BAHLS JOE BRANDENSTEIN HERBERT BUCK GAGE BURMiEISTER MYRELL COHL MERVYN CONNER MORTIMBR COOMBS NADA DAVIS LEWIS DE LEW 54 Hector Escobosa, '26, is President of I.Magnin, and Les Vogel jr., '33, is San Francisco's leading Chevrolet dealer. William Cunningham-Real Estate. Eugene de Sabla-Founder of the P.G.8:E. William Earl Doud-Real Estate. Harold R. Ebright-Engineering and construction business. Hector Escobosa-President of I. Magnin's. Maurice L. Euphrat-President Wendling-Nathan Lumber Co. john Eppinger-Owner of the Golden Pheasant Restaurant and Leighton Industries. Herbert Fleishhacker-Financier. Harold Freemon-Freemon Box Co. Richard Gock-Executive of the Bank of America. William Gallagher-Wrecking Co. john W. Gallagher-Wrecking Co. Dennis Gallagher-Wrecking Co. Arthur Gordon-President of Acme Paper Co. Bob Goldstein-Diamond Palace executive. Russ Green-Vice President of Signal Oil Co. D. Lyle Ghiradelli-President of Ghiradelli Co. Willis E. Huson-Architect. Sherman Hoelscher-President of the San Francisco Stock Exchange. W. H. Hewitt-Vice President of john Deere Co. C. Floyd Hirshfeld-Engineer. Louis Honig, Sr.-President of Honig Advt. Co. Louis Honig, jr.-Vice Pres. of Honig Advt. Co. William Kahn-Insurance broker. Robert Koshland-S. Koshland 8: Co. Frederick J. Koster-Industrialist and former Direc- tor of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Felton Kaufmann-V. P. of Sommer 8: Kaufmann. Melville Kaufmann-Sommer 8: Kaufmann. Daniel E. Koshland-Director of the Goodwill In- dustries and V.P. of Levi-Strauss Co. Hugh C. Keenan-Contractor. Harry KlienhEx-President of the California Bean Growers Association. George N. Keystone-Stock Broker and Pres. of the San Francisco Stock Exchange C30-'41j. Walter H. Levy-Chief Purchasing Agent of the California Packing Corp. jacob B. Levison-Pres. of Fireman's ,Fund Ins. Co. Benjamin P. Lillienthal-V.P. of Lillienthal Co. Raymond Lang-Lang Advertising Agency. Alfred Lundberg-President of the Key System of Oakland. Leon Liebes-Department store executive. james Kennedy Lynch-First governor of the Fed- eral Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Irving Levin-Auto Supply business. Harold Levin-Auto Supply business. Marshall Levin-Auto Supply business. David D. Levin-Auto Supply business. Leo W. Meyer-President of the LeoW. Meyer, Ltd. Insurance Brokers. Alfred E. Meyer-Executive of Sutro 8: Co. John W. Mailliard-Chairman of the Board of Mailliard 8: Schmiedel. DI. Ward Mailliard-President of the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce in 1936. Alex J. McBoyle-President of Trevor 8: Co. Charles W. Marwedel-Merchant. Frederick P, Mahler-Controller 8: Secretary to Hills Bros. Coffee Co. Wilson Meyer-Director of the Wells-Fargo Union Trust Co. Richard A. McLaren-V. P. of Williams Diamond Co. J. Max Moore-Pres., Quaker Pacific Rubber Co. Alfred Moskowitz-Real Estate. Leonard Moskowitz-Real Estate. WilliamA.Magee-Pres. of Thomas Magee 8: Sons George S. Montgomery-V.P. of Castle Cook, Ltd Vincent Mead-Secretary of Buckbee Thorne Co. Hulda B. McGinn--Secretary-Manager of 'California Theatres Association. Grover Magnin-I. Magnin Co. . Mark M. Morris-Bay Beverage Co. and Automatic Merchandising Co. Virginia Maloney-Head buyer for Kress's 8: Co. Parker Maddux-Pres. of the San Francisco Bank. Eugene Meyer-Pres. of the International Bank. George Middleton--Real Estate. Bill Middleton-Real Estate. Eugene de Sabla, '83, founded the Pacific Gas and Electric Company. Leon Voorsanger, '97, former president of Lyons-Magnus, Inc. Robert Ostrow-Meat packing business. Frank B. Peterson-Founder of the Frank B. Peter- son CO. 8: Red Salmon Canning CO. Haradon Pratt-Business Executive. Myron M. Price-Hirsch 8: Price Clothing CO. Max Rosenfeld-Auto manufacturing Co. William Paul Rieger-Perfume manufacture. Edward F. Russ-V. P. of the Commercial Arts 85 Engraving CO. William R. Roberts-V. P. of the Crocker First National Bank. james Ransohoff-Department Store executive. Sidney L. Schwartz-Exec. of Sutro 8: Co. Bonds. Albert Woodson Scott, jr.-President of the A. W. Scott and CO. Samuel Sonnenberg-Treasurer of Crown Zeller- bach Corp. Roy Somers-Vice President of the Petroleum Equipment CO. of L.A. Mark L. Gerstle, '84, has been El director of the Anglo California Trust Company, a trustee for General Petroleum Corporation, and was one of the original directors of the Emporium where he served as vice president and chairman of the Board of Directors. Eugene Meyer, '92, publisher and editor of the Warbingion Part, one of the nation's leading newspapers. Also has served as President of the World Bank. Adolph Schuman-President of Lili Ann Corp. Sidney M. Schwartz-President of the San Francisco Stock Exchange. Albert Samuels, Jr.-jeweler. Leo Simon-Simon Mattress Co. Arthur Wolcott Towne-Manager of Blake, Moffitt Sc Towne Paper CO. Charles L. Tilden-Pres. Of Overland Freight Co. Perry T. Tomkins-President of the Building and Loan Association in Berkeley. Oliver Raphael Vannucci-Vannucci Construction. Les Vogel, jr.-Chevrolet dealer. Shirley Walker-Walker Advertising Agency. Jack Wyman-Advertising Agency. Paul Yost-Vice President of the First National Bank Of L.A. Julius Zetterman-Advertising. J. David Zellerbach-Zellerbach Paper CO. james K. Lynch, '76, former Governor of the Federal Reserve for the Twelfth District. Presi- dent of the California Bankers Association, and President of the American Bankers Association. TERYS DI'ETLE OSBORNE DOANE DONALD FALCONER ORMOND FLOOD TADAO FUJIMOTO DE LANO FULLER MAXIMO GIMENEZ BENJAMIN GOLD GOLDEN GRIFFITH RUDY OUNZEL 5AMiEs GUTHRIE PERRY HARDWLCK ROYAL HARRELL NEIIEEN HAUB ALBIERT HAYES ROBERT HEYMAN LLOYD HIBBETT BARRETTS HINDES ROBERT HOOPER ARTHUR HOPPE MARTIN ICOVE GUNK1 KAI JOHN A. KILLAIIEE GARDNER LANDON WESLEY MANOLES CAESAR MANNELLI SHERWIN MCIQENZIE VICTOR MCPHEE MIELVIN MCRAE CHESTER MEANEY MARTIN MITAU JOHN MITCHELL LAWRENCE MORIEL WALTER I. MORSE EDWARD MURPHY TOBA OIIENDER JOHN PEARSCHEID LLOYD PETERSON JIEFRERSON PEYSER WILLIAM PRINCE REUBEN RATNIER BAXTER SHARP MARTIN D. SIBERT STEWART SIMPSON JONATHAN sNOOK LLOYD sTOcK RUSSELL SWEENEY PARK H. TYRIELL LOUIS WALDECK THEODORE WEHR KENNETH R. WILSON PHILIP WIssER ROEIERT WORMSER EDMOND zUssMAN Girls HELEN ASMIAN BEATRICE AUSTIN L. AYER IEA BARKIS ZELLA BEEBE LUCILIIE BEHNKE BEATRIICE BEPLER MINNIE BERIELSON GERALDINE BOHANNON CLAIRE E. CANE HELEN CROOKS MARIAM DONNELLY SHIRLEY :EDWARDS LENORIE FISCHEL DOROTHEA GORTER HELEN GRAHAM VIOLET GRAY MARGARET GRIMES ELSIE HARTH AIBEN HASHIMOTO IMOGENE HIELNO DOROTHY HESS EDITH HUNTINGTON KATHRYN HYDE GLADYS LACAY ELSIE LEICESTER TI-IELMA LIGHT STELLA MACKINTOSI-I ELIZABETH MCMULLEN BESSIE MCNAB MARGUERITE MULLER GERALDINE MOBLEY ANITA NATHHORST EDITH PASMORLE GLADYS PATCH MADELEINE PAULL LUCILLE PYNE HELEN RHODES BERNADETTE RILEY SYLVIA ROBERTS MIRIAM SAVILLE BARBARA SHIERMUND MARY E. SIBERT ROSE SILVERS FRANCES SMITH MARIE SPENCER MARIO N D. STEVICK ADELINE THOMPSON EMIILE TORIRIE NINFA VALVO LOUISE WAIBEL MILDRED WALLEN CLASS OF DECEMBER 18. 'l9'I7 Boys HENRY ANKELE FREDERICK W. BAHLS ARTHUR BOERICKE LESLIE BOTTOMLEY NATHANIEL BRAUSER ANTHONY CUNHA GEORGE DAWSON EDWIN FRIEDMAN LLOYD FRONK HUGH FULLERT ON CHARLES GATES GEORGE GERDES PHILLIP GITTINGS JOHN HAGIS RICHARD HARMS GEORGE HIBBETT RAE HYMSON AR IIHUR KAHN IRWIN KAUFMANN WALTER KENNEDY RALPH C. KEPHART LAWRENCE KINSPEL MILTON KLEIN ROBERT LEVY OMUND LILLELAND JULIUS MACKSON PAUL MARTIN ALEX MULLGARDT ALLEN NEWHOFF HAMILTON NOLAN GERALD O'CONNOR VINCENT O'CONNER HAROLD REAMER GR.AYSON ROGERS LEO ROTH WALTER SCHAFFER ALEX SOHWARTZ RALST ON SIVERSON ISADORE SMITH NATHAN SPIVOCK FRANK SUTLIFFE RUDOLPH TROUTNER CHRIS TROWBRIDGE HAROLD TRUMPOUR SEYMOUR TURNER GEORGE WASCERWITZ CHESTER WEST ALBERT WITHOFT Girls ADELE A. ARATA ENOLA BADGER OLIVE BROOKING JUDITH CAMPBELL XVINFRIED CAMPBELL GRACE CUTHBERTSON HELEN EAKIN, SARAH ELLISBERG GENEVIEVE FLEISCHMAN MURIEL FULTON MARIE GREEN ROMONA HAYES MILDRED HOWE DOROTHY LELAND AILJEEN MACLYMONT HELEN MANSFIELD MARY MCBRIDE IRENE MCCARTY ALICE MCCAW ADELHEID MCGOWAN ELEANOR OSBOiRN VERA PENNGTON CECELIA RUBURY IQATIHRYN STONE REVA SUGARMAN DOROTHY ULMAN EMILY XVINDELE SADIE ZEDERMAN CLASS OF JUNE 14, 1918 Boys ROBERT ARDELL ROBERT BENDER WILDER BENTLY FORREST BERG LOUIS BERING KURST H. BERNDT EDGAR BISSINGER NELSON W, BLACK JACK BOYDEN ROBERT CAHEN RUSSELL CLARK EARL COHEN JOHN F. COLLINS. MAURICE J. CONKLIN T. ROBERT EDWARDS BRUCE ELLIOTT CHARLES A. ELLIS HARRY GROSS L. H. GURLEY GEORGE HARRIS SAUL HAYFER THORNTON HIGH LLOYD HIRSCHFELD GEORGE HONIG LLOYD HUMMEL 56 Harold A. Kellogg, Class of June 1905. Promi- nent businessman faccountantj. AAII of his family graduated from Lowell. His father was one of the outstanding English teachers in California. His sister has been teaching science at Lowell since 1922. Frank E. Booth graduated in 1880.He is mainly responsible for the development ot' the sardine packing industry in California, one of the state's most important sea food products. George G. Montgomery, '12, vice president of Castle and Cook, sugar factors, shipping hrm. Arthur W. Towne, '12, vice- president and general manager of Blake, Moffitt, and Towne. Edward C. Hutchinson was associated with the Kennedy Mining and Milling Company for 40 years as secretary, general manager, and as president. Matt A. Harris was a member of the class of 1893. President of the Van Arsdale Harrs Lumber Company. Lowellite Wins Fame as Cartoonist Marty Links graduated from Lowell in 1936 and immediately entered the field of commercial art. In 1940 she had her cartoons syndicated and now they can be seen in papers across the nation. In private life Marty Links is the wife of Alex Ar- guello, a lawyer, whom she met wlhen she was lost in the cavernous halls of Lowell on her first day there. It was love at first sight, she says. Now She is the mother of two lively children. The inspirations for the famous B0bbysox series are born in a pleasant studio in the back of the Arguel- los' home. Often the names of friends are used in the cartoons, and Lowell pennants adorn the walls of the typical teenagers' rooms, When asked to do the cartoons on this page, Marty wanted to know what Lowell was like today. Do they still gossip in the court at lunchtime ? she wanted to know. 1 If if f Lowell Court scene, any year. MART., JJNKS Marty Link's impression of the 1956 Lowell Song Leaders. ,umm-1 LINKS ROBERT INGRAM ALFRIED ISHIKAWA THOs. M. JENNINGS CARL JENSEN ELTON JIMENEZ WILFRED H. JOHNSTON HORACE JONES JULIUS KAI-IN, JR. JULES LABARTHE RICHARD LEONARD CARI. LUDEMANN GEORGE W. LUPTON VICTOR MAAS EDWIN MACDONALD JOHN MCCONE HENRY MERKEL LAWRENCE MILLER c. BROWNLEE NEWTON ADOLPH OsWALD ROSS PELTON BRANDLEY PLYMIRE CLAUDE N. ROSENBERG MORRIS ROSENBERG WILBUR RUDEE ALLAN RYAN VICTOR H. SALSMAN HAROLD scR1ENER FRANCIS SHEARIER JOHN H. SNOW ELLIS sP1EGL ABRAHAM sP1vocK CHARLES STELLING JOHN v. STRAUSS EDWARD SUTHERLAND DUDLEY TA1T ANTHONY TARANTINO LEONARD TYRRELL DOUGLAS WALDRON GERALD WORTHINGTON Girls OLGA ARDELL BARBARA BALL EDWINA BARRY RUTH BOROWSKY CLARITA BOTHE SOPHIE BREIT LOUISE BRESLAUER ESTHER BRUCKNER RITA CONVERY MARIE CULLEN LOIS CURETON PARTHENIA G. DAHL ELIZABETH DANIELS LURLINE DE MARAIS MARJORY DICKIESON CECELIA DONOVAN BERNICE M. DORN RUTH DUFFIE BERNICE EDDIJE ANNIE M. FOLEY AUGUSTA GOEJRLICH BERNICE GOLDSTONE FLORENCE GREEN AGNIES HARRISON ELIZABETH HAZLETT VIOLET HEPBURN PHYLLIS HILDER DOROTHY HILL DOROTHEA HORTON LUCILLE JACOBS ZELMA MACDONALD RUTH MCCALLUM CLAIRE G. MCCARTY WANDA MCMURTRY MALVINIA MLLDER EIIIEIEN MURRAY ANITA NIETO LOUISE NOUSSEILLETES MAUDE O'BRIEN REGINA O'DONNELL MARIAN O'GRADY ALBINA G. PICETTI ANNA REGAN ELLINOR SCHAECHE ETHYL SCHEELE DOROTHY SMITH BERNICE STIEFEL FRANCES STOWELL ISABELLA SUNDER LILLIAN L. TASSI ROSALIE TRAUTNER ADA B, WEAVER GWENDOLINE WEGENER CLASS OF JANUARY 3, 1919 Boys GEORGE BAHRS HANS BRIESEN GEORGE H, CABANISS LEE CHEUNG JOHN F. CONNOLLY ABRAHAM DRESOW JACK FERRI MAX H. FISCH JEROME GLUCKFELD EVERETT GRIFFIN BERT GROSS WILLIAM HANLEY FREDERICK HEELLMAN EDWIN H. JULIEN KAUEZO KAI EDWARD KNIPPER ALEXANDER LAEORQUE FRANCIS L. LANDON FERDIINAND LAPEYRI JOSEPH ILEVITEN CECIL MCCANN JOSEPH MCNAMARA DOUGLAS MENNIE IVA MONTI MERRILL MORSHEAD O'l'I'O s. NAGIEL SHELLY N. PIERCE EZRA RATNER RANDOLPH SCHMIEDEL Joi-LN SKAFF JOSEEH SZUKALSKI GEORGE VAN VLIET MATI-PEW WEBER RAYMOND WEINMAN EDWIN WELLMAN NATALIE WERNIER THEODORE WINTHRALL ALBERT WOLLENBERG Girls FLORINIE ABRAMS ALBERTA ALLEN HELEN BEEBE VELMA BIERCOVICH ALICE BUCHANAN EMMA CANTON DOROTHY CLARK MARION B, CUNHA EDNA CURRAN NORMA DAVIS EVELYN DE LONG EILEEN FALVEY ANNIE FAVERMAN KATHLEEN FITZGERALD RUTH GREENBERG ELSIE HALEY AtLOiHA HINZ ELSIE HOFFMAN MILDRED ICOVE HELEN M. LAT.EY HELEN MACKINTOSH ANTOINETTE MARCACCI DOROTHY MCHUGH EVELYN MCLAUGHLIN ALICE MITCHELL GECILIA MULROONEY EDITH K. MURDOCK ELEANOR MURRAY ALVA NOLAN ESTHER POSNER DORA RICH IRMA RIDLEY JEAN ROBINSON IVERNIE SCHAEFER FRANCES SI-IELDON FRANCHOW TURNER MARY I. WOCKER EIDINIA WOENNE DOROTHY YATES CLASS OF JUNE. 1919 Boys GABRIEL ABRAMS JACK -ABRAHAMSON W. VERNE AHRENS NORBIERT BABIN PARKER BAILEY WALLACE BATES HAROLD BERTHIAUME 'EHEODORE R. BILL ALFRED BRANCH RALPH OAHN PHILIP CHAPMAN ALEXANDER B. CHINN GEORGE A. CORLIEY FRANK DOR-N LUCINE EDWARDS DWIGHT FRISBIEE HERBERT GOLDMAN ISIDOR GRODSKY CHARLES G. GWYNN PAUL HADLEY ALBERT I-IARKER ALVIN HOLMES WILLARD JOHNSON JOHN JORDAN FRANK KUHNLE JEAN P. LATAPIE FRED LEVY ABE MIELMOM ROBERT MORTON EDGAR J. MUNTER MARVIN OSBURN EUGENIE PECKHAM EUGENE PIERCE RICHARD POELETE ALFRED POPE MAURIOE POPER 58 Lowellites Enter Medical Look through the list of graduates throughout the pages of this book and you will discover the names of some of the country's ,finest and most respected doctors and dentists. Even the first class, back in 1859, with only 11 graduates turned out a successful member of the medical profession. He was Henry Gibbons, jr., who continued his education at the University of the Pacific, and then served in the Civil War as a medical oflicer with the Union troops from 1863 to 1865. He returned to San Francisco after the war and gained the reputation of being the city's leading obstetrician. He later served as San Francisco health officer. Former Lowellites have served with distinction in all phases of the medical profession. Dr. Harry Blackfield, '20, has gained his fine reputation as a plastic surgeon. In the field of psychiatry there are Dr. julian Wolfson, '00, Dr. Kathleen Stuart, '23, and Dr, William Kelley. The latter served as the psychiatrist at the Nurem- berg Trials for the Nazi war criminals. Dr. Paul Castle- hun, '94, has served as Chief of the United States Re- serve Hospital Unit. Dr. Stanley H. Mentzer has served as president of the San Francisco County Med- ical Society. Dr. Leon Michels, '26, received a Bronze Star for his heroic deeds as a member of the medical corps in World War II. just about every Lowellite on the following list could be singled out for some important contribution to the medical or dental profession: Edmon Alberton, Adolph Baer, 1894, Hans Bar- kan, Otto Barkan, 1905, George Becker, 1912, jerry Beltman, William Bender, 1914, Alice Bepler, 1915, R. Berke, Abe Bernstein, 1920, Jerome Bettman, 1927, john A. Bier, 1945, Robert Blum, 1925, Eliza- beth Bradley, Ieptha Briggs, Lester Briones, 1923, Paul Bruch, 1941. Earl Cane, 1920, Arthur Carfagni, 1943, Francis Dr. Edward Munter is a member of a Lowellite family that has been attending the school for three generations. Carmody, 1924, james Carson, 1920, Paul Castlehun, 1895, Guido Cervelli, A. B. Chinn, 1919, Helen Chinn, O. Cope, 1923, E. A. Daneri, julian Davis, 1932, Theodor Diller, 1932, Herbert Dryfoos, 1927, Kenneth Dulfey, 1920, Maurice Eliaser, 1927, Abel- son Epstein, 1914, and Arthur Dunn, 1920. Leland Felton, Harris Fishbon, 1925, Charles Fletcher, 1920, Randolph Flood, 1915, Monroe Fried- man, Morton Gibbons, J. Wolfe Goldstein, 1928, Roland A. Grubb, 1922, John Haman, 1923, Chester Harris, Robert Harry, 1944, Lloyd F. Heaney, 1921, Arden Hedge, 1929, Ralph Hornung, 1918, Verne T. Inman, 1924, George Jacobs, 1927, T. C. ,Iaegeling 1921, K. M. Jenkins, 1923, Ernest R. Ker, 19133 Gus Kerhulas, 1930, Thomas F. Killilea, Milto Klein, 1917, Paul Klein, 1923, Russell Klein, 1927 Paul Krueger, Ostroilo S. Kucich. C. Stanley Lawrence, 1932, Stanley Lann, 1937 Sanford Leeds, George Leek, Herman Leland, Sher man Leland, 1921, Maurice Leonard, 1923, Edwar Levin, 1923, Louis K. Lichtenstein, 1920, Harold H- FAMOUS DOCTORS ARE FORMER LOWELL STUDENTS Pictured below are four Lowellites from a single family who are part of the school's long list of doctors and dentists. They are Dr. H. C. Marcus, '16, and his three sons, Dr. Irwin L. Marcus, '42, Dr. Sanford Marcus, '36, E and Dr. Hurbert C. Marcus. '48, and Dental Professions Dr. John J. Kingston, '14, along with his medical practice, has served as Coroner for the City of San Francisco. Lindner5 J. H. Lonergan, 19315 Melville Long, 19375 John C. Marsh, 19235 Earl Marsh, 19295 Herman Marcus, 19485 Sanford A. Marcus, 19365 H. C. Mar- cus, 19165 Francis Mauer, 19205 Angelo May, 19295 john D. Mayer, 19205 Robert Mendle, 19255 Stanley Mentzer, 19165 Pierre Merle5 Merrill Meusor5 George Meyer, 19235 Leon Michels, 19265 Shelby Mohr, 19345 Andrew Molinari5 Lewis Morrison, 19165 E. Munter, 19195 L. F. Musante, 1935, and Arthur A. ,Molinari. Morton Nahman, 19335 Christine Nerger, 19155 Al- fred Newmang Charles Nicolai5 John Null, 19285 Charles O'Brian, 19215 Gerald O'Hara, 19255 El- wood R. Olson, 19125 George Ociedo5 Robert Palmer, 19315 Theodore H, Paoli, 19285 Leo Paslin5 Lionel A. Pereyra, 19265 Theodore Peftaerson, 19295 Saxton Pope5 Milton A. Post, 19225 Galzell Potter, 19245 Fletcher Pyle, 19265 Donald Pratt. Ralph Rabinowitz, 19105 Philip A. Rasori, 19235 J. Marion Read, 19085 Francis Redewill, Jr., 19295 Frances Redewill5 Harry Rees5 Julian Reinhertz, 19265 Emmet L. Rixford, 19225 Harry P. Robarts, 19275 Saul J. Robinson, 19275 Paul R. Rockwitz, 19235 Louis Roncovierig Herbert Rosen5 Harold Ross5 Mary K. Ryan5 W. B. R'yder5 David A. Rytand. John J. Sampson, 19145 joseph A. Sampson5 Louis Schmohl, 19305 Thomas Schulte, 19275 Henry Scott, 19275 A. jesse Shenson, 19385 Ben Shenson, 19325 Sidney Shenson, 19275 Albert Shumate, 19235 Jacob Smith, 19245 William Smith, 19305 Ronald Sockolov, 19439 Ralph Soto-Hall5 John Spencer5 Herbert Stein5 Edward Susnow, 1930. Leon Takoyu 5 John Tofts5 Emile Torre, 19175 john Tufts, 19125 Morrell Vecki, 19135 Gerald Villain, 19205 Hans Von Geldern, 19125 George Ward, 19235 Dr. Harry Steinberg as he looked at the time of his graduation in 1919. Robert Watkins5 Bernard Weil, 19345 Earl L. White, 19255 Norman Wihr, 19235 Harry K. Wolff, 19315 Alfred Zobel5 Jerome Zobel, 19245 and Reuben Zum- walt, 1926. The following list contains a few of the Lowell graduates with D.D.S, degrees: William R. Burke, Lester N. Briones, Elmer S. Compton, J. Earl Cane, Kenneth M. Jenkins, Thur- low jaegling, Monroe S. Friedman, Roland A. Grubb, Ralph S. Hornung, Paul A. Klein, Frank C. Larsen, John C. March, George M. Peters, Leo I. Paslin, and Lowell N. Peterson. Philip A. Rasori, Paul R. Rockwitz, William B. Ryder, Herbert R. Rosen, Milton A. Post, Gustav Putzke, William S. Smith, Norman L. Wihr, George F. Ward, Leslie Myers, Louis W. Schmohl, john W. Mayer, Harold P. Esser, Harold Keyes, Eugene E. Reb- stock, and Leland A. Barber. Dr. Saxton T. Pope, '95, was equally noted as a skilled surgeon, big game hunter, and author. FRANCIS ROCHEX JOE ROSENZWEIG DE WITT RUSSELL HENRY SANFORD AARON SA.RGENT RLEMIGIO SEGOVIA ORTMANN SHUMATE SANFORD SIDDELL HOSMER SMITH MERROW SORLEY J. HANDLIN THRELKELD EARL TREADWELL JULIAN VALERIANO LOUIS WATERFALL CONRAD WLEIL IRVING WEINSTEIN LOTON S. WELLS LEONG WING AUSTIN WOOD Girls ROSE AMEDEO THEMIS ANDERSON VELMiA BERNARD ANITA BERENDSEN ALICE BITLEY HELEN BLACK CHARLOTTE BRUCKNER EDNA BURNETT DOROTHY CARKEET EMILIE CHAPUIS LORETTE COLE MARGUERITE DALY VIRGINIA DE BELL BERNICE DONNELLY FLORIENCE M. FOLEY EDNA G. GAYETTE CONSTANCE GRAY ALBERTA GRIBI LUCY GRIMES SYLVIA HIRSCH GERTRUDE HOECKELE J. SBRLRITA JANE DOROTHY JONES THELMA JORGENSEN LORETTA KENNY ZOE L. KING ESTELLE KIRWAN HELEN LAZAIRUS MADELEINE LECHTER RUTH LEON ALITI-IA MARTIN MARIE MASON BEATRICE MECCHI EMMA MILLER HORTENSE R. MILLER MARGARET NIELSEN BIDDY O'SULLIVAN MILDRED PETERSON MARIE PLESS VIOLET RUNGE GERTRUDE M. ,SOI-IRAM ANNA 'IIAHENY ELTRUDE WAGNER HELEN WALLACE LOLA WILSON CLASS OF JANUARY 9, 1920 Boys GUSTAV AMBERG RIMO BACIGALUPI EDGAR BELLANI PHILIP BENTZ MARK A. BOTTENSTEIN ALAN CHARVOZ ALEXANDER CONEY CHARLES COX LESLIE DANNER WILLIAM DEAMER LEONARD C. EDELMANN HERMIAN ELSBACH WILLIAM FARRENKOPF JACK FEDER SYDNEY FISHER CHARLES FLETCHER ALBERT S. FURTH FRED B. GALBREATH AUGUSTE GAUTHIER GEORGE S. HARMAN CHARLES E. HART GEORGE HIGGINBOTHAM EDWARD JACKSON CHARLES JANSSIEN JOHN F. KAVANAGH WILLIAM KESSLER HERBERT KIRSCHNER GEORGE KLEISER CORNELIUS LANDSBERGER HUGH LYTLE ROBERT MCGOWAN WARREN MARSTON CLIFFORD MARTIN GEORGE MARTIN ARTHUR MATTHEWS CRAIG MAXWEIJL EARLE MCBIRNEY GEORGE MCGEE JOHN MERIRICK FRANK MUSSO ROBERT NOURSE BARRY O'CONNOR JAN QUAN CHARLES QUAST KENNETH RULOFSON JOSEPH SALTZMAN RUSSELL B. SHEAN HLAROLD SIMON BYRON SMITH HARRY SMITH HARRY STEINBERG FRANK STEVENS MALCOLM STEWART ALBERT E. TAYLOR I. RINALDO TORIGGINO LAWRENCE TRAUNER GERALD VILLAIN ARNOLD WEBER LOUIS W. WHITE LEON WOLLENBERG WILLIAM WOODS Girls HELEN BARRY MURIEL BRESLIN URSULA CHESHIRE FRANCES H. COLE DORIS COMPTON FAY E. CONGDON IRMA D1ENNISON GRACE DENTON DOROTHEA W. FRAI-IM ROSE l-IANLEY IDA HERNON MARGUERITE HERON RUTH HOFFMAN R. BERNARDINE HOLDRIDGE ESTHJER JOHNSON STELLA JONES EDNA KELLY CLARA A. KING HELEN KING GRACE KNOXW LES BESSIE LAU EVELYN LAU EVELYN LENDELOF JOSEPHINE MADDEN HELEN MAIL FLORENCE MANELLI RUTH D. MARACCI BERYL W. MOSS JOSEPHINE NEWELL EDNA OLSEN SELMA R. PABST RUTH PENNEFEATHER INEZ BERSSON BERTHA PRICE ELEANOR RAPHAE-L EDNA ROWELL TPAULINE ROY ADELA RYER WANDA M. SCHAAB HELEN SCI-IILLIGER EVA SIVERSON MARY Y. TAKETA FAITH TERASAWA DOROTHY WOLL ESTIHIER WONG CLASS OF JUNE 9. 1720 Boys AMMEL S. ABRAMS JOHN ALIATO SAMUEL ALTSHULER JOSEPH V. ARATA JEROLD BAER LOUIS BARRAZA EDWARD BATES WALTER BEALE ABE BERNSTEIN HERTRAND BLEY LEO BOWMAN ROBERT BOYNTON ROBERT M. BROWN MAMLERTO BUENAFE DONALD CAMPBELL CLAIR V. CARL JAMES CARSON ROBERT CARSON ALLEN CAVENAUGH PETER CONMY JOHN CONNOLLY CHARLES COOK FORREST DAVIDSON NORMAN J. ms BACK JOHN DINKELSPIEL ,PAUL DOZIER CHARLES J. FERGUSON CHARLES FLEISCHMAN RAYMOND FLOOD DICK P. FULLERT ON CLYDE GENTLE PAUL A. GLLEBE THLEODORE R. GOSLINER STANLEY GREEN HARRY GREEN BERG STANTON R. HAIGHT 60 Scientists Among Graduates Lowell High School can well be proud of the long list of scientific achievements of former students. In- cluded in this group are two Nobel Prize winners, a pioneer in the field of aviation, and a chemist who has mastered the secret of making synthetic emeralds. Albert Abraham Michelson, who graduated from Boys' High School in 1869, was the first American scholar to be awarded a Nobel Prize. He received the award in 1907 for his research on the velocity of light, From 1892 until his death in 1931 he was head of the physics department at the University of Chicago. Dr. joseph Erlanger became the second Boys' High School Nobel Prize winner when he received the award in 1945. His study of the individual nerve threads gained him the honor. Dr. Erlanger was to have grad- uated from Boys' High with the class of '92 but, like many of the students of that time, left before graduat- ing and gained entrance to the University of California by taking an examination. He has received an M.D. from johns Hopkins University and has served as head of the department of physiology at the University of Wisconsin and Washington University of St. Louis, Missouri. While attending Lowell in 1899, Thomas E. Self- ridge received an appointment to West Point. He graduated with honors in 1903, and, because of his scientific ability, was assigned to the Aeronautical Di- vision of the Signal Corps. His initial assignment was to work with Dr, Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, who was experimenting with man-lift- ing kites. Dr. Bell described Lieutenant Selfridge as the most widely informed expert on dynamics of the air and mechanical flight and successful navigation of the air in America. On September 17, 1908, while Carroll'Chatham, '33, is the discoverer of a method to make synthetic emeralds. Dr. Albert Michelson, '69, was the first American Nobel Prize winner. making a test flight with Orville Wright, Selfridge was killed when the plane crashed. He 'became the first man in the United States to die in an airplane crash and has been memorialized by having Selfridge Field, a large Air Force field in Michigan, named in his honor. While attending Lowell in 1930 Carroll Chatham read in his chemistry book that no one had succeeded in making synthetic emeralds, and decided that he would be the man to do so. Two years after his gradu- HUGH, in June of 1933, he had succeeded. Today he is owner and operator of Chatham Research Labora- tories, and calls himself the Exclusive Producer of the Chatham Emerald, the Only Man-Made Emeralds Available in the World. At the last count he was making 5000 carats of cultured emeralds a month and was more than a million dollars behind in his orders. He has not hired anyone to help him make the emeralds in order to keep the process a secret. Other former students who have been successful in the science field are Charles Auerbach '68, chemical engineer, who did research for Standard Oil, Charles S. Bartlett '98, engineer, Abel M. Benfield '86, en- gineer, Bernard Benfield '78, engineer and astrono- mer, George D. Blood '88, mining engineer, H: R. Bostwick, engineer, Philip Lee Bush '92, engineer. George C. Chadwick '98, engineer, George Cum- mings '68, inventor of a portable forge, Marvin Cur- tis '88, chemist, Percy L. Davis '06, electrical engineer, Leonard Feldman '04, chief chemist, Bishop-Conklin Paint Co., Samuel Lymde Foster '80, electrical en- gineer, Wendall Hammon '09 mining engineer, Sig- mund Hess '95, mining engineer, C. Floyde Hirsch- feld '98, engineer, Walter Holmes '00, engineer, james Kidd '00, engineer, Wolfgang Kummer '42, Bell Research Laboratory, Paul Legenbaum '97, elec- trical engineer, Morris H. Levy '03, civil engineer, Samuel Murray '98 engineer, Leonard Pockman '98, mining engineer, Haradan Pratt '09, vice president Dr. joseph Erlanger, '92, was a Nobel Prize winner in 1945. and director Mackay Radio and Telegraph Company: Sam Rooney '27, engineerg Max L. Rosenfeld '91, en- gineer, Norman Stines '00, mining engineerg Leslie W. Stocker '99, civil engineer: Charles Albert Weck '90, mining engineer, Bill Wehlau '44, astronomer: john Brooks Wheatly '98, aeronautical engineer. In the past 12 years, Lowell High School has com- piled the best record of any high school in the West for the Annual Science Talent Search for Westing- house Science Scholarships, All these boys have gone on in the science field. They are: 1944: Bill Wehlau received his Ph. D. in astrono- lrny from the University of California, and is now en- gaged in research in Ontario, Canada. 1948: Melvin Look, who graduated in chemistry from the University of California in 1952, will receive his Ph. D. from Stanford this year and will do post graduate doctorate work at the Radiation Laboratory in Berkeley. 1949: Melvin Rubin and Richard Gross are attend- ing U. C. Medical School. Gross is doing special work in biochemistry. 1950: Ernie Malamud, who graduated from U.C. with a degree in physics, is working for his Ph. D. at Cornell in the field of experimental physics. Eva Kal- in is teaching at U.C. while she is working on her h. D. in mathematics. 1951: Angelo Cosmides is majoring in chemistry at U.C. 1952: Paul Fong, who graduated from U.C. in 1955 as the gold medal winner for scholastic achievement, 's working for his Ph. D. at Harvard in the field of heoretical physics. john Hutchins is now a graduate student in physics at the University of California, 1953: Mike Gainey is studying engineering at Cor- nell. Iohn Parks is studying engineering at Cal Tech. Thomas E. Selfridge, '99, was one of America's most promising young scientists when he was killed in an airplane crash with Orville Wright in 1808. 1956: Peter Belmont has 'been the recipient of sev- eral scholarships which will allow him to continue his studies in science and mathematics. Another recent graduate, Peter Wing-Kee Woo of the class of june, '51, is starting what should prove to be an outstanding career in the chemistry field. While a junior at Stanford University, he received an award as the outstanding member of his class in the field of chemistry. He graduated from the university last June with the following honors: Phi Beta Kappa gold key, American Institute of Chemists gold medal, and the Phi Lamda Upsilon gold key. He is now doing research at the University of Illinois under a research assistant fellowship. I-Iaraden Pratt, '09, was vice president and chief engineer for American Cable and Radio Corporation until he was selected chairman of the Radio Technical Planning Board for Gen- eral Electric. He had the distinction of being one of the select group of scientists invited to view the Bikini atomic bomb tests. ROLLA HESS WALLACE HYMAN THOMAS J. JUE HANS JURGENS LEOPOLDO KARGANILLA ADOLPH KLEIN AUGUST KOSI-HELL DOO SUE LEE LOUIS K. LICHTENSTEIN FLOYD LOBREE ALFRED LOEWENSTEIN MORRIS LUEIN FRANCIS MAURER HARLAN MCCOY JAMES MCWILLIAMSA FRED MEYER RALPH MORGEN HAROLD MULLIN ALBERT NERNEY KENNETH D. NESBITT CHESTER NEWELL XVILLIAM PATTERSON SAXTON POPE ALFRED E. RALSTON LOPE G. RAZ JAMES A. RITCHIE CLOUDSLEY RUTTER PHILIP SADOWSKI ABRAHAM SCI-IILLER EDWIN SHEARER ERNEST SPIEGL CHARLES SPIVOCK THEODORE WEIL ELBERT WETMORE IRWIN WOLFF CHARLES WOODROW JEFFERSON ZANDER Girls NATALIE M. ACED PAUTLINE AUSLEN VIOLETIIE BOUDREAU ELIZABETH BRIDLER MARGUERITE BROOKES ROSA A. BROWN HIELEN E. BURKI-LART RUTH CHASE VEIRNE CLARKE DOROTHY CLUTE DORIS V. CONEY ELAINE CORCORAN ANITA CREELEY EDITH CUMMINGS OLEMIENTINE EDIE ELEANOR ELLIS ,IOSEPHINE EMANUEL MARJORIE FAIRGIRIIEVIE AILEEN FLEALY CAROLYN EREYERMUTH ELSIE GIANDONI HELEN GILMORE HERMINA GOLDSMITH CATHLEEN HALLGREN ZETA HARRISON LOIS IHOLLINGSHIEAD EIIEANOR HUMPHREYS ALBERTRAM LARDI ELLAMAYE LAWLER LEONA LERCARA GLADYS LORIGAN MILDRED A. MALLOY MOLLIE MAIRCUS HELEN A. MARKOWITZ AILEEN MCCARTY ANITA MCELROY HELEN MCEWEN DOROTHY MORSE CARLENA NOEHL EDITH M. O'BRIEN IMIELDA F. O'G-RADY PHYLLIS PAYNE DOROTHEA S. QUITZOW EDNA ROSS MARGARET RUETTELL RUTH SIMPSON EILLEN A. SKELLY ELAINE SPENCER MURIEL SULLIVAN ISABELLE G. SWEENEY MIRIAM TAYLOR FRANCES THOMAS VICTORIA WALLACE VIRGINIA WALTON MIRIAM WANDS ADELYNE WEY MOUTH CLASS OF DECEMBER 17. 1920 Boys HARRY BLACKFIELD GOULD BOWLEY EARL CANE ERNEST CARR MARVIN CHAMBERLAIN PHIILIP F. CONKLIN JOHN DANIELS JOHN DELLEPIANE BERTRAM DEUTSCH JEROME DE VOTO 'SAM DILIAER ARTHUR DUNN DONALD FELTON MONROE ERIEDMAN ALAN GARDNER ALVIN H. GETZ ROBERT GOLDMAN IRWIN R. GROSS RICHARD GROSS GEORGE HAGEMANN GEORGE D. I-IERZOG LUNDELADE W. HOERO IIEO HONE ALFRED HOOPE-R JOHN JACOBS EDWARD KELLER GEORGIE S. KELLY RICHARD W. KENT RAYMOND KRIIEGIER WALTER LEVISON a EERTRAM LEVLT DALTU MARKS HAROLD MITCHELL HARRY NEWBARTH KENNETH PELTON CURTIS RHODES LEON RIESE HENRY RIXFORD ALWIN ROSSLOW HAROLD SANFORD JEROME SCI-IILLER ALLEN SCHUMACHER RALPH C. SHERMUND ELMER SHORT JOSEPH THIEEEN ALFRED E. TITTEL MATHIEW TOERINER BASIL 'ITSIAPRAILIS JIACK WALLACE FREMONT WIRIGHT GEORGE WRIGHT Girls MURIEL BATES ELLEN BOOIQER AGNES BROWN TRMA BIROXVNSTONE FRANCES BURDICK MILDRED CLARK JEANETTE CLARY CAROLINE GOFFIN M1AXINE C. CONRAD ELIZABETH DAVIS LEILA DICKINSON EUPI-LROSYNE ERTOLA 'III-IELMIA GATES ELSIE GRLAY RUIFH I-IARKER MARGARET HART MLLDRED HIART GLADYS JACOBSON BESSIE B. JOHNSTON ISABEL KE LLIIE MARY KILGAIRIFF HIELEN KNIGHT ALBERTA KRAGEN GRETCI-BEN KYNE .IOSEPHINE LUCAS DOROTHY MALLOY MILDRED L. MCKAY VIRGINIA MCLAUGHLIN GERTRUDE MCLEOD ANNA O'HERN EMMA PETERSON BESSIE PILOTKIN GLADYS RICHARDS ALMA ,ROSIEN MARJORIE IRUCKMAN JEAN SEXTON VERA SIEVIERIS BFRTIHA SKAU LUCILLIE STOFF GRACE 'DERASAXVA LILY TERASAWA GENEVIEVE TOYE MALRJORIE TOYE VIVIAN WATERS ETIHEL WINDT CLASS OF JUNE 9, 'l92'I Boys IRENIO A. ACACIO MIEYER ALBERT HARLOW ANDERSON FRANK BAIRD BERBERT BARRETT EDWIN BIARSHLELL IRVING BAUM DAVID BERELSON KENNEDY BLISS GERSON BLUM LESTIER BORN LUTHER BROWN ETTORE BRUNO HENRY BULL IQENNLETIH BUIRRELL ARMAND CAILLEAU RICHARD COBLENTZ 62 Alexander F. Morrison, was founder of one of San FranCisco's most prominent law firms. The Morrison Planetarium in Golden Gate Park was named in his honor. Charles L. Tilden, '74, left the practice of law to enter business. He was president of the Over- land Freight and Transfer Company for more than half a century. Man Graduates Follo Law Career A career in law has always attracted Lowellites in large numbers during the entire history of the school. For some of these graduates, passing the bar examina- tion has been the stepping stone to other public careers such as in the case of Edmund Brown, '23, who gave up his law practice to become the District Attorney of San Francisco and the Attorney General of California. Listed elsewhere in this book are the many judges and other public Officials who have combined their legal career with public service. However, many graduates have remained in private practice and have had distinguished careers. A good example is Alexander F. Morrison, founder of one of San FrancisCo's most prominent law firms, Morrison, Foerster, Holloway, Schuman, and Clark. Two other Lowellites have been partners in this firm. They are Oscar Sutro, besides being a prominent attorney, served as president of the Alumni for the Uni- versity of California and was trustee of Mills College. Edward Hofeld, '93, now retired, and Roland C. Foer- ster, '10, still active in the firm. The Morrison Plani- tarium in Golden Gate Park is named in honor of Mr, Morrison. Money for this building was obtained from a trust fund established by his wife, May Treat Morri- son, and administered 'by Mr. Hofeld. An interesting combination of occupations belongs to Kenneth Zwerin, '26. Besides being a lawyer, he is also a jewish Rabbi. Another noted attorney, james G. Sullivan, '19, re- cently was appointed to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Attorney Bert Levit, '20, barely finds time for pri- vate practice with all of his other interests. He is a member of the Board of Education, and has been Chief Deputy District Attorney, Deputy Attorney General Along with his law practicing, jefferson Peyser, '17, has also been active in politics. He has served as a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, and as a member of the State Assembly. Dr. Henry Hart, '03, was admitted to the bar in 1909 and served as Assistant City Attorney of San Francisco. Since then he has devoted most of his time in lecturing and writing about the Orient and is considered one of America's authorities on the subiect. of California, a special assistant to the Attorney Gen- eral of the United States, and president of the Cali- fornia junior Chamber of Commerce. Other graduates in the field of law: William Abbott, '90, Alex Arguello, '36, Simon Anixter, '23, William Auslen, jr., Irving C. Acker- man, '01, Warren Atherton, '08, Thomas Aitken, '98, Edwin H. Andrews, '98, and Charles Adams, '84. The latter is given credit for having instituted Public Schools Week in California. Roger Bramy, '23, Irving Breyer, '26, Tadini Ba- cigalupi, '98, P. A. Bergerot, '87, former president of the San Francisco Board of Education, Louis E. Brown- stone, Esto B. Broughton, '11, William Brobeck, '89. Reynold Calvin, '26, Jerome Cohen, '36, William C. Crittenden, '01, Finlay Cook, '80, Lloyd Dinkel- spiel, '16, Sydney De Wolf, '31, Samuel Davis, '92, john Dwyer, '78, and Oliver Dibble, '95. Willard Ellis, 21 , Morse Erskine, Charles de Young Wesley N. Hohfeld was one of many former Lowel ites to win the Gold Medal at the Uni- versity of California for graduating with highest honors from the university. He had a private law practice for a time which he gave up to accept the position of professor of Law at Yale University. Q Franklin D. Madison, '84, was one of the out- standing legal minds of his day. He served as legal counsel for the Bank of California, Cali- fornia Packing Corporation, California Cotton Mills, and other large corporations. Elkus, jack Flynn, Warren Gregory, Roland C. Foer- Ster, '10, and William Gillogly, '92, Louis Heilbron, '24, Edward T. Houghton, '88, Emanuel S. Heller, Ralph L. Hathorn, '89, Maurice Harrison, '04, Howard Iveson, Samuel Jacobs, '24, Hiram W. Johnson, jr., '05, Frederick W. Kant, '11, Herbert Leland Levy, '23, Marvin Lewis, john Jacob Lerman, '85, Frank D. Madison, '84, Lawrence Liv- ingston, '10, Thomas S. Molly, '88, Robert Mann, '87, Emilie Lastreto, '85, and james D. Meredith. Nathan Newmark, '68, Edgar D. Peixotto, John Prosek, Jacob B. Reinstein, '70, William C. Sharp- steen, '82, Oscar Sutro, '91, jesse H. Steinhart, Felix T. Smith, William Sea, jr., Nat Schmulowitz, '04, and Matt To'briner. Stanley Weigeli, '22, Benjamin Weiner, Harvey Wolf, '26, Albert Wollenberg, '18, Franklin B. Wor- ley, '93 Q Edwin R. Zion, '90, and Armando Zir- poli, '24, Bertram Bley. Warren Gregory, '83, was admitted to the Supreme Court of California in 1890 and the United States Supreme Court and all Federal Courts of the Ninth Circuit. He was also a member of the first State Board of Bar Ex. aminers, co-worker of Herbert Hoover, District Board of Selective Service, and an outstanding jurist of California and the United States. THEODORE COHN JOHN DAVIS PALMER DUNKIIEY KENNETH EAKIN EDWAIRD EISENBERG GRAHAM EVERS JOSEPH W. FERRIS CHARLES EOYE WILLIAM FUTTERMAN AIRTHUR GOBIEY MERVYN GOODMAN ARTHUR GORDON FREDERICK A. GREISBIERG WILLARD GRUNDEL ALFRED HARLEM LLOYD HEANEY RICHARD HICKMAN ELMER HINMAN HEADIEN INMAN THURLOW JAEGELING ALLEN JAYNE GARETH KELLAM WILLIAM KELLY MILES KITTRIEDGIE BERTRAND KIRAGEN EMILE KREUTER WARREN LA BARTHE LOUIS LEVY ROBERT LEVY DOUGLAS MONAMARA EDMUND MERWIN JOE MITCHELL OSCAR MOSK ED. PIERRE MULLER LESLIE O. MYERS GEORGE NASSAR JEROME NEWBAUER ROY NISIJA CHARLES O'BRI'EN DAVID OLIVA CLAUDE PARIS LAWRIENCE PEARL ERNEST PERA HOMER PFEIFFIER JACK PIVER WILLIAM PORTRUDE EDWARD ROBERTSON EERTRAM ROSS WINTHROP SARGENT HERBERT SHAW GEORGE SHILLOCK EDWARD SIMONS LEON SPIEGELMAN LELAND SVANE PAUL THIEBAUT GEORGE TIPPETT JOHN TRAVTERSO SATOSHI UCHIDA LLOYD VANDERBILT BURNELL WEIR BRUCE W. WELLS ALBIIN WERNER WILLIAM WILLIAMSON PAUL WOLF Girls RUTH ASHDIILL VLRGINIA BAGLEY ROSEMOND C. BEHRLENS SARAH BELL LOIIS BIETTANNIER B-ERNIGE BLAIINE ELSIE BOYEE HEIAEN BRACE BEATRICE P. BREINING ALICIE CHISHOLM HELEN CLAUSSEN EMILY CRAIG MARGARET DALY ETTA DAVIS FELICE F. DE GRANCOURT DORIS DESMOND MADELLA DUNCAN DOROTHY EDMONDSON BERTHA EDWARDS IRMA EGGELING VIOLA EVANS MARGARET HANSMANN MARIAN HOGAN ROSE JURRAS AMY KRUSE ELIZABETH LABARTHE ADA LEDDY STELLA LIPSCHUTZ MABIEL LUDWIG RUBY MCBIRNEY RUTH MENNIE PEARL MINEDFIW MABELCLAIR MORRISON GERTRUDE NELSON CLARISSA OSTERN MARY PECKHAM ALMA PEDEN LOUISE PERKINS ESTELLA PETERSON NATHIALIE POPPERMAN JESSIE A. RIDDOCK FRANCES RYAN AUDREY SI-LEAN MARION STRANDBERG ZORKA SUTIICH MITSUYE TOGASAKI MARIAN TRACE GERTRUDE E. URIEN ADELIA VELSIR RUTH WEINERT CLASS OF DECEMBER 15, 1921 Boys JACK D. AHNDEN RICHARD AURANDT ALDO BACIGALUPI ARITEHUR BERGER MONROE A, BLOOM WIVLLIAM D. BROWN DONALD L. BRYANT HENRY CHACE WILLIAM CHINN ALBIERT G. CHrOY CHESTER W. CLARK ELMER 'COMPTON LEO CORVINO BILLY DAVIES SIDN-EY -EHRMAN WILLARD ELLIS SIDNEY FRANKENAU BION R. GREGORY KENNETH GREENE MINORU F. I-LAYASHI HOWARD HERRINGTON M-ELVYN HOLTON RALPH S. HORNUNG FELTON HOWE CARTER JUDAH CONRAD KAHN EDGAR M. KAHN BYRNE KIELLY HENRY KLANG NORMAN KLOTZ KENNETH KRATZ BENNARD F. LANGER LLOYD LASKEY SHERMAN LELAND LEWIS LERCARA CHARLES LEVITT LLOYD LEVY STANLEY LIEBER DONALD MACDONALD RONALD MACDONALD JOHN MCCARTHY FREDERICK MCCLUSKY EDWARD MCPHERSON WILLIAM MECKFESSEL JAMES MOSES RAMU-ND MURPHY RINALDO MUSSO HARRY NACHT JITZUSO NODA GUION OSBORN LAWTON PAYNE JOHN RAMM WILLIAM RANKIN LLOYD RASMUSSEN THEODORE ROCHE PHILIP ROTHSTEIN AUGUST ROTHSCHILD MORRIS SILVERMAN RANDOLPH SMITH WILLIAM STRIZICH HERBERT SUI-IR EDGAR F. SWAS-EY EMNILIO VENTURA JOHN VIOLICH Girls ISABEL ARATA ALBERTA BANGS ELSIE BERGNA GERALDINE BOWMAN MILDvRED BROWN BEAUCHAMP CROLY V,ERNA DE CHARLES LORNA DELANEY VENORA DE PARTIEE RUTH DEVINE HIELEN rEDW,ARDS EILEEN FULTON ELIZABETH GARDNER SYLVIA GORDON DOROTHY HAUSE ROSE HECHT FLORENCE HELMSTEIN A.LICrE HITCHCOCK GUSSIIE HOFFMAN ISABELLE HOFMAN JENNIE HOFFMAN URSULA HOLMES ELAINE HORTON MARION G. HUSON FLORENCE IMPEY MADELINE JACOBSEN KATE KESSLER HELEN FIESEL ELAINE E. KRAUS ALIC-E KROTOZYNIER HAZEL .LARSSEN CHARLOTTE LATAPIE 64 Histor of Lowell Park Out of the Flag Day Exercises of the Jefferson- Lafayette Improvement Club held June 14, 1942, grew the Lowell Association, one of the school's most active alumni groups. The Improvement Club had secured permission to improve the old Sutter Street Lowell site by making a lttle park in the area. Former Governor C. C. Young, who had been a teacher at the old school, was an in- vited guest at the exercises. He made a motion that the group of Lowell-Boys, High graduates, who were there, 'form an association. All of those present agreed that it was a good idea and the Lowell Association came into being with three primary objectives: First: Plan for the enlargement of the present little Lowell Park to include all of the original school prop- erty and preserve the Park as a memorial to these schools which have earned the love and gratitude of so many people. Second: Sponsor reunions and hold Flag Day exer- cises at noon on the Sunday nearest Flag Day upon the old school site. Third: Gather data regarding the achievements of all of those who were associated with these schools and preserve the record of their deeds for the benefit of future generations of Lowellites, The Lowell Association felt that they had accom- plished their first purpose when the American Red Cross picked the site for its San Francisco headquarters. Most former Lowellites have a deep regard for the Red Cross and its work, and felt that the beautiful new Red Cross Building made a fitting memorial to another great institution that had occupied the same site. A stone bench, in keeping with the decor of the building, reminds visitors that Lowell once stood on this site. Carved in the bench are these words: HERE STOOD THE BUILDING WHICH WAS SUCCESSIVELY BOYS' HIGH SCHOOL-1875-1894 LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL-1894-1912 ALUMNI NOW ORGANIZED AS LOWELL AND BOYS' HIGH SCHOOL ASSOCIATION HAVE ERECTED THIS BENCH AS A TRIBUTE TO THE SOUND EDUCATION AND LASTING FRIENDSHIPS OF THOSE YEARS The second purpose of the Association was carried out through yearly reunions between 1942 and 1950. Plans are now underway to have another reunion this year at the Red Cross Building. The third objective of the Association was carried out through a quarterly magazine sent to all members. The staff of the Red and Wbife is indebted to the Association for much of the historical information con- tained in this book, which otherwise could not have been obtained. The picture on this page shows the Lowell-Boys' High officers for the years 1947 and 1948. The photographs were obtained from the tiles of the association. FLAG DAY EXERCISES AND REUNION-JUNE 13, 1945 Included in the picture are: Dr. Archie J. Cloud, President of San Francisco Junior College, William J. Drew, '90, former principal of Mission High School, Dr. William M, Tryon, Secretary of -the Lowell Association, Dr, William E, Stevens, '95 Associate Clinical Professor of the Stanford Universit Medical School, Pierson Durbrow, '83, insurance broker, Finlay Coolt, '80, recipient of a Ph.D. degree from the University of California in 1888. Also included are: Judge Alfred J. Fritz, guest of his good friend EI. I. L. Harris, Judge I. L. Harris, '88, jurist on the Superior Court ench, Alfred J. Lundberg, '08, president of the Key System in Oak- land, Mrs. C. F. Hoos, a former school teacher, Mrs. Lundberg, Joseph L. Licht, '98, associated with the Civil Service Commission of San Francisco, Jud e Louis E. Goodman, '09, U. S. District Court Judge in the Federal Courts, William Paul Rieger, .'79, former Secre- tary of the first Boys' High School Alumni Association. Jesse C. Colman, '96, President of the Lowell Association, Maurice L. Eu hrat, '94, prominent industrialist, Robert L. Mann, '87, reclipi- ent ofan A.B. degree at the Universit of California, Ralph a- thorn, '89, attorney, Thomas S. Molloy, '88, lawyer, William C. Sharpsteen, member of the Legal Aid Society, Fletcher Cutler, '82, Superior Court Judge gdjoseph J. Phillips, '95, Director of Property for San Francisco, Miss E ith Silberstein, '05, chemist, Mrs. Hulda Block McGinn, '03, lobbyist for the State Legislature, Leon Voorsanger, '97, business executive, Lee Crawford, '05, banker. William R. Roberts, '98, vice president of Crocker National Bank, Frederick A. Cellarius, vicekpresident of the San Francisco Bank, Shirley Walker, '98, advertising executive, Dr. William C. Voor- sanger, '93, surgeon, Dr. J. Marion Read, '08, clinical professor, Dr. George H. Becker, '12, phtysician, former Governor C. C. Young, who taught at Sutter Street rom 1893-1906, Dr. H. Lisser, '03, physician, Professor George D. Louderback, '92, teacher, Albert Wollenberg, '19, attorney, Morris H. Levy, '03, engineer. Added to the illustrious roster are: Harold J. Boyd, '03, controller for San Francisco, George H. Sandy, '97, advertising, John Ler- men, '05, lawyer, Ulrich Graff, '98, draughtsman, John S eehan Drew, '86, headmaster of Drew's School, Abel M. Benfield, '90, engineer, Erwin Hirschfelder, '13 business executive, Oscar Geballe, '08, shoe business, Perry T. Tompkins, founder of the Lowell Associa- tion, Leroy H. Stephens, principal of Lowell High School. Beverly Robinson, '14, signician, Max L. Rosenfeld, '91, William Kahn, '83, insurance broker, Dr. Henry A. R. Kreutzmann, '10, Urologist, Lawrence Livingston, '10, lawyer, Frederick W. Koch, Lowel teacher, Irving Ackerman. 01, attorney, William Earl Doud, '05, realtor, Hugh C. Keenan, '05, contractor, Thomas J. O'Neal, '01, plumbing business. MAXINE LICHTENSTEIN MARIE LINDBERG IOWEN MCKENNA TERESSA MCKENNY GLADYS MCLEOD LAURA MEKCADO ELSIE MILLER LYDIA OXENDINIE CARO D, PEDLER CAMILLA M. PETERSON HAZEL PETERSON ELIZABETH ROMADKE EDN-A R, SEWELL MARION STOWELL EIIEANOR SUGRUE YOSHIYE TOGASAKI MIRIAM TOMSON , MARIE VEZINA ELIZABETH WALLACE ELSIE WESKE VIVIAN WHITNEY CLASS OF JUNE 15. 1922 Boys ARDEN ALLEN LEWITT ALLISON RAYMOND ANIXTER EUGENE ARNSTEIN FRANCIS ASHBY FRED BELASCO HOWARD BERG ROBERT BERG PAUL BISSINGER PAUL BLACK JULIAN BORCK WORTHIEN BRADLEY WILLIAM BRANDSTEN BRUCE BROYLES CHARLES BUCHANAN WARREN BURKE JOI-HSI CASTAGNETTO ROGER J. COOPER ROBERT H. DAHLER AiR'1JHUR DAKIN WILLIAM DE MARTINI EDMUND DOYLE RONALD DYCHE THOMAS FALLON GIRARD FELTON ETTORE FIRENZE CLARENCE FRAZIER RICHARD FRIEDLANDER RICHARD D. FRIEDLANDER ELMER GAIETJEN SIDNLEY GORDON JOHN GORFINKEL FRANCIS K. GRUSS HERBERT HALLAHAN WINTHROP E. HART JAMES I-IEALY IRVING HOLCENBERG ANGUS HORNBLOWER LOUIS JENKINS ARTHUR KANZEE ABE KAUFMAN GIEORIGE -E. KEEFE LAWRENCE LANDECKER PHILLIP LAWLER LOUIS LERCARA LIONEL LEWIS WALT LIGIHTNER FRANK LOVETT WAYNE LYONS WILLIAM K. MAYO WILLIAM MCDONALD WILLIAM MCGINNESS BERNARD MCGOWAN LEONARD MCQUEEN ALBERT MEILLETTE FRANCISCO G. MONTEALEGRE EDWARD MORGEN ROBIERT F. MORROW JOHN MORSE RALPH E. MYERS RALPH NATHAN JACK L. NOUNNAN WILLIAM OLMO LUIS PADILLA JUAN PASCUAL RICHARD PATTERSON ARMANDO PEREYRA GEORGE PETRIE HARLAND PLUMMER LEO PRESS MILTON PROTOPAPPAS GUST AV PUTZKE WILLIAM REIS EMMET RIXFORD LOUIS ROSENTHAL FREDERICK SALA THEODORE SCALIONE CHARLES SCHMITT IRVING SCOTT JOE S. SILVERBERG WALTER SMITH EVAN SPAULDING FRANK SOMNER DAVID SOSNOVSKY LESTER SPIEGELMAN SAMUEL sTEINEERC HARRY SULLIVAN HOMPER SWLEENEY DAN M. SYLVESTER WALKER TAYLOR JUN TERAsAWA WAYNE THATCHER JACK VAN NOSTRAND ALBERT WALEORD ALFRED WARD MARSHALL WATERS ROLAND WATT STANLEY WEIGEL ALVA L. WERNER RALPH WERTHIEIMER HERBERT XVILLIAMSON READ WINTERBURN WILLIAM WISEMAN JACK WORDEN ROBERT YOUNG ALFONSO ZIIRPOLI Girls ROSNLIE ALLENIBERG RAMONA BAKER ALFEA E. BELL! HELEN BIELENBLERG REBECCA M. BIRCH ISABELLE J. BOUDREAU ETI-IEL BOVYER DOROTHY BRADSHAW GLADYS BRAIESIE REBE BRITTAIN HIELEN G. BURMIEISTER VARVARA CANELLOS BONITA CARLETON . .H ,Y XL 5 f I MARCBA CARLSON ROEERTA L. CHAPMAN AU DRIEY CHIPPS MAY cHRIsTENsEN JIENNIE COHEN BERNICE CONTENTIE CLARE CONVERY ORA CREEL EMILIE DALE MATILDA DAMNER GIENEVIEVE DE VALL CECILE DORAN FRANCES DURHAM RACHEL ELATLAND GERTRUDE FOLEY ELMYRA Foss ELSE GEILFUss LAURA GOODWIN MERIDIAN GREENE EDNAH HENZEL ETHEL M. HESS MARIE JOAQUIN EMILY JURRAS KATHLEEN KILGARIFF EDNA KNIGHT DOROTHY KNOWLES RUTH E. LACKMAN MADELINE LAWLER DOLORES LONG VIOLA LUTHER EssIE MARDER SELMA MARGOLIS AUDREY MCCULLOUGH SADIE MCELWAIN ELISE MEANY DORIS MEACHAM 66 1 ,ffl .sl xl Z' . IW ,I ii mv uh ,Q tis. 6115! Y P' .1 Adrien J. Falk, recently retired president of S8cW Food Corpo- ration, is one of many former Lowellites who has served on the Board of Education. Robert Dodd, '96, long time president of Cogswell College, is still one of the most active members of the Lowell Alumni Association. Alumni Prominent in Education With Superior Scholarship as the school's most honored tradition, it is no Wonder that hundreds of students through the years have been attracted to ca- reers in education. Two of Lowell's twelve former prin- cipal's Miss Edith Pence and Frederick Clark, gradu- ated from this school. Approximately one fourth of the present faculty are also former students, including Vice Principal Gladys Lorigan. Oother graduates are serv- ing in almost every high school and grammar school throughout the city. Lowell graduates have held important positions on the faculty of every major educational institution in the Bay Area. Monroe Deutsch, '86, was associated with the University of California for 48 years. For almost 25 of these years he held the position of vice president and provost of the university. His degrees Dr. Aurelia Reinhardt, '94, served as president of Mills College for 27 years. include an A.B., M.A., PhD., and an LLD. He is au- thor of a number of books including The Letter and the Spiriz, written in 1945. Other Lowellites who have been associated with the University of California include Professor William H. Christie, '82, Sydney M. Ehrman, '98, regent and professor of law, Maurice E. Harrison, '96, dean of Hastings Law School, Professor Lincoln Hutchinson, '82, George D. Louderbach, '92, dean of the College of Letters and Science, Professor Albert H. Mowbray, '98, Professor Barbara Nachtrieb, '07, Professor George O'Neill, '92, and Professor Lionel S, Schmitt. Dr. Aurelia Reinhardt, who served as president of Mills College from 1916 until her retirement in 1943, was a graduate of the Class of 1894. A noted educator and lecturer, she held the degrees of B.L., LLD, LittD, and LHD. Among the Lowellites who have -been on the Stanford faculty is Harriet Bradford, '11, who was dean of women at the Palo Alto university. Some of the other graduates teaching at the College level are Professor Dwight Bentel, '27, San Jose State College, Professor Wesley N. Hokfeld, '97, Yale, President Robert Dodd, '96, Cogswell College, Pro- fessor Alfred Knolf, '94, Yale, Professor Alfred Leng- feld, '96, Chicago University, Professor Harry Over- street, '94, New York University, Professor Melvin Rader, '20, Harvard University , Professor Louise Chinn Lim, University of Arizona, Professor Frank P. Buff, University of Rochester ,and Fred Neustadter, M.I.T. Some school principals who formerly attended Low- ell include Miss Julia Coffey, '93, Daniel Webster and Emerson schools, Winn W. Davidson, '05, john Drew, '86, Humboldt Evening High, Dr. William Drew, '90, Mission High, and Frederick W. Koch, '96, Galileo High. Lowell has always had a fine representation on the San Francisco Board of Education. Four out of the present seven members are Lowell graduates. They are Mrs. Clarance Coonan fCora Kennedyj, john CHAS. C. TROWBRIDGE, JR., was president of the Lowell student body in 1917. He was also captain of the track team. BERT LEVIT, '20, is a former president of the California Jr. Chamber of Commerce. I JOHN LEVISON, 'zo, mm- bines his work on the Board of Education with running one of the West's largest binderies. As Teachers and Administrators Levison, '20, Bert Levit, '20, and Charles C. Trow- bridge, Jr., '17. Former Board members include Philip Lee Bush, '92, C. Harold Caulfield, '96, and Adrien J. Falk, '97, The attorney for the Board is Irving Breyer, an- other former Lowellite. It is interesting to note that many of the school's finest athletes decided to follow a career in education. In this group are four of the current members of the school's physical education department. Ray Milton, assistant varsity football coach, head junior varsity coach, and head of the social studies department, was one of the sparkplugs on the Lowell 1939 champion- ship football team. Barney Wolf, track and cross country team coach, is one of the school's all-time great track and field stars. He was also one of the mainstays of the Uni- versity of California's track team. His Pacific Coast Conference discus record, set in 1940, was only re- cently broken. Jim Livingstone, tennis and golf coach and a mem- Mrs. Ludwig Frank 1Nan Bam- burg, 'OH has given service to education as Executive Secre- tary of the Public Education Society. 1 ber of the English department, was an all-city tennis star at Lowell. Later he also won the Pacific Coast Doubles Championship as well as other honors in the sport. Bob Anino, lightweight basketball coach and assist- ant track coach is another Lowellite. Washington High School's head football coach, Chad Reade, all-city halfback while at Lowell in 1936, is another star who decided to go into the Held of education. Roger Fanfelle, former Indian basketball ace, is now teaching and coaching at Mission High School. Irv Delman, baseball and football coach at Abraham Lincoln High, is another former Lowell athlete. Two of Lowell's greatest basketball players, Howie Dallmar and Bob Feerick, are now associated with Stanford University and the University of Santa Clara respectively. As head basketball mentors for the two institutions, they face each other across the courts each year to fight it out for the basketball champion- ship ofthe Peninsula. Dr, XVilliam Drew, '90, was principal of Mission High for 24 years. HELEN MOSS SYBIL MUCKLE GERTRUDE NEWELL BIARBARA NOURSE EDNA O'BRIEN FLORINE L. OLIVEIRI ROMLLDA PEINI ELIZABETH RIDDELL SYLVIA RINTALA SELMA RUMMELSBURG GLADYS SCHILLIGIER LILLIAN SCHRAM MARGARET SHEARER LOTUS SHELI-IAMER MILDRED SKALBERG HELEN SNEDEKER ALBERTA SNELL VIOLET STANGE HELEN 'ITHEIS CHARLOTTE TURNER NORMA WALLACE EDITH L. WEST JUANITA VAESTLAKE JANET WILSON FLORIENCE WILSON YVONNE YOCUM CLASS OF DECEMBER. 14. 1922 Boys ALAN AUGER FRANK J. BACIGALUPI RALPH F. BARNARD, JR. AUBIN R. BARTHOLD WALTER H, BERGER THEODORE R. BOWIE HERBERT G. CHRIST GEORGE N. CROCKIER ANDREW G. CROW JOHN A. CURTIS FRANCIS J. DALY RICHARD W. DIANON FRED W. DILL DWIGHT DOTY EREDERICK L. EHRMAN LLEWIELLYN FORREST RAYMOND C. ERANCHI DAVID FREIDENRICH. JR. MORRIS FRUMKIN WEST ON P. GERHARDT LEON E. GOLDSTEIN ALDEN GRAVES LESTER L. GRIBBLE FREDERICK B. GRIFFITH ROLAND GRUBB JOSE GUTIER-REZ FRANK HAMBURGER AUGUST HELBING MBRLE F. C. JORDAN FRANCIS J. KNORP ARTHUR LAT IMORE BERT RAND LILLELAND MILTON A. LINKS DENIS J. MAI-IONEY D. EWING MARSH TOYOZO MATSUI CHARLES H. MoALLISTER JOHN MEYER CHARLES T . MILLER MEYER MIZEL L. RALPH MORRIS CLYDE A. NELSON ROBERT H. OHEIA CHIRISFITIAN W. OLMO RAYMOND F. OLMO AQUILINO L. PACIS K. MARVIN PARK -LEANDRO M. PEREZ RAYMOND PUCCINELLI BELA PURGELL FORREST M. RANKIN MALCOLM B. REISS CARL RIZNIK EDGAR T. ROBERTS E. -GORDON ROBINSON J. M-AURICE ROBINSON RAYMOND A. ROSENDAHL JULIEN L. RUWICH DONALD B. RYAN SERAPIO M. SAN DIEGO CHARLES L. SEWARDS HERBERT L. SOMMER IRVING G. USHER WALTER P. WALSH JOHN L. WEBBER JOHN T. WELCH ALBERT WILSON STARLING WINTERS STANLEY A. WRIGHT NEWTON G. ZOBIEL Girls GRACE ANDREWS ROBERTA B. BELLIS DOROTHY GLADYS BOLTON GLADYS I. BONE PEARL BRUCKNER GRACE CHISHOLM JEANETTE GEIGER HAZEL GEILFUSS 6 ROSALIND GREENFIELD RUTH E. HARRINGTON STELLA HECHTER MARY IR. HUSTON EVELYN E. JENSEN MILDRED LANE ALICE H. LAYNE ESTHER B. LEE ROXIE LUTHIER ALICE E. MAGNUSON LOMA IE. MANGELS KATE MERCADO EDWINA J. NORMAN ALICE NORTON CHAIRLOTTE M. RIEISS VIRGINLA M. ROSSI S. ELIZABETH SATTERFIELD HIELEN U. SLATER LENA SPIEGELMAN FRANCES STEINBERG HERMINA STERN VESTA E. SUTTON THEODORE M. TRACE ELSIE ULFVES IULIA VIZZIS ANNA A. WILSON MARIE A. WILSON STELLA B. WITT CHIYO YATABE CLASS OF SPRING. 1923 Boys DONALD D. AINSWORTH JOHN PETER BACIGALUPI OTTO WILLIAM BACKMAN HAROLD STUART BENAS WILLIAM BERELSON WILLIAM BERKOWITZ HENRI G. BERTHIAUME FRANCIS BAYLY BLANCHARD EDWIN R. BLODEN ERNEST ELIE BLUM ROBERT NEWMAN BLUM EDMUND G. BROWN WALTER LOUIS BROWN IRVING S. BROWNSTONE CHARLES P. BURGESS, JR. GEORGE HARLEY BUSHNELL HARRY SAM COHEN ARTHUR HARRY COLTON WALTER E. CRICK NORMAND CURRERI OLIVER DIBBLE, JR. FRANK MCALLISTFR DUNN ROBERT LEE DUNN, JR. KENNETH EVERS HANNON BARKER FARR ALBERTO C. FIRENZE THERMAN GREGORY FRICK MARCELINO A. GARMA THOMAS WILLIAM GASSER HENRY GIBBONS FRANK I. GONZALEZ LELAND B. GROEZINGER GERARD ALBERT GUDDEE LAURANCE HOLMES GWYNN JAMES LEONARD HANLEY THOMAS HARVEY HARRIS MAYAYOSHI HATTORI RAY W. HAWKSLEY MARCO FRANCIS HELLMAN NELSON B. HOLTON J. HAYDEN HULL BEN JACKSON WILLIAM KING JENKINS CARLTON ADAMS JOHANSON GEORGE LAZAR JOHNSON LESLIE ALAN JONES ALBERT KNOWLES MAURICE PHILIP KOCH PAUL EDMUND KUTTNER CHARLES MARION LAMSON JOHN A. LANE EDWARD D. LEDERMAN EDWIN FELIX LEVY HARRY EUGENE MADDEN ARTHUR ELMORE MARSTON DONALD WALKER MCCARTY H. HARRINGTON MCGOWAN ROBERT c. MCNAUGHT MONTEL MONTGOMERY VICTOR LOUIS MONTRE EDWIN J. MOORE, JR. MILTON WOODS MORRIS FRANCIS WILLIAM MOSHER SANFORD ALEXANDER MOSK JAMES CLAYTON Moss EDWARD NEWMAN JOHN HOWARD NEWTON FRED G. NIEMAND PETER C. NOONAN ROLLAND LORIGAN OLDIS JOHN OXENDINE ROBERT HERMAN PAGE, JR. WILLIAM PAGE GEORGE M. PETERS 68 Admiral Clark, '08, fcenterj makes an inspection of officers and men aboard the U.S.S. Hornet. KOMCMI U.S. Navy Phatoj When her country called Lowell hesitated not to send her sons to battle. Fighting in the two great wars, Lowell graduates have shown that Lowell spirit will not yield. Let us see what Lowell has contributed to our country's fight for freedom. Though World War I took relatively few Americans to the battlefield, 705 Lowellites fought for the Star Spangled Banner. An interesting fact is that of these 705, 10 were women. They were Lyla Bernhard, Blanche Collette, Miss Hoffman, Edna Howell, Thelma Light, F. Lock- hart, Bess Short, Nina Valvo, and Margaret Vance. To this war Lowell contributed two Brigadier Gen- erals. Both graduates of West Point, they were Mal- colm Graham and james A. Woodruff. In World War II Lowell was the alma mater of more than 1,000 lighting men. Of these, more than 58 were killed. Once again Lowellites filled the high ranks. Among these were Rear Admirals Chadwick G. Rudde and William D. Sample, Brigadier General Charles D. Os- tram, Commander Sherman Leland, Lt. Colonels Trux- ton Andrews, Robert Koshland, and Peter Manjos, Militar Careers Attract Lowellites and Lt, Commanders Emanuel Blue and Charles Brin- dupke. Henry P. Rethers, I88, started his military career in ' the Spanish-American War as a buck private and by I World War I had achieved the rank of Brigadier Gen- eral. He has been awarded medals by England and France as well as the Distinguished Service Medal by the United States. After the Armistice in 1918, he was given the task of arranging for the return of the 45,000 American Soldiers to this country and the building of permanent military cemetaries. It was he who had to select the body to be placed in the tomb of the Un- known Soldier. Another Lowellite, Kirk Simpson, wrote the inscription which appears on the tomb. Lt. Col. Walter J. Buttenbach, ,98, is another veteran of the Spanish-American War and World War I. Major General james K. Underhill, '09, U. S. Ma- rine Gorpsg Admiral R. A. Theobold, '02, U. S. Navy, General R. Smedberg, U. S. Army, General Philip Faymonville, '05, Commodore Milton S. Davis, '98, U. S. Navy, Captain William Granat, '10, Brigadier General Bethel W. Simpson, '07, Rear Admiral Ar- thur Clark, '08, and Col. Hiram johnson, jr., '05, U.S. Army, were others who served with distinction. Robert McGlaShan, '32, graduated from California, Phi Beta Kappa, and took a competitive examination for the U. S. Marines, He finished second highest in the nation. A mathematical wizard, Colonel McGla- shan was given a special citation for his part in the I American victory over the Japanese in the Battle of Midway. On the battlefield their Lowell spirit stayed with our lighting men. Take, for example, Ist. Lt. William Gar- ry. Bill, who graduated from Lowell in 1940, was awarded a Bronze Star for his heroic action in thwart- ing a German tank attack on a French village in june, 1944. On September 20, 1944, while returning from a Col. john S. Pratt, Major Gen. James A. Woodrtiff, and General R. Smedberg were all members of the Lowell Cadets. General Woodruff has declared that the two years training he received at Lowell helped him to graduate as No. 1 man in the West Point Class of 1899. f0p'irial Dept. of the Army Photon Roll of Honor l for Men Killed in Action reconnaisance mission, Bill's patrol was attacked from the rear. While nghting a rear guard action to enable his patrol to return to safety, Bill was killed. Charles W. MacKenzie, jr., class of Fall, 1938, is another fine example of Lowellites in time of war. He wears the Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal, and five Bronze Oak Leaves. As a navigator he flew thirty- three missions in the Sicilian theater. Richard Hansen, class of Fall, 1942, was in the Marines. After serving in Sitka he entered the Pacific war on November 27, 1944. On February 28, 1945, he was killed in the storming of Iwo Jima. Taken prisoner on Bataan was Capt. Berry Lang- worth who graduated from Lowell in 1933. Major Charles Auerbach was awarded the Bronze Star for action with anti-aircraft batteries in the West- ern Front. Major Auerbach was a members of the class of Fall, 1937, the Valedictorian, a member of the Scroll and L, and CSF. Flying a plane over Rumania on July 28, 1944, was Lt. Paul Kenneberry. Flack hit his plane exploding the gas tanks. As a result of parachuting from his plane, he broke his leg in six places. The Germans cap- tured him and took him to a hospital to amputate his NAVY CROSS WINNER Captain William Granat, class of 1910, receiv- ing the Navy Cross from Assistant Secretary of the Navy, N. Struve Hensel. Mrs. Granat is also present. l Major General Malcom Graham was another one of the many Lowell boys to leave school in 1898 to serve in the Spanish-American War and then follow a mili- tary career. 10556711 Dept. of the Army Plmloj leg. He died for lack of blood the next day. These are but a few cases of Lowellites in World War II. But cases like these show the terrific Lowell spirit shown by Lowellites when fighting for their country. LOWELLITES KILLED IN WORLD WAR I Alan Ackerman, '15, Richard Armstrong, '18, Wil- son B. Barnes, '15, Francis Cardinalli, '11, Walter Farnlacher, '12, Lieutenant, United States Army, Jo- seph Figueredo, '17, United States Navy, C. R. Frank, '11, Corporal, United States Army, Leon Guggen- hime, '12, United States Army, Earl Hammer, '12, United States Army Air Corps, Kenneth Heron, '00, United States Navy, Cecil Huntington, '12, Lieuten- ant, United States Air Service, Byron Jackson, '12, LAUNCHING OF LST-99 AT THE BOSTON NAVY YARD Miss Teresa C. McDevitt, sponsor, Rear Ad- miral Robert A. Theobald iLowe1l graduate in 19021 5 Miss Helen Mury. DYER BUCHANAN PIERSON FRANCISCO F. RACIMO HENRY JAMES RALSTON, JR. CARLISLE CLARK RANKIN PHILIP RASORI LEE BURGEES RAYMOND WILLIAM RENTMEISTER WILLIAM DENT REIS PAUL ROBERT ROCKWITZ GILBERT W. ROOT HERBERT RAYMOND ROSEN MARION C. ROSENBERG WILLIAM B. RYDER, JR. LLOYD THEODORE SCHELEY ROBERT SCHWAB LEONARD KELSEY SCHWARTZ STEPHEN JACOB SCHWEISER ARNOLD B. SCHILLER FLOYD BURDETT SCULLIN ALBERT SCHUMATE GEORGE W. SIEGFRIED NORTON WINFRED SIMON GUSTAVUS HARLBERT SMITH MARSHALL L. SMITH WILLIAM S. SMITH FRED SPRINGER RUSSELL CARL STANGE JOHN M. STEFFENS LOUIS STRAUS, JR. LLOYD LEROY THOMAS ADELBERT Q. THOMPSON MELVILLE C. THRELKELD LAURENCE P. TULLOCH GARDNER voN DER LEITH JOHN ROBERT WAGNER BENJAMIN WEINER JOSEPH HENRY WHELAN NORMAN LESTER WIHR Girls MAXINE URSULA AYERS MARGARET BEI-IM MADELINE BEVIACQUA PAULINE MERSEDUS BONE RUTH MARGARET BOYE KATHARINE BOYNTON DOROTHY W. BUEHRER HILDA EMILY BURQUE MARGUERITE L. CAMPIN ALMA LUCILE CAPELLI ORA KATHLEEN CAPELLI FRANCES E. CHISHOLM ROBERTA CLARINDA CLANCY NITA ISABEL COOPER ALICE HENRIETTA COTTON LA VIVA EMMA DEL CURO VIRGINIA HELEN DRURY VIRGINIA HELEN DWIGHT LILLIAN ELEANOR ELBERLING MYRTLE EMMA EMERY MATTIE LUELLA EVANS HERBERTA LOUISE FAITHORN ROWENA FERGUSON PHYLLIS FOGERTY MARION FRANCES FULTON MARY LUELLA GOFF RUTH EMMA GOODALE ILAH ROSE GRUBB GERTRUDE RAYMOND HESS ALYCE HOFMANN HAZEL FLORENCE JOHNSON MARION FRANCES JOHNSON ANITA MARTHA LANDERS FLORIS LEATHER5 CONSTANCE M. LIBBY REVA JACQUELINE LINSEY JENNIE MARGUERITE LOGAN MARJORIE MACPHERSON MARIE BABETTE MCCLORY CECELIA D. MCCULLOUGH ADELE ELIZABETH MORONEY MARION ALMIRA MORRIS EILEEN W. MCDONALD MARIAN MICHIKO NANBU MARY FERGUSON NESS LOUISE E. NEVRAUMONT AILEEN BERYI. NOTMEYER EVANGELINE V. OLSON MARIAN EVELYN PECHART ELLEN MARION RASMUSSEN JOSEPHINE JANE RASORI MOLLIE D. ROSEN ADELHEID SOPHIA SCHRAFT GERTRUDE SHENSON RUTH MARION SILBERSTEIN MARIAN ELIZABETH SMITH RUTH MARION TOLCHARD JEANNETTE PEARL TOM FRANCES CAROLYN TOZIER MILDRED VANDER ZWIEP ISABELLE IDA WAKEFIELD GERALDINE C. WARFORD GOLDEN THELMA WEST BEATRICE KILBURN WILSON ELEANOR YOUNG 69 CLASS OF FALL. 1923 Boys SIMON DAVID ANIXTER FRANK J. BAUMGARTEN SAMUEL S. BERMAN ELMER XWILLIAM BLAU EDWIN HARVEY BLUM ROGER BRAM LESTER NORMAN BRIONES DONALD RICHARD BROPHY GORDON BROWN PAUL JAMES BULGER WILLIAM D. CHEATHAM MERRICK W. CREAGH, JR. HOWARD CHESTER CURTIS THEODORE T. DANIELS WILLIAM CLUFF DOWNEY EUGENE S. ELKUS, JR. FREDERICO E. ESTAVILLO DURAN WALDO EWING FRANKLIN HALLET FAY JAMES THOMAS FEEHAN PHILIP A. FISHER WHEATON FREGEAU EZRA GERSON GOTTHELF LAWRENCE MCCUNE GREENE JOHN O. HAMAN JOHN E. HAMMER GEORGE F, HANSEN HOWARD EDGAR HARMON JAMES WARNER HARVEY LLOYD RAYMOND HENNIG RICHARD BENSON HESS BERT WILLIAM HIRSCHBERG ALBERT JACOBY, JR. KENNETH M. JENKINS ANASTASIO H. JOVEN PAUL A. KLEIN FRANK CHRISTIAN LARSEN RUSSELL BERNARD LAWLER THURLOW CHARLES LEE HENRY M. LEICESTER MAURICE E. LEONARD BEN KENNETH LERER EDWARD A. LEVIN WILLIAM F. MAGUIRE JOHN COMPTON MARCH JOHN DANIEL MCDONALD RALPH CLINTON MCILWAINE JAMES HERBERT MCNAMARA WILLIAM K. MCNAUGHT HERBERT K. MENSING GEORGE MEYER GUILLERMO MIRON CHARLES T. MISHKIND HAROLD A. MITCHELL EDWARD PHILIP MORELAND TOM HATSUO NISHIMOTO HYMAN GEORGE NOVESHEN LARS EMIL OLSEN MASSARU ONO MASSO OYAMA LEO PALONSKY LOWELL NIELS PETERSON WENDELL ADRIAN PHILLIPS ALBERT A. PUCCINELLI FRANK REINKE H. IRVING PHINE HEITHER BELL RUSSELL EDWARD A. SHELTON GUSTAVUS H. SMITH CHARLES STEWART HORATIO F. STOLL, JR. CHARLES FOSTER THOMAS FRANK B, TRIEST, JR. HAROLD CHESLEY WALL GEORGE FREDERIC WARD HAROLD A. WOLLENBERG PEDRO T. YABO KIYOKI YAMATO WILLIAM FRANK ZECH, JR. Girls MARGO DOLORES ALBERTI BARBARA ALLEN CALIFORNIA PRIOR ANDREXV S RENEE BLUM SARAH BLIEMA BLUMENFELD CECILLE LEONIDE BOUDREAU CLARE BRADBEER LUCILE EDWINA BRIDGES ROSE BUSH CONSTANCE CONNIFF FRANCES B. CUMMINGS MARIE LORRAINE DOYLE DORIS LOUISE ELLESSEN E. EDITH FIBUSH GRACE HELEN FOSTER ELSA URSULA HAUSER DORIS ELIZABETH HOBBS CLARANNA LEI LANI HUBER FLORA MITSU IMAI HELEN KAZU IDE FRANCES MARGARET KEDDIE THELMA M. KERN 70 CDR CHARLES F. BRINDUPKE, USN, a graduate of Lowell in Jan. 1927, was captain of a submarine in the South Pacific during World War II and was reported lost July 1944, 2nd Lieutenant, United States Army, Meredith Lewis, '15, Lieutenant, British Royal Flying Corps, Fenton McGlachlin, '21, Adrian Morin, '14, Ist Lieutenant, United States Army, Mervyn Neugass, '03, James Rosenberg, '11, Inyo Russ, '11, United States Army, LOWELLITES KILLED IN WORLD WAR II Alvin Altfield, 1st. Sgt., United States Army, Mer- vin Bacigalupi, 2nd Lieut., United States Army, Wil- liard Blackfield, 2nd Lieut., United States Army, Charles Brindupke, Lt. Cmdr., United States Navy, Jack Bunner, Lt. Cmdr., United States Navy, Jack Burke, United States Marine Corps, Francis Chris- man, United States Army, Eugene John Clark, Lieut., United States Army, Myles T. Clark, Phat. Mate Zfc, United States Navy, Jim Cross, 2nd Lieut., United States Army Air Force, Richard Derham, 1st Lieut., United States Army, Robert I. Ervin, United States Army, George Fortayon, United States Army. Al Garcia, Lieut., United States Marine Corps, Wil- liam Garry, lst. Lieut., United States Army, Law- rence Glassberg, Charles W. Grotte, 1st Lieut., United States Army Air Corps, Jack Guptill, Pfc., United States Army, Richard Hansen, United States Marine Corps, John Hart, Lieut. QJGJ, United States Navy, Paul Henneberry, Lieut., United States Army Air Corps, Jim Honnert, United States Navy, Richard Kehp, United States Army Air Corps, Charlie Ken- all, United States Army, Jack Kessel, Lieut. tJ.G.J United States Navy, Fred Kimball, Lieut., United Brigadier General Bethel Simpson,Class of '07, fDepl. 01' lbe Army Pbotaj 4 States Army Air Corps, Philip Lee, Edward B, Let- tunich, Capt., United States Army, Gordon Lewis Lieut., United States Army Air Corps. Ted Lewis, United States Army Air Corps, Jung Chin Lok, Pfc., United States Army Air Corps, Rich- ard MacGowan, Capt., United States Army, Gordon B. Melody, Pfc., United States Army, George W. Meyer, Pfc., United States Army, Henry Mielke, Lieut., United States Army Air Corps, Gerard O'Connor, Lieut., United States Army, George Otis, Lieut., United States Army, Jillson Peattie, United States Army, Joseph E. Roach, Lieut., United States Marine Corps, Warren Salz, Lieut., United States Army Air Corps, William D. Sample, Rear Admiral, United States Navy. Jack Sherwood, Pfc., United States Army, George Arlin Sine, United States Army, Warren Sleeper, Lieut., United States Army Air Corps, Ian Smith, United States Marine Corps, Peter Somdahl, United States Marine Corps, Sanford Stadfeldt, Lieut., United States Navy, Chester Stock, United States Army, Leonard Taix, Lieut., United States Army Air Corps, Bob Thompson, Pfc., United States Marine Corps, Dick Warren, Pfc., United States Army, Jimmie Wells, United States Marine Corps, Richard West- dahl, United States Army, Dave Wilson, 2nd Lieut., United States Army, John Wilson, United States Army, and Glenn Wollman, United States Army. Brigadier General Charles Ostrom, '06, was awarded the Legion of Merit in 1943. f0jiz'ial Dept. of the Army Pboloj C Sporty 118' or 0fLo ll CECILE MAYBLE KESELING YOSHIKO KZUMIDA ELOISE LARSEN HELEN DOLORES MAHONEY KATHLEEN MAHONEY HELEN IMOGENE MANGAN FLORENCE MCKENNY CHIZU MIHO MADELEINE MONELL DOLORES A. MONSALVE HELEN MORRIS MARGARET JANET NIEBLAS LOUISE GRAY NISWONGER ETHEL JOANNA OHM GEORGIE PIELOW HELEN D. PITTMAN MYRTLE AGNES REGENTZ DOROTHY R. SOLLMAN EMMA K. STEINEGGER DOLPHINE E. STERNSEHER GRAYCE FAY STILSON SARA LOUISE STOREY GLADYS SWIFT MARGARET D. THOMPSON CHIYE TOGASAKI NIEVES B. VELASQUEZ HELENE CLAIRE WINTER CLASS OF JUNE 1924 Boys LAWSON CURTIS ADAMS ELMER AHL MARTIN AIZENBERG EDGAR PRESTON AMES MANFRED E. ANDERSON ROBERT AUGER GEORGE H. BALL LE ROY F. BARSOTTI JAMES EDWARD BEARD HOWARD BENSON DANIEL E. BERG ROBERT E. BERGMAN LEO JAMES BERNSTEIN E. WADDINGT ON BLAIR HAROLD IRVING BLOCH HENRY H. BOOTH JAMES PARKS BRADLEY EDWARD BRANSTEN LOUIS H. BROWNSTONE, JR. NICHOLAS T. BUJA ARNOLD S. CANTON FRANCIS JAMES CARMODY CHARLES DIXON CHUBBUCK ARTHUR A. COHN JR. JULIAN MAXWELL COHN JAMES DAVID COULTER MARION M. CRAWFORD ALRICH WILLIAM DAHL BURT LINCOLN DAVIS JR. DANIEL C. DAVIS ARMOND DEMARTINI THADDEUS R. DE MARTINI WILLIAM JOSEPH DOUD ROBERT L. DREYFUS LOUIS FRANCIS DUBROY ROBERT A. DUNNING JACK FRANCIS DWYER EDWARD HAROLD FIFER EDMUND L. FITZGERALD ROBERT S. FREDERICK JAYNES T. FRIEDMAN LESTER ALFRED FRIEDMAN LOVELL RICHARD GARNETT ELLIOTT GINOCHIO NORMAN J . GATZERT MCCONE WILFRID GIRARD GEORGE ALVIN GILLESPIE BENJAMIN GOLD JOHN RICHARD GOLDEN DORMAN M. GOLDMAN ALVIN GOLDSTEIN JOHN WESLEY GREENOUGH ALBERT P. HAHN FRANCIS RYDER HANIFY HERBERT HANLEY ALAN HARRISON CECIL JEROME HART MAN DUDLEY HAINES HASKELL J. GORDON HAWKINS LOUIS H. HEILBORN CHARLES HOEY EDWIN HOLDEN MAXWELL HOUSE VERNE T. INMAN HERBERT M. ISRAEL HYME JACOBS, JR. LEWIS GRANT JACOBS, JR. DEAN SOUTHERN JENNINGS RADEVOY F. JOVANOVICH LUCIEN GEORGE JUILLY RICHARD MASON KAHLER MICHINORI KATO WALTE FREAR KIMBALL DAVID HUNTER KINZIE LAWRENCE LOUIS KLEIN HERBERT C. KOHLWES 71 VICTOR E. LARASI-I SIDNEY LESSER LEE SAM A. LEVIN WALTER BENJAMIN LEVIN ALEXANDER LISSAUER WILLIAM H. MAcDONAI.D SHOKICHI MATSUNAGA HERBERT JOSEPH MAYER HOWARD D. MAYERS CLAYTON C. MCCAY STANLEY F. MCDOW GRAY P. MINOR EDWARD F. MOHRHARDT BRECK MORAN JOSEPH J. MORRIS ELMER OLIVER MURRAY C. DONALD o'MALLEY EDWARD F. PENAAT NEWTON JOHN POLLITT DALZELL JOHNS POTTER SILAS BURR PRIME REX ASHMORE REINHART ALEXIS W. SHIMONAIEFF JACOB O. SMITH NORMAN EUGENE SMITH ALVIN SNOW GEORGE ROLAND STACEY EGBERT BARKER STONE JR. HERMAN A. STEIN WILLIAM WINTER STILSON G. ELWOOD TICOULET JUSTINO A. VILLASENOR ARMIN LOUIS VERBRAG GEORGE A. VOSPER ERNEST DEAN WAGNER HARRISON J. WEBB BERNHARDT WEIDENBAUM MARTIN JOHN WEIL MERVYN WEINBERG WILLIAM GEORGE WELT JR. OLIVER M. WILLARD STEPHEN WILLIAMS NORMAN S. WOLFF CHARLES GRABER YOUNG ARMANDO JOSEPH zIRPOLI JEROME FREMONT zoBEL Girls INO ABE GWYENDOLYN BERNELL ALLEN ELIZABETH COOK ALLISON GLADYS ALVARIEZ NORMA JEANNE BACCIOCCO ETHEL LETITIA BARKIER HANNAH JANE BARRIETT ELIZABETH BARRY EDITH JANE BATH N. JUANITA BLANCHFIELD THlER'ESA LEE BORTHICK ALBERTA CLARA BOTHE ALTA BRISTOL OLIETA VERNA BIRUNSING DOROTHY H. BYINGTON IDA BROWN CHALFANT DOROTHY MERLE COGGINS CATHERINE ROSE COGHILL JOSEPHINE COSTANZA FLORENCE ANITA CRESALIA BEULA BLAIR DAVIS IRIS NEVA DE LUCE ZITA Du PONT ANITA VERA ELKINS ELVIRA M. FIRENZE ELEANOR HARRIET FRASER GRACE 'ITERUE FUJIMOTO FAYE ASFASIA GEORGE IRMA GOLDSTINE ETHEL M. GORDON IIORRAINE ANNA GRANZ GERTRUDE ELIZABETH GRIFFIN DORIS V. HARRIGAN MADELINE ANITA HEINICKE AIMJEE I. HOLMTQUIST ANITA JOSEPHINE ISAACS SARA HEARL JOHNSON GRACE MARILE JONES ANNA KAST MARGARET L. KERRELL MARY FLORENCE KIRCHER ANNE E. LAPHAM CHARLOTTE G. LAW BERNICE E. LAYNE LOUISE E. LAYNE LOUISE ELIZABETH LEGGAT DOLORES E. LEONARD DOROTIHY VIRGINIA LOUDER MARGUERITE E. MAMLOCK VERNA MANN ELINOR M. MARSHALL VERLE MARSHALL HELEN MATHESON CLARA MAY MATTHIAS RATHRYN GUY MILLBERRY VIRGINIA MYSELL MARY VIRGINIA NEWTON CAMILLE M. NOUSSEIILLETES BEATRICE M. NYKLICER ADELINE MORGAN O'BRIEN 72 Cycling LOWELL 25-MILE BICYCLE RELAY TEAM OF 1900 fl! Theoboldg QD Bridgefordg 131 W. G. Sachs fCapt.Jg 141 Spickesg C53 Cutler. In the period between the Spanish-American War and World War I, rugby Outshone American football as the great School sport. Usually the game that would decide the league championship during this period was the Lick-Wilmerding vs. Lowell contest with both schools getting an equal share of the championships. By 1920 most of the high schools in the area had disbanded their rugby squads so that it was necessary for San Francisco and the East Bay Schools still playing to combine into a single league. The following year Lowell had to drop the sport as there were no other teams playing the game in the area. Rugb The first important spOrt's squad at Lowell was the Bicycle Team. During the 1890's the Lowell squad was considered the best on the Coast. Stars of the team were George Fuller and Edmund Russ who held every individual school record from one-half mile to five miles. Russ also set two national interscholastic marks in 1897. His time of 1 minute, 9 and 1X5 seconds in the half mile, and 4 minutes, 41 and 3X5 Seconds in the two mile event were the All-United States marks. LOWELL RUGBY TEAM - 1919 Top row: Steve Wilmans, Bob Jansen, Bill Woods, jim Carson, Rollo Hess, and Randy Flood. Boltom row: Ken Eakon, Leonard Eddlenian, George Harmon, Charlie Poucher, Frank Bernstein, Harvey Blackheld. 1 an Championship Crews i y Crew was introduced to Lowell in 1922. At lirst few facilities were offered in the sport but things got better as 1 the team won more top honors. Lowell's strong crew dominated the championship for the first yew years, winning from 1924-28. Jim Montgomery was largely responsible for the crewls state of perfec- tion and three of their titles. Jim coached and devel- oped one of the best high school crews in the country. In 1924 the top title seemed destined for Oakland's Technical High, however, Lowell ended Tech's hopes A y a large margin, The first boat of '24 was composed t' Jovanovich, Mahrhardt, strokes, Sarno, Stacey, Con- adi, Zobel, Canton, Maio, Casgrove, Benny, Shimo- nieffg Daniels, bow, and Schuman, pilot. As a result of the crew's diligent and concentrated efforts in 1925, they succeeded in accomplishing an almost impossible feat. The crew was able to cover a one and one-half mile course in the oiiicial SFAL meet in 5 minutes 40 seconds, breaking the existing record set by Lowell's '24 team of 7 minutes 36 seconds. The crew's work also bettered the world's existing high school record in that course. The team of '25 consisted of Roth, Dettner, Kieystone, Taylor, Schuman, Weh- ser, Daniels, Nelson, Vredenburg, Witzel, Valente, and Scott. Another feature of the victory was that Poly's crew which finished second was 15 lengths be- hind. Lowellis power in aquatic sports is unquestioned, such records are not easily obtained or upheld. The crew again gained the championship in 1931 and 1938, and thereafter ran close behind until the sport was discontinued in 1942. UNLIMITED CREW-1928 Top row: Allen Reinhardt, Bernard Russ, Amerigo Fortini, Bill Warren, Jack Newbegin. James Dawes, Harold David. Row two: Francis Redewill, Bud Lindus, Carlos Monsalve, Lloyd Phillips, Jack Flint, Arden Hedge, Parker Edwards. KATHLEEN THERESA O'HERN FLORENCE E. PAYNE LOUISE PEARsoN MIRIAM REEVES PIMENTAL FLORENCE L. RASMUSSEN DOROTHY cLAIR ROSENBERG VIRGINIA FRANCES RUSS ROSE SAND DOROTHY LOUISE SCHROTH RUTH VIVIENNE SHAPIRO JEAN ANDREA sIMMI.E GRAcE L. SMITH MARIAN M. SMITH FRANCES ELINOR SOMERS BEVERLY ROSE STEWART FLORENCE M. THOMPSON JANE THoIvIPsoN ETHEL AUDREY TIETJEN TERU ToGAsARI MARGARET B. VON ALT H.ELEN WARD EUGENIA SYDNEY WATSON RUTH ELIZABETH WEBER ANGELA R. WEICHHART MILDRED G. WESTLAKE ANNA I. B. WITT ELEANOR ALLENE WOODRING TOMI YASUKOCHI CLASS OF JANUARY 3, 1925 Boys WILLIS ANDERSEN ALBERT MCKEE ARNOLD RICHARD ARNSTEIN WALTER E. BAKER STEVU ART BAUER LAURENCE D. BENAMATI HARRY L. BRIGHT ALEXANDER BRILL STEPHEN BYRON BRODER KENNETH BUTTE SAMUEL RUSSELL CANFIELD PATRICK CASEY CHARLES A. CHABAN BENNING P. COOK, JR. FREDERICK JAMES COOKE JAMES GREGORY DALY WILLIAM DAVIS MADISON DEVLIN, J-R. ADDISON V. DISHMAN LEO JULES DOBRIN ERIC RALPH DONATI HERBERT U. EDELMANN LEO A. ELKINS OSCAR H. FEHLEN ALBERT HAROLD EEST CHARLES A. FITZELL WALTER J. FITZPATRICK ROBERT LEE FREDRICKSON ALLAN LESTER FRIEDMAN ARTHUR MELVIN GORDON ROBERT MILLER GREEN WALDRON B. GRIBBLE EDWARD THOMPSON HAAS LEONARD KEATING HAIL IRWIN F. HANAK HENRY HARRIS, JR. RICHARD M. IMAI KENNETH BAXTER JENKINS ROBERT JOHNSON WILLIAM E. JOHNSON, JR. FELTON DOLPH KAUFMANN KARL FREDERICK KOENIG LOUIS LANDMAN ARTHUR CHRISTIAN LARSEN MARVIN LEWIS PERRY LIEBMAN RICHARD MAIO PHILIP MATHIAS CHARLES A. MCCLORY SIDNEY L. MELLER HERBERT M. MENSOR LOUIS R. MERCADO, JR. WILLIAM METTERS ROY M. MICHAEL KATSUTARO MIZUHARA DWYIER J. MOE JOHN D. MOSES WILLOUGHBY NELSON SHIGEAKI NISHIMOTO PRESTON NUNER GERALD P. O'HARA CI-IOKI OYAMA HENRY PALSZY JOHN ALBERT PERCY LAWRENCE H. PRAGIER XVILLIAM PROTOPAPPAS VERNILE H. RUCKER XYIILLIAM G. RUYMANN FRIED MILLS RUSS ROBERT LEWIS SAGE JOSEPH SALOMON HENRY C. SCHNEIDER ALB-ERT SHERMAN JACOB SHERMAN EDWARD J. SOARES LESTER DETLEF STEFPENS WILLIAM TAYLOR 75 JACK EVAN THOMPSON PAUL FAULKNER TJENSVOLD BEVERLY TURNBBLL CLEM WALLACE VAIL EUGENE VAN HORN EARL WHITE EVERTON D. WILSON RICHAiRD WARD WITTER Girls JEVVEL ADAMS TABYTHA ANDERSON SETSUKO AOKI KATHRYN ANN BAILEY ALICE M. BAXTER GLADYS M. BOSTWICK CARMEN BUSALACCHI CAROL CASE HELEN A. CLANCY HELEN vROWEN-A COHN DOROTHY mE. COLEMAN LEXLE COTTON EDNA DOYiEN LOUISE -E. GAILEY GERTRUDE C. GARIN MILDRED GLICK MURIEL GOODWIN HENRY-ETTA GREENE ALICE IMPEY ETHEL KIRCHNER BEATJRICE KOEN-EMANN MARIE KORNBECK ELSA KROTOZYNER KATHERINE LARSEN ALICE LAURAY MILDRED LEVY NORA LOCK GEORGIA MCCORMICK ISABEL MCKELLAR RUTH MICHELSON HELEN MORRIS ESTELLE MUNDER JOSEPHINE NOVITZKY MATTIE OZMiENT PEGGIE PIELOW FAY PINKUS LOIS ROBINSON MILDRED SCHWEITZER DOROTHY E. SMITH GRETCHEN SPITZER MARGARET JEAN STEAD CLARA TAIT GERTRUDE M. WILLIAMS CLASS OF JUNE 17. 1925 Boys HERKIMER E. ADAMS ELI ADELMAN HUGH ALLEN CLAUDE M. ANDERSON, JR. ALFRED J. BACIGALUPI ALWYN F. BERCOVICH KENNETH C. BERRY TED G. BLOCKLEY G. IRVING BLUHM, JR. GEORGE B. BOCARDE HARRY H. BRISTOW HAROLD C. BROWN ROBERT E. BURNS JOHN LR. CAMPBELL RAYMOND E. CAMPBELL CHARLES B. COHN CRESWELL C. COLE J. GORDON COLE WAGNLER J. D'ALESSIO LEO DAVID ALEXANDER E. DEDENKO LAWRENCE DRAPER, JR. FRED DUCATO SAM J. DUNKLEY MARSHALL DUNN LAWRENCE 'ECKLON DAVID FALK HARRY M. FISHBON JAMES E. FRANK HOWARD QE. FRASER JULIAN S. FRIEDMAN ALFRED M. FRITSCHI THOMAS J. GIILL BERNARD H. GLASSGOILD SANFORD GOILDNER DONALD GRAHAM CHARLES J. GRAY ROBERT C. GRAY BERTRAM J. GREEN RICHARD E. GUGGLENHIME ISIDOR HARBAND PERRY I. I-IARiRIS HARRY T. HATIA HERMAN T. HAUSER IRVILN HERSCOWITZ IRWIN N. HORVITZ FRANK HOWDETT, JR. HARRY A. HUNT WILLIAM L. HYNES SAMUEL I. JACOBS CARROLL F. JACOBY FRANK E. JONES 74 It is interesting to note that from 1899 until 1919 rugby was played, with a few exceptions, in the place of regular football. 1898.-After a successful gridiron season, the In- dians met favored Belmont for the championship. The two teams battled to a 5-5 deadlock. Rooney, Sym- mers, Hooper, Irving, Lewitt, Ollwell, Ellinwood, Milton, Kidd, Duzer, and Captain Cook were among the stars of the first city championship team. 1900.-Lowell managed to defeat the best teams of the strong AAL League, and won the coveted foot- ball crown. The deciding factor was the Berkeley tilt in which the Indians edged out a 6-5 decision. 1902.-In two 20-minute halves the Lowell eleven won the championship of the AAL over Berkeley by a score of 6-0. Mead Hamilton again proved himself one of the finest players on the coast, with Ray Folk, a great tackle and quarter, showing his abiliity as well. 1909.-The Indians again captured the football championship. 1914.-Lowe-ll's football team not only disting- uished itself by winning the City Championship, but when the all-star team was selected from city high schools, eight Lowell men were picked. The notables were Captain James Conrado, Herb Wilson, Randy Football y LOWELL-BALBOA GAME, 1939 Lowell wins, 5-2. Howard Council 1333 Lowell, white jersey, makes tackle on Bal man. Jim Stephenson 1553 Lowell tackle, moves in to assist. Bill Joslyn, Lowell center, moves in from far left of picture. Flood, Walter Osborne, Don McKenzie, Si Kat- ten, Dick Berndt, and Voyne Vucosalievich fMil-ze Voynej. 1915.-Once again the championship was kept ah Lowell for their fine rugby-football squad. 1916.-In 1916 Lowell's rugby team was said to b one of the finest. The championship was carried ove and the Indians captured it with ease. Caesar Manelli was Lowell's best front-ranker, and Eldon Basset, Man- ager Sherwin McKenzie, Captain George Hooper, An- thony Cunha, also starred. 1919.-The final engagement for the champion ship was between Lowell and Poly. This game cause a great deal of infeli-city within high school circles. The score was 8-3 when Villan kicked, the trouble then followed, Poly's attempt to have the game for- feited failed and Lowell captured the championship. Captain Campbell and Manager Raymond Flood were among the outstanding performers. 1924.-An experienced Red and White eleven dom- inated the SFAL and swept their opponents to anne Lowells first title in four years. The greatest singl achievement was when the Indians managed to ti State champs, San Mateo, 14-14. Paul Vredenburg' excellent punting and the hard-rushing line with fas FOOTBALL TEAM - 1905 Row one: Lowell Kriegbaum, Robert Young Row two: Otto Barkan, Ralph Hare, Alfre Roncovieri, Pierce, Cyril Quill. Row lbfee Harry Flynn, Edward Corbet, Schloss, Giber son, Frank Deuprey. Row four: Adolph Tis cornia. CHAMPIONSHIP FOOTBALL TEAMS - 1924 Top row: Joseph Miller, Eugene Van Horn, Willard Edwards, Frank Carrol. Bottom row: James Eagan, Elbert Ryan, Paul Vreclenburg, Merle Glasgow, Joe Musto, Melvin Grigsby, backs, were the main reasons for the Redmen'S success. 1926.-The India.ns ended the season in a triple tie :for the AAA -pigskin championship. Lowell 'fared ex- :ellently against their league opponents, losing but one tilt. The defeat was suffered at the hands of Gali- leo, 3-0. 1927.-Lowell captured the football crown through post season playoff victory over arch-rival Poly, 12-6. hroughout the season Lowell displayed talent and superiority over their helpless opponents. Sacred Heart ell by the Score of 28-6, Commerce was waxed, 26-0, hile others awaited similar treatment before the Red IMachine. 1928.-With the Championship depending upon the final tilt Lowell 'beat their traditional rivals, Poly, to win the pigskin trophy. A record-breaking 55,000 fans watched this titantic struggle for the West's most renowned football crown. San Francisco was then the center of prep football. FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM-1939 Front, kneeling : Don Kranich, Bob Hinman ffootball managersl. Row one: Howard Coun- til, Howard jones, Fred Beaver, Bill Joslin, Hans Wienderholfer, Jim Stephenson, Elroy Neher. Row two: William O'Brien, Bud Mac- Kinnon, Caxton Rhodes, Jerry McGinn, Jack Vierra, Ed Russell, Bob Burmiester, Brose. Row three: Stan Restler, Bill Chandler, John Thompson, Ray Milton, Steve Detour, Roy Culver, Milt Cohen. Row four: Norman Mil- back, Ken Eustache, Bob Toppmann, Al Gar- cia, Milt Swartz, Ed Rowe, Ira Thompson, Iack O'Brien. Row five: Mike Voyne fcoachj, Mr, Stevens Qprincipalj, Clayton Calandet, Bob Simmons, Angelo Misthos. 1959.-On Thanksgiving Day at Kezar the Indians in their annual big game clinched the first AAA title for Lowell in eleven years. LOwell'S team outcharged and outplayed a supposedly superior Poly to give them- selves the needed edge and championship. The team was sparked by jim Honnert, Al Garcia, and Ed Cerf. 1941.-The Lowell Indians again met their tradi- tional rival Poly, to decide the outcome of the cham- pionship. However, LOwell'S powerful team led by Gardner, Orsi, Captain Frank Wigmore, and Sheridan, pushed ahead and captured the Valued title. 1942.-For the second straight year Lowell beat Poly to win the Triple A Championship. As the final gun sounded the scoreboard read Lowell 13, Poly 12. Among the outstanding players on the In- dians' last Championship team -were Bill Bennet, Paul Orsi, Bob Sims, and Aiff Gomes, who made the extra point which made the difference between victory and defeat. WALTER P. JONES ROBERT M. KASPER VERNON E. KIMBALL ROWLLAND R. KING WILLIAM J. KIRKPATRICK E. WILLIVER KLEIN LEO KLEIN HERBERT B. KNUDSEN, JR. CLARENCE KRIEGER NORMAN J. LACKMANN WILLARD s. LEVY JAMES B. LEWIS HAROLD H. LINDNER SIDNEY L. LIPSITCH LEONIDAS L. LORENZINI DANIEL MARX, JR. DAVID M. MCKELL ANDREW L. MOLINARI JOSEPH A. MOORE, JR. MATIAS P. MORTIGIA RICHARD N. NASON, JR. JOSEPH IC. NG N. GUNNAR NORBERG RICHARD J. O'BRIEN PAUL G. OSTROM MIGUEL Q. PARAISO RALPH IH. PETERSON JOHN B. PRESTON ALBERT G. PUTNAM JOSEPH S. RAVINSKY CHARLES C. ROBERTSON GEORGE P. ROGERSON M. CASBER ROSENBERG REGIINALD RUMWELL STEWART O. SAMUELS JAMES D. SANGISTER I-IAYDN J. SARTORI ROBERT J. SCHERMER WINSTON R. SCHMIDT LLOYD D. SERIGHT LAWRENCE SHAEARMIAN RAYMOND R. SISK EDWARD L. SMITH, JR. JACK .E, SMITH JOSEPH H. SMITH GIEEORD E. SOBEY DAVID SPIEGELMAN HARRY STEINBERGER JACQUES STEUR P. VICTOR SVANE DAVID 'DERKELTAUB DOUGLAS G. THOMPSON COLVIN P. TOLAND MAIER I. TUCHLELR H. .ALAN VAN NUYS PAUL L. VREDENBERG MYWRON WACHOLDER EDMOND M. WAGNER FRANK C. WAGNER FRANCIS WAHL RALPH J. WALKER RALPH C. WALLACE SCOTT WEBSTER JOHN B. WHEATLEY E. JOSEPH YOUNG Girls ADELINE ADDLESTONF LINA H. AHRENS ROBERTA ALDRICH EUNICE A. BARG MILDRED BELTZ ANNA G. BRANDON HELEN BRAUN FRANCES K. BREDIMUS DOROTHY B. BROWN MILADA BUDINSKY WINIFRED S. CLANCY MARIAN G. CONZELMANN MARGARET CROCKER EDNA R. CUNNINGHAM BLANCHE C. DODGE KATHLEEN E. DUNBAR FRANCES C. DUNKLEY KATHRYN FAGAN BARBARA C. FOXVLER HELEN L. GARVIN VIVIAN GREEN MARY GUBBINS WINIFRED HAM MARGUERITE HAMM DOROTHEE J. HARNISH FRANCES HAZELTINE IEA HIRSCH G. ELIZABETH HOFFMAN MILDRED K. IPSVVITCH MARGUERITE A. KILGARIFF HENRIETTA LANDMAN MARJORIE L, LEEPER ALICE LOUISE LESCH SOPHIE C, LEVIN RUTH L. LINCOLN S. JANET LINCOLN JACQUELINE LIUZZA BERNICE E. LUDWIG EVELYN R. MATTHEWS ANNE MCKELL MATIE MCLAREN EDNA MENSING ALBERTA H. MEYER ALICE MINAHAN MARY A. MOE JEANNETTE W. MORRIS RAPHAELA W. MURRAY CLARISSE NEWMAN EDITH M. PATCH CLARA P. PETERSON ISABELLE RANKIN ANTOINETTE A. RATHMANN DELMA ROYCE GRACE D. RUPERT VERDELE E. RUSS ROGENA E. SANDERS RAE S. SARAGA S, KAZUKO SATO GOLDIE SHOSTER LUCINA K. SOROLA MILDRED SPIEGEI. MARIAN STEUR NORINE S. SURRYHNE ELNA N. SWESEY BETTY J. THOMPSON MARIE THUNBERG HELEN V. TONG VIRGINIA I. TRACY ELISE F, TRICOU BRUNA TRUSSI VIRGINIA L. TUCKER HELENE R. TURNER EVELYN T. WEBB DOROTHY A. WEBER PAULINE E. WEED MARGARETTA WORTHINGTON PHYLLIS WRIGHTSON VERNA WUNDERLING CLASS OF JANUARY 7, 1926 Boys JOHN HERBERT ARTHUR LEWIS S. BAER GEORGE STANLEY BAKER EREDERICK M. BARINGIER LOUIS B1ECK1ER JAMES S-EATON BIAS R. WILLIAM BIAS, J-R. HENRY JULIUS BLANK PRESCOTT H. BLATITERMAN, JR GEORGE SAMUIEL BLUM LRVING GERALD BREYER SIDNEY BUEGELEISEN MAURICE MARSHALL CAREY JOSEPH H. CASTLER ERNEST E. CHARLESTON RIOI-LARD1R. CRITCHLOW ARTHUR DANIELS JOHN WILLIAM DEAN ARMAND MORRIS DILLER WILLIAM MARTIN DODGE CHARLES DREYFUS JAMES FRANCIS EAGAN BERTRAM STANLEY .EDELMAN CHARLES ALBERT ELKUS HECTOR E. ESCOBOSA RUSSELL CHARLES EWING MA:RK MEHERIN FALLON EDWIN MERLE GLASGOW EDWARD JAMES -GOLDIE DONALD .HENRY GOODCELL FRIANK GORDON MARCUS GORDON 'EARL JOHN GRAF EMINEL POTTER HALSTEAD RICHARD HENRY HIELLER CHARLES T. HENSEL BERTRAM HEIL HIRSCH BLAKE FRASER HOPKINS, JR. LIONEL LOUIS HOUSER MERVIN L. HUTCHERSON MEYIER HYMAN HYMAN LOUIS HYMSON HENRY EDWARD JACOB HARVEY LEWIS JACOBSON FBLIX MALCOMB JUDA CURTIS SAMUEL KNOWLES WILLIAM HOWARD KNOWLES FREDERICK GATES KRAMER HYMLE .LAFF CHARLES EDWARD LARABEE NATHAN S. LAZARUS HENRY HYMAN LEVIN DAVID LEVY HERBERT A. LEVY JOHN E. LINDENMAYER SIDNEY G. LIPPITT, J.R. WILLIAM T. LUSCOMBE NORMAN EWEN MACLEAN PETER P. MANOS GEORGE MANUCK MAURICE MANUCK LEWIS ARTHUR MARTIN RICHARD ,M. MEAGLES, JR. MICHAEL M. MELNEKOFF LOUIS JOHN MERRILL JAMES B. MONTGOM.ERY 76 Bob Feerick, '37, was All-City for Lowell, All-Coast for Stanford, and All-Pro for N Wfashington. 1 CHAMPIONSHIP BASKETBALL TEAM 1930 Top raw: Dick Hay, Milt Stansky, Emmett Keefe, Elmo Bozzo, Bob Hay, Coach Ben Neff. Boliom row: Artie Mueller, James, Harris, Schindler, Taylor. Man Great Basketball Team Lowell High is proud of its record of varsity basket- ball championship teams. The years in which the In- dians won the title are: 1907, 1913, 1916, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1925, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1949, and 1953. Lowell has produced its share of outstanding bas- ketball players. The following list is the All-Time. All-Star Indian basketball squad. The players are not listed in first, second, and third teams, because all were stars on their respective squads and it is impossible to determine who were really the best. The team is composed of Richie Hay, Ed Conroy, Bob Carney, Carl Troppman, Don Burness, Bob Fee- rick, Bill Cowden, Pete Delos, Ed Cerf, Howie Dall- mar, Jerry Coleman, Ken Leslie, Bill Lau, Al Krag- stad, Ward Healey, Bob Matheny, Ken Flower, Mike Leaskou, and Clarence Grider. Richie Hay, a center, was the only player for Lowel who ever made the All-City team three years in a row He made it in 1930, 1931, and 1932. He later player for California. Ed Conroy made All-City forward in 1931 ani 1932. He played college ball for Santa Clara. Bol Carney, a forward, was an All-City selection in 193' and 1932, too. Carl Troppman, an All-City center in 1935, later went over to Santa Clara to play for th' Broncos. Bob Feerick, currently the basketball coach at Sant Clara, was an All-City guard in 1937 for the Indians He was also an All-Coast selection for the Santa Clar. Broncs, and an All-Pro cager for the Washington Capitols. Don Burness, an All-City forward in 1936 ant 1937, Bill Cowden, AllJCity guard in 19385 ana Howie Dallmar, All-City in 1939 and 1940, all wen CHAMPIONSHIP BASKETBALL TEAM OF 1955 Top row: G. Ivelich, A. Mock, K. Balling, L. Pelfmi, P. Goldberg. Middle row: W. Keough, P. Rosenthal, B. Shafer, A. Holder. Bottom row: J. Thomas, M. Noe, C. Grider, M. Leaskou, M. Prescott. .psi WWW 'Mau Bill Cowden played football basketball for Lowell. Later he played at Stanford on the team that won the National Champi- onship of the U.S. Howard Dallmar, 140, played on Stanfords NCAA Cham- pionship team. Now Stanfords coach. over to Stanford and played first-string on the only tanford team that ever won the NCAA champion- ship, the 1942 squad, All three were also All-Coast performers. Dallmar llater made All-Pro for the Philadelphia Warriors, nd he is currently the basketball coach at his alma ater. Pete Delos and Ed Cerf both were All-City forwards 'Il 1938 and 1939. Cerf later played college ball for he St. Mary's Gaels. Jery Coleman, who is better known for his base- ball feats with the New York Yankees, also was an All-City guard for the Lowell basketball team of 1943. Bill Lau and Ken Leslie were both All-City selec- tions in 1944. Lau played center and Leslie played uard. Leslie has played on many club teams around he Bay Area, including the Oakland Bittners, and as played for the College of Marin. Al Kragstad, a forward, was an All-City choice in 1946. Bob Matheny and Ward Healy were both All- 'City selections in 1947, Matheny as a guard and Healy ,as a forward. ' Matheny later was an All-Coast player for Califor- nia, and has played for the Olympic Club. Healy was ,an All-American prep, and Ben Neff, who has been coaching at Lowell since 1925, said that Healy was the best shot he has ever coached at Lowell. Ken Flower made All-City guard for Lowell in 1949, and later was an All-Coast performer for Sou- thern California. Mike Leaskou was an All-City guard in 1953, and, like Flower, later played for Southern 'California Clarence Grider, a center ,was an All-City choice in 1953 and 1954. He was also an All-American prep. lLast season he played for CCSF. 1941 BASKETBALL ACTION Bob Troppman, Bob Arnold and Bill Kotta come to the rescue of I.owell's Bob Cherry during the Lowell- Coimmerce basketball game of 1941. Lowell won 21-20. A couple of generations of Lowellites can recall the bench antics of Ben Neff and his five pennies. These pictures would bear the same expressions if they had been taken in 1930 or 1956. JOSEPH CLARENCE MUSTO BERNARD NAUGHTON, JR. FRANCIS ARNOLD O'BRIEN LIONEL A, PEREYRA HENRY EDGAR POLAK MAURICE S. POXVER JACK FRANCIS POWERS JULIAN S. REINHERTZ RAY AUGUST REYNOLDS JAMES FULLER ROSENTIHAL ELBERT RYAN HOWARD JEROME SCHINDLER HERBERT M. SCHNEIDER MILTON ALGER SCHROEDER RUSSELL W. SCHUMAGH-ER ADOLPH PHILLIP SCHUMAN SYLVAN SCHWARTZREICH GEORGE R. SHOBLO FRANK HECHT SLOSS EDXVARD R. T. SMITH ARMAND SPECK SCOTT HAYES STEWART, JR. GEORGE HENDERSON STILES ROBERT BEVERLY TAYLOR RUSSELL JAMES THOMAS CHARLES N. THOMPSON, JR. HENRY SHUE TOM EDXVARD RUDOLPH TOSO BINGHAM H. TRIGE EUGENE LOUIS VALENTE JOHN NICHOLAS VALIANOS ALFRED WESTON VITT JACOB HENRY VOORSANGER NEWTON E. WACHHORST LOUIS EDGAR WALKER DELBERT GUY WAYNE RALPH 4EDWARD WHITE HAROLD I. WOLFF JOHN JALMAiR XWOTILA JOHN ANDREW' ZOLEZZI Girls DOROTHY JEAN ADELSTEIN DOROTHY ALVAREZ ELIZABETH BOYNTON HARRIETTE E. CARLSON ALTA MAY CARSON .ELIZABETH CASTAGNETTO DOROTHY IDA CHAMBERS JEAN HARRIET DAXVSON MAURINE DE LONG GLORIA MADELEINE DOUGLAS JOSEPHINE E. FINK NORMA MAE GAETJEN ALICE .ANNETTE GOFF VIOLA GOLDSMITI-I EDNA FLORENCE GREEN LUCI-LE CATHERINE HALL HELEN K. HARDIMAN DONALDINE LOUISE HAUSE MILDRED HEILMAN RUBY HEMPHILL DOROTHY HILDA HENRY ALICE ISERMAN LUCY EMORY JENKINS MABEL EVANS JOOST EVELYN KAMP ELSIE A. LAFRANCONI RUTH LILLIAN LECKER THELMA MAE LEE WILLA HEYER LEGGAT ENID CAROLYN MACDONALD MARIE ROBERTA MARTENS NANCY KING MCKENZIE MABEI. JEAN MEADE GLORIA C. MORIARITY KATHRYN H. MOXWBRAY ELIZABETH F. NICHOLS ZELMA S. NORMAN ETHEI. EVELYN ROSEN BELLA ROTHBACK FRANCES M. RYAN JOVITA JET REAVIS VIVIENNE GERTRUDE SALA DOROTHY C. SAVERCOOL LOUISE SCHNEIDER ABBY ELIZABETH SCOTHAN SARAH SHNEIDER BEATRICE LILLIAN SMITH MARGARET SMOOKS GRACE CI-IIYO TAKATA ANITA TIERNAN ANNIE J. VAN NATTA NEMELRA B. WARHUST DOROTHEA WHITE BERNICE CATHRINE XVILSON LORRAINE FRANCES WILSON CLASS OF JUNE, 1926 Boys EDWARD S. AITKEN CURTIS R. ALEXANDER GRAHAM LUDLUM ALLEN ERIC O. ANDERSON JACK D. ARAKELIAN WILLIAM ASI-IER THOMAS BARRETT JOHN W. BEATIE 77 M..M. . V l MORRIS SCHAPIIRO BECKER SOLOMON BINEMAN HENRY W. BLAETTLER MAX BLEC-HIMAN HENRY JOSEPH BLOOM ROBERT BILUM STANLEY GERALD BREYER PHILLIP R. BROCATO COLEMAN E. CAMPBELL ROBERT CUTLER CASE HARRY CLARK RICHARD F. COOPER WALTER JOHN ORANERT ROBERT W. DETTNER ARTHUR JOSEPH DOLAN, JR. JOSEPH F. DOLAN, JR. HAROLD C. DREW CHARLES EUGENE EAGAN EDGARD VINCENT ENGLISH RICHARD L. .ERLIN -LEE ESCHEN, JR. JOSE S. LESTEBAN THEODORE EDWARD EULER JEROME B. FALK JACK FLINN SIDNEY FOGERTY ROLAND D. FON'IiANA GEORGE IHORTON FORREST LAUIRIEN FRANECHI EUGENE FULTON HAROLD A. FURST ADOLPH GANSEL JOEL WIILFRED GEDDES ABE GIDAL PHILIP K. GI-LMAN, JR. PRISCILLO P. -R. GONZALEZ JULIUS GOULD ALEXANDER GRUBSTICK JOHN WILLIAM GRUVER HIENRY HAMBURG ROBERT M. HARRISON CHARLES DE B. HAZELTINE WILLIAM A. HEATLIE NORMAN 'HELWIG WALTER DAVID HIRSCHL DIEMING HOBART LOUIS A. HOLMES JOHN H. HOW GEORGE C. HUNTER FREDERICK W. ISAAC 'IfADANORI ITO WILLIAM WALTON JACKSON HARRY CLARE JACOBS PORTER JOHN JACOBS JULIUS P. JAEGELING, JR. EMIL OTTO JELLINEK, JR. AIRCHIJE A. JOHNSON WALTER S, JOSEPH HUMPHREY KERMENT CURTIS A. KLEIN ARTHUR F. KRAUSKOPP KIENNETH E. LAWRENCE NICHOLAS M. LEUTZA JACK H. LINDOW GEORGE IRVING LONG MANUEL F. LOSHUERTOS DUNCAN LOXV FRANK THOMAS LYONS MELVILLE MARX STANLEY J. MARX JOSE MATIAS FRANCIS MCCARTY GEORGE T. MCDANIELL PIERRE V. MERLE, JR. LEON MERLYN MICHELS EDGAR WILLIAM MILES MERTON E. MILLSAP FRANK H. MONTGOMERY JOSEPH LEO NANNERY HILARIO OBADO JAY OLIVER EDWARD L. O'NEIL DAVID OPPENHEIM ROBERT F. PAINE, JR. WILBUR L. PARKER HOWARD CHARLES PLATT HARRY WILLIS PLEVIN JOHN HART POLHEMUS, JR. JOSEPH POLVERINO JOHN J. PUGH FLETCHER STANHOPE PYLE BERNARDO S. RAMOS SIDNEY A. ROVER ADOLPH LOUIS POSENBERG VICENTE P. SAGON ENJIRO SAKAI ' FRANK A. SCHUPPERT CHARLES WILLARD SCOTT JAMES WARREN SCOTT LOUIS SIMON NEWTON HAROLD SIMON CHANDLER SMITH ELLISON SMITH NATHAN SMOOKE WILLIAM SOMMER ALBERT LESSER STEINBERG FORREST SLOCUM TAYLOR CHARLES ALFRED TROLLIET 78 SENIOR TRACK TEAM AT STANFORD - 1925 Row one: Harold Jennings, Edelman, Henry Sanford, Bernstein Irving Weinstein, George Harman. Back raw: Merrick, Gwyn, Furth Hosmer, Smith, Scotchy Campbell, Jim Carson, Rollo Hess William Deamer, Herzog, Osburn, George Corley. Record of Track Teams Impressive 1909.-For the first time in the history of Lowell a team came through first in the AAL Indoor Cham- pionship iield meet. The eight-man team set a record which Lowell's track teams have upheld. The team consisted of Captain Leo Meyer, Roy Cohon, Street, Brown, Agazelow, S-meltzer, Potter, Sommer, and Wakeman. 1916.-From out of a deep hole to the champion- ship of the San Francisco Athletic League rose Lowell's track team. The task of success was simplified by the return of Several lettermen, and the 'brilliant perform- ances of Captain Dinkelspiel and Babe Bering. 1917.-The track team Saved Lowell's reputation for the term by cleaning up the SFAL meet. Led by Captain McRae and Manager Abinanti the team did a great job. The Indians brought in 71 points, 11 first places, and two records. Mell McRae was a consist- ant winner in the Sprints and -the broad jump, while UNLIMITED CHAMPIONSHIP TRACK TEAM 1914 Richardson reached 11 feet 22, inches in the pole Vault. 1919.-In spite of all advance predictions at the beginning oif the season, the weight track team came through with winning the SFAL track and field meet by the Score of 63-31. Coach Voyne led the team while Captain Hosman Smith and Campbell Saved the day, winning the javelin and shot, both scored 13 points. Also high on the point list were Villain, Bernstein, Jansen, and Hess. 1920.-On Saturday, October 2, Lowell'S weight track team once again walked away with the SFAL meet. Poly, Lowell's nearest opponent, was defeated by 20 points. Shermund made a record by stepping the quarter mile in 52 seconds. Manager Morris was the star for the Indians when he set a record in the 75-yard dash. 1921.-To the surprise of everyone including the Row one: Spellman, Steigman, McRae. Row two: Baird, Flood, Mgr.-Voyne, Captain Ackerman, Geoppart. Row three: Brown, Fredericks, Postlethwaite, Levison, Starbird, Turkington, Bering, Kahn. Barney Wolf, shot put and dis- cus Star for Lowell and U. of California. V staunchest of rooters, Lowell again retained the cov- eted SFAL championship trophy beating favored Poly 602-41. Led by team Captain Robinson and Manager Protopappas, the trackmen's spirit and determination brought on their victory. L 1922.-Lowell's unlimited team led by Captain Rankin totaled 36 points to capture the SFAL meet. Also to the surprise of many was Lowell's weight team Ivictory. The stars were Captain Morris, who took first in the 100 and 220 runs, and Williamson, who cleared the high jump record. 1923.-For the sixth consecutive time LOWell's weight track team won the SFAL title. Under the watchful eyes of Coach Dykes and Vernile Rucker, the Indians scored a total of 892 points. Haskell won the 30's high jump, and Casey ran on the winning relay. On the 20's, Russell was the star with two firsts, plus his part in the relay, Gren scored eight points and also ran on the relay 1924.-Displaying the form that had previously won seven victories for Lowell, the weight cinder artists, led by Captain D'AlessiO, again captured the SFAL meet. Al Fest broke the 100- and 440-yard rec- ords, while Robeson Smith shattered the 120's 75-yard record. The team annexed 75 points. 1925.-The Lowell unlimited track team of '25, under the guiidance of Coach Dykes and Captain Baker, rought the team to a city championship. Berry Iinished rst in the 220, and the 440 was won by Sanderson in 55 seconds flat. Other winners were Baker, 880, Pres- lton, hurdles, and Smith, the javelin throw. 1938.--Fulfilling the highest expectations the In- fiian Papaoses romped through the leagle to annex the AAA title. Every division took top honors. The lteam included such stars as En:ile, Sjolund, Fry, Hi- gaki, Lew, and Curley. 1939.-With versatile Captain Canfield setting the pace, the unlimited track team defeated Commerce, 51-48, to take the City Championship, The Indians eemed to do no wrong. Pete De Vries garnered eight oints and Bernard was next in the shot and discus, ac- quiring sixg Meier also made six points. 1940.-With stalwart George Canfield, Gene Clark, miler, and Skiles Hoffman, sprinter, leading the way, Lowell's unlimited track team beat Commerce 54M- 33.. For the second straight time the Redmen captured the AAA Championship. Howard Alvord an-d John Fonaas both accounted for five points and won in the shot and discus, respectively. 1942.-The blue chips were down and the Indians again swept the field for their third AAA title in four seasons. Weeks of hard practice brought Lowell tO a fine pitch. Jim Shepperd led the Indians with eight points. Phil Arnot, jack Shepherd, jack Bresler, Car- son, O'Donnell, Bob Sim, and Mel Evans, came through with important points. 1943.-For the second year in a row Lowell's var- sity track team took hold Of the championship. The The 1919 junior Track Team. Indians rose to a total of 532 points. With undefeated miler Dick Winker leading, Lowell emerged victo- rious over Lincoln's team. Dick MacMillon took first in the 100, -and john Hardgrave won the high hurdles, setting the city record. 1946.--Lowell upset Poly, 58-47, to capture the track title. Running the mile, Lowell had Don Bran- son, undefeated varsity man. Palaby, broad jump, Abraham, discus, Marrow, 100, Dunn, shot, Davis, pole vault, Moretti, 220, and Hughes, 880, were other outstanding team members. 1947.-Coached by Elmer Harris, Lowell's mighty track team won the '47 Round Robin Championship. The Indians were paced by Torres, Scroggy, Plessas, and Anderson in the sprintsg Scroggy, 440, Johnson, 880, and Frey, in the mile. Both star hurdlers, Loren Baker and Frank Packard, unofficially broke crity rec- ords in the hurdles. 1948.-For the third consecutive time Coach Harris' cindermen annexed the AAA crown by sweeping over the best teams of the league. On Saturday, April 24, the Indians captured the Burlingame Relays over the defending champions, San jOse's Lincoln High School. Besides winning the meet, Lowell's relay team of Loren Baker, Jim Plessas, Hughes, and Marv Hoffman, broke the relays' 880 record. 1949.-Led by phenomenal Plessas, Lowell's pow- erful team won its fourth city title. Plessas became the sixth man in AAA history to win three city titles. Don Carlson took the 440, Dick Cook carried over the dis- cus, while Bud Warren and Dick Tophen won the hurdles. Bob Foehr and Bill Pardy won the pole vault. The team and their spirit were superb. JOHN A. vos: ENDE TRACY wAHRL1cH WINTHROP PORTER WATROUS THOMAS MCWATT PHILIP G. WEAVER THOMAS E. w1LK1NsON NEVILLE WOODRUEE JAMES 1. YANO REUBEN HERMAN ZUMWALT Girls HEST ER ANDERSON EVELYN MARTHA ANDREWS JULIA ANDRUSS' ILIONE E. BALDWIN BERNICE ELIZABETH BAND CATHERINE BARCLAY MARY ELIZABETH BASSINE ROSE MARIE BAZERQUE DOROTHY MARIE BECSEY THELMA BISSERT CORA MYRTLE BLACKMAN BERNICE MADELINE BLANCO EDNA HELEN BOTHMANN ISABELLE BOUICK KATHERINE BRAUN LOIS H. BROWNSTONE CATHRYN LUCILLE BULLOCH JULIETT E CASSENS NEVA JUANITA CHARLES LILY LAURA CHLOUPEK RUTH CHOW HELEN COLGAN DORIS FRANCIS CORCORAN MARIAN CRAWFORD HELEN LOUISE CULLEN MARY KNIGHT DAVIES CARMEN AVELL DEL CURO BEATRICE HELENE DENKE RAMONA DILL ANNE DREYER FRANCIS DRYDEN ESTHER FEHLEN GERTRUDE KEMLER FELTY MARIE MELITA FENECH ELIZABETH FERGUSON DOROTHY ALICE FORD MARCIA WHITE FREDERICK ELOISE GRIFFITH MARGARET MARY GUBBINS MARTH K. HACK REVA HALPERN BESSIE HARBAND DELPHA HARRIS HELEN HECKAMAN MABEL JOSEPHINE HOGGARD ANNETTE MAY HOLDING ELLEN GRACE HOOPER GWENDOLYN HUGHES FANNYE KAPLAN MARGUERITE KESSLER GLADYS CECELIA KING EUNICE KIRSCHBERG BERTHA M. LARRE HELEN B. LEON CELIA LEVIN ETHEL M. LONGMIRE DAISY MARIE LUNDGREEN ANNA MADDEN GRACE EVELYN MAHONEY MARY J. MANO DE CSAVARA MARTHA LOUISE MAYO A NAN MCK Y IRENE ELIZABETH MENSING HAZEL LOIS MOORE BERTHA MUROV LUCILE LORRAINE O'LEARY,. ANTOINETTE VIRGINIA PRIEN MARGARET LEE PRINGLE MARJORIE H. RASMUSSEN DOROTHY REESE FAY INEZ REINHART HELEN VIRGINIA REYNOLDS DOROTHEA MARGARET ROEBKE CLARA ROITENSTEIN FANNIE SALOMON ANN SARVER MARJORIE SAVANNAH JANE ANNA SCHIECK CLAIRE SCOTT LENORE FREDERICKA SELIG JOSEPHINE SERIGHT EMMA LILY SILAGI MIRIAM SOLOMON OLGA TADWICK CATHERINE FAY TELLER EUGENIA WAGNER DOROTHY LAURENE WALDIE EDWINA ELIZABETH WALKER BARBARAGR G. WEIDERMAN JUANITA WELISCH HETTIE ELISE WERNER DOROTHY ROSE WHEELER KATHRYN JANE WILLIAMS ETHEL MABEL WILSON LILLIAN E. WYNKOOP SELMA ZIMET GLADYS PHOEBE ZUMWALT 79 CLASS OF FALL, 1926 Boys MASAJI HARRY ABE ALBERT C. ANDERSON ELMER ANFINSON GEORGE BACIGALUPI TADINI BACIGALUPI RAY EDWIN BATZ JEROME W. BETTMAN DALTON H. BISHOP MORRIS BRILL CHARLES BRINDUPKE ROBERT M. BROWN GUIDO GEORGE CAGLIERI HARRY CHILTON JOHN M. COLLINS WILLIAM A. CONNOLLY, JR. PETER J. COSTALUPES ARTHUR R. CURTIS HENRY JOHN DABEL RICHARD B. DAVIS JACK EDWARD DEMANDEL EARL JOHN DEWAR CHARLES WRIGHT DILLER HERBERT L. DRYFOOS EDMUND J. DUNNING WILLIAM L. EGAN WILLIAM ALLEN EHRHARDT ERVIN HAROLD EPSTEIN ALBERT JOGEL JOHN W. FORBES CHARLES HENRY FRANCISCO ROBERT H. FRANK G. A. FREUDENBERG, JR. ARCHIE L. FRICK WILLARD SMITH FROST LOWELL A. GARDNER WALTER B. GIBBONS JOHN CARY GILMAN JACK ALBERT GOUGH WILLIAM DELFORD GRAFF HARRY GRAY HARRY GREEN MONROE SHELDON GREEN WRAY HOLMAN GRIFFITH ELI HAMMER HOMER S. HARRIS JOHN HENRY HEIDE WILLIAM J. HESTHAL DAVID DANFORTH HEWES ARTHUR S. HYMAN D. QUINCY JACKSON GENGO KAIIWARA LEIGHTON KOEHLER NIROKU KUSUMOTO VINCENT PAUL LAFFERTY EDWARD C. LEITNER ROY CHARLES LEMOGE ROBERT LOUIS LEVIN SANFORD E. LEVY JACK G. MAIL JAMES ALEXANDER MARR HENRY R. MARZILLIUS JOHN MAWSON WILLIAM S. McBIRNEY GEORGE KNOX MCDANIEI. ROBERT JARDINE MCEWEN ROBERT MCGROUTHER MELVIN MENSOR PHILIP MICHELSON JOHN A. MINER HENRY MISHKIN SUMIO MIYAMOTO RALPH H. MONTALI FRANCIS JACK NELSON JOHN L. NESS EDGAR PIERSON HOWARD EDWARD QUINN CLIFFORD F. RAFAEL HERBERT JOHN RICHTER GUEST RICKETTS LOUIS L. ROBERTS SAUL ROBINSON MAURICE D. ROUBLE ERNEST SALZMANN EDWARD C. SANDERSON GEORGE G. SARNO JOHN HENRY SAUNDERS, JR. LIONEL SCHMITT SYLVAIN SCHNAITTACHER R. , J HENRY WILLIAM SCOTT HAROLD ROBERT SCULNICK WILLIAM LUTZ SHATTUCK JOHN JOSEPH SILLICK ALAN A. SIMON RICHARD J. SKAFF MANUEL STERN JEROME JOSEPH SUICH DAVID DANIEL SUM JAMES RUSSELL TIPPETT GEORGE L. TOCALINO KIICHI UYEDA GEORGE MARSHALL WELTON OTTO MILLS WESTERFELD ROBERT XV. XVILL 80 Tennis Teams Produce ationall Famous Stars Since their first championship back in 1899 Lowell's tennis teams have established a winning tradition. The Indians have won 46 titles in the 57 years they have been competing. Furthermore, the tennis teams of Lowell have turned out more nationally and interna- tionally known players than any other school in the country. The sport wasn't well received at first, but the popu- larity increased as did their proportions and cham- pionships. The personnel of the 1901 team competition championship were the first of the renowned players, the Long brothers, Melville and Herbert, who later Harry Likas continued his winning ways in college. He is a farmer National Intercollegiate Singles Title holder. V P 4 . Mervyn Griffin was one of many Lowel- lites to receive national ranking in tennis. became internationally ranked. However, the mos noted player that attended Lowell was later to becom the world famous Little Billl' Johnston. Johnsto completely revolutionized the style of tennis, and wo two national championships, and for ten years was dominant figure of the Davis Cup competition. Other famous earlier notables who played at Lowel and became nationally ranked were Allen Lowry, Me Long, Maurice McLaughlin, and the Rosenburg broth- ers. Other Lowell players to gain fame in tennis circles included Roberts, Wallace Bates, Phil Neer, Mervyn? Tom Brown in action on the center court at Wimble- don in the finals of theWorld's Single's Championship. Little Bill Johnston fLowell '11J standing with Big Bill Tilden. These two men dominated international ten- nis for a decade. irifiin, Herb Sauer, Sr., Bowie Detrich, Homer Liv- Ison, john Strachan, Phil Battens, Irving Weinstein, nd the Kinsey brothers, Robert and Howard. In recent competition Lowell's tennis teams have held and added to the list of important and national- known players. A few of the outstanding stars in- luded Tom Brown, who -became national and world's ngles runner-up, world's doubles champ, and a Davis Yup player 5 Nick Carter, city champion five timesg arry Buttimer, and Harry Roche, Pacific Coast dou- es champion, and Harry Likas, national intercolle- 'ate singles champion. The last three attended Lowell .om 1938-40. jim Livingstone Qnow English instructor and ten- is coach at Lowell, became the Pacific Coast cham- ion. John Lesch, 1950-51, became national boys' aampion and national junior champion. jim Livingstone and Harry Buttimer, former all-city tennis stars, have annexed many titles including the Pacitic Coast Doubles Championship. 5 GOLF Golf was inaugurated as a major sport in city high schools in 1925. Golf, like the also newly-established crew, wasn't completely accepted by the general stu- dent body. However, the yearly tryout and participation has been comparatively large. As a result, golf has con- tinued as a major sport at Lowell. Lowell's golf teams have always presented a for- midable team. The first team of '25 consisted of James Binns, Ted Lees, Dick Erlin, Captain Charlie Helganz, Dave McKell, and Bob Mercure. The first few years were fairly suocessful for Lowell, being twice runner- up for the first championship tournaments. In 1929 the Indians won the championship through a technicality, and with a stronger team in 1930 they again captured the title. They had another championship in 1935. Since then the team has always been near or at the top. Among the many tennis titles held by Nick Carter are five San Francisco City Singles Championships. WILLIAM WINDSOR FREDERICK XVITZEL FERDINAND M. WOLFF DENNY WOODWORTH BEN ALFRED YANDELL Girls LILLIAN L. AARON VICTORIA H. ANDERSON BERNICE B. BAXTER RUTH BELL RUTH E. BELLIS ELINOR L. BENKIE CHARLOTTE BERMAN BERNICE BIEDERMAN ALICE C. BILL ALICE BRASSEL TI-IEODORA A. CASSIMUS ELSIE CHIN BING VIRGINIA V. DECAMP OLIVIA E. DOUGLAS ROSALIE DROHER DOROTHY C. EGGERS ELEANOR K. EELTY ANNA A. FORTINI EDAJANE GERHARDT ALMA GOYUN ETHEL G. HALLETT YURIKO HATA HELEN HOLLAND LUCILLE JELINSKI MARGARET C. KEES RUTH KIBBEE LOIS LAVERS EVA LEVIN TERESA LYONS DOROTHY H. MAGEE ANTONINA MAIOROFF MARJORIE M. MARTIN MILDRED E. MCCARTHY EDITH J. MCCRARY EVELYN L. MELVILLE BERNICE M, MESSNER SYRIL L. MEYER VIVIAN E. MOORE PEARL MOSER KATHLEEN C. O'CONNOR ELEANOR PALMER LORAINE POVEY MARGIE RHINE GRACE E. RINGRESSY IRENE s. ROSENBAUM CELIA ROSENEELD MYRTLE H. SAXE ELYSE D. SCHAEEER ANTOINEETE L. SCHULTE ERNA SCHWARTZ LOUISA SCHWEIELER ETHEL ADELAIDE SCOTT EILEEN ROSE SECHINI MOLLIE SHNEIDER ELIZABETH B. SIGOURNEY BEATRICE SILBERSTEIN FLORENCE SMART LEILA MAE SMITH MILDRED L. STIEFEL HELEN E. STRAUCH ELOISE THOMAS ROMA G. WALTHER HAZEL C. WESTPHAI. ENA AILEEN WILDY CLASS OF SPRING 1927 Boys YASUO WILLIAM ABIKO HOWARD E. ADDLESTONE ROBERT ALTEIELD EARL MILTON AMES ALBERT ARSLAN HENRY BARBE NATHAN BARNETT LAURENCE G. BORSOCCHINI OTTO JOHN BAUER DWIGHT E. BENTEL RALPH WILLIAM BERRINGER EDWARD HARRY BLANCHARD CARL LEWIS BOWMAN FRANK P. BROPHY, JR. LOUIS DANIEL BROWN CHRIS A. BUCK, JR. CHARLES EELIX BUTTE, JR. ENTIQUIO BONA CABAIS HAROLD CLOER JAMES V. COLEMAN NATHAN BELT COOPER JACK CURTS DANIEL CHARLES CUTTER RICHARD E. CZEIKOWITZ LELAND EDMUND DAKE ARMANDO V. DE LA ROSA JAMES EDWARD DILLION ARTHUR JOSEPH DUPLISEA KERMITE DEAN ENGELSON JAMES LEONARD ENGLISH DOMINGO ASIGURADO EPILI XVILLIAM J. EARRELL, JR. 81 'THOMAS G. FERGUSON JOHN RAY FICKLIN WILLARD ALLAN FLASHMAN ROBERT PARSONS FORBES JAMES DANIEL FRENCH MANNY M. GANAPOL WILLIAM H. GARDENIER STEPHEN A. GARIN JOSEPH GARNELLA JOHN L. GLESSNER A MAURICE R. GOLD STANLEY GORDON WILLIAM MERLE GRAY IRWIN JOSEPH GREENBAUM ROY GREENFIELD ALFRED L. GROSSMAN DIONISIO G. GUILLERA JOHN F, C. HAGENS GEORGE LOUIS HANLIN MAURICE HARBAND IRVING FRANKLIN HARRIS ROBERT GALLIANI HARRISON RAYMOND L. HAVARD ARTHUR J. HEMBERGER WALTER SIMON HERTZMANN ALBERT L. JACKSON GEORGE L. JACOBS ALVIN P. JACOBS WARDELL JENNINGS KENNETH F. JOHNSTON WM. CAMPBELL JUDGE TRENTON ANDREW KARUPS J. BERNARD KATZ HENRY KEMP HAROLD STEPHEN KEYS JARRY KING BENJAMIN MAX KIPNIS JOHN M. LACEY LESTER LASKY RALPH S. LEON ROBERT LEVIN JACK FERNAND LEVY JOHN LEWIS MORRIS LOWENTHAL GERALD B. MACARTHY BAXTER C. MADDEN, JR. NATHAN I. MAGID JOHN LEON MANAUT ARNOLD MANOR EDWARD WILLIAM MARTIN GEORGE MARTIN EMILE ERNEST MAzE EDWARD A. MCDEVITT KENNETH MCGREW LOUIS CHARLES MCGUIRE R. BRUCE MCKNIGHT JOHN EDWARD MEDAU, JR. SUMNER MEDAU DAVID MELMON JACK MENDELOWITZ ROBERT B. MERCURE GORDON MERTENS JOHN MOLINARI, JR. SCOTT MORRISON KENNETH R. MOYNIHAN THOMAS ADAM MUSTO HENRY NATHAN JOSEPH C. NEWELL MASAO NICHIMOTO RICHARD MEIGS ODDIE DANIEL OSTROM PHILIP SAMUEL OZMENT JULIUS PAUL GEORGE W. PAULSEN JOHN HIGBY PECK FRANCIS BERTON PERRY WILLIAM B. POLHEMUS WILLARD LEE POPE RICHARD PURDY JOHN LOUIS RAVELLA GEORGE HOWARD RICKMAN WILLIAM H. RILEY FRANCIS CHARLES ROBINSON HARRY ROSENBLATT JOSEPH SCHICK FREDERICK P. SCHNEIDER ROY SCHULBERG THOMAS LACOSTE SCHULTE JAMES WALTER SCOTT, JR. CHARLES SHELDON ROBERT HALE SHIELDS GEORGE A. SINE CHARLES H. SINGER JOHN SIRMYER RIGDON HALL SLOCUM JOHN ROBERT SMITH WALTER E. SMITH J. SPENCER SPARKS VICTOR M. SPROGE WILLIAM SULLIVAN HEWLETT G. TARR JULIUS F. TUCHLER PHILLIP J. VANDER zWIEP GEORGE VASILATOS MULLER WARD EDWIN B. WARHURST 82 Baseball BASEBALL TEAM OF 1903 Top row: Edwin C. Perry, Mead Hamilton, Anthony Devofo, julian Green, Edward Hou- gard. Middle: fCaptainJ Milton Eisner. Bai- zam row: Harold Peeler, H. W. Johnston, Fred Tatum, Eugene Juda. Lowell's baseball team was organized in the fall of 1896 and the first Academic League game was played the following year. Some of the players on Lowell's first team were Boradore, Wistrand, Robinson, Maze, Carter, Aitken, and Symmers. The first team had a promising start playing to the finals before they were defeated by the Alameda University Academy. Bel- mont won the championship. In 1901 Lowell captured the championship but failed to duplicate the feat until 1918 when the nine managed -to weather the season and cap off the year by defeating Poly for the league championship. Lowell beat the favored Parrots 1 to 0. The game was an ex- citing pitchers' duel, neither side registering hits until the seventh inning. Baseball was again stranded until 1927 when four veterans, Captain jimmy Campbell, Archie MacLean, Jake Galinsky, and Benny Morgenstern, Lowell's can- didate for All-City again brought Lowell top honors. The Cards apparently overcame unsurmountable odds and fought their way to the AAA finals, and cham- pionship. Although few championships have been won by Lowell's baseball teams, they almost always remain near the top. Baseball also has been a stepping-Stone for some Lowell graduates into pro ball. Among those notables are Walter Dutch Reuther, who pitched fi Lowell from 1909-11. He then continued to the P cific Coast League and the majors, where he pitched two World Series. Counting Reuther'S experience as PCL scout for the Chicago Cubs he has spent 22 yea in pro ball. Bert Cole, at Lowell in 1916, later turned up in tlj PCL and then pitched five years for the majors. IJ later retired and became a Coast League umpire, Mai Koenig was a major league shortstop. He played wii the New York Yankees 11925-29Q, Chicago Cul Q1932j, and the N. Y. Giants QI935-36j. In 1925 Frank Crosetti played baseball and bask ball for Lowell. Upon graduation Frank was with t S. F . Seals and later shortstop for the N. Y. Yanke In 1927 Lowell's most Valualble player was Wilb Wright, who pitched Lowell's baseball tea-m to th AAA championship. In 1930 Al Wright graduated from Lowell into job in the infield for the Missions of the Pacific Coa- League. He played a short while in the majors befo returning to the PCL with the San Francisco Seals. Jerry Coleman, '41, starred in baseball and baske -ball at Lowell and then went on to star with the Wor Championship New York Yankees and become tl Rookie of the Year. 1925 BASEBALL TEAM SWIMMING TEAM - JUNE 1920 Tap row: Jack Ahnden, Donald Brophy, Dick Fuller- ton, Rolla Hess, Rhodes, Graham Evers. Middle row: Alfred Hooper, Howard Herrington icapt.J, Charles O'Brien fmgr.J, James Carson. Ballom row: Vonder- Leith, Leonard Schwartz, Jack Hornung. Championship Swimming Teams 1906.-At the -big swimming meet Lowell's small eam made a fine showing, winning their Hrst Aca- emic Athletic League Championship by gathening 'ght points. Laine led the Indians by breaking the terscholastic records in the 440 and 880 yard dashes. 'he team rounded the season with Smith, Jewett, oncove, Trout, and Ruether as the mainstays. The imming teams of Lowell throughout the years have ollowed the example set by this first team, and have llways been high on the list of champions. After neir first win the Indians went on for 20 consecutive lears without a loss in the all-league meets. 1907.-Another championship. 1908.-Every event was marked with Lowell's fins and the AAL meet championship was won by large margin. The team consisted of Rayward, leyer, Laine, Johnson, Mither, and Grimes. 1909.-With five strong veterans, Johnson, Mither, Grimes, Meyer, and Simpson, Lowell went on to its ourth consecutive AAL win. The relay team tied the I8 record. 1910.--Once again the Indians annexed the cham- Iionship. 1911.-On September 22, Lowell won its sixth .AL meet by a margin of 25 points. Led by Captain rnith's distance record, the team including such stars : Colles-hon, Van Vliet, and Huntington went on to 1 easy victory. 1912.-The unbeatable team won the crown also L '12. 1913.-On the night of the AAL meet, Lowell on easily with 34 points. Flood and Lewis won the 3 with Lewis breaking the record. The relay team so won easily. Captain Wilson and Huntington also eserved credit. 1914.-After winning the AAL meet with 32 points, the Indians, led by Captain Flood, went on to engulf the California Interscholastic Swimming Meet. For the first time Lowell won the championship of California. Gardiner and Smith were the high pointers. 1915.-Lowell's great swimming team seemed to have gathered the crown for good. 1916.-With only one meet, the Lowell June semester swimming team tied with the Stanford fresh- men, and -then continued on to annex the SFAL crown. Among the outstanding men were John Dorn, winner of the relay, an-d Robert Don, Maky, and Goodmen, join-t holders of the 50 yard record. The December tea-m also annexed the crown under the leadership of Captain Ransohoff, Manager Wilsio-n, and O'Connor. 1917.-Leading with Captain Julien, Barry O'Con- nor, Strauss, Carson, Hooper, and followed by a determined team, Lowell again copped the SFAL championship meet. The SFAL championship proved simple with Lowell gathering 64 points. The relay was most important and most exciting. Lichtenstein stretched Lowell's lead to win a victory. Captain Hooper and Julien both' scored 13 points while the large rooting section went wild. The December team also re-tained the crown. 1919.-The swimming team again won the SFAL meets of June and December. The outstanding swim- mers for the Cardinals were Jim Carson, Captain Herrington, O'Connor, Woods, Fat Smith and Al Hooper. The June meet was won with 66 points while the December contest was annexed with 52. 1920.-Since Lowell's only loss was to Stanford University, the Red and White kept their spirit and continued on to hold the championship. Jim Carson took the 50, followed by Captain O'Brien, Herring- RALPH W. WELIERSTEIN WILLIAM L. WELCH FRANK w. WEYMOUTH LLOYD E. WHIPPLE EDWIN o. wnms, JR. JOHN VERNON WHITNEY JOHN MARTIN wircox Howano w. WINTERMANTEL Russrrt M. worrr SHIGERU YAMAMOTO J. oavis YOUNG PAUL E. zrn Girls CLARA MAY ADAMS LORRAINE ALEXANDER ARLEEN ALLINGHAM SARA ALPERT MARGARET BARR TERESA MAY BELLI ESTHER H. BIDSTRUP LEAI-I MARIE BOEHM ANN JONES CAMPBELL NORMA RUTH CANE GLADYS MARGARET CAREY MARIE CAROLAN VERA CARTER FRANCES L. CASTLEHUN JUANITA CHESSMAN ELIZABETH MAR CLARKE RUTH ELLEN COX ELEANOR CRICK EVELYN CROWLEY BETTY MILICENT CULLEN LILLIAN MAY DAVIS VERNA C. DEMARTINI GERALDINE EIDENMULLER ALFREDA G. FLEISCHMAN JEAN CLARE FREED ALLYS LOUISA FREEMAN MARIE DUFFICY FRIEDLANDER SARAH GEORGE TRUE GIFFORD MARION W. GOEHLER ET HEL RUTH GORDON HELEN MARIE GREELEY DORIS MAE GRUNAUER MARGARET M. HACKETT CHARLOTTE HALPERN LUCILE MARIE HANSEN JANET B. HARRINGTON WINIFRED HAY GLADYS NATALIE HERZOG GRACE LILLIAN HEWITT FRANCES BARBARA HIGGINS FLORENCE E. HOLSINGER DOROTHY HOLT JEAN HULBERT MADELEINE M. JUILLY ALICE MARIE KEEGAN CHARLOTTE ROBERTA KEILY AN ITA FLORENCE KRAUSKOPP SARAH JANET LASH ' ESTELLE E. LAYNE LORRAINE LEE HELEN LINDBERG MARJORIE ANNA LOFGREN SADIE LOPESCO ELSIE C. LOUSTAU MAY CI-IING LUM MARY EVELINE LUNDGREEN BLANCHE MAKOWER ANNE MANFREDI DOROTHEA C. MARTIN DOROTHY ALYCE MCADAM MARIAN ANNA MCDANIEI. ETHEL MARIE MCDANIELL ALPHA B. MCLAUGHLIN HELEN FRANCES MENY EUGENIA R. MICKLE CLARA CATHERINE MINGST EVELYN B. MOE CHRISTINE ANNA MOHR AUDREY MAY MOORE GLADYS V. MOORE MARY MORTIGIA MARIAN FRANCES NEWTON MARY ELIZABETH NORTON HELEN ONG NATALIE T. PADDOCK KATHARINE MARY PAGE VIOLA E. M. REED HELEN M. REES JEANETTE REESE ALICE J. RICH MARY RUTH ROGERS MINNIE SCHNEIDER MAYBELLE HELEN SCHORD PODI SCHRAIB ESTHER HOXISE SCOTT MARIE CHRISTINE SIFERT ESTELLE SHERMAN MARGARET SHOBLO FLORINE JEAN SIEBRECHT SARA SILAGI 85 Y1Y Y YY FLORENCE NAOMI SMITH RUTH STEMBERG ANNA SURMONT MARJORIE UREN MARJORIE CLAIRE VAIL GI.ADYS VALENTE GERALDINE DORA VIETH ESTHER WACHOLDER LOIS MARGARET WANN DOROTHY WARD AMELIA WATTS ANITA LOUISE WEBER MARGRETTE WEISS HANITA WOLFSON LIDA MARY WRITESMAN MARIE T. ZIMMERLIN CLASS OF FALL. 1927 Boys EDWARD ABARR JOHN S. ATSUMI ROBERT E. BAKER JOHN HENRY BAROSS WALTER SHERMAN BOOTH HENRY BYRON BRILLIANT BERTHOLD W. BROEMMEL HAROLD BROGGER JOSEPH EUGENE BROWN ROBERT CHALMERS EDUARDO D. CURPUZ PERCY M. COTTON ALBERT COUDERC JEROME PAUL CRAMER HOWARD R. CUNNINGHAM RICHARD GARRETT CURTIS JESSE DANIEL JOHN ROGER DEAS WILLIAM DEERING ISAIAH DUBINSKY MAURICE ELIASER. JR. FRED W. ENGLEBRECHT ERLING C. ENGEN M. BRANTLBY EUBANKS OGDEN FIELDS MYRON FISHER SYLVAN CHARLES FRANK HANON FREED JOHN OSCAR GANTNER, JR. RAYMOND E. GAUTHIER ROBERT C. GBHRET ALFRED LEIGHTON GIBSON BERTRAM H. GINSBERG ALBERT HANDSCHIN PRESTON HARTMAN RAYMOND J. HERLIHY SHICHIRO HIRAHARA MOWATT M, HURST VINCENT KELLY JACOB DAVID KEMP BURT CHARLES KENDALL NATHANIEL KENDALL HOWARD B. KENNEDY RUSSELL R. KLEIN LEE S. KRIEGER LELAND L. LEVINGER EDGAR T. LINDNER ARCHIE F. MACLEAN THOMAS MAGEE, III WALTER F. MENSING EDWARD PAUL MOORE WALLACE EVERETT MOORE ARTHUR GEORGE MOREY CHARLES E. MORAGHAN HENRY von MORPURGO ISAMU NAKAMURA ROBERT M. NICHOLS, JR. VICTOR PAULSEN DANIEL R. PILAR CLARK ANTHONY POTTER SHELDON E. POTTER DONALD ROY PRATT LARRY RHINE HARRY P. ROBARTS, JR. HARRY E. ROSENBAUM RALPH ROSENBERG CLARENCE EDWARD SABINE BENNO SAFIER EARL IRVING SASS JUSTIN M. SCHARFF HALLETT SEVISON GEORGE NORTON SHEILD ALFRED A. SMITH, JR. ARTHUR R. SOVIG REGIS J. SWETMANN KENNETH TERRILL SYLVESTER H. THRONSON EDWIN H. TISHLER LESTER TRAUNER CHARLES T. TRAVERS CARLETON WALLACE TRAVIS CARL R. VENDT GARBRIEL J. VENTURA LAWRENCE WESTDAHL MASAO YAMATE 84 ton, and Hooper. Throughout the year Lowell's only trouble was getting teams to swim against them! 1921.-Manager Don Bryant broke the 50 yard record, and Felton won the plunge, setting a record of 66 feet 7 inches. Once again with 53 points Lowell's team took the title. In December the title still remained at Lowell as the unbeatable team pulled together 36 points to win. 1922.-At the SFAL meet held at Sutro Baths, the Indians took every place but three. The June and December championships were won. Among the out- standing were Captain Brophy, Captain Schwartz, Sullivan, Allen, and Hart. 1923.-For the 34th consecutive time Lowellls june and December teams won the Championship. Among the stars were Captain Hobcty, national in- terscholastic 50 yard winner, and Brophy who tied a seven year record in the 50 yard event. 1924.--Again on May 24, the Lowell team cap- tured the SFAL title for the 17th consecutive year, and for the 35th semester. Holiday and Smith again starred, the former breaking the interscholastic 50 yard breast stroke record, and -the latter piling up the highest individ-ual score by annexing 12 points. Scott and Webster distinguished themselves by shattering the 150 and 130 pound free style record. A feature of the meet was that every man placed in some event. The final score was 71 points. With 61 points, Lowell's December team also an- nexed the crown. Webster broke his own 150 and 130 free style record, while Captain Ducato and Dunn were other individual winners. 1925.-On Saturday, May 23, after a strenuous and successful practice Season, the Cardinals under the leadership of Captain .Ioe Smith beat their aquatic rivals. Tom Welkinson started the meet by capturing the 50 yard free style, Ducato took both the 220 and 440. Saunders copped the 100 yard breast stroke, Webster, McLeon, and Medau also contributed their quota to the point column. 1926.-The mermen of Lowell swam away with the SFAL meet, annexing 63 points. Bill Egan proved to be the star of the day, being high point man. Captain Caglieri, Welch, and Erlin held the Sprints following Red Dunn's win of the dive. The rela team broke Lowell's former record. The championship that Lowell had seemed to hav permanently acquired from the SFAL slipped out o their hands in '27, 1928.-Lowell again annexed the swimming titl, with the large total of 55V2 points agains-t 51 fo runner-up Galileo. The result of the meet remained i doubt from the initial event until the concluding one Red Dunn of the Redmen was high point man o the meet and was ably backed by teammate Neville 1933.-Lowell edged Galileo by one point, 40-35 to win the swimming title at Fleishhacker Pool. .Iac England, jack Kenut, and Elton Stone forme Lowell's big three, scoring 27 of Lowell'S 40 point: 1935.-Scoring an average of 4.6 points -in each the ten events, Lowell's varsity mermen annexed tl AAA swimming title. jack Read set a new record i the 100 yard backstroke, while many other Lowellite shone in their events. 1940.-The Lowell mermen again took their AAL title. Leading throughou-t, the swimmers culminate the meet with a total of 47 points. Possessing only O winner in Don Beanston, ace 220 man, and a recor breaking relay .team of Gene Bolster, Len Levy, Bea ston, and De Lano, the team had reserve strength it all events. 1941.-With the final outcome of the AAA ci swimming meet depending upon -the outcome of t last event, the 220 yard relay, the Lowell varsi emerged from Fleishhacker Pool with another tit under its belt. Captain Bob Vayssie, Nick Belkin, an Al Resleure were outstanding throughout the season ' 1944.-Captain Danny McGill led -the Lowell me men to an AAA swimming t-itle over the perennial tough S.I. Wildcats. Fred Ganz, city champ for thr years standing, plowed through to an easy win in t 100 yard breast stroke, turning in the record time 121O.7. 1945.--The swimming title was achieved by bea' ing the Wildcats by a score of 51V2 to 44V2 in t city meet. Outstanding performances in the varsi were turned in by Don Fisher, who copped both t 50 and 100 yard free styles. LOWELL CHAMPION SWIMMING TEAM OF JUNE, 1919 Louis Lichtenstein, Edwin Hart, Al Hooper, Smith, O'Brien, Howard Herrington, Barry O'Connor, Wood, Fisher, jim Carson. 1955 CHAMPIONSHIP 130-POUND BASKETBALL TEAM Row one: Bob Oddone, Harvey Brody, Roy Collins, Jim Caranica, Richard Hudson, Charles Eklof, and Coach Bill Feiling. Row two: Maurice Weinger 1Mgr.J, Tim Earle, Jeff Thomson, Tom Tsuyuki, Ralph Daniels, Paul Matzger. and Vance Strange. 1949.-This year Lowell swimmers, under the eadership of Coach Feiling, brought another title to he Reservation. Lowell was blessed with such stars is 220 and 100 yard free styler Jim Lee, 50 and 100 Yard free styler Bob Fisher, back stroker Bill Gren- piger, and diving star Morley Shapiro. 1951.+Coach Feiling's swim team, after beating amalpais and Sequoia in meets held out of town, ade their way to the AAA Round Robinl' swim hampionship. Among the outstanding swimmers were Viurphy, Floyd, Hellman, Barnato, Winker, Fisher, ,nd Shapiro. The following Triple A swimming records are held by Lowell's varsity, 130 and 120 pound teams: Don Fisher, 1945, broke the varsity 50 free style record: 25.0. Lowell's varsity relay team of 1952 holds the 150 medley relay record: 1:29.4. Lowell's 150 pound relay team of 1950 also holds the 150 medley relay record in their class: 1:34.1. Al Sommer, 1953, holds the 120's 50 yard breast stroke record: 33.1. Also in the 120 pound class are Lowellis 1949 record in the 150 medley relay: 1:39.6, and the 1938 120's record in the 200 free style relay: 1:57.6. 130 BASKETBALL CHAMPS OF 1925 Row one: Churtori, Wacholder, Coach Harlan Dykes, Captain Lauren Franchi, Dieudonne, Long. Raw Mao: Dalpino, Fest, Jones, Walirlich, Goldner. 1 I Q ' ii: -' ' -I Qwvvxgi gg ' - ,: 5.42. ,,5 - z 553233 .1-V: -...i g- :pf , , . .,g:qg- 2 ,. ,..5:3'f-ig :,.,jaj-.2'f':33 5131- ---' ,.,.,,, . I -- ...., .... ....- as- A .wifi 7' ar: m,....t: , . f ., ' 17, ees? if 12:2 Q'-':: ' we 'A 'Q' A o f . ' I Qin,-,5'jf' 1 V f . u i -1 ' ' I. 2 ..,, , rw. uf V1 ' H' f ,Qi .2'g5:f1:1k-'f ,I, if V,-' - f -'1::.v,:I'-i f2j' ' ' ,.,. .I V :Eg , .. .,.. . . V v- .-.v ' A . '. ' mags uv 'E f. .Qjf ' ' 'Q 1'1 -'-g...gQEf fI' ,'11' ,: ,..... , I Girls VIRGINIA BELLE AARON DOROTHY AMBER CARMEN MARIE ARAMBURN HAZEL VIRGINIA AUGER MARY BOUCHER JUNE ALVIRA BOVEY FRANCES MARION BRETT ELIZABETH BROXWN RUTH CHATHAM ANGIE T. DEL CHIARO DOROTHY M. COLEMAN LILLIAN LENORE CUNNEEN ALICE CURRIE LAURA DAVID DOROTHY HELEN DINELEY MARY DURELS BARBARA E. EMANUELS GRACE MARIE FARLEY EILEEN J. FITZGERALD HELEN GOLCHER MURIEL ESME GRATTAN VIRGINIA TUMLIN GRAY EDITH MARION GREEN GAUTIER HARRIS NORMA MYRTA HONG GERTRUDE ROSE HOFFMAN CYNTHIA ELIZABETH JUDSON CAROLYN MARY KANE MADELINE L. KATZ MARGARET IRENE KELLOG FLORENCE DAVIS KELLY HELEN LANDON FRANCES ANNA LOGUE WINIFRED ANN LOUGHERY MARY MARGARET MCCAIN GLADYS EVELYN MELSNESS ANGELA MARIE MICKLE BESSIE MILLER ELVIRA HELEN MONTI FUMIKO MURAYAMA LAURA ELIZABETH NEWTON VIRGINIA SHIRLEY NICOL ESTHER NOVITZKY WINIFRED MARGARET OSMUN CORA BERNICE PHILLIPS SADIE RABINOVICH CAROLINE REDFERN GRACE RUBY RIESER CAROLINE ANITA ROBUSON MURIEL SCHAFFNER KATHLEEN ROSE SCHILLING CAROLYN CLAIRE SIVERS BEATRICE H. STARR MYRTLE G. STEVENSON JEAN URSULA STOLL CHEFFITA MARIE THOMAS FRANCES A. WEBER VIRGINIA WISE GLADYE THEAXVILLA WORDEN CLASS OF SPRING. 1928 Boys THOMAS D. AITKEN, JR. JACK MCLEOD ALGIE ROBERT ANINO AGATON AGUSTIN ARCIA BERT J. AXELROD WILLIAM JAMES BALI. JOHN HENRY BAROSS BENJAMIN J. BAUM, JR. JOSEPH HAROLD BEAUMONT S, HOWARD BEECHER GEORGE BEERS BENSON JEROME BENJAMIN I.EON S. BLENDES JOHN S. BONTE ISADOR WOLF BOTASOF VERNON BOYSEN ARTHUR DECATUR BRODER NATHAN BRODY CARL C. BROWN, JR. AUGUSTUS M. BURNETT JAMES WILLIAM CAMPBELL GEORGE MICHAEL CARNEY BERNHARDT N. CLAYTON GEORGE CHADWICK, JR. BERNHARDT N. CLANTON ROBERT PIERRE CLAYBAUGH ARTHUR H, CONNOLLY, JR. EMMET COONEY HERBERT ARTHUR CROCKER RAMSDELL CUMMINGS GLENN CURTIS HAROLD DAVID JOHN J. DAVIS, JR. ROLAND CHENOWETH DAVIS STANLEY DAVIS G. ALBERT DOYLE MUELLER ARTHUR FOSTER DRAPER HUGO WILLIAM DRUEHL PARKER FERGUSON EDWARDS HARRY H. ELKINS ROBERT H. ESCHEN GREGORIO V. ESCUADRO 85 ,. JAMES S. FIRTH MILTON C. FITZGERALD JOHN JOSEPH ELAHERTY C. W. FRIEDRICHS, JR. AMERIGO R. FORTINI GEORGE FOUSEK ALFRED SIDNEY FRANK CAREY GALLIVAN ROBERT C. GEHRET MARQUAN CHARLES GEORGE STANFORD PAUL GIBBS RICHARD J. GILMAN WILLIAM JAMES GLIDDON HENRY P, GRACE WILLIAM PATTERSON GRANT BERNARD S, GREENDORFER JAMES O. GREENWELL, JR. RUSSELL CURTIS HADLEY ALFRED J. HAGUE HAMILTON RUSSELL HEDGE WADE HENDRICKS F. FISHER HICKS LIONEL VON HORNLEIN F. ALLAN HUNTINGTON EDWARD C. HYMAN MASAYOSHI ITO EMILE R. JACOB FREDERICK P. JACOBSEN EVERETT LEMIS JOHNSON JAMES DUANE JACOBY JAMES WELLS JORDAN CHARLES KAUFMAN EDMUND D. KEEFFE, JR, PETER KERHULAS EUGENE U. KNIGHT, JR. JACK J. KORN JACK LANDEWEHRKAMP MURRAY LAWLEY CLAYTON BOYER LEITCH HAROLD L. LEVY HERBERT MALCOLM LONG LESLIE LUBLINER THOMAS ENGLISH LUNDY GEORGE R. LYDDANE WILLETT J. MACFARLANE DON A. MARQUIS ELMER WARREN MARSTON CHARLES FRANCIS MARTIN EDWARD LOUIS MASONI BENTON D. MATHEWS JACK DWYER MAYER ROBERT E. MCHALE ROYAL EARL MCSHEA MILTON C. MEYERFELD, JR. SHUICHI MIHO JOSEPH SAMUEL MISRACK MILTON MONASCH ANGUS C. MORRISON CRAWFORD MORTENSON HARRY MUROV JOHN FRED NELSON LAWRENCE ROBERT NEVILLE FRED NEWMAN MICHIKATA NISHIMOTO ROBERT LAZARUS NWEEYZ JOHN WILLIAM NULL GEORGE JOSEPH OLIvA TAKEO OKAMOTO WILLIAM R. O'LEARY, JR. JOSEPH OXENDINE THEODORE H. PAOLI JOHN KENNETH PETERS WAYNE LESLIE PHILLIPS FRANKLIN RAHE PILLING JOHN PALMER PINTO SYLVAN IRWIN POSNER HARRY ANTONE POST FRANK H. PULLEN THOMAS DARCY QUINN WILLIAM P. REBSCHER ALLAN M. REINHART JOHN FREDERICK RHINE EUGENE ROSEMONT LELAND S. ROSENER, JR. HARRY L. ROTH EARL RICH ROUDA SIDNEY RUDY BERNARD RUSS RUSSELL LYALL SAUNDERS MAURICE SCHNECK HERBERT R. SCHULTZ JEROME SCHUMAN WAYNE WILLIAM SENNER RAYMOND B. SENS RIUZO SHIOTA JACK A. SPENCER WILLIAM F. STAGER OLIVER C. STINE MORTON ORF STOCK STANLEY STREETER RAY COLE THOMPSON WILLIAM OWENS WATKINS EDWARD ADDIS WACHTER RALPH WALK BYRON G. WALKER 86 School Fvwult 856 - 1956 San Francisco High School ll-Iolmes, Ellis H. IMinns, George W. IParks, Miss Anna C. II-Iewes, Mrs. M, C. II-Iansen, George D. Clapp, Mrs. Lily A. Bradley, Theodore IBunnell, George W. Minns, George W. Bradley, Theodore Leonard, Thomas C. July, 1856 to unc, 1864 Principal, Nat. Sci. Ancient Languages Lower Division English Branches Frenchg German Literature Mathematics Ancient Languages Principal Principal Mathematics ELLIS H. HOLMES 1856 - 1864 1856-1864 1856 1856 1856-1861 1859-1861 1861-1864 1864 1864 1864-1865 1865-1875 1865-1868 Atwood, Mrs. C. L. Pioda, Paul Mann, Azra L. Sibley, John M. Winn, Abel T. Rowell, William K. Howell, S. S. Levy, Daniel White, William Carlton, H, P. Herbst, Prof. Belles-Lettres 1865-1871 Belles-Lettres 1865-1868 Ancient Languages 1866 English Branches 1 867 Science ' 1868 Classics 1 868 Mathematics 1 870-1 875 French and German 1 872 Mathematics 1 873 1 87 3 -1874 Modern Languages 1 869-1871 GEORGE W. MINNS 1864 - 1865 ,,, L LEWIS WEBER, JR. JOHN KENNETH WEHSER WILL EMERSON XVEHSER JEFFREY H. WEINBERGER CARL ARTHUR WERNER GEORGE WILLIAMS GEORGE C. WOOD Girls ADALINE ALEXANDER WANDA VERNE AMES EDITH LILLIAN BAKER CHARLOTTE HAMBLA BAUER MARGIE BLANK MAY BRIDLER HELEN IRENE BRENNER MARY ELIZABETH BUCHER MARCIA EILEEN BURBANK FRANCES WELCOME CASPER ANITA FAY CHUBBUCK MARY A. CLOT PRISCILLA H. CLOUTIER JANE FORD DELANO ASSUNTA MARIA DELL'OSSO RUTH CAROLYN DE LUE EDNA META DENHARD ANNE MARGARET DENKE MARY DOLLARD BONNIE BERNEICE DOWD LOUISE A. DOYLE MUELLER ALICE EASTON CLARA ELIZABETH ELLER OLGA FIRENZE DORIS E. FITZGERALD FRANCES L. FLIBOTTE AVIA MABEL FLOCKTON ROMLA WADDINGTON FLOOD EMMA JEAN FULLER ESTELLE E. GABRIELLI YSABEL GOLDMAN ELIZABETH GRAY UNA BERNICE GRAYBIEL THELMA LOLETA GROEZINGER RUTH LENORE GRUHLKE DOROTHY GUNN MILDRED L. HEINEMANN ANN HEMPHILL ETHEL RUTH HENNIG LUCINE CATHERINE HERTSCHE DOROTHY K. HUBBARD NAIDA JEAN JOVANOVICH JEAN ELIZABETH KANE AUDLEY KENNY ELIZABETH KIRSTEN DOROTHY EDITH KOCH HELEN BEATRICE KRONER EVELYN B. LANDESBAUM BETTY MARGRET LEAVERTON VIRGINIA ANN LUKENBELL CLAIRE ANITA LYNCH PIA M. MAINI SHIRLEY MAY MATHIESEN FRANCES MAYER RUTH MARIE MCCURDY EVELYN G. MCDOUGALL JANETTE G. MCINTOSH HARRIET MCKAY DORIS LUCILE MEHDEN MAGDALENE L. MENGEL MARY JOSEPHINE MILLSAP EDNA MOHRIG CAROLINE NAUMBURG ALICE JANE NIKIRK JEAN OLIVER RUTH ELEONORE OLSON CLAIRE GERTRUDE OTTEN PRISCILLA LOUISE OWEN JANET PARISH JEANNETTE PELLISSON MARY HARRIET PETERSON HELEN CECELIA PORTER BETTY LEE POWELL MARIETTE QUIGLEY HELEN REIS ESTELLE MAJORA RINGEL MARGARET B. RONALD RUTH RUSS RUTH BEATRICE RUSSELL DOROTHY SAINGES GERTRUDE SCHLEIFER ELSIE EVA SELLINGER IDA CLARISSA SINCLAIR FRANCES SILBERSTEIN MARION CLAIRE SMART DOROTHY EVELYN SMITH VIRGINIA E. SPALDING EVELYN STOLZEL THELMA MARIE STONE INEZ WALDA STRAUCH LUWILL BERENICE TRAINER HELEN MARIE UHLRICH KATHRYN HELENA VENSANO MARGARET WEIR JUANITA D. WESTERFELD MADELINE MARIE S. WILBUR 87 DOROTHY RUTH WILLIAMSON GRACE WELTNER JUNE BEATRICE WOOD MITSUKO YASUKOCHI AUDREY YOUNG RUTH ZELVER CLASS OF FALL, 1728 Boys JOHN EDWIN ANDERTON WALTER LANG ARKUSH JONAS BABITZ GIOVANNI BACIGALUPI ARMAND BAREILLES MORRIS BASKIN GEORGE E. BENNETT JOHN AUGUST BLUME JOSEPH BLUMLEIN EDWARD THOMAS BRADY SIDNEY BRASH HARRY ELBERT BROWN ROLLIN C. BUSH WILLIAM T. BYRNES CLIFTON CAMPBELL MAXWELL EDWARD COHEN GUNTHER R. DETERT CHARLES E. DISCHER ARTHUR WATROUS DODGE ARTURO ROQUE DOMINGUEZ MICHAEL DOUDOROFF BERNARD GILMORE DOWD JOHN RICHARD DRYDEN HERMAN EIDELSHEIM ROBERT MILTON EISNER THEODORE GARY EMMETT CHARLES MILO ERHARD EUGENE ESSNER ALFRED GEORGE EULER RALPH SYLVSTER EXLEY GEORGE AUGUST FICAT DEWEY FLAHERTY JOHN HENRY FLINT, JR. JOHN XV. FLYNN FRANK FOX JACOB GALINSKY ABE GOLDBERG LAWRENCE GOLDSTEIN J. WOLFE GOLDSTEIN HARRY ARNOLD GOODFRIEND ALLAN GREEN STANTON MICHAEL GREEN EUGENE V. HAFLINGER HARRY DALY HAWES ADRIAN R. HEANEY EDWARD T. HEWITT, JR. JOHN C. HOLMES ROBERT SANFORD HUEBNER WALTER J. JACOBS LESLIE JACOBY NORMAN E. KELK, JR. ROBERT KOCHMAN JOSEPH LEWIS KORNFELD HENRY J. LABORDE ROBERT JAMES LAUGHLIN DALMACIO ARENA LEGION ERNEST LENN ARTHUR LEWIS HAROLD A. LEIBES RAYMOND A. LINDBLOM CHARLES E. LORD COLLIER MACDONALD BISSELL MAGEE WALTER RALPH MARSHALL FREDERIC VV. MEYER ANTHONY MORPHY TAMOTSU MURAYAMA THOMAS E. MALLOY NORMAN NELSON JOHN JAMES NEWBEGIN HARRISON EDWARD O'NEII.L NICASIO Q. PARAISO HERSCHEL PARKHURST GEORGE C. RADER ALLAN B. RICHMAN GEORGE ROBERTS CLARENCE PHILIP ROTHBACH FRANK V, PISTOLESI, JR. JOHN M. SCOTT EUGENE SHEEHAN MICHAEL BORIS SI-IIMKIN EDWARD JOSEPH SKINNER JEROME SNOW ARNOLD BYRON STEINER WILLIAM STEMBERG EUGENE on ST. GERMAIN RICHART HART STEUBEN HAROLD SUGARMAN ANDRE DENIS SUPPO SAM A. TANNENBAUM WILLIAM G. THOMPSON GEORGE HAMILTON TRICE KENNETH VUILLIAM TYLER TOM T. USHIHARA G. FREDERICK VANDER HOOGT FRANCIS VIOI.ICH 88 Reid, Wm. T. Mann, A. L. Sibley, John M. Winn, A. T. Levy, Daniel White, William Knowlton, Ebenezar Bissell, G. R. Templeton, Milo T. Silliman, C. H. Blackburn, F. A. Philbrook, Horace Webster, Reginald I Boys, High School uly, 1875 to June, 1894 Principal 1875-1881 Cumming, David Drawing Cpart timej Latin, Greek 1866-1887 White, T- B- English English, Com. Dept. 1867-1886 Wi1S0H-JHmeSK- Principal , , Morton, Frank Principal Science, History 1868 Bush, Walter N, Mathematics French, German 1872-1881 Kellogg, A. E. English lvfathernatics 1873-1886 , Walker, Clarence M. Classics History, Elocution 1875-1885 COX, Miss M' M. Algebra, German Math, Military 1876-1877 Simmons James H. Latin English, Math 1876-1887 Mitchell, George Otis Mathematics, .Science Algebl-ag English 13774331 Clark, Frederick H. History Lating Greek 1877 Crittenden, J. L. English, Mathematics PriI1CiP21l 1381-1886 Crofts, Francis S. Latin, Mathematics History 1879-1884 Kingsbury, Susan M. Historyg Latin English 1882-1886 Noble, C. A. English THEODORE BRADLEY WILLIAM T. REID 1865 - 1875 1875 - 1881 1886-1888 1886-1888 1886-1888 1888 1886-1889 1886 1888 1888 1888-1894 1888 1889 1889 1891 1890 1891 Lowell High School 1394 Morton, Frank Principal Altman, Aaron Drawing Baker, Milo S. Physics, Chem., Ma Barrett, Annie V. English Barry, May D. Spanish Blanchard, Milton E. English Bowman, Elsie Mathematics Brease, Ebba fMrs. Grayj Biology Carey, Everett P, Science Carlson, Carl L. English Clark, Frederick H. History Cleghorn, Arthur M. Latin, History Cloud, Archibald J. English Cox, Mary M. Algebra, German Craven, Alexander R. Math, Physics Crittenden, Joseph L. English, Math Crofts, Francis E. Mathematics fActing Principalj Cronise, Cecile English Cummings, Ernest J. Latin, Mathematics Danforth, Charles C. Mathematics Dickerson, Roy E. Science Downey, Abner Science Duffy, Anna G. English Durst, Fred M. Science Fender, Charles W. Biology Gallagher, John J. Latin Gorton, George Latin, Greek Harvey, Richard W. Biology Hodgkinson, Frances English, Latin Hunt, Anne P. History F. A. BLACKBURN 1881 - 1886 th 1888-1918 1909-1917 1901-1906 1918 1915 1894-1899 1909 1918 1909-1912 1909-1911 1889 1914 1905-1911 1888 1914-1919 1888-1907 1891 1918-1919 1907-1918 1916 1915 1907-1911 1912-1915 1911 1915 1912 1903-1909 1915 1905-1909 1899 1915 -1919 Johns, Arthur W, Kast, Gregg Kavanagh, Florence T. Kellogg, Adelbert E. Kelley, Tracy R. Keohan, Constance Kingsbury, Susan M. Koch, Frederick W. Longley, John A. Mackay, Minnie fMrs. Duxburyj Maher, Minnie McCarty, Arthur L, McKinley, Dr. A. W. McNeeley, Alberta Mitchell, George Otis Morrin, Mary I. Morton, F. Willard Newhouse, Clara CMrs. Christiansenj Newman, Andrew J. Nicholson, Anne Nourse, Joseph P. Nunn, George E. O'Malley, Helen Partridge, John S, Peckham, Gertrude C. Pence, Edith E. Perham, Franklin E. Rhine, Emily P. Science Science English, Science English English, Latin Music History, Latin Physical Geography History Science English Mathematics Latin Physical Education Science English Modern Languages Physical Education History Modern Languages History, Latin History Drawing Latin English, History English, French English History, German JAMES K. WILSON 1886 - 1889 1915 1915 1916 1886-1901 1899-1911 1916-1919 1894-1901 1901 1901-1915 1914 1915 1915 1913-1914 1918 1894-1898 1915 1918 1916 1916 1916-1919 1901-1919 1916-1919 1915 1894-1897 1916 1914 1901-1915 1903-1907 CLAUDE A, WAGNER, JR. MARSHALL WAGNER JOHN EDMOND WAGSTAFF HAMMOND S. WEAVER, III DAVID L. WHITE JAMES WHITMORE FRED V. WISEMAN JOSEPH J. WOLF KENNETH CARLTON ZVUERIN Girls HELEN GENE BASSETT ERNESTINE MURIEL BAUER GEORGETTE L. BLUMENTHAL EVELYN ALICE BOLTE ALICE CATHERINE BREHENY ARABELA MARGARET BURKE ETHEL LOUISE BUTZMAN PRUDENCE G. COMPAGNO MARIE C. CUMMINGS EVELYN JANE DE CLAIRMONT MARY CHAQUETTE HELEN BERESEORD DAVIS MARCIA DUDEN EDMAR DOMINE DUNAND HARRYJEAN ANN DUNBAR ELINA ELVIRA EOPPIANO ELIZABETH FORBES BEATRICE E. FRIEBERG ALMA CHRISTINE FRIEDRICHS CAROL s. FROST MARY MEDA FUGITT ELLEN M. GAEENEY OLIVE E. GARDNER GENEVIEVE GNOTT BELVA JEAN GOODMAN HELEN GRAHAM PHYLLIS E. GRAMM JANE DICKSON GRANT HELEN MARJORIE GRAVES ROBERTA R. GRUBB VIRGINIA HALL RUTH HAMERTON RUTH ELIZABETH HANSEN BETSY JEAN HARRIGAN VIVIAN MADONNA HARTLEY ADELAIDE E. JACKSON MARJORIE V. JACKSON MILADA JIRSAK MARY EILEEN JOHNSTON RUTH JOOST MARIAN DOROTHY KNIGHT FLORENCE BLAIR KRENZ ELEANOR LOIS KRIEGER EDITH BAKER LACEY ALICE LAGOMARSINO BEATRICE ELVERA LAPHAM CAROL L. LEVENE DOROTHEA VALERIE MANK MARIAN GAYLE MERGUIRE HENRIETTA MURIEL MILLER LOUISE MOORE ARCINAE NISHKIAN BEATRICE J. OTTEN ARDINE FERN OTTS GRETTA ELIZABETH QUICK FLORENCE VIRGINIA RIESE EELICE MARIE RIX ADELA MARGARET ROLANDO IRENE JEANNETTE SABINE VELDA PAULINE SABINE MILLIE CLAIRE SALOMON RAYE ETHYL SALOMON DOROTHY EVE SINGER DOROTHY JUNE SPECK PHOEBE SPECK MARY STEDMAN OLIVE LEE STEPHENSON MARTHA STIRM EVELYN AGNES SUTICH MARJORIE LEE THOMPSON EUNICE VITT ESTHER NORBERTA WARNER RUTH AUDREY WEINBERG ALICE ANABEL WILKINSON IRMA MARIE WILLIAMS ELEANOR WOERNER AYAKO ZAIMAN LUCILLE ZUCKER CLASS OF SPRING, 1929 Boys SAMUEL R. ADES BERT LEE ALLEN NORMAN ALTFIELD CARL ANDERSON SYLVESTER ANDERSON THAXTER HENRY ANDRUSS JACK D. ANGELMAN ROBERT E. ASHLEY MADAN M. BAGAI JULIEN ROLPH BAUER ARTHUR SHAPIRO BECKER 89 - ---- NORMAN BEENFELDT CARL H. BEETZ JOHN F. BLODGETT LEONARD BLOOM GEORGE BRALYE THOMAS MAURICE BOOKS JOSEPH A. BUTTE HOWARD W. CARRIEL ALVIN DOLPH CHARLES SAMUEL CLEWANS ADDISON B. COLLINS LOUIS JOSEPH CONTI JACK MEIER COOPER JOHN C. COSGROVE GEORGE BARTLEY COULTER EMIL CRANERT FRANCIS E. CUMMINGS ADAM H. DAHLER JAMES WILLIAM DAWES DOMINGO S. DEFENSOR STANLEY DISCHER EMILIO ANGEL DOMINGUEZ JUSTIN REDMAN DORGELOH ALVIN LOUIS DOVE DOMINGO DULAY WILLIAM EINARSON ROBERT EZAWIN ALVIN JEROME FABRIS DUANE B. FISH BERNARD DAVID FREEMAN DANIEL K. FREUDENTHAL GEORGE HOBSON FUHRIG VALLEJO GANTNER BERTRAM EDWARD GLICK CARLTON BERTHOLD GLICK RICHARD SELLER GOLDSMITH LAWRENCE GONZALEZ BYRON GRABER EDWARD L. GRAY FRED HALL GREEN, JR. NATHAN GUTHERTZ MARTIN J. HANLON MARLOW BRISTOW HARRISON JAMES E. HEATLIE ALBERT ARDEN HEDGE ARTHUR C. HIMMELSTERN JOSEPH HOFFMAN LOUIS HONIG, JR. OSWALD L. HUNT PAUL HEILBRON JACOBSON WILLIAM A. KAYE JAMES C. KEESLING, JR. DOUGLAS M. KELLEY CHARLES ROBERT KEMP ELZAPHAN R. KING ROBERT W. KING WALDO KING GEORGE S. KOBA JAMES M. KROTOZYNER I-IAWLEY KUGLER WESLEY R, LACHMAN ROBERT LAPACHET JACK RICHARD LEE STEPHEN MAN SING LEE WILBER LEVY LEO H. LINDAUER FRANCIS HOWARD LINDUS ERIC LYSS GEORGE ALBERT MACK ALEXIS MAXIMOV ANGELO M. MAY, JR. ERNEST MCCORMICK, JR. DAVID JAMISON MCDANIEL JOHN E. MCKIRAHAN JAMES G. MELVIN, JR. MASAO MIHO CHARLES P. MOLINARI DOUGLAS M. MOORE JAMES R. MOORE GEORGE S. MORISHITA ROY B. MULLER WALTER IRWIN NELSON WILLIAM J. NEWMAN MELVIN ARTHUR NYMAN MORRIS OPPENHEIM, JR. ROBERT VERNON OREM VICTOR M. OSTROM WILLIAM PROVIS PALMER ALPHONSO PEACHE JILLSON MCINTOSH PEATTIE HENRY A. PERLMUTTER WAYNE E. PERRY THEODORE CALVIN PETERSON G. NELSON PIERCE, JR. RUSSELL PIERCE, JR. BENITO BERNABE A. PONS ALFRED L. PRITCHARD JACK CLARK QUINN ISADORE RASKIN FRANCIS H. REDEWILL, JR. HENRY L. REICH MARION R. REICH HARRY A. RENFRO, JR. FRANK O. RENSTROM, JR. PHILIP W. ROCHE 90 Lowell Facult Rhodes, Thaddeus H. Science, Latin 1906-1919 Richardson, Dr. B. P. M. Science 1913 Robertson, Alvin I. M. Science 1918 Rockhold, Fred W. Mathematics 1911-1919 Rogers, james E. English 1911-1916 Rowell, Elmer I. Mathematicsg Latin 1902-1906 Schmidt, James J. Draw., Mod, Lang. 1894 Seawell, Harry W. Drawing 1918 Sheldon, Hudson Science 1908-1915 Smith, Thomas A. Math, Chemistry 1909 Snyder, Charles D, Biology 1901-1905 Stephens, Leroy H. History 1909 Lowell Facult Clark, Frederick H. Principal 1889 Crofts, Francis E. Vice Principal 1891 Lacoste, Eugenie Vice Principal 1919 Alexander, Hazel J. Music 1925 Alger, Irving G. History 1922 Anderson, Edith S, Modern Languages 1924-1929 Angus, Mary S. Y Modern Languages 1921 Antonovich, Elvida C. Drawing 1929 Bachmann, John H. Modern Languages 1922-1924 Badger, Flossita B. Music 1921 Balensiefer, Florence English 1925 Ballou, F. Herbert Mathematics 1929 Barnes, Luther B. Inorganic Science 1925 Barrett, Anne V. English 1917 Barrett, Katherine C. Classical Language 1921 Barry, May Modern Languages 1915-1921 Bartholomew, Bruce Mathematics 1929 Bass, George W., Jr. History 1928 Baxter, Marion A. History 1928 FRANK MORTON 1888 - 1918 I 1394 Stokes, Guy H. Tompkins, Perry T. Tucker, Frank B. Vucosavlievich, V, M Walker, Clarence M. Walsh, Charles F. Weigle, Elsie fMrs. Hendersonj Welch, Harriet A, Winn, Abel T. Wright, Harry M. Young, Clement C. -1919 Latin Physics Latin g Greek Physical Education Classics Latin Historyg German Mathematics Science Latin Q Greek Latin 3 English A 1919-1930 Beardsley, Louise J. Bowman, Elsie Bruce, Irene F. Butler, Lora Cairnes, john C. Carr, Esther M. Chapman, Paul G. Christiansen, Clara N. Cleghorn, Arthur M, Cornell, Everett Cox, Mary M. English Mathematics Modern Languages Mathematics Physical Education Mathematics History Physical Education History Organic Science Modern Languages Croker, Florence M. History Cruzan, Albert Organic Science Cummings, Ernest Mathematics Curtz, John G. Mathematics Dakin, Clarence C. Drawing Danforth, Charles C. Mathematics Daniels, Myra W. English Danner, Sara J. History FREDERICK H, CLARK 1919 - 1930 1901-1905 1895-1906 1910 1918 1888-1902 1916 1907 1916 1868-1898 1894-1896 1892-1906 1923 1909-1922 1928-1929 1924 192 3-1926 1926 1922-1925 1916-1924 1914 1920-1928 1887-1924 1918 1927 1916-1922 1925 1920-1928 1915-1924 1923 1927-1929 Lowell Facult De Laguna, Augusta De Nike, Thomas Devaul, Adelbert Dobson, Robert J. Duffy, Anne G. Durst, Fred M. Duxbury, Minnie M. Dykes, Harlan H. Elder, Valerie J. Elskamp, L. M. Emerson, Sybil Fender, Charles W. Fickett, Loretta M, Flexsenhar, Capt. H. Flynn Dorothy Forbes, Walter D. Forsdick, Archibald M. Gallagher, Edward D. Gannon, William J. Garton, George Gerlough, Ludwig S. Gray, Ebba Braese Gray, Frances H. Gray, Robert F. Graybiel, John M. Harris, Elmer H. Harris, Harvey E. Henderson, Elsie Weigel Henrich, Jouis J. Herrmann, Fernande L. Hill, Eugene Hodgkinson, Francis Hunt, Anne P. Indahl, Eleanor Tyrrell Jennings, Henry R. Johns, Arthur W, Johnson, Nels English Physical Education English Organic Science English Organic Science Organic Science Physical Education Physical Education Organic Science Drawing Organic Science Modern Languages ROTC Physical Education Inorganic Science History Mathematics English Classical Language History Organic Science Modern Languages English Organic Science Physical Education Drawing English Inorganic Science Drawing Physical Education Classical Language History Modern Languages Organic Science Inorganic Science Modern Languages F. E. CROFTS 1931 - 1934 1919-1922 1920-1921 1922-1924 1928 1909 1915- 1921 1914-1926 1922-1926 1924-1928 1922 1922-1924 1912-1924 1929 1919 1925 1929 1920-1922 1928 1929 1915 1924 1918 1921 1924 1928 1928 1928 1907 1926 1921 1926- 1897- 1915 1925 1921 1914 1922 -1925 -1926 1928 1926 -1928 -1926 -1923 1 1919 Jones, Lydia Long Jussel, Martin Kast, Gregg Kavanagh, Florence T. Kellogg, Elfreda E. Kitchen, Claude L. Kittredge, Herbert Knollin, Ernest Kock, Frederick W. Lalande, Alice H. Lane, Lulu M. Libby, Barnum B. Lorbeer, George C. Maher, Minnie Martine, Ella M, Matchette, Orral Matthew, John McCarty, Arthur L. McCord, Olin H. McCue, Etta McDonald, Mary E. McNeely, Alberta Millie, Mabel F. Moore, Samuel W. Morrin, Mary I. Morris, Madeleine V. Morton, Frank W. Myers, Irene H, Neff, Benjamin H. Nelson, Edith Troxell Nelson, Gertrude Neppert, Julia M . Newmark, Amelia Oliver, Margaret Malarin O'Malley, Helen Osborn, Dorothy Osborn, Edna Osuna, Aurelia M. -1930 History Mathematics Organic Science Inorganic Science Organic Science Physical Education Mathematics Physical Education Organic Science Modern Languages Physical Education Inorganic Science History English Modern Languages English Physical Education Mathematics Mathematics Music English Physical Education English History English Organic Science Modern Languages Modern Languages Physical Education Mathematics Music Music English Modern Languages Drawing Physical Education Classical Language Modern Languages LEROY H. STEPHENS 1934 - 1948 1921-1926 1923-1924 1915 1916 1922 1925 1922 1921-1924 1901-1921 1921:1929 1926 1925 1921 1915-1924 1920 1920 1924-1925 1915 1927 1920-1924 1922 1918-1921 1922-1927 1926 1915 1920-1928 1917 1929 1925 1924-1926 1926 1919 1922-1924 1921 1915 1924-1926 1926 1928 GEORGE LEWIS RUSSELL ALFRED SCHWARTZ ARTHUR DAVID SCRIPTURE FRANCIS EVERETT SEAMAN FREDERICK T. SEARLS ELIHU SHAPIRO JOHN M. SHIPLEY ADOLPH EARL SIEBRECHT RICHARD EDWARD SOLOMON DAVID CLARKE STEEL WELLMAN A. STELTER EMMETT J. SULLIVAN FELIX C. SURMONT JAMES CHARLES SWITTON JEROME PATRICK TAHENY PETER W. TAMARAS EDWARD TOM WILMER HAROLD TRAINER LEON VALIANOS VINTON W. VAUGHN WILLIAM XVARREN JACQUES WEINBERGER BARON SEMAN WEISS ROBERT EDWARD WITTS RODNEY S. YEE FRED H. ZUMWALT, JR. Girls HELEN MARIE ALBRECHTSEN LUCILLE VALERIE ALVAREz MARY ADA ANDERSON LAINE ANDRESSON LILLIAN MARIE ANTONINI JERUSHA ARsANIs VIRGINIA RUTH BADGER VICTORIA G. BAHERYCZ ALICE VALEVIA BARRET LUCRETIA ELIZABETH BELSER MILDRED BLAUT JUNE BLEssING ELEANORE CECELIA BLUE ADELE BLUM FRANCES BoUEY DOROTHY MABEL BRADNER MARION LoRETTo BREILING DALE BROWN MURIEL COLGAN EVELYN E. coMEGYs JANE COOPER ETHEL CASE CRUICKSHANK WILMUTH DAHL ELEANOR MARIE EDELMANN VIRGINIA JORDAN ELsToN LOXVELL ENGLERT RUTH WILLETTE ENOS EVELYN J. EERRARIO ROSE JEANNE EEUTRIER SOPHIE SHIRLEY FINK MARY JANE FOSTER NATALIE J. GAMBARASI GERTRUDE GERSHON DOROTHEA H. GORDON ALICE GRAY MATILDA GUGLIELMINI LILLIAN HALPERN vIoLA DORIS HARTMAN MARGARET R. HAYDEN MARIAN HENDERSON FRANCES HODES NATALIE ESTHER HULBERT MARY VIRGINIA HUNTING NADINE IRVING HENRIETTA MAXINE ISRAEL CLARA MAY JONES ANNIE VIRGINIA KAEL FLORENCE KEEN ALYCE A. KELLEY M. LUcII.E KERLINGER ISABEL OSBORN KLEIN JENNIE CLAIRE KOBLIK MARIE LACABANNE KATHERINE G. LANDERS EVELYN QUEENIE LASALLE LUCILLE J. LINDEBERG EERMER PAToN LLOYD MARGARET LYDERs MARION LoUIsE MANN BARBARA MARTENS MARY ERMIN MARTIN MARIAN ADELE MCCOY JANIs MCCREADIE MARGARET ANN MCGUIRE MARGARET c. MCIVER RUTH I. MCRELLAR FRANC ADELAIDE MCLANE JEAN MARIE MILLIGAN RUTHE MURIEL MORDAUNT MILDRED G. Mosicow PAULINE Mossop EDITH LoRRAINE MUSSER DOROTHY CHLOE MYGRANT THELMA NEELY GLENADENE G. NICHOLSON MARTHA NIKIRK VIRGINIA KATHRYN NOLAN 91 VALDA G. NORTON DOROTHEA A. NUSBAUM JOAN OLIVER VIVIAN MAY PARKER MARIE PASSANISI HELEN LUISE PATCH ARLEEN JEAN PAYNE WILMA PIRAG MARY ELIZABETH PUGH LOUISE MARIE PUSCHEL EMILY CHRISTINE PUTNAM IRMA LAT, QUATTLEBAUM ZILPHA LASLEY RAGSDALE CAROL VIRGINIA RASMUSSEN THELMA ANN REES MARGARETE C, RUTTER RUTH MARIE SARTORIUS HELEN SCHULZE EDITH HELEN SCHWARTZ LUCIE SCHWERIN CLAIRE YVONNE SILEERSTEIN JEAN W. STALL MARIE LOUISE STEINBACH THELMA K. STEVENSON JANET ELIZABETH STEWART DOROTHEA LUCILLE SUNBERG ROEERTA TEMPEST EDNA VIRGINIA THUNEERG ERMA TOLSTONAGE WALLEA STAR TORMEY JENNIE A. TOTH VAREE TRASK EDITH JOSEPHINE USHER MARIE VALENTIN DAHRL LOVETTA WALL NINA HARRIETTE WALLACE DOROTHY JACQUE WEHE NAOMI WEIDENSALL ELEANOR M. WEINMANN MARJORIE WELISCH MARJORIE A. WELSH LOUISE HELEN WESTPHAI. BETTY WHITNEY ROSE MARIE WHITTHORNE ELEANOR D. WILLIAMS PHYLLIS YOUNG DOROTHY MAE YOUNGCLAUS DOMINA zARo CLASS OF FALL,1929 Boys ROSALINO A. ABAYA RAYMUNDO R. ALCALA LEONARD BAER ALVIN L. BENAS BEN BLAIR WILLIAM M. BLOHM EMANUEL M. BLUE E. BRADSHAXV BOWMAN ALBERT BOYAHAN THOMASRAYBRAGG FRANCIS BREHENY ALCOR S. BROWNE CHARLES F. BURROWS, JR. JOHN F. CARNEY BURTON H.CHEENEY CHEE SHING CHOY GEORGE CLARK ROBERTSTANFORD COHEN JULIAN J. CONCANNON MARK ENSIGN CORY, JR. RICHARD S. COSBY EARL JAMES COTTRELL NCHARDJ.DAHL ALPHIN C. DAVIS JOSEPH HAROLD DAVIS ANTHONY DEDOMENICO ROBERTJOHNIHCKSON ALFRED DOWD RALPHJOHN'DUHAGON JAMES LELAND DUNBAR ROBERT THORNTON DURKEE EDWARD ROY ELEFANT WALTER WILLIAM FEIL LEON GORDON FINEGOLD JOHN C. FISCHER EDWARD FORDE FLINN HARRY FRIEDMAN JOHN V. GALGIANI ALLAN M. GOLDSMITH RALPH'GOLUB MARCEL A. GONSOLIN JUAN NICOLAS GUIRAO AEXDLPPICHJTBJADJ HENRY GRATTAN HARDIMAN DELBERT HARTLEY,JR. FRED HOLZER LEROX'VVHQG'O1'JA NORMAN OGDEN JACOBSEN DAbHELE.JOPHQSON HERBERT H. JOHNSON CHARLESJUAY PASIL POCOCK KANTZER BURT KEBRIC ELBERT B. KINSMAN 92 Lowell Faeult 2 1919 -1930 Paulsen, Amandus John Mathematics 1921 Smythe, Helen Physical Education Peckham, Gertrude C. History 1916 Stack, Katherine English Pence Edhh Blodern Languages 1913-1920 Stephens,LeroyI1, Liodern Languages Plumb, Max Mathematics 1925 Sturges, Falka Gibson Mathematics Polland, Samuel K. Dramatics 1923 Thomas, Margaret Smith History Price, Mary T. Modern Languages 1922-1924 Tremayne, Frank G. History Reston, Gladys I. Modern Languages 1920 Trimble, Veronica English Revoy,IIdene LI. hdodern Languages 1929 Tucken Frank B. Clasdcal Language Riedeman, Carolyn F. Modern Languages 1926-2929 Voyne, Michael V. Physical Education Robertson, Alvin J. M. Inorganic Science 1917 Walsh, Charles F. English Sanders, Joseph B. Mathematics 1923 Ward, Shirley English Schmit, James J. Drawing 1894-1921 Welch, Harriet A. Mathematics Schou, Elsie M. History 1922 Whelan, Rena English Schwartz, Abraham Organic Science 1928 Whitaker, Anna Classical Language Seawell, Harry W. Drawing 1918 Wilcox, Hiram Inorganic Science Silberstein, Edith Inorganic Science 1922 Wilson, Janet Physical Education Smith, Alix G. Modern Languages 1923 Sullivan, June Secretary Smith, Thomas A. Inorganic Science 1909 Hickey, Mary M. Assistant Secretary Lowell Facult , 1931 I94o Crofts, F. E. Principal 1891-1934 Balensifer, Miss F. English Stephens, L. H. Principal 1909 Ballou, F. Herbert Mathematics: Biology Lacoste, Miss E. Vice Principal 1919 Barker, I. C. Mathematics Harrison, Miss E. P. Secretary 1931 Barnes, L. B. Chemistry Miller, Mrs. R. Attendance Clerk 1931-1938 Barrett, Miss A. V. English, Store Service Adams, Miss R. Physical 'Education 1937 Barrett, Miss K. C. Latin Airth, L. G, Music 1940 Bartholomew, B. Mathematics Alger, I. G. History 1922 Bass, G. W. History Alexander, Miss H. G. Music, English 1925 Baxter, Miss M. A. Biology Alibertine, Miss V. Italian, Eng., History 1937 Beardsley, Miss L. J, English Anderson, Miss J. K. Library 1939 Belli, Miss E. Englishg Italian Angus, Miss M. S. French 1931 Berg, Miss B. English Antonovich, Miss E. Drawing 1929-1932 Black, Miss L. Physical Education Austin, A. Science, Mech. Draw. 1938 Butler, Miss L. Mathematics Babitz, M. Science 1939 Carreras, Miss W. English Bach, Mrs. A. L. Spanish 1938 Carroll, Miss M. E. English, Library Badger, Miss F. B, Music 1921-1935 Chase, Miss M. Art JOSEPH B. HILL EDITH PENCE 1948 - 1950 1950 - 1955 1921 1919 1909 -1922 1922-1929 1919-1928 1922 1925 1910 1920 1916 1921-1923 1916 1919 1926 1921-1926 1927 1925 1929-1934 1935 1931 1917-1931 1921 1929- 1926 1928 1923 1938 1932 1931-1931 1935 1924-194 1937-193 1938 1936 Lowell Facult Cleghorn, A. M. Close, Mrs. M. S. Coester, A. Colburn, H. Croker, Mrs. F , M. Curts, J. G. Daniels, Mrs. M. W. !Dealtry, Miss F. E. Delman, E. DeMaria, Miss I. DeSousa, C. Devlin, R. M. Dobson, R. J, Edminster, H. W. Elskamp, L. M. Farmer, Miss E. V. Fast, N. C. Feiling, W. Flexsenhar, H. J. Flynn, Miss D. Forbes, W. D. Forcade, Miss D, Gallagher, E. D. Gannon, W. J. Gorham, E. Gerlough, L. S. Gettemy, Miss R. Gray, Mrs. E. B. Gray, Miss F. H. Graybiel, J. M. Hanlon, Miss M. R, Harris, E. H. Harris, H. E. Henderson, Mrs. E. W. Henrich, L. J. Hermann, Miss F. L. Hill, Mrs. I. Hunt, Miss A. P. Jarvis, Miss G, Jelinski, Miss L. Johnston, F. E. Jordan, Mrs. M. W. D. History Science Salesmanship g Eng. 1914 1939 1939 Spanish, History of Art History Mathematics English Science Physical Education Physical Education Chemistry Music Physiology English Biology Modern Languages Physics, Gen. Science Physical Education ROTC Physical Education Science Physical Education Typing English Mathematics History Physical Education Organic Science Spanish Biology Speech Physical Education Mechanical Drawing English Science Design, Applied Art French History English, Salesmanship English Science English, Dramatics MILO S. BAKER . 1918 1925 192 3-1932 1939 1940 1940 1935-1937 1935 1928 1938 1922-1935 1931 1936 1940 1919 1923 1929-1935 1934-1937 1928 1929-1932 1940 1924 1933 1918-1931 1921-1938 1928 1932 1928 1928-1934 1907 1926 1921 1926 1915-1938 1952 1938-1939 1938 1933 -1931 Karpenstein, Miss E. Kast, G. Kavanagh, Miss F. T. Kellogg, Miss E. E. Kitchen, C. M. Kittridge, P. Kuhnle, Mrs, V. T. Lana, Miss G. Lane, Miss L. M. Lee, A. C. Lee, Miss E. S. LeSeur, Miss M. H. Libby, B. B. Lightner, Mrs. Al Lighty, S. J. Lillie, R. Lindborg, G, C. LOFOrti, Mrs. J. Lorbeer, G. C. Martine, Miss E. M. Matchette, Miss O. McCall, Miss F. McCaron, Miss R. McCary, A. L. McCord, O. H. McDonald, Mrs. M. E. Mensing, Miss B, M. Metcalf, Miss G. Moore, S. W. Morrin, Miss M. I. Morton, F. W. Myers, Mrs. I. H. Neff, B. H. Nelson, Miss G. Neppert, Miss J. M. Oberlander, G. Oliver, Mrs, M. M. O'Malley, Miss H. Osborn, Miss E. M. Osuna, Miss A. M. Patterson, J. W. Peckham, Miss G. G. Peters, Miss E. I94o French, German Biology Chemistry Physiology Physical Education Mathematics English French Physical Education English Mathematics, Latin Eng., Hist., Hygiene Chemistry Salesmanship Physical Education German History, Civics Math., Typing, Span. Social Studies German English Physical Education English Mathematics Mathematics English , Physical Education Spanish, French History English Spanish French, German Physical Education Music Music Science Spanish Freehand Drawing Latin, English Spanish, French Eng., Jour., Civics History, Literature Mathematics ELSIE WEIGLE MAJOR J. P. NOURSE 1940 1915 1916-1933 1922 1925-1939 1922-1933 1934 1940 1926 1939 1933 1938 1923 1932-1939 1938 1934-1937 1921 1937 1921 1920 1920 1932 1938 1915-1935 1927 1922-1939 1932 1936 1926 1915 1917-1936 1929-1932 1925 1926-1931 1919-1939 1940 1921 1915 1926 1928 1940 1916 1940 ALAN s. KLEIN WILLIAM T. KNIGHT ALFRED P. KRIEGER HAROLD A. KUHN EMERsON CHAs. LASATER JULEs I. LEFKOVITZ STANLEY A. LEVIN DONALD ARTHUR LOUDER ROBERT BRUCE LUCEY GRAEME K. MacDONALD JOHN EMMETT MAHONEY RICHARD H, MALLOCH MAXIMO PASION MARIANO EARLE MILLIARD MARSH GEORGE EUGENE MARTIN BERNHARD WILLIAM MAU ERNEST H, MCCAUGHAN JOHN MCDONALD STEPHEN MCGAEBEY WILLIAM T. MCLEOD AUSTIN MCNAMARA, JR. ROBERT JAMES MCSHEEHY JACK L. MENGEL HUGH B, MILLER ROBERT s. MILLER EARL DANIEL MOCK JOHN MONGON CARLOS A. MONsALvE ROBERT H. MOORE STEWART E. MOOSLIN BENNIE MORGENsTERN CHARLES IsADORE MORRIS MARK M. MORRIS, JR. RAYMOND ERNEST MORRIS HARVEY HAROLD MURR GENE GORDON NOLIN GILBERT M. NULL WALLACE O'CON'NELL JOHN BRIAN O'MALLEY JOHN O'ROURKE ALBERT PAREDES EDWIN BYRON PARKER, JR. SAMUEL H. PLATT WILLIAM HELD PRATT RUPERT WRIGHT PRAY JOHN E. PUTS WILLIAM KENT RAINES RALPH H. RATTO HARLAN E. READ ALBERT EDGAR ROSENBAUM ARTHUR ROSENBAUM EDWARD sAADALLAH ROBERT ALAN SAXE sAMUEL SCHAPIRO ERNEST SCHLUMPBERGER WALTER L. sCHUTzER DANIEL M. sCHWARTz HERBERT LAWRENCE sHAPIRO STANLEY A. sHAYER MAURICE M. sHECTER JACK SHEEHAN JACK D. sHELDoN THOMAS J. sLAvIN SYDNEY HARWOOD SMITH LEONARD JOSEPH sOBEL CHESTER EDWARD STAFF MANORU TAOKA DAVID WOOsTER TAYLOR EDWARD A. TIMOssI MELVIN TODD VINCENT J. TOsI JAMES H. TRICE ROBERT E. TURNER ROBERT E. VANS AGNEW RAYMOND WETZEL LOUIs WALKER GERALD TAYLOR WHITE HERBERT G. WHITEHEAD WARREN B. WIESINGER JACK EVERETT WILLI DONALD C. WOLDEN FREDERICK E. WRIGHT CURT ARNO zIMANsKY ERED'K W. ZIMMERMAN, JR. Girls ROSALIND ABRAM FLORENCE ETHEL ANTONE HELEN DOROTHY BARNETT I-IELENE LOUISE BARNETT CAROLYN DORA BARTLETT JULIET BAYLACQ LILLY AAGAARD BECKER NATALIE ETHEL BEGGS CONSTANCE BROWN PHYLLIS JOSEPHINE BURDON FRANCES MARIE BURGE LAURA EVELYN BURKE BERTHA CAROLINE BUTZMAN ROSE MARGARETHE CALLEN DORIS BARUTH CAMPBELL ELIZABETH ENLOE CAREY HELEN V. CLEAVELAND AGNI CLEMMENSEN MILDRED CLOW 93 . MARGARET ANNE CONLAN VIOLA JENSINE COOKE DOROTHY COOLIDGE EMMA CECYLE CROCE JEAN CUTHBERTSON EUNICE JEANNETTE DAVIS LORRAINE E. DE NICOLAI LUCIE E. DOBBIE EDITH JANE FLEXSENHAR MARJORIE CAROLYN FOLEY RITA LENA FORASSIEPI LOIS MARY FOSTER DOROTHY FOULK JANE GALINDO LORAINE GEORGE JEANETTE E. GUNNISON GLADYS M. HANEBERG DOROTHY JULIET HARRIS GEORGIA HEMPHILL PHILOMENA MARIE HIE BARBARA EARL HOWES ALICE JESSEN GWENDOLYN JOHNSTON MARGARET KATENBRINK BERNICE MOORE KLEIN CATHERINE LANDESBAUM ELEANOR LUCILLE LEWIS DORIS ELIZABETH LIEB ALICE MADDEN EDNA ANTOINETTE MCNEIL JULIAN EDITH MAINI MARTHA E. MOTTRAM HELEN PERLMUTTER FLORENCE V. PODESTA EDNA LOUISE READ BARBARA-JANE REDFERN MARYLYN GRAHAN REEVE HELEN LOUISE REGAN ASTA SELCHAU HISAKO SHIMIZU KATHRYN ANNE SMITH DOROTHY SMOLENSY EVELYN GERTRUDE SORACCO ANITA I. SOLVIG SYDNEY B. STEVENSON VIRGINIA LEE THAYER VIRGINIA E. THOMPSON AILEEN VIRGINIA VARNEY BARBARA MARIE VOLZ JOSEPHINE WEIN MARGARET JANE WEST BARBARA ALDEN WHITE AGNES JEANNE XVILCOX URSULA WILLIAMSON MARYANN LOUISE ZILIANI GLADYS C. ZOERB CLASS OF DECEMBER. 1930 Boys IRWIN M. ABRAMIS HAROLD R. ADAMS 1. REID ANDERSON GEORGE R. BABA FERDINAND CHARLES BARGIONI MERRITT s. BARNES JOSEPH BIENARD JOSEPH BENJAMIN HAROLD W. BESEMAN HENRY BORDEOARY DANIEL BRASSEL EDMUND BROLLO FRANK BROWN ROBERT FRANCIS BURNS REEDER BUTTEIRFIELD LUIS M. CARAGAN JOVENCIO A. CASTILLO 'BED L. CLACK GEORGE LYON COBB I-IEDLEY E. COPE CARLTON FORSYTH COREY VINCENT J. -COURTNEY EDWARD T. CULL ALBERT H. DANIELSON GAULT DAVIS ERROL F. DENSFORD JAMES T. DING EUGENE E. DUMESNLL IRVING EDWARD EDELMAN GEORGE EISEN WILLARD D. EISNER HAROLD ELBERT ROBERT W. ELLIOTT HAROLD PHILIP ESSNEIR ROY EUGENE FELLOM CHARLIE B. EORSE FLITCROFT E. EROSS ALAN S. FURST ABDIEL M. GALINDO STANTON W. GILL NORVELL GILLESPIE MERVIN GOLDMAN LEONARD GOLDMAN HILLARD GOLDSTEIN STANLEY M. GOLDSTEIN JEROME C, GREENSIEIN DAVID E. I-IALLETT 94 LO ell Pacult , 1931- Peterson, M. Plumb, M. A. Polland, Mr. S. K. Power, M. S, Reston, Miss G. I. Revoy, Miss H. M. Robertson, A. J. M. Sanders, J. B. Schou, Miss E. M. Schneider, D. Schwartz, A. Scott, Miss E. G. Seawell, Mr. H, W. Seeley, Miss W. W. Silberstein, Miss E. Science Mathematics Dramatics French 3 English French French Physics Mathematics History Music Biology Librarian Drawing Library g English Chemistry C. C. YOUNG DR. R. W. HARVEY FRED W. KOCH 1936 1925-1931 1923 1939 1920 1929 1917 1923 1922 1937-1939 1928 1932 1918-1936 1939 1922-1936 Smith, Miss A. G. Smith, Mrs. L. B. Smith, T. A. Stack, Miss K. Swanson, Mrs. M. Todd, Miss F. Tremayne, F. G. Tucker, Mr, F. B. Vasilatos, Miss M. Voyne, Mr. M. V. Walsh, Mr. O. F. Welch, Miss H. A. Whitiker, Miss A. Williams, S. Wilson, Miss J. W. 1940 History Physical Education Physics, Chemistry English Music Physical Education History Latin, French Science Physical Education English Mathematics Latin, German Civics, French Physical Education TRACY R. KELLEY CHARLES W. FENDER FLORENCE PRAG PERRY T. TOMKINS AARON ALTMANN FRANK B. TUCKER 1923 1936 1909-1937 1919-1937 1935-1936 1932-1934 1922-1932 1931 1940 I 1920 1916 1916 1926 1931 1927 Lowell Facult itephens, Leroy H. .aCoSte, Eugenie vfonroe, Hudson M. alill, joseph B. .origan, Gladys karpenstein, Henry Ieterson, Melvin Lmith, Dr, Alden 'ence, Edith E. 'erino, J. A. Idams, M.Sgt. H. Idams, Miss R. M. Ilger, I. G. lnderson, Miss J. K. tnderson, J. lndrews, Miss M. L lngus, Miss M. S, lnino, R. Tustin, A. iabitz, M. Lach, Mrs. A. L. Laker, W. E. ialensiefer, Miss F. larker, I. C. larnes, L. B. iarrett, Miss K. C. larry, R. E, lass, Mrs. C. Lass, G. W. laxter, Miss M. A. Leardsley, Miss L. I ielli, Miss E. L. Lelmour, R. Lernard, B. ierry, S. F. ioehm, Miss L. irauer, B. Brigham, Sgt. B. iruener, Miss M. Buckley, R. J. iuono, A. iurke, Mrs. A. Zahn, Mrs. G. Zarpenter, S. Iarr, J. R. Principal Dean of Girls Dean of Boys Principal Dean of Girls Dean of Boys Dean Of Boys Dean of Boys Principal Principal ROTC Physical Education Social Studies Libraiyg English Social Studies Social Studies Languages Lang., Math., PE Math., Mech. Draw. Science English 3 Languages Mathematics English, Counseling Math., Counseling Science, Head of Dept. English, Languages Science Art Social Studies Science English Eng., Lang., Typing Science, Mathematics Music Music Physical Education Languages ROTC Languages English, Social Studies Physical Education Social Studies Attendance Ofiice Science Social Studies Claude Kitchen came to Lowell in 1925 and .taught in the physical education department or 15 years. While at Lowell he coached swimming, football, tennis, and crew, and became the head of the athletic depart- ment in 1938. 1909-1948 1919-1946 1940-1952 1948-1950 1946 1952-1953 1953-1954 1954 1950-1955 1955 1953 1937-1949 1922-195 1 1939 1954 1954 1931-1947 1949 1938-1941 1941-1942 1938 1948 1925 1935 1931-1950 1921-1950 1942-1951 1942-1953 1926-1954 1928-1944 1923-1948 1938-1942 1953 1956 1948-1956 1941 1951 1951 1950-1951 1952 1954 1952-1954 1944 1953 1946-1951 , 1940-1956 Catelli, Mrs. E. G. Chase, Miss M. Cheiker, .Miss S. Cleghorn, Mrs. A, M. Close, Mrs. M. S. Coester, Mrs. A. Cooper, Mrs. I. M. Croker, Mrs. R. M. Curts, J. G. Dealtry, Miss F. E. DeMaria, Miss I. Devlin, M, Dobson, R. J. Doi, R. Dole, Mrs. G. K. Driscoll, F. G. Drysdale, W. Duffy, Miss A. G. Duffy, Miss M. M. Dunn, R. L. Duty, A. East, Mrs. V. C. Edminster, H, W. Ehrman, J. Englander, M. Farris, Mrs. J. Fast, N. C. Feibusch, E. Feiling, W. Flynn, Miss D. Fowler, Miss M. Franks, R. Fry, Sgt. F. Gallagher, E. D. Gerlach, Mrs. Gerlough, L. S, Gorham, E. Graeber, Miss A. G. Graybiel, J. M. Grimes, Sgt. E. K. Harris, E. H. Harrison, Miss E. P. Haven, Mrs. H. A, Heaton, Miss M. Henderson, Mrs. E. W. English, Languages Art Science Social Studies Science, Counseling English, Commercial English Social Stud., Couns'g Math., Treasurer Head Science Dept. Physical Education Music Science Art Physical Education Social Studies Phys. Ed., Counseling Head English Dept. Social Studies, Lang. Science Science Englishg Science English Mathematics English, Social Stud. Library Science, Social Stud. Social Studies Phys. Ed., Science Physical Education Library Physical Education ROTC Mathematics, Typing Mathematics Social Studies Mathematics Math.,g Counseling Science ROTC Physical Education Secretary Music, Eng.g SO. Stud. English Englishg Counseling Dr. Ella Martine, who 1949 1936 1951-1952 1914-1944 1939-1952 1939-1943 1948 1940-1948 1925-1950 1939 1940-1941 1941-1942 1928-1951 1954 1944- 1948 1950 1946 1940-1942 1940-1942 1940-1946 1952 1949-1953 1938-1942 1953 1953 1955 1936 1955 1940 1923 1947-1948 1954-1955 1951 1928-195 3 1946-1948 1924-1952 1940-1941 1950 1928-1942 1944-1946 1928-1949 1931 1940 1950 1907-1944 taught at Lowell from 1920 to 1947, is now a college professor. Mr. A. Schwartz, Mrs. L. Gerlough, Mr. L. Gerlough, Mrs. Myrtle Gallag- her, and Mr. Edward Gallagher. CHARLES HARBAND OHARLES M. HART MERRITT W. HODSON WILLIAM BENJAMIN HOLST GIRIAIRD C. HOPKINS JAMES E. HOPKINS ROBERT R. JASMINE HIRAM WARREN JOHNSON III LLOYD EDWARD JOHNSON JOHN E. JOHNSTON ROBERT HANSEN JONES BERTRAM C. JOSEPH EMMET B. KEEEEE EDWIN IE. KJEOUGH LLOYD W. KOHLER HERBERT B. KRAUS ERNEST ALBERT KRIEGER LEONARD E. LANDSBERGLER THOMAS IIIEONG FRANK J. .LESLIE LOUIS NELSON LEUIREY RICHARD M. LEWIS HUGH ALBERTON LINTHICUM THIEODORIE LOCKWOOD HAROLD SAUL LONGMAN WILSON WOODROW LOW EDWARD LUl'IlLEY SAUL MADFES RICHARD J. IMALONE DAN S. MALTAS HARRY P. MARKS BERKELEY MATHEWS ASATOU MATSUMOTO MAURICE RAYMOND MQCOLLEY JOHN HENRY MCCORMICK DONALD MALCOLM MCDONALD JAMES MCKAY NORMAN MBLLIER HOWARD POOLE MELVIN FRIEDERICK WILLIAM METTERS HAROLD T. MEYER PHILIP LEONARD JMOLACZYK AARON MORAFKA EDWARD P. MQRPHY GRANT MORROW WILLIAM SANDERS NEAL DAVID NEWMAN JR. G. ROY NOCOLAYSEN CHARLES E. NORMAND DONALD L. O'HAIR JR. CHARLES FRANKLIN PARKER BEVERLY PASQUALETTI GUS PHILLIPS LLOYD BECKER PHILLIPS FIRIEDERIC L. PONEDEI. NORMAN TRAUNG POWER LEONARD W. RAIOHLE JR. JAMES RINGROSE JR. , GIRARD B. ROSENBLATT JR. EDGAR ASHFORD SAMPSON LAWRENCE R. SAMUEL ROBERT HOWARD SCHNACKE HOWARD C. SCHWARTZ RALPH H. SLEGIIER NATHAN SILEN HENRY SKAGGS WILLIAM L. SMLITH ROBERT G. ST. DENIS HYMAN STONE IRVING C. SUGARMAN EDWARD JOSEPH TAAFFE JR. RICHARD TEBEAU ROBERT L. THATCHIER DONALD s. THOMAS WARD J. THOMAS 1-LERSCHEL TOLSTONAGE RICHARD E. TRETTEN ALBERT VON MURPURGO GEORGE WALL JR. DONALD K. WALLACE MERVYN W. WEI-IE JOHN JR. WELCH JOHN R. WIESE LEONARD H. YOUDALL BYRON YOUNG Girls FLORENCE ELAINE ALLEN R. MARIIE BATT SHIRLEY EDITH BAUER HENRIETTA R. BINEMAN JANICE BLANCHE BLOCK RUTH LAURULE BOEHM MILDRED LOUISE BOWERS FRITZI-BETH BOWMAN AIGN-ES TORRANCE BRIGGS OLIVE ELEANOR BROWN ALENE BRUCE DOLORES BLYTHE CAMPBELL HELEN M. CANTROWITH MARGUERITE CAVE HARRIET JEANNE CHALMIERS CARMJELINA C. CINCOTTA CONSTANCE ELISE CLEARY HELEN MARY CLIFFORD SUE COHEN ELEANOR DOWNS CREIGHTON I-LARRIET ELLEN CURRIIE KATHRYN JEANNE CUSH-LEY 95 GOLDIE CLAIRE CUTLER HELEN ELIZABETH CUTLER ALVERA ANN DAHL LORRAINE DAHL VIOLET DAVID CONSTAN CE ROBERT DEAN JANE EDWARDS PATRICIA EDWARDS BERTHA FLORENCE EVANS JESSIE FALCONER GERALDINE HELEN FERGUSON GLADYS RUTH FERGUSON DORIS K. FORSDICK TERZA FREEDMAN LORRAINE FULLER PEGGY L. GEIDE REBEKAH GISNET MARGARET HELENE GLUNZ BEATRICE GOLDBLATT ENID MAY GRANZ AILEEN LUCILLE HAINES MARION I. HAMILTON VERA LOUISE HANSEN ELIZABETH HARRIS SYLVIA H. HARTMAN LEANORE B. HARTWIG HELEN MABEL HEISEN RAE HELLER CAROLINE HENDERSON CARMEN HIRSCH NAHMA P. HOAG MARGARET E. HOLBROOK KATHERINE ALICE HOLMES EILEEN MAY HULBERT HELEN ENID JACOBS MARJORIE G. JACOBSEN ELSE MARGARET JORGENSEN MARGARET KING KELLEY NADINE G. KESTELL ANNA ROSE KING PHYILLIS KIRSTEN BARBARA 'RAE LARSEN NANCY S. LAW BEATRICE IRENE LEITNER RUTH MAY LEVY MARGARET INGRAM LINDUS LOIS VICTORIA MARIANI CELESTINE MASONI HARRIETT H. MASSON RUTH MCCAIN ROBERT JEANNETTE MCGOVERN CARROLL MCGRATH LILLI AN MCKEE FLORENCE MELKONIAN DOROTHY IELVIRA MEYER ETSUKO MURAYAMA AGNES M. NESS EILEEN E. NICHOLS ALICE VIRGINIA ORR ANZETTE J. PENDERGAST MARGARET LORRAINE PERRY HEIIEN DOLORES PETERSON MARGARET PETERSON DOROTHY BERNICE PINKUS DOROTHY POOLE ELNA MARIE RAETZ CARLA .MARIAN RANKEN RUTH RONALD RETALLICK EDYTHE RICE CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH RILEY YVONNE SABATO EDNA SCHAFFNER MARION SLELIG RUTH LILLIAN SIEMON JANE ALBERTA .SMITH MARY JANE STTRAUB DOROTHY MARGARET TRAVES DOROTHY FRANCES TUTTICH CLEMENTINE MARIE VIOLICH HELEN VIRGINIA WAGNER ROSALIE CLARICE WAGNER GERALDINE CHARLOTTE WELCH WINIFRED K. WETHERILL JEAN ARTHUR WHITE CHARLOTTE VON DER H. WILKENS MARGUERITE WATKINS CLASS OF JUNE 1931 Boys ADRIAN ABADIE FRANK W. AITKEN, JR. KIRK ARMISTEAD MARIO M. ASTURIAS NORMAN BAKULICI-I THOMAS JONES BARFIELD LEON BAUER JACKSON F. BEAN STANLEY BEAUBAIRE JOHN FRANCIS BELZ IRVING M. BENJAMIN WILLIAM BOYCE BERCOVICI-I ROBERT KEYES B-LODGETT GALE BLOSSER MELVIN -E, BLUM JEROME V. BOUCHER MELVI-LLB M. BOWEN DON BRASSEL CECIL BERTRAM BUTTS WILLIAM BYERS 96 GORDON WARD CARD IRVING CASSENS ALBERT CHAQUETTE I-IIERBERT CHISHOLM WALTER F. COOPER WIIRT OROCKETT ALBERT P. DADIAN PHIILIP W. DAHLE SIDNEY F. DEGOFF WINFRIED DETSCH DAVIIL M. DRYFOOS WILLIAM GEORGE DUGGIN RICHARD R. DUNNIGAN ALEXANDER F, EAGLE, JR. ARVID EKENBERG NORMAN ELSLEY ROBERT W. EMMETT ALFRED FLAXMAN BAIRNEY FOX RICHARD L. FRANK J. EDWARD GENSLER ANTHONY GLAZKO EDWIN W. GODFREY ALLAN GOLDFISH HARRY GOLDSMITH MILTON GORDON JOTHAM E. GOULD OWSLEY L. GRAY, JR. GEORGE GREENWOOD JOHN DUDLEY HAGEN VERNON FRED HALLETT SIDNEY F. HAM LESLIE HAMILTON MERVIN HARRIS MORRIS HARRIS CLIFFORD IF. HAUPTMANN WILLIAM A. HEAL KAIRL HEINEMANN WILLIAM HELGIANZ WILLIAM HEWITT HAMPTON HOGIE MORRIS D. HONIG CARTER M. HOUSTON EDWIN JAMES HUDSON PAUL KAZUO IDA TRINIDAD INOVEJOS ALVIN M. ISAACS FELIX JAVIEN ALBERT EDWARD JAMES WILLIAM JOHNS J. ARTHUR JOHNSON WILLIAM H. JOHNSON MAREL KALISKY JOSEPH KENNETH KANE PHILIP JOHN KANE FREDERIC RICHARD KELLEY HOWARD EDWIN KELLY SHLRO KIDO WILLIAM KILSBY DAVID KIPNIS GEORGE KLOR EDWAIRD LEE ALLAN LEFEVRE EDWARD B. LETTUNICH DONALD IL. LEWIS ROBIN MERTON LINDSEY STJANTON LOBREEI JERRY H. LONERGAN BEN A. LYON LAWRENCE LYON CAIRL E. MACBIETH JAM-ES B. MACKINNON ALBERT MALONE RAYMOND C. MARDON DAVID C. MAYERS WILLIAM MORTON MCNULTY AILFONSO MEJIA JAMES J. MELODY MANUEL MENDELOWITZ HUGO MENEGHELLI M. D. CARTER MEYER WILLIAM S. MEYER, II ARNOLD B. MILLER EARLE THOMAS MORAN BYRON MORTENSON DARRELL MUELLER ROBERT FRANCIS MURCH ARTHUR H. MYER ROBERT MYERS, JR. E. GORDON NASH FRED NASSER HENRY NEWMAN EDWIN NEWTON EDWARD NORMAN DOUGLAS NORTON JACK OLDIS ROBERT E. PALMER RAYMOND FRANKLIN PARKER ANDREW J. PARTIDOS CLIFFORD PETERSON ROBERT NORTON POLLACK JACK PORTMAN STANLEY E. PRESCOTT MYRON MORRIS PRICE MARTIN RAUHUT CLIFFORD C. REA ROBERT M. REDINGER ERICK REICHEL ROBIERT M. RIDLEY, JR. 97 MAX ROED HERBERT ROSENBAUM HENRY ALEXANDER ROWE WILLIAM JEN RUDEE MORRIS SANKEY ALFONSO M. SAOADAN LEWIS FOLSOM SBRANA ALFRED N. SCARDIGLI 'Ill-IEODORIE F. SCHMIDT HENRY SCHNEIDER LEON F. SHAERAN ROBERT SHEPFIELD SIDNEY SHENSON MARCUS SI-IIMOPE MIERVYN SHOOR SIDNEY SILVERMAN J. LLOYD SILVERSTEIN LUKE RICHARD SINCLAIR LEON SINE CLAIRENC-E H. SPARKS ROBERT G. STARKWEATHER JULES STEINBERG NATII-IAN SUSNOW PAUL MALCOLM 'ITHOMPSON J-AMIES L. TONG ROBERT JAMES TRIPP LEIIAND TROBOCK RALPH VANDEVER IRVING VINLER WILLIAM FRANCIS VOCKE WILLIAM VOEGTLY CHARLES W. WALKER JAMES WALSH PHILIP LYONS WEBSTER SAM WIEINER CARL WOLFF HARRY K. WOLFF , JR. WALTER A. YARNELL WALTER ZAGOR-EN NICHOLAS IE. zAVA-LISHIN, JR. PIERRE S. zucco Girls DORIS IRENE ANDERSON MABEL .ELIZABETH EANNISTER MARJORIE BARNEY ANN BEATON BARR HELEN CORNELLA BARTLE'1T1' ESTHEIR LOUVENIA BELSER DOROTHEA M. BLEYLE ROBERTA BRESSI DOROTI-IEA BRYSON ETHEL F. BUTLER HAZEL CANEPA DOROTHY D. CASE BETTY CASI-IIN MARJORIE JO CHIAPPUIS PEARL CHRISTIAN FRANCES COLEMAN ROSEMARY CORKBRY VIRGINIA M. CRAWFORD MBLBA ALICE DALTO BONNIE LYNN DAVIS JAYNE DAVIS VIOLET DAVIS DORIS V-IVIAN DEAN EVELYN DEL CHIARO GERTRUDE DERIN JLIANITA E. DOWD MARI-E DUFEY ELEANOR CATHERINE EDDY FRANCES ANN EGAN ETI-IEL ELVIN JEANNETTE ENSLER LUCILLE VIRGINIA FILIPPI HORTENSE I-IELENE FREED EUGENIA YURIKO FUJITA MARGAIRETTE EMIKO FUJITA MARIE ANNETTE GARIN DOLORES VIOLA GONZALEZ DORIS GOODMAN BETTY HELEN GRAY NADINE JANE GRAY HAL GURLEY ELISE DOROTHEA HARDER BETTY ANNE HARRIS CAROL HAUSCHILD BARBARA ALMA HEIM HENRIETTA I-IEIMAN MARION HITCHCOCK MARTHA JANE HOERR GENEVIEVE HOGAN GERALDINE F. HOOGSTRAAT ANNE JANE HUDSON DOROTIHY DIELLE HUNT HELEN VIRGINIA JOHNSON LILLY KIRISTINA JOHNSON HIELEN JONES RUBY JURGENS LILLIIAN KAPLAN UNA AMELIA KELLY BERNICE KEMP EMILY KEMP MURIEL R. KILLIMEDE FRANCES KRUTMEYER MADELEINE LAHADERNE JUNE GILZEAN LEAVITT RUTH NERNLE LEVY MARGARET LILLIE 98 MR GEORGE LORBEER F h d f lEAcLUL,IllI IEDENTSS 9 . I :ormer ea ote owe oren' 't dh's-t t h,M,Lb lff Lowell In 1955 .... MRS, AILEEN BURKE: Mrs. Burke was ligad ffietheagaciallsterldiieseilipiirtmerit in0l19e5e4 aid was In charge of the audgo Visual axdes. She left Lowell In 1954 .... MR. GEORGE BASS was at Lowell for 26 years and taught history .... .SERGEANT FIRST CLASS GEORGE K. BRIGHAM: Taught ROTC and sponsored the NRA Saber Club and DrIll team. Henrich, L. J. Hermann, Miss F. Lowell Faculty, 1940-1956 Higgins, Mrs. M. Hill, Mrs. I. Howard, R. Hyink, R, B. Jamison, D. Jennings, H. H. Johnston, F. E. Jordan, E. L. Jordan, Mrs. M. W. Kallberg, Mrs. E. Kallberg, Sgt. H. Karpenstein, H. Kast, G. Keene, Mrs. K. Kellogg, Miss E. Kerner, Miss D. Kirkner, M.Sgt. Krieger, R. Kuhnle, Mrs. V. C. E. T. B. Science Art Social Studies Languages Languages Mathg Mech. Draw. Science Science Scienceg Counseling Englishg Counseling English, Head Coun' Englishg Counseling ROTC Head Counselor Scienceg Counseling English Science Englishg Counseling ROTC Instrumental Music English I 1926-1946 1921-1946 1955 1926-1944 1954 1949 1946 1952-1955 1958-1946 1952 1955-1949 1945 1940-1942 1940 1915-1949 1952-1955 1922 1946 1949-1951 1942 1954-1951 Lana, Miss G. Lee, Miss E. S. Lee, J. Lennon, Mrs. A. O, LeSeur, Miss M. H. Leubner, E. Libby, B. B. Lighty, S. J. Lindborg, G. C. Lindner, F. Livingstone, J. A. LoForti, J. Lorbeer, G, C. Lucey, P. A. Martine, Mi-ss E. M. Matchette, Miss O. Mathisen, Miss I. McBean, Miss U. McBride, Miss M. K. McCarty, C. J. McCord, O. H. MR. FRANK W. MORTON . . . Mr. Morton was a former Lowell teacher of Spanish and he also was a counselor. MR. B. B. LIBBY . . . Mr. Libby was a former mathe- matics teacher at Lowell. Languages Mathematics English Languages English, Social Stud. Languages Chemistry Physical Education History, Civics Languages Englishg Counsel. Math.g Lang.g Com'l Social Studies Social Studies Languages English Math.g Mech, Draw. Mathematics Math.g Counseling Lang.g Counseling Math.g Mech. Draw. 1940-1941 1955-1950 1952-1955 1952 1958-1952 1947-1954 1925-1951 1958-1945 1921-1942 1954 1946 1957 1925-1955 1954 1920-1947 1920-1948 1949 1950 1940 1950 1927 Leroy H. Stephens started teach- Miss O'Malley was an ing at Lowell in 1909, He later art teacher at Lowell was rnade vice principal, then during the 1920's. principal. Lowell Facult , 1940 McFarland, Miss C. McKee, Mrs, M. Mensing, Miss B. M. Metcalf, Miss G. Milton, R. J. Minkwitz, E. G. Mitchell, M. Moore, S. W. Morgenstern, Mrs. P. Morrin, Miss M. I. Neff, B. H. Neppert, Miss J. M. Newell, Mrs. Nichols, T. Ogle, G. Oliver, Mrs. M. M. O'Malley, Miss H. Osborn, Miss E. M. Osuna, Miss A. M. Patterson, J. Peckham, Miss G. C. Peters, Miss E. Peterson, M. Englishg Music Physical Education English, Languages Languages Social Studies, PE Social Studies Mechanical Drawing Social Studies Science English PE, Head of Dept. Music, Counseling Mathematics Art Music Languages Art English, Languages Head Language Dept. English, Social Studies Social Studies Mathematics Math., Sci.g COuns'g 1953 1954-1955 1932 1936 1949 1950-1955 1941-1949 1926-1943 1950-1951 1915-1953 1925 1919-1939 1946-1948 1952-1954 1952-1953 1921-1943 1915-1943 1926-1950 1928 1940 1916-1948 1940-1942 1936-1949 Peterson, Mrs. Polland, S. K. Potts, Sgt. Power, M. S. Rench, Sgt. A. A. Reston, Miss G. I. Revoy, Miss H. M. Riedeman, Mrs. C. F. Robertson, A. J, M. Sanders, J.-B. Saville, Mrs. T. D. Schiller, Mrs. T. Schneider, D. Schou, Miss E. M. Schroeder, Miss M. Schwartz, Miss M. Scott, Miss E. G. Sharp, M.Sgt. L, L. Simi, Sgt. L. Sink, Miss I. Smith, Miss A. G. Smith, Mrs. L. B. Stewart, G. Tryphon Nichols taught art in 1953 and 1954. John Lee was an English instructor during the same period. Mrs. Clara Bass taught art from 1942 to 1953. -1956 English 1946-1948 Head English Dept. 1 92 3 ROTC 195 5 Englishg Counseling 1939-1941 ROTC 1940-1944 Languages 5 Counseling 1920- 1956 Languages 1929-1951 Mathematics, Science 1 941-1946 Science g Counseling 1 917-1942 Mathematics 1923-1946 Physical Education 1 942-1946 Physical Education 1 949- 1 950 Music 1937-1943 Social Studies 1922-1954 Typing 1953 Science 1928-1952 Library 1932-1955 ROTC 1949-1950 ROTC 1954-1955 Physical Education 1 952 History 1923-1942 Physical Education 1936 Social Studies 1947-1948 CAIRMEL ANN LINDEN JEAN KATHLEEN LORD FRANCIS WOODS LOVE LUCILLE MACDONALD AIRLEEN .MANEGGIE ELAINE MASONEK JEAN ELIZABETH MATTHEW ALICE MIAUER ALICE KATHRYN MCCLINTOCK LOIS MCMILLAN MARGARET MEQUAT LUZ -ESFERANZA MIRALDA VIRGINIA FRANCES MOREORD MARY JANE MYGLRANT KON NAKAGAWA DOROTHY NELSON NADINE ALICE NEWBIGIN JUNE FLOYD PADDOCK EVELYN PAPALE DONALDINA PATTERSON ELIZABETH THELMA PIEAT ROBERTA PEERY HELEN ELINOR POLAKOFF MAY LUCY MORRISON LOIS PORTER DOROTHY FRANCES PORZER MARIIE MARTHA PUTS BETTY MARIE RETHMEYER GLORIA REYNOLDS MAYBELL THERESA ROACH LILY GERTRUDE ROBINSON RUTH ROSENBELD DOROTHY JEAN SAUNDERS CLARA SCHIEFSKY THELMA K, SCOONES ELINOR M. SHAPIRO ELAINE MARIE SIEERECHT LILLIAN J. SEIGEL BERNICE SILBERSTEIN VIOLET 'LOUISE SIMON ERASQUITA SINGLETAIRY DOROTHY PAULA SMITH SHIRLEY EVE SOLOMONSON THYRA KIRSTINE SORENSIEN MURIEL EVELYN STAHLE ANNETTE LOIS STEIN GERALDYN REGINA STOEE JEAN SYMIES ALBJEIRTA TAYLOR ANNAEEL OLIVER TBLLER ANN TILIN FRANCES LOUISE TILLMAN MARGARET TORPEN JUANITA VAN SLYICE VIOLA WALTERS KATHLEEN WELCH GLADYS ADELE WENGER DOROTHY WEST HELEN MARIE WHITE GRETE WIESE JEAN WIIGHOLM FREDERIGA ANNE WISEM.AN FRANCES WOOD VIRGINIA RUTH WOODS CLASS OF DECEMBER, 1931 Boys ALAN ABRAMS ROBERT ACTON HENRY BERNSTEIN LEON BERRY HENRY M. BETTMAN PAUL FRANCIS BIGGER MYRON LIONEL BIRNBAUM NATHAN BLUMENFELD SOL LOUIS BLUMENFELD HOWARD BOSCUS PAUL BRADY ALBERT BRAMY ' HAROLD BRAUNSTEIN ELMER BROWN WALTER LEONARD BROWN NORMAN BUELL JACK ELLSWORTH BURNESS BERTRAM GEORGE BUZZINI SANFORD CARO JACINTO CASTRO OSCAR CATOIRE FOLE CHAN ROBERT W. CHASE LOUIS CHIANTELLI RICHARD CLAIRE CLIFFORD CONLY, JR. LAWRENCE COHEN RAYMOND COMPTON DICK DANFORD SIMS DE VEUVE HERBERT DUDLEY ARTHUR EISENSTADT WALTER ELEFANT LAWRENCE R. ELKINGTON JOHN H. ENGSTROM WILLIAM HARUO ENOMOTO HILARIO FACTORA JACK FEELEY MILTON FENMORE ANTHONY CHARLES FERRIGNO FRANCIS HENRY FORBES, JR. WILLIAM FORESTER 99 1 MMMM .,,,, I THOMAS GAFFNEY ALFRED GEIGER EDWARD GIAMPAOLI DAN A. GILES WILLIAM GOLDMAN, JR. HAROLD GOLDSTEIN WILBUR HAL GRAFF HERBERT J. GRELLMAN CHARLES HENDERSON JULIUS LLOYD JACOBS MYRON JACOBS WALTER JOSEPH HERBERT TREGEA JOSLIN STANFORD KAPLAN BERNARD KAUFMAN, JR. EDWARD THOMAS KELLY, JR. BERNARD KORNFELD NIELS T. LARSEN, JR. GORDON LEA NATHAN LESTER BEN LEVINGER EDWARD LINGAFELTER JACK LUCEY IRVING FRANCIS LYONS, JR. RALPH WILSON LYTLE HERBERT MAAS DONALD MACKY LLOYD MADISON EDWARD MAPLES MICHEL MARCULESCU, JR. NIEL MARTIN ALFRED MAUSNER ROBERT MAY AUBREY MENDLE LAWRENCE MINVIELLE DANIEL MIROLO JOSEPH NATHAN MOOSER, JR. RONALD DAVID MUEH VIRGIL MUHLER JACK MULHALL RALPH NATHAN STUART NEDD ALBERT NIssIM GEORGE OBERLANDER HUGH RICHARD O'CONNOR BERNARD OOTKIN ARNOLD OSTERN EDWIN OWYANG RAYMOND A. PATTERSON ROY IRVING PLATT CEDRIC PORTER MIGUEL PRADO JOHN P, PREOVOLOS AURELIO PULANCO UNTO PYLKKO EDWARD H. QUARG CARL ROBERT QUELLMALZ JACKSON ROOP LAWRENCE ERNEST ROUBLE, JR. IRVING MAURICE RUBINCHIK WILLIAM RUTTER SANFORD A. SCHWALB MEYER SCHWARTZ ROBERT SCOTT DANIEL SHAPIRO HAMILTON SHUTTS CHARLES SILBERSTEIN RALPH MALCOLM SIMON HALL SMITH WINFIELD SMITH JUDSON SOMERS ROBERT JACK SWART EDWARD THOMAS SWEENEY DAVE M. TATSUNO FRED TELLER DONALD TEMPEST EWART THREST LESLIE THORSEN CARL JOHANN TIETZ FRANK TOMASELLO, JR. HOMER TRICE WALTER M. TUBBY DEMOSTHENES M. VANVALES BOB VOEGTLY JOSEPH WAGSTAFF GORDON WAYNE HARLOW LEROY WILLIAMS TOMAMASA YAMAZAKI . ALVIN ZAK Girls HELEN ALDRICH NANCE ANNEAR LORRAINE ALICE ATWOOD MARJORIE AUDSLEY AUDREY BADAL RUTH BAILEY LOIS GEORGINA BAKER ELIZABETH BEANE ERNESTA MARIE BEI ETHEL BENNETT CATHERINE BERINGER MARY BIGGAM BIRDIE BLOCK SHIRLEY BLUM ELEANOR BOLAND BERNICE BOST VIRGINIA BOYAN 100 FACULTY IDENTS MISS GLADYS RESTON . . . Miss Reston was a former French teacher, class sponsor, and counselor. Miss Reston retired in 1956 .... MR. EARL MINKWITZ was also sponsor of the S. F. Youth Association and a coach, besides teaching history. Mr. Minkwitz left in 1955 to become the head of the social studies department at Washington High School ,... MISS ELSIE SCHOU: Miss Schou is a former Lowell history teacher. She retired in 1954. Lowell Facult Stone, Miss M. Strachan, Miss A. Strauss, Miss C. fCain, Mrs. CJ Thomas, Mrs. M, Travers, D. Tucker, F. B. Vasilatos, Miss M. Volandri, Mrs. M. Voyne, M. Wallach, Mrs. A. K. Walsh, O. F. Weaver, Miss A. G Welch, Miss H. A. Commercial Languages PE, Counseling Mathematics Social Studiesg PE Head Language Dept. Science Mathematics Physical Education English English, Traffic English Head of Math. Dept. 1948-1949 1952-1954 1948 1952-1953 1949-1954 1931-1946 1940 1952 1920-1951 1951 1916-1952 1949-1950 1916-1952 Miss LeSeur taught at Lowell from 1958 , 1940 Wescott, Mrs, J. Westfall, Mrs. T. Whitaker, Miss A. White, Mrs. E. A. Whitfield, Mrs. M. F Williams, J. Williams, S. Wilson, Miss J. W. Wolf, B. World, J. B. Worley, W. T. Wurm, R, J. Young, Miss G. F. Zeidler, Miss P. -I9 6 English Languages Languagesg Couns'g English English Mathematics Languages Physical Education Physical Education Science English Artg Social Studies Math. 3 Mech. Draw. Bookkeeper Mrs. Kuhnle was in the English depart- ment from 1934 to 1951. to 1952. 1946- 1952 1926 1949 1946 1953 1931 1927 1954 1951 1952 1952 1952 1947 '1952 -1950 -1948 -1947 -1943 -1953 -1953 I Former Facult Members Mr. Seawell and some former art students. JOHN G. KURTS ED. D. GALLAGHER Myra Jordan, former Dublications advisor, IS now retired. HENRY JENNINGS Melvin Peterson, forrner vice princi- pal, is now principal at Poly. M. A. PLUMB AND MATH PUPILS Mr. M, A. Plumb and some Inembers of his majh rlfvss, He tauzht at Lowell during the 20's and 30 s. MADELEINE BROPHY GERALDINE E. BROWN GLADYS CAGLE vERA COHEN EREDA COLEMAN MARIAN COLTON VIRGINIA FRANCES CONLAN ERANCINE COUTURIER ELIZABETH CROPLEY JUNE CURTS HELEN DAY JEANNE MARIE DEVINE HELEN DICKSON JEAN DORTMUND VIRGINIA DOUGALL GRACE DRAKE BEATRICE DWYER CARLINE EBNER ROSE ERANCOIS RUTH FREEMAN MARION ERONK MARGUERITE GAFFNEY DOROTHY GAULT THELMA GEEEEN TILLIE GEFFEN MARY ANN GILBERT LORETTA GILLESPIE HELEN GOODMAN KATHRYN E. GOODMAN ANNETTE GRENADIER LAURA ISABELLE GROAT LILLIAN GROTE BESSIE GURSKY YOTTA GURSKY JEANNETTE MARIE HANSEN MARJORY HEIM ANNA M. HELMS HELEN HERMANSON DOLORES ALLEYNE HUGHES ELEANOR ALLAN HUNTER GLADYS JACOBS ELIZABETH JONES EDA MAE JOSEPH VIRGINIA KILLEBREW DORIS KRENZ BARBARA MARIA KRUGER GEORGETTE LABORDE JEAN LOUISE LAWRIE SARA LEE LESSER MARION JEAN LEWIS MURIEL I. LINDENMAYER MARIE GENEVIEVE LYMAN DOLORES LYNCH MARY FRANCES LYONS ELEANOR MERCEDES MAINI DOROTHEA MANGELS ADELAIDE MANSFIELD BETTY MCDONALD MARJORIE MCDONOUGH BETTY MEADOWCROET THORA MERCHANT DORIS VIRGINIA MONSON MELBA MONSON ROSE MULLOY CATHERINE TERESA NICOL ALICE HELENA NICOLL DOROTHY PARKER MARGERY PERRY ELSA PPAEP ARGENTINA POLVERINO JANE PORTER HELEN PRICE NORMA REICHELT HAZEL REINHART EVELYN PAULINE REISNER ELvIRA L. RICE LUCILLE RINGEL CICELY ROMERO LENORE VLASTA RONZ HANNAH MEHL ROOD IDA RUBINCHIK MARIAN SANFORD ELIZABETH SARLE JANE SCHULTZ JEAN SHEARER MARIAN SINE FRANCES SKELLY MAR JORIE SLAUGHTER JEAN SOLMONSON LUCIA STAIB VIRGINIA STARR CAROL STERN ELEANOR STOKES SIBYL SWALLOW JEAN TAYLOR PEGGY TURNLEY BABETTE WESSA DORIS WESTMAN ELSIE MAYE WILLIAMS RUTH MARIE WILLIAMS GERALDIN E EVELYN WILSON JANET WRIGHT VALERIE YOUNG CLASS OF JUNE 1932 Boys GARFIELD ABARR ROBERT AGUIRRE 101 ARTHUR B. ALLEN ERVIN O. ANDERSON MARK ANTHONY VERNON L. BADGER RALPH H. BARKOFF SAMUEL H. BASS STANLEY BERLAND NORMAND PAUL BERSON NEIL THOMAS BEST FRANK J. BEVERIDGE EMIERY LOON BINGILEY WOODROW BOWMAN STANLEY BOYANICH THOMAS BRADY DONALD RALPH BRAUER MERVIN J. BRAUNSTEIN HAROLD E. BROWN MAIRVIN H. BROWN, JR. FRANK BUDINSKY CHARLES W. BURKETT, JR. ELBERT BYRNES EDWIN BOWLES CAHILL JOHN EDWARD CAHILL ROBERT CARNEY HARRY J. CARLSON, JR. JAMES TURNER CAIRRIEL THOMAS YEE CHAN LOUIS CHERIN ROBERT CHARLES CHURCH ROBERT HAIROLD COLE EDMUND C. CONROY RAYMOND A, COPERTINI FRANK CLAY CREASIEY BERT DAVIS EDWARD FOON DEA LOUIS L. DE LU WILLIAM C. DEYL THEODORE DILLER ALAN ALFRED DOUGHERTY OIVIND DRANGE JAMES IEGAN, JR. JOHN F. ELLIS JACK EDWARD FALVEY WALTER J. FANICHER, JIR JOHN F. FRANUSICI-I IRVING M. FREEMAN MORRIS FRIEDMAN JOSEPH FUTERNICI-I MAX GALANT IRVING GOBAR BIERTROM J. GOSLINER JOSEPH GRANVILLE JAMES W. GRAVES, JR. JASON M. GRAY WILLIAM C. GREELEY JOHN S. GREEN J. LOXVELL GROVES MAX F. GRUENBERG JACK LEWIS GUNNING VINCENT HADERLE RALPH DONALD HAGUE ROY J. HAM JAMES GIBBONIS HARPE FRANK ARTHUR HARRIS RICHARD B. HAY MERVYN HIEATLIE FRED W, HERMS FRANK C. HICKMAN JOHN R. IUSI ALFRED L. JACKSON HAROLD E. JACKSON HERBERT JACKSON THOMAS L. JOHNSTON JR. EDMUND D. JUNG JACOB KAHN LEO FRIEND KAUBMAN NICK KERHULAS MYRON L. KERN ROBERT C. KEYSTON SAM CHARLES KLAUBER WILLIAM ROBERT KNAPP JAMES KOLIAS THOMAS KORN WALTER P. KRAUSGRILL, JR FRED KRIEG RONALD H. LAMBE PAUL LANGTON JOHN FRANCIS LARSON CLIFFORD S. LAWRENCE, JR. FRIANK YORK LEE HAROLD THEODORE ILEVIN PHILIP LEVY BENNIE C. N. LUM FREDERICK W- LURMIANN VERNE J. MACFARLAN BERNARD MACKALL ALRD CRAWFORD MACKINTOSIH MILTON MACOWSKY THOMAS G. MAI-LONEY GEORGE MARTIN RAYMOND MASON NICKOLAS G. MAXIMOV ROBERT MAY ROBERT J. MAY JAMES W. MCCLENAHAN ROBERT C. MCGILASHAN CHILTON C. MCPHEETERS WILLIAM LESTER MCWOOD EDWARD MELKONIAN 102 Former Facult Members L. GERLOUGH Roger Fanfelle is now in the P.E. Department at Mission High. GREGORY KAST A. SCHWARTZ Mike Voyne, former football coach, is now retired. MRS. J. N. NEPERT Miss Agnes Strachan, former Latin teacherg Mr. Donald Travers is now in the P.E. Department at Balboa High Schoolg Miss Elizabeth Scott, librarian, is on a year's leave of absence to handle a special Board of Education assignmentg and Mr. Eugene Leubner, former German instructor. . THIRD GENERATION Top'row.' Paul Tr1mbel,,'58, Frances Trimbel fCastlehunJ, mother, '27, Dr. Paul Castlehun, grandfather, '96. Marilyn Munter, 57: Rlfhlfd Mllnfff. 54: Dr. Edgar Munter, father, '19, S. Ottinheimer, grandfather, '91. Bottom row: Mike Tobriner, '58, Marrh T b' , f th , '20, 0 T 1, ' df h ' - 1, M k ' - Raymond Marks, father, .335 Byron C0i1f'ma?l,fgf:3ldfi-ithfsrlz, ,091 scar o finer, gran at er, 92, Jo n ar S, 58, Lowell not only has traditions-it is a tradition. Third generation students are no longer a novelty t school. There are over 15 pupils now at Lowell hose mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, to :ay nothing of the great aunts and uncles and grand- parents, attended high school here. The Lowell that the present students know may be ahysically different from the one of their grandparents. l'he ideals and traditions of the modern Lowell, how- ever, are the same as those which were respected 100 fears ago. Lowell prides itself on the fact that there are three enerations of its alumni in many prominent San Fran- .isco families. Yes, Lowell is a family affair! Just a few of the Lowellite families are listed below: Susan Lindner, '56, Harold Lindner, father, '25, ind Lilian Lindner fZobelj grandmother, '04, Carolyn Perkins, '56, Alice E. Perkins CNortonJ, nother, '22, and Dellie Norton, great-aunt. Sandra Walsh, '58, Roberta Walsh, '59, Charles alsh, Jr., father, '35, and Charles Walsh, Sr., grand- ather, teacher. Valerie Harris, '59, Irving Harris, uncle, '27, and Nlorma Abrams fLichtensteinJ, grandmother, '15. Paul Trimble, '58, Frances Trimble fCastlehunj, .MM M ,,,, nf. mother, '27, and Dr. Paul Castlehun, grandfather, '96, Michael Tobriner, '58, Matthew O. Tobriner, fath- er, '20, Oscar Tobriner, grandfather, '92. Marilyn Munter, '57, Richard Munter, '54, Dr. Ed- gar Munter, father, '19, and S. Ottinheimer, grand- father, '91, Cindy Menzies, '58, Vesta Partridge fReadJ, aunt, '11, Mrs. T. Addie CPartridgej, grandmother '02. Dan Pointer, '56, Margaret Thompson fCatagianJ , grandmother, Charles G. Norris, great-uncle, '09, and Frank Norris. Ralph Daniels, '56, Martha Daniels, sister, '54, Matie Daniels fMcLarenj, mother, '25, Joe Daniels, father, 32, Arthur Daniels, uncle, '25 , Maria Novit- ski fDanielsJ , aunt, '29, and Myra Daniels fWinnj, grandmoth-er. Carl Berry, '57, Kenneth Berry, father, '25, and Carl G. Brown, grandfather, '96, Marcy Silberstein, '58, Harold Silberstein, father, '33, Marion Shapiro QSilbersteinj, aunt, '37, Max Brodofsky, great-uncle, '09, and Ann Kuo fBrodof- skyj, great-aunt, '16, John Marks, '58, Raymond Marks, father, '33, By- ron Coleman, grandfather, '09. HERBERT MEYERINCK, JR. FRED W. MOORE WILLIAM ERNEST MOTTRAM HOWARD FRANK NEEDHAM WILLIAM ANDREW NELSON ROBERT R. NORTON, JR. KURT F. NUSS GILMORE O'NEILL JOSE B. PATROCINIO SIDNEY PEARLMAN EMMET MCALLISTER PERRY PAUL A. PFLUEGER, JR. HARRY PIERCE JACK WAYNE POLEY ALLEN L. POOL DAVID POTTER HARRISON L. PRIMES HERBERT E, QUANDT ROBERT J. RADER FRANCIS J. REGAN HENRY R. ROLPH PHILIP E. ROSENBERG MAURICE SALOMON WILLIAM VASQUEZ SAMAYOA GERALD SAMUEL JEROME SAPIRO WESLEY SCI-IEW RAYMOND HAROLD SCHOEN KENDALL I. SHERMAN RANDLE P. SHIELDS MARTIN CARL SHIMAN IWAO TANAKA ROBERT P. THOMPSON WILLARD THURSTON LARRY A.I.DEN TINKER JAMES ELBERT TOWNSEND, JR RICHARD W. TRAVERS WILLIAM J. TREGANOWEN WILLIAM G. 'IREVORROW CHARLES ROBERTS 'FROST HAROLD TVED GRAHAM UNIKEL NATHAN UNIKEL VINCENT A. VAN PRAAG SHERMAN WATKINS ROBERT G. WENZEL WILLIAM S. WHITCOMB CHARLES C. WHITE HENRY ELMER WICKSTROM PETTER E. WILLIAMS BERTRAM JOSEPH WOOD TODD ZAGOREN ALLEN ZAHN NORMAN F. ZECH ROBERT R. ZEIMER Girls EUNICE ABRAMS JANE ALEXANDER BARBARA ELEANOR ALLEN INEZ VIOLA ALLEN RENEE M. ALTER ALMA ANN BACHMAN MARJORIE JEAN BACON LORRAINE HELEN BALTOR GERTRUDE F. BARNETT ELSA BEENFELDT ERIN EFFIE BELSER JANET MARIE BILL E'I7HtEL BLACKFIELD JULIETTE BLOCK STELLA LOUISE BOEHM JESSIE BORGE MARGARET V. BOWEN BILLEE RING BRENDEL DOROTHY H. BROWN JANE SUZANNE BROWN CAROLINE M. BUCI-LER BILLIE BYERS MURIEL BYRNES FRANCES CARPENTER DORIS CHAMBERLIN VIVIAN V. CLACK INEZ M. CLIFFORD BETTY COOPER PATRICIA O. CRAIG WINIFRED J. CREIGHTON BEVERLY M. CRESTO JANET CLAIRE CROSS RHEA DOROTHY DIEDRICH GENEVA DOWELL DOLORES V. DOWNEY YVONNE ELLEN DOYLE EVELYN A. DROIT THELMA MAE DUNBAR MIRIAM ROSALIE DUSCHKIN BEATRICE PAULINE DYSON HELEN DWYER DOROTHY ESTHER EASTON FRANCES ALICE ERICI-I BETTY FULTON FALCONER GRACE M. FAULKNER LORRAINE FELLOM BETTY ELYSE FEIST EVELYN FERRIIER LOIS GERTRUDE FLETCHER GERTRUDE ELAIN FRISK MARY GLAZKO 105 JOSEFHINE GRASSO ALICE GRISHIN ELEANOR LOUISE GUNN FRANCES LOUISE GUTH JUNE HALLINAN GRATIA B.EATRI'CE HALVERSON BARBARA F. HAMPTON MARY RUTH HAVERFIELD MARIE ALICE HILL MLRA HILL UDA GENEVIEVE HOFFMAN DOROTHY F. HOLLIS MARJORIE E. HUTCHINGS ESTHER HELEN HYAMS CLAIRE BLANCHER ISRAEL HORTENSE S. JACOBS GLADYS C. JACOBY DOROTHY B. JAM.Es FLORENCE JOHNSON EDNA MAE JOHNSTON ETHEL WINIFRED JOHNSTON F-RANGES MARJORIE JUDSON MARGARET FERSIS KADING MARGARET KAHMAN MARION KAHMAN BETTY JEAN KAPLAN CLAIRE ANN KATHRINER HARRIET GRACE KAYSER GERTCRUDE OLIVE KELLY ANN KENDALL DONNA KLEINSCHMIDT JOSEPHINE F. KLEMENS 4 ANNABELLE KNIGHT MARY N. KOUFOS JEANNE LAFONTAINE ROBERTA CLAIRE LAUGHLIN VERA LESSER MILDRED SAXE LINSEY JANE LOUGHERY DORIS LOWE EVELYN E. LYMAN BEVERLY B. LYON INEZ VIRGINIA MACCALLUM FLORENCE MAISLER EVELYN L. MARCUSSEN FRANCES EDYTHE MARLOW' EVELYN ADELE MASLIN LENORE MASSONI BARBARA PERKINS MATHIS MARJORY MAYNARD ALMA LORAINE MCLAUGHLIN ANNA PATRICIA MCLEAN CAROLAN MERTENS HELEN MOHR CATHERINE MOONEY DOROTHY LUCLLLE MUIR MARIAN E. NEPER CLAIRE E. NEUMAN MARGARET NWEA PHYLLIS ADELAIDE O'NEAL DOROTHY JOSEPHINE O'NEILL MARY THELMA ORR DOROTHEA PALLVINY ELDA PIVA LIVIA M. PRIGIONI GERTRUDE C. REICH EUDICE RINALDO ELDA RODONI FRANCES Ross ETHEL G. ROTHENSTEIN MURIELLE RUSS HIELEN SALA ELINOR SANFORD BERNICE F. SARRAILLE JEAN MAXWELL SAXE ANITA SCHECTER DORIS BEVERLY SCHOENWALD ELIZABETH KATHRYN SCOTT JANICE ADRIANNE SCOTT VERNA E. SECHINI HELEN KATHLEEN SHERMAN MARLIE 'ELIZABETH SIBAK MARGARET ANITA SOLLEY SARA ROSE SFEIER MARTHA ANN STANLEY LUCILLE JANET STEIN MARTHA .ELEANOR STONE EDENE E. STRICKLAND MINETTA SWITTON BEVERLY TAIT SHIRLEY THORESON VERNA EUNICE TOUSLEY JUANITA TREVASKIS ETHEL MAY VAN TASSEL RUTH VAN WINKLE RUTH WALCOTT MARY ELIZABETH WARDE MARTHA L. WARNECKE BARBAIRA JEAN WATSON HELENE WESTMAN ANN LOUISE WHITNEY I-IARRIET A, WHITNEY GRACE MARY WHITBY KATHRYN WILLIS LORNA DALE WREN LILLIAN -AMELIA ZALEISKI 104 Histor of the Scroll and L The Honor Society of the Lowell High Sohool, as it was first known, was organized in May, 1905. The leading spirit in establishing such a society was Cedric Cerf, 1905. In january, 1907, the name was changed to the Winged L and Scroll Society. The charter members were H. W. Johnson, J. A. Roncovieri, H. Long, U. Pollack, H. H. Maundrell, W. Leib, and Tom Laine. The Winged L and Scroll Society was reorganized in 1919 and its name was changed to the Scroll and L. The purpose of the society is to promote good, clean activities in the school and to keep harmony among the different branches of the student enterprises. A member of this society must have worked faith- fully and unselfishly in some way for his Alma Mater, as the motto read: In the Service of Lowell. This tradition has been the same throughout the years. Up until the last 25 years the Scroll boys, main activities here at Lowell included supervision at the rallies and participation in the Newcomers Receptions The Scroll boys of today participate in many activi- ties. The members of th-is honor and Service society Stand for leadership, service, and high scholarshipi Tihe Scroll and L boys may be seen before and after a rally, decorating the windows overlooking the court with flags. During the rally they do their best to main- tain the type of conduct that keeps the standards ol Lowell rallies so high. They also help to make thc Newcomers Reception and the H9-L10 picnic a big success. The Scroll prove themselves willing to tackle a jo when they join with the Shield to present the Sprin Carnival. The job of decorating the court with stream- ers and other brightly colored attire is done by the Scroll. There are other Services which the wearers of red and white caps perform. They are a great help the P.T.A. and do a fine job keeping Order at athletic events. SCROLL SKIT A group of Scroll boys getting ready for a rally skit in january, 1926. Included in the group are Lee Valianos, Tom Schulte, Stanley Breyer, and Russell Klein. l I Histor of the Shield and L Miss Gladys Lorigan has been the sponsor of the Shield and L since 1946. She was also a member V of the society during her undergraduate days a-t Lowell. It's a proud Lowell girl who has the honor of wearing a red and white hat, signifying that she is a member of the Shield and L. This hat stands for many things: service, good grades, participation in school activities, and a willingness to serve others. The Shield and L Society is an outgrowth of the Winged L and Scroll Society. It was organized in December, 1909 by the Winged L and Scroll Society. The girls' organization was to have the same purpose as the boys'-to work for the best interests of Lowell. The members who comprised the first group of Shield girls were Alvina Barth, Marianne Bell, Win- nifred Bridge, Hilda Brandenstein, Edith Frisbie, Jes- sie Harris, Marcella Mcllvain, Etta Schalk, Harriet Pasmore, and Mildred Lincoln. The Shield girl of those days did not have as many projects or activities as they have today. Their prin- cipal jobs were Newcomers Reception and aiding the freshmen in getting settled here at Lowell. The girls in the Society today have many projects and activit-ies such as the Freshman Reception, the H9- L10 picnic, the Christmas gift drive for needy chil- dren in which the Scroll Society also participates, and the Spring Carnival. The members of these societies have been recom- mended by the sponsors of school service groups and extra-curricular activities. Faithful and unselfish service, good character, and satisfactory scholarship are prerequisites for consid- eration and selection by faculty committees meeting with the ofiicers of the organizations. Each term the number admitted is equal to the number of members who are graduating, thus keep- ing the membership of each society at twenty-three, except that by unanimous recommendation of the members in any particular term and unanimous agree- ment of the faculty committee of that term, the mem- bership may be increased to not more than thirty for the succeeding term if there are students whose record of service justifies this increase. These two groups constitute an important part of the famous Lowell tradition, for Lowell was the first school in San Francisco to inaugurate such organi- zations. CLASS OF DECEMBER 1932 Boys ALAN ADDELSTONE ROBERT W. ANDERSON RAM BAGAI CRAIG BARBASH JOHN D. BINGI-IAM KEITH BLACKMAN JOHN ROBERT BLUM PAUL M. .BONACCORSI MARVIN THOMAS BONDS THEODORE J. BRENNER ALAN F. BROOKS ARTHUR BROWN, JR. JACKSON BUNNER ROBERT C. CAMERON PATROCINIO S. CARILLO LEO AUGUSTUS CASTLER SILAS S. CHINN JOHN PHILIP COGHLAN, JR. PAYNE CONVERSE JOHN WILSON COOKE WILLIAM V. COOTS DONALD CRAWFORD HARRISON S. CROMAN, JR. JOSEPH W. DANIELS JULIAN STANLEY DAVIS T. HENRY DAY ALFRED DITO CLARENCE C. DONG JACK DONOVAN EDGAR H, DOUGLAS, JR. JAMES DORR EDDY RICHARD EDDY ALLEN ELIA JOHN WILLIAM ENGL HAROLD M. FARLEY JOHN EDWIN FARRAR EUGENE FRAMPTON TADASHI FUJIMOTO BILL GALLAGHER LOUIS MARL GETZ ELVIN A. GIACOBBI, JR. DOUGLAS C. GILES HARRY RUSSELL GOFF EUGENE KERTIS GRACZOL SHELDON GRIFFIN DONALD LUCIUS GRUNSKY STANLEY GUYER WALTER H. HABEKOSS JOHN HAMILTON ROBERT N. HAMMOND JEROME B. HANNIGAN JOSEPH G. HARRINGTON ROBIN B. HATFIELD CHARLES H. HESS JULIAN HIRSCH I-IGAI-HO HONG STANFORD L. HOPKINS EMILE J. HURABIELLE RICHARD HURST APHILIP B. JOHNSON FRANCIS W, JONES JOHN KANEO KADONAGA EUGENE KAHN HARRY M. KARONSKY ADRIAN W. KAUFMANN HIROSHI KAWAHARA SUMIO KAWASKI HERBERT L. KAYE ROLAND P. KEARNS, JR. CHARLES LADENHEIM RBGINALD LEIPSIC JOHN B. LEITH IRVING LEWIN EDWIN R. LEWIS ARMIN CHARLES LEWOHL KWONG LIM ROBERT R. LINKS THEODORE S. LISBERGER MARTIN J. LOUGHMAN EDMUND B. MACDONALD RICHARD A. MACGOWAN OSCAR MADFES CHARLES J. MAGGIONCALDA HARRY A. MANDOLI SIDNEY MARTENSTEIN BERNARD v. MARTIN FRANCIS c. MARTIN FRANK MATOSICH GEORGE ELMO MAUER XVILLIAM R. MCEVERS XVILLIAM H. MENZIES, JR. RUBEN E. MERELES, JR, RICHARD A. MINGsT XVILLIAM A. MINGsr JOHN s. MITCHELL, JR. FRANK PAUL MILLER XYXILLIAM R. MUIR, JR. MAX MUROV XVILLIAM E. NOLAND, JR. CAMPBELL s. O'NEILL ARTIHUR c. OUTSEN, JR. ROBERT RoY OWENS HENRY E. PACKSCH-ER MARK PAUL CHARLES E. PEACOCK JOHN HENRY PEARSON I0 5 ROY PEARSON GEORGE PBTROPOOLES RAYMOND PURCELL S. VINCENT QUARTARARO ROBERT A. RANZONI WILLIAM B. RAYMOND ROBERT EDGAR REICH ROBERT A. REIMUS FRED 'G, ROSENBERG EDGAR S. ROSENSTOCK JAMES J. ROSTLER G-EORGE F. RUEF ARDASH A. SAROYAN FROLAND SAY7SE'ITI'E BERNARD SCHILLER FRANK W. SCHIRMER FRED SCHWARTZ BEN SHENSON DEMITRI B. SHIMKIN GARARETT GREER SIMONS BYRD OLIVER SMITH HAROLD B. SMITH WELTON C. SMITH WALTER A. SONNENSCHIEIN ALFRED B. SPALDING, JR. JOSEPH STEIN WILLIAM S. STEVENS NORMAN G. STILLER PHLLLIP C. SUPNET RALRH TALCOTT CHARLES ALBERT TAYLOR GRANT TODHUNTER GEORGE H. TORNEY WILLIAM P. VERBER DAVID JAMES WALSH 'WILLIAM G. WEHE ROBERT M, WERNKER WALTER O. WILLIAMS RICHARD WILSON BERNARD M. WORKEN HOWARD LUBARSKY Girls ROSE DOROTHY AARON MARY BARIONA CAROL LOIS BECKER MARGARETTE L. BELDING HILDA FRANCES B-EVRKWITH RUTH E. BLAIR ELEANOR BLINN DOROTHY RUTH BLOCK LORRAINE EDYTHE BLOOM CAROLE DOROTHY BOWEN ANNE CURTIS BOWMAN WILLETTE BRENNER ANGELINA BROVERO BARBARA CASAD MARTHA ROSE CASTLE FRANCES L. CHAN OLGA HUMBERT COLLINS KATHLEEN MARIE COTTRELL BARBARA COX ESTHER DIANE DAHLSTROM JUANITA ELIZABETH DALL MARY ALICE DEMING ILLMAH LAVBRNE DENSFORD DOROTHY ANN DOUGALL REYITA DU GAND LUCILLE ALICE ELVIN RUTH EPSTEEN CELESTNE JEWEL FOGERTY BARBARA MARIE FRAHM BERNICE FRANKEL GERTRUDE NE. FREED EUGENIA GARBARINO LILLIAN GOLDSTEIN MARY ANNE GOOLO BEATRJCE GOLRDINO FLORENS E. GROTH MARIA GRASSI JEAN ROSSEN HANSEN BARBARA JANE HARDIES LEONE A. HARRIS GUENN VIVIAN HARCOURT DORIS EMILY HARTTER VIRGINIA IM. HAUSMAN DARATHIE HESTHAL BERJE HONG VIRGINIA MARGARET HUEY 'LUCILLE ALBERTA JACOBSEN EDNA L. JONES ANITA DOROTHY JOST JANE ELLENE KAHN LORRAINE MARIE KILIQENNY RUTIH PAULINE KLEIN JEANE MARIE KNOX VIRGINIA LOUISE KOHNKE CELESTIN.E A. KOSSOY RUTH M. KRUTMEYER ELINOR JANE LARSEN BARBARA J. LASCELLES CECIL MARJORIE LATZ BEVERLY FRANCES LEMKE MARGARET LIND VIRGINIA C. LIVINGSTON VIRGINIA LOFQUIST DOROTHY M. LONG FANNIE LOO 106 l-listor of the Big Sisters During the year 1941, there were many confused and lonely girls in the schools of San Francisco and Lowell High School was no exception. These depressed girls had come from other cities and places, and from homes which had been sadly disrupted by the war. Ad- justments were many and difficult and friendly hands and faces were sorely needed. Mr. Leroy Stephens, who was the principal of Lowell at this time, requested that something be done to keep the new students with- in the gates of Lowell, and thus the Big Sisters came into being. At this time Mrs. Mary Close was the first sponsor. It was thought that if each new girl who entered Lowell had one friend upon whom she could depend, her school life at least, could be made easier and happier. Following this suggestion, the teachers of junior and senior students were asked to recommend girls with high standards and ideals, maturity of judgment, a well developed sense of responsibility, and grades which would remain high with additional responsibility. Upon the quality of each girl selected, depended the success or failurehof the Big Sister movement. The first year the Big Sisters only had a chairman and a senior advisor. More girls were appointed, upon recommendation, and an assistant chairman came into oflice when it became evident that the Big Sisters were doing a lot of good. Each ,term there was additiona work and more responsibilities, therefore the need for special leaders grew.The following oflicers were added a secretary, a social chairman, and an assistant socia. chairman. These officers were appointed upon the rec- ommendations of the Big Sister oliicers, who had watched the quality of the work the girls had done the- previous term. The work for the Big Sisters grew as each term pros gressed and suggestions for additional tasks were made by the Big Sisters themselves. Once in awhile a new girl would think of something which could be done to make the newcomer more welcome and if it was feasi' ble it was done. The Big Sisters is now a well established organizae tion at Lowell and one of the most helpful. This or- ganization has helped thousands of new girls to be' come acquainted with Lowell, its students, and its traditions. Recently the Big Sisters have started a morning stud session in the girls' cafeteria before school. So, the Bi Sisters not only help new girls become acquainted wit Lowell, but they help them with their studies and wit activities. FORMER BIG SISTERS Top row: A scene from the varieties in 19505 The Human Christmas Tree from the varieties in 1950. Both acts were put on by the Big Sisters. Boliom row: Big Sisters party in 1951. Introduction of officers at the Big Sisters party in 1952. Mrs. Close is honored guest. In keeping with the times the 1945 Big Sisters put on a patriotic skit as their contribution to the Varieties of that year. l-listor of the Big Brothers The Big Brothers organization was organized in 935 by Mr. Hudson Monroe, Mr. Charles Walsh, and r. Ben Neff. This group was founded in order that :he new boys who came to Lowell would have at least one friend and person whom they could rely on to help them become acquainted with the school, its traditions, lstudents, and teachers. In the first years of the organization, only those -boys who were mem-bers of the Block L were permitted on this society, The duty of the Big Brothers at this time was to help the Scroll boys keep order at the rallies. Also, each boy on the society was assigned to a registry and was responsible for all the 'boys in that room. Upon Mr. Monroe's retirement, Mr. Ray Milton ook over the duties as sponsor of the Big Brothers. esides the change in sponsorship there have been nu- merous changes in the code of the Big Brothers. Now the Big Brothers is composed of upper division boys who have been recommended by the sponsors of different organizations, a radical change from the old way of determining membership. This way more boys who wish to do something for their school have an op- lportunity to become a Big Brother. During the past years the membership has grown quite rapidly and this past fall there were 30 Big IBrothers aiding the new boys at Lowell. All of these Big Brothers have done an excellent job of making the new students feel quite at home and more than wel- come. This past fall the Big Brothers have done some new things under the guidance of Mr. Milton, who has been more than willing to give up his time to these boys and their activities. Some of the activities which are very new to this organization are an auditorium program, which was held this past year, and a won- derful barbecue which was held in Golden Gate Park. Also, the Big Brothers are the sponsors of what is termed an athletic field-day, As the years have progressed, the activities and re- sponsibilities of these boys have expanded a great deal, Now the Big Brothers wear arm bands, guard the rally gates, are the sponsors of an annual track meet in which the winning registry is given a trophy, and co- sponsor the twirp dance with the Big Sisters. To conclude this history of the Big Brothers we would like to say that the success of this organization would have been impossible if it were not for the won- derful aid which the teachers have given this organiza- tion, and most of all this group would not be here and doing the good job that they are doing, if it were not for the wonderful co-operation that each and every boy who has been a Big Brother has given both the spon- sor and the school. ANNELIESE MARTINA LUTHER EDA MARGARET MALoY EEULAH MARKARIAN JOAN MAUSNER -ESTELLE JOAN MCDANIELL RUTH A. MOGOWAN VIRGINIA MARGARET MCKELLUP ALLAYNE MAY MCKINLEY BLANCI-IE MCLANE MIRIAM SYBIL MILLNER DOROTHY EMILIE MINGST ADELAIDE MOI-IR KATHLEEN L, MOLINEUX H. VIRGINIA MOYNIHAN FLORENCE T. NAKAGAWA NADELL NATHAN HELEN LOUISE NEUENIBERG MARIE ISABELLE OLIVERO LDRNA EDITH oLsEN MAIRIE oLsoN DOROTHY owENs DORIS DURLING PADILLA MILDRED PEALE DORIS IKENE PEAT GERALDINE M. RADEMAKER ROSALIE RAN RUTH ELIZABETH RAPKEN MARY ELIZABETH REDFERN BERNICE FRANCES REYNOLDS JANE A. REYNOLDS VIRGINIA MAE REYNOLDS JUANITA RUBIO EDITH c. SCHRADER RAMoNA HARRIET SCHWARTZ BERNICE sHAERAN . ISAIBEL E. SHAW BARBARA ANN SILLER HELEN LILLIAN SILVERSTEIN IRMA SMITH JANE ELIZABETH SONDERUP TI-IELMA STARKE ELLEN-MARIE SVANIE ALICE JANET SWENSON SHIRLEY THALL EERNICE ESTELLE TISHLER sUzANNE A. VAN SCI-IAICK MARY ELIZABETH VODDEN DOROTHY M. WAGGONER VIRGINIA MARIE WAGNER RUTH CHRISTINE WALKEIR BARBARA KUHN WEHSER YvoNNE CARMEL WETZEL LORRAINE RUTH WOOD MURIEL WOODWARD 'EJDNA ELAINE YoUNG zoRA ZAK CLASS OF JUNE, 1933 Boys HOWARD ABRAMSON MASON ABRAMSON ARNOLD ADDLESTONE ANTONIO AGUILAR PEDRO ALGAS OTTO ANDERSON RICHARD AUER CLAIR AUSTIN WILLIAM BAKER BENSON BANKS LAWRENCE BEDECARRE BENJAMIN BENSON CLARK BENSON ELLIS BERRY LANGWITH BERRY LEROY BILSBOROUGH PRICE BOLTON NICHOLAS BONFILIO ALBERT BRAIVERMAN WILLIAM BRASFIELD JACK BRIGHAM RICHARD BRIGHAM GERALD BROWN JOSEPH BRUCIA JOHN BRUNTON TOM BUTLER ROBERT CAI-IILL PAUL CAIN GEORGE CROAL JACK CARLSON WILLIAM CASEY MAURICE CHASE CARROLL CHATHAM HARRY CHONG EDMOND COHN WALTER CONWAY ROBERT COWDEN JOHN CRABBE WARREN DANFORD DONALD DASSONVILLE WARREN DESMIDT ROBERT DEVELBISS HAROLD DIECKMANN PHILIP DILLER ERNEST DOBSON JOHN DRISCOLL ROGER DRUEHL MALCOLM DUNPHY ALLAN EBER 107 ' ALBERT EBERSPACHER ROBERT ENGLISH HOWARD ERLENHEIM CHARLES EVANS BRUCE EARNOW DAVIS FIELD TEOTIMO FIGUERAS WILLIAM FOSTER CARL EOSSELIUS MORRIS ERIEDBERC THOMAS CANNON JOSE GARCIA RALPH CARRY JANK GEISEN FRANK GINDICK ARTHUR COINS SAM GOLDSTEIN PRED GRAF JOHN GRAZIANO ALBERT CREENBERC EARL GREGORY NAT GROTTE ROBERT CRUNSKY GILBERT HAHN JAMES HAIT JOHN HAMMOND ROY HANEY ALVIN HARRIS CHARLES HAYES FRED HENRIQUES RUDY HOLTERMAN STANFORD HORN LLOYD HOWARD CEORCE HURST MARVIN INMAN ROBERT JENKINS CEORCE JOHNSON WILLIAM KAHN TERUO KASUCO REGINALD KELLY RICHARD KOSHLAND WILLIAM LAMBERT ROBERT LANCTOT BOB LATZ CEORCE LAURENT GLENN LAWLER Ross LAWRENCE LEE LEHOUSSE KENNETH LERUM CEORCE LETTUNICH ROBERT LEVIT LAWRENCE LIKENS WILLIAM LOVE WILEED LUCKY EUGENE LYTLE HUGH MACKENZIE ALBERT MACCIO JAMES MALAMIS ARTHUR MALM HOWARD MARKUSE TOM MAUER WALTER MCCALLUM CARROLL MCCAUCHAN ADOLPH MEYER JAMES MILLER WILLIAM MOLINEUX ELIAS MORAEKA JACK MORE ROBERT MORRIS ROBERT Moss JOHN MUELLER WILLIAM MUNTER MAKIO MURAYAMA WILLIAM MURPHY MORTON NAI-IMAN RICHARD NEWELL TOSHIO NINOMIYA JAMES O'MALLEY VERNON O'NEILL WILLIAM OSTERMAN ARTHUR PALLAS JAMES PHIPPS ALEXANDER PIRVULESC ROBERT POMMER HORATIO RANDALL ROBERT REBOK ROBERT RHODE PAUL RILEY LEONARD ROBINSON JEROME ROCKMAN JULES RODICOU AUGUSTINE ROSASCO HAROLD ROSENBERC JACK SALZMAN ALBERT SARRAIL EICHI SATO WILBUR SCHAFER ALBERT SCHWARTZ MARTIN SCHWARTZ MORRIS SCHWARZ JOSEPH SEXTON LAWRENCE SHEEHAN ALFRED SHEPHERD HAROLD SHERMAN MASASHI SHIMOSAKA BERNARD SHIPNUCK HAROLD SILBERSTEIN MERVYN SIMON 108 O The Good Old Days!! fEditor,s note: During the one hundred years of Boys' High and Lowell High, things have not run smoothly at all times. Every so often students and ad- ministrators did not see eye to eye on some School rule or situation. Boys, High alumni may recall the following incident. We donlt feel that the reader could get the full flavor of the situation unless we printed the entire story which was run in the September 20, 1890, issue of the San Francisco Examiner. Here is the story, complete with headlines, which had top position on page 3 of the newspaperj A HIGH SCHOOL REBELLION Principal Morton's Rule Protested Against as Tymnnical Girls Must Go to School Alone The Boys May Lift Their Hats and Say Good Morning, but They Must Not Escort the Young Ladies to or From School-A Committee Secretly Formed To Denounce the Obnoxious Regulation. The following communication was received at the Examiner ofhce yesterday: Boys' High School Boys, High School September 17, 1890 To the Editor of the Exfznziner-Sir: Six of us have been selected as a committee by the pupils of the Boys' High School, to ascertain by what authority the conduct of our Principal is maintained, and we know of no better way than by referring the matter to you. In the first place, our Principal, Mr. Frank Morton, has made several odious laws in regard to acknowledg- ing the acquaintance of young ladies on the street. fSome of these young ladies we have known all our 1ife.j This causes a great deal of trouble and many estrangements. For instance, a young lady wishes to speak to us. We have the alternative of sneaking off and leaving her wondering and looking after us, or being expelled from school. As you may easily per- ceive, by just putting yourself in our place, this is very aggravating to us. Many of the young gentlemen of the school are of age. His conduct is that of a petty tyrant, and we cannot stand it any longer. There is a document in circulation, with about 270 signatures, that the undersigned shall leave school unless this overbearing pedagogue is re- moved or his laws repealed. We are sanctioned in our plans by most of the girls, two of whom are on the committee and several are teachers. Wishing you to ascertain if his conduct is justifiable, and answer in Friday's Examiner, we remain yours respectfully, I COMMITTEE OF THE BOYS HIGH SCHOOL PK wk ak ak An intellectual-looking gentleman with black whiskers and a sad expression stood on the curbston yesterday in front of the Boys High School, which i situated on a high ridge on Sutter Street, between Gough and Octavia, and kept a close watch of thd street for a quarter of a mile to the eastward. Boys and girls alighted from the cable cars that stopped before the school, and on these the saturnine man frowned gloomily. As soon as the male pupils caught sight of him they slackened their steps and allowed the girls to walk: ahead, which they did Very demurely indeed. To these young men and women the Principal paid but little attention beyond a frown of recognition his mind apparently being focused upon a throng Oli pupils coming up from Larkin Street. The young men sauntered along with their book under their arms chatting with one another. The were well-dressed and neat in appearance, and were remarkable for their bright, intelligent countenances While they seemed to be taking that part oil life easy which led from home to school, the youn lady pupils with apprehensive glances at the gloom living Statue on the Ridge hurried on as if they feared to be late, although it lacked twenty minutes of school time. When they were on the point of overtaking a group of boy pupils, the girls quickened their steps and passed them without looking to the right or to ther left or giving the faintest sign of recognition. Still the Statue on the Ridge glared down the sloping street with hypnotic eye. IRREVERENT CANARIES An Exfznnner reporter, noting these constrained ac- tions of the pupils, stopped three of them and made inquiry as to the identity of the Statue, which evi- dently was surrounded with an environment of gloom. For all that, the morning was sunny, and even some canary birds in a window of the house adjoining the high School warbled merrily as though they recked not whether it was vacation time or otherwise. Oh! replied a strapping young fellow with a downy mustache, that's Bones. Who is he?,' He is Frank Morton, Principal of the Boys High School, and the boys dOn't love him so they call him Bones. Why 'Bones,?,' I dont know. From skull and crossbones, prob- ably. His presence on the sidewalk lowers the tempera- ture. The Great Rebellion Of course you wouldn't mind it because you are not a pupil. But he is very unpopular. For the past ytwo months he has been rigidly enforcing a rule that none of the boys shall walk to or from school with any of the girls or hold conversation with them on the street. We are permitted to say good day or good morning, and touch our hats to the girls in passing, but we must say nothing more. The boys, and girls too, are chafing, against this rule. They believe it to be arbitrary and uncalled for, and beyond that a reflection on the manhood of the boys and the womanhood of the girls. THEY ARE YOUNG GENTLEMEN That sounds funny, doesn't it? continued the downy-mustached youth, but it is true. We can see no harm in accompanying a young lady pupil to or from school. We are not roughs or hoodlums and it seems to us to be a very un-American Order. Is the rule pretty generally Observed? asked the reporter. Only when Bones is in sight, was the reply. I walk with a young lady acquaintance or schoolmate whenever I meet her, 'because I think it is nothing more than courtesy and good breeding to do so. It is much better than allowing a girl to walk alone and be ex- posed to the winks and observations of street-corner loafers, but Bones doesnit think so. I really believe that he cannot digest his lunch for fear that the boys and girls will be walking together. Do you know what caused the rule ? was asked, was there ever any scandal arising out of the associ- ation of the sexes? A 'CAUSELESS ORDER NO, I have never heard of any, and, in fact, there never has been any talk or scandal for the past two years while I have been attending the school. That is why the girls and boys protest against the regulation as arbitrary and tyrannical. It is evidently the product of an over-suspicious nature. I understand that the order is only a verbal one and that it has been in existence for about two years, but within the last month or so it has been stringently enforced under pain of suspension for a repeated Offense. But I and many of the other boys dOn't propose to pay any at- tention to it, and we dOn't. How do you get around it? was asked. Easily enough. We know that Bones, although terrible, is not superhuman and that he cannot see around a cornerfl When asked whether he knew the authors of the foregoing communication the young man replied that he did not, and that if he did he would not tell for fear that they might get into trouble with Principal Morton on account of it. He admitted that there was intense feeling among the boys in regard to the Order, and he would not be surprised if a committee had been formed to protest under cover against the useless and unmanly regulation. Another thing that the boys don't like, added the young man, is the fact that the Principal finds out everything the boys say and do, and we believe that there are spies and informers among our number. This looks to us to be a very degrading and un- American kind of business. The informer is bad enough, but the one who uses the informer is worsef, Good morning, said the young man, lifting his hat to a young lady who passed. MOrn', she responded with a choking utterance as she hurried by as from a contagion. Her eyes were fixed on the black-whiskered statue on the ridge. THE RULE DISOBEYED Among others interviewed was a handsome manly looking fellow about twenty years of age who was extremely reticent until assured that his name would not be mentioned in the matter. He had just taken leave of a young lady on the corner of Sutter and Polk streets and was proceeding toward his own home when accosted by the reporter. Oh, yes, the rule is in force, he said, but it is not fully obeyed you may be sure. For myself I pay very little attention to it, for I do not think any school- master has a right to force such a regulation on the boys when outside the schoolhouse, and a large number of us are nearly of age and fully competent to under- stand what propriety and decency mean, and I do not see why, if we know certain young ladies in the classes, we should be compelled to pass them in the street when we happen to be going in the same direc- tion. What possible harm can there be in walking be- side and chatting with a female member of our classes as we are proceeding toward the school? I have heard of boys and girls both being sus- pended for doing such a thing, and I think it is an injustice to say the least. I know there has been considerable indignation among the pupils at the high school about the matter, and I was aware that there had been some preconcerted action taken, and I suppose it was referred to a com- mittee. No, I never was punished for escorting a young lady to and from school, but I suppose it was only because I was not noticed. THEY SHOULD BE INDIGNANT ' Another bright young fellow, who also begged that his name be kept out of print, said: I don't know much about girls in general or about the girls of the high school, but I should think that they would be indignant about a rule which would pre- vent their gentlemen friends and classmates from speaking a friendly word or two going to and from school. MORRIS SINGER JOSEPH soWMA SAMUAL SPEIER ROBERT sTAHLNECKER WALTER STEVENS BERT STOEE TETSUO sUGIYAMA KING CHUEN TOM LAWRENCE TOMSKY LELAND TONG YOUNG TOY DAVID TRICE WARREN VANDERBURGH HERBERT VECKI JOSEPH vERzA GEORGE WALL XVILLIAM WALLACE LOUIS WAX EDWIN WEINBERG SANFORD WHITE ALMA WILLIAMSON HAROLD WINTER LOUIS WIRGLER MORRIS WISEFIELD GEORGE WOLLENBERG JACK WOOSTER MASAO YAMADA HARRIS YOUDALL ALBERT YOUNG ARCHER ZAMLOCH STANFORD ZIMET Girls FANNIE ABEND ' DOROTHY ABRAHAM LOIS ALFREY LAUREL AMES VIRGINIA ATTERBURY DOROTHY AUDSLEY CATHERINE AUSTIN BETTY BAI-IMEER VIRGINIA BARNEY LUCILLE BARSOCCHINI ELSIE BASSETT ROBIN BEARDSLEY SHIRLEY BENSTOCK LOIS BERNE LEONA BIGLOVSKY MABELLE BOWERMAN ROMER BOWMAN ALTHEA BRESSI BETTY BROWN MARY BUSSEY BETTY JO BUTLER KATHLEENE BUTLER GRACE BUXTON ALICE CAMPBELL NORMA CARLSON VERONICA CASSIDY RITA CHAPPUIS GLADYS CHINN ELMIRA COBURN MARJORIE COHEN DORATHY COLLMAN JOANNE CONLAN DOROTHY CONNELL ROSE CORRAO DOROTHY CROSBIE ISABEL DAVIS DOROTHY DEERING MARIAN DRAKE FLORENCE EHLERS MAXINE EKLUND JEANE ELLIS MURIEL ERI-ILICH ' JOSEPHINE EVENSON MARY FINCH EDNA FINNILA PATRICIA FLAHERTY HELEN FRANK VIRGINIA FRIEL MARY FUNG CAROL GOLDEN LYDIA GORBATENKO MARJORIE GREER BERNICE GRENADIER BONNIE GUINEE HELEN HANEY BILLIE HARRISON MARY EDITH HARRON HELEN HARTZER HELEN HAWKES JANIS HECHT MARGUERITE HOBBS MARIE HOLST EDITH HUMPHREY ELINOR JACOB CONSTANCE JAMES ANN JEFFERY NELMA JOHNSON BETTY JUDELL CECILIA KASS EDA KAVIN EMILY KELLY MARY KING YETTA KIRSCH ENID KISLINGBURY ATHENA KORINTHIAS LOUISE KRAUSPE IDA KREBS OLIVE KREBS GLADYS KYNE ADELL LAGER NATALIE LAPKIN JERRY LEBRECHT MARIE LEE MARGARET LEHRKE MARY LEICHTER MILICENT LEPETICH MARVIS LEVIN VIRGINIA LINDEN LENORE LONDON JEANETTE LUBLINER WINIFRED MARCUSSEN LAURA MCENERY VIRGINIA MCPHERSON CHERIE MEHERIN BEATRICE MERLE BARBARA MICHAEL EMMA MILES MARGARET MILLER SHIRLEY MILLER ALCIE MITCHELL VERA NELSEN VIRGINIA NEWSOM BERYL O'CONNER ANNABELLE OLSEN KATIE OLSEN EVELYN OLSON PATSY O'NEIL ELISABETH PAHL WANONA PALMER NATALIE PARK JUNE PARRISH VIRGINIA PAYNE HELEN PERRY MERYL PINGER FRANCES PORTER DOROTHY PRAETZEL JUNE PURCELL CATHERINE RAMACIOTTI JUNE RAND FRANCES RICHARDSON MARY ROBERT EDNA RODGERS BETTY ROSSETTI HELEN RUDERMAN LILLIAN RUDERMAN CAROLYN RYLANDER MURIEL SANDQUIST ANITA SCHAEFFER BERTHA SCI-IAPIRO JEAN SCHERMERHORN HELEN SCHULBERG SYLVIA SCULNICK JEANETTE SHENSON HELENE SOLOMON JANE SPERB MARION STAHL HELEN STENSON BERNICE STERNSHER ETHEL T s ONE CECILIA STORCH GEORGLE THIERBACH BETTY THORNE v1v1AN TORLAKSON MARTAN VON HUsEN BERNICE WACHOLDER ENID WALKER CAROL WALLERSTEIN KATHLEEN WALSH JANICE WELsP1EL MADELLNE WERNER EDITH WHITE LORRAINE WLGMORE GRACE WILSON SUSAN WOLFF CARLTTA YATES BEss YELLIN JEAN YOUNG BEATRICE ZEISS SELMA ZINMAN CLASS OF DECEMBER, 1933 Boys NARCISO ARCIA WILLIAM ASHLEY CHARLES BABCOCK MILTON BABITZ ROBERT BALL CHARLES BECKER ROBERT BISHOPP GEORGE BLACKMORE GEORGE BLOCK GERALD BOLLERT MAX BOVERMAN GORDON BOOKE THOMAS BOWE ROY BROOKS WILLIAM CAIN EUGENE CAMOUS ROBERT CAMPBELL JACK CARR HENRI CHARPIOT JOSIAH CHASE ALBERT CHENEY MELVIN COHN 110 The Great Rebellion There are no girls in my class, so that temptation was never thrown in my way, and I have not been punished, but I know of two other young fellows who very recently had to submit to the disgrace of a week's suspension on account of speaking to class- mates while going toward the school. The young lady was also suspended for a week, I think. I heard some of the boys talking about a pro- test. I don't know what I should do if my sweetheart happened to be a schoolmate, but I think I should take the consequences and speak to her, whether Mr. Morton could see me or not. Several other boys expressed similar opinions, but not one of them would consent to his name being mentioned in connection with the interview. Neither would they divulge the names of the committeemen. The teachers in the high school, several of whom were seen, were equally reticent about the matter, and their knowledge of the regulation seemed to be very vague. PREPARING THE EXPLOSIVES Professor Winn, who instructs the youth of the school in the intricacies of physical science, was found in his laboratory surrounded by 'half-a-dozen 'bright faced boys aproned deep in the pleasures of mixing acids, bromides, chlorides and other dangerous and odoriferous substances. His face at once assumed a look of deep perplexity when asked about the regulation, and it was some time before he was able to remember anything about it. I don't quite remember any such rule, he said, but there may be one. I think, however, if I saw two pupils, a girl and boy, walking together, I should probably request them to separate. I know of no trouble which has ever come to light and which might have caused such a rule, but I suppose if the Principal has made such a regulation it is to prevent anything wrong occurring. If such a rule exists, and I do not say it does not, it was not made to prohibit all the young men from speaking to the young ladies, for it is only fair to assume that a very large percentage of the pupils are ladies and gentlemen, but to guard against the few black sheep which are found in the best regulated schools. You can readily understand that one difficulty would give this school a black eye for many years and it is to guard against anything happening that the rule was made. Of course we could not enforce the rule against the bad boys alone, but should make it apply to all. I don't know as I should report a young man whom I thought to be a gentleman for a breach of discipline of this kind, though I would probably speak to him and tell him to be more careful. I don't know as any great harm could result from the simple fact that the pupils walk along together, but I myself think it is well enough to guard against contingencies. l SOME SUsPENsiONs . Another teacher said that he knew such a regula-i tion existed, but did not know how rigidly it wasl enforced. One or two boys and a young lady had been suspended for the offense. Principal Morton was very much surprised and evidently somewhat angry when he learned that any complaint had been made on account of the regulation which he freely confessed was in active operation. I deem it a very necessary measure, he said, and try to see it strictly enforced. The penalty for break- ing the rule is suspension for as long a time as I deem necessary. I only have power to suspend a pupil for one week and that is the penalty usually meted out. The regulation was first made when Mr. Wilson was in charge of the school and went into effect when classes of girls were added to those of the boys. I think it is very necessary, for though no scandal has ever disgraced the school, it might possibly hap- pen if the intercourse between the scholars was too free. I R After considerable questioning Mr. Morton ac- knowledged that he had suspended a number of pupils for the violation of the rule, and that the last one had taken place but a short time ago. In this case, he continued, I suspended two young men and a young lady. One of the boys was an old offender and needed punishment, while the other was punished for walking to school with the girls. We do not expect them to pass without any sign of recognition 'but a bow is all that can be exchanged. Do I think that preventing the pupils from speak- ing on 'the streets is calculated to induce them to meet in out-of-the-way places at other times? Well, no, I hardly think so, though it might happen in some cases. At any rate the parents of all the pupils are in accord with me in this matter and are pleased that I prevent their children from mingling too freely. MUSIC SHACKS-1956 lumni and Eaeult Centennial Committees JUDGE JOHN B. MOLINARI The Lowell Centennial Committee is the group responsible for planning most of the events being carried on in celebration of the SchOOl'S one hundredth anni- versary. The committee is headed by Judge John B. Molinari, chairman, J. Max Moore, vice chairmang and Miss Edith Pence, Secretary. A Faculty Centennial Committee has also been functioning as a coordinating group for alumni and undergraduate activities. Ivan Barker is the chairman of this group. BOARD OF DIRECTORS LOWELL CENTENNIAL COMMITTEE IVAN C. BARKER R. A. GOCK JAMES A. LIVINGSTONE MISS GLADYS LORIGAN STANLEY J. BERNHARD EDMUND G. BROWN ROBERT J. BUCKLEY FRANCIS MCCARTY J- D- CAMPBELL MRS. CLARISSA MQMAHON HERBERT M. CI-IISHOLM DR. A. J. CLOUD EDWIN J. CONN GAULT DAVIS JOSUA EPPINGER, JR. HECTOR ESCOBOSA JOHN B. MOLINARI J. MAX MOORE MRS. RICHARD NASON, JR. MRS. WALTER NIELAND MISS EDITH PENCE DR. RANDOLE G, FLOOD J- A- PERINO HAROLD R, EREEMON ALVIN E. WEINBERGER FACULTY COMMITTEE LOWELL CENTENNIAL COMMITTEE ROBERT ANINO MISS ALICE GRAEBER . MISS E. E. KELLOGG JAMES A. LIVINGSTONE MISS GLADYS LORIGAN MISS IONE MATHISEN J. A. PERINO fhonorary memberj IVAN C. BARKER ROBERT J. BUCKLEY JOSEPH ERHMAN NORVAL C. FAST MERVIN COLEMAN TED COLTON FRED COMBA CARRINGTON COOK OLIVER COPE JOHN COULTER HAROLD CROWHURST HENRY CUNIBERTI WORDEN DIXON JOHN DORRER KINGSTON EBNER WILLIAM ECKART EDWARD EIMAR LELAND ENGEMANN EDWIN EPSTEIN GENE ENGSTROM BERNHARDT FARROW CATALINO EERMIN GERALD FLAMM CHARLES FOSTER GEORGE ERATES SAM FREIDMAN RUDOLPH EUETTERER YONEO FUTATSUKI LOUIS GEFFIN RICHARD GOCK JOHN GRAZIANO JACK GREIE LARRY GRIFFIN NAT GROTTE FRANK HAGEN SUREN HAGOPIAN LUKE HARDEMAN GEORGE HITCHCOCK EARL HOFFMAN HIROSHI HONDA DARYL HOPKINS REED HUGGINS HALE JACOB LESTER JASPOVICE HERBERT KAHN JEROME KAUEMAN WARREN KELLY JACK KENT RAYMOND KIRK YOSHIO KONO EARL KUENSTER MARSHALL KUHN VICTOR LAGOMARSINO MARSHALL LEVIN LEONARD LEWIS PERCY LOW DOYEN LOWE LAWRENCE MANA RAYMOND MARKS ROBERT MARTIN TONY MATOSICH ROBERT MAUK ROBERT MELLON JACK MILLER TERUO MORISHITA ELLIOT PARDEE ROBERT PATTISON WILLIAM PETERS VERNON PETRIE WILLIAM PICKERING NATHAN PINKUS RAYMOND PINNER ROBERT POTTER RALPH READ CHARLES REARDON RICHARD RICHERT KIRK RIEGELHUTH JACOB ROCHLIN CHARLES ROCK NED ROSENBLATT MARIO ROSENTHAL LEE ROSTLER AARON RUBINO PHILIP RUDE WENTWORTH SANKEY RICHARD SBRANA JOSEPH SCALIA FRANCIS SCARPULLA CLYDE SCHOENEELD DANIEL SEID BEACH SEYMS WILLIAM SHERMAN MANZO SHIOTA MERVYN SILBERMAN EDWARD SILVERMAN GEORGE SMITH JOHN SPAULDING ROBERT SPENCER CHESTER STAMER JULIAN STAMPER MALCOLM STEWART SAM SUCKERMAN MASAO SUGIYAMA FRANK SULLIVAN JACK SULLIVAN STUART SWEETMAN GEORGE TAYLER RODNEY TOM GEORGE TYLOR RONALD VALENCIA METRO VELLIS EDWIN WACHTER HENRY XVAKAMATSU ARNOLD WALLEN LORON XYXASHBURN HARRY WAXMAN REUBEN WAXMAN PHILIP XVEINMAN SYLVESTER WHITCOMB ALBERT WIENER HERBERT WIENER JOSEPH zERGA Girls KATHLEEN ANDERSON MARGARET ANTZ MARTHA ARCHER JUGA BABA BETTY BEEBE JEANNE BENNETT DOROTHY BEYER MARIAN BREMNER JEAN BRESLAUER BETTY BROWN AUDREY BRUMFIELD MADELEINE BRYAN MYRA BUTLER FRANCIS CAREW BETTY CARR BETTY CHAMBERLAIN DORIS CHAVEZ MARGARET CLEGHORN MILAN COATS ENID COLLINS MARGARET CONRAD WILLA COPE EILEEN COWELL MARJORIE DEXTER SHIRLEY DICKIESON VALESKA DOUGHERTY ARDEAN DUMBRELL CICELY EDMUNDS CATHERINE FAULKNER SHIRLEY FERMIN SHIRLEY FINEGOLD IDELL FORREST PATRICIA FOURNESS MARION FRANK MYRTLE GOLDMAN ALINE GOLDSTEIN HELEN GOODMAN VICTORIA GOPAL BETTY GRAY MYRTLE HAMILTON FRANCES HART BETTY HEAPS MARTHA HITTENBERGER BERNICE HOVER RITA JOHNSON OLIVE KALTHOFF DOROTHY KELLER PATRICIA KOPMAN LILLIAN KOSS MARGARET LEISS BERNICE LEVIN ROBERTA LEVY KATHERINE LIGI-ITFOOT BLANCHE LONGFIELD FRANCES LYDERS JUNE MAY LILLIAN MATTERN ELVA MCDONALD BARBARA MQDONOUGH FLORENCE MCKEE LOIS MURPHY ANNA NAKAHARA PHYLLIS NEWMAN BERNICE NICOLL LILLIAN PAULSON JUNE PEKAR HELEN PERL CLARA PINKSY GRACE PRESTON KATHERINE PRONGOS VIRGINIA RANKEN GRACE RICHMAN ELEANOR RIGA GERALDINE ROBERTSON MARION ROSENBLEDT BEVERLY SACHS MARGARET SCHEEHL ELEANOR SCHAUB GLORIA SCHUBERT ALBA SCHWARTZ MARY SHIBATA FUMI SHIOTA INGRID SMITH BETTY STARR JEAN THATCHER MARCELLA THIEL SHIRLY TOXVAR BARBARA XVAGNER JEANNE XVALHEIM MILDRED WEARNE MARJORIE WHITE ALICE XWILCOX MARGARET WILSON MARGARET WISE TAIKO YAKI 112 Student Centennial Committee CENTENNIAL COMMITTEE Row one: A. Weinberg, G. Guiliani, D. Blight, 1. Davies, I. Ulan, B. Enmeier, G. Giovannetti. R010 two: A. Greenblzrtt, G. Dagnino, S. Wiel, D. Garriott, R. Soward, 1. Luce. Top row: R. Price, B. Lyttle, J. Kiil, K. Harrington, J. Benninger, N. Urano, J, Luce. First event Of the Centennial Celebration was the Band Concert in January under the direction of Mr. Reginald Krieger. V Centennial Datebook J January 1 1 January 50 April 22 May 11 May 28 June June 15 June 1 5 August September 9 September 17 September to October 8 September September October 5 October 6 October 6 October 7 November November November November January 1 3 3 1.- J A N U A R Y Pop Band Concert-The Band Concert was held in the Lowell Auditorium under the direction of Reginald Krieger. Lowell received a framed document of resolution on occasion of its 100th anniversary from the Board of Supervisors. APRIL Parade-LOwell's ROTC, Band, and a float were entered in the City's U50 year-100 year parade. The Lowell float won Second Place. MAY Lowell Carnival fheld during 40 and 5o.j Lowell display in Emporium window. J U N E Centennial Yearbook published. Graduation - special diplomas, graduating class speeches pointed to the centennial year. Special issue Of the Lowell to all alumni including centennial events, history, and stories. AUGUST A display of books by Lowell authors, Old pictures, and docu- ments in the Main Library. SEPTEMBER Display in Roos Bros. window. 'Pilgrimage to Lowell Benchn On Sutter Street. Floral design in Golden Gate Park. New football uniforms. A long-playing record of Lowellis songs and yells. O C T O B E R Golf tournament at California Country Club. Centennial Ball at the Fairmont Hotel. Centennial Dinner at the Fairmont Hotel. Cornerstone ceremony for new Lowell. N O V E M B E R Homecoming at Lowell. Open House. Class Reunions. Old-time rally in the court. Lowell-Poly game. Special events. Armistice Day-Special program for military men Of Lowell. Centennial edition of the Varieties. J A N U A R Y Graduation-Fall 156 class. CLASS OF JUNE 1934 Boys FRANCIS .RALPH ABINANTI BEIRNARD ABRAHM IIRWIN FRANK ABRAMSON ERNEST R. ALEXANDER ALDEN AMES, JR. HAIROLD C. ANDERSON JOSEPH J. AN-DERSON RICHARD F. BAILEY ARCADIO CASILA BANEZ GEORGE JAQUES BENKIE CHARLES MORRIS BERRY ROBERT JOSEPH BIBBERO HAROLD A. BLACKBURN WILLIAM MCLEOD BOUICK FREDERIC BRAUN SAMUEL L. BREAUX, III LOUIS GEORGE BRIZZOLARA PAUL E. BRYANT WILLIAM H. BURROWS GEORGE ANTONIO CARBONE GEORGE LAIRKIN CARROLL ARTHUR B, CASWELL, IV VUILLIAM F. CLOUTIER WOODROW WILSON CONNER FRED M. COREY MARCUS DOUGLASS COUCH ERNEST EDWARD DA ROZA ARCHIE THOMAS DAVIS MARCUS FITZROY DAVIS JACK HARVEY DERROUGH RICHARD S. DINGLE JOHN LOWRY DOBSON 'WILLIAM PATRICK DOUGHLERTY ALEXANDER DOUGLAS GEORGE GERALD DREW, JR. RICHARD FRANCIS DUCA JOSEPH PATRICK DUFFY FRED HOWARD DUNCANSON JOHN B. EATON HAROLD EDELSTEIN WILLIAM R. BGAN BYRON EARL EISENBERG 'ROBERT c. ELKUS LAZARO EABIAN GILDO FAVETTI ,R NEAL EELLOM J LEON H. FISHER J WILLIAM FISHMAN ROBERT DALE FOSTER NICK EOTENOS OTTO G. FREYERMUTH, JR. -EUGENE L. FRIEND JOHN WALLACE GALLAGHER SIMON GANSEL JOHN R. GARZERO RONALD GELBALLE CLARENCE MICHAEL GELA-RDI ELMER M. GEORGE PAGE GILMAN JERALD W. GINNEY JACK GLASSMAN ARTHUR ALFRED GOLDSTEIN ROBERT A. GORMAN ROBERT GRAY GEORGE EMILE HALL JOHN EDWARD HANNIGAN DONALD J. HARVEY EERDINAND L. HERSHEIELD CLARENCE MARTIN HILL WILLIAM OLIVER HODGE CHARLES E. HUNKINS ROY HURST, JR. FRED ICI-LELSON TOSHIZO IWATA NORTON JACOBS ARTHUR W. JENSEN ALAN W. JOHNSON DAVID MORGAN JONES JOSE A. JOSUE BERNARD KAHN JOSEPH PAUL KANE GERALD WRIGHT KANTER ROBERT H. KEON FREDERICK D. KOEHLER ROBERT HARRISON LEAVITT IRVINIG LEVIN CLIFFORD E. LOADER EMMET LOFTUS THEODORE MAKOWER FRANK G. MARRON HIROMASA MATSUEDA FRANCIS WILLIAM MAYER JAMES ALBERT MAYERS WILLIAM P. J. MQDEVITT GRANT H. MCEEE FRANK X. MCGUIRE, J-R. JOHN MCNEILL DONALD M. MCRICI-IIE ROBERT LLOYD MEISEL RICHARD B. MEYER LLOYD R. MICHELS LEON MIZEL SELBY RUDOLPH MOHR, JR. ROBERT MORGAN JOSEPH JAMES MURPHY 113 BORDEN S. MYERS AIIBEIRT NAGAHASHI WILLIAM NASSER CLARENCE OTTO NELSEN JOHN MICHAEL O'MARA, JR. WILLIAM A. OSTRON ROBERT I. PEACHEY, JR. PETER JOHN PEDRONI CHARLES S. PEERY EDWARD CARL PROLL CARL PHILIP REGLI PAUL A. REICHLE WALTEIR A. H. RICE ARTHUR B. ROSEN IRVING HAROLD ROSENBBRG CORNELIUS J. RYAN GEORGE R. SAKANARI DAVID HERSH SCHNEIDER EDWARD SCHWAIRI2 CHARLES HAIRLEY SCOTI' GEORGE A. SELIG ICHIRO SETO DONALD W. SHARP HALE C. SHAW LIONEL SHENK ROBERT SHERMAN JOHN SIEIBERT STEPHEN L. SIMON CHESTER SIVERSEN JENNINGS WAIT SMITH KENNETH SMITH DAVID FOSTER SNOW SANFORD SPILLMAN ROLAND STAHL, JR. ARTHUR E. STEMPS WILLIAM G. STEARNS, JR. STANLEY GEORGE STEBBINS THEODORE W. STEIGER ISIDORE SUCKERMAN KAZUO SUGIYAMA FRANK TALRA PETER PAUL TARANTINO CREIGHTON THOMPSON EMMETT TIERNEY EDWARD TOM JAY T. TREAT WILLIAM C. TREVORROW PHILIP SEAIMAN VAIL, JR. OLIVER R. VANNUCCI WARREN W. VEREIDE LEDDEN H. WALL RAEBURN BISSELL WARE 'BERNARD JACK WEIL WILLIAM A. WEINSTOCK, JR. WALTER DONALD WESTMAN JAMES T. WHITE BENTON ARTHUR WIGNEY WAYNE JOHANNE WIISANEN GORDON WILLIAMS JAMES H. WILLIAMS EARL WILSON HAROLD WOLFP WILLIAM H. WORDEN CLIFFORD LEWIS WORTH VIRGIL JOSEPH ZAPPONI JOSEPH A. ZARRI LOUIS J. ZARRI FREDERICK H. ZELZ Girls JANIS IRENE AAIRON IEANNE BABETTE ABRAJMS HELEN ADDELSTONE JNCKLYN A. ALEXANDER CAROL ROBERTA ALLIN DOROTHY ALTSCHULER DOROTII-IEA ARNOLD ALICE GLORIA ARROYO JJEANNE ALBERTA ASI-IER MIIRIAM AXELROD FLORYNE BAER BARBARA ADELE BARNES VIRGINIA MARIAN BEACH VEOLA BECK NELDA BERCOVICH EVELYN F. BERESINI LUCILLE K. BERTELSEN COLOMIBA MARIE BOCCONE LESLIE F. BOURGEAULT ELLEN BIRIGGS BEATRICE P. BROPHY 'MARGUERITE T. BROWN DOROTHY BUNBURY-VERSTURME FRANCES S. BURBANK LADDIE JANE BURKS 'MEDORA DAZEY BUIRNETT NANCY E, BURNETT FRANCES MARY BYRNE VIRGINIA CARR LINDA ADRIANNA CELONA 'LAVELLE CHALMERS FLORENCE M. CHAMBERS ROSE G. CHERIN RUTII-I LOUISE CLEVELAND GERTRUDE HELEN COHEN JANIICE COLE 'MERYL JANET COLEMAN MARIE ROSE CAMPAGNO TERESA MARIE CONENS 114 L0 ll Scrapbook VIRGINIA COOK MILDRED COUGHLAN MARJORY COUTTS LESSIE B. P. COWDEN JANE ELLEN CRANMER 'LILA GRACE CRAWFORD MARION F. DELINE MARGARET DEVLIN FRANCES DOROTHY DOWLING ROBERTA L. DYER 'HELEN EPPINGER JEAN EPPINGER MARY JUDITH FACCI ADELA CLAIRE FEASTER DOROTHY GRACE FIDIAM WINIFRED ANITA FISHER EMILY-ANN FLINT JESSLE P. FUNG JEWEL L. GELMAN LEONE BELLE GINTZLER BETTY WALKER GLASS ELEANOR GLASSBERG JUNE GOLDEN FRANCES MAE GOLDMAN PAULINA E. GOPAL DOROTHY GRAHAM FRANCES GREEN AUDREY CLAIRE HALEY ALICE MILDRED HAMILTON ELIZABETH ANNE HAMM VIRGINIA JANE HARRIS NATALIE HARRISON JUNE PHYLLIS HEATLEY ALBERTA A. HEIMAN ROSALIND HERSCHIN BARBARA JEAN HENRY ADRIENNE DELPHINE HEWITT CAROLYN HICKS JANE HILLMAN GERALDINE D. HOEFFLER MONTEZ HOOVER ROzELLE S. ISRAEL 'HELEN JACOBS MIRIAM D. JACOBS MAXINE N. JACOBSON RUTH AUGUSTA JANKE DOROTHEA M. JEWELL ALYCE JOAN JOHANNESEN PHYLLIS JOHNSON MARY VIRGINIA JONES GERTRUDB WILLA KAISER ELSIE E. KANTROW 'MARY STORY KILGORE MARGARET KING FRANCINE MARIAN KREUZER MAY GLORINETTE LAI BABETTE LAU MARJORIE SELBY LEE ANNE LETTUNICH LOUISE LEUENBERGER 'SUSAN ANNE LINCOLN IRIS LILLIAN LINTHICUM 'MARGAR-ET LOFTUS LOUISE M. LOUISTAU ETHEL ELIZABETH MADDEN 'SYLVIA J. MALONE MARJORIE B. MARBLESTONE BARBARA ALICE MARLOW MURIEL CAROLYN MARSHALL AUGUSTA JANE MATz ELIZABETH MCGLASHAN VIRGINIA BURBANK MCGUIRE DONNA MEPHERSON DORETTA N, MENDELSOHN DOROTHY MERTENS 'HELEN' E. MILLER ELIZABETH CAROLYN MOHL MARION MORRIS MARYLE MORROW MOTOK0 MURAYAMA DOROTHY NEWMAN MEREDITH D. NICHOLLS BERIHA O'CONNOR ELAINE JOSBPHINE OLSEN ALICIA MARIA ORSOLINI CATHARINE B. O'TOLLE FRANCES ESTHER PERKINS MARION ELOISE PETERSON IRENE PETRIE HELEN L. PHELPS JANE ELLEN PHILLIPS RUTH PIERCE ESTHER POLLOCK PAULINE KATHRYN QUIRK HILDRETH RAN DACIA BAYLY REAY MYRTLE VIOLA RENSTROM BERINIICE EDNA RESNICK JEWEL R. RINALDO CAROL F. ROBERTS ELIZABETH M. ROBERTSON JEAN ROBINWSON BRIMA-MAY RODIN VIRGINIA P. ROSENTHAL CARMEN MARIE RUIZ ESTELLE SALOMON LESLIE JEAN SCHARLIN GERALDINE N. SCHARTENBERG 115 l IANIE INEz SCHEYER SALLY SCHWARZ KATHLEEN FRANCES SEAMAS HARRIET K. SEILER GERALDINE ANN SEMPEL FLORENCE SHAFFER IRMA ROSLYN SHENSON DOROTHEA JUNE SHEPHERD RUTH SHLMAN BETTY LEE SHRAGGE DORIS E. SILVEY MARY KATHRYN SLATE JEANNE ELIZABETH SLATER JANET BAILLLE SMITH MARY DOROTHY SNELL MEREDYTH FRANCES SPIRO AUDREY STEWART HELEN V, SULLIVAN LOIS 'MARION SULLIVAN LORRAINE SULLIVAN PATRICIA NATALIE TEDROXV HELEN BALDWIN 'ITEEPELL JEAN HARRIET THOMPSON MARJORIE OLIVE THOMPSON ELSA MARGARET TITSWORTH 'DORIS GERTRUDE TOFT CONSTANCE M. TOURNY EDNA MARIE TOWLE VICTORY TRAGAIZEN CATHERINE ESTELLE TUFTS MURIEL UDENIGAARD AUDREY FRANCES WEHR LEONA WEIDLER RUBY WEINBERG ANITA WENDEL LOUISE ALTON WHITNEY DOREEN WILLIAMS ALICE D. WINTERSTEIN LORETTA E. WRIGHTSON SACHI YASUKOCHI ELEANOR YOUNG WANDA YOUNG GLORIA ZWERIN CLASS OF DECEMBER 1934 Boys PAUL M. .ABRAHM DAVID ADES PLACIDO P. ADVIENTO PAUL E. ALLSMAN ALVIN ANDRES ALFRED BAER RICHARD K. BEARDSLEY GEORGE WILLIAM BEATTIE LEON BENJAMIN BERNAL LEE BLACK ROBERT M. BLATTTEIS JAMES ALLISON BOLLIER WILLIAM BRIGHAM WILLIAM R. BRODE FRANK MARSHALL BROWN JACK BRUTON JOHN R. BRYAN DON BUTLER FRANCIS B. CAROTHERS JR. CHARLES BASIL CARTER ROBERT CASWELL ARTHUR M. CHRISTIANSEN RUSSELL CLARKE REYNOLD HENRY COHN JOHN PETER COWDEN JOHN J. CRONIN DICK CROSBY. JR. JAMES JOSEPH CURRAN JOHN BURTON DAVIS C, MAJOR DAWSON SAM DENBY FREDERICK J. DREWES MELVIN DUBINS JACK ENGLAND PAUL E. FECHTNER THOMAS H. FOX, JR. WILLIAM KUYOSHI FUJITA DENNIS J. GALLAGHER OLEG A. GATTENBERGER ROBERT GJEE HERBERT s. GEINZER WINSTON ODJARD GILKEY DANIEL GLANTZ DICK GLASSMAN ALBERT M. GOLDSTEIN, JR. HAROLD GOODMAN JOHN HARVEY GRAY, JR. EDWARD HAAYS GEORGE HAGENS ALBERT L. HIGUIERET JAMES C. HOOLEY POWELL G. HUMPHREY WILLIAM J. HURLEY JOSEPH JACOBS ROBERT L. JACOBS FRANCIS H. JACOBY PHILIP JOHNSON RICHARD JONES HENRY G. KALB HENIRY PHIILLIP KAN JACK PAUL KEANE HENRY JAMES KEARNEY, JR. 116 Centennial Sera book P Q I l I l l l 3 5 lv 'll.l- MAF lgldi fs CI oxvell gh Q ' l l IIL HI . I7 l'lcul,nc1me of Lowell, name we revere, l.ooclU Hoy glory we proclcum farorcl MGP? llny Sons and daughters In loyalty vue, l'laIl l.oVvell l'lIqlw Sclwool ,all lxcul l.oWell lllq l'lc1Il to thy Colors, emlolema we love, ovmq may lluy banners Wave proudly above, Rl-lxy wondrous spxr-It never- :Shall due, l lcul lowell l'lIgl1 Sclnool ,all l'Icul l.oxvell I-l-gh' Centennial Scrapbook THE 1850's August, 1856-San Francisco opens the first high chool in the West .... Everyone throughout the state S watching this experiment in secondary public educa- ion .... There is progress in transportation, too .... Overland stage coach line is established .... News from he East via St. Louis could now reach San Francisco in 24 days .... First school crisis in 1857 .... Not enough 'unds to buy needed school equipment ,... Students neet the challenge by conducting fund-raising drive. . . The money is raised and equipment is Obtained. December, 1859 - Interest in school increases hroughout the city as day of first graduation draws ear .... Crowds flock to the Powell Street school hen an invitation is extended to the general public O view the conducting of final exams .... December .1 . . . First graduation .... Every graduate has a chance O recite .... Robert Wilson gives an original recita- ion On the Revelations of the Telegraph and Micro- cope .... Miss Virginia Rabe presents an original -ssay on Music ,... David R. McKee and Patrick Barry ecite Brutus and Cassius. . . . Frederick Elliott makes .n original address on the pursuit of science and letters xy young men .... James R. Estill gives an original leclamation On Public Schools ,... Miss Delia B. Kim- mall Offers an original essay, Men and Women. . . . viiss Mary Casebolt speaks on My School Daysf' . ames R. Estill talks about Public Instruction. . An original dissertation on Time is made by Henry Gibbons, It .... The Pleasures of Science is the reci- tation by john Carroll .... A stump speech is made by Patrick O. Barry .... The Last Hours Of Copernicus is the declamation made by Frederick Elliott .... The valedictory On the part of the ladies is made by Emma I. Swasey entitled, How Blessings Brighten As They Take Flight. . . . Valedictory on the part of the gen- tlemen is by David R. McKee . . . Subject- Genius THE 1860's 1860-High school now in a brand new building. . . . More progress in communications as the Pony Ex- press goes into operation and news from the East reaches San Francisco in 10 days. 1861-Civil Wfar begins and many students join the Union Forces. 1864-San Francisco High School becomes Boys' High School as the girls leave the school to attend the newly-built Girls' High School .... The boys are prop- erly impressed With their new principal who has the distinction of having attended Harvard with his friend, James Russell Lowell, and personally knows such liter- ary figures aS Hawthorne, Emerson, Thoreau, and Oliver Wendell Holmes. 1869-Students celebrate the big event of the year -the completion Of the transcontinental railroad .... Several boys enroll in the newly-opened University of California. Nineteenth Century members of the faculty. GEORGE THEODORE KERHULAS FRANK G, C. KESELING ROY H. KIMBALL ROBERT KNOWLES LEONARD H. KRAUS EDGAR M. KRIEGER STANLEY KRIEGER JACK MARSH LAUGHLIN STATHIS LAVDIOTIS ALBERT THOMAS LEAKE MILTON H. LEES, JR. FRANEK JAY LINDLANID JACK M. LIPMAN NORRIS GRAYSON LOW HUGH s. LOWTHER JAMES A. MACGRUER ALFRED JACKSON MALNICK LEO B. IMANNING GEO.RGE MASARU MATSUMOTO EDWARD I. MCGINTY OWEN MCKLEVITT WILLIAM F. MITCHELL DENIVER MOORE, JR. FRANK MORTON MORRIS JOHN TOWNSEND MORRIS ROBERT D. MOWAT HAROLD FRANK MUELLER NORMAN M. MUNDELL ROBERT s. MUNRO KATSUO A. NAKAJIMA JOHN BECHTEL NEUENBERG EI JI NINOMIYA DOUGLAS R, O'HAIR KATSUICHI OMURA DINO G. ORLANDI EDWARD J. RAINSFORD ALBERT REINERT, JR. WILLIAM RETALLICK J. MAURICE ROITENSTEIN ADOLPH R. ROSENTHAL MORTON RUDE EUGENE ROSSI MAURICE L. SAMTER, JR. HAROLD F. SAUNDERS ADRIAN EDMUND SCHARLACH PERRY JOHN SCHOTT NIELS J. SCHULTZ LEWIS E. SCHWAB WILLIAM SHARP ROBERT SHERMAN, JR, SAMUEL ROBERT SILVER HENRY SILVERMAN THOMAS BURT SKOV CHARLES E. SMITH DEMING SMITH ARTHUR W. SOBEY JOHN SPEAR ROBERT DWIGHT STABLER GUS STATHOS SIDNEY J. STEIN MERVIN STERNSHER OLEY G. STEWART MYRON SUGARMAN RICHARD x. SUTTON GERSON THURM PETER K, TOM MASAO TSUJIMOTO JOHN BOLAM VANDERBURG HARRY VON VOLKMANN HAROLD WAGSTAFF ROBERT MORGAN WALSH JACK WELCH DONALD L. WHITE ROBERT J. WHITE STANLEY BENJAMIN WIDRIN WILLIAM A. WILLIAMS WILLIAM H. WOLF ROGER H. L. WOLFSOHN TOSHI W. YAMAZAKI Girls JUNE EMMONS AFFOLTER JANET AITKEN HELEN FAYE ALFREY RUTH ELIZABETH ARNALL LUKA MARGUERITTE BAKER LILLIAN BARRETT GLORIA BARUSCH BARBARA ENA BENNETT HORTENSE M. BERTICEVICH JEAN N. BINGLEY EVELYN M. BLANKENSTEIN ANNE BROCATO ERICA BUENIGER ANNELIESE BURGDORF AILEEN CAMERON CATHERINE A. CAPURRO DOROTHEA AILEEN CARI.OS IRENE EVELYN CARNEY DOROTHY EVA COHN H.ELEN CLAIRE CUTLER MARY ELIZABETH DAMON MARGARET JANE DAVIS ALICE M. DENHARD ANNETTE P. DE VRIES LORRAINE DOMB KATHERYN ELIZABETH ELLIS LOUISE PAULA FECHTNER IDA FERTIG 117 LAURA JOAN FINO ALICE HARRIETTE FISCHER HI-IYLLIS C. FOREMAN JESSIE FUNG GRACE GAFENEY BILLIE MARIE GERDES JULIE DBMETRA IGETAS MILDRED MARIE GILLA SOPHIE E. GLAZKO BERNICE JACQUIELINE GOLDBERG EVELYN M. GOLDENBERG BARBARA M. GRANFIELD EIJSBETH GRAFF CHARLOTTE GRANT ELEANOR MARIE HAMILTON MARGARET E. HANDY JANE GERTRUDE JACOBI MARIAN ANITA JACOBS EMMA M, JORDAN GRACE TOSHIKO KANZAKI JEAN KELLY LUCILE KEMP BETTY CORINNE KERNS SHIRLEY AUBRAE KESSLER JANE KIDDIE JANIIS MAE KUSHNER EVELYN FRANCES LAEREMAN HAzEL BERNICE LARSEN GLADYS HELEN LAYNE DOROTTHEA ANNE LEE PANSY LEONG ETTHIEL ZELDA LEVIN MARJORIE LEVY JOAN LIPMAN JEANNIE MAEGRUER OLIVE LOUISE MCDONALD KATHLEEN IMCLAUGHLIN -ELIZABETH MARGARET MENEIL LINDA MCNUTT FLORENCE EUNICE MERIT BARBARA LORRAINE MERVILLE LOWHANA E. MOHR LOIS MORE DOROTHY S. MORRIS JANET NELSON CHIYO NONAKA PATRICIA ANNE NORTON ELEANOR OJA JENELLA M. PATTEN AUDREY CLARIE PINKIERT JEANNE B. POWEILL PATRICIA GRACE QUINN THEDA MAE RHODES MILDRED .EVELYN ROSSI MINDELL E. ROTHENBERG JANE L. RUSSELL EDNA MARIAN SAMUEL SYLVIA J. SANDLER DELPHA E. SCHMULIAN ADELE ISCHWARTZ RUTH MARY SCOVEL LILLIAN B. SERENSKY CATHERINE SHAW MARY ALICE ISHAW CAROL LORAINE SHERWIN LOIS JEAN SHERWIN SHIRLEY VIRGINIA SHOLES BERDINE MARCELLA SHOUMAN LUCILLE BLISS SIEMENS HELEN J. STAHLE LUCILLE MARIE STEIN ADELE STIMMEIL BETTY SUTTON LOIS ANNETTE SWART ELIZAIBETH E. THORNTON MARION KINGDON TREMONT DORIS E. TRUHLAR BERNICE SONIA TURNER RUTH MARY VALSANGIACOMO VIRGINIA VAN HEEKEREN MARIE WALKER CECELIA WELSH ANN WHITEHEAD MARIAN WIENER DOROTHY BELLE WILKIN ELIZABETH J. WILLIAMSON JANE YAGIER BHYLLIS YELLAND GOLDYNE ROBERTA ZIMET CLASS OF JUNE 1935 Boys MAURICE ABEND FREDERICK H. AMIGO H. RODE ASHE WILLIAM WEN-DELL E. BEASLEY BERNARD L. BERNARD, JR. DUNSTAN S. T. BERRLMAN ALVIN DE MAINE BLACKMAN HERBERT BLUMIENTHAL JOHN L. BLUMLLEIN VICTOR IBONFILIO HERBERT RAY BROTMAN ARCHIE EUGENE' BROWN ROBERT RAYMOND BRUNN ROBERT CAMP FELIX THEODORE CASTAGNOLA JOHN E. CLAIRVAUX BENSON CHOY 118 Centennial Scrapbook Centennial Scrapbook , THE 1870's 1875-Great building boom in progress definitely stablishing San Francisco as the great city Of the West. . . William RalstOn's fine new Palace Hotel built, Terry Building built, and a new, larger Boys' High Ichool opens on Sutter Street .... Huge crowd on hand or the dedication of the new school, despite a heavy Ownpour, with the girls from Girls' High School nvited as the guests of honor .... The new building las many new innovations .... Board of Education ven authorizes a piano for the school as long as the ost will not exceed 3400. THE 1880's 1882-SchOOl's first extra-curricular activity, the .Owell Cadets organized and affiliated with the Na- ional Guard .... Members of the group look forward O going to summer camp with other National Guard nits .... Boys at school becoming more sports-minded. . . Track and bicycle riding are major sports. 1887-Boys welcome a group of girls to school .... .atin and Greek discontinued at Girls' High so girls may now attend Boys' High to prepare themselves for admission to the University of California ,... Richard Walsh is acclaimed for breaking the record for the mile walk. 1889-Two new wings added to school building. THE 1890's 1890-First football team is organized .... Team is declared champs Of the Bay Area. 1895-George Fuller is champion cyclist of the year. 1896-The Axe Yell becomes a popular yell at school. 1898-The Lowell, under the editorship of Mon- roe Deutsch and with reporters Charles Norris and Walter De Leon, begins publication .... Big news stories are that the Lowell Cadets are being mustered for service in the Spanish-American War, and that Edmund Russ is winner of Pacific Coast amateur cyc- ling championship ,... Greek fraternities at school attract many students .... Alumni Association becomes active .... Girls organize tennis and basketball teams. SENIOR GIRLS, CLASS OF 1896 EDGAR LOUIS COLTON RICHARD HENTRY CORY PHILIP FABIAN DANZIGER ALBERT DEHR MAURICE DERIN RAYMOND R. DINGLE LEONARD EUGENE DOMB WIILLIAM GERALD DOWD ROBERT E. DOYLE MILAN DRAGOLOVICH JOHN J. DUEMLER HARRY WELSON EDWARDS WARREN .BRADFORD EGAN GEORGE ELKINS HENRY ENSLER ERROL STANLEY EVANS JEROME FAHN LELAND ROY FELDHEYM MARTIN E. FIELD LOUIS WALTER FLEISCHFR ANTON J. FRANUSICH JACK FRIEDBEIQG FUJIO FURUTA JOHN F. GHEEN JEROME GINSBERG LAWRENCE GLASSBERG JOHN FRANCIS GOBAR JACK BENJAMIN GOLDMANN ARTHUR MILTON GOLDSTEIN JOHN HENRY GOODWIN LAURENCE Goss CHARLES SHELBY GREENLAW BURTON W. GROSS DONALD HAROLD GROSSMAN N. LEE .GROTTE JOHN F. GUINEE BRIAN 'HARVEY SARGENT IHEARN ROBERT ISYDNEY ,H.E.RMAN DAVID HERZBEKG JOHN H. HERZOG WILLIAM H. HOMER, JR. WILLIAM IHOWDER JOHN THOMAS HURLEY EDWARD E. HUTSCHING WALTER IRVINE BRUCE JANG MARLIN ASHLEY JEFFERSON LAWRENCE H. JOE JAY JAMES JONES ALFRED JUNG JOSE JOvEN PAUL KAHN LEON KALIMOS WILLIAM FREDERICK KAISER, RUSSELL JACOB KANTER ALFRED KATCHINSKI, JR. JAICK COOPER KESSEL ROBERT KING HAROLD KLANG DAVID W. KOBLIK WALTER ROBERT KRENZ ABNER DAVID KUPERSTEIN MELVIN PHILLIP LAGER HOMER KYTHRIEATIS LAMIBIE DALE EDWARD LANE TOM ALFRED LEE EMANUEL B. LEPLIN RICHARD PHILLIP LONERGAN HENRY LORIENZEN HASKELL DAVID LUDWIG RICHARD Y. LUM PAUL F. LURMANN NORMAN LOWENSTEIN RICHARD LYNCH DONALD R. LYON JOSEPH LLOYD MACRY CHARLES R. MANZONI HARRY MARGOLIS SANFORD A. MASONEK GEORGE ROBERT MAXWELL A. MOULTON MAYER ROBERT ALFRED MENDLE LAMBERT MARTIN MEYER ROBERT R. MILLER HENRY PE-TER MOOY JACK F. 'MURPHY LESLIE F. MUSANTE BENNETT MCGUIRE JACK FRANCIS MCKANNAY LEONARD B, McKEE STANLEY H. NEYHART GERARD O'CONNOR ROBERT s. ORR RICHARD OTIS HENRY E. PAPE THOM.As PARRAMORE BREDERIC REESE PEASLEE GEORGJE PAUL PEDRIN ALEX H. PELLET JAMES D. PHELAN ALAN PHILIP H. DAVIDSON RAE MELVIN W, REDER MARTIN RIST COSMO R. RIVIELLO JOSEPH EDWARD ROACH MARTIN ROBACK RODERICK MATTHEW ROGAWAY 119 T. BLAND ROGERS GEORGE ROSENQUIST EDWARD WILLIAM ROSSTON DON SAEHOLM DAVID NEWTON SCHULTZ PAUL SCHWARTZ ROBERT B. SELIC LEON THEODORE SHAEE ARTHUR VERNON SHEARER ALEX C. SHERRIFES E. EARLL SHINE RICHARD DAVID SHRIEVE WILLARD SIEGAL EDMUND SOLOMON SANFORD STADEELD CONRAD STAIB MAURICE ST. CAUDENS JOHN P. STOCK BERNHARD STONE RAY W. TILTON EUGENE TINKER CARL M. TROPPMANN CHARLES L. TOWNSEND ROBERT YASUO UYEDA EVERETT VAUGHN STANLEY VIERECK JOHN ROBERT WAGN.ER CHARLES FRANCIS WALSH FLOYD FRANKLIN WALTER DIXON EARL WANSBURY HERBERT E. WARD XVILLIAM EDWARD WATERS KING J. WEISG-ERBER JULIAN A. WEISS JAMES RAYMUND WELLS, JR. WILLIAM L. WHITE JOE E. WILLIAMS WILLIAM JEROME WITHERS, JR. EARL D. WONG THOMAS IS. YAMAMOTO VIERLIN Y. YAIVLAMOTO DEES YOUDALL CREIGHTON YOUNG VINCENT GEORGE ZUARDO Girls MILDRED J. ALVAREZ PEGGYLEJE AMBERSON BARBARA ELIZABETH ANNIS MARIAN SALINDA ARATA SHIRLEY BAER KATHERINANNE BAILEY JANET IRENE BAMBARGER DOROTHY BERNICE BARBER JEANNE A. BATMALE ADRIENNE JEANNETTE BATT ANN BERCOVICH SIEGRIID MARIE BEUCI-IE RUTH VIRGINIA BLOCH GLADYS BLOCK BEVERLY LENORE BLUM LUCIILLE BLUM BUIRRIS ALENE BLY DINA ESOLINA BONADEO MARIE D. BORDI EVELYN FLORENICE BOTHE ANITA BOVERMAN MARY KATHRYN BRIGGS BETTIE BROPHY ELIZABETH BRONX' N EXA BUERKLE ELAINE NOLA BURNS DOROTHY C. BURROUGHS ELOYAS JLILLIAN CAGLE ELEANOR CARLQUIST MILDRED JEANETTE CARLSON MARY MARGARET CASEY MARY ISTICKNEY CATOIRE IA CELEBER MARY JANE' CHANDLER ETHEL ADELAIDE CLARKSON JANET GLADYS COHEN PATRICIA ANNIE COLLINS JEAN ROBERTA COOGAN 'DAHLAS COWLES JANICE CROPLEY GLADYS ALVA COHN BETH DAHLEEN BETTY MARGARET DANZIGER BETTY DAY BETTY DEMING ANITA CECILIA DEMARTINI LOIS D. DE MARTINI VERONICA R. M. DE MARTINI PATTY DE ROULF ELIZABETH M. DIXON FAYE DOOLING MARGARET DYER MARIE E-LOISE EATON CLAUDINE LEE EDWARDS JOSEPHINE ENWRIGHT CONSTANCE J. ESSEX MARY HOUSTON FINLAYSON HELEN' FORTIER DOROTHY M.-J. FRANCHI MARTHA HANA FUJITA VIRGINIA MARLYN GARRICK MARJORIE N. GINSBURG 120 Centennial Scrapbook 3 LEO W. MEYER: Won seventeen block L's during his four years at Lowell High School from which he graduated in 1910. WILLIAM A. MAGEE: A track and football star at Boys' High and the University of California, he held the distinction of never having been beaten in the quarter mile event. BERT WALSH: He was a great athlete in his day and undisputed champion at Lowell and University of California as a walker. Bert was tops among the heel and toe pedestrians. SIDNEY L. SCHWARTZ: Sidney was considered one of the greatest athletes at Lowell, beating Abadie at the Gaelic Athletic games held Thanksgiving Day in 1903, in the record time of 9 3X5 seconds. Abadie of U. C. was the Pacific Coast Champion and held A.A.L. record in the 100 yard. ADELBERT E. KELLOGG AND HIS CLASS, 1895 PHILIP LEVY, 1903 I FYW, ,, 7 Centennial THE 1900,s y 1900-Lowell wins league football championship. . . Minstrel Show held in Girls' High School audito- rium a big success. l 1901-Students campaign for .lS150,000 Bond Issue lio build a new Lowell. 1902-First school orchestra formed .... First Alumni Banquet held. 1903-Art Club is popular new organization .... Swimming Club organizes a school water polo team. 1904-Girls given the opportunity to turn Out one edition of The Lowell .... Lowell High School Student Association formed with Robert Blake as president and Iune Schloss as vice president .... School Constitution written .... Honor Society formed. 1906--Hugh Young elected president and Hazel Scrapbook Clifford is vice president .... Skating Club and Read- ing Club Organized .... School survives fire and earth- quake but many students leave Lowell after the destruc- tion of their homes. 1907-Arthur Saxe and Adelaide Bruning are Stu- dent body Ofhcers .... Honor Society becomes the Winged Scroll and L. 1908-School Constitution revised to make it more democratic under Student Body President Lyman Grimes and Ethel Thorndike. 1909-Tennis team keeps its record intact of having won every tennis championship since A.A.L. began in 1898 .... Maurice McLaughlin continues On to win the National championship .... William McRave and Ila Coombe are spring student body leaders, and Sher- man Burns and Miss Harris are elected in the fall. - --- , BARBARA J. GITTELSOHN MARIE GODT DOROTHY GREEN JEAN IGUERIN . MARIE LUCILLE HARELSON JUNE HARRINGTON DORIS MARIE HEAPS GEORGIA FELICE HELLER NORMA LOUISE HENDERSON JUNE FRANCES HERKNER LYDIA MARIE HILL MARY DAVIS HOFFMAN GRACE J. HOLLINGBERY MA-RION IRMA HORVITZ ROSELLE JACOBS YVONNE JACKSON PEGGY Y. JARVIS FLORENCE PATRICIA JORDAN MURIEL LEONA KAMLER TERUKO KANBA LOUISE KATCHINSKY MARY ELIZABETH KING JANE KNIGHT ENID KUCHEL NORMA JEAN LANE ROBERTA LEIALOHA LANSING DOROTHY LOUISE LARSON HELEN E. LAUER ELIZABETH BRECHIN LEE MARGARET WINIFRED LEEDS JANET THERESE LEVEY AUDREY DEE LEvY JANE WINIERED LILLON MAMIE LIM ELOISE LYON ELIZABETH MACAULEY MARION ELIZABETH MAGNER ELISA LAURA MAINI JACQUELINE MANSFLELD VIOLA A. MARKARIAN AUDREY MARTELL MARJORIE LILLIAN MAYERS HELEN MERIWETHER ADELLE PARKER MERRIMAN CHARLOTTE MEYER DORIS HELENE MICHELS MURIEL IDELL MORRISON MAURINE GENEVIEVE MULLER IRENE DOROTHY MURCH JEAN B. MYERS BARBARA LUCILLE MCADOO MARY MARGARET MCALLISTER GEORGIA MILTON MCANTIRE IONE A. MCCHESNEY MARY M. MCCUNE EDITH 'MCDONALD LOUISE E. NATHAN ERAN-CES E. NELSON MURIEL NEWSOM MARJORIE E. NICHOLS MURIEL ELAINE NIELSEN PATRICIA O'BRIEN JUDITH PENORA OLSEN CAROLINE ORGINOS HELEN MARY ORMSBY EVA-SUSANNA OSCHAT7 OLGA PAPATINOU MARION PARKINSON DOROTHY PERDICALIS DOROTHY ELLEN PERSON ANITA PETERSEN LENA CLARLCE PONTIER JESSICA HELENE PLATT HELEN OVERTON POHLMAN MARTHA MARY PRAY PHYLLIS DAPHNE RABJOHN CHARLOT N. RADER ROSELLA RETALLICK MARIE RIGHETTI LUCILE RONDONI PATRICIA K. ROHLICK BARBARA JEAN ROOT ROSE JASMINE RUSHDOONY EVELYN E. SABIA ESTHER R. SALVISBERG H. COEURN SANCTUARY RITA SCHIC ELISE ALMA SCHMIDT BEATRICE D. SCHWARTZ RUTH PAULINE SHAPERO SUZANNE SHEEHAN BARBARA L. ISHIELDS VERA S. SILBERSTEIN LUCILE HELEN SIMMONS ELIZABETH SINGER MARGARET AMELIA SKELLY EUNICE SKERRITT CLARICE ROSE SADOWSKI IRENE BIBB SPEARS ALICE M. SPRENGER ELISE -STELTER JANE STRITTMATTER RACHAEL STUDABAKER VELMA MAE TARVER MARJORIE E. TATE HORTENSE CATHERINE TAYLOR ALICE ROSE THEEERT VIRGINIA TURNLEY ANNABELLE G. TYLER Q 1 21 MIRIAM M. UTTER PEGGY VAN SCHOICK LAVERNE VAUGHAN BERYYL WINIFRED VICIKERY MARTHA F. WALL FLORENCE WALILER PHOEBE JANE WATWOOD LUAYNE WEEKS OLIVE GEORGINA WHITIE KATHRYN E. WILDBERGER MARGARET V. WILSON MARINORA WILSONT VIRGINIA WILSON HELEN ILESLIE WOLF IRMGAIRD FLORA WOLF AMY JUNE WONG FLORA MICHIKO YAMAZAKI MARGARET LOUISE YTEALLAND HEDWIG ZAHLER MILDRLED E. ZEDLER CLASS OF JANUARY 1936 Boys IRVING ALGER IRVING ALTER AILEX L. ARGUELLO JAMES CHESTER ARMSTRONG CARL NORMAN ARONSEN RALPH ASTRELLA DOUGLAS GORDON ATIKINSON RICHARD PAUL BART HOL LESLIE BAILEY JOHN LAWRENCE BERTINO ARTHUR BIRNBAUM RICHARD SINCLAIR BISHOP PAUL BLOOM MARSHALL R. LBLUM, EUGENE BLUMENTHAL WALLACE 'STANLEY BOHMAN IRA WILLIAM BRAUNSTEIN TOM BRENNAN JOHN' ALLEN BRIGHAM CLARK BRINGHAM JOHN RAYMOND BURGER ANTONIO CALONICO WILLIAM A. CARROLL JOHN J. CAMERON HAROLD CHANDLER HENRY K. D. CHEW VINCENT ALEXANDER DAGORT FRANCIS SCOTT DAM BERNARD DEBISSCHOP FRANK W. DESSEL, JR. PAUL JAMES DONNELLEY BOB DUMESNIL FRANK ENG MARVIN FAIRBANKS ALEX FALK WILLIAM FORNER GERALD ERUCHT HARRY W. FRUSTUCK, JR. GEORGE IWOA FUMOTO LOUIS GARAT DAVID GEFFEN MARVIN GEORGE GIOMETTI ROBERT GIVENS WILLIAM EDWARD GOETZE WALTER L. GOLDENRATH DOUGLAS GRANT TOWNSEND GREEN WIILMOT HARRY GROTIH ROBERT -H. -HANSEN EDWARD HARRINGTON ROBERT HOWARD ,HARRINGTON EREDERIC GAVIN HUMPHREY HAROLD JACOBS LAWRENCE JUE BARTON I-I. KNOWLES GILBERT KOEHN ERNEST KREBS FRED KRIEDT EDWARD C, KRIEG ROLAND WOODROW LANDINI MAX M. LEICHTAG ARNOLD LINANE PHILIP H. LORING JACK MARSHALL ILYON A. DOUGLAS MAAS JOHN MAQKENZLE NOEL DOUGLAS MARTIN ROBERT MCCLENAHAN JACK MEEHAN RUDOLPH ALLEN IMOHR ROBERT MOOCK JOSEPH W. MORTON IRVING .MYERSON ARAM ARNOLD NIKSARIAN EMANLLEL NOVEMBER JAMES LONGWORTH POTTS JOHN MARION READ EDWARD REBSCHER CI-IADWICK GRIER READE ROBERT JOSEPH REDMOND STAFFORD A, REPP DAVID ROSENTHAL ELMER ROVERE BILL CARL ROWLANDS ELLIS GEORGE ROWLANDS 122 Centennial Scrapbook CHAMPIONSIP FOOTBALL TEAM OF 1900 Top row: George Middleton, DuVal Moore, Fred Lewitt. Row three: C. S. Middleton, Robert Williams, Robert Craig, Fielding H. Yost, jim Keegan, Mead Hamilton, Al Lean. Rauf' two: Steve Douglas, Bill Middleton, Garry Rooney, Jim Kidd, Ray Baldwin, Bolfam row: John S. Pratt, Whitman Prentice, Theodore Vosberg, HIGH SENIOR CLASS, 1903 Centennial Scrapbook CLASS 0F 1904 Top raw: Edith Hollingsworth, Wm. C. Mackintosh, Henry Mehrtens, Con Jones, Alice Lacay, Roy Hillebrancl, Albert Luchsinger, Robert McDonald, Ella Sondheim. Row lufo: Chas. Grace, Teresa Ryan, john W. Speyer, Sadie Falk, Alan Abbott, Otillie Gilliland, Alfred Kohlberg, Fay Breneman, Frank Abbott. Row three: Florence Nachtrieb, jack Hillman, Chester Woods, Mr. Crofts, Mr. Morton, the principal, Mr. Clark CHist.J, H. Oser, H. Chesley Bush, Emilie Joseph, Row fzmr: A. A. Rhine, Veva Anderson, Mr. Tompkins, Mr. Gallagher, Hazel M. Bonner, Sydney Smith. Row five: Aslaug Aune fM:s. Mark White, Berkeleyl, Archie De Mamiel, Roy Fuller, Mr. Nourse, Mr. C. C. Young iformer Gov. Calif.J, Felix Smith, Lester Gunst, Grace Sorgenfrey fMrS. C. N. Douglasj, 10 - 9th Ave., San Mateo, Calif., Eugene Grubsky, Pauline Nast, Johann Pfister, john Speyer, Paul K. Yost, Eugene Judah, D. Christopher Creighton, Edna Horn, Maurice Harrison. Row rix: E. H, Nast, Will Carrick, Constance Dewey, Fred Barthels, Anita Beyfuss, W. C. Krenz, Florence Sibley, Geo. W. Frank, Roy Gottheimer. Row Jeven: Katharine Lindsay, Sidney Schwartz, T. Allen Bonner, Evelyn Doughty, Albert Lapachet, Pauline Meier, Louis Meyer, David Levy, Irene Waltres. PETER SALES JOSEPH DBWITT SANDERSON WIILLIAM J. SCHOIENFELD ALLEN G. SEARCY STOCRTON SHAW DAVID D. SHINN RICHARD B. SIMON RONALD E, SIMPSON IRWIN SANFORD SONNENSCHEIN JURAN STRAUSS HARRY H. TAKAHASHI VERNON L. THORESON DICK TIERNAN EDWARD TOLL ELMER G. TOM LANGLEY TORNEY WILLIAM TRUHLAR ALLAN VOORSANGER ROBERT H. WALKER EDWIAIRD BENNETT WALLIS RICHARD P. WERNER FRED G. WHEELER RICHARD A, WRIGHT MILTON YOUNG Girls JEAN GLENN ADAMS MARGARET JUNE AMOS AUDREY ARCHER LILLIAN AUYONG LEONIDE BARATY FLORENCE JEANETTE BARR MARJORLE BEAM DORIS A. BELLISLE BERNICE ELIZABETH BONDS BARBARA BOVYER JANET MARIE BONT NINA P. BRANDT JAN.E BROWN JAYNE ARLINE BROWNING HELEN FRANCES BRUNTON MARIAN .LOUISE BUBB ARLENE CAIILAHAN VIRGINIA P. CAMERON FLORENCE IHILDA CAPLAN ELAINIE CHINN PATRICIA JEANNE CLARK CORNELIA COBB FRIEDA COHEN MARJORIE LOUISE COHN DELORIS OWEN DAVIS MARJORLE DAVIS MOUCHA DEHE GERALDINE DOLAN EDITH ELIZABETH DOREY HARRIET EVANS VIVIAN CLARA FACTOR TROY F. FINNIERTTY BETTY FISHER MARIE ELEISOFLER HELEN LOIS FINE INGER GAN:DION SHIRLEY .ELEANOR GEDDES BARBARA ESTELLE GILBERT KATHLEEN GLAESER SYLVIA GOODMAN POLLY JANE GOODWIN BARBARA GOWANS DOROTHY GRAY LOIS BARBARA GRUNSKY CECILE IHACKMEIER CAROL ANNE I-IANSELL PATTI HARBAUGH NANCY E. HARTTER GLADYS I-IERST ADELE STANLEY HOPPER ANITA H. HENNINGSEN ROWENA ISSERJLIS FRANCES ,ANN JACOBSEN GERTRUDE JONAS ADELANE JOSEPH ELAINE KATON NOLA KELLER KATHRYN ICLEMYER BETTIE MARIE KENNEDY JEAN MORSE KOHLMANN MARCIA AUDREY KUNEDT ABBIE FRANCES LA GRILL LORRAINE JOAN LALANNE LOUISE ELEANOR LAPIN CAMILLE A. LAURENT ELLA JEANNE LEONARD JANIS FELLCE 'LEVY MARGUERITE LOWTHER REGINA CATHERINE MACKEY JANICE S. MARKUSE BETTY JANE MARSHALL MARDIS IMULLIN MARIAN JANE MENTDELSOHN PAULINE HELEN NAST CLARA EMILY NEVIIILE PAULINE E. PAUL BERNICE RAULSEN MARILYN E. PINNER MARTHA ANNA POSTEL HELEN GERTRUDB PROLL MARGARET MABEBLE PURSER ELENA ROMANOV LILLIAN REEVES 123 JOYCE RICHARDSON DOLORES IM,ELDA RIDDELI. DOROTHY ANN ROGER BARBARA FRANCES ROSE EDITH .EI ROSE BETTY ROSS BARBARA ANN SCHMIDT MARGHIERITA G. SCHWYTTER 'VIRGINIA HELEN SIMON ETHEI. ELIZABETH sHORAs OLGA M. SISKA GWENDOLYN SMITH PHYLLIS JOYCE SMITH KATHRYN SOILLEY RUTH STEFEENS BEATRICE STERN ELVA LINNEA STRANDBERG DOROTHY KUNIKO TAKECHI DOROTHY LYNETTE VINCENT CATHERINE ,ELISABETH VINSON SUZETTE SOUTHERN WADDELL MABEL ILILIAN WATSON FRANCES WEINBERGER ARDELL RUBY WHITE SHIRLEY RUTH WHITE HELEN R. WILLIAMS LORRAINE WILLIAMS ARDARY WI'IlT KA,THRYN WOLF CATHERINE WOOLDRIDGE MURIEI.. GEIRTRUDE ZECHER CLASS OF JUNE 1936 Boys VICTOR ABE EDWARD ABRAHAM-SON HENRY EDWARD ANDERSON MIGUEL E. ARCHULETA FRANCIS T. BALESTRIERI, JR. CLIFFORD BARBANELL MAURICE RADST ON BARUSCH DAVID E. BATES WALLACE BEEBE. JR. WILLIAM J. BENIOFF MILTON BERMAN ROBERT JOSEPH BERTRAND JAMES F. BLACK ROBERT CLYDE BLANK BERNARD BILUMIBERG BERT M. BORTZ RICHARD BOURNE RANDOLPH BRANDT PAUL BRINKMAN CARL W. BROGGER DEAN BROWN VINCENT HAMMOND BROWN DONALD BRUCE BRYANT GINO JOSEPH BUCCHIANERI FRED E. BUCK RICHARD F. BUCKLEY, JR. WILLIAM NEIL BURKHARDT THOMAS R, CALDWELL ARTHUR ZANDER CERF WILLIAM CHAN JAMES R. CHAPMAN RAYMOND MARTIN COATS JOROME COHEN WILLIAM S. COHEN RAYMOND JOSEPH COSGROVE HARRY E. COPP JOHN PARR-COX CHARLES VERNON DALE EDWIN J. DAPOLLO LOUIS F. DE LARA WILLIAM HAROLD DILLON LUDWIG DIMPFL STANLEY EAGER JOSEPH EDWARD .EAGLETON WALTER EDGAR EISONBERG ALDEN L. ELLIS ELIAS P. ELLIS J. CHANDLER ENNOS JACK SEVERIN ERLAN ROBERT F. FARRELL GORDON FEIST MELVIN K. FENSTER HENRY CORBIN FIELDS JOHN FINN III WILLIAM F, FLYNN IRWIN FRIEDMAN PETER GARAT GARCIA WALLACE QUON GEE HAROLD L. GOLD RICHARD ELLIOTT GOLDSTEIN DONALD GRIFFIN ROBERT C. HAGEN HAROLD JOHN HAMILTON ABRAHAM LOUIS HANKIN ROBERT J. HAR.ELSON ROBERT MARION HARRIS ALEXANDER ZADOK HIGH III ROBIN HOOD CHARLES J. HRUBY JOHN IGNOFFO HOWARD IVERSON JAY JACOBS JOHN J.ANG WESLEY MORRIS JONES HARRY CON JUE 124 Centennial Scrapbook CLASS OF '05 lnfluded in the piclwe ure: Margaret Foley, H. Devine, J. Marion Read, M. Trout, Alma Ward, Cora Bassett, Enid Ackerman, Ruth Kellogg, G. D. Whittle, Ruth Weeks, Frank Deuprey, H. Aldeu, H. Wolf, M. Macks, Eschen, Alfred Lundberg, J. Hannerschlag, Helen Blake, M. Awaki, M. Carpenter, Rose Glyvinovitch, Emma Block, R. Cameron, I. Murphy, M. Rodgers, I. Morris, Mr. Schmidt, Ferguson, XV. I-Iink, G. Lebenhauer, Harold Johnson, Alma Myers, Ochner, and Roy Thompson. MR. SCHMIDT AND HIS CLASS, 1908 Centennial Scrapbook THE 1910's 1910-First senior day held .... President and vice :resident in the spring are Milton Marks and Harriet Pasmore .... Fall leaders are Charlie Streit and Lois Ile Vilbiss. 191 1-Another new tradition begins. The first semi- annual Freshman Reception is held .... Fred Maggs nd Harrier Bradford are spring oHicers and Ernest mith and Aileen Hand win in the fall elections. 1912-Walking Club organized .... Members take rips to Bolinas Bay and to Mt. Diablo .... Student aody president is Bert Thomas and Theodora Schaert- :er is vice prexy. 1913-Lowell moves into new quarters on Hayes Street ,... Student leaders during the year are Edwin Iirschfelder and Myrtle Fitschen in the spring, and George Brown and Florence Warford in the fall. 1914-Rugby and swimming teams sweep to cham- aionships .... Spring president is James Conrado and vice president is Dorothy Riedy .... President Lewis and Vice President Gardener are elected to office in the fall. 1915-News of the year was the marriage of Prin- cipal Morton to Miss Nette Wright .... Other big events were the school dances in the auditorium, the interclass swimming and tennis competition, and the introduction of rowing as an interschool sport .... Annette Ruggles becomes the school's first girl student body president when the elected prexy, Charles Wiss- ing leaves school in the middle of the term. 1916-Lowell faculty plays Poly faculty in baseball. . . . Poly Wins, 15-14 .,.. Lowell places eight men on the city's all-star football team .... Russell Green and Marion Black are spring officers, and M. Voyne Vuco- savlievich and Elsa Kleugel are the 'fall leaders. 1917-World War I activities dominate the school program. Charles Trowbridge is elected student body president and Grace Cuthberrson is vice president. DRAMATICS CLASS OF J'1905- THE RIVALS Included in the cast were: Fred Dorgeloh as Sir Anthonyg Phillip Faymonville as Captain Absolute, Harold Maun- drill as Faulklandg Richard Goldman as Acresg Faun Tuska. as Sir Lucius O'Triggerg Rena Bender as Mrs. Mala- propg Edith Allen as Lydia Lanquishg Frances Vlfilson as Julia, Frances Baxter as Lucyg Edwin Newman as Fagg Milton Sichtenstadter as Davidg Harold Kellogg as Thomas. WALTIER KASHUIBA ALEX KERHULAS GEORGE C. KIRKER, JR. DIMITRI KOZLOYSKI WILLIAM KREUZER, JR. CLIFFORD LAME GEORIGE JAMES LAND MAXWELL LAPKIN ALBERT SIR LEE HERBERT LEE WILLIAM WALLACE LEE HENRY JOSEPH LENCIONI WILLIAM LEM FRANK W. LEW GORDON M. LEWIS JONAH IG. LI JULES MELVILLE LINDSAY CARO WOLFRAM LIPPMAN KAY J. LYMAN ROBERT ROY MACDONALD DOUGLAS PHILIP MACKILLOP BENTON YOUNG MACMILLAN, JR, ARTHUR B. MARDER HARVEY M. MASONEK WILLIAM MASSEY YOSHIO MATSUOKA EUGENE W. MCKANNAY PHILIP MCGUIRE THOMAS G. MCGUIRE HUGH G. MCPI-IEE RUDOLF IM. MILDNER MILTON MORRISON ALFRED ,MOSKOVITZ LEONARD MOSKOVITZ JOHN MUIR JOSEPH J. 'MURRAY WILLIAM R. MYERS FRANCIS TOSHIHIKO NAKAHARA NEWTON JOSEPH NAI-IMAN LEROY M. NATIHANSON HENRY NEWTON JAMES IK. OKA ALLEN OLINGER ORVILLE G. ORVIK WALTER JOSEPH OTTO JOHN KINGS-LAND PERRINE HERBERT PILCI-IER BERT M. PORTUGEIS JAMES P. PREOVOLOS PHILIP C. PRIGIONI NATHAN PUGATCI-I WALLACE RANDOLPH DON C. REBOK F LYD RIDDLE HARVEY CHARLES RISER WARREN A. ROBERGE DONALD P. ROTH WILLIAM A. RUBENSTEIN HAROLD IM. SADOWSKI JOHN GEORGE ,SARANTITUS LEON SCHILLER JOHN H. SCHROEDER, JR. FRANK W. SCHUMACHER STANLEY CHARLES SILVER ARTHUR BERNHARD SIMON RICHARD SIMPERS LEE E. SOLOMON WILLIAM 'SPARKS WILLIAM STEIN BERTON J. STICKEL NICHOLAS M . ISUNTZEFF EDWARD SYDNEY SUSNOW ROBIN TABER MARK .M. THALL GEORGE Ll-I. THOMFORD JACK EDWARD THOMPSON NELSON WALTER THOMPSON WALLACE W. THOMPSON WALTER A. THOMPSON HENRY IMARSHALL TI-IREEFOOT ROBERT E. UNDERWOOD PHILIP KING VERLEGER GEORGE A. VIDAL ERNEST ROBERT WEINBERG WILLIAM TED WHITE EDWARD E. WILLIAMS JOSEPH WILNER EVERETT M. WITZEL BERNARD H. WOLF D. LIONEL WOODMAN FRANCIS JAMES WRIGHT GEORGE YASUKOCHI Girls RENA ABOUDARA LORELEI ARDYTH ADAMs BIRDIE L. AFTERGOOD BARBARA ALLIN LOUISE ALTIERI TOKIYE AMANO 'VIRGINIA D. AMERIAN JANE ANDERSON MARIAN ANDROVICH HELEN ELIZABETH BAAR MARJORIE ANNE BEIGHTLER LOIS BEHREND ANNABELLE E. BENSON OLGA J. BIALY BERGIT BIRKLAND 125 BETH-IEA BRINGHAM RUTH BROGGER COLLEEN BROWN RUTH ,IANE BURBY HONORINE JCAILLEAUD AUDREY WAYNE CANNON OLGA JOSEPHINE CENDRIER MARIE BARBARA CHEVIERS SHIRLEY MARIAN COHEN JEAN ELIZABETH COMSTOCK JACQUELINE CROMWELL VIVIAN CUMMINS LUCILLE L. DAVIDSON BETTY EDNA DAHL DOROTHY FRANCES DARLING BEVERLY AUGUSTI DIEBOLD BARBARA E. Doss DORIS FRANCES DOYLE JEANNE MARIE EASTMAN JUNE KATHERYN- ELWELL DOROTHEA EALTIN ELEANOR ANNE FENNON CHARLOTTE KEITH FILLMORE EVELYN EITZPATRICK LILLIAN EREED DORIS JANE FRIEND VIRGINIA FRANCES FROST MINNIE EUN-G MIRIAM GEBALLE NORMA MARIE GEOEEROY MARTHA LOU GILMORIE LORRAINE C. GOODMAN CORA ELIZABETH GOULD HARRIET GRIFFITHS LORRAINE HOFFREMAYER BERET .M.ARGUERITE HAGEN TRUDY HAGENS LOU ELIZABETH HAGERMAN RUTHLEORA HAIL ROSBMARY ANN GARRINGTON TOMOE JHATA STELLA HAUBOE VIRGINIA ELEANOR HEIMAN VALERLE HEISER QIOSEPHIN-E M. HENRIQUES LOIS HESS MARGARET ERNESTINE HILL ENID MURIEL 'HILLDRING JANICE HIRSCH VIRGINIA LEE HURST HELENA JACOB EVELYN FRANCES JACOBS BARBARA GLORIA JACOBS SUZANNE JACOBS MARIAN E. JOHNSON OLWEN WOODRUFF JONES PHYLLIS KAHN MILDRED IRENE KANTROW NANCY JEAN KERNIER AMANDA KOCKOS MARGARET LA NICCA JANE LAURISTON AUDREY ,LEMKE KATHERINE LEVEY MARTHA LINKS BETTY MARCIA LOBREE KATHRYN ANNE LOUCKS VERA C. MAGHETTI LORRAINE MARKGRAE HELEN MARKOWITZ IRENE MAE MARTIN MARIAN MARTIN VIRGINIA ORDELL MAXWELL GEORGINA MAYER 'ELEANOR J. MCCLINTIC JANE MCCORMICK BERNLCE MARY MCDONALD PHYLLIS MCGUIRE ADELE C. 'MEYER MINETTE M.EYER BENNETTZ MILLER ELLEN JOAN MORCH JACQUELINE ROSE MOSSERI FE'RN ANN MUHEIM BARBARA MURPHY MARGARET LOUISE NEALIS NISAKO NONAKA MARY JANE NORCROSS ADELINE NORMAN JEAN R, OLIVER MARIE .LOIS o'MEARA SYLVIA JOHANNA ONESTI JEAN E. PALLVINY LYDIA EARIN NORMA LEE PARENT J. -LOUISE PERRY FLORENCE HARRIETT PORTIGOL BARBARA M. RAAKA HJELENE SY.LVIA .RASMUSSEN BERNICE RAVN NEAL REDEERN EMILY REINHOLD AMARJORIE JANE RHINE BARBARA ROBINSON GABRIELLE MARGUERITE ROGER ZELMA ROMAINE VIRGINIA ELLEN ROSENBURG FRANCES VIRGINIA ROYSTER GOLDIE RUBINSKY 126 Centennial Scrapbook LOXVELLITES OF 1918 Included in some of these pictures are Dorothy Hill, Frances Langpaap, Esther Bruckner Edith Pence fformer Lowell principal and teacherj, Bess McArthur, Marian Black, Katherine Stone, Edith OBIICH Elsie Henderson Bob Janssen, and Scotchy Campbell. CADET COMPANIES A AND C, 1918 Centennial Scrapbook 1918-The school's War Service Committee work- ing hard on Belgium Relief, literature for soldiers, and other war projects .... The president and vice presi- dent in the spring are Daniel McMillan and Edwina Barry .... Fall officers are Joe McNamara and Edith Murdock. 1919-A school jazz band, The Diminished Seven organized .... Senior Follies and a circus are the big social events of the year .... George Carley and Zoe King are spring oflicers .... George Harman and Helen Barry are the fall student body leaders. THE 1920's 1920-The Audubon Club and the Junior Literature Society are the newest school Organizations .... Gift ACTION SWIMMING 1919 For a number of years the Lowell swimming team so outclassed its high school competition that it was necessary to schedule meets with college frosh and varsity teams. Here is the start of the 50 yard dash in the Lowell-Stanford frosh meet of 1919. A year later Jim Carson, Lowell starter at right, qualified for the United States Olympic swimming team. SENIOR DAY OF MAY 21, 1919 Senior Day ini the courtyard Day is another new tradition .... Students decide to celebrate James Russell Lowell's birthday by present- ing a yearly gift to the school .... Student body leaders are Donald Campbell and Margaret Puetall in the spring and Kenneth Pelton and Genevieve Toye in the fall. 1921-Circus is a big success .... L.H.S.S.A. oiii- cers are Elmer Hinman and Gertrude Nelson, in the spring, and William Rankin and Gladys McLeod in the fall. -1922-The ROTC organizes a fencing club .... The girls organize a crew .... Ralph Norris and Vesta Sulton are spring oflicers .... Fall leaders are Clarence Frazier and Edna O'Brien. SENIOR CLASS DANCE COMMITTEE-JAN. '25 Row one: Beverley Turrrbell, John Moses, Elsa Kroto- zyner, Henrylitta Greene, Mildred Levy, Katherine Lar- son, Benning Cook. Row Iwo: William Taylor, Robert Green, Laurie Benomati, Henry Harris, George Hart fothers not identiiiedl. EVELYN K. RUSSELL LOUISA RUSSELL MAUREEN RUSSELL LQLSESAKM K ,L JANE LETIT IA SANCTUARY MARY FRANCES SCHAEFFER MARIE SCI-IAFER MARCIA LOU SCOBEY LAVONNE SHEARER ROSALIE SLATT BETTY LORRAINE SMITH JEANNE MARIE SMITH BARBARA KATHLEEN SOLOMON 'GLADYS SOLOMONSON PHYLLIS G. SOUTHARD MARION LOUCETTA STANG ELEANORE STAPLETON JANET STRUGNELL LACY A. SWANSON MARGARET THOMSEN JANE F. THOMPSON CLARE A. TROPPMANN VIRGINIA VALENTINE LOIS voN .MORPURGO ARLAYNE MARJORIE WINSTON DENA DIONE WITTE AUDREY ELAINE WOODS BERNARDINE WRIGHT MARJORIE B. WRIGHT LILY YEE JEAN CATHRYNE ZELLER NATALIE ZISSER ESTHER L. ZWERLING CLASS OF JANUARY 19, 1937 Boys 'WILLIAM ALBERTSON ALVIN ALTFIELD WILLIAM STANLEY BABER FRED BACCEI LLOYD GEORGE BENJAMIN PAUL BJLAK BRUCE W. BOLTON ROBERT O. BRAGG FRANK JOHN BRICKWEDEL, JR. LLOYD A. BROCKWELL ROBERT E. BROWNE ROBERT ALFRED BUSH IV ROBERT CAMPBELL GEORGE L. CARTER ALBERT 'CERF AiLVIN EDGAR CERF II WILLIAM GERRICK CHANDLER HARRY JAMES COHN, JR. STANLEY PHILIP COHN ERNEST E. COLL 'ROBERT -C. CREIGHTON 'RALPH STANTON CRUMMEY VITO ANGELO D'ACQUI-STO ROBERT DAILEY WILLIAM DAILEY CHARLES CLARENCE DANFORT ROBERT DANNENBERG ROBERT L. DE SAUSSURE ROBERT M. DORWIN PETER DRAGOLOVICH SAMUEL W. ELKINS RAY FAHN JAN-ANDERS EINAR FOSSELIUS 'GORDON G. GEORGE PETER BASIL GEORGE MARVIN M. GEORGIAN GEORGE .R. GEPPERT AARON JM. GINSBURG ROBERT J. GOLDSTEIN HILBERT GROSSMAN ARMANDO F. GUGLIELMINO ROBERT W. HADELER ELMER D. HAMBLIN ROBERT HAMBURGER , ROBERT I-IANNAN LEONARD JACKSON HARLESS, JR JOHN LANDIS HARTIG DOUGLAS H. ,HENKEL JACK DALFORD HENSHAW JOHN c. LHILL ROBERT J. HOGAN CHARILES s. JENNER THEODORE KAPLAN CLEMENT KRASNOW JAMES A. KRAUSE HAL 'LANDAU RAY LANG LANE s. LAWSON PAUL M. LE BARON ALLEN LIM VICTOR ANTHONY LOEREE LEE TLETJEN LOBERG H. ALFRED O'CONNOR OTTO A. OTTOSEN, JR. THOMAS E. PARKINSON KENNETH A. PASQUALETTI GEORGE BERGEN PLANT cONRAD E. PRAETZEL GEORGE SHIPLEY PRUGH EMMETT w. PURCELL SANFORD ALBERT MARCUS RUSSELL HUDSON MACDONALD 127 FRANK MAKOTO MATSUMOTO MILTON JOSEPH MAYER SYLVESTER J. MCATEE KBMPTON H. MCCA.R'TI-IY JOHN THOMAS MQEADDEN. JR. HAROLD GRANT MELLER FRANK W. MILILER J. .MAX MOORE ALAN WILLIAMS MORRIS KENNETH MORRISON RICHARD BRENDAN MURPHY RICHARD ELLIOTT NEUSTADT EDWIN B. RABJOHN NEILSON JACK REESE ALAN EDWARDS REHN ERNEST MUES ROHDE GORDON JA ROMEY JR, ROY LEE ROMEY LLOYD LEO ROOT, JR. 'ALLISON M. ROUSE WILLIAM SALfT JAMES MEIRTON SANDERS HERBERT SCHONBERGER ROBERT R. SEY:MS BERNARD WARE SHIRAR LLOYD ARATA SHINKAI JAMES SIME ALAN E. SQUIRES ARNOLD N. STAMPS CARLOS STEWART STANTON L. SOBEL FRANK S. TARANTINO 'MARITIN J. TEHANEY WILLIAM E. TESSIER GEORGE URICK HARLAND VAN NESS ASHLEY V. R. WALCOTT BERTRAM WARD - GEORGE WARTON WILLIAM L. WEATHERLY, JR. EDWARD WIEDER, JR. ALLEN V. WILLIAMS THEODORE HERBERT WREDE GEORGE WAYNE YEE PETER G. YOUDALL FREDERICK RANDOLPH YOUNG ARTHUR CHARLES ZIEE Girls SYILVIA ABRAMS 'SHIRLEY AFTERGOOD JANE ALEXANDER ALISE ALLISON YVETTE CARROLL AMBROSE MAY Y. N, AUYONG EVELYN LUCILLE AVERY BETTY JEAN BACKSTEDT LORRAINE BEARWALD HELENE BEHNCKE JUEL BLUMENTHAL PAULAANA MARIE BOURNE JEANNE E. BOUTON MARGARET LOUISE BOVYER ESTHER BROWN MERLE HELAN BRUCE 'RUTH ELLIS BRUN AILEEN DOROTHY CASTAGNOLA CLARA BERNICE CHANNING MARY FRANCES CHAPMAN FRANCES JANE CHICHIESITER SHIRLEY H. COHN ANNETTE COOGAN JANE CORBETT MARJORIE M. CUMMINGS BARBARA ILOANE CURRY HELENE DAVIS HARRIET CORINNE DECKER JUNE .DE GANNA JOAN DEVLIN MARION DILLER DORIS DOUGLAS HELEN DOYLE VIRGINIA LEONTINE ELLIS AUDREY FRANKEL LILLIAN FRIED BETTE CHARLOTTE FRIEDMAN ELEVYN GRACE FUSE PHOEIBE IGALLAS BARBARA ALICE GIBBON CLAIRE B. GOLDMAN JACQUELINE JOAN GORDON MARJORIE GORDON SHIRLEY B. GREENBERG RUTH MARJORIE HACKE VIRGINIA FRANCES HERNAN JANICE HIMMIELWRIGHT FLORA HARSHAW DOROTHY LOU HOPPER HELEN CHARLOTTE HYLAND FRANCES ISOBEL JACK MARGARET ALCEYN JACK ALYEECE LORRAINE JOHNSON SHIRLEY JOHNSTON FRANCES JOSEPH HELENE KAMLER JEANNE KELLY EVEILYN KEMP MARGARET A. KILGORE 128 PROMINENT STUDENTS OF THE MID-TWENTIES Upper left: Student ofhcers of 1926, Tom Watt, Walter Gibbons, Steve Garin, Stanley Breyer fstudent body presidentj and John Saunders. Upper right: L12 President Tracy Warhlich and Lenore Selig. Below Zbem are: Moco Woodworth, Joe Musto Qsenior class president in '25J, and Leon Valianos. Next row: A 1926 track star chats with Student Body Secretary Hamilton Hedge and S. B. President Steve Garin. Next: Some more members of the class of '26. Righl: Bill Welch, '27 football and Swimming star, and Herb Richter, fall '26 editor of the Red and White. Boy in the swimming suit is Guido Caglieri, captain of the 1926 swimming team. Nexi: Marjorie Leeper with a friend. 1925 Student Body President Joe Smith also poses with a friend. Football ace Gene Van Horn. Bottom row: Track star Ted Sanderson was also captain of the '26 football team. The 21 Hayes Street car. Lunch time in the court. Tom Schute, guard on the '26 team. l Centennial Scrapbook 1923-ROTC forms a Rifle Club .... Newly-organ- ized Spanish and French clubs each put on a play .... Edward Newman and Marion Johnson are the spring leadersg Ralph Mcllwaine and Lucille Bridges are the winners in the fall student body elections. 1924-School enrollment still growing .... Spring senior class is largest in school's history .... School leaders are Ernest Wagner and Elizabeth Allison, in the spring, and Benning Cook and Henry-Etta Greene in the fall. 1925-The Chess and Checker Club and the golf team are organized. A Riding Club is started .... Joe Smith and Dorothy Brown are spring officers. Fall president is Russell Ewing and the vice president is Elizabeth Castagnetto. 1926-Middie Day every Wednesday is the latest school fad .... The Uke Club started to provide en- tertainment for the rallies ..., Stanley Breyer and Helen Cullen are officers in the spring, and in the fall the winning ollicers are Guido Caglieri and Virginia DeCamp. Physical Education Department '25. Pictured is Miss Dorothy Flynn, head of the departmentg Miss Doro- ithy Osborne, Miss Valerie Elders. GIRLS CREW Girls Crew preparing for a practice run. This was a popular sport for Lowell girls between the years 1922 and 1928. CLARENCE CAST-FALL 1923 Row one, frilfingjf Allen, Bailey, Turner, Tei. jen, Royce, Niswonger, Niebles, Storey. Row Iwo: Willard, House, Harry, Stoll, Brophy, Solomon. Rou' three: Harvey, Lawler. ANNA KIMBLE FREDA KOBLICK ELAINE KOCKOS ELIZABETH R. KRAUSE BEATRICE KROGER JEAN HART KRUGIER MURIEL FRANCES LEDER DOROTHY ANN LEIGHTON PHYLLIS iLEVY DONNA LORRAINE LOWE ROZELLE S. LOWENSTEIN LORRAINE MCKINLEY LUNT CAROLYN EILEANOR MACDONALD ALICE M. MAIER LILLIAN H. MALKIN CHARLOTTE MARBLE DORTHEA SUSANNE MATZ 'BEVERLY MARSHALL MARIE LOUISE MCNUTT AUDREY GERTRUDE MEIER PI-IYLLIS JANE MEINBERGER CRESSIDA THERESA MIELKE ELSIE ROSE MEYER MURIEL MILLS ELINORE JUNE MINGST CLAIRE MISHKIND BITTY MOORE BERNICE MOORE LOUISE C. iMORGH MARYON MORTELL BARBARA M. MOYES GUDRUN RAGNA NAES BETTY NELSON MARGARET KATHERINE NISSEN RITA MARIE O'BRIEN 'MILDRED J. O'CONNOR MERCEDES ONTIVEROS ELEANOR GERTRUDE PERSONS BARBARA E. PETERS YVONNE PHILLIPS BETTYMAE POLDINGHORN MURIEL RADEMACHER BARBARA H. RANDALL WANDA CHARLOTTE' RANKEN MARY JANE REEVES JEANNETTE RENFERE 'RUTH H. RICI-IERT MARY ELENA .RIEDY MARGARET ROBINSON DORIAN R. ROSENTHAI. MARGARET E. ROSENTHAL JEAN ROYSTON NORMA JANE RUDE VIRGINIA L. .RYAN 'HAZEL E. SAUNDERS BARBARA LOUISE' SCHIECK MARION HELEN SCHMIDT PATRICIA SHERRY TRUTHO'MAE SNYDER UMEDO SOWA FRANCES SYLVIA SPEYER VIRGINIA STADTFELD LOIS M. STOBENER PATRICIA SULLIVAN MARCELLA SYMON YVONNE TISSOT RUTH TRINIES NANCY VAN SCHAICK FRANCES MURIEL VON AHN BETTY CONSTANCE WARREN JEAN MARIE WILKIN MARY ELIZABETH YOUNG CLASS OF JUNE 1937 Boys STANLEIGH D. ACTON GEORGE H. AMBERG DONALD A, ANGUS ROBERT M. ARMITAGE LAWRENCE H, ARNSTEIN HAROLD ADRIAN ASHER DONALD I. BABCOCK HARRY BECKER STANLEY M. BEHR STANLEY K. BEHREND WILLIAM A, BENTLEY JACK BERNARD JOHN BRYON BLACHLEY ROBERT A. BLACK WILLARD I. BLACKFIELD EUGENE M. BLAKE JAN HAROLD BLOMQUIST 'CHARLES F. BOSTER E, LLOYD BRAUN WILLIAM BRUMFIELD DONALD S. BURNESS ASA BUTTON RICHARD FRANCIS CAHILL ROY S. CAMERON, JR. LEE A. CARLSON RALPH MONTALVO CARRUTHERS WARD ARTHUR CATE WILLIAM G. GHINN GEORGE CHRISTIAN CHARLES HENRY CLAFLIN JOSEPH R. COLDWELL EDWARD JOSEPH CONWAY JOHN WILLIAMS COON 129 GEORGE COPELAND WILLIAM CUNNINGHAM RUSSELL GUILD CURTIS RAYMOND DASMANN RALPH .H. DAVIS WILLIAM R. DAVIS JOHN MARKLEY DENNIS GEORGE R. DERHAM ROBERT E. DETHLEESEN JOHN O. DIEHL 'WARREN A, DUEEIELD JEROME EDELSTEIN ROBERT LEROY ELDREDGE SAMUEL ELKIND ROBERT M, BLKING WARDEN ELLIS HORACE E. EMERSON DONALD E. ERSKINE HUGO EACCI ROBERT JOSEPH EEERICK DAVID WILSON FLANAGAN GORDON H. FILEMING HARRY WILLIAM FIRISTER, JR. GEORGE YOSHINORI EUKUHARA CHARLES A. GALLIVAN VICTOR GINOTTI CHARLES PAUSON GINSBURG LEONARD GOLDB.ERG SIDNEY GOLINSKY CHARLES GROTTE JAMES IGUNN ROBERT RANDALL GRAHAM MYRON BARNETT IHAAS RICHARD EVERJETI' HALL WILLIAM A. HAMILTON ROLAND HELLMAN JOSEPH M. HANNAN WILLIAM EUGENE HANSEN HOWARD HANVEY WARD LAWRENCE HART BRUCE ,ELIAS HEISER WALTER HEISLER M. MENDEL HERZBERG JAMES WEST HITCHCOCK RAYMOND E. IHOEEMAN, JR. SHIGERU RICHARD HORIO ROBERT HOUGHTON WILLIAM J. JHOWATT EETER M. IDA ROBERT BARON JACOBS ROBERT S. JACOBS ALEXANDER JAFEE GEORGE T. .JEONG BENJAMIN ISELIN JONES JACK NORMAN KAMINSKI HAROLD A. KELLER, JR. KENNETH KESSEL ROBERT KEVIE PAUL KIMBALL IARVING L. KLEIN BOB KOLP DANIEL IC, AKRIEDT LEO N. KRUCOEE ROBERT S. LANG PAUL E. LANGPAAP GEORGE 'MARTIN ILA NICCA, JR. EUGENE E. LEUBNER JOHN E. LEAVITT BENJAMIN GERHART LIBBY LESTER LIPINSKI CHARLES M. LONG, JR. MELVLLLE H. 'LONG JOSEPH ,LOPEZ KAY LORENTZEN LIONEL LUBEIN JOE J. LUCO FREDERICK G. LUNDBERG CHARLES D. LYON JACK ILYNCH DOUGLAS B. MAC MULLEN ROY IH. MATSUDA, JR. JAMES REDMOND MCCARTHY CHARLES A. MQGARRIGLE, JR. ELDEN L, MCKOVVN ROBERT MAXWELL LOGAN T. MILES JAMES EMERSON MILLER. JR. ROY STEIN MINKLER ANDREW JAMES MOORE JOHN QUINCY E. MOSES HARRY MILES MUHEIM WILLIAM J. MURPHY, JR. GEORGE NAKASHIMA ALFRED NELL RODNEY NESSIER EDWIN J. ONGERTH ROBERT J. OSTROW ERIC OWYANG JOSEPH MYLROIE PENBERTHY JACK E. QUINN 'GEORGE QUIROS ROBERT ROBACK -WILLIAM J. RODGERS HOWARD E. ROBERTS EDWARD SCHAEFER ARTHUR G. SCHARLACH JOHN RUSSELL SCHOENFELD 130 Centennial Scrapbook CLASS OF 1921 Top: Gladys McLeod, Miriam Tomsong Gladys McLeodg Mildred Brown, Miriam Tomson, Kate Kesler, Vivian Whitneyg Elaine Kraus. Middle: Pattersong Bill Ranking Gladys McLeod, Kenneth Kratzg Loretta Doran. Bottom: Gladys McLeod, Miriam Tomson, Kate Kessler, Vivian Whitneyg Elaine Kraus, Mildred Brown: Marie Vezina, Kenneth Kratz, Mildred Brown, Bill Ranking Cecile Dorang Mildred Brown, MiriamTomsOn,Vivianwhitney. PICTURE TAKEN AFTER ELECTIONS IN JUNE, 1924 Gladys Bostwick, vice president of the class of janu- ary, '25, Betty Allison Murray, student body vice presi- dent of june, '24, HenryEtta Greene Dizzani, Student body vice president of January, '25, and Miriam Smith Cook, vice president of the class of june, '24, Centennial Scrapbook 1927-Stephen Garin and Lucille Hansen are the lspring officers ...h . Hamilton Hedge and Dorothy Dine- ley are elected in the fall .... The Lowell judged the best high school paper in California .... Students com- iplaining about the hard seats in the auditorium .... Seat covers finally provided ..., Organization of the Sewing Club and the Press Club brings the number of school clubs to a total of 26 .... Herbert Long and Margie Blank in the spring, and Harry Laborde and Roberta Tempest in the fall, are elected to the oflice of president and vice president of the student body. 1929-Lee Valianos and Wallea Tormey are new school ofiicers ..., School handbook is published with a summary of school activities and a list of songs and yells. THE 1930's 1950-ROTC cadets take first place in annual high school competition at Kezar Stadium. . . . Albert Cook GRADUATES OF THE TWENTIES Leff to right: Lee Pope graduated in 1927. He was a member of 5 the term play cast of that term, was president of his senior class, and was also on the Scroll and L. Anene Denke graduated in 1924, was on the girls' tennis team and also on the girls' crew. Larry Rhine was on the debating team and graduated from Lowell in '27, GIRLS' SWIMMING TEAM-1925 Marie Carolan Irigbtj and two other members of the 1925 Girls' Swimming Team get ready to take a dive at Sutro Baths. and Tollie Irwin are the spring officers and Gualt Da- vis and Jean White are the winners in the fall election. 1931-Girls' Athletic Association and Girls' Block L Society established ..,. Lowell gets a new library .... William Johnson and Betty Gray elected president and veep in the spring .... Same honors for Bertram Buz- zini and Virginia Conlan in the fall. 1932-School gets an amplifying system for the ral- lies .... GAA adds ice skating and natural dancing to its list of activities ..,. Spring student leaders are Harry Carlson and Betty Scott .... Joseph Daniels and Mary Redfern win fall elections. 1953-LHSSA ofiicers are Howard Erlenheim and Romer Bowman fspringj and Richard Gock and Idell Forrest ffallj ..., A Psychology Club organized. 1934-Lowell students now attending Galileo on half-day session .... Girls' dance orchestra formed .... First GAA playday. . . Spring officers are Bennett Mc- fC0ntinued on Page 1351 TERM PLAY-l1929 Stars of the 1929 term play, Merton of the Movies were Dorothy Sainges and Sylvester Anderson. Helping to make the 1929 term play a success were Catherine Corbett and Barbara Martens. Lefi to right: Tracy Warhlick was captain of the 150 pound soccer team in 1925. Joe Smith, '24, was president of the student body, captain of the unlimited basketball team, and captain of the champi- onship swimming team. Dick Curtis graduated in 1927, was on the Scroll and L, was secretary of the student body, on the track team and the Lowell staff. PHILIP NICOLAS SCHMIDT RAYMOND A. SCHWARTZ RALPH H. SCHWARTZ DANIEL F. SHEAN AARON SHENSON VINCENT SHERMAN HAROLD G, SHOOK REX EARL SHOOP 'CHARLES JULIAN SILVERMAN, JR JAMES E- SIMMONS 'SAMUEL J. SISKIN 'JACK SKAI-IAN MAJOR JOSEPH SMITH ROBERT JUDSON STULL, JR, JACK ROBERT SULLIVAN RALPH THOMPSON WARREN E. THORNTON RICHARD C. TOBIN JACK NATHAN TURNER HUGH TOMALIN VICTOR F. URBAN, JR. ROBERT VAN HEEKEREN HERBERT E. VOGLER JACK ARTHUR WAHLE IRWIN J. WENGER PAUL PARKHURST WIGGINS PHILIP JOHN WILLETT, JR. ROBERTON CAPELL WILLIAMS CHESTER JAMES WOLF 'WIDLIAM WOLLNER HERBERT BARTLETT WYMAN 'KAORU YAMAGUCHI 'ALBERT YOUNG Girls 'DOLORES VALETTA AGEE ROBERTA FRANCES ALEXANDER GWYNEVERE M. ANDERSON LOUISE MARIE ANDERSON LORENE FRANCES ATKINS MARGARET L. BALDWIN ANANFJLLE BARRETT 'ALLEN ELIZABETH BARRY ADELE BAYLINSON IHAZEL BAUNT ON :EDNA FLORENCE BEER IBEVERLEY BOLTER BETTY JANE BRADLEY ROBERTA A. BRUNN JACQUELINE MARIE BURROUGHS ANITA 'CALIFORNIA BUSSE QIANE PATRICIA BUTLER DOROTHY LUCILLE CARLON BETTY JANE CLIDENCE 'BETTE OHRYSLER CLARIBEL COFFIMAN JEANNE ADILE COLLINS BINNIE COLTART 'LOIS HELEN COOPER DOROTHY JANE CROUCH NANCY CUTLER JACQUELINE DAVIS LEAH ANITA DAVIS MARION G. DAY JANE LOUISE nr: MAMIEL 'BERNICE ni: MARTINI 'VIVIENNE FRANCES DOD HELEN JEANNE ,DULIK MARY PATRICIA ELLSWORTH FLORENCE EILEEN EIMERSON ANN ERSUNOFF ELIZABETH BRYON FARROW ESTHER ALMA FEITELBERG JACQUELIN FINK LORRAINE JANE FORTRIEDE ALBERTA FOWLER PEGGY L. GERDES ANNA MARIA GIANNINI DOROTHEA A. GIOVANNETTI HELEN EDE GLOS DORIS MILDRED GOLDSTEIN JUANITA GOMEZ ROSALIND E. GORFINKLE ALICE GRAEBER LOIS JUANITA GREEN JEAN GROSS JANE GUERENA MARJORIE JANE HAASE AUDREY HALLGARTH BARBARA VIRGINIA HALL DORIS RUTH HANLEY EMILY MARTHA HARRIS MARIE BEVERLY HASSE MARION MARGARET HANSEN WILMA HANSEN MIRIAM LA VERNE HAWKINSON MARY GRACE HELFRICH BETTY FANCHER HEIM VIRGINIA MARIE HEIN MILDRED HELLER TOYOKO HIDEKAWA BARBARA GAY HINDS NORMA ELIZABETH HOFFMAN 'BARBARA MORGAN HOLT ET1-IEL .ELIZABETH HOWELL ELVIRA E. HUENERGARDT FARRUCK IOAS LOUISE JAMESON LORAINE P. JOHNSEN 131 ELEANOR JOHNSON MARJORIE JONES AIJMA B. JORDAN ELIZABETH EMMA JORDAN LOLITA MARGARET JUDGE JOY KAUEMAN PATRICIA KENNEDY PAULINE ANNA KERBER MARIAN EDITH KERR BARBARA JEAN KISPERT ELIZABETH ANNE KRELING JEAN KUSTER MILDRED JEAN LANDSBIERGER DANA JOAN LANGEELD EDITH DOROTHY LARSON JEANNE 'MARIE-THERESE LATTIN DOROTHY YLEMKE GAIL ELENA LIPMAN DOROTHY LISCHESKE MYRTLE S. LOUIE LAURA N. LOWE MARY ELIZABETH LUCAS JULIET ILUTON VIOLA LUTON ELEANOR JANE .MCGAHIE CORIENNE WILLIS MACKINTOSH JEAN ROBBINS MACLANE BARBARA MARIE MARKIGRAF JUNE MASSONI SARAH BESS MANNON POLLY ANN MCCARTHY GAYNEL LOIS MCOLAIN DOROTHY P. MCGUINNESS BETH AMY MCCRONE FRANCES ELAINE MCMILLAN PATRICIA MCNEIL JEANNE MCNAMARA ELORA MEEK EELICE MEYER BARBARA ANN MILLS EVELYN DOLORES MORIANO MARGUERITTE MORAND ELEANOR MARIE MUEGGE VIRIGINIA NELSON DORIS HAZEL NICKSON MURIEL ELIZABETH NUHN JUNE BERNICE O'CONNELL ,MARY JANE OEHME OREALLIA P. ORSLAND EUGENIA MARIE O'SHEA DORIS ILYLE PATITERSON EVELYN B. PATTON JUNE LINNEA PAULSON PAULINE LOUISE PIICARD JOSEPHINE PORRAS HELENE POWELL VIVIAN POW.ER JANE READ CATHERINE REBOK DOROTHY REED BETTY JANE REPP HARRYETTE ESTHER RIECRS MARION PAY ROBERTSON MADGE E. RUSSELL MARGUERITE RUTLEDGE ELIZABETH JANE ROBINSON LRENE' SAAMUELS DOROTHY MAUDE SANDERSON SYBYL N. SANDFORD ETHEL BEATRICE SAPIR NADINE -SCHENDEL HILDRED E. SCHWARTZ CATHERINE' ANN SCHROEDER BERNICE SERENSKY BARBARA JANE SCOTT MAIRLE SHALE MURIEL FLORENCE SHAPIRO ALICE SHATSIKY PHILLIS HELENE SILBERMAN MARION H. SILBERSTEIN MARIAM E. SOMMER NANCY ,LEE SPARKS MARY JOSEPHINE SPAULDING BARBARA VIRGINIA SPERRY BERNADINE STARR CECILIA STEINBERG RUTH CHARLOTTE SUTHERLAND GERTRUDE SUTTON DOROTHY M. TABOR JACQUESSINNE THEBERT DORIS ELIZABETH THOMPSON JOY CLAIRE FOSTER THOMPSON JUNE' LESLIE TOMLINSON MERE IDA TRENEAR BETTY TUCKER MILDRED URQUHART MARGUERITE VAN DRIESSCIHE ANNE ISABELLE VAN NATTA MURIEL PATRICIA VELLOU ETHEL M. VIZZARD GRACE VOISIN VERA WALSH NAOMI B. WELFIELD ALETHA WELLS MARCELE J. WIILKINS DORIS .ANN WOEHL SHIRLEY BETH WOODMAN BARBARA WORDEN 132 Centennial Scrapbook 1929 LOWELL STAFF Centennial Scrapbook IA DANCE COMMITTEE-1940 Tap raw: Ralph Kjar, Donald Brush, Edward Russell. Raw lwo: Jerome Applegarth, Jean Sonne, Anita Faltin, Robert Troppmann, Margilee Chrisman, Mary Libby, Clayton Calender. JACK STROUD-ALL-AMERICAN ack Stroud on traflic duty in the Spring of 944. Later he became All-American guard for he University of Tennessee. He is now playing brofessional football. ART CLASS ON FIELD TRIP Field trips were a popular activity in the '20s too. Mr. Dakin and the Art Club enjoy a trip to the Legion of Honor Art Gallery. John Heilbron was the president of the senior class of June '51, a member of the debating team, and a member of the Student Court. He graduated from U.C. in June 1955 and was in the Phi Beta Kappa. Louis Heilbron was a member of the June '24 graduating class of Lowell. He was the editor of the Lowell, presi- dent of the Scroll and L, captain of the tennis team, and the valedictorian of his graduating class. He gradu- ated from U.C. in 1928 when he was valedictorian and in the Phi Beta Kappa. Kingstone Ebner was drum major in 1933 LILLA Y. C. WU EDITH J. ZAMMITT CLASS OF DECEMBER 1937 Boys GUSTAVE T. ALLIBERT ROY YOSHIO ASHIZAWA VERNON AMBROSE J. OSWALDO ASTURIAS JAMES BRUCE ATKINSON CHARLES E. AUERBACH MERVYN BACIGALUPI GENE WALDO BAYLESS MIERVIN G. BECK RICHARD LYLE BELL CARL A. BERNTSEN ARNOLD BERWICK PHILIP RAEBURN BOWLES JACK HANCOCK BURNS RICHARD BUTLER ALAN LOUIS CAHN HERBERT WILLARD CAHN NORMAN I. CHEILEK FRANCIS MOLTON CHRISMAN JAMES PATRICK CLIFFORD JAMES J. COEN MILTON M. COOK OSCAR A. COOK XVALTER COTA MAX DANZIGER ROBERT D.ASHIELL THOMAS JOSEPH DEE, JR. EUGENE DEL MONTE MICHAEL .EARL DESMOND SIDNEY DIAMOND KENNETH EARL DUFFEY MELVIN DVORSON WALTER JOHN JOSEPH EAGER HENRY LEON .EINSPRUCH JOHN -M. FINLAYSON II ROBERT FRANCIS FISHER GEORGE WLHITIIEMAN FORMAN SIDNEY EDWARD FOSTER WILLIAM A. FOSTER, JR. ROBERT F. FRANKLIN JACK R. GATES LAURENCE VICTOR GRABER DONALD GRANT HARRY NORMAN GREENBLATT WALTER WILLIAM GRELLMAN GERALD GRIFFIN ALLEN GROSS EDWARD HANSON GRUBB STANLEY TOFT HAMILTON JOSEPH HAROLD HANDLON, JR. MELVILLE GEORGE HARVEY RICHARD HEILMAN HERBERT IHILLBRINK HAROLD HANSEL HOFFMAN HISASHI HORITA DOUGLAS O. HAUGE ROBERT BRADFORD KERN CHARLES ELLIS KISER JOHN :FREDERICK KRAUSE III THOMAS VINCENT LACOSTE NORMAN F. LAKE STANLEY HALL LANN JULES ALBERT LEVENE DAVID DEREK LEVIN JEROME J. LEWIS ROBERT B. LICHT ALFRED LOPEZ WILLIAM CHARLES MACKEY JOSEPH MAHONEY A. WARREN MALICK CHARLES GUILDFORD MANLEY JOHN WINTHROP MARTIN PETER MARTIN-BOBBA BORIS E. MAY JAMES ROGER MCNEIL, JR. JOHN WILLIAM MERIERDIERCKS FLETCHER G. MERIWETHER DONALD F. MILEY ROBERT MILEY JOSEPH DOUGLAS MILLS WILLIAM MITCHELL HOWARD E. MOSER FRED A. MURASKY JAMES WILLIAM MURPHY JOHN P. PADDOCK NIELS H. PEDERSEN RONALD PERKINS ALLAN SHERMAN PERRY EDMUND JOSEPH PICEITTI DOUGLAS WILLIAM RAAKA RICHARD G. RAY IRVIN M. ROTH ROBERT AUSTIN ROWE ALAN ROWLAND NINO RUSSO GEORGE M. SAKAI ANTHONY SALEVOURIS ROY SCLAR CARL SENGE ARTHUR SHEPARD JEROME L. SIMPSON ROBERT JOHN SKINNER 135 DAVID SOLOMON EDWARD SMITH PAUL LELAND STEBBINS MERVIN ROY SULLIVAN LEONARD LEWIS TAIX ARTHUR E. TELLEFSEN ll SAM TONG JACK KENNETH UNDERWOOD WALTER B. H. UNGIERLAND J. LESLIE VOGEL, JR. JONAS WAXMAN MAX JOHN WEBER HENRY WEISMAN EWELL NEWTON WHEELER EDWARD FREDERICK WILI.I FRANK NELSON WRIGHT. JR. FRANCIS YOUNG EDWARD A. ZEISLER, JR. Girls RUTH ADELE ABRAIMS ADA ACED CONSTANCE BALDWIN CAROLYN BALDWIN JANET EILEEN BALL ELLINOR BAX LILLIAN JANICE BELLISLE SIBYL DAPHNE BETTANCOURT BETTY BIELEMA BETTY JEAN BLUM JANE BOUGHNER LYNN RUTH BROWN REVA BRODSKY LUCILLE CARNEY BAIRBARA JANE CERF DORIS V. CLAPTON DAVIDA CROWLEY MARGBRY MARY CULP MARGARET MARY DANIELS ELIZABETH BURROWS DAVIS DENISE VON RANTZAU DEUPREY DIANA BURKETT DILLINGHAM MURIEL A. DODSWORTH EMILY DRISCOLL EI JANE EDDY CLARINE C, ELKEN IN.EZ ERICKSON ANN-MARIE ERIKSON ALDA ALBERTA FERRETTI CONISTANCE FISHER FLORINE MIRIAM FRUCHT MAY DOLORES FUNG ELLA HULDA FUSS JOANNA ILONA GHINSBERG EUNICE GOLDBERG BETTY GOLUB CAROL THERESE HARDEN MARGARET H. HATT JACQUELINE JANE HAUSMAN ANN HEPPNER MARJORIE CLARICE HOFMEISTER PATTY HOLLINGBERY BARBARA HUBBARD GINEVRA HUFFMAN BETTY HUNTER ELEANOR K. IANCOVICH PEGGY KAMPER LILLIAN JEAN KAPLAN EILEEN KENDALL LOUISE KIDDIE PAULINE ANNE KIMBALL KAYA KITAGAWA ELIZABETH KNOWLES EVELYN KOLODNY DORIS HONOR LANCTOT BEULAH GAIL LANE VALERIE E. LAURENT LUCILLE L. LEE BETTY JOAN LIPPMAN JEANNETTE S. LIVINGSTON JOY ANNA MACK BARBARA J. MAGHETTI DORIS .MAY MARKOWITZ HELEN LOIS MCMILLAN JUNE MCMULLIN BARBARA CHRISTA MILLER NANNETTE ALYCE MITCHELL EUNICE MARIE MOHRDICK MAUREEN V, MONSON FLORENCE MOSSERI LOIS NORIEGA JOYCE LEANORE PERKINS ARLENE JANE PHILLIPS PATRICIA PRINS CLAIRE RAND FLORENCE OLIVE REARDON FRANCES VIOLA RICE PEGGY ALICE ROACH RUTH N. ROMER DANETTE ROSENBLUM ELETA A. SCHROEDER ANNETTE SCHUNICK ANNE SEVERNS MERLE DORIS SHAFF BALRBARA JEAN SMITH VIRGINIA MARIE SMITH ELIZABETH ANN STANTON 134 Centennial Scrapbook SOME MEMBERS OF THE GRADUATING CLASS OF DECEMBER, 1934 MR. SCI-IXVARTZ AND SOME MEMBERS OF HIS CHEMISTRY CLASS Mr. Walsh swings at one in the 1952 Faculty- Senior baseball MEMBERS OF THE JUNE, 1956 GRADUATING CLASS game. Centennial Scrapbook fC0ntinued from Page 1311 Guire and Barbara McAdoo .,.. Bill Goetze and Kath- ryn Solley are fall student officers .... William Worden and Louise Leuenberger are spring officers .... Frank Morris and Jean Kelley are fall leaders ,... Lowell students move from Galileo to Poly to continue half- day sessions. 1936-Students return to new earthquake-proof Lowell .... Barbara Raake is the first girl elected editor of the 'Red md White . . . Roberta Harris and Jane Anderson elected spring term officers .... Fall ofiicers are Max Moore and Virginia Stadtfeld. 1937-Spring student body ofiicers are Henry Cla- fein, president, and Peggy Baldwin, vice president .... Fall leaders are Ed Willis and Lucille Carney .... Girls' Hi Jinx, sponsored by the GAA and Girls' Block L, is 'big success .... Girls organize drill team. 1938-Boys get new gym .... First edition of the Varieties presented .... Carol Channing wins the Crusaders Oratorical Contest with a trip to Hawaii as her prize .... Bill Cowden and Patricia Cowden win student body elections in the spring, and fall winners are Jack Sloan and Shirley Brown. 1939-Busy year with lots of special events going on at the World's Fair on Treasure Island .... Donald Minkler and Teresa Guilfoil are spring student leaders and Bill Joslyn and Barbara Don take over the student body offices in the fall. ADVANCED ORCHESTRA-JUNE, 1942 Row one: Chan, Sipes, Burness, Tearnish, Arnold, Gumbrecht, Yoshizato, Erb, Applegarth, Surtees. Row two: Berger, Martens, Wigle, Comstock, Erb, Sachs, Butler, Vance, Hesselberg, Murray, Hepper. Row three: Bucher, Schwabacher, Cochrane, Smith, Haney, Larsen, Vail, Schussel, Seppich, Lewis, Ostwald. BAND-JUNE 1942 Back row: Mr. Krieger, Goldstein, Scott, Sheppard, Butler, Wilson, Wilson, Lewis, Dank. Middle row: Smith, Jensen, von Essen, Dumont, Wurrn, Cooper, Curtis, Giusti, Lunn, Block. From raw: Johnson, Tierney, Doty, King, Sodestrom, Murray, Croker, Gomperts, Self, Simon. MILDRED SPIEGELMAN YOSHIKO G. TAK1oUcH1 FLORENCE oL1vE THOMPSON HILDA ANNETTE THURM cLAUD1A TIDWELL SUSAN EAYE TIVOL JEANNETTE TRACY JEAN MARY TROPPMAN JEANNE KERSTIN voN HUSEN SHIRLEY JANE WIENER RESSA GALE Worr JULIA MARY WRIGHT MARIAN wi-urromn YELLAND CLASS OF JUNE 8. 1938 Boys KENJI ERANK AMANO ALAN HOWARD ALCH ALEXANDER BOYD ALLEN HAROLD WOODROW ANNIS JAMES ARKATOV ROBERT ELMER ARMSTRONG RAYMOND AT TRIDGE ALBERT BARANOFF THEODORE FRANK BARTELS HERBERT BENARD DEL AUSTIN BENNETT SILVIO BESSONE WARREN BOONE EMERSON BRADSBERRY EPHRAIM DAVID BREMAN RICHARD K. BROWN FROBERT WILLIAM BUCKLES, JR LESTER SPEIER BURBANK ULICK PETER BURKE WILLIAM CROCKER BURKIT LEE HAYUM BURNS RICHARD KNIGHT BUTLER CHARLES CALHAN JOHN CARLSON ROBERT WARREN CASEY EMILE G. CLIFTON, JR. DAVID COHEN LELAND COHN JAMES J. COLLINS MICHAEL COSTELLO WILLIAM COWDEN DONALD COX JOHN LOUIS CRELLIN OLIVER .L. DAWSON GUS A. DESPOTAKIS GEORGE CLEMENT DONOVAN WILLIAM W. DORWIN DONALD F. EHRITT VICTOR EISNER, JR. MARK STEPHEN ELLIS JOHN ERVIN LLOYD ,JOSEPH EUBANKS HAROLD FLIEGLER CHATHAM HALE FORBES ROBERT GISSLOW SOLOMON JAMES GOPAL JAMES HERRON GRAHAM III OWEN MORT ON GREGORY LEONARD GROSS GEORGE J. GUM ARTHUR MELVIN HAILAND BILLY HENSLEY HART JOHN JAMES HARTFORD LE ROY HERSH ROY E. HILLS, JR. IRVIN JOSEPH HODES THOMAS HENRY HOPCROFT EARL D.AVID HORWITZ ROBERT J. INGERSOLL GEORGE C, JONES, JR. 'WILLIAM JOAQUIN JOSEPH ROBERT DANIEL KEEFFE CHESTER A. KEMP KENNETH M. KESSLER, JR. JACK KING KAY ICHI KITAGAWA RALBH .MARTIN KRAMER WILLIAM J. A. KIRETZMER GEORGE KOERNER JACQUES .LAFITTE WILLIAM LEONIDAS LA RASH WARREN LAWRENCE CHARLES PHILIP .LEBO JACK W. LEE FRE'D T. LEONG JOHN WAY LEONG JEROME M. LERNER RUSSELL GEORGE LEWIS LEON LEVENTHAL LEONARD RAYMOND LEVINE ROBERT C. LEVY STEPHEN BERTRAM LUNT, JR. GROVER J. MAGNIN JOHN MARSHALL, JR. EDWARD ROBERT MAURER ARNOLD MAYER JAMES FRANCIS MCCANN ROBERT EUGENE MCDERMOTT GEORGE ALLEN L. MCGINN FRANK MCINTOSH GENE BUD MEAD WALTER ALAN MEINBERGER 135 HENRY L. MILLER HALRRY M-ISTHOS WALTER W. MOHRDICK. JR. YOSHIKAZU MORITA ULYSSES GRANT MOY DANIEL IB. MULHOLLAND JAMES W. NICOSON ROBERT HAROLD NIELSON CHARLES ANTHONY NORTH ROBERT S. OLIVER, JR. LEONIDAS ORGINOS ROBERT ONIZUKA WALTER L. PENICK, JR, 'HARRY V. PERKINS, JR. JOHN OTTO PETERSEN NOBERT PRINS EDWIN WILLIAM PRESCOTT, JR. EDWARD REED DANIEL GARSON ROSENBLAT HENRY HUNTER SCALES, JR. ALEX SOHLESINIGER SIDNEY PLATT SEID AARON JESSE SHENSON ROBERT SILVERMAN EDWARD SIMPSON JEAN TALBOTT SMITH 'PHILIP ALAN SMITH ROBERT A. SMITH WESLEY D. SMITH, JR. JO SOLMONSON, JR, ALBERT A. SPECTOR MILTON ABRAHAM SPIRO STANLEY JOHN STENDAHL JAMES STROLE JACK L. SUNDBERG RICHARD D. TABER HERBERT TESLER CHARLES TEXAS THOMPSON S. JOHN TRIMBUR CHARLES REES WAKE RICHARD JOSERH WATERS MILTON WEINER DONALD EUGENE XVELTY JOSEPH OLIVER WILLIAMS ROBERT WILSON STANLEY V. WILSON, JR. EDMUND WUNSCH QJAMES YASUDA TEOFILO O, ZABALA Girls SHIRLEY .ACTON GLENNETTE MARIE ALLEN MASAKO AMEMIYA ANDREA C. ANDERSON JANE ELIZABETH ANDERSEN PATRICIA A. ARATA JEAN LOUISE ARMSTRONG FLORENCE V. ASHE GERALDINE BAKER JANE BARRY DORIS MAY BERRY JUANITA ALICE BONDS SHIRLEY L. BOLIN DO.ROTHY MARIE BERNTHAL CORINNA BOWMAN ISABEL BOYAJIAN JEANETTE BOYNTON RUTH EVELYN BRENNER VIRGINIA .LENORE BRIGHAM BETTY BROCKLEHURST NATALIE BROWN DORIS A. BURMEISTER 'MARJORIE MYRRL CAMERON ETHEL FRANCES CARR ,CAROL CI-IANNING CAROLINE MARGARET COARD JANET ELIZABETH 'CONRADI ELLEN BERNICE COOPER 'PATRICIA COWDEN BETTY PATRICIA COX FLORENCE CRABBE DOROTHY DOLORES CRANGLE BARBARA LORRAINE CRESPI JEAN DAVIS THELMA DAVIS LOIS B, DEBENHAM GLORIA WENTWORTH DOD ERANKEY SIBYL DOSS JUNE LUCILLE' DUNS BARBARA ANNE DYER DOROTHY EBERSTADT PAULA REGINA EBERSTADT MARGARET EMS MARJORIE ENDICOTT DIANA FEIGL DOROTHY LEE FEIST FAYALLA YVONNE FENTON MARIAN JEAN FINNELL RUTH CAROL FLAUM NORMA ANN FOLSOM GEORGIANA LORRAINE FRANSEN BEATRICE GEBALLE GEORGIA G, GIANOPULUS DOROTHY HELEN GISIN IRMA B. GLASSER LILLIAN GOLD LOUISE CAROLE GOODMAN JEANETTE LILLIAN GORDON 136 Centennial Scrapbook DRAMATICS CLASS 1937 Row one: Penberthy, Newell, Comadi, Chrysler, Smith, Hoffman, Ross, Tadducci, Driscoll, Mackie, Muheim, Row rwo: Peterson, Wolski, Nielson, Witcher, Storheim, McCann, McCrone, Pickens, Lunt, Rebok. Raw three: Bradsberry, Grissell, Roche, Serensky, Channing, Feitelberg, Perkins, Lynch, Brodsky, Lerner, LOWELL ALUMNI, 1945 Row one: Al Rossi, Lou Van Vliet, Ken Corsiglia, Bill Morrison. ' Row Iwo: Sid Loupe, Ken Corsiglia, Dean Mason, Harold Folb, Paul Nedelman, Ken Corsiglia, Gordon Tovani. Claude Rosenberg, student body president in 1946 Centennial Scrapbook 1942-School goes all out to support war effort. . . School has own amateur radio station, W6UST .... Dave Williams and Janet Pico are student officers in the spring, and Paul Hopper and Jacqueline Kenfield are fall leaders. THE 1940's l 1940-An a cappella choir organized .... CSF :ponsors a Pan-American Day ,program in the audito- rium .... Spring officers are Robert Curley and Frances Harrison .... Fall S. B. leaders are Carl Paakas and AgI16S JOHCS. 1943-Students receive Minute Man flag from Treasury Department for war bond sales .... Robert Eddy and Ruth Gumbrecht win student body posts in spring and Ray King and Margie Hiers are the winners 1941-Big Sisters organized .... Lowell offers post graduate courses for the first time .... Robert Arnold tnd Geary Krill take over student body posts in spring. . . Ira Thompson and Jane Blair are fall officers. in the fall term. GYM M 1942 Row one: June Winckler, Nancy Traverso, Pat Wil- liamson. Raw two : Corinne Clayton, Bobbie Mathews, 1947 RALLY SKU. Jean Barbe, Carol Menary. LOWELL STUDENTSkCLASS OF 1941 I Top left: Corinne Clayton, Jackie Kentield, Barbara Gidotti, Pat Kelly, Bobbie Mathews. Bottom left: Paul Hopper, Don Schumacher, Ken Larkin, Carol Menzlry, Bobbie Mathews, Barbara Sheldon. Top right: Pat Ann Williamson, Sandy Johnston, Bobbie Mathews, Carol Menary, Alice Jean Bahr, John Wullschleger, Mibs Dibble. Bnttom right: Alice Jean Bahr, Barbara Oliver, Barbara Pixley, Betty Spelvin. MARGERY GOULD IRENE GODSICK GRAY MARYLOUISE GRIES BETTYLOU fGRISSELL EDYTH GRITZ CATHERINE JEAN GUTHRIE ELINOR VIVIAN HALL '-HELEN LOUISE .HANNAH 'MARCIA iI-IANSEN TAIKO HARA PEGGY LEEHARBAUGH 'PATRICIA HUNTER HARVEY 'PATRICIA DAWN HEALY JOY ALLIENE HELDERLE DORIS JUNE HERMANN MIRIAM EDITH HOFFMAN ELVERA HELENE HOLSHER 'JOAN CATHERINE HUMPHREY JEAN FRANCES HURWITZ BETTY JANE HYMAN SUZANNE LILLIAN INGRAHAM BETTY ANNE ISRAEL MOLLY JARVIS TERESA ANNE JUDGE RAE SARA KAPLAN PATRICIA KEANE ELIZABETH KINGSBERRY LORRAINE FRANCES KIRBY RUTH ELLEN KROM NATASHA KUHACH BETTY VIRGINIA KYLE NOBUKO KUMEKAWA BARBARA BELLE LADDON GERALDINE CLARK LAMBERT LA VERNA LANDEN 'DENZIE P. LAVETTE HELEN JANICE LAWTON INEZ CELIA LEVY MABEL KATHLEEN LEW BETTY JO LIPSCHULTZ CONSTANCE LONGDON LYBA LENORE MACKIE BARBARA JANE MANGAN MARIAN ELIZABETH MANNERS MARIKO MARY MATSUMOTO DOROTHEA MCHENRY RUTH IRENE MCLAUGHLIN DOROTHY MADALYN MENSCH XVINIFRED ALICE MILLER CHRISANTHE MILIRIDES SIMONNE MONCHEUR KATHLEEN MOONEY PHYLLIS MOORE 'NATALIE MAE MORROW NELLIE N. MOURADIAN CONSTANCE MURAYAMA BETTY ANNE NEAL BERNICE NELSON RUBY LOIS NETZER CHARLOTTE NEWELL PEGGY ORCUTT IRETA LOUISE PARMAN ELLEN HENRIETTA PATTERSON LUCILLE MARY PAULSON EUGENIA RUTH PENICI. JUNE ANITA PERSSON VERNA PETERSON BLANCHE PHILLIPS MARJORIE PHILLIPS THELMA HELON FLYER BILLIE POMEROY MABEL HOLLIDAY PRACY JEANNE BEVERLY PRICE PATRICIA PRINCE 'MARIE JULIA REDON MARYANN REHDER WINIFRED ANN REIMUS GRACE ADELADE ROBINSON KATHERINE ROCHE LOIS DOROTHY ROGERS JEAN PAULINE ROSS BARBARA SALTER EMILY SCHERER DOROTHEA ELIZABETH SCHMIDT EVELYN F. SCHMOHL IDORIS ADELAIDE SCHNACKE LOIS ELEANOR SCI-IOEPPE ROSE MARIE SEEBERGER GENEVIEVE SHIROIAN NAN SHIPNUCK LOUISE SIMPSON JEAN MARIE SMITH TRISTAN R. SMITH DOREEN SYLVIA SOMMER JULIA SPECTOR MARJORIE JEAN STEWART EVELYN MARY 'STORHEIM LILA ETHEL SULLIVAN MARION LOUISE SULLIVAN BERNICE JOAN TADDEUCCI LILLIAN L. VAN DER SHUUR MARY L, WALLER HELEN ELIZABETH WHITE ELAINE WILKEN 'NANCY JEAN WILSON BETTY WITCHER HELGA WOLSKI MAE ,ROISAMOND WONG JEAN PATRICIA XVOODSIDE 137 LA VON WRIGHT PHYLLIS MERLE YATES BETY ZEHNDER BEVERLY CONSTANCE ZXVERIN CLASS OF DECEMBER 1938 Boys MARTIN ARNOLD AGUERET ALAN HOWARD ALCH CLAY S. ANDREWS EDWARD W. BACIGALUPI. JR. ROBERT VICTOR BAREILLES MARIO L. BASSO ROBERT C. BERWICK ALVIN S. BLOOM LEONARD M. BLUMENFELD ROBERT E. BOEDDIKER SIDNEY BRANDIS THEODORE A. BRAVOS THOMAS P.I BROWN FRANK EDMUND BRUSH FRED BURMER GORDON BUSH VICTOR E. CAGLIERI HARRY R. CHASE HARRY M. CHRISTIANSEN, JR. LEONARD M. COHN JACK COLLINGWOOD WILLIAM CUNHA CLYDE J. CURLEY, JR. JAMES E. DELEHANTY WILLIAM DE PAOLI JOHN :C. DILLINGHAM ROBERT H. DIMPFL WILLIAM DOREY DICK DUNCAN LOUIS E. FAMBRINI DALE FREDERICK FARNOW ROBERT BRYAN FORT DAVID F-REED CHARLES GALLAGHER WALDRON R. GARDINER, JR. ERNEST F. GENTNER, JR. KENNETH M, GLASER MARSHALL LANCE GORDON FRANK IGRAFF BENJAMIN LEON GROSS MORRIS VHABERMAN ROBERT A. HAGENAH FUJIO GEORGE HAYASHI ROY LEWIS HITTCHCOCK WILLIS HODSHIRE KEI HORI KIYOSHI ICHIYASU TELLWO ISHLJIMA MILLER JENSEN MARTIN JOE COLEMAN CHARLES JOHNSON KENNETH H. JONES HAROLD VIGGO KALLERUP WALTER W. KAPLAN ROY KAWASHIRI FENTON JOSEPH KILKENNY HARVEY KINOSIAN HENRY KOBAYASLHI FRANKLIN MORRIS LEAVICK DANA CLIFTON LOVEJOY, JR. JEROME SEYMOUR LUBFIN CHARLES W, MACKENZIE, JR. JEROME MADDEN JOHN EDWARD MAGHETTI LAWRENCE MARGOLIN GEORGE MATSUMOTO JOHN E. MCINERNEY JACK MCKILLEN WILLIAM MCLAUGHLIN RONALD MCLENNAN HARDING MCPHUN JACK E. .MENARY FREDERICK W. MIELKE, JR. JOE IMOLIN A FRED MONROE WILLIAM GLENN MOORE, JR. CHARLES OLIVER MORGAN, JR. DONALD EDWARD MUSANTE MLCHIKAZU NAKAI ALBERT A. NICHOLSON KIYOSHI NISHIKAWA HIROSHI H. NISHINO CHARLES D. PARMELEE THEODORE A. PEDERSEN, JR. RICHARD HARWOOD PERRY KENENETH IH. PETERS TED S. PETERSEN, JR. EDWARD C. POLADIAN MACK PONG ROBERT EDWARD PUNTIGAM WILLIAAM M. RE-ID EDWARD J. ROLESON WARREN ROGER SALZ ALLAN LEROY SAPIRO ROBERT SCHMALZ WILLIAM R. SIEGENTI-IALER WARREN H. SLEEPER JACK RICHARD SLOAN ROBERT G, 'SMITH JOEL SMYTI-IE LESTER H. STOCK 138 WW?'??i?z13 of Finn raw: Charlie Borleh, Bob Naveg Al Rossi, Ken Corsiglia, Tom Getchellg Jim Duavaras, Bob Gritiin. Row two: Ross Jordan, Lee Hand, Gordan Tovani, Bill Maillouxg Mr. Alger-5 Connie Campana, Norma Jerm Parsons. Row three: Ken Corsiglia, Camille Trincale, Gordon Tovani, Connie Cookg Bob Griffin, Bill Mailloux, Bill Nyland, Dick Norris, Hand Hilebrand, Sherlock and Petieg Joyce Rodegerdts. Row four: Ken Corsiglia, Dean Mason, Gordon Tovani. Bofzom raw: Pat Bransen, Ken Corsiglia, Tom Getchell, Al Rossi, Joyce Burk, Gordan Tovanig Al Rossi, Dave Herbert, Bill Lau, Bill Calhoung Tom Getchell, Ken Corsiglia., Al Rossi, Gordan Tovani. Centennial Scrapbook y 1944-Tom Steege and Pat Prichard elected prexy ind veep in the spring term .... Fall leaders are Lind- :ay Wilson and Connie Cook .... Board of Educa- ,ion authorizes the building of a new Lowell. 1945-Jim .Duvaras and Ann Bartlett are new stu- dent body ofiicers .... Claude Rosenberg and Sydney Morgan take over in the fall .... A school traffic squad s organized for the second time. Water ballet is the ,atest GAA sport. 1946hSchool enrollment sets a three-year record. . . Ben Maushardt and Margaret Lovener are spring student leaders .... Fall officers are Mort Dunn and Ioyce Howell. 1947-Lowell wins Northern California Basket- ball Ohampionship .... Ward Healy on Hearst All- American Prep Basketball Team .... Bill Hicklin is S.B. prexy and Diane Davidson is v.p .... Fall officers are Dick Clarke and Nancy Hardgrave. 1948-Superintendent outlaws all sororities and fraternities in public schools .... Lowell Greek letter organizations are disbanded .,.. GAA starts a folk dancing group and boys join too .... Lloyd Cunning- ham is elected fall student body president with Merla Burstein as veep .... Ofiicers in the fall are Dick Sac- cani and Margaret Polglase. 1949-Lowell wins first annual Pacific Forensic l l MORT DUNN was student body president in Fall '46, He was also president of his low senior class a member of the Scroll and L, the Block I. and Big Brothers. CLASSROOM SCENE-JUNE, 1947 This is a class scene, June, 1947, of Mr. Walsh, English teacher, doing Casey at the Bat in Room 323. SPONSORS OF BLOCK L DANCE-OCT. 15, 1945 Ken Flower, Student Body President Dick Saccani, H. M. Monroe, Rudy Suarez. Hudson Monroe and Bob Arnold MARTIN STOLLIN WILLIAM H. SURTEES RAYMOND THOMPSON ROBERT W. TOM RICHARD H. TOT ARO MILTON VUCINICH REDMOND WADDELL ROBERT PARKER WATWOOD NORMAN B. WEEKS WAYNE FISCHER WELCOME EDWARD S. WILBUR THOMAS WOODS HENRY S. YEE LOUIS T. YEW LEWIS L. DURKEE WILLIAM F. MORGAN JOSE SEMINARIO Girls EVELYN ANNA ANDERSON JANE ARNOT CAROL BARNES LUCILLE BEATRICE BEASLEY VERNA V. BLOOMQUIST SARA ANN BLOOM GENEVIEVE RUTH BLUM GERALDINE BROAD BETTY ELISE BROWN EARLEEN E, BROWN SHIRLEY BROWN ALICE BURNET T MARY CARR YVONNE CLAIRE CERF BARBARA ELIZABETH CLAUSEN BARBARA CLAYTON BARBARA CORCORAN CHARLOTTE CRANDALL VIRGINIA MARY CRITCHLEY SHIRLEY CRUICKSHANK WILDA CURTS BETH CUTHBERTSON JANE R. DASHIELL BARBARA L. DAVIS ELIZABETH DAWES JUDITH DE GIOBBI LUCIA ANN DE LARA MARCIA SHIRLEY FEINBERG JEANNE FERRARI ELEANOR FINDEISEN VERONICA PATRICIA FOLEY NEVA MAY FOSTER HELGA CLARA FRIEDRICHSEN MARION LA VON GAFFNEY ANNA ELIZABETH GALVIN MURIEL MARIE GARDENFIELD SYLVIA REVA GLASSMAN BERNICE GOLDEN CHARLOTTE LOUISE GRAVES GLORIA GREENBACK SYLVIA H. GREENBAUM JOAN GREENE CATHERINE GUERENA ALICE ANN GLAZKO LORRAINE HAINES FLORENCE JOSEPHINE HANSEN ELIZABETH HARTWICH BARBARA LOIS HEIMAN MIRIAM HIRSCHFELD FRANCES HOFFMAN GLORIA HOMILIUS MADELINE JOHNSEN ELIZABETH JOHNSON SHIRLEY KEIFER MARY KIDDIE JEAN KRONWETTER MARY LILLIAN KUENSTER DOROTHY KUPERSTEIN PEARL LAPIDAIRE BEATRICE I. LAPKIN JANE LARRIEU KATHERINE MARIE LEIGHTON AIDA MARY ANN LEYDUANO JOAN MARJORIE LIPSETT JOAN LITCHFIELD MARY VIRGINIA LORIGAN LOIS MARIE LOW JANE LUT ES MILDRED LEE LYNCH JEAN YVONNE MADISON DOLORES MALOUF MARY DOLORES MARSHALL MARY LOU McKAY ROWENA BARBARA MEYER DOROTHY MILLS ESTELLE MOURADIAN BARBARA MARIE MOYNIHAN ANNA MAE MURPHY DOROTHY I, MURPHY NORMA JUNE NIELSEN MARY ELIZABETH O'BRIEN BARBARA SPEED O'CONNOR EDNA VIRGINIA PEDERSEN ELEANOR PEDRIN SUSAN PETERS SHIRLEY PETERSON GEORGINE POULTNEY ZEPHERINE PROULX VIRGINIA MARIE REILLY MARAJORIE RENNICK 139 RENA RICCI HELEN JANET ROHRBACK BERYL ROSE SAMMIS JANE RAE SCOTT MARIE LOUISE SINGDAHL BARBARA SLAUGHTER BARBARA LUCILE SMITH JANET ARMSTRONG SOBEY MARJORIE RUTH SORENSEN DOROTHY STAPFF SUZANNE STEPHENS DOROTHY JANETTE ST OCKER BLOSSOM TANG DOROTHY HELEN THURMOND JANNA W. VAN DER WAL GERALDINE WHITE PAULA WHITE MARGARET MARY WYNN DORIS LUCIE ROHLFS CLASS OF JUNE 1939 Boys JOHN PHILIP AARONSON ROBERT ANDERSON ROBERT JOHN BACIGALUPI WALTER BAILEY JAMES BAKER STANLEY J. BERNHARD OLIVER J. BERVEN BRUCE THOMAS BONNER I-IARMON BONTE BOB BRECK WARREN ROBERT BRODIE JOHN JAMES BURKE CHARLES PATRICK CAIN WILBUR HUGH CAINELL RICHARD BRIGHT CALLAGHAN EDMUND JOSEPH CASSIDY MYLES CLARK WILLIAM HAROLD CLARK BEN CLEWANS FORREST A COBB RICHARD G. COHN WILLIAM RUSSELL COLLINS JOHN F. COONEY MELVIN CRAIN JAMES CUNHA DONALD WILLIAM DAVIS ROBERT MERRIMAN DAWSON PETER A. DELOS PIETER ARNOLDUS DE VRIES PATRICK JAMES DOOLING JAMES ALDEN DRUMMOND DONALD FRANCIS DUNCAN R. ALBERT ECHEVERRIA ROBERT ELLIOTT EDWARD EPTING THEODORE FARWIG ROBERT BENJAMIN FRANKLIN JOSEPH FRIEDMAN GEORGE M. FUKUI ROLAND F, GHISELLI ERWIN ESIAH GIMOV JOSEPH GLASS CLARK H. GRANT NICK GRAVEM CHASE E. GREGORY GEORGE HAGG BILL HARRISON JACK ALLEN HARRISON HARRY SEVERANCE HAUCK GAVIN N. HIGH HOWARD HOFFMAN DONALD VINCENT HOLSCLAXV FREDERICK H. HONG TOSHIO HORIO JOSEPH J. HORN HUGH H. HOUSTON STANLEY SANFORD HYAMS HUGH INGLES THOMAS BRUCE IREDALE GEORGE T. JANG IRVING JARKOVSKY BERT J. JENKINS GORDON LEE KENNY TERRY KILPATRICK JACK T. KIUCHI BILL KNAUBER JOSEPH KARL KOLHEDE WILLIAM F. KORN DONALD EDWARD KORTICK WALTER KRACKE WARD LAME FRANK LAYCOCK JOSEPH LOUIS LEITNER JOSEPH MERVIN LEVIN CARL LIVINGSTON ROBERT WILLIAM LOCKHART GAITHER LOEWENSTEIN DAVID SUMMERS LULL JAMES ALLEN MACIEL MADISON MARCUS JOE MARRON JOHN JAMES MATHEWS LEONARD MCBRIDE THOMAS ALLEN MCCARTY JOHN GABRIEL MEIER SAMUEL MENDELSON 140 gi Centennial Scrapbook HOMECOMING FOR JERRY COLEMAN jerry Coleman, voted American League Rookie of the Year in 1949, signs autographs for admiring Lowell High School co-eds. Coleman a Lowell graduate of 1942, returned to Lowell to attend a football rally for the traditional game of his alma mater, Also pictured with Coleman are: Ellen Duncan, Irene Agorasies, Fran Bosse, Sue Dreyer, Cynthia Postel, and Liz Anderson. DANCE COMMITTEE OF 1948 Fin! row: Jack Sutorius, Terry Stanley, Chuck Oliver, Merla Burstein, Bill Hooy. Second row: Jim Campanella, Norma Walsh, jack Lynd, Marilyn Hamlyn, Roy Barnett, Marilyn Rand, Audrey Coperantz. Third row: Don Douglas, Bill Holmes, Lydia Potter, Don Reinberg. Centennial Scrapbook Ournament at S. F. State with Jack Anderson as the only double winner foratory and after-dinner speak- ng divisionsj .... Jim Plessas and Margot Helmuth are Spring Ofiicers .... Dan Benatar and Liz Anderson are fall leaders. THE 1950's 1950-Lowell wins top honors at First Annual ootball Pageant .... Student Court organized .... river education course Offered at school .... Don einstein and Margaret Bischoff win student body -Osts in the Springg Bob Foehr and Robbie Scheffler rake over in the fall. 1951-Student Code and By-Laws revised .,.. Gor- on Reed and Sue McDonnell are spring Ofiicers. . . ete Kistler and Kirsten Denker are fall leaders. . . ROLAND PERACCA was presi- dent Of the student body in 1954 and a member of the varsity football team. School gets new coat Of paint for the first time in many years .... Student body officers are Ray Perkins and Jackie Lowrey fspringj and Bill McCubbin and Kay Helgesson Qfallj, 1953-An annual faculty picnic becomes a popu- lar event .... Phil Fehlen and Carol Rosenthal are spring term leaders .... Sanford Haber and Pat Zel- ler direct fall term activities. 1954-Ticket Sellers Club formed .... Blood Re- serve Fund started at school .... Dave Heilbron and Barbara Batmale are student body ofiicers in the Spring. . . . Roland Peracca and Carol Karstensen, fall Officers. 1955-Gordon Callaway and Sandy Johnson are spring S.B. officers, and Jim Nolan and Carol Mel- mon take over in the fall .... the Centennial is the theme for most school activities. BARBARA BATMALE was student body vice president in the Spring semester of 1954. Some of her many activities were being a mem- ber of the Shield and L, Big Sisters, and GAA. She was also secretary of her high junior class. CLASS OF '51 ENJOYS OUTINGS Outside activities Of the class Of '51 included pajama parties and beach Outings. On the left we find many girls enjoying Gail Nieland's pajama party, lon sofalz Marilyn Nagy, Alma Porta, Margaret Manvilleg ion fioorj: Carole Calendar, Gail Nieland, Paula Riordan, Pat Hoberg, Joanne Schwelfier, Marietta Parker. On the right we see a group of girls taking in some sunshine, fleft to rightj: Barbara Epp, Pat King, Bernice Baciocco, Jinny Waxman, Debbie Sampson, and Inez Kenny. HERMAN MINGST DONALD MINKLER ROBERT LOUIS MOLINARI JACK MOORE DANIEL MORAFKA RICHARD H. NAETALY YOSHIMITSU NISHIMURA RICARD BYRD NOAH TORU MICHAEL OKAWACHI JAMES O'KEEFE ARTHUR FU JIO OKUNO BEN H. PARKINSON RUSSELL W. PENNELL ALVIN STANLEY PETERS DON A. PETERS BORIS PONOMAREE DAVID RUSSELL PURRINGTON RICHARD V. RAFAEL NEAL FRANCIS REGIN CARLOS RICKETSON BERNARD N, RIORDAN EDWARD A. RISS GEORGE S. ROBACK CHARLES JOSEE ROGERS WILLIAM ROGERS WALTER H. ROOT MANUEL J. ROSEN JOHN M. ROSENBLATT WILLIAM E. ROYAL VICTOR ARDEN RUNDLE FRED SANDROCK THOMAS A. SCADDEN ROBERT LOTEN SCOTT WILLIAM J. SCOTT RALPH LESTER SELLECK JOHN HIKARU SHINKAI KENNETH THOMAS SILVA JACOB SIEGEL ROBERT P. SILVERMAN CARL ARNOLD S JOLUND FLOYD RANSDELL SMITH SIDNEY SMITH ROBERT BASIN STAMATIS HAROLD SHERIDAN STONE TADAYOSHI SUGIYAMA MARSHALL TAFT TATE THOMAS FRANCIS RICHARD THRELFALL GERALD B. TODD WILLIAM LUN TONG SHOTARO TSURUOKA JOHN DANIEL TWOHY LOUIS P. VASQUEZ CLYDE VOLENS RALPH WALLERSTEIN HENRY AARON WASHAUER WALLACE WALDRON WARREN H. WATANABE JACK WEINSHENK CLIFFORD JOSEPH WILEY DAVID EUGENE WILSON HAROLD H. WOLF CARL ROBERT zAMLOCH HERBERT E. ZELINSKY WILLIAM R. ZION Girls ALICE ABE NATALIE CHARLOTTE ADAMS MARION AZUBA ANDERSON JEAN CLAIRE ARNOLD ELIZABETH BAGET MYLA MARIE BAILEY MARGARET SUSAN BAKER MAYBETH JEAN BANTON BETTE JAYNE BARR BETTY G. BLONDER BARBARA CORINNE BLUM DOROTHY ELIZABETH BLOOM GENEVIEVE R. BONAL GISELA BUENGER INGE BUENGER FRANCES CLAIRE BUTCHER MARY LEE CALLOXX' RUTH CAREW BETTY JANE CARSCADDEN ETHEL RUTH CHABAN CHARMIAN JOAN CHANDLER ANNE CECELIA CHU MARY MAE CHEONG LOUISE H. CHIN CAROLYN KAYE CHONG HELEN F. CONLISK MARY ELIZABETH CONNELLY ANNE HOLLINGSWORTH COOLEY SELMA RAY CORNET DOROTHY CRAIB YVONNE CYR MILDRED LORRAINE DAVIS MARJORIE DE MARTIN PHYLLIS EUGENE DEREBERRY JEAN DUNCAN FRANCES COOP-ELLINGSON DOROTHY J. FELTON GERTRUDE FERRIS LEONILDA L. FINOCCHIO PRISCILLA CAROLYN FINLEY DOROTHY JONES FITZPATRICK 141 DOROTHEA FRANKLIN SONYA FREED MARY CLARE GANNON LORAINE GILBART JEANNE CAROLYN GILLIN ELENA GIORNI MARION THELMA GLOS GRACE GOMPERTS SOPHIE GORTER ESTHER L. GRANT BETTY IRENE GREEN MAGARET NATALIE GREY MARIA TERESA GUILFOIL HELEN GRACE HAMILTON RUTH MARIA HASSON CAMELIA ANN HAUCK DOROTHY HEISS BAMBIE HERRINGTON MARGARET K. HEWITT MARY K, HOWARD HELEN LOUISE IRWIN FRANCES JACOBY LAURA JOHANSON BARBARA T. JOHNSTON SHIRLEY K. JOY ESPERANZA JONES MARION LOIS JORDAN DOROTHA GRACE JORGENSEN BARBARA LOU KALTHOFF GERTRUDE KARP KIKU KATO JEANNE KATZ BARBARA KELLOGG YULIE KIYASU RUTH-MARION KNOPH CONSTANCE HART KRUGER DOROTHY KUHN PATRICIA MARIE LANG ALBERTA M. LARKINS RUTH ELEANOR LARSON MARION LEARY DOROTHY LEE PAULINE LEE RUTH LERER MARILYN LEWIS YOK QUON LI DOROTHY LEE LIBBY JANE M. LIM URSULA LOEWENSTEIN EDNA ADELE LUCY EMILY LUM HELEN LYNES ALICE MAQWILLIAMS PATRICIA MARTELL MAR JORIE JEAN MAYER MARY ELIZABETH MCCABE MARGARET E. MCCALLUM EDITH MAY MCFARLAND BARBARA JANE MCFARLANE JUNE ELLEN MEESE LEEANA GAY MICHAEL FLORENCE NELSON LORETTE J. NORTH ZINA OOTKIN JEAN CLAIRE O'CONNELL CAROLYN PALMER ELIZABETH PANTON ANNE PEACH JOY EVELYN POWELL AMELIA LOUISE RADKE RUTH PATRICIA RASMUSSEN CLAIRE ANGELA RIDGWAY CLAIRE ANNE RIEBELING RITA KATHRYN RILOVICH HELENE ELSBETH RIPPE FRANCES ROITENSTEIN BETTY ROSE SANDERS MARTHA SCHERER ELSA LOUISE SCHLAMM MARGARET ANNE SCHMUCK GALE SCHOMAKER JEAN SCHRAEMLI IRENE SCHUNICK JUNE SCHUNICK ROSALIE MAY SCHWARTZ JEAN SCHWARTZENBEK BARBARA JEAN SCOTT VIRGINIA DOROTHY SCOTT JACQUELINE AMES SHAW MARGARET ANNE SIMPERS BETTY LOU SMITH JANET SMITH NELLIE-JO SMITH INGER ELIZABETH SPIESS JEANNE STOBENER JEAN MARIE SUTHERLAND JAYNE SWARTZ FLORENCE TEZA LORRAINE L. TISCORNIA BEVERLEE TOBIN MURIEL TRENDT ELAINE TURNER GOLDIE UNGER MADELEINE ELIZABETH WAITE MARY ANN WALKER MAR JORIE WEBER IRENE MARIE XWEED ANN WEIMAN 142 Centennial Scrapbook FORMER LOWELLITES BOSE PRETTILY Botlom row: Bernice Baciocci, jenny Waxman, Pat King, Barbara Epp, and Debbie Sampson in 1951. Yoshinori E. Bokura of the Class of June, 1954. Ira Thompson. Big Sister at 1953 party. Serond vow: Members of senior reg 153 in spring '53, Charleen Klein, Virginia East, Sharon Ford, and jackie Hughes. 1953 band members, Debbie Mendelavitch and Archie Le Coque, '50, in front of the music Shacks. Helga Faross and friend at the '55 carnival. Carole Seldman, Debbie Mendele- vitch and Archie Le Coque in 1949. Howard Hymans, 1955. Third row: Larry Cahen, jan. '49, played varsity baseball, now in Air Force. Richard Gross, jan. '49 went to Stanford. Now works at I. Magnins. Nellie johnson, Jeannette Balles, joan Barker, Donna Campbell, and julie Lewis taking gym in March, '48, Alma Porta and Tom Brennan sent greetings to Lowell from St. Marks Square in 1955. Fonrlb row: Larry Cahn played varsity basketball at Lowell in '-19. Went to Stanford and is now a reporter for the S. F. Examiner. Top raw: Fred Firestone Jr., '49, was a member of the football and Swimming teams. Now at Stanford Medical School. Laurence Goldsmith was valedictorian for the class of jan. '49, Ernest Dubrey was an all-city tennis Star in '48. Centennial Scrapbook TRAFFIC SQUAD ON PARADE AT KEZAR STADIUM, 1947 LLOYD CUNNINGHAM was student body presi- dent in the Spring semester of 1948. Among his other various activities were be- ing a member of the Scroll and L, Block L, and Big Brothers. He was also a member of the football and baseball teams. DAVID HEILBRON-president of the Lowell Student Body, assistant yell leader, member of the Scroll and L, and member of the swimming team. He graduated in June '54 and at present, he is a sophomore at U.C. with a straight A record. REAL ESTATE TROPHY Cadet Lieutenant Gus Antonis receives the Real Estate Trophy for the best band among San Francisco High Schools ROTC units in 1949. Also pictured are Warrant Otiicer W. R. Martin, Battalion instruc- tor, Charles Dennis San' Francisco Music Director, Max F. Robinson, past president of Real Estate Association, presenting award to Cadet Lieutenant Gus Antonis, Mr. Reginald Krieger, instrumental instructor at Lowell and Lt. Colonel Leroy B. Wilson, Inf., Professor of Military Science and Tactics. SHIRLEY SADIE WEISMAN ROSEMARY CHAPMAN WHERRY DOROTHY M. WILSON PATRICIA JEAN WORRALL JACQUELINE M. WRIGHT DORIS YIP IDA MAY ZAMMITT I ' 'X - 3 rw CLASS OF DECEMBER 1939 Boys WILLIAM CHARLES ADAMS EARL O. ANDERSON JOHN BEDECARRE JACK B. BOONE RICHARD MARNE BORDEN JOHN BORDMAN CHARLES E. BRIDGETT FRANCIS EYMARD BROLAN BICKFORD BROOKS ROBERT BROWN JOHN K. BURKE HERBERT BUTTON JAMES CAMPBELL EDGAR CERF JAMES CHANDLER RAYMOND CHOW DOUGLAS CLIFFORD HARRY JOSEPH COLEMAN CHARLES RUSSELL COMPTON HOWARD MILTON CONNICK GEORGE A. CONRADI, JR. GORDON CLARK DETTNER JUSTIN A. DEVOTO RICHARD DIEBENKORN JOSEPH GEORGE DODGE JACK DUNS CARL WARD ERICSSON JOHN FELDMANN JACK W. FERRIS ARTHUR FOFF LESTER P. FONG ALBERT GARCIA ELMER FRANCIS GEPPERT JOHN JOSEPH GILKEY FRANK GILLIO WILLIAM GILMAN GEORGE CLIFFORD GOOD DENVER GREER ROBERT GRIFFIN SEYMOUR GRONER VICTOR GULLMES ROBERT V. HALE HOWARD GILBERT HALL NOBLE HAMILTON WALTER A. HAUCK, JR. SYLVESTER F. HAVEY FRANK E. HENDRICKS ROBERT L. HINMAN WILLIAM JOHN HUNTER KUNIO ISHII EDWARD JELLINS ROBERT M. JENSEN HOWARD JONES ROY M. JONES EDWARD JORDAN WILLIAM JOSLYN WILLIAM D. JUZIX WILLIAM GEORGE KEARNEY LAWRENCE ALLEN KELLER JIN HAROLD KINOSHITA PAUL EMIL KOHLER DON EDWARD KRANICH CHARLES WAYNE LEININGER BERT LIEBERT JAMES LIVINGSTONE HERBERT LOWE STANLEY W. LUCIA ROBERT HENDERSON LUCY WAYNE WILLIAM LUDDY JACK LYNCH PAUL LYNLY FREDERICK C. MACDONELL JACK MACKINNON CHARLES MANNING BERT HENRY MANZONI ALFRED EDWIN MASON FRANKLIN MASTEN BRUCE MCDONOUGH 143 JACK WESLEY MCMILLAN EDMOND MCNAMARA RAYMOND JOHN MILTON ROBERT ARTHUR MIRALDA BRUCE LUTHER MOORE JAMES T. MOORE LLOYD N. MORGAN TRAFTON DOUGLAS MULLER JOSEPH G. NEWELL CURTIS H. O'SULLIVAN ROBERT PALMER MELVIN PEDEMONTE JAMES FELLER PESTANER HENRY R. PETERS HARVEY DAVIS PETRY ROBERT POLADIAN NORMAN POON WESLEY B. PRATHER HAMILTON PRUGH LAURO R. QUIROS WERNER RAMSGARD JOHN PAUL REDINGER NOEL J. REYBURN JAMES KENNETH ROBERTSON BOB ROCKWELL HAROLD EARLE ROWE LEO JOSEPH RYAN MILTON FREDERICK SCHNVARZ EDWARD D. SEGHIERI WILLARD SHERBURNE SAMUEL SOO HOO GEORGE KARL STEIN JOHN R. D. STRICKLER JOHN TAKEO TAKETA DAVID JEROME THURM WARREN P. VALENCIA ROLLO R. WHEELER CHARLES ALBERT WHITE RONALD TAYLOR WILLIAMS GEORGE A. WORK GLENN RICHARD WOLLMAN ALLEN S. WONG SHIGERU JOHN YASUDA FOSTER XYYAH YUEN Girls LILLIAN ALTSCHULER GWENDOLYN ANDREWS ETHELANNA ARMSTRONG GLORIE MARIE BACCEI EVELYN BAIER BARBARA CLAIRE BAMMANN GLADYS ROSEMARIE BARRETT MARY BARTHOLOMEW SHIRLEY BERNSTEIN GLORIA LORENE BITTLES FRANCES BITTNER JUNE BOXWLAN DORIS BELLE BRODOESRY THELMA JUNE BROWN ROSEMARIE BROXVN ANNE BRUNTON BARBARA JANE BURKE MARGARET ANN BURKE CLARE BUSH BARBARA ANN CAMPBELL CAROL JEAN CHRISTIAN BETTYE RUTH COHEN JEAN ELMA COHEN VERNA CONRAN BARBARA ANNE COWLES CHARLOTTE DOROTHY DAVIS LEONA IDELLE DAVIS JEAN DEWEY BARBARA DON EINA EICHNER ELAINE EMMONS GLORIA ESSMANN JUNE MARION FINEGOLD VELMA JEANE EOWLER ELORINE BEVERLY FRANK ELERIDA MARIA EULLALOVE JEAN E. GILLIO MARIANNE GOLDMAN VIRGINIA L. GOLDSWORTHY ELWYNE GRATTAROLA JUNE GYSELBRECHT BARBARA LEE HILL JEANETTE M. HOFFMAN MARIAN HONAN ALYSE HUNTER BETTE H. JENNINGS NORA JOHNSON PHYLLIS RENTZELL HELEN KUHN CAROL JEAN LANDO DOROTHY LANN BETTY LARRIEU ANITA LARSEN ROBINA LYON LEE SONIA ANNETTE LESH JEAN LEVINSON LILLIAN BERNICE LYNCH DOROTHY MA JORS JACQUELINE A. MANUEL MARGARET C. MATHEWSON FRANCES ELEANOR MCNEILLY 144 Centennial Scrapbook I I . I ,ZB A E.E.EJE:J, owilm 'S ..... Q. ', . aa 5 A . E..... .. :,:7 kr , , V F -4 ' S' .lf zzz 6,5 SZE g l I ' A A I JJIIIJAARRAJJR IJ J 96 no . if YAII Auluu up J ,... 436W Y. 10 ,....,,.. ,. , , . , A aeptecbglo 'YS A gc I Q, If-iw R - 0 1 .,.,,.. X 933' A f 'xi'l Q .J Cac, XM B 'Fi ' NW' 43 A I 'Y-8' 6 ' . qc ,,.,,, , XJ-3 'vous , . ,f ,,.: ' . I 'zii AHSE A:: ,,. 'X X ...e::1' r '5A., A I . in ,D Cgiisfe i n .- of ' A A 1 K 0 l I Q . .,.,.,.. Q .:.,, ... 1 ...... IEEEP Z . A:. Q ! 'QSIBG 4 Y qi 5 :QQQHEH H ,.,.,.,,, 54 Q6 V, , ., E., I ' ' :uz Ibbl ' A E J . vvE:.,, H , . A, ressurer Len 1353 J JU L, 5517? ,,7,mmfBill Cnuolen 1937 STUDENT BODY OFFICERS '49, All-City basketball Bxll Stevenson, Ken Flower, '49, all-time basketball great. RCE Dan Carlson, all purpose track and field Sm. Fritz Fenster, '49, H-12 Scroll nresidenf- Centennial Scrapbook Miss Edith Harrison, boss of the main ofhce. m Rosenthal, '50, editor of the Shirley McVey, '51, editor of the Virginia Tilden, '50, editor of the Claire Leibowitz, '50 editor ofthe Lowell. Red mm' White. Red and Ilnlaite. Red and While. Barry McCrea, 1953 Scroll Bill Stimson, 1952 Scroll Jane Szirtori, 1952 Shield Joanne Alioto, 1953 Shield president. president. president. A president. PATRICIA MEEK GRACE NELL BETTE-JANE NELSON HILDE NEUHAUS TAKIKO ANITA NONAKA IRENE OLD MARY ELLEN OTTO LILLIAN ANITA PEREYRA ELLEN L. PHILIPSBORN BERNICE E. L. PLUM ENA POGOJEFF CHRISTINA MUIR REID NORMA ESTRID RAMSGARD MILDRED E, RIENECKER BEATRICE GLORIA ROHLFS PHYLLIS R. ROOS BERNICE ROTH SHIRLEY JANET ROUSE LEILA DOROTHY ROVAI GRACE C. SANT MARJORIE SCHNITTGER LORRAINE SCHWERIN VERA SEDLOFF JEANNE DORIS SEEGER AUDREY DELL SIMMONS GLORIA SLATER BARBARA STARR BETTY LOUISE STOFFERS JEAN STRATTON JOAN JINNETT SUTTON LILLIAN J. TABOURNEL ELENA THOMAS KATHERINE DOLORES THOMAS LORRAINE THOMAS PATRICIA MARIE THOMAS BETTY ISABEL TREDWAY LAURA A. URBAN RAMONA VINCENT BARBARA WANKOWSKI VIRGINIA JOYCE WAYNE BETTY WHITE PHYLLIS ARDENE WHITE BETSEY ANN WILSON HAZEL TIBBS WILSON JUDITH WISEMAN MINNIE G. WONG GLORIA YAFFEE PEARL ZUCKERMAN CLASS OF JUNE, 1940 Boys HOWARD B. ALVORD JAMES K, AMANO JOHN P, ARNOT ARTHUR N. ARONSEN ROBERT BARKLEY FRED BEAVER HANS R. BEETZ ROBERT W. BEMIS LAURENCE D. BERG ROGER E. BOYD HOWARD F. BROSE HENRY A. BROWN EDOUARD BRUSH LAWRENCE B. BURN HARRY BUTTIMER WILLIAM W. CALLAHAN. HARRY F. CAMP RICHARD F, CASSIDY RAY CASTELL-BLANCH EDWARD CAVALLINI JOHN C. CEBRIAN JAMES J. CHAN SEWARD E. CHAPMAN ARTHUR H. CHILD MCCOY CHOY XVILLIAM C. CLARATY EUGENE J. CLARK HAROLD CLARK ALVIN C. COHEN JAMES CORTHAY WILLIAM K. COBLENTZ KENNETH J. COOPER HOWARD COUNCIL JOSEPH F. CULLEN RICHARD C. CULVER ROBERT G. CURLEY HOWARD DALLMAR HAROLD DAVIS RICHARD M. DAVIS PAUL DE FREMERY PHILIP D12 LANO ROBERT DROUIN BRUCE DUNCAN CHARLES K. ELKIND EDMUND ELLIS ALBERT M. EVANS WARREN A. FAHEY ALFRED FARREN STANLEY FELIX ROBERT H. FINLAYSON JOHN C. FLEMER JAMES O. FORBES VINCENT G. FRANCON CARL E. FRY HENRY D. FUJITA JOHN H. FYE WILLIAM J. GARRY 145 THOMAS C. GLASCOCK FRANK C. GRAEBER JOSEPH GREELY WILLIAM H. GREEN PETRIE R. GUNTHORP JAY P. HAMERSLAG ROY A. HARDING PAUL V. HARLESS WILLIAM L. HARRISON JACK L. HARTLEY NAYLOR H. HARTWIG GEORGE HEWLETT FRANK O. HOFFMAN PAUL J. HOFFMAN RICHARD D. HOLMAN ARTHUR W. HOLMES WILLIAM HONG JAMES HONNERT TADASHI HORITA MARSHALL H. HYDE HERBERT C. JENSEN DONALD B. JOHNSTON FRANCIS X. KAST WILLIAM G. KAST MAKOTO KAWAGUCHI KIYOSHI KAWAHATA GEORGE KAZARIAN CHARLES V. KENDALL WILLIAM L. KERR GEORGE KITAGAWA ROBERT KITCHEN WILLIAM KIYASU GEORGE K. KOBAYASHI WILLIAM J. KOSER WILLIAM KOTHGASSNER DAVID KRIEDT RUDOLPH KUHN LAURENCE J. LALAGUNA GEORGE C. LAMBERT LEONARD J. LALKA RICHARD E. LANDRE BURNETT W. LARASH JOHN F. LEICESTER ALFRED T. LEE EDWARD J. LEE ROBERT LBNOACH WIELAND LEONG LEONARD J. LEVY ROBERT LINDAUER XVARREN LOWE MAX LOWEN ROBERT LOWENBERG ALFONSO A. LUCAS ROBERT N. LYNCH WILLIAM L. MATHE REX O. MAWDSLEY JOHN MAY DONALD J. MCGINN CHARLES W. MCGUIRE CLEMENT F. MCINERNEY JOHN METCALFE DIMITRI MIHAILOFF ED MILLER WILLIAM MINTZER JOSEPH MITCHELL WARREN D. MOHR MASAHIRO MORIOKA WILLIAM MOYES KOTARO MURAI MAXWELL A. MYERS ELRINO E. NEHER ROBERT G. NEPH RICHARD L. NIELLO WILLIAM X. NORTON JOHN R. O'BRIEN JOSEPH A. ONORATO JOHN M. OWEN ROBERT W. PEDIGO HENRY PIERNIKARZ THEODORE L. POHLMANN CHARLES F. POWERS JAMES J. PULLMAN JAMES C. RAY DONALD REID CAXTON P, RHODES HARRY ROCHE JAMES ROOT ERNEST RUAUD JACK RUBKE KATSUMI H. SAKAI DANIEL SAM CHARLES B. SARBER FRED M. SAUER BENJAMIN N. SAWTELLE ERNEST S. SELIG SAMUEL W. SELFRIDGE LAWRENCE SHEPARD HAROLD R. SILVERSTEIN ROY SMITH K ROBERT L. SPRAGUE HARRY F. STAFFORD JAMES M. STEPHENSON JOHN A. STIMSON PHILLIP R. STINCHFIELD DONALD H. STONESON HOWARD A. SULLIVAN BRUCE C. SUTHERLAND 146 .mm v y mx V Y al' X I: ' it 4 X xi QW l , xxx . , , K Y -I OUTSTANDING MOST EEST favs A mc sv ATHLETE 1 szifsv- SENIOR POLL - FALL '53 This picture Shows the winners of the senior poll in the graduating closs of january, 1953. Outstanding: Sanford Haber, Pat Zeller. Most Likely to Succeed: Scott Sherman, Pat Zeller. Best Hair: Kay Harper, Tulie Barnum. Best Eyes: Elaine Mueller, John Egan. Best Dressed: Carla Tassi, Mike Gilbert. Nicest Smile: Bruce Purrington, Elaine Mueller. Best Dancer: Phil Gebhard, jackie Norwitt. Best Personality: Lou Pelflni, Nancy Wfest. Best Athlete: Millie Harmon, Sam Kuhn. Cutest Couple: Kathy Vifalgren, Gordon Clark. SENIOR POLL XVINNERS, JUNE 10, 1955 OUTSTANDING: Gordon Calloway: Sandy Johnston .... MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED: Steven Breyer: Elyce Edelman .... BEST HAIR: Tony D'Augustinog Mary Ward .... FRIENDLIEST: Vie Hansen: Gretchen Gause. . . BEST DRESSED: Dick Rose: joan Blumenfeld .... CUTEST COUPLE: Joe Laskyg Ann Beeman .... PHYSIQUE 'N FIGURE: Mike Byrnes: Carol Ann May. . . BEST EYES: Ed Morrisong Sonnie Grossman .... BEST DANCERS: Joe Laskyg Yvonne Grossi. . . . BEST SENSE OF HUMOR: Boots Stenarog Sue Fisher .... BEST SMILE: Ed Hobbs: Van Utt .... BEST ATHLETE: Marsh Kreuterg Carol Hicks .... BEST PERSONALITY: Bob Hermanng Gretchen Gause .... FAVORITE TEACHERS: Mr. Brauerg Miss Anderson. - fl I I i f CC C C.. G C C C, Ck . GA C O C C Cf 0 ' LJ C.. L9- MOST UKELY TO SUCCEED CUTEST COUPLE. I 7 PHYSIQUL 'I-I FIGURE X '35 . IF I 3' ff ! . Ni WA. lf I I 'lu I I BEST PERSONAUTY BEST HARRY SWIFT TOICHI NV. TAKIGUCHI XVILLIAM J. TERLAU ROY A. THOMSON EDWARD P. THURBAN XWARREN UNNA ALFRED R. VASQUEZ CLIFFORD D. WAKEFIELD FLOYD WALKER NORMAN R. WALTER ROBERT WALTER ROBERT WANDERER HARRY WARREN RAY WASHMERA JAMES WEEKS HERBERT J. WELCH PAUL XVHITESIDES HANS W. WIEDENHOEFER ADDINGTON I.. WISE JOHN M. WOODFIELD GEORGE YAKI TAKEO J. YAMAMOTO ANTHONY ZOLEZZI Girls MARGARET AEELL ELEANOR ADAMS MIRIAM ADAMS DOROTHY ALLING MARILOU ANDERSEN NANCY L. ANDERSON DOROTHY ARRAS I.EOROSE ARRILAGA MARCELLE ARTOUX BARBARA J, BACHARACH DORIS BENATAR MABEL BOVYER MARIE BOWMAN MYRA BUCHHOLZ MARY G. BURKE DOHERTY L. BURKHARDT FLORENCE BURRELL FRANCES BURSON SANDRA M. BUSTAMANTE BETTY A. BUTTON CLAIRE B. CADIGAN ANNETTE L. CALONGIE EVELYN L. CARR JANE L. CHASE CATHERINE C. CHU PEGGY J. COOK EMMA MAY COWDEN JUNE CROOK JANET H. CULLINANE MARIE L. CUMMINGS ANN M. CURRY GLADYS M. CURTIS DOROTHY M. CURTIS DOROTHY J. DAFT ORETA DAVIS JANE DAWSON DOROTHY DAY MARGIE DE ANDREIS LORRAINE A. DE MERS BERTHA L. DE PERINI MARY ELLEN DERAGISCH JEWEL DIEHL DORIS DIETTERLE PATRICIA DODD FLORINE A. DROUILI.ARD zIREL M. DRUSKIN ADEY MAY DUNNELL MARY L. ENGLER MARION ERICKSON ROBERTA F. FALEN EMMA FAY RUTH E. FEATHERS CLAIRE I. FILIATRAULT JEAN S. FLAUM ELAINE F. FLOWER BESSIE FONG FLORINDA FONG ROSEMARY FONG SHIRLEY FOSTER MARION J. FOWLE INGA FRIEDMAN LAURA M. FRIEL KATINKA GALLIN LYNNE GALLOWAY ROSEMARY GANTNER PATRICIA GARRY KATHERINE I. GLAFKIDES GLORIA J. GRANT ISABELLE GREEN BABETTE GRIFFIN JUDITH K. GRONBERG JEAN A. GUTMAN ANN C. GWIN ELEANOR HALEEER MARY K. HANEY FRANCES HARBERG FRANCIS M. HARRISON JEAN R. HARTER DOROTHEE HAUSER MURIEL HEMMERL BETTY HIDEKAWA PATRICIA HOPKINS ' I 4 FRANCES HUBBARD MARY HUFFMAN ARDEN L. HUSTON PEGGY A. HUTCHINS ELEANOR A. HYMAN BONNIE D. ISRAEL JEAN D. JACOBS JEANNE M. JORDAN HENRIETTA M. JUNG BETTE J. KASPER MARGARET M. KEATING KATHLEEN KELLAR KATHERINE H. KEMBLE CONSTANCE A. KNOPH PATRICIA KURTz ANTOINETTE M. LAGARIO Ln VELLE LE CLAIR ALICE MARY LEE HELEN LEE SUSAN C. LELBACH BETTY-MAE LEWIS DORIS LEWIS JANET LEWIS JOSEPHINE B. LOCKWOOD PIA M. LOMBARDI BETTY LONGLAND LOIS LONGLAND LUCY I. LUCAS EAIRA- JEAN MAEEARLANE DOROTHY A. MACKENZIE JEAN E. MALONE LORRAINE MANN MARYLIN MECARTHY CORLISS MCDONALD JOSEPHINE MCGRATH JEAN MCINNES CAROL MCKENZIE FRANCES MCNEIL BARBARA MCRAE GLORIA P. MEYER VIRGINIA M. MILISICH GWENDOLYN W. MILLER CLAIRE K. MOODY YASUKO MORIYA TOMA MOSHENETZ EILEEN MUZINICH KIMI NAO LAURA JEAN NAST MARJORIE E. NAVE BETTY M. NEAL BETTY J. NELSON MARION L. NEUSTADT PATRICIA NIEMEYER EVELYN E. NOEL JEANNETTE OLANDER NANCY z. OLIN GLADYS E. OLIVER ELAINE P. OPPENHEIM BARBARA OWEN AMY OWYANG ELEANOR R. PACCIORETTI RUTH H. PADWAY JEANNE PAMPINELLA CAROL S. PAUKER LORRAINE L. PELLISSON CARMEL PETERSEN ELEANORE PETERSEN BETTY.MARIE PETERSON RENATE E. PHILIPSBORN RUTH PHILLIPS PATRICIA PIXLEY MARGUERITE PORTER MARGARET I. PRATT SHERRILL J. PRINS LOLA M. QUAYLE ELAINE QUEVILLON JEANNE RADANOVICH HARRIET RALSTON MAXILINDA RAVARA MARY T. REID MARGARET REIMANN MARGARET REYBURN DOROTHY RITTER MARY ROSENTHAL LOIS D. ROSEVEAR VIRGINIA E. RUDIGER ALDEAN RUGGERI LA VONNE E. SEARS MARILYN M. SEID ELLEN DALE SHANK AUDREY H. SHAPIRO JEAN SHERRIFFS MIDORI SHIMANOUCHI MARION SHOOK CORINNE SINGLE PHYLLIS G. SNELL IRENE S. SPIVEY KATHERINE STAPFF JUNE D. STEEGE PEARL STEINER NORMA STERN ELAINE M. STEVENS JEAN M. STEWART ALICE STRAUSS BETTY N. SULLIVAN LORRAINE SULLIVAN MARY N. SURTEES 148 1953 YEARBOOK STAFF MEMBERS 1954 NEXVCOMERS' RECEPTION SCENES VIRGINIA M. SWEENEY DORIS E. SWENSON EUGENIE I.. SWIFT PHYLLIS E. TATE HARRIET TAYLOR VIRGINIA L. THOMPSON SUZANNE TOMLINSON ALICE B. TONG MARY SUE TONG BETTY JAYNE TRESSIDER JUNE VAN I-IEEKEREN LOU F. VAN DER WAL JANE M, VISALLI EVA VOIGT ANN M. WAELDER CARLA M. WAGNER PEGGY WARDE CARLA F. WASSERSLEBEN AUDRAETTA WATSON MAXINE A. WEST HARRIET F. WHITEHEAD CLAIRE A. WILKENS ALICE MARY WILLIAMS PEARL WONG ZARA S. WONG ELIZABETH M. WU SHEILA YEI.LAND ROSE MARIE YOUNG EVELYN C, ZINKAND I' ff' I I, , H! was CLASS OF JANUARY 1941 Boys CI.ARKE I.. AARONSON MICHIO AOKI BENJAMIN AUYONG CHARLES BALI. DANIEL F. BARRETO JACOB E. BATTAT DONALD E. BEANSTON ALBERT BENEZRA RALPH BERNHARDT JACK BIK GORDON BIRD PAUL BRUCH RALPH BUCHAN ROBERT BURMEISTER DEAN H. BUSH WILLIAM E. BUSH EDWARD W. CALHAN WILLIAM C. CAMPBELL GEORGE CANFIELD ROBERT CARDINAL WILLIAM CHANDLER ARTHUR COHEN IRWIN T. COHEN TED COLEMAN EDWIN CONN BURTON CROWELL ROBERT DAVIS JOHN DLMARTINI MAURICE DUCASSE DIXON DUDLEY WILLIAM J. FLEXSENHAR LAXVRENCE FRIED GEORGE A. GALVIN RICHARD GEORGE JOHN GIANOPULOS CLARENCE GOLDFINGER CREIGHTON GRADY DONALD F. GRANNIS XVILLIAM K. GRAVES JOHN M. HAASE WILLIAM HABER CHARI.ES E. HAIT FORREST J. HALSTEAD NOBUHISA HANAMURA KENNETH M. HARDESTY BERTRAM V. HARTFORD RAYMOND W. HAUN ALVIN HEYMAN HIKARU HIDESHIMA WILLIS W. HITCHCOCK GARLAND S. HOFFMAN BERTRAM HORN PHILIP R. HUGHES DOUGI.AS JOHNSTON GILBERT JONES STRATTON D. JONES FRANK KAHN GEORGE KARONSKY YUzO KATASE E. LESLIE KEISLING NORMAN KELLER PETER PHILLIP KEPON BERT LARSON RENE LASTRETO HERBERT MAQEARLANE WILI.IAM R. MANNINO E. DEAN MARCUCCI HAROLD W. MARSH PETER MATTEI THOMAS MAUER, JR, RALPH MCKENNA MARTIN MEHDY ANGELO MISTHOS DONALD MODLIN ROBERT J. MURPHY ALDEN MURRAY IRVING MYERSON JACK NEALIB PETER W. NEXVMAN EDMUND v. NORMOYI.E WILLIAM E. O'BRIEN RICHARD E. PALTENGHI FRANK A. QUINN LESTER QUIRK CARI. RAAKA DONALD E. RAHLMANN RAYMOND RATTO MYLON REMBOLD ROBERT RINDER CLIFFORD ROBERTS DAVID ROBINS RICHARD G. ROCHE RALPH ROLESON EDWIN ROWE , DAVID SCHARFF MICHAEL SCHNAPP ARTHUR E. SCHUMACHER ARTHUR SCHWARTZ SAMUEL A. sHER EDWARD SHERMAN FRANK SHERMAN, JR. RALPH J. SPIEGL ROBERT T. STAHMER ROBERT T. STRAND THOMAS TATE MASATERU TATSUNO WILLIAM E. TAYLOR JOHN THOMPSON ROBERT TWOHY ALEXANDER VLADIM IRO If If FREDERICK VUARNKE SAMUEL WEISS ELLIS WIARD HENRY YIP GIRLS MARILYN ADAMS BETTE ANDERSON PATSY ALEXANDER MAY ALMLIE NADINE APPEL AVONNE M. ARNAUIII' HELEN BACHYNSKY ALICE F. BEEKER GERDA E. BENDSTRUP BARBARA J. BETTENCOURT ALICE BLOOM PHYLLIS M. BLOOM JACQUELYN BI.UM ARLISS BOONE ELIZABETH R. BRYANT AUDREY CAMERON JANISLEE CASEY MARJORIE CLOSE ROBERTA COLLINS BARBARA CONRAD JACQUELINE B. COYLE PAULINE DECARLO MARJORIE J. DECKMAN HELEN DEGENHARDT BARBARA DOVE OLGA V. EKELOFF DORIS A. ENGLER DOROTHY ERHART MARYJEAN ERICKSON PATRICIA ESMOND VIVIEN S. EVANS MARGARET M. FINCK BETTY FITZGERALD LORRAINE E. GLOS IXIARIAN GORMAN VELMA GRATTAROIA JANE GRIFFIN ALYCE GROTH NADINE A. HAND SONJA HAYWARD LORRAINE HEIMAN VIRGINIA C. HELMS AMY HORTON MARY J. JAMESON AGNES H. JONES DOROTHY JONES 150 1954 RALLY SCENES 1955 FORENSIC SOCIETY 1955 NEXVCOMERS' RECEPTION SCENES RUTH KAUEMAN YUKIYE KAWAGUCHI MARY KEATING JEAN KERRIGAN ANNIE M. KILCOURSE MADELYN R. KINKLE BERNICE KIPNIS ELIZABETH KITCHEN BETTY KLINKER B. LOUISE KOHIJQR NORMA KOTHE BARBARA L. KRASE HELEN KUSUMINE NORAH LAVERS ANNIE LEE WYONA I. LINDNER HELEN MARIE MARK BERNICE MCCOOK NEITA M. MCKENZIE MARTHA MELVIN PATRICIA MOEEITT JACQUELINE MORRIS RUTH MORSE LUCY MOURADIAN EIKO NAKAMIZO MITSUYE NAKAYAMA SHIRLEY NEWMAN MARION PARMELEE JEAN PEASLEE BETTY ROSENBLATT MARGARET H. SALZ EVELYN SAPIR HELEN SCHULTZ HILDEGARD SEIDEL THELMA SELIX JENNIE SEVERDIA NAOMI SHAIN GENE SIMON JEANETTE SOKOLOEE GLORIA SONNENFELD I.ORETTA STEVENS BETTY JANE STRINGFIELD JOAN STUART EILEEN SUTTON EMMELINE TONG JEAN TRIMBLE BARBARA VOORSANGER EI.SIE A. WAGNER BARBARA A. WALTER BERTHA M. WALTER HELOISE WEICK MARJORIE WEISS MAR JORIE WILSON EVA WONG FLORENCE WONG SHIRLEY ZELECHOXYER CLASS OF JUNE 1941 Boys PATERSON B. ALLEN SIDNEY AH TYE JOHN E. ANDERSON ALBERT ANDROVICH JOHN J. APPLEGARTH JOHN APOSTOL LEE M. APPEL MILO L. ARCHBOLD ROBERT K. ARNOLD SOL BABITSKY GRANT M. BAKEWELL HAROLD A. BIMROSE ANATOLY G. BOGDANOEE EDWARD J. BRAGG JOHN H. BRAINARD WILLIAM C. BRASH JULIUS H. BRAUN CHARLES H. BRENNAN WII.I.IAM BRINNER DONALD J. BRUSH THOMAS J. BUCKLEY FRANK BUEE SANDOR G. BURSTEIN CI.AYTON D. CALENDER ROBERT CASTELL-BLANCH JOHN C. CATTERMOLE DOUGLAS J, CHAN AI.BERT CHEUNG OAK L. CHINN ALLEN K. CLAPP HERALD CLAYTON 'THOMAS E. COHEN JULIAN D. COHN MORTON R. COHN RUSSELL G. CONE ROBERT W. COOK JOHN E. CORBY DOUGLAS J. CRAIG WALTER J. CRISTOEORO EUGENE M. DAVID ALVIN DAVIS CHARLES G. DAVIS WILLIAM J. DEMARTINI WILLIAM L. DESMOND GEORGE W. DIBBLE FREDERICK S. DICKSON HARRISON L. DOBSON DONALD J. DOLAN RAYMOND C. DOUGLAS DARRELL W. DUANE JAMES L. DUNCAN EDWARD P. EASSA HERBERT L. ELOESSER KENNETH K. EUSTACE MILTON G. EVANGELOU LYONEL EVANS JOHN FONAAS HERBERT S. FOWLER WILLIAM D. FRANKLIN HAROLD J. FREEMAN DONALD M. FREETHY CHARLES E. FRENCH ROBERT FRIEND FRANK F. FRIES KENNETH R. FUNSTEN JOHN W. GEARY ERIC GILLESPIE JACK M. GILPIN CLARENCE B. GINTHER JOHN A. GOLDSMITH WILLIAM GORMAN GEORGE GOTO IRVING J. GREEN CYRIL GREENBAUM HENRY GREENBERG ERNEST GREENEBAUM BUTLER F. GREER MARVIN K. HAND JACK W. HARTMAN ROBERT F. HANSEN WILLIAM D. HARRIS JACK R. HAUSER GILMAN HAYNES WILLIAM L. HENDERSON WILLIAM HENDRICKSON PAUL HENNEBERRY JULES M. HEUMANN DONALD I.. HUFF RUSSELL H. IMBECK ALFRED JACOBS SYDNEY R. JACOBS I.AWRENCE H. W. JOWER JAMES A. KEPHART JEROME T. KILTY BENJAMIN T. KIRKLAND ROBERT K. KIYASU RALPH A. K JAR STODDARD H, KNOXVLES WILLIAM F. KOTTA RICHARD K. LANSING JOHN L. LARSON HEROLD W. I.AUBNER HARRY E. LIKAS CLINTON J. LOK WILLIAM J. LORD HUGH F. MACKENZIE DOUGLAS MACKEY DAVID XV. MACLEAN PRESTON A. MAGINIS JOHN H. MAHONEY WILI.IAM A. MAJORS LEO MANUS JAMES K. MATSUMOTO TED MATTHEWS KENNETH W. MCCATTY ED MCCLARTY FRANK E. MCCLURE RICHARD A. MCCLURE FRANK A. MCCOLGAN JAMES R. MACFARLAND DONALD MCKEE SEYMOUR W. MEISTER BARTON R. MEREDITH ARTHUR W. MIDDLETON ROBERT C. MILLS DANIEL MULLER THEODORE M. MYERS KAZUO NAKABAYASHI FRIEDRICH S. NEUSTADTER ROBERT NEWMAN MARTIN V. NICOLL FRED A. OBAYASHI JOHN E. O'BRIEN DONALD XV. O'CONNELL PATRICK O'CONNELL SILVIO J, ONESTI ABRAHAM OTTENBERG DANIEL PARSONS WALTER XV. PEACH ROBERT E. PETERSON HENRY M. PICARD CHESTER PIERCE WALDO F. POSTEL DORMAN POTTER JOHN G. PREOVOLOS EDWARD O. PRINGLE EUGENE J. RAUSCHER JOHN H. REES ALVYN A. REMBOLD ROBERT REMENSPERGER STANLEY RESLER ALAN D. RESLEURE THOMAS E. RICKARD LOUIS J. RODRIGUEZ ROBERT M. ROGERS 152 THE LOWELL HYMN I With heads bared we stand in tribute to thee, Our Alma Mater Lowell, all true to thee we'll be. Unfurled, Red and White, none shall thee decry, Thy name we love-oh, Lowell High! II The battle is o'er and Lowell hearts true, . In victory or defeat will their faith in thee renew. . With hearts full we sing, thy sons, ne'er will fail. Thy name we love, hail, Lowell, hail! ALMA MATER R. Anino Hail, Lowell High School-All hail to thee! Our undying loyalty will bring thee victory. We love thy banner Red and White, symbol of our might, Hail, Lowell High School, Alma Mater, hail to thee! Alma Mater, hail to thee, all hail! ON CARDINAL On-on-Cardinals ! Fight for victory today, team. Colors red and white, Proudly wave to you from up on high, Coura-ge, Lowell hearts, Down the foeman in the fray, team, And when the battleIS won, We'll cheer for Lowell High. LOWELL FIGHT SONG R. Anino I Fight, Lowell High! CClap three timesj Go, Lowell I-Iigh! CClap three timesj Lowell's spirit will not yield Give us the ball and watch us Go right down the field. Fight, Lowell High! fClap three timesj Go all the way! CClap three timesj Score, score, score, and score some more, And helD to make this a Lowell Vict'ry Day! II CClap three timesj Cyellj Let's go! CClap three timesj Cyellj Let's go! Lowell spirit will not yield, Give us the ball then watch us Go right down the field. fClap three timesj CyellJ Let's go! CClap three timesj Cyelll Let's go! Score, score, score and score some more And help to make this a Lowell ViCt'ry Day! PEP SONG R. Anino Rah-Rah-Rah-Rah ! Spell Lowell! Yell Lowell! L-O-W-E-L-L Cslowlyj L-O-W-E-L-L spells Lowell Cfasterj L--O-W-E-L-L spells Lowell Lowell High-Lowell High. Fight, fight, fight-Red and White, Fight for the Red and White- Rah! HICK SONG R. Anino I We're glad to play a game today, CLAP YELL It's L, it's L, it's L-O-W, Cclap, clap, clap-clap-clapj It's E, it's E, it's E-L-L Cclap, clap, clap-clap-clapj And we will do our best in ev'ry way. As long as we areging it we are going to try to win lt- A better spirit you will never see. And ev'ry time we score we'll cheer. For that's the very reason we are here. And when we get behind our team, as we will always be- We'll go home with a victory. II Cyelll One, two, three, four-we want a score! Cbanclj X X X X X Cyellj One, two, three, four-we want more! fbandj X X X X X Cbandj X X X X X Cyellj Rah! fbandj X X X X X Cyellj Rah! Rah! Csingj And when we get behind our team, as we will always be- We'll go home with at victory! Cbandj X X Cyellj LOWELL HI!! HAIL, RED AND WHITE COfficial song in '20's and early '50'sJ Hail, Red and White May you conquer left and right With banners high Our team will do or die. Listen to our yell- May you hear it ev'rywhere. So get behind it, Lowell High, and make it fend the air! ALL FOR LOWELL R. Anino We're all for Lowell High School And we will help to cheer her on to victory. We're all for Lowell High School No one will have a chance to doubt our loyalty. We'll sing for Alma Mater And let the whole world listen to our battle cry. We'll hoist her banner to the sky The Red and White will ever fly Hurrah, hurrah, hurrah for Lowell High! EEE-RAH Eee-rah, rah Ooo-rah, rah L-O-W-E-L-L Lowell-Lowell High. LOCOMOTIVE YELL Rah, Rah, Rah-Ra-h-Rah, Ooo Rah, Rah, Rah-Rath-Rah, OOO Rah, Rah, Rah-Ra-h-Rah, Ooo L-O-W-E-L--L Go get 'em, Indians- It's L-O-W Cclap-clap-cla-pb It's E-L-L Qclap-clap-clapl It's Lowell, it's Lowell, Fight, fight, fight! ROCKET YELL Cclap, clap, clap-clap-clapj Cclap, clap, clap-clap-clapj fclap, clap, clap-clap-clapj Cwhistlej-Cyellj BOOM! L-O-W-E-L--L Lowell-Lowell-Lowell ! Fight Fight 'em, Red, , FIGHT 'EM em, White, Fight 'em, Indians- Fight, fight, fight! Fight 'em, Red, l Fight Fight 'em, White, em Indians, Fight-fight-fight! frepeat twice, each time louder: VIVE LE LOWELL HIGH fMusic.' Vive l'Amour j Well, here's to our colors, the Rec and the White, Here's to our teams that shall neve. say die, With memories golden, more cher ished with age, So we'll keep up the fight 'till thi victory's won. Vive le Lowell High! May they always succeed in portray ing their might, To pals that a fellow can alway: stand byg To stand out forever among record: made, The worst of the fray is the bes of the fun. Vive le Lowell High! Chorus Vive le, vive le Lowell Highg Vive le, vive le Lowell Highg Vive le Red, vive le White, Vive le Lowell High. ALMA MATER Alma Mater, Alma Mater, 4 The hills send back the cry, you'v1 got to do or die, For Alma Mater, Alma Mater, We'll win the game or know thi reason why! Sing the first time. Whistle the second time. Sing it the third time. THE STURDY TEAM Our sturdy gridders true, Are waiting for the fray, And look upon our colors fair, For they are out to win the dayg Our banners red and white, The symbol of our might, Fight, Fight, Fight! WHISPERING CARDINAL C-A, I-N, C-A, C-A-R-D, I-N, I-N-A-L, C-A-R-D-I--N-A-L, C-A-R-D-I--N-A-L, CAR DINAL LOWELL HIGH. Qsoft the first time, loud secondj Give Give Give Give Righ Righ Righ Righ THE AXE YELL 'em the axe, the axe, the axe, 'em the axe, the axe, the axe, 'em the axe, give 'em the axe, 'em the axe, where?- t in the neck, the neck,the neck, t in the neck, the neck,the neck, t in the neck, right in the neck, t in the neck, there- Crepeat, but fasterj Means Lowell High will fight, hgh hght, So give a cheer for Lowell's Braves- We'll send them on their way With our mighty cheers today, For they are out to win the game And bring to Lowell name ana fame. So cheer with all your might, As it will help them light, For Lowell stands for Might anc Fight, So give a cheer for Lowell's Braves: ZOWIE LOWELL HIGH Zowie Lowell High Wowie Lowell High, San Fran rockety fran Cis, co rockety co, Lowell Lowell High. END BUCK 'E Lo ll I9 6 JOHN J. ROSE MAX RUBINCHIK EDWARD R. RUSSELL RUSSELL RUSTICI GEORGE D. RYAN HOWARD SAGEHORN PIERRE E. G. SALINGER RUDI E. SCHEIDT JOHN SCHILz JOHN SCHMUCK THEODORE G. SCHUIZ JACKSON E. SCOTT MICHAEL SHANKS JAMES R. SHARPE WILLIAM E. SHAW TOMOTSU SHIMOSAKA WILLIAM W. SHIPP JOHN R. SIGNER BERNARD SILvA GEORGE SIMMONS MILLARD S. SIMON ROBERT L. SIMON MILTON H. SIPPLE DALE H. SMATHERS JOHN SMISSAERT RAYMOND M. SMITH STUART SMITH SIDNEY L. SOMMER MAURICE H. STEIN DONALD J. STEWART DANIEL J. SULLIVAN WILLIAM T. SUZUKI HANJI TAGUCHI MASAO TAKAI LEO M, TALKOV ROBERT J. TROPPMANN WILLIAM P. TROWBRIDGE PETER WALTER VARELLAS ROBERT R. VAYSSIE . JACK VIERRA ROBERT S. VOLOSING WILLIAM G. WALBY ROBERT B. WALKER GUY E. WATSON DONALD C. WELCOME RICHARD K. WHITESIDES NORMAN WILLBACK JOHN C. WILDERMUTH MACEIO C. WILLIAMS WILFRED M. WONG EDMUND E. WOO ALBERT J. WYRSCH NEON G. YASINSKY JOHN E. ZEILE Girls MARIE I. ANDERSON PHYLLIS E. ANDERSON VICTORIA C. ARKATOV MARIE BAILEY JOY E. BALESTRACCI JUNE E. BARTELME GLORIA L. M. BARTON BARBARA J. BEALL ETHEL BEECROET BARBARA J. BEETZ MARGUERITE BOAL GALI BOGORODSKY BETTY L. BOHLS ANN L. BOWMAN MARION L. BROWN KATHLEEN E. BURT BETTY J. CAMPBELL GLORIA I. CENTURION MARJORIE LEE CHRISMAN HELEN CHRISTIE BARBARA S. COCHRANE MARJORIE J. COFFEY ROSEMARIE R. COLEMAN FRANCES J. CONNELLY PEGGY P. COYNE DORIS CRANE MARION E. DEBERRY CECILE DE FREMERY GLORIA E. DE MARTINI RITA J. DE MARTINI DORIS DENISON JOAN F. DI NOLA LOUISE L. DORAN EVENELLE A. DORSHER DOLLY DOTY JEAN M. DOWNEY ELAINE J. DREYEUS AUGUSTA EAGLESON CLARICE E. EARL JOSEPHINE L. EHRENEORD SHIRLEY E. ELLIOTT CAROLYN S. ELLIS BONNIE ELLSWORTH EVELYN S. FAIN ANITA FALTIN URSULA S. FELTON MARY E. FILES TATIANA FLOROFF MARJORIE FONG HELEN J. FOX GLORIA D. FRIEDRICHS SHIRLEY GOICOVICH LORAINE H. GRANICHER MARJORIE J. GRANUCCI BERNICE N. GUTMAN ELLEN J. HABERICHTER LUCILE I. HACKETT SHIZUKO HARA BEATRICE C. HASKETT PHYLLIS A. HAWLEY BERNICE HAYES MARJORIE HELZBERG JEAN E. HENDERSON MAR JORIE HILP MARTHA HOWELL BARBARA J. HUGHES ESTELLE HUNTER BETTY JEAN HUTSON MARY LEE JAHN JUDITH M. JOB BETTE I.. JOHNSON DOROTHY E. JOHNSON BARBARA E. JONES EDNA KABUSHCO DOROTHY KANE FLORENCE B. KELLEY SYLVIA T. KERSHAXW EDITH MARY KOCHE NATALIE KOGAN GEARY KRILI. EUNICE C. KROGER LORRAINE S. KUGELMAN CHRISTINE E. KUTULAS DOROTHY M. LANG MARYJANE LANNON BARBARA J. LARUM RAE M. LASATER VIRGINIA T. LEGGETT EDITH LEW MARY L. LIBBY MERCEDES E. LOPEZ JEAN E. MACCALLUM CAROLANN J. MACDONALD PATRICIA MAQNEILL I.ORRAINE C. MANGAN JOSEPHINE MARROQUIN ANNELIESE MARX EMIRO J. MATSUMOTO NANCY M. MAYS JANE E. MCCLELLAND MADELENE MCGARRIGLE MARGARET H. MQGRATH DORIS I. MCGUIRE MIRIAM S. MEANO VIRGINIA MENGOL ELIZABETH M. MILLER PATRICIA A. MILLER I.ILLIAN V. MORGAN ILAVEDA MOTZER ALYCE I. MULZER SETSU NAO NANCY M. NEAL FLORENCE M. NEIL RUTH E. NELL EUGENIA NIKONENKO BARBARA NORVILLE ANN M. NUSSBAUM BERNICE GRACE OLIVER BEATRICE A. O'MELVENY BARBARA A. O'SHEA JEANNE M. PACHECO DONNALYN PADEN BARBARA A, PARKER BARBARA L. PATTERSON BETTY J. PERSON MILDRED S. PICKERING IRENE POPE LEE POYNOR JOSEPHINE E. REIMERS JEANNE E. RICHARDS DOROTHY RIESE JUNE S. ROBANSER JUNE MARIE ROBERTS BETTY ROBINSON NANCE I.EE RONEY GLORIA SABBATO MARGARET G. SCHAEEEER JEAN D. SCHARETG HILDE SCHEUER BARBARA J. SCHUCHARD ELVIRA M. SCHUMACHER ELAINE J. SCHWARTZ DERYL SHAKESPEARE SABEL SHELLEY EDA SIEGEL PEGGY B. SMALLWOOD JEAN R. SONNE PATRICIA SPAULDING DOROTHEA B. SPIVAK GLORIA SPROUL MILA STAROSTIN LEONORE R. STEVENS OLGA STIMSON BEATRICE SULLIVAN GLORIA L. SWANSON WAWONA N. TANG ENID A. THOMAS LORRAINE THOMAS BETTY M. THOMPSON ESTHER C. THORLAKSSON 156 TIQLWIZ J. A. PERINO Prifzripal MISS GLADYS LORIGAN Dean of Girly ,,, V V- - Aclmimkt oz om' DR. ALDEN SMITH Dam of Boyf W I HENRY KARPENSTEIN Head Coumelor MARJORIE TORMEY AGNES G. TRUMURE JUNE C. TURNER MARJORIE M. VAN DE SANDE MARGARET A. VOTAW KATHERINE H. VUKASOVICH KATHERINE E. WALLACH BETTY I. WALLAR JEAN A. WALLEN JUNE C. WALSH ELSA G. WARBLANE BEVERLY J. WARD JACQUELINE WAX MARGARET M. WAY MARGARET WEBB JANE F. WEIS DOROTHY WEISBAUM RAYE WELCH MARILYN H. WHITE LEAH P. WHITEMORE GLORIA WICKERSHAM VALERIE WILSON GERTRUDE WINTER DORISWAYNE WISE ELEANOR XVISE SARAH A. WONG ROSE WYNN LORRAINE S. YAMATE BARBARA A. YEW DOROTHY ZACHAU CLASS OF JANUARY 1942 Boys HARRY C. ABELES HARRY ADAMS, JR. RALSTON W, ALLAN WILLIAM F .BACKES NICHOLAS BELKIN KENNETH ALAN BERVEN CHARLES BLAKE ERVING MALCOLM BLUM ROBERT HERMAN BRAUN ANATOLE GEORGE BRATOFF FRANK ALLEN BRODIE ROBERT CAMPBELL SAM CHAN JACK RANDOLPH CHANDLER BILL CHRISTIANSEN PETER MARK CITI CHARLES SANFORD COHEN GERALD STANLEY COHN WILLIAM MORTON COLE ALLEN CARTER COOPER CHARLES COX RICHARD CUPPLES EMMETT S. DAWSON. JR. WALLACE A. DONG MELVIN TIMPSON EDGAR LYONEL EVANS RICHARD DONALD FARRELL FREDERICK WALTER FAY MATTHEW W. FONG JERRY FRANKEL JEROME S. FURAY ROBERT W, FYE BLAINE JOHN GARDNER JOHN W. GIBSON, JR. KENNETH JOHN GILLESPIE ERWIN GOLDSMITH BENJAMIN GOLLOBER ROLAND K. GRANNIS JAMES DAVID GRAY ROBIN GREEN JOHN MORRIS GREENBERG ROBERT B. HABER RICHARD E. HAM JAMES STEPHEN HANRAHAN MICHAEL MITSURU HATA XVARREN C, HOFFMAN HALSTED REID HOLMAN DENMAN HONDA THOMAS HOOD S. HARRY HOOK, JR. WALTER HOWARD HILL, JR. MARTIN H. KALVELAGE ARTHUR M. KARP ROBERT KINSLOW TETSU KINUGASA YUTAKA KOBAYASHI JAMES ALAN LAFITTE FRANK LANDECKER THOMAS LEW RICHARD LIPTON JAMES PRINCE LIVINGSTON SINCLAIR LOUIE GEORGE EUGENE LOWRIE WALTER HERMAN LUCAS EDWARD MASTERSON WILLIAM CLINTON MCDUFFIE JOHN MCHUGH JUDGE MCLAUGHLIN STUART CHARLES MCPHERSON HENRY E, MIELKE GENGO MIYAHARA JACK MONAHAN BORIS VICTOR MORANOFF JAMES HOWARD MONTROSE YUUJI MORITA 157 DONALD G. P. MOTZER WILI.IAM MULCREVY WARREN HARUO NAGATA THOMAS NELSON, JR. WILLIAM DANIEL O'MARA PHILIP J. O'NEILL BERTRAM L. OWYANG YING OWYOUNG JORDAN NEVILLE PECRHAN ROBERT POON GEORGE MICHAEL POULO HARTFORD SINCLAIR RAPP JIM RICHARDS DOUGLAS RIDENOUR HARVEY SANFORD ROGERS LYLE EDWARD ROHDE BILL ROJAS RICHARD H. SAMUEL PAUL SELCHAU LLOYD JUSTIN SELENE BAXTER SHARP ROBERT THOMAS SHERIDAN HARMON M. SHRAGGE MAXWELL SINGER EARL LEON COHEN SOBEL JOHN WILLIAM SOMERS DONALD IRVINE SPARROXWE WARREN GILBERT SWANSON VAZKEN HARRY TASHIN IRA GILBERT THOMPSON. JR. JON ORRIEN TRUBY THOMAS TULLY HERBERT WALTER WAECHTLER JOHN STERLING WARD JOHN F, WASHBURN GARY HORST WEINHOLD JAMES HARDING WELLER BRUCE PRIOR WILLIAMS WARREN WONG J. LUIS ZABALA Girls MARTHA MASARO ABE ANITA GERTRUDE AMES DONNA CAROLYN ANDERSON LOUISE AUSTIN DOROTHY YVONNE BADGER JOY EMMA BALESTRACCI JEAN BARTENS MARJORIE ALICE BATES BARBARA BENN JANE BLAIR MARION R. BRILL EMILIE C. BROUILLET HARRIET BROWN IRIS BROWN SHIRLEY O. BURKE WILMA JANE BURN SHIRLEY MARION BUTTON VIRGINIA E. CARPENTER PHYLLIS CARROLL BETTY LOUISE CHATTMAN LORRAINE CHRIST MARIAN PEARL COCRS RENEE COI-IN BERNICE ALICE CROHARE RUTH DE LANO JOAN DENNISS LOIS ANN DILLON FRANCES EATON JOSEPHINE MARY EBERSTADT MARY JEANNE EMERSON FLORENCE ENGLER EMMY LOU ERICKSON MARJORIE ERICKSON JOHAN FILES PATRICIA FINN GERALDINE F. FITZGARRALD MARY ANN FOX VIRGINIA FRANCES FREEMAN VIRGINIA GARRIGUES JOY ELLEN GIANNINI BETTY ANN GILES FRANCES LOUISE GIMLIN MARION GLEITZMAN MILLICENT GOMPERTS MATTIE JEAN GOULD ANN GRAVES ELLA GROSS RENEE GROSS MARJORIE JEAN HAAS JEANETTE HAMILL LOIS G. HANSEN BEVERLY BARTLESON HEACOCR VIRGINIA ARLENE HEAD HELEN LOUISE HERRING KATHERINE MARIE HITCHCOCK JEAN LOUISE HODGKINSON FELICE HODSHIRE LOIS MARIE HOFVENDAHL KIKU HORI FLORENCE C. HOUSTON JOAN MARIE IRELAND VIOLET M. JOHNS CONSUELA JONES JULIA JORDAN NAGAKO KAWAGUCHI SARAJANE KENDRICK 158 The Facult MR. MAURICE ENGLANDER . . . He attended the University of California, Fresno State College. He teaches English and U.S. History. MISS JANE FARRIS . . . Miss Farris attended Carnegie Institute of Technology, the Carnegie Library School, and the University of Pitts- burgh. She is the school librarian, and her hobbies include cooking and reading. MR. NORVAL FAST . . . He attended U.C. and the University of Southern California, the University of Nevada, Santa Barbara State College. He teaches Social Studies, Science and English. MISS EDITH HARRISON , . . She attended the University of Hawaii and the University of Caifornia. She is head of the main office at Lowell. and hobbies are golf and cards. MR. O. H. MCCORD . . . He attended California Tech. and the U. of C. He teaches mathematics and Mechanical Drawing. MR. ANDRE DURY . . . Mr. Dury teaches scienceg sponsors the Radio Club, attended Ohio State University, Cooper Union Poly- technic College, San Francisco State College, his hobbies are gym- nastics, swimming, and electronics. MRS. GERTRUDE CAHEN . . . Mrs. Cahen is the chief attendance clerk at Lowell. Her hobbies are music, reading and camping. Her son has recently become a commissioned officer in the U.S. Air Force. MR. ROBERT ANINO . . . Mr. Anino graduated from Lowell and attended U.S.F., Stanford, University of Utah, Denver University and S. F. State College. He teaches Spanish, German, P.E., and Social 922' 'fm mf: 5' W I. I 5.:'. ? W, .M Goals. His hobbies include music and sports. MRS. ELENA CATELLI . . . Mrs. Catelli attended the University of California at Berkeley. She teaches world history, general math, English, Spanish, social goals, Italian in the Italian Club and First Aid. Her hobbies are music, Red Cross and jackie services. MR. RICHARD DOI . . . Mr. Doi teaches crafts, freehand drawing and advanced drawing. He attended the University of Chicago, Northern Illinois State Teachers College, School of the Art Institute of Chicago. and the University of California. His hobbies are painting, reading and music. MR. ROBERT HYINK . . . Mr. Hyink attended Hope College, Michigan, Montana State College, U. S. Naval Academy, University of California and San Francisco State. He teaches mathematics and mechanical drawing. His hobbies are philately and photography. DR. RUTH HOWARD . . . Dr. Howard attended Wellesley College, B.A., Columbia University, M.A., Catholic University of America, Ph.D. She teaches Latin. Her hobbies are knitting and gardening. MRS. AGNES LENNON . . . Mrs. Lennon teaches languages. She attended the University of Southern California. As a hobby she keeps up her home. MISS DOROTHY KERNER . . . Miss Kerner is a graduate of Lowell. She attended San Francisco State and Stanford University. At Lowell She teaches English, Senior and Sophomore Goals. Her hobbies include swimming, reading and gardening. MR. DAVID JAMISON . . . Mr. Jamison attended the University of Denver, Colorado. MISS LEAH BOEHM . . . Miss Boehm is a Lowell graduate. She attended San Francisco State College and U. C., Mills College, Bennington School for the Dance. She is a Counselor and teaches Girls' P.E. MR. ERNST FEIBUSCH . . . Mr. Feibusch attended San Francisco junior College and S. F. State College. He teaches U. S. History. Senior Civics, Social Studies, and German, One of his hobbies is soccer. MISS JEAN ANDERSON . . . She attended U. C., Oregon, San jose State. She is a counselor and teaches English. She is also the Assist- ant Librarian. Some of her hobbies include travel, the theatre, dancing, and music. MR. BERTRAM BRAUER . . . He attended S. F. State College and Stanford University. He teaches French, and one of his hobbies is the theatre. MISS MARGARET CHASE . . . Miss Chase attended the University of California, Stanford and Columbia University. She teaches art and Social Studies. Some of her hobbies include travel and ice skating. The Facult MISS CONSTANCE MCFARLAND . . . Teaches choral music and English. She attended Dominican College, San Rafael, and is a post graduate of the University of California and Mills College. Her hobbies are literature, theatre, music, history, and she likes to travel. MR. PAUL LUCEY . . . Mr. Lucey attended Brown University and U.S.F. He teaches economics and econ. geography. His hobby is flying. MR. CORNELIUS MCCARTHY . . , Teaches Latin, drivers' educa- tion, English, and is also a counselor. He attended Santa Clara, Gon- zaga, U.S.F., Loyola, U.S.L.A., and S. F. State. MR. JAMES WILLIAMS . . . Mr. Williams teaches mathematics. MRS. JANIS LOFORTI . . . Miss FoLorti is a Lowell graduate. She attended Stanford University, where she obtained her A. B. and her M.A. She teaches Spanish, algebra, geometry, shorthand, and typing. Her hobbies include knitting and gardening. MR. JOHN WORLD . . . Teaches science and attended Stanford and California Universities. He is interested in music, art. and elec- tronics. MISS GLADYS METCALF . . . Miss Metcalf teaches languages. She attended the University of California and Whitman College. Her interests consist of music, travel, and amateur photography. MISS MARGARET VANDERBURGH . . . Teaches basic English, and Americanization. Attended U.C. and McGill University. MRS. ANNE WAI.LACH . . . Teaches English. Attended S, F. State College and U. C. Her hobbies are literature, art, and music. MR. BERNHARD BERNARD . . . Lowell graduate. Teaches music. Attended College of Pacihc and Stanford. MR. WILLIAM BAKER . . . Teaches mathematics. Attended Stan- ford, California, San Jose State, and S. F. State. His hobbies are golf, gardening, and athletics. MRS. HAZEL HAVEN . . . Teaches social studies, social goals, and iEnglish, Attended U.C. Her hobbies are reading, music, and knitting. I MR. 'WILLIAM WORLEY . . . Teaches English, attended the Uni- versity of Utah and San Francisco State College, his interests are music, and reading. MRS. MINETTE HIGGINS . . . Mrs. Higgins is a Lowell grad. She teaches social science. She graduated from the University of California. MR. EDWARD JORDAN . , . Teaches English and attended the University of California and S. F. State College. His interests are skiing. fishing, and commanding National Guard Anti-Aircraft Battery. MISS MARGARET HEATON . . . Miss Heaton attended Mills Col- lege, U. C., and Stanford. She teaches English and poetry. Her hobbies are reading and traveling. MR. JAMES PATTERSON . . . Teaches U.S. history and civics. Attended Stanford and U.C. His hobbies are skiing and automobiles, MRS. CELIA CAIN . . . Teaches physical education and social goals. Attended N.Y. University, Columbia University, and S. F. State. MR. SAMUEL CARPENTER . . . Teaches science. He graduated from the University of California. His hobbies are sports and science. MISS BARBARA MENSING . . . Teaches German and English. Miss Mensing attended U.C. Her hobbies are collecting symphony records, and cookies recipes. JACQUELINE KRAUS EVELYN IRENE KREKOON VERA KREEKIS ELSIE MILDRED LANDRY NADINE LAPKIN MARGARET E. LELBACH CLARE SHIRLEY LEWIS BETTE JUNE LIBERTY MARGARET MARKARIAN GERALDINE LOUISE MARRE BONNIE MCPHERSON ELEANOR MARILYN MENSCH GERDA MIRIAM MEYER 'JACQUELINE MISHKIND FRANCES AKIKO MIZUNO MOLLY ALLEN MOORE GLADYS RAY MOTL CAROLINE SARAH NAHMAN BETTY NELSON REBA NICKSON RUTH CONSTANCE NORDFELT LOLA OSTRANDER PATRICIA ANNE PETERS ELISA PETERSEN EVELYN RADKE ELIZABETH ANNE REISS MITZI NICOLE RUSS NORMA SEARS PAULINE SERGO INGE SCHEUER EVELYN CLAIRE SCOTT MARY ALICE SCOTT MOLLY MAE SHEPARD ESTELLE DOROTHY SPIEGELMAN CATHERINE STEWART VIRGINIA MAE TAFT BARBARA JUNE THOMPSON SUSAN FRANCES THORSCH MARGERY TOMLINSON BARBARA TREGAN OWEN JOAN LOLITA TROST SHIRLEY JEAN VERNON MARY MARGARET VON RAVEN ALICE ELEANORE WEATHERLY DAVONA B. WILLIAMS JOAN RUTH WISE - CLASS OF JUNE 1942 Boys DONALD B. AIRD HATSURO AIZAWA J. BEAUCHAMP ALEXANDER THEODORE L. ALTHAUSEN E. MARTIN ANDERSON ROBERT L. ANDERSON PHILIP H. ARNOT GEORGE E. ARNSTEIN DANIEL K. ASHCRAFT CALBERT W. ATKINS MATTHEW A. BAILEY PIERRE H. BAILLIF ROBERT F. BELLMONT DAVID BERWICK ROBERT A. BLAIS WILLIAM D. BLANKENSHIP ROBERT N. BLOCH KAJ. E. BLOMQUIST CLIFFORD H. BLOOM JACK BRESLER WILLIAM BRIZEE ARNOLD L. BROWN SIDNEY L. BROWN WILLIAM J. BROWN WILLIAM R, BUCHANAN CLYDE C. BURCH ROBERT H. CARLSON ROBERT CARRIER DOUGLASS S. CARTWRIGHT STANLEY P. CHARLES ROBERT H. CHERRY GEORGE S. CHICHESTER DAVID W. CHINN GEORGE N. CHYSOSKY FRANK A. CLARVOE EDWIN M. CLINTON W. CURTIS COFFMAN LESLIE B. COHN MAURICE N. COHN MALCOLM G. COLBERG JAMES O. COLE GERALD F. COLEMAN JOHN H. COLTON KENNETH J. COLVIN CHARLES A. COOKE FRANK CRONAN JAMES E. CROSS ROBERT s. CROWDER JOSEPH JOHN CROWLEY XVILLIAM S. CULPEPPER STANLEY J. CUMBERPATCH REMO C. CUNIBERTI FRANK S. DAVIS DON J. DEVOTO IRWIN DIAMOND STEPHEN P. DOTUR PETER J. DUNSTON JOSEPH H. ECKART 159 LEONARD B. FELDMAN H. WOLF FINK GEORGE P. FORTAYON HAROLD E. J. FUHRBERY HENRY N. FUKUI D. WILLIAM GAINES LOUIS F. GAMBA EDDIE J. GEE RICHARD E. GEE CONSTANTINE M. GLAFKIDES HASKELL E. GOLDMAN FRANK R. GRANNIS OTIS GRAVEM FRANK L. GUERENA JOHN G. HABERMEYER D. ALLAN HAGERTY KENNETH M. HALL EDWARD HALSEY WILLIAM G. HANLEY CALVIN K. HARADA JOHN L. HARVEY RALSTON J. HARVEY LAWRENCE D. HAWKINSON PALMER B. HEWLETT DONALD HEYNEMAN CHARLES E. HINCKLE RICHARD K. HIRSCHFELD STANTON C. HOEFLER P. HITOSHI HONDA MAXWELL T. JAMES DAVID O. JOHNSON LAWRENCE W. JORDAN DANIEL KASS NORMAN J. KEMP ROBERT L. KESLER K. ROY KETTLER JOHN A. KILDAY W. BRADLEY KING ARTHUR KITTELMAN ROBERT L. KNOX JOHN W. LACKMANN WILLIAM R. LANDWORTH WILLIAM L. LANE JESSE E. LANGRIDGE NEILL LANSING LOUIS C. LEITHOLD H. HSIEN LI LEE PHILIP LEE HAROLD LEMESH HERBERT M. LEVY CHARLES A. LINDGREN JOHN A. LINDSTROM GEORGE A. LINEER ALFRED LOBELL PARK L. LOUGHLIN IRWIN L. MARCUS WILLIAM H. MARSHALL JOHN W. MARTIN RICHARD A. MARTIN SAMUEL R. MARTIN JACQUES R. MARTINET EDWARD W. MCARTHUR B. RANSOM MQBRIDE RICHARD A. MCKNEW LESLIE A. MENDELSON RAYMOND R. MENZEL BERTRAM MILLER C. WILLIAM MILLER DANIEL MILLER DON H. MILLS JOHN R. MORIARTY GORDON MORRIS EARL B. MURRAY ERNEST J. NACKORD MANUEL NORIEGA JOSEPH S. NOWACK JOSEPH P. NUSSBAUM JAMES E. O'CONNELL DANIEL S. O'CONNOR EDWARD F. ODENTHAL SEVERYN OKSENBERG TOSHIO OzAKI EDWIN L. PAILLASSOU LEONCE PERRIN ROBERT H. PFILE DONALD V. PHILLEO THOMAS W. PICKETT FRANK PIOMBO JOHN T. POOL SOL PRESS E. ELDON PROUIX DALLAS F. RADER RAYMOND V. REBOIS JAMES R. REYNOLDS WILLIAM T. RICHARDSON EDWIN H. ROGERS STANFORD L. ROSENBERG MOTOAKI SAKAGUCHI HISAJI SAKAI WILLIAM L. SALES JOHN sANz NORBERT A. SCHLAMM CLAUDE H. SCHMIDT ROBERT G. SCHMIDT KENNETH E. SCHUSSEL DONALD P. SCOTT ROBERT SETRAKIAN BURNETT SHEEHAN 160 The Eacult MISS ELFREDA KELLOGG . . . Miss Kellogg graduated from Lowell. She teaches physiology, and her hobbies are gardening and interior decorating. MR. SAMUEL POLLAND . . . Mr. Polland is the head of the English Department. He attended Reed College and Columbia Uni- versity. He teaches Oral English and Dramaticsg directs the Varieties and term plays. MR. JAMES LIVINGSTONE . . . Lowell graduateg teaches English and prose fictiong golf and tennis coach. He attended the University Of California. ' MRS. THERESA WESTFALL . . . Mrs. Westfall teaches ages She attended the University Of California. MISS IRENE SINK . . . Miss Sink sponsors the GAA riding an teaches P.E. She attended U.C., University of Washington, and S F. State. Her hobbies are Stamps, gardening, and orchids. MR. BENJAMIN NEFF . . . Varsity basketball coach. He has had the honor of coaching many great teams. He graduated from U.C. and his hobbies are fishing and hunting. MRS. A. LAURIE BACH . . . Graduated from the University of California. She teaches Spanish. Her interests are flowers, birds, music, and reading. MR. XVILLIAM FEILING . . . Attended Stanford University. He teaches P. E. and Biology. His hobbies are hunting, fishing, and athletics. MRS. IVA MARIE COOPER . . . She teaches English. She attended Stanford and Iowa. Hobbies are gardening, swimming, and travel MR. RIRCHARD WURM . . . He is in charge ot' Lowell's finances. He attended the University of San Francisco and likes to paint. MR, REGINALD KRIEGER . . . Mr. Krieger heads the music department. He attended the University of California. His hobbies are fishing, guns, and bees. MISS MARY MCBRIDE . . . Miss McBride teaches mathematics. She attended Lowell and then U. C. She sponsors the H12 class. MISS IONE MATHISEN . . . Miss Mathisen teaches mathematics. She attended U.C. She enjoys arts such as weaving and knitting. l MRS. MAUDE VOLANDRI . . . Mrs. Volandri teaches Algebra and geometry. SERGEANT JOHN POTTS . . . Sergeant Potts attended the University of Hawaii, S. F. City College, Stanford, and U.C.L.A. He supervise: the ROTC. MRS. LENORE SMITH . . . Mrs. Smith sponsors the GAA bowling and ice skating. She also teaches P.E. She went to Occidental College. MR, RICHARD BELMOUR , , , Mr, Belmour attended U.S.F. and MRS. ETHEL HALL . . . Attended U.C. She has been the emplOymen1 San Francisco State College. His hobby is photography. counselor at Lowell for nearly 10 years. Her hobby is traveling MISS UNA MCBEAN , , , Miss MfBean teaches mathematics and MR. BARNEY WOLF . . . Mr. Wolf teaches P.E. and coaches the has a L10 registry. trac-K team. He attended U.C. The Facult MISS MARGUERITE SCHROEDER . . . Miss Schroeder teaches typ- ing. She graduated from the University of California. Her hobbies are tennis and motoring. MR. ROBERT BUCKLEY . . . Mr. Buckley teaches iournalism and historyg coaches the frosh-soph football team and the baseball team, advisor of the Red and Wfbiie and Lowell. He attended S. F. State College. IMISS ALICE GRAEBER . . . Lowell graduate. She attended U.C. and U.S.F., and S. F. State College. She sponsors the Big Sisters. Teaches mathematics. MR. RAYMOND MILTON . . . Teaches history and social goals, and P.E. He attended Stanford and S. F. State College. He is the Big Brothers' sponsor. MRS. ESTHER KALLBERG . . . Mrs. Kallberg teaches English. She graduated from U.C. Her hobbies are reading, gardening, and music. MR. JACK ANDERSON . . . Lowell graduate, attended San Fran- cisco State College. Teaches social studies, world history, and U.S. history. His hobbies are fencing and iishing. MRS. ELIZABETH GOLDSMITH . . . Works in counseling office. Her hobby is gardening. MR. JOSEPH EHRMAN . . . Lowell graduate, attended Antioch College, Indiana University, U. C. and Stanford. Teaches algebra, geometry, and mechanical drawing. His hobbies are Scouting and photography. MISS AURELIA OSUNA . . . Attended University of New Mexico. Stanford and National University of Mexico. Teaches Spanish, French, and Italian. Her hobby is music. MR. FRANCIS DRISCOLL . . . Teaches history and civics. He at- tended the University of San Francisco and California. His interests are studying Little Theatre Plays. I MISS FLORENCE BALENSIFER . . . Miss Balensifer attended U.C., St. Mary's College and Notre Dame. She teaches English, Latin and history. MISS FRANCES DEALTRY . . . Miss Dealtry attended U.C. She teaches chemistry and mathematics. Her hobbies are gardening and reading. MR. WALTER DRYSDALE . . . He attended S. F. State and Stan- ford. He teaches P.E. and is also a counselor. His hobbies are fishing and scouting. MISS DOROTHY FLYNN . . . Miss Flynn attended U.C. She teaches Physical Educationg is in charge of GAA, Girls' Block L, and counsels. MISS MAXINE VASILATOS . . . Miss Vasilatos attended U.C. and the University of Wfashington. She teaches biology and physiology. Her hobbies are hunting and fishing. MR. IVAN BARKER . . . Mr. Barker heads the math department. fle attended Stanford University and he enjoys hiking, woodworking, and photography. MISS HELEN BYERLY . . . Miss Byerly attended Jefferson Medical College Hospital in Philadelphia also she got her B.S. from U. C. he is the school's nurse who is always there ready to give aid to sick student. MRS. ROSE TEMPLE . . . Mrs. Temple attended Hunter College in N.Y., San Diego State, and S. F. State College. Her hobbies are camping and weaving. She teaches home nursing. MR. EDWARD WARD . . . Mr. Ward is our foreman ianitor. His hobbies are baseball and all sports. He appreciates the cooperation that the school gives him. MR. PATRICK ROGAN . . . Mr. Rogan is our school engineer. He is interested in all sports especially soccer and fishing. KENNETH H. SHELLY JAMES C. SHEPPARD WILLIAM F. SHERIDAN J. SHIGEO SHIJO CHARLES M. SIMMONS PAT SIMMONS E. MAYNARD SMITH HOWARD A. SMITH IAN D. SMITH RANALD A. SODESTROM GEORGE L. STANLEY W. SHIGEO TAKAI MASATO TANABE JOHN P. TAYLOR JOHN W. TAYLOR ROBERT D. THOMSON ROBERT L. THURBAN NORMAN E. TIERNEY KIMIO J. TODA ROBERT S. TONNESEN CLIFFORD W. R. A. TOOLEY RAYMOND B. TRUELSEN BERNARD J. TURGEON DUANE N. TWEEDDALE PHILIP A. TYRWHITT HANS K. URY MILTON A. VAIL WALTER F. VELLA HOWARD R. VOLDMAN ROBERT H. voN DER LIETH THOMAS E. WALES HENRY J. WALSH DONALD A. WELLS FRANK D. WIGMORE DAVID I. WILLIAMS JOSEPH C. WYNN KUNITAKE M. YAMANAKA Girls RUBY D. AARON FLORA R. ALLEN VERONICA C. ALVES AUDREY M. ANDERSON HELENE ANDRONICOS FRANCES ARNERICH KATHERINE ARNERICH LORRAINE C. ARRIGOTTI JUANITA BABBITT DOROTHY BAKER NANCY A. BARNETT BEATRICE A. BELL ELAINE C. BENIOFF MARILYNN F. BERNARD JUNE s. BERRY sUE BLAKE HARRYETTE BLOCK JEAN M. BORsT JEANNETTE M. BRAVINDER JAYNE E. BROCK CHARLOTTE R. BROSI JOAN H. BROWN HILARY BROWNELL GWENDOLYN YIN CHAN STELLA P. CHANG HILDA C. CHAPMAN ANNIE CHU ELEANOR CI.AUsEN BETTY CLEMENT PEGGY COHEN PATRICIA J. COLLINS ESTELLE COOK HARRIET COOK ELEANOR F. CORCORAN CONsTANCE CORKERY PHYLLIs COULAM HELEN I. CRAWFORD EMILEE M. CURLEY JEAN C. CURRIE JEAN DANK LUCILLE M. A. DEDIER JACQUELINE DEUTSCH PATRICIA M. DINsDALE JUNE E. DOLAN CATHERINE E. DON MARGARET ENGSTROM MARGARET ENRIGHT PATRICIA J. FARRELL SHIRLEY F. FITZGERALD MARY FLAA MARY E. FLETCHER EDNA M. FOSTER ELEANOR L. FOX BARBARA M. GALE LESLIE F. GALVAN BETTY L. GARDNER PHYLLIS M. GEARY vIvIAN M. GIsIN BETTY F. GLAsER REGINA GOLDBERG GLORIA GRANUCCI GERDA s. GUMPEL JUNE GUTMAN HARRIET A. HALLERAN GRACE L. HANNON BETTY HANSEN ANN HART SHIRLEE-JO HART 161 MARJORIE A. HAUCK MAR JORIE C. HELLER LUISA P. HEPPER BETTE M. HINDEN INGE HUBER PATRICIA G. HUTCHINGS JEAN M. IRWIN DOROTHY J. JONES ALICE KAEKAS P. MICHIKO KAGEYAMA GISELA KAMM DOROTHY P. KAPP5 FRANCES N. KATASE PATRICIA A. KELLY PHYLLIS E. KERRIGAN JEANNE S. KLINGER LESLIE I. KLINGER LYDIA KAHANOVICH CLAIRE E. KORET DORIS A. KRUTMEYER KIKUYE C. KUBOTA EDNA M. LAGORIO KATHRYN A. LAIRD MARIE T. LARNER BETTY C. LARSEN ELIZABETH LAWSON MARIE LE BUANIC BARBARA M. LEE JEAN W. LOW JUANDA LOYSEN PHILIS J. LUDLAM DOROTHY L. MACKENZIE MARIAN P. MADDEN MARY-ELLA MAGUIRE DONNA A. MARSHALL GLENNA A. MARTIN BARBARA A. MATZGER NANCY MAY JOAN I. MCCAPPERTY MURIEL A. MEGRATH VIRGINIA H. MCGRATH BARBARA J. MCINTYRE KATHLEEN MCINTYRE SHIRLEY P. MCRAE PATRICIA C. MEHERIN NATALIE MENSHIKOEE BARBARA E. METCALE MURIEL MILLER SALLY L. MILLIGAN CHARLOTTE M. MILLING FRANCES M. MINTON ELIZABETH M. MONTESCLAROS SUZANNE MONTGOMERY FLORENCE A. MORRISON HELEN E. MORRISON ELEANOR v. MOSELY NANCY E. MURPHY PATRICIA MURPHY M. MARIKO NAKABAYASHI JULIA A. NEIL GLORIA NICHOLS RITA A. O'NEILL LORRAINE O' LOONEY ROBERTA R. OSBORNE PATRICIA I. OTTO M. ELIZABETH PALMER DOLORES R. PARODI J. LUCILLE PHIPPS MILDRED J. PLUMMER MARGARET A. POULSEN EVELYN E. PRATHER B. JUANITA PREVATTE JEAN E. RANSOHOPP EVELYN RASMUSSEN JOANNE L. REED DOROTHY A. RICHARDSON JANET A. RICO ALICE RIGHETTI LUCRETIA J. RILOVICH ELIZABETH A. RINGHAM EVELYN J. RISS ROSE RIVERA BETTY J. ROBANSER Jo ANN RODGERS NATALIE ROSENBERG MARIE T. ROSSI SHIRLEY ROSTERMUND EDWINA Y. ROTHGEB ROSEMARY A. SHIvo JUNE E. SCHMULIAN JANICE SCHULZE RUTH M. SCHWEDHELM EDYTHE J. SEGALI KAY SHATTUCK MARGARET SHEPHARD LOIS J. SIDEMAN RUTH J. SIMPERS MAXINE M. SIPES JOYCE C. SKOPP DOROTHY SMITH ELEANOR M. SNEAD MAXINE H. SOBEL A. THEODORA SPOUSE EVELYN E. STANTON DORIS E. STEELE ELIZABETH A. STEWART DOROTHY J. STRANTON 162 Lowell High Students V FALL STUDENT BODY OFFICERS Wiith President Jim Nolan as leader of the student body ofiicers, the fall term was very Successful. Serving as vice president was Carol Melmon. joelle Rosen took care of all the Secretarial duties, while the person in charge of the financial situation was Bob Minney. Head Cheer Leader Paul Matzger helped to keep up Lowell's fine spirit. Marilyn Levy, editor OfiThe Lowell, kept all teachers and Students informed with the latest news around school. Gwen Davis, editor of the Red and While, and her excellent staff Started working on the centennial year- book. JIM NOLAN President CAROL MELMON Vice President JOELLE ROSEN Secretary BOB MINNEY PAUL MATZGER MARILYN LEVY GWEN DAVIS Treasurer Yell Leader Editor, Lowell Editor Red and Wbrte Association Officers SPRING STUDENT BODY OFFICERS The Student body officers led by President Bob Moore made an active spring 1956 term. Assisting Bob as vice president was the very capable Sylvia Nelson. Secretary Terry Yasukochi took care of all minutes and corresponding matters. Paul Matzger, treasurer, took care of all money matters. Head Yell Leader Tony Mathios had the entire stu- dent body behind him while he led every yell. Gathering all the latest news for The Lowell was Editor Sue Figel. Re-elected editor Of the Red and White was Gwen Davis. BOB MOORE Prefid ent SYLVIA NELSON Vice Prerident TERRY YASUKOCHI Serretary U A f , ' ' : ::'- Q. '::1:..f A ,I 4 Vpg. sh , at -.H , .ivv V: ' la y, . - ' I 4 . esees 1' Q . , le: :':--. 'i ' L 5 1 ' ' l f: :Z .v.- ..Ag' , A QI: A A 'Ll ',.,i,i,. . . ,t,-V,, ...I ,. K 5 If L Ab. A r Q NY MATHIOS SUE FIGEL GWEN DAVIS PAULTLLQEZGER To yen Laude, Editar of ibe Lowell Ediffff' Uf 151' Red and Wbiff' f E, DOROTHY SURTEES JUNE B. SUTTON MARY NATSUME SUZUKI DORIS SWETT PATRICIA SYNAN ELAINE M. THIBODEAU MADELINE V. TRACY MARY L, TWEEDIE BARBARA M. TYLER YVONNE UEFOLD ANNA VALENKO JULIE VOESTER BETTY A. WALDEN DOROTHY E. WARREN JUNE F. WARSING BEVERLY J. WATSON MARJORIE E. WEIGEL CLAIRE J. WEINHOLD MARGARET L. WELTY JACQUELYN L. WEYL BEVERLY A. WHITCHURCH BARBARA A. WHITE RITA WIELAND ANNE WIGLE CONNIE WILSON GEORGIANNE R. WILSON LOREE G. WILSON WILLA-MAY WISSING URSULA WOLFF BETTE WOODARD EIKO YoSH1zATo ROSALIE A. ZIEGLER THERESE E. ZIEGLER CLASS OF JANUARY 'I943 Boys HENRY ALBERT JACK ALBERTS RAYMOND ALLEN FRANK ANTOINE CALVIN BENJAMIN APTER CHARLES T. BAKER IRVING BALTOR JOHN R. BAZNIK CHARLES BERNATAS MAURICE DAULTON BLUM RUSTIN BREWER PAUL J. BUCHNER HOBERT WARREN BURNS ROBERT HENRY BUSSE WALTER GEORGE BUSSE JOHN C. CALLAN FRANK L. CARDELLI ARTHUR CARFAGNI SOTIRIOS JAMES CHALIOS LESTER CLARKE ALBERT CLEMENTE RUDOLPH CLEMENTE PHILIP COLLISCHON KENNETH LEON CULVER, JR, NATHANIEL DANIELS, JR. NICHOLAS N. DANILOFF HOWARD A. DANK, JR. CLIFFORD ROY DAVIS DONALD K. DAVIS EDWARD L. DE MARTINI, JR. JOHN WOODROW DEMIAN MARVIN DIAMOND EDWARD T. DREESSEN WALTER DUMAS DONALD B. DUNWOODY HENRY EVERETT EMERSON HERBERT MARTIN EMS MELVIN EWELL EVANS GERRY GEORGE FALK ALLEN S. FEDER JACK M. FEDER, JR. PATRICK ROBERT FEENY LEE JAY GOLBETZ FRANCIS WILBUR GRANTZ JAMES C. GREENE DONALD ANDERSON HABER IRVING LEONARD HAMMER ' RICHARD ARTHUR HANSON EDWARD J. HENDERSON, JR. SYLVAIN HEUMANN WILFRED FRANCIS HOLDEN CLAYTON M. HOOPER ARTHUR WATTERSON HOPPE ARMAND B. HOPPEL ARTHUR PAUL HOPPER V LAWRENCE J. HORN JOHN P. IRVINE LAWRENCE H. JOHNSON RAYMOND P. JOHNSON JOSEPH FRANCIS KANE, JR. JOHN HAROLD KEEFE, JR. MERVYN BRUCE KIPNIS GEORGE KRITSKY FRANK CARL KUDELKA RUDY D. LANG, JR. CHARLES J. LEE LLOYD ARTHUR LEE RICHARD HENRY LEE GEORGE J. LIEBES, II WILLIAM LOWE DONALD JOHN MAQDOUGALL 163 WARREN WESLEY MANGELS BOB ALLEN MARTENS JAMES HARVEY MAXWELL ROBERT MCLAUGHLIN ROBERT MCMAHON GORDON BRUCE MELODY ALAN MEYER WILLIAM ROY MCMILLEN ALLEN MITCHUM HENRY M. NELSON ALEXANDER NICHOLS MAURICE J. O'BRIEN, JR. LOWRIE O'DONNELL PAUL O'DOWD JAMES BOYD OLIVER, JR. WARD LUBAC PENINGTON MILLARD HARRIS PERSTEIN A. BEAzELL POSTEL LOUIS GEORGE PREOVOLOS WALLACE HERMAN REITz MORTON CLARKSON ROACH GEORGE ROSS, JR. HERBERT EDGAR SALINGER FRANKLIN ARTHUR SANFORD WARREN MILTON SAPIRO HAL SCHEPPS LOUIS SCHMIDT HERMAN SCHNIEDER WILLIAM B. SCHWABACHER ROBERT ELI SEARLE, JR. DAVID ARTHUR SEPFICH DONALD BURTON SHARMAN DAVID M. SHELDON, JR. ROBERT SIM JOHN SKLIVAS RONALD JEROME SOCKOLOV ROSS EDWARD SOCKOLOV MORTON SPEIZER GEORGE ANDREW STAFFORD JOHN FRANCIS STOLL THOMAS JOHN STREI ROBERT STURTEVANT WILCOX TUCK JOHN M. URBAN JOHN T. A. E. WARK FREDERICK G. WILLIAMS, JR. JACQUES HERNI WILSON JOHN WILSON JACK CAMERON WORTHEN JOHN WULLSCHLEGER Girls EMILIE ALLISON DOROTHY ANNE ATHERLEY NANCY BAER ALICE JEAN BAHR BARBARA ELIZABETH BAUR MARY LOUISE BEARD MIRIAM BERCOVICH ISABEL COLLEN BOWENS BEVERLY IRENE BRACKETT POLA L. BRAIVERMAN CORINNE TRUE BRASH JANE BRASHEAR BURRIS ALICE BRAZIL DONALDINE BRIDGES GRACE JEAN BRONSON ELEANOR VICTORIA BROTMAN LILLIAN BROWN MARION EDITH BURNESS ELIZABETH LOUISE CALVERT MARY RUDDOCH CAMPBELL JOAN CARAVELLAS CHRISTINA J. CI-IALIOS DORIS CHRISTIE CAROLE ANN CLAIBORNE CORINNE RAE CLAYTON SYLVIA JEANETTE COHN BETTY CROOKS MARGARET KATHERINE CROSBY MARYLOUISE DECHERY KATHLEEN DEMARTINI MIRIAM EVELYN DIBBLE AN ANNE DUFF JANE ELIZABETH ELLISON Fall High Seniors E 2. S Aw .9-KS, A S , JOHN DEBENHAM DIANE DE MUN GLORIA ROCES TASIA VLAHOS Prexident Vive Prerident Secremra' Tyg,U,,yg, H-12 FALL '55 ACTIVITIES Row one: T. Vlahos, D. De Mun, J. Deben ham, G. Roces. Raw two: M. Prescott, R Lom, S. Hurff, J. Russell. Tap row: A, Inouye H. Woo, A. Katsuyama. Spring High Seniors SOPHY CHRISTINA EVANGELOU LOIS VIRGINIA FALEN IRIS FARRELL DOLORES FLEISHMAN DORIS ROSE FLYNN CHARLOTTE M. FREDERICKSEN MARJORIE ANN GALVAN JANICE MARY GOODWIN BETTY JANE GREENBAUM VIRGINIA L. GRIMM GEORGETTE J. HANSEN DOROTHY LEE HARVEY MARY HEFFERNAN DYTHE-MARY HERTERT BETTY HOLT JANE HOUSTOUN KATHERINE HUBBARD JEANE VIVIEN INGRAM HELEN SANDRA JOHNSTON JACQUELINE KENFIELD BARBARA A. KERRIGAN LEOLA ELSIE KLAHN 164 STUART REED Trearurer f Iwmfxfil .SA -fq A... . ' Y A HARVEY BRODY JANICE DRISCOLL JOYCE ROBBINS Prefldent Vice Preiidenl Secretary .... . , A flag '- ' fw' ':' i i: gi - 3235 Af if .EIS .. IIf.EI.-'gs M5 3 if X V S R R -:ST In . . R 1 .E .2 1 f 2? A H I . S i I ,nv ,,,,,,, 77, , ,, Pall Low Seniors 4. 3, -, , if I I I I f 3. DICK ANDERSON JUDY FREED JUDY TEITLER President Vice President Secretary ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE Raw one: J. Swimmer, D, Anderson, J. Freed. Row MUD! S. Abel, L. Cohn, S. Muto. Row Ihree: S. Vlfoodward, V. Eckstrom, D. Black- well, J. Driscoll. Spring LOW Seniors RICHARD PRICE IDELLE LEVY CHARLENE PETERSON Clary Prefident Vice Prexident Serreiary NORMA J. KRISTOVICH ANN LANG MARGARET LANG BARBARA LAUNDRIE BARBARA JEAN LEVY MARIE LO BIANCO MITZI CLARKE LOWE SOL-BRITT LUNDEN FRANCES JEANNE MANDICH LOUISE HELEN MANHEIM RUTH MARY MARTIN ROBERTA GEORGIA MATHEWS JEANNE MATHEWS BETTY LOU MCINERNEY THEODORA CLARE MCKEE WANDA MCKENZIE WILMA CLAIRE MELVIN CAROL ALICE MENARY LYDIA MILOSLAVSKY FLORENCE MUHLMANN CAROL BOWKER NELSON FRANCES NEWMAN CORINNE JACQUELINE O'BRIEN PATRICIA O'DEA BEVERLY OSTROW BARBARA HELEN PIXLEY GALE L. PRICE GLORIA LILLIAN QUANDT LOUISE REYBURN FLORENCE RIZA ADELE J. ROGERS JANE MARIE SACHS ELIZABETH JEAN SACKMAN GEORGIA BLANCHE SAYRE EVELYN SCHAECHE BARBARA J, SHADE IRENE SHAPOFF ELISABETH MARIE SIEBER JOAN H. SIMON ' BARBARA RUTH SMILEY BETTY SOLOMON LILLIAN L. SPECTOR LOUISE ELEANOR STONESON LA VERNE STOUTENBERG RUTH SUTTON NANCY TRAVERSO GLORIA UNTI MARY ELLEN VANCE HELEN JANE VERNEY JACQUELINE MARIE VOYSEY MARION WALLACE HELEN WARD BARBARA J. WAX LOIS VIRGINIA WELCH ROSEMARY WELLS RAMONA MARIE WILSON JACQUELINE CULVER WISE CECILE WOHL MARION JOYCE YOUNG CLASS OF SPRING. 1943 Boys WALTER ALTHAUSEN NICHOLAS ASTRAHANTSEFF JOHN M. BAIRD WALTER C. BALL RICHARD WATTS BARRETT CHAUNCEY GRISWOLD BEHRENS EDWARD W. BENNETT, JR. WILLIAM HANSFORD BENNETT WILLIAM N. BEUTTLER RICHARD LEWIS BLUMBERG PAUL BOHIGIAN VICTOR RICHARD BOISSEREE WILLIAM K. BOWES, JR. THOMAS ARCHER BOWLES OLEG BORIS BRAJNIKOFF NOEL BROWN ROBERT STANLEY BUCHANAN GEORGE W. BULL- JR. DUNCAN ALVIN BURDICK JACK F. CARREIRO PAUL FRED CHAPFEE LEO RICHARD CHAIKO ROBERT M. CHEILEK GEORGE JOHN CHIGRIS ROSS EDGAR CLARK DONALD FRANCIS COCHRAN JOHN JAMES COCHRANE JACK RAYMOND COOPER ROLFE CHARLES CROKER WILLIAM L. CURLEY RICHARD JOHN DAVIS EDWARD A. DEVINE MAX DIAMOND EDWARD DOTY ROBERT E. EDDY LEO HERBERT ELLIS WILLIAM EPSTEIN JAMES WILLIAM FADDIS CARL ANDREW FAIN FREDERICK E. FOWLE, JR. LLOYD F. FREECHTLE HEBERT B. FULDA THOMAS GARFIELD RICHARD IRVING GERSON HENRY LEO GIMMEL CLIFFORD zENO GOMES 165 HOWARD ERNEST GOTELL1 BARRY I. GREENBERG THOMAS W. GRISWOLD GEORGE GROMEEKO WILLIAM RUSSELL HALL FRANK MICHAEL HALLERAN FRANK R. HANRAHAN JACK LAWRENCE HANEY JOHN EARL HANNAN THOMAS WILLIAM HANRAHAN JOHN GRAHAM HARDGRAYE EDWARD HAUG KENNETH JON HAY JACK H. HELMS GEORGE L. HENDERSON MICHAEL HENNEBERRY ROBERT L. HERMANSEN EVERETT JOSEPH HERRERIAS HENRY H. HERz GEORGE M. HIDZICK VINCENT J. M. HOLIAN JOHN LAWRENCE HOLLAND MILTON IVERSON CLAYTON ROBSON JANSSEN DAVID JENSEN JACK M. JENSEN WALTER E. JOYCE, JR. ROBERT ADDISON KAPSTEIN HAROLD KAUFMAN ALAN J. KAYE SHELDON R. KISER NICHOLAS ANTHONY KURTELA WOLFGANG KUMMER JOHN KENNETH LARKINS WILLIAM LOUIS LARKINS RICHARD THEODORE LARSEN LEONARD LEIBOWITZ CHARLES HYDE LEWIS, JR. CLIFFORD BOB LEWIS WARREN B. LOGAN RICHARD C. MACMILLAN JOHN A. MANGAN ALAN JOEL MARGOLIS JULIAN R. MARTIN ROBERT E. MATEER, JR. DAVID BALDWIN MCGAW BRIAN VALENTINE MCDONNELI. KENNETH MCLENNAN GEORGE WILSON MEYER JAMES MICHELS WALTER E. MOONEY, JR. CHARLES AUGUSTE MORNARD PHILIP ROYAL MORGAN, JR. HENRY ROSSI MORRIS MERRILL ARTHUR MUHS ROBERT OTIS MURDOCK FREDERICK P. MURRAY JAMES PETER MUSLADIN PAUL NORAGER ROBERT E. OLSEN HAROLD WAH ONG RUDOLF O. F. OPPENHEIMER GEORGE ORNAS ALAN ORR DONALD H. OWEN DUNCAN PACKER JOHN OLIVER PARKER ROBERT LEE PERRY LESTER M. PETTERSON HORACE ALDRIDGE PITKIN GORDON STIRILING PISTOLE EDWARD L. PITTSON LESTER EDWIN PRICE, JR. MORRIS RABINOWITZ WALTER ANDREW REICHLE ROBERT LAWRENCE REEVES PAUL ANDREW ROBINSON CHARLES L. ROCKWELL DONALD ROMEY EDMUND BURKE RONEY RICHARD ALLEN ROSENTHAI. JAMES WALTER ROUPRICH WILLIAM ROUSH WILLIAM EARL RUDDICK CHARLES MERTON RUNYAN, JR. JOHN H. SADOWSKY RICHARD D. SALTZMAN CLEMENTE J. SAN FELIPE ARTHUR JACK SAPER ALFRED B. SARONI, JR. RICHARD JOSEPH SCHNEIDER DONALD OLIVER SCHUMACHER WILLIAM WARREN SCOTT, JR. PETER TOM SEREZLIS SOL SILVERMAN, JR. GEORGE N. SMITH CARLYLE SOBEL BERTRAM CLIFFORD SOLOMON RUSSELL IGNATIUS SWEENEY RAYMOND T. THOMPSON ALBERT J. TITUS, JR. HUGH TONG ROBERT H. TUCKER HERBERT RICHARD WAGNER CHARLES G. F. WAHLE GRANT W. WALKER ROGER MATTHEW WALSH EDWARD RICHARD WARREN 166 Pall High Juniors P 'K I ,qs I I I TONY MATH IOS Clan Prexidenf M ARTY PYLE Vit? P1'EJidFI1f TAMARA HLYNSKY Serretafy HIGH ELEVEN ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE FALL 55 Raw one: Tamara Hlynsky, Tony Mathios Marty Pile Rau Iuo Charles Levin, Walter Blau, Joan Horowitz Row lhfee CraIg Swan Son, Charlene Peterson, Bev. Middleton Spring High Juniors VICTOR BROCIFIARD P1-rIidem ANITA SCOTT Vire Pmfidezzl ANN MERRITT S6'I!'FIdf-'J' Fall LOW uniors L-11 ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE - FALL Tap row: N. Vuyas, E. McKenna, K. Kelly, V. Brochard, B. Wait. A. Merritt. Row lwo: A. Scott, M. Braverman, S. Johnston, P. Wil- . liams, C. Collins, A. Fowler. Spring Low uniors PETE XVILLIAMS President CARLIE COLLINS Vice President S. JOHNSTON Secretary BLUETTE KARPE Vice Pfefidenl ADRIENNE LANDY Secretary CLARENCE J. WEINMANN EDWARD PAUL MICHAEL XVHITE ROBERT C. WILMES OLAF PHILLIPS WINNINGSTAD EDWARD WAYNE WRIGHT LEO CLIFFORD WURSCHMIDT MILAN YUROSH Girls FAY ACUFF BLOSSOM MARIE AMSBAUGI-I ADRIENNE P. APPLEGARTH JEAN LUISE BARBE RENEE BARON CHARMAINE BECKMAN BETTYE JEANNE BEELER DALE IRENE BEHREND JACQUELINE BERKSON DARLENE A. BERRY OLIVE ELSIE BLACKLEY SHIRLEY JOSEPHINE BLOCH YVONNE JEANNE BOETE LORRAINE MAE BOWMAN PATRICIA ANN BRADY MARY JANE BRANDT CATHRYN BRASH GEORGENE TURNEY BRITTON JUNE BROOKS HELEN ANN BUCKLEY CAMILLA VIVIAN BURBANK CORALIN CACERES IDA L. CARLSON MARILYN V. COCHRANE BARBARA JEAN COHLER BETTY MAE COHN LOUISE COHN KATHERINE HARRIET COMSTOCK DOROTHY LOUISE COOK JANE SHANLEY COONEY GEORGIA COULAM GLADYS FRANCES COX FRANCES M. DAVEY EDITH ESTELLE DE LONGPRE JEAN DIETTERLE ELIZABETH DOUGLASS ALICE JUNE DRUSKIN CYNTHIA JEANNE DU BOIS GLORIA ANN DUNCOMBE RUTH LOUISE ERB CHARLOTTE JUANITA ERICKSON MARY MARGARET FARRIS PHYLLIS MARIE FERRERO LITA T. FLAX IDA GEORGIANA FRIEDBERG SHIRLEY R. FRIEDRICHS AMY JEAN GALLAGI-IER PATRICIA GALE FRANCIS GALLEMORE FRANCES GLORIA GALLO DOROTHY JANE GIBBS MEREDITH GOINGS JEAN MARIE GOLD MARY LOUISE GOODBERLET GENEVIEVE ANNE GOODIN JACQUELINE ANNE GORMAN MARION CECILE GREEN MARILYN ANN GREEN RUTH ADELE GUMBRECHT JEWEL FERN HALL BARBARA JEAN HART MARIE HEROLD NAOMI HEWLETT ALICE LOUISE HILL HELGA HUFFMAN GLORIA E. HUGGINS MAE HUNTER VIRGINIA JEAN JACKSON EILEEN ODESSA JOHNSON MARGARET W. JORSS BETTY MAE JOY PAULA MARIE JUDGE HELEN MARGARET JUZIX MARIE CATHERINE JUZIX MARGOT KAI-IN MILDRED KEI-I JOSEPHINE C. KELLY PATRICIA ANNE KELLY DOROTHY FRANCES KENNEDY MILDRED LUISE KIEFER CORINNE ELEANOR KILCLINE BARBARA JANE KING RUTH ELOISE KRILE PATRICIA KRILL MARGARET HURLEY LANTRY JEAN WILLA LARUM CAROLYN RUTH LAYMAN DOROTHY M. LAZENBY BABETTE MARIE LEVINGSTON JOAN SARA LEVY BOBETTE C. LICHTMAN ROSE ANN LOVINER IRENE MATVEEV NAN MAC MILLAN JUNE ARALYN MANGINI CORNELIA JUNE MASON CHRISTINA MAGUIRE YVONNE B. MCCALL ELLEN JOAN MCCAULEY 167 l PATRICIA H. MCCARTHY DORIS MAE MCDEVITT BARBARA LOUISE MCGAHIE CAROLYN MCGARRIGLE NANCY ANN MEEK IDA BARBARA MERCER INGEBORG D. MILLING PATRICIA MINAKER MARY JOSEPHINE MONAGLE MARY JANET MORELAND DOLORES MOJICA HELEN LORRAINE NELSON LAVONNE ALOHA NELSON JOYCE BEVERLY NORWALL BARBARA ELIZABETH NOVSTRUP BARBARA RUTH OLIVER BETH OUTSEN EDITH ELLEN PETERS MARIAN FERN PHILLIPS SHIRLEY ELIZABETH PLYMIRE JEANETTE POLONSKY DIANE MARIE Pos JUNE EIZABETH PREISSER WILNA JANET RASMUSSEN AMY HEARD REES JULIA ANNA REMAK MARILYNN RESSEL JUANITA EAYE REYMENANDT RITA MARY RICHEY TUKE RICKARD KATHRYN IONA RICKMAN PATRICIA ANNE RODEGERDTS JANE FLORIAN ROEDER HILDRETH LORRAINE ROEHRIG JEAN JOCELYN ROGERS MARGARET F. SCHOLES MONICA L. SHRAGGE BARBARA RUTH SCHWARTZ CAROLYN BARBARA SELF BARBARA MARIE SENNER NUBIA IRENE SEYDEN MARY ROCHESTER SHEFFEY RUTH E. SHOOK CARMEN SILVA SHIRLEY SILVERMAN SHIRLEY ETHEL SINGER SHIRLEY ANN SLEEPER DOROTHY SMITH DOROTHY IRENE SMITH JEAN CAROLYN SMITH LORRAINE DELLA SMITH SHIRLEY ANNE SMITH MARJORIE ANNE SMITH EVANGELINE JOY SPRAGUE GAYLE VIRGINIA STAFFORD JEAN STEWART JUNE STEWART VIRGINIA STEELE ELOISE STONESON ILA GRACE SULLIVAN JEAN BASSETT SUTHERLAND NANCY GATES SUTHERLAND ANDRIENNE KATHRYN STEINER JACQUELINE TABOURNEL ORA LOUISE TEEPLES ALVINA ELLEN TEMPLE DORIS H. THOMPSON LAURA MAE THOMSON JUNE TIPTON FLORENCE EVELYN TOEPKE EZILDA TORRE ELAINE TOVER BARBARA JEAN UNSINGER RUTHE M. VARNEY JEAN VERONICA VALARIS VIOLET M. VINCENT JOCELYN VOLLMAR ELENA MARIE WAGNER MARGARET GORDON WALKER BARBARA CLAIRE WARREN JUNE WINCKLER MARGARET WILLIAMS PATRICIA ANNE WILLIAMSON MARY PATRICIA WILSON JOAN WONDER EVA WOLFF BARBARA L. WOOLDRIDGE VIRGINIA ROSE WURM BARBARA C. v. YEE TUTH ELAINE ZELECHOWER ELEANOR BARBARA ZIMET PATRICIA ZISTEL DOROTHY ESTELLE ZIVIAN CLASS'OF FEBRUARY 1944 Boys WILLIAM C. AKARD EDWIN ANTHONY ANDREW G. BACIGALUPI EARLE PAUL BALIN EDWARD A. BARTHOLD, JR. WILLIAM LESLIE BEALE THEODORE F. BEIMESS KARL IRVING BERRIMAN HYMAN BIK RICHARD CHARLES BLOCK LEON JOSEPH BRIDGES HARRY MILFORD BROWN 168 SPRING EXECUTIVE BOARD T. Mathios, C. XVatson, D. jones, Miss G. Lorigan, 1. Davies, T. Stevens, S. Figel, B. Bates, R. Moore, Mr. J. A. Perino, R. Oddone, T. Yasukochi, P. Belmont, S. Nelson, Dr. Smith, G. Davis, B. Lyttle, J. Burton. The Executive Board The Executive Board is the general governing body of all student activities. The board makes and executes the laws of the school. It also puts into effect the pro- visions of the Lowell Constitution. This term's Executive Board, led by Bob Moore, did a fine and capable job of organizing School activi- ties. Assisting him was the student body vice presi- dent, Sylvia Nelson. The board met once a week to discuss any affairs which were brought to their attention. Taking part in each meeting were the officers of the School. This in- cluded Treasurer Paul Matzger, Head Yell Leader Tony Mathios, the editors of the Red and While and The Lowell, Gwen Davis and Sue Figel, Terry Stevens, president of the Scroll and L, and the president of the Shield and L, Barbara Bates. Also composing the board were the president of the Q Boys' Block L, Bob Oddoneg the president of the' Girls' Block L, Carolyn Watsong president of the Girls' Athletic Association, Dorothy jonesg chairman of the Student Council, Brian Lyttleg Joanne Davies, presi- dent of the California Scholarship Federation, and the commanding oficer of the ROTC, Peter Belmont. Terry Yasukochi, secretary of the student body, took: minutes and kept a record of all business. The Executive Board appointed the members Of' the rally and social committees and helped assist the- principal in setting the dates for general school assem- blies. Maintaining the morale and promoting the wel- fare of the school was another of their accomplish- ments. Advising the board on different matters were Prin- cipal I. A. Perino, Dean of Girls Miss Lorfigan, Dean of Boys Dr. Smith, and Activities Sponsor Mr. Anino. A ctz'w'tz'e.r 1' 'T- 'AAT' A . I New W' 'A N-' 'U 1 ' J I. is ma W I V F JI I , y EMEA X W mlm, . IHVIIXX '- X 4 A - J a Y ' I . Q it If B 'S 7 . I A I L57 G.Dav'.s lb HERBERT VU. BURNS RICHARD S. CALENDER PETER HARMON CATANICH ARVORD GEORGE CLEMENTZ CALVIN COPSEY LYMAN W. DICKERSON SANFORD M, DICKEY III ROBERT J. DONOHUE DAVID P. EDWARDS ALBERT THOMAS EVUING JOHN J. FALIANO ROGER JOHN FANFELLE HAROLD C. FAULKNER, JR. DONALD ROBERT FITZGERALD REED L. FUNSTEN JACK GOLDBERG JOHN JOSEPH GONZALES FLORES GOUNARIDES XVAYNE DAVID GRAY ANDY HAGOPIAN ROBERT REES HARRY, JR. RICHARD HYMAN XVILLIAM A. IRWIN RICHARD EARL JAENSCH ELLIOT KAPCHAN JOHN D. KASSENBROCK RAMOND L. KING NORMAN R. KRAMER CARLISLE B. LANE EARL LAXVRENCE JERRY DAVID LEE PALMER EDXIUIN LEE STANLEY C. LICHTENSTEIN EUGENE W. LINEHAM ALFRED RICHARD LOUCH CALVIN LUBRAN DANIEL GRAYSON MACDONALD DONALD I. MAGNIN ERNEST E. MARLOW, JR. PAUL P. MARRACQ ALBERT DEAN MASON ROBERT A. MATHIESEN THOMAS ERNEST MCCAULEY RICHARD XVILLIAM MOBLEY IGNACIO MONROY ROBERT M. MONTGOMERY ROBERT PENNELL NAVE WILLIAM A. NELSON ROBERT NEUHAUS ROBERT JULES NEUSTADT VERNON EDWARD NORRIS HUGH EDWIN ONSTOT FLOYD M. PACKER ROBERT A. PLATT DE XVIT POPKIN HARRY E. RAHLMANN FRANCIS DARYL RICHARDSON SAMUEL RISKIN CHARLES G. ROBERTSON, JR. CLINTON PAUL ROSE ARTHUR RUDE RAYMOND W. RYAN, JR. RICHARD SAFHOLM ROBERT ALLAN SCI-IXXIARTZ I.EON SCLAR EDWARD M. SELF RICHARD SOLOMON WALLACE LOUIS SCHWARTZ ROGER CLARK THOMPSON COLIN TOOLEY GENE E. VAYSSIE CARL v0N ESSEN CHARI.ES F. XVAGNER, JR. WILLIAM HENRY WEHLAU KENNETH GEORGE XXIELLS FLOYD E. NXIEYMOUTI-I JACK KESTER WILLIS ROBERT T. H. XVONG PAUL NIELS YDE Girls SHIRLEY JEAN AAGARD CAROL ALLAN ROBERTA L. ANDERSON BARBARA ANNE ARNOT ELAINE DOROTHY BLOCH BETTY JEAN BRADY ELEANOR JANE BULTMANN MARJORIE COLVIN GRACE MARY CAMPBELI. NOEL CHRISTIAN HELEN FRANCES CLEGHORN MARY ALICE COUSSENS JOAN CURTAZ LOIS G. DAVIDSON ROBERTA B. EVERAL NANCY MARGARET FAIRES LENORE GEORGINE FAXVCETT MARILYN FEISEL MARGARET LUX FRASER DOROTHY GALVIN BARBARA KATHRYN GEDDES MARJORIE HELEN GETZ CONSTANCE MARY GILLESPIE ANN JUNE GOLDSMITH RAE GORDON DORIS GRANTHAM 169 PI-IYLLIS MAY GREENLY BARBARA JEAN GUIDOTTI BETH HALEY AUDREY HELEN HANSON BARBARA MAE HARBINSON MINNIE HARVEY PATRICIA M. HAYWARD ELEANOR LUCILLE HEMMIN MARJORIE HIERS NINA HOFFMAN WINNIFRED MAY HOWARD ELEANOR LORRAINE JENSEN PHYLLIS JOHNSON MARY L. JORGENSEN CORINNE KESSLER MARY LOU KEYES HELEN KOCKOS RENEE LABOURE JUNE LOUISE LERER THELMA SUSAN MAGULEAS MARNA LEA MARSHALL FRANCES R. MCBRIDE JEAN ELLEN MILLER PATRICIA ANNE MORIARTY ILEANA MUNTEANU ISABEL G. PHILOW JUNE PRUDHOMME CARLA AURELIA RICHTER CAROL MARIE RIDENOUR DIANE ROTH ROSE ELIZABETH SCHROIDTR BARBARA ELAINE SHELDON NANCIE L. SINGLE SUZANNE SPRINGER BETTY LOU STADTFELD ELVA STEELE EVA BEATRICE STERN SHIRLEY STERN JOY STINSON MARIETTA STOLLER VIRGINIA TAYLOR ESTHER MARNIE VASQUEZ MARGERY WEISS PATRICIA WHITE NADYNE YVONNE ZALK CLASS OF JUNE. 1944 Boys MONROE B. ABERNATHY DONALD D. AINSWORTH ALBERT VICTOR ALLEN ANDREW RAYMOND ANDERSON BERNARD HERBERT ARCHBOLD WALLACE N. ATHERTON RAYMOND RICHARD BARONE PAUL F. BENETTI BYRON FREDRICK BERTRAM ROBERT CECIL BLUM HUGH WINSLOW BURRELL WILLIAM C. CALHOUN COLIN CAMPBELL FREDERICK WALTER CARLSON RONALD A. CASASSA ARTHUR B. CHABOYA CRAIG CLAYTON CHANDLER DANIEL SEBASTIAN CHU MORTON CHEIM COHEN ALLEN COHN RUSSELL THOMAS CONN LESLIE J. COTTER ROBERT TURNER DOHERTY JACK JAMES DOLAN RICHARD WALTER DREXVES JACK DOUGLAS ELY PAUL THOMAS FANCHER GEORGE FORMANEK DONALD HENRY FRICKE FREDERICK M. GANZ FRANK NEWTON GARRISON RONALD ANTHONY GEE ARTHUR GHIGLIERI BRADFORD CLARK GILES ROBERT SIMON GLASCOCK IRVING GOLDBERG ARNOLD HERBERT GOLDMAN CHARLES W. GOLDSCHMIDT FRANK A. GOTCH JOHN FRANCIS GRIM SFIRO MICHAEL GUDELJ HAROLD STANLEY HAAS CURTIS HARDIE JOHN LOREN HARTMAN WARREN B. HAYWARD JOHN FRANCIS HENRICUS DAVID B. HERBERT JAMES I. HERON HENRY R. HERTING DONALD HESKINS DONALD E. HONNERT MELVIN STANLEY HORN HENRY JOHNS HUNT STANLEY ALLEN HURBERT ARTHUR ROBERT HUSTON LEONARD J. JACOBS PAUL JACOBSON DONALD EDWARD JAMES ROBERT H. JAMES PAUL MCCRACKEN JESSEE 170 The Scroll GUY ERB TERRY STEPHENS Full P1'e.rider1t Spring Prefident BELMONT BENNINGER BRODY CAYLOR CLARK GOLDMAN GOSPE HARRINGTON HONE JAKOBSEN JOHNSON KATSUYAMA KEOUGH LOW MATHIOS M ATZGER M IN NEY MOORE MUTO NOLAN PONIG REED ROSEN SCHXV A RTZ SHOAF J. WEINBERGER 5 . A. AXT S. BARNARD 1. BURTON Y. DANDY 1. DAVIES G. DAVIS A. DIEHL D. DOXVLING B. ELMAN G. GIOVANNETTI S. HOLODILOFF S. HOUGH S. HURFF A. JONES L. KAY R. KLEIN L. LABE M, LEVY S. LINDNER A. I.YNCH I.. MALFANTI C. MEI.MON S. NELSON N. NORTON C. PERKINS J. ROBBINS J. ROSEN S. SNOW R. SPIVOCK J. TUHTAN I. UHI.AN A. WASHINGTON C. WATSON A. WITT T. YASUKOCHI The Slueld S. BROCHARD BARBARA BATES Fall P1'e.Iia'L'r1l Spring Prwidenl AI.LAN HAROLD KAUFMAN ALLEN WILLIAM KLAVONS HARRY M. KOLSCH KENNETH E, KROHN WILLIAM M. LAU LOUIS LEBUANIC ROBERT EUGENE LEE JIMMY WAY LEONG KENNETH A. LESLIE HERMAN M. LIKERMAN GORDON T. LISSER DON JOSEPH LOWE RICHARD C. LYM JOHN PATRICK MAGUIRE HANS GEORGE MAIER DAVID K. MAYER ROBERT W. MCCUNE WALTER A. MOOROMSKY RAYMOND MORAI.ES DIMITRI PAUL MOSKVIN JAMES ROBERT NIHILL WILLIAM TUCKER NILON WILLIAM HENRY NOVALES LOUIS KAY O'LEARY JOESPH MICHAEI. PARTRIDGE HARRY PAVLOVSKY JEROME EOUTE POLITZER GAYLORD THOMAS QUANDT ROBERT C. RAY EDMUND E. J. REYNOLDS WALLACE H. RICHARDSON PHILLIP H. RIDDLE LOUIS ROLLER WILLARD H. RUSH JOHN JOSEPH RYAN MEYER SASSOON XVILLIS C. SCHAUPP ERNEST WILI.IAM SCHMIDT HAROLD PAUL SCHULZ PETER FRANCIS SCOTT JOHN EDWARD SIMON LOXVELL S. SIMON MORRIS LEE SOCKOLOV HARTWIG SONNENBERG THOMAS WILLIAM STEEGE DONALD B. STEINBERG HARVEY J. STEINBERG EDWARD A. SUTHERLAND ROGER JOHN UNNA HANS CLAUS VETTER ARUNDALE VRABEC RICHARD DAVID WAUGH CHARLES WEINSHANK JAMES L. WHITTAKER MORTON K. WILLARD VERN G. WILIAMSEN ARTHUR WILLIAM WRIGHT STANLEY YEP JERROLD I. ZINNAMON Girls BARBARA MARILYN AARON IRMA JANE ADAMS THALIA ALLEN JEANETTE IRENE ANDERSON SUSAN JOY ANDERSON BEVERLY ANDREW FRANCES ANIXTER EVELYN RAY ANSON PAULETTE APELBAUM BARBARA ARNOLD BESSIE BABIN LILI.IAN IRMA BAFHMAN JOYCE ELAINE BAKER MARIAN BALDAUF MARILYN LEE BARKER JULIETTE DOROTHY BARMAN AUDREY BARTHOLD CI.AIRE JEAN BAUMGARTEN JANICE ANN BEANSTON SHIRLEY BERCOVICH DEI.YSIA ANN BIRD BILLIE RUTH BLAYNEY BARBARA JOY BLUME MARILYN DORIS BOCK GRACE MARY BONAPARTIAN BERNICE BOWMAN JOYCE HELENA BOWMAN BARBARA ANNE BRAY PATSY RUTH BROWN JANE ETHEL BUCK HARRIETTE RANDOLPH BURNS NANNETTE BURRONI MURIEL PATRICIA BUTLER CLARA LYDIA CABURI BARBARA ANNE CARLSON DAWN CARSON JEAN MARIE CASSIDY CLAIRE HASTINGS CATHERWOOD BETTY LOU CAVANOR FLORENCE ARDELLE CLARK -IEANNE ARLINE CLARK ELIZABETH CAROLYN COBLENTZ LILLI COI-IN PATRICIA COLLINS DOROTHY JEAN CONLAN FRANCES E. DEELY FRANCES ELIZABETH DENCKER 171 NAOMI RUTH DENNEY AUDREY ADAIR DIPLOCK GERALDINE DRUSKIN CECILIA MAY DRISCOLL WANDA MAE DYER MABEL RICE EDWARDS SYBIL CAROLYN EGGLESTON RUTH ELKIND RETHA CHARLOTTE EMMICK JEANNE ERB CAROLE FALTIN HILDA L. EEINBERG EVELYN EDYTHE EILICE JOAN TABB FISHER MARIAN ADELINE FLINT JACQUELYN FORRESTER HELEN FUDEM FRITZI GLAUSER LEATRICE GOLDEN ALICE JOY GOLUB JUNE LOUISE GRAVEM SHIRLEE A. GREENBERG HELEN HANDL ELIZABETH E. HANSEN KATHARINE L. HARDIE HELEN MARIE C. HAYLAND JEAN HAYMAN ELEANOR RUTH HESSELBERG SUSAN HIRSCH GLORIA BERNICE HOFFMAN BARBARA JOYCE HOLT MARILYN JUNE HUNT SHIRLEY HURWITZ DOROTHY NOELL HUSTON HELEN KATHERINE ISAACSON MIRIAM JACOB NANCY HUNTINGTON JACOBS MARY ELLEN JAMES ELINOR GERTA JESS DOROTHY MAE JOHNSON JUNEMARIE JOHNSON MARY JOYCE ROSEMARIE KAPP BARBARA JEAN KARBY MARGARET Y. KAY RUTH A. KAY JEAN JARMAN KAYE YVONNE KETTERING ROBYN KIRSHNER BILLIE ANN KLINGER SHIRLEY JULIANN KRIEDT ANITA MARIE KRUER MARTHA LENNEA LARSON ELSIE-MAE LEE LOUISE LEIGHTON NANCY IRIS LIPSETT MILDRED LOUISE MABREY BETTY JANE MANTZ MEMORY PAULA MARSHALL NANCY JEAN MULCREVY JACQUELINE MARTY PATRICIA MATHEWS PATRICIA ROSE MCGEOUGH MARY KATHLEEN MCELROY WINONAH MCGINNIS PATRICIA ANN MEIER CAROLE JOAN MEYER RUTH ELISHA MOLINARI VUINIFRED MARIE MORGAN MARJORIE WINSLOW MORSE GLORIA MAE MOTzER JOAN LOUISE MULLER MARY BELLE NELSON MARILYN ROSE NESSIER ZELDA RAE NEWTON PEGGY NOLZE BARBARA NUTTING ELEANOR A. ORWITZ PATRICIA PARNELL CLARA LOUISE PALTENGHI JANET PERKINS ELAINE MADELINE PERRY ELEANOR MAE PETERSON LISA M. PICARD LORAINE ALYCE PIELHOP RAEAEL JOSEPHINE PISCITELLI PATRICIA EILEEN PRITCHARD JEAN ELIZABETH PROUGH ANNA PSALTIS ELLY J. PSALTIS BARBARA JEANNE QUINTARD MARIE LUCILLE RAMAZZOTTI MARGARET JEANNE RAMIREZ CLARA EDITH RICHERT ESTHER DORIS RICHERT GERTRUDE MARIA RICHTER PHYLLIS MAXINE ROCK RUTH LORENA ROGERS LILLIAN ANNA ROMASANTA SHIRLEY ANN RONAN JEAN ROSENBLATT DOROTHY ROSENTHAL WINIFRED ROSING JACQUELYN RUBENSTEIN LOIS ELINORE SCHNEIDER VELMA L. SCHNEIDER WILMA sCHUIz MARTHA LENORE SCHWINLEY 172 l BIG BROTHERS - SPRING Row one: R. Garrison, S. Shalit, R. Ebert, B. Hall, D. Buttolph. R. Ebert, M. Kavangh, C. McClure, R. Monte- leone, C. Berry, B. Moore. Row two: S. Yao, C. Cohen, J. Tolson, J. Eppinger, K. Kelly, V. Brochard, M. Rucka, L. Gokson, J. Weinberger, D. Nolan, R. Guggenhime, J. Vfolfenden, V. Strange, A. Laymon. Row 1111-ee' R. Low, N. Urano, P. Dare, J. Tsukamoto, P. Carr, T. Stephens, J, Benninger, S. Wiel, B, Lyttle, R. janigian, L. Draper, B. Nason, R. Posada, F. Becker. Row four: D. Zickerman, B. Miailovich, K. Cole, M. Hall, C. Jacobsen, M. Gospe, W. Keough, K. Harrington, H. Brody, C. Swanson, B. Slatt, T. Earl, B. Henry. Big Brothers Before this term, the Big Brothers consisted of senior boys only. Now, boys of the junior class are being rec- ommended in order to give them a sense of responsi- bility. They are selected for their good scholarship, re- liability and service to Lowell. Scroll members are automatically ex-officio members. The most important function of the Big Brothers is to acquaint the new boys with Lowell. A warm smile, helping hand, and a little friendly advice make it a lot easier for the bewildered newcomer. In both the fall and spring terms they assisted in putting on the highly successful Newcomers' Reception. The fall Big Brothers were headed by President A johnson and Terry Stephens, secretary-treasurer. The Sponsored an intramural basketball tournament. if track meet was held in the Spring. The Officers wer+ jim Weinberger, president, Kit Cole, vice president and Harold Hand, Secretary-treasurer. Also, in the spring, they co-sponsored the Twir Dance with the Big Sisters, held on Friday, April 1 Mr. Milton is thesponsor of this group whose othe' duties are to keep order at the rallies and the oute doors. BIG BROTHERS-FALL Row one: Ron Bachman, jim Nanjo, Eric Macintosh, Ken Balling, Phil Sevier, Manny Goldman. Row Iwo: Jim Nolan, Al Clark, john Debenham, Tom Caylor, jack Hansen. Bob Lom. Row three: Pete Carr, Alan Katsuyama, Mike Russ, Al johnson, Ray Collins, Bob Minney, L E l 1 H-12 BIG SISTERS - FALL '55 H GAIL JACOBS Fall Pfejidklll Raw one: Helen Woo, Norene Sibell, Gail Jacobs, Joelle Rosen, Donna Dowling, Barbara Elman, Jeanette Nicolas. Row 11110: Judy Sirbu, Suzanne Brochard, Dixie Samuels, Sue Hurff, Diana DeMun, Carol Leeds. Row flaree: Anita Washington, Tasia Vlahos, Carol Melmon, Julia Russell, Charlyne Arosio. Big Sisters Miss Alice Graeber, one of Lowell's active Coun- elors, has been the sponsor of the Big Sister Society 'or the past three years. This dependable organization onsists of upper division girls who attempt to get iew girls acquainted with Lowell. The Big Sisters of the fall term elected Gail Jacobs, hairmang Noreen Sibell as 'her assistant, Sylvia Nel- on, secretary, Carolyn Perkins, as co-ordinator, social hairman, Audrey Witt, and Carolyn Watson as chair- inan of the special activities committee. The capable officers of the spring semester were nresident, Carolyn Perkins 5 vice president, Joyce Rich- .rdsg Cathie Covington, secretary, Gerry Giovanetti, io-ordinator, social chairman, Charlotte Lee, and Helen Wolf as chairman of the special activities com- mittee. In the fall a Big Sister-Little Sister party was given to acquaint the newcomers with their Big Sisters. An- other event which took place on December 3, in the Lowell auditorium was a fashion show where some Big Sisters modeled the latest fashions. Among the various events given during the spring semester was a luncheon and tea for the incoming girls, planned by the Big Sisters. The group has organized a morning study session for both Big and Little Sisters, welcoming all girls who wish to study in the morning. BIG SISTERS - SPRING Raw one: J. Driscoll, L. Lahe, B. Bates, J. Freed, R. Klein, S. Nelson, C. Perkins, Y. Dand , R. Perry. Raw zwa: J. Hanson. J, Hanson, P. Ikezne, T. Yasukochi, I-I. Wolf, I. Ulan, P. Reynolds, O. Rudenho, S. Holodilotf, D. Flarnm, A. Witt, A. Jones, C. Watson, Davies, S. Deming, A. Axt. Row three: L. Vlautin, D. O'Neill, G. Davis, S. Swenson, B. Seeley, J. Purcel , A. Lynch, A. Diehl, J. Robbins, J.Burt0n , P. Unck, K. Mac- Donald, J. Cohen, L. Kay, S. Snow. Row jour: J. R'chards, S. Lindner, M. Levy, J. Klein, L. Malfanti, J. Hemstreet, N. Norton, B. Enmier, S. Barnard, D. Deutscher, S. Hough, G. Giovanetti, C. Covington, J. Tuhtan. A. Libby. JEAN HARRIET SCOTT ANNIS K. SEATON ANITA MARIE SHIFFLER MARIE ALMA SEPPICI-I MARILYN VIRGINIA Sl-IALEF EMELYN SHATTUCK JEANETTE SHIROIAN MARVELLE LEONA SMITH MARIE LILLIAN SNEAD AUDREY ANN STAFFORD ELIZABETH JANE STANLEY WILMA JANET STEIN CLAIRE MARIE STEWART HELEN CLAIRE STONESON NANCY STOOKEY ELISABETH STOREN NADINE L. SULLIVAN RUTH JOANN SWANSON JUNE PHYLLIS TANZER MARY NADINE TOBIN DORE MAXINE TONKIN PAULA JEAN TYROLER MARY LOUISE VENTURA GERTRUDE WARSHAW HELEN CLAIRE WEINGARTEN SUSANNE L. WHITE MARILYN P. WILSON MILLICENT ANN WILSON BARBARA JANE WOLF MARIALACE G. WOODBECK FAITH MARILYN YEFFA RUE ANNE YOUNG PAULINE CLAIRE ZAHLER BARBARA ZELINSKY CLASS OF FEBRUARY. 1945 Boys CHARLES FREEMAN ALLEN RICHARD BRUCE AMANDES GERALD MOUTON ASCHER WILLIAM H. ASHER ROBERT WILLIAM ASTRUE WALTER BERAN JOHN ALLAN BIER CHARLES JAMES BUTLER ALBERT VICTOR COLLETT JR. LAWRENCE VERNON COTT RICHARD ARTHUR DEERING JAMES WARD DERRYBERRY J. RICHARD DUMONT JOHN HOWARD EPSTEIN JOHN MARSHALL FITCH JOSEPH FRANK JR. ERNEST S. FRIED EDWARD CHARLES GARZERO IRVIN THOMAS GOLDSTEIN ROBERT ELLIOTT GOMPERTS JAMES E. HAMMON KENNETH RAYMOND HANSON GERALD R. HAYWARD HENRY WILLIAM HILLEBRAND ROBERT L. HONG ROGER WILLIAM JOHNSON KENNETH RUSSELL KEENEY SHELDON DAVID KULLY EDWARD MICHAEL KURTELA ARTHUR F. LEITHOLD DOUGLAS C. LINDAUER RICHARD E. LOEWENGUTH JOHN W. LOUTZENHEISER HENERY CHOW LOXV XVILLIAM L. MARTIN JAMES ANDREW MCGILLEY DAVID MARION MILLS KARL MINNIGERODE WILLIAM ARTHUR MORRIS WENTWORTH MYERS PAUL IRVING NEDERMAN JR. ALLEN NEWELL CALVIN J. PATTON GILBERT PAVLOVSKY ELMER ROBERT PISTOLE WILLIAM DAVID POLLACK GEOFFREY ROBERT QUIN ROBERT HOWARD RANSOHOFF DONALD RICHARD RAY THOMAS F. ROGERS FREDERICK ROTH HANS RUSCH LEONARD GEORGE SAND ERSON PETER KIP SCHOONMAKER ROBERT BRUCE SELBY WARREN LEWIS SIMMONS MYRON JULES SOSNICK FREDERICK DAVID SPRUANCE E. ALLAN STEINAU JR. CHARLES WILLIAM SUTTER JOHN BOYD TAYLOR DANIEL L. TEPLIN WALTER ARCHIBALD VAN DEHEY DEWEY VENTURA SPENCER SYDNE VOYNE BENJAMIN H. WAITE HERBERT GEORGE WEISS MELVIN WILLBACH LINDSAY KNOX WILSON ALAN JEROME WOLF HARRY YOUNG 173 Girls JERE EDONNA BLANCHARD JANET E. BOCCI DOROTHY ANTHONY BOXER CORINNE B. BUCCHIANERI HELEN BETTY BUCKLEY CONSTANCE CAROL CAM PANA HELEN J. CHAUsEs RUBY MAY CHIN DOLORES M. CHRIsTENsEN CONsTANcE COOK FRANCES CHARLOTTE COOK PAULA LOU COOPER RITA LOUISE Cox GLORIA JEAN CRAIG LORRAINE DECKER sHARON PATRICIA DEMICK HELENE PATRICIA DEsMOND ELORA DESPOTAKIS MARYELLEN DUPLISEA JOAN MARIE EMERSON JEAN MURRAY FARRELL BEVERLY JEAN EELIX SARAH SUEY FONG JUNE LEE ERACTENBERG ANALEE PHYLLIS FREEMAN MARIE ELIZABETH GALLIETT JOYCE BARBARA GEARY BARBARA CLARE GEISSBERGER VIRGINIA MARGARET GIBSON MARILYN FAYE GILBERT GLORIA ROCHELLE GOLD MARJORIE ELISE GOLDBERG DORA ALMEIDA GREENLY BEVERLY J .GRIMWOOD ANITA LORE HART DOROTHY ANN HARTMAN MILDRED LOUISE HEDBERG ELIZABETH HEYN MARJORIE Lois HOLBERT MARIAN ELIZABETH HOWE NORMA JEAN HOWELL ROsANNE GERTRUDE JAENsCH JACQUELINE JENKINS BETTY FRANCES KAHN GRACE KEH TATIANA KLIKOFF FERN LYN KLINE Lois A. KONKEL BENICE KOOLL IRENE BARBARA KUHNER EDITH S. LAI PATRICIA C. LARRIEU MARY ELEANOR LAWRENCE JOSEPHINE CHIN LEE BEVERLEE EDNA LEHMAN MARY ELLEN LEONARD LORRAINE LEONG LETITIA JANE LESSER ROBERTA ELAINE LEVY JOYCE IRENE LEWIS MERLE JUNE MACKINNON MERILYN JEAN MAGNUS BARBARA ANN MARCH JOY AVON MARTINELL NOEL MARIE MCKENNA DOROTHY L. MCKINNON ANTOINETTE HELEN MISTHOS SAMELE AUDREY MONCHARSH BARBARA JANE MORRIS DORIS LORRAINE MURPHY JACQUELINE CLAIR NOWELL GERTRUDE FRANCES O'BRIEN NELL O'DONNELL JACQUELINE PECK JEANNE KATHRYN PLUMB WALLIE ANN PONTIUS MABEL MARTHA PRZBYLA NANCY IDA ROBINSON LESLIE WINEFRED ROWLAND JOAN RUBEN NANCY INEZ RUTTENCUTTER ELLSNERE D. SCHENCK DAISY V. SCHWARZ HELEN L. SHEA MARY RUTH SKI PPER JANET LOUISE SMITH LENE STRUCKMEYER FLORENCE ANITA TRIJUTO PHYLLIS ANN VALLEJO ROSALIE J. VAN CROMPHAUT VIRGINIA GRACE WEST NANCY WHITE PATRICIA GREY WINTER MILDRED DOREEN YOUNG JOYCE D. ZACHARIAH JOAN ZEALAND CLASS OF JUNE 20, 1945 Boys THOMAS RICHARD ACTON DENEAL ALBERT AMOS CHARLES ANGIN CLAIR ARLEN BAKER JOHN GREGORY BARTLE JR. ALBERT JAMES BEAVER CARL O. BENGTSSON 174 . .,,.. ' . ... .. . AL CLARK Full Prefide nt .LJ H Ei' K. 1. Y tl gil BOYS' BLOCK L Row one: M. Prescott, J. Hansen, B. Lom, A. Clark, P. Sevier, K. Balling, J. Debenham. BOB ODDONE Rau' zum: M. Mattson, A. Inouve. A. Katsuyama, J. Manjo. Row lbfee: B. Minney, R. Spring Pferidenl Collins, E. Mackintosh, T. Yasukochi, G. Erb, J. Nolan. Boys, Block L The Boys' Block L is one of the most importantor- ganizations at Lowell. Helping to make the fall term a successful one were President Al Clark, Vice President Phil Sevier, Secre- tary Ken Balling, and Sergeant-at-Arms Larry Draper. During the spring term the Block L also had a fine set of leaders. The very capable Bob Oddone acted as president. Assisting him were Doc Brody, Vice pres- identg Bucky Reed, secretary, and Josh Eppinger, sergeant-at-arms. The Boys, Block L forms an important part of the school's activities. The traditional Block L dances, co sponsored with the Girls' Block L, are the best knowi of these. Major social events were their two dances thi year. In this, the Centennial year, the Boys' Block 1 are revising their constitution. Due to theirlhard work the clean-up campaign was a huge success. They als' assist the school in outside activities. ' Mr. Neff is the sponsor of this Outstanding group Reliability, hard work in the sports in which the participate, and a desire to win, all add up to th' achievement of athletic success for boys at Lowell, ani their ultimate goal-a Block L. Knights of the Gridiron THE KNIGHTS OF THE GRIDIRON Rauf one: J. Nolan, T. Nyhan, P. Sevier, H Oddone. Row two: A. Clark, T. Yasukoch B. Moore, D. Rankin, Coach Feiling. Roi lbree: W. Keough, J. Hansen, R. Lom, H Mackintosh, P. Pallas. lf , . A CAROLYN WATSON Spring Prefident A V. H-12 GIRLS' BLOCK L Row one: Carol Aizenberg, Carol Melmon, judy Sirbu, Noreen Sibell, Anita Washington, Dixie , NNT .XX Samuels, Donna Dowling, Barbara Elman, jackie Morie. Raw two: Audrey Bocek, joelle Rosen, S' 'f l Suzanne Brochard, Arnell Shows, Gloria Hansen, Maureen Furtado, Diane De Mun. Row three: DIXIE SAMUELS Gail Jacobs. Sue Hurlf, Helen Woo, Carol Leeds. Lorraine Batis, Charlyne Arosio, julia Russel. Fd1lp,.eJide,,, Girls, Block L The Girls' Block L is a very active organization round Lowell. A girl must participate in a sport for nree years before she is eligilble to receive her block, Terefore, these girls wear their blocks proudly. Th program was a very active one under the leader- hip of fall President Dixie Samuels, assisted by Sec- -etary Anita Washington. The Girls' Block L joined with the Boys' Block L 'nd presented the traditional Block L Dance on Oc- aber 29 in the girls' gym. Other highlights Of the fall term'S activities in- luded a roller skating party as well as the Semi-annual Block L Banquet which was held at DiMaggio's Res- taurant. Everyone had a terrific time. The spring term meant new olhcers. The Block L girls chose Carolyn Watson as their president and Nancy Norton as their secretary. Under the leadership of these new oflicers many activities were planned. The activities of the spring term included the tra- ditional Block L Dance on March 23 in the girls' gym with the help of the Boys' Block L. The semi-annual banquet also meant a lot to these girls. Miss Flynn, their advisor, helped in many ways to make this year a success! GIRLS' BLOCK L - SPRING Row one: C. Nickelson, C. Postel, D. Petersen. L. Kay, R. Klein, j. Rosenthal, E. Klein, J. Scanlon, L. Vlautin, j. Erskine, A. Libby, A. Diehl, A. Axt, J. Robbins, J. Tuhtan. Row two: J. Hemstreet, M. Hamilton, G. Davis, H. Wolf, -I. Driscoll, J. Takahashi, P. Ikezoe, T. Yasukochi, I. Ulan, J. Davies, S. Lindner, J. Burton, C. Watson, J. Nakamoto, G. Guiliani, S. Herlick, E. Kato. Row three: -I. Hanson, j. Hanson, S. Swenson, J. Purcell, S. Snow, L. Labe, B. Bates, S. Nelson, A. A. Lynch, M. Levy, P. Unck, S. Deming, A. Jones, A. Witt, G. Dobbs, C. Leong, N. Freed. Row four: D. Addington, B. Texiera, L. Malfanti, C. Perkins, J. Klein, J. Gruen, J. Richards, N. Norton, S. Barnard, S. Schilp, D. Deutcher, D. Reese, L. Diez, S. Hurlf, A. Weiss, N. Wood, C. Lee. JOHN DAVID BERL ROBERT JOSEPH BILAFER VIRGIL M. BIRDSALL PETER HARRELL BLACK ALBERT LEONARD BLOCK JOHN HAROLD BORDWEI.I. JOHN BORETA JAMES J. BROWN ALLEN WAYNE BUMALA ROBERT E. BUNDY FRED ROLAND CARR HOWARD CHAN CHUN LAWRENCE COTT ERNEST S. COWELL ARTHUR LEONARD CREBASSA GEORGE DAVID CROWLEY CARLOS A. CUADRA ANTHONY RICHARD CUEVAS JOHN RICHARD CURLEY JAMES EDWARDS CURTIS BURTON DAGITZ JR. ROBERT MILTON DESKY ROBERT WILLIAM DONOVAN ROBERT EUGENE DRYDEN JAMES DUvARAs JR. DON ALLEN EACKER RICHARD GRANT ELLSWORTH DANARD H. EMANUELSON JEREMY MOSES ETS-HOKIN LEOPOLD ENGLANDER EALK JR WILLIAM DOHRMANN EvERS PAUL M. FISH JOSEPH HOWARD ELAHAVAN JOHN B. FRACCHIA JR. JOHN ARTHUR GARVIN MAXWELL CLAUDE GILLETTE DUANE GILMAN HEINz LEOPOLD GUMPEI. RICHARD G. HAMMEL ROBERT R. HAWLEY LEE WILERED HAND ROBERT R. HAWLEY JAMES GAY HELMUTH CHARLES GLENN HENDERSON CHARLES B. HERRING ROBERT D. HERSHENOW LEONARD ARTHUR HESKES JAMES GEORGE HIGGINS STANLEY J. HOTCHNER REED O. HUNT, JR. ROBERT RANDOLPH JOHNSON WILLIAM S. JOHNSON JAMES BRUCE JONES, JR. EDWARD WILLIAM JOSE JAMES NOEL KELLY HARLAN ROBERT KESSEL RONALD PLATT KLEIN JOSEPH C. KOHLBECHER, JR. JACK TRENARD KOHN RICHARD EREDERIC KOVAK DONALD R. KUHN FRANK ROBERT LA BERGE JR. PETER KNIGHT LA VOIE DON J. LAWRENCE MARTIN LEMESH MARK HUGO LINTz EUGENE JAMES LUNN FRANK N. LOCKWOOD, JR. FRED A. LYNCH, JR. DAVID N. MACDADE ROBERT JOSEPH MAHER JOHN L. MANHEIM RICHARD A. MANSEAU STEPHEN HENRI MARX JAMES STEWART MCCANN JAMES G. MCEARLAND DONALD ROBERT MCPHEE WALTER WILLIAM MCRAE RICHARD OBANNON MEEUWIG RICHARD E. MILLER ROBERT KENNETH MINGEE RONALD MARTIN MOORE CHARLES MORLEY RICHARD J. MORRIS RICHARD PATRICK MULREADY JOHN W. MURRAY WENTWORTH MYERS GUNTHER PETER NAGEL WILLIAM M. NELSON HAROLD NEWMAN JEROME ROBERT O'LEARY GERALD L. OLSON LAXVRENCE E. OLSON, JR. ROBERT VINCENT OLVERA MICHAEL CHARLES O'NEILL BERT T. PEDERSON EDWARD R. REILLY JAMES R. RIGGINS WILLIAM D. RIVAS RICHARD ROBERTS XVILLARD ROBINSON, JR. STANLEY ROSE, JR. EREDRICH HASE RODENBAUGH WALLACE E. ROSENBERG EMIL ROTHENBERG ARA B. SAHAGIAN 175 JOHN MITCHEL SHERLOCK STUART ELMAN SIEROTY HERBERT J. SILVERSTEIN JERROLD A. SILVERSTEIN JASPER JAMES SIPES ROBERT MCKINLEY SKIDMORE ROBERT MARTIN SMITH XVARREN STANLEY SMITH ROBERT SOCKOLOV PETER DANIEL SOKOLOWSKI ROBERT G. SPIEGELMAN PAUL DONALD STANLEY GEORGE ROLPH STEVENSON ROBERT JOHN STEWART XVILLIAM PAUL STEXVART ELWIN H. SXVANSON WILLIAM ALLEN SWIFT THOMAS ELDEN SMITH NED JAMES TAVERNA JOHN R, THANE JOSEPH G. THURSTON EDWARD FRANCIS TONER CHESTER RAYNAIDO TORRES EUGENE L. TREASRAU THEODORE M. VALORIA STEPHEN J. VARNHAGEN DONALD DAVID WACKS CHARLES M. WATT FRANK ELLIOTT XVILSON WILLIAM HENRY XWISECARVER LAWRENCE J. WOLF SHELTON XWONG Girls MARY ALICE ALLEN JANET MARIE ANDERSON YVONNE DONNA ANTHONY ROSALIND HELEN ARONSON BILLIE ATHEL BARBARA JANE BARBASH GLORIA MARIE BARILLAS BEATRICE MARY BARKER ELIZABETH ANN BARTLETT DOROTHY LA VERNE BARTOSH BARBARA ELIZABETH BATES BARBARA BEAVERS BARBARA LUCILLE BEELER ANGELA FRANCES BELLANTE MARY L. BENNETT JOANNE VIVIEN BERAN JOYCE ADELE BERK KATHRIN JANE BERTRAM BARBARA BETTMAN MADGE BISSINGER ZENA BLAIR BETTY GENE BLOMQUIST SELMA B. BLYTHE PATRICIA IRENE BRANDON CLAIRE BRINNER FRANCES JUDY CALA MARY LOUISE CAMP JANE ARDELE CAMPODONICO MILLICENT MARY CARRY BARBARA S. CARREIRO NADINE ABBOTT CHANDLER I-IANNAH CHYSOSKY COLLEEN MARTHA CLARK BEVERLY ROSE COHEN SHIRLEY ANNA COMFORT MARY JANE CORKRUM GLORIA COURTENEY PATRICIA JEAN CUMMINGS BETTY B. DAVIS ELAINE D, DAVIS BARBARA ANN DEL MONTE DIANE DE MARTIN GLORIA M. DE MARTINI BARBARA JEAN DE MATTEI ALANNA DEVEREAUX BEULAH MARY DOLAN SALLY CAROLINE DUNGAN PATRICIA ANN EGAN PATREA EGBERT NORMA JEANNE ELKINGTON BARBARA CAROL ELTRINGHAM BARBARA M. ENGLER HENEL FLORENCE EPLING FRANCES GRACE FEISEL BEVERLY ANN FIELD CAROL MAY FILENE ANNA LOUISE FILICE HERMINE FRIEDMAN JEANNE MARIE GAGEN GENEVIEVE GALLIETT GERALDINE GALLIETT JACQUELINE ESTHER GARBER CARMEN RITA GARCIA VIOLET JEANNE GLAZIER ELEANOR RUTH GLIKBARG JEAN PATRICK GREGORY JOAN GUMBRECHT MARTHA M. HACK MARY LEONA HARRIGAN MURIEL JOSEPHINE HARRISON ANTOINETTE JEAN HARTMAN NANCY L. HEMINGRAY 176 HIGH SENIOR CSF Row one: D. Samuels, S. Hurlf, G. Jacobs, S. Brochard, H, Woo, Row Iwo: A. Johnson, M. Goldman, J. Debenham. California Scholarship Fedczratio CSF - UPPER DIVISION Row one: A. Trowler, E. Everall, T. Trosper, J. Mandelson, D. Sachs, N' Qwoflgv M' Yokoro. Row Iwo: H. VonHoItz, A. Scott, S. J0hI1Sf0f1, L- Pfflimr, H- Schwartz' V- Bro' chard, M, Kavanaugh, B. Cohn, L. Manrique, J. Jacobs, E. Silverman, M- Cooper, D- Keegan. Row three: B. Hall, T. Cummingsu B, Nason, J. Tolson, R. Guggenhlme, C. McClure, S. Jacobs, C. Lau, S. Chow, D. Chan. R0w fm! -' D- B0bf0ff, D- BUff0lPh, D- Gomberg, M, Freedman, D. Kaplan, J. Carroll, A. Moses, D. Krug. R. Kandel, A, Won, P. Chung. LOWER DIVISION CSF - SPRING Row one: R. Yoshikawa, J. Vanderburgh, K. Thomas, L. Snaider, J. Benet, J. Beard, I. Siewert, T. Sumida, C. Au. Raw lu'a: J. Brodmerkel. J. Logic, A. Tong, C. Carmack, V. J. Au, E. Kumamoto, B. Mars, L. Leong, F. Mum, S. Nagase, S. Nagase, S. Ramsey, S. Windholz. Row three: B. Chinn, M. Silberstein, M. Tobriner, A. Epes, V. Smith, K. Adachi, S. Brown, P. Beavin, S. Pearce, A. Young, Row faur: C. Greenberg. S. Jacobson, B. Gilman, I, Hammond, K. McClellan, B. Goldman, C. Breyer, R. Mendelson, R. Burton. D. Lopes, J. Won. CSF Travels to San osc State and the Ford Factor CSF 1. Boarding the bus for the Ford factory. 2. An interesting display at San Jose State. 3. CSF members talking about what they had seen. 4. Inside the Ford plant, S, Having fun nn the trip. 6. The entrance to the campus at San Jose. JACQUELINE FAY HUTSHING MARGUERITE JANET HOWELL DOROTHY W. JOHNSON FLORA E. JOHNSON PATRICIA CATHERINE JOHNSON PAULITA MARIE JOHNSON PHYLLIS BETTY JOHNSON JOAN KAHN JOYCE ELAINE KALECH AMELIA GERTRUDE KATES BEVERLEY MARILYN KINSMAN CHARLINE LURA KNIGHT LISA JOHANNA KRAUS ELLISE E. LACHMAN LE ETTA JUNE LANDON LENORE LB BLANC GLORIA VIOLET LEE MARY LEE MERRIAM IDA LEVIN ALINE MERLE LITTMAN MARION JANE LORTON MARY PATRICIA LOUGHMAN JUNE LOWE NANCY M. LOWE MILA LUKASH JANE HARRIETT 1.YON ELLEN LOIS MAGNIN SHIRLEY FRANCES MCRAE PATRICIA AGATHA MILEY VIRGINIA VICKERY MILLER MARIAN LOUISE MINTON PAULA MARIE MOFFITT PATRICIA JOAN MOORE PATRICIA MARIE MULLER JANET ROBERTA NATHANSON VIOLA JUNE NELSON BEVERLY ANN NI CKELSON CORA CLARA NICKS ORLY ELLY NOLZE WILLIS EDENA NORTON MARY JOE NULAND RHODA OLDFIELD FLORENCE MERLYN OLESON JEAN ANN PADDOCK NORMA JEAN PARSONS BARBARA MARIE PEDERSON DOROTHY P. PIERSON BARBARA JEAN PONCETTA CATHERINE PORTA BARBARA LOUISE PRESTON EUGENIA THANAI PSALTIS BEVERLEY L. PYNE MARY IRENE QUIGLEY ELIZABETH ANN RHOADS FLORENCE PATRICIA REILLY MARIE JEAN RITCHIE MARY MACKENZIE ROBERTS RHODA ROSE PATRICIA ALICE ROSENWALD ELAINE BERNICE RUFF FRANCES SCHMITT NIEVES LEE SCHNEIDER CISSIE SCHWARTZ MARIAN F. SCHWEDHEIM JACQUELINE ROSE SEIBERT MARILYN V. SIMMONS MILDRED ELIZABETH STARR SHIRLEY ANN STEINMAN AVONNE V. STONE NELL D. SULLIVAN LORAYNE JANE SWEET ANNA MARIE SYLVESTER PATRICIA LA VERNE TENNANT INGE M. THALER SUE ELIZABETH THOMPSON CAMILLE BETTY TRUNCALE LINNEA CAROLINE TSCHUMY ALENE VERNON FRANCES VIEIRA BETTY JEAN WAGNER DOREEN HILDA WALKER VALERIE WALKER CAROLYN ESTHER WALLACE CONSTANCE REICHERT WEISS MARY EDNA WIGMORE VELDA MARIE WILKINSON DOLORES WILSON JANIS MARION WISEMAN MARILYN VERA XVISSING BETTY M. WONG JUANITA JOAN WOODS DORIS M. ZEBALLOS CLASS OF JANUARY, 1945 Boys WAYNE DAVID ALLEN FRANK WILLIAM BACHELOR JAMES LINWOOD BASTABLE ROBERT LEO BENNETT NORMAND B. BLACK MERRILL BRUCE BLOCK ROBERT T. BROWN EDMOND R. CHAVANETTE ROBERT G. DALEY RICHARD DANIEL 177 GEORGE STEWART DOW RALPH R. DRESEL, II ROBERT F. ENGLER DONALD PAUL ESTAVAN FREDERICK K. FEAGIN HENRY B. FULTON EVAN GOLDENBERG ADLAI F. GOLDSCHMIDT MAURICE B. GRIFFIN DAVID XVARREN GROSS TANIOS GEORGE l-IABEEB, JR. LLOYD D. HANFORD, JR. REECE GLENN HARRIS EDWARD BUCKLEY HAYDEN BRUCE CARSON HEII. CLARENCE C. HOBDY, JR. PAUL S. HUNGERFORD, JR. KENNETH JACOBSON ROBERT LEON JAYMOT RUSSELL COBURN JORDAN GORDON P. KELLEY FRANK DAVIDSON KING, JR. RICHARD H. KIRTZXWEIL ARNOLD T. LEE MAX ARNOLD LEVIN ROBERT MARK LEVISON, JR. XXfILLIAM LEXV ROBERT ALBERT LEXWEK ROBERT S. LIEBER, JR. PAUL FRANCIS LINDSTROM BERNARD NATHAN LOGASA XVILLIAM MARTIN LONGMAN EDWARD KIRK MACGURN, JR. VUILLIAM PHILIP MAILLOUX FRANK GEORGE MCCORD ROBERT ALLEN MCKEEVER TERRENCE MCKEON JERRY L. MCMILLEN DONALD S. MCNAMARA ROBERT EUGENE MCVEY HOXWARD J. MILLER BERNARD MORRIS XVILLIAM C. MURRAY NORRIS STANLEY NAHMAN JOHN A. NEXVSOM ROBERT E. NOLAN CHARLES DONALD NOONAN RONALD RICHARD NOVALES ROBERT XV. OLNEY GREGORY STIRLING PRICHARD PHILIP LAXVRENCE RICH CLAUDE N. ROSENBERG, JR. JACQUES C. ROOS DONALD C. ROSS GEORGE ALFRED SALINGER DANIEL WINSLOW SCHIAVONE ANDRE CAMILLE SCHMIDT ERNEST C. SCHOLZ ROBERT CECIL SEARS IRVING SHEMANO STANLEY EARL SHERMAN ALLEN SIMON LAWRENCE SOLOMON JACK CHESTER STROUD KENNETH E. STURGIS JAMES JOSEPH SULLIVAN, JR. KURT VOESTER ARTHUR THORNBURGH WHITE Girls DONA DOLORES AIKEN PATRICIA ALLEN BARBARA ANN ANDERSON FLORA TAUNANI AUYONG ELAINE LIBBY BLOCK SHIRLEY BLUMENFELD BETTY BRAIVERMAN LOIS E. BREWER ANNIE MARGARET BRIGGS NINA MARY BROCATO MARJORIE EVELYN BROOKER MARY ANN BROWN GLADYS MARIE BROWNE ALOHA MILDRED BUTLER JOAN RACHELLE CAHEN SYLVIE CRITTENDEN MARGARET DEHE FLORENCE EDITH DE MARTINI MARY JACQUELINE DE SHA ROSE MAYBELLE EGGLESTON CAROLYN ANN FISHER ELVIRA CHARLOTTE FISHER BETTY JO FLETCHER BEVERLY FLOWERS LORRAINE ADELE FORKGEN ANITA BAINBRIDGE GALLAGHER CORINNE MARIE GERNANDT FLOSSENE M. GLAFKIDES LILLIAN B. GOLDSMITH MARJORIE ANN GOODWIN NATALIE GOULD RUTH ELLEN GOULD TERRY GOULD JEAN A. HEMBERGER CONSTANCE BREE HERMAN 178 ORCHESTRA Razr' ow: B. James, P. Belmont, D. Preddy, J. Hollingsworth, H. Skillman, D. Young. Row nw: S, Archer, A. Libby. K. Sugiyama. C. Greenberg. J, Belmont. E. Tom, M, Olsen, J. Macklenburg, P. Postel. Ron' tb:-ee: K. Johnson, K. McDonald, E. Silverman. B, Alberts, S. Terstegge. J. Nash, M. Zimmerman, A. Shinn. Rau' fauna' S. Swenson, D. Smith, J. Tuhtan, C. Benson, D. Rofen, N. XVood, C, Ellis, A. Weiss, A. Swartsfager, S. Cohen. Rott- fire: R. Burke, G. Thacker, B. Fay, L. LaFlamme. J. Mindlin. S. Davis, A. Schwartz, B. Batistich. SCHOOL ORCHESTRA Music is a major part in the lives of many students at Lowell, The orchestra is under the direction of Mr. Krieger, who is the head of the music department. Each year the orchestra plays for the Varieties, and many times ensembles perform for PTA meetings, rallies, the Newcomers' Reception, and other school activities. Such musicians as Sally Ann Hough, Dave Rosen, Nancy Wood, Alan Johnson, and Russ Cantor had the distinction of performing solos. Representing Lowell in the Festival of Music at Stockton were a group of instrumentalists from the orchestra. THE BAND The Lowell band, under the guidance of Mr. Krie- ger, is known as one of the best hiigh school bands in the city. Student Conductor Alan Johnson was director in the fall term, and in the spring term Armand Schwartz took over thebaton. Not only does the band play at all the rallies and games, but it puts on band concerts in the auditorium. Among the talented musicians were several outstand- ing soloists. College of the Pacific in Stockton was the scene of the Festival of Music held on February 4, A group of instrumentalists from the band attended to represent Lowell in this big affair. ADVANCED CHOIR Lowell's advanced choir director, Mr. S. Berry, il tired with the ending of the fall term. After being Lowell for so many years his choir students were so to see him go. Mr. Bernard who came from Balboa took over Berry's position as choir director. On December 13 the choir sang at The Empori and also appeared in the 1955 Varieties. A group 14 went to the Festival of Music in Stockton and r resented Lowell in a huge chorus, directed by the W known Roger Wagner. One of Lowell's traditions is the choir singing graduation. It is an experience long remembered both graduates and choir members. ,. ... CHOIR Row ang: Greenlaw, H. Weinrob, I. Hackh, C, Kelly, K, Smyth, C. Givens, S. Moore, V. Farr. Raw Iwo D. Maclocia, M. Barton, M. Molinar, L. de Losada. Y. Hammond, E, Foster, L. Gardner, H, Wilson, Mr Bernal-d.4Row three.: C. Lau, C. Broberg, P. Marquis, T. xwllllff, M. Baker, I. Steiner. Row fwfr: J. Yee J Kafantaris, B. Enmeier, V. Bocci, C. Magidson, L. Cripps, S. Barnard. Rau' HN: D. Marble, H. Wfeiss F. Skill man, B. Thompson, S. Boccara, J. Payne, J. Panizo. ' ' BAND Row one: C. Chester, C. Ellis, G. Giovannett', I. T lt' , A. S ' tf r , K. CA P, E k L B Rau' Iwo: D. Williams, C. Benson, A, Fraumilni.'.A. uRlyiil, M. Fxzllilgriyill-IK. J0ssisfllSEiSlPaddoEki Kl1'Hastin2?,yeR James. R01,L'fb7'6I8.' Wood,.D. Rosen, F. Dagnino. E. McKenna, P. Davis, P. Watson, B. Johns, S. Leonard Row fame: J. MIndllD, S, Davis, N. Quong, A. Martins, H. Hernando A. Wcisc, D. Foster, S. Archer. Row iw R. Burke, B. Batistich, B. Maxwell, M. Rogerson, R. Hennigan, H.,Nakai, M. Crawtield, J. Harris. Rauf fix: J. Marks, K. Rasmussen, C, Malanca, G. WWI , , G. Tl k , E. F Y , B. . T ff R 1 Skillman, B. Robey. Leadefr: A. Schwartz, Lili-gollisar. liLFuji1i'e11e1:eligugllllpps, VilmCI1estdi'? Freeidgo dbyl H VIOLET ANN HOFFMAN VIRGINIA HOLLOWAY BEVERLY E. HUFF BARBARA RENE HUNT ANNE VICTORIA HUSTON NANCY HUTCHINS BETTYE FRANCES ISAACS BARBARA JAYNE JENSEN BEVERLY XVAINE JOHNSTON ROBERTA LORRAINE KAMPERT ARDIS MERLE KATZ ADELE DEE KEATLEY MARY KELLOGG KAREN MARIE KENNARD GRETTAANN KRAUS ERNA K. KURRLE MARJEAN LAMBERTSEN MARGUERITE LEAKIN ELINOR LILLIAN LEE EVELYN ALTHEA LEE BARBARA LEVISON MARGOT LEXVIN HELENE CECILE LOUPE ANN MARIE MCCAULEY BARBARA JANE MQCLYMOND PATRICIA MCKEE CAROL ANN MANHEIM LUCINDA L. MARSHALL LEONORA HELEN MOONEY SYDNEY-JUNE MORGAN JOAN ELIZABETH PARKER BETSY ALATHEA POMIN BARBARA ANN PUCKHABFR FLORA LEE PETERSEN MAY PETERSEN OLGA E. PETROFF BARBARA ANN RANKIN BARBARA RATTO TRINIDAD THERESA RAVARA JUNE DIANE RICHARDSON JOYCE K. RODEGERDTS MARGARET LILLIAN ROSEVEAR .MIRIAM RUBENS JOYCE IRENE SAMPSON RUTH E. SCHWABACHER HARRIET SOLOMON LAURA ANN SPRINGSTEEN COLLEEN SMITH JACQUELINE CLAIR STAMELEN MARION CONSTANCE SUMMERS BETTY ANN TAYLOR CORINNE KENT THOMPSON SALLY TIBBS GLORIA ALELE TYROLER PATRICIA MARGARET UTECHT MARION I-I. XVALKER NANCY B. WALLACE THELMA WALLAR HELEN MARGARET VXATERS DOROTHY WANEVA XYJILSON JOYCE JOANNE WISHAN ILSE EMILIE WOLFEN BETTY LOU WRIGHT CLASS OF JUNE, 1946 Boys DONAI.D ALBERT ACTON CHARLES BRYAN ARNONE LOU ARONIAN XVILLIAM MARTIN AUSLEN RANIER FRANZ BA LDAUF LOUIS F. BANTLE CHARLES GEORGE BARNETT ALVAN H. BEALL RUSSELL BENIOFF PAUL A. BERGEROT DOUGLAS H. BLACKIE HARRY BERRY BLATCHLY PIERRE BORDEGARAY JOHN GARLAND BOWES DONALD L. BRANSON JACK RICHARD BRAUN RICHARD DARRELL BRIDGMAN LEE XV. BRILLHART, JR. DALLAS DAVID BROCK NICHOLAS BUHAROV M. ERNEST BLOOM ALXVIN S'I EVE CABURI ROBERT F. CAMPBELL MILTON M. CERF LEONARD GEORGE COI.LINS EDWARD WILLIAM COY RONALD M. CRAWFORD JEFFERSON DEWBERRY RODERICK LAIRD DUNGAN BARTH ALBERT EASTON JAMES DARWIN I-ELLETT FREEMAN FAY ELZEY XVILLIAM R. ESPINO THOMAS F. FEE VICTOR L. FISCHER DONALD G. FISHER JOHN A. FITZGERALD PETER GANYARD 179 PASQUALE J. GELARDI RAYMOND LEROY GIRARD WILLIAM CHARLES HAACK DOUGLAS C. HANSEN REED P. HARRIS CLYDE HENRY. JR. GEORGE MURICE HICKOK MERRILL BURNHAM HILL ROBERT L. HITCHCOCK GILBERT GLENN HITTLE DAVID PURDY HOLMAN SHAUN PURDY HOLMAN JAMES MILLER JOHNSON HARVEY O. KENT MASON EDWARD KLINE, JR. AUSTIN E. KNOEII JAMES FRANCIS KRELING ALBERT KROGSTAD, JR. RICHARD G. LAMBERT EDWARD C. LAMKINS NORMAN S. LANDSBERG HERMAN B. LANGNER ARTHUR ALLEN LA PEDIS AUGUST LA ROSA JOHN A. LAWSON EVERETT S. LAYMAN JOHN GEORGE LILIENTHAL HERCULES E. MALEKOS RICHARD MAURICE MARRACQ BEN MAUSHARDT JAMES MAYERHOFER JOHN DAVID MCCAPEREY EMMETT CAMPBELL MCKOWEN ROBERT LEWIS MEANEY WILLIAM N. MENNUTI EDWIN MITSUNAGA ROBERT MIZUHARA EDDIE ICHIRO MORIGUCHI JOHN D. MORSE HENRY CRAVEN MULLOWNEY MURRAY DONALD NACKORD ISAMU NAO JACK GEORGE NAVARRO THOMAS MORGAN NILON MOGENS P. NORAGER RICHARD E. OLSON SHOJI ONO BRYAN JOHN OREILLY GEORGE LELAND PERROTT, II LOUIS PHILIP PICETTI, JR. ROBERT A. POLITZER HARRY JEROAH PRUETT, JR. MILTON EARL RAASCH EMIL ANTHONY RAFFETTO, JR. PHILIP LAWRENCE RICH JOSEPH RIVERA JOHN NEWTON ROSEKRANS CHESTER SESSIONS ROWELL ALLAN MARSHALL RUPPRECHT TATSUO SAKAKURA PETER NORMAN SCHWARZE JAMES BURNELL SCHWEITZER DOUGLAS ROBERT SCOVIL MYRON ROBERT SEGOL IGOR V. SHARONOEE VANCE SHEFFEY MERVYN SILBERBERG SHERMAN RICHARD SILVA SAM SINELNIKOFF WILLIAM R. SMITH PETER S. SOMMER, JR. GEORGE STEVENS JOHN REYNOLDS STEWART JOSEPH G. STEWART WILLIAM FRANK STILES RICHARD AARON STOEE DANIEL EDWARD STONE KENT HAMILTON STOW ROBERT J. STURGEON JOSEPH EDWARD STURLA ROBERT ERNEST SXWINGLEY ROBERT WELLS TALLMAN MELVIN E. TAMBERG PAUL JOHN THURAU HAROLD H. TIEMROTH, JR. RINADRO JOHN TORRE THOMAS T. TRONWBRIDGE NEIL DAVID TURNER JOHN T. VANDER MAI.E DONALD VON GELDERN FRANK WOLFF JAMES YAT WONG JOHN B. WORLD MARSHALL LAWRENCE ZEMON Girls LOUISE MARIE ALBERTAZZI STEPHANIE ANNE ALIOTO KATHERINE ALLEN ENID ARATA MARY ANN ARNERICH VIVIEN ASAYE ASHIZAXVA HAZEL DIANE ASLAN BERNADINE ELAINE ATTINGER RUTH C. AUFHAUSER H80 ROTC REGIMENTAL STAFF Charles Andrews, Peter Belmont, David Rosen Under the capable Supervision of Sergeant First Class john Potts, the Lowell battalion has successfully completed another banner term this spring 1956. The commander of the unit, Major Robert Dawson, made Sure that the fine traditions and upholdings of Lowell'S ROTC remained Steadfast for another event- ful Semester. Adjutant Kenneth jenkins was also a valuable help in the many activities that Once again proved that Lowell has some of the most precisioned Soldiers of any San Francisco high School. Company commanders for the Spring were Captai john Richter of A Company, Captain Carl Berry of ' Company, and Captain Danial Buttolph of C Con pany. The entire battalion received high honors for its ei cellent showing in the St. Patricks Day Parade an received many 'favorable comments for the many otha drills and marches which they exhilbited with ease an Skill. COMPANY A H- ROTC Rau' mis: C. johnson, R. Richter, J. johnson. Row Iwo! M. Christensen, L. Obenchain, R. Achuclc, J. Riordan, D. Roach, M. Larner, B, Chinn, R. Brindle. Row three: B. LaF1amme, A. Mogannan, R. Quimby, R, Nelson, R. Williams, R. Hurmuz, D. McKeen, L. Schreier. Row four: T. Bissell, D. O'Rorke, D. Parsell, L. LaFlamme, G. Patrick, S. Hudson, V. Huffman. COMPANY B - ROTC Row one: H. Mitchell, V. Nalivaiko, C. Berry, P. Bonaccorsi. A. Braguine. Row two: A. Shinn, C. Au, C. Chang, H Gueterskoh, F. Martinez, P. Braguin, A. Wfatsun, M. Maeda, F. Barnes, P. Meyers, G. Cooley. Row llaree: R Drisdale. D. Brandt. C, Brandt, B. Holl, A. Swartsfager, D. Wiener, M. Gaynor, E. Sellinger, T, Lee, D. Kassi- anov. Rauf four: P. Sargent, 1. Dederian, E. Nelson, S, Paddock, B. Bantowsky, G. Stanton, V. Ponitkoff, N Hein, R. Sommer, K. Lee. COMPANY C - ROTC Rau' one: D. Buttolph, Robt. Ebert, Rich. Ebert, R. Kelly. Ron' Iwo: A. Sepulvida, D. Strausl, P. Cloonan, R, Cirami, M. McKee, E. Rodriqucz, R. Hlynsky, R. Bartolome, S. Saiki. Row three: L. Moss. B. Maxwell j. Belmont, C. Manning, E. Tseng, G. Armbrust, F. Valle. G. Grady, B. Pena, R. Pena. Tap mug- A, Maggfm C. Ellis, M. Gordon, S. Abinanti, R. Eiselt, A. Fraumeni, R. Goldsby, G. Prather, B. Sommerville, G. Verrill R. Cronin. PEGGY ANNE BAKER JUNE LUCRETIA BARNUM LAVERNE P. BENSTOCK PATRICIA ANNE BERKE LEY DOLORES BERRY JOAN MARY BERUTTO MARY MARGUERITE BESSONE ELEANOR HERMINE BETSCHART NORMA MARIE BLAIR ROSEMARY BLOOMGARDEN BARBARA JUNE BLYTHE JOAN DIANE BOISSEREE MARIAN JEAN BOLLIER VELERIE C. BOOTH BEATRICE JOAN BRAINARD XVILMA CAROL BRODY JEAN DORLAND BROWN SHIRLEY MAE BRUBAKER GLADYS BRYANT KATHLEEN MAY BRYANT ELAINE KATHERINE BUTLER CARMEN CACERES MARCIA B. CALANDER MARY CALFAS CYNTHIA LOIS CANE NANCY LEE CARTMAN CORINNE A. CLARK DOROTHEA VIRGINIA CLARK CATHERINE JOAN CLIFFORD BARBARA FRANCES COBB ROSALIE COBLENTZ MARIAN RUTH COHN BARBARA A. COOK ILEEN CRISCILLA COOK DOLORES JULANNE COOPER CAROLYN JEANNE CRANE CONSTANCE MARIE CROSS AUDREY JOAN DAVIS SOPHIA DELL'ORTO MARY DEMAKAS JOAN DOLORES DONLON SHIRLEY ANN EMLAY JEAN ENRIGHT CLARA LOUISE ERVIN JOAN G. EVERS ELIZABETH R. FENSTER MARGUERITE JANE FISHER ANNE MARIE FITZSIMONS SONDRA FLESCHLER BARBARA JEAN FLEXSENHAR FRANCES JANE FREEMAN MOLLY I.. FREEMAN BETTY JANE GEORGE JOAN M. GIDDINGS NANCY DEAN GILL HELEN MARIA GLOVER ELEANOR GLADYS GRANT JEANNE MARIE GRUPE MARIA C. R. HANAN CAROL HALEY JOAN HALL NANCY JEAN HARRISON BEVERLY R. HARTMANN JOAN HARVEY CLAIRE ANNE HELLER IRENE MARIE HENNIGER JANET ELIZABETH HIGGINS SANDRA LEE HOFFMAN ALICE ANNE HOISHOUSER GLORI-'KN ADELE HOLSTON VIRGINIA KATHERINE HOYT BEVERLY JEANNE IIUDDLESON BETTY LEE HUERSCH PATRICIA KATHLEEN HUNT JOAN MARIE ISAACS BARBARA MARIE JACHENS JOYCE MARILYN JELLINS XWILMA M. JENSEN DELORES JOHANSEN BARBARA ALICE JONES MARIAN CHRISTINE JORGENSEN MURIEL JOAN KAUFMANN MARGARET S. KAWAGUCHI ALYCE MAE KELECHAVA JOANNE MARIE KELLEHER CQAROLE SUZANNE KENNEDY RUTH KEVICH CHRISTINE KOCKOS ROSE-MARIE KONINGS JOANNE ROSE KRAGEN JOSEPHINE KEH BARBARA J. LAWRENCE MARION E. LAYCOCK ANN MARI LE DOUX BARBARA JANE LEE VIRGINIA XVINIFRED LEE ANNE ELIZABETH LEHMANN BARBARA ANN LICHTENSTEIN XVINIFRED DOROTHY LILLY GERALDINE LORE LIANE MARY LORENZINI MARY SHAW LOWE MARGARET E. LOVINER JOAN ANN LYNCH CAROL LEE LYON 181 HELENE MARIE MAGNER YVONNE CLAIRE MARTIN GRACE EILEEN MCCAGUE ELEANOR C. MCCULLOUGH MARY MCDONALD BARBARA ANN MILLER HANNA JEAN MILLER JOCELYN MITCHELL GLORIA FRANCES MOLINARI JOANNA NAKAMURA VIOLETTE MARIE NEIDECK SADAKO NOGUCHI ROEAN NORXVITT BARBARA ELLEN ORLOB JOYCE H. PEDERSEN MARILYN ALBERTA PERRY EI.AINE MABEL PLATT MARY POWERS ALICE JANE QUANDT MARGE QUINLEY DIXIE LEE REA FRANCES CAROLYN REED LEESE RIDER BARBARA M. ROCKFORTE JOAN HELENE ROEDER MARILYN ELIZABETH ROGERS CATHERINE P. ROSENBERG DOROTHY JEAN ROSS LEAH LORENE SANDERS REVA DIXIE SAPER LIESEL SCHIFF FRANCES MARIE SCHMELZER RENATE META SCHXVAB CLAIRE SCHXVARVZ GLADYS E. SCHWARTZENBACH GLORIA YVONNE SEGHIERI EVELYN SEIFERT ANNA SEREZLIS EILEEN PAY SHAPIRO BARBARA JEAN SHARP ELIZABETH MCLEAN SHERMAN JANICE SHIRLEY DOLORES ANALISA SIEBER MARILYN JEAN SIEL PHYLI.IS SLACK OLGA SMIRNOFF JOAN SMITH JOY ANNE SMITH MARILYN SMITH CAROLINE CLARICE SOUTHARD PATRICIA BURKE STANFIELD JEANNE ISABEL STATON IRENE STEEN SALLY JAC STEPHENS GERALDINE GRACE STOLZ CONSTANCE LOUISE STONE LILLIAN DOLORES STONE JUNE SUMMERS BARBARA MARION' SXVADLEY BENNY TAYLOR CHARLOTTE MARGARET TOMICH ROSE ROSALIND UYEDA MARION E. VALDESPINO EDNA TERESA VALMASSY GRACE E. VON DER MEHDEN JACQUELINE G. XVALLIER NANCY PERSANA XWEIL PAULINE XVI-IITEHEAD JOAN MARIANNE WILSHIRE CAMILLE ANNE XWONG SHIRLEY ANNE XIVOODMAN MARY N. WOOLDRIDGE CAROLE LOUISE ZIMET CLASS OF JANUARY. 1947 Boys HANS J. ALDER ANDREXV MICHAEL ANDERSON MARVIN ANMUTH MARVIN HERBERT BELL CARL STUART BENEDICT RICHARD LOUIS BLATTEIS NADEAU A. BOURGEAULT GERALD F. CANTXXWELL ALVIN B. CARR RICHARD C. CARSCADDEN JUSTIN B. CASEY DAVID NATHAN COHEN ALAN B. COLEMAN CALVIN B. COLT JERRALD DELL'OSSO DANIEL K. DEVER SAM DIMENSTEIN MORTON B. DUNN ROBERT HERMAN ELLINGHOUSE ROBERT ALAN EVANS ROBERT L. FAGEN FREDERICK H. FIELD, JR. HARRY FRED FURLONG MICHAEL J. GOMEZ VICTOR ANTONIUS HABEEB WELDON G. HALL REECE GLENN HARRIS RICHARD SHELDON HARRISON JOSEPH CARMOREAU HATIE 182 ROTC QHICCIS T. CAYI.OR D. ROSEN C. ANDREWS M. RUSS B. DAWSON B. JENKINS A. PAUL C. JOHNSON J. JOHNSON R. BRINDLE R. RICHTER G. RICHARDS C. BERRY C. MITCHELI. P. BONACCORSI D. BUTTOLPH R. EBERT R. EBERT R. KELLEY LESLIE FRANKLIN HEFFY JOHN LAWTON HIGLEY, JR. ROBERT N. HIRABAYASHI DONALD HUBER DIMITRI KIRIL ILYIN EVERETT CLARK JONAS STUART EARL JONES FRANCIS WILLIAIVI KNORP XVILLIAM KORTE FELIX GEORGE KRAUS KENNETH JOHN LA BELLE WII.LIAM LEONG LAM ALFRED GEORGE LANGE RONALD LEONARD LEONG IRWIN S. LEVIN ROBERT LELAND LINCOLN CARROLL GORDON LITTLEJOHN ALBERT LOUIE DAVID GRANVILLE MARTIN CONSTANTINE MATOSICH ALEC G. MCCALLUM STANLEY C. MENTZER JOHN EMMETT MEYER CHARLES J. MOLENDA HUMPHREY J. MOYNIHAN. JR. DENIS DANIEL MURPHY XVILLIAM ANDERSON NEWMAN ARMAND H. OFFEL TOM OSTXVALD JERRY PERSTEIN XVILLIAM CHARLES PUTNEY IRWIN ROSS RAFTEN LUD RENICK GEORGE WILLIAM RIEDEMAN JEAN ROBERT ROCHE ROBERT S. ROSE BARRY R. ROSEKIND DONAL BENSON RUDE JAMES BENNETT ST. CLAIR GEORGE SANTRIZOS MICHAEL DILLON SCHOLL DONALD B. SCHULZ WHITNEY SHIRO JAMES DONALD SKIDMORE CHESTER JOHN STANARO, JR. DONALD C. STOW ROBERT SEVERENCE STRAUSS JOHN TENNANT LAURENCE CHARLES VAN EVERY SAMUEL WAKEFIELD DANIEL XV. WALLIS RICHARD WAYNE WILKINSON WERNER FELIX XWOLFEN VICTOR KEUNG WONG JACK M. WOODSIDE KAZUO YANASE Girls LA ROSE ABDIE BETTY ANN AMOS ANNE ARGALL ANITA ARTAL NORMA BALLARIS JUNE D. BARNETT MARGUERITE BERWICK CATHERINE NINA BOUYDUKLIS SHIRLEY BRAUNSTEIN DOROTHY JEANNE BRAUN BARBARA ANN BROOKS GLORIA BURNELL BARBARA FRANCES CERF NORMA A. CHABOT NORMA JEAN CROCKETT CHRISTINA V. DUVARAS ANNE FRANKEL JACQUELINE M, FREUND PATRICIA HELEN FRIEND ROSEMARY CAROL FURTADO XVINIFRED PATRICIA GEGAN CLAIRE J. GHELARDI JOAN ELAINE GLANZER MOIRA GLEN RUBY GOLDABER MILLICENT E. HANSON JEAN DOLORES HARMAN MATILDA HASSON ORISSA M. HAYMOND JACQUELINE ALLEN HERBST MARIE HESKY HELEN MARIE HILDEBRAND EDNA JANE HILI.ER MARILYN LOIS HINDEN CAROLYN IRENE HOWARD JOYCE ANN HOWELL NATALIE DOLORES HUBBERT VIRGINIA BETTY HULL GLENDA ISAACS WILMA JEAN JELLINS LOIS IRENE ISSACS CORRINE MARVIS JORGENSEN MARIE LOUISE JORGENSEN ANTOINETTE JURAVCOFF LILLIAN KRELING ELIZABETH H. LEHMAN MARJORIE-JEANNE LEXVIS 183 RHODA D. LINEER JANE LUKAS MILDRED GLORIA MACDONALD AGATHA MAIER COLENE DUNNING MQDOWELI. SONJA MECHLOXYIICZ DARLIEN M. MERRILL VIOLA MICHELSON FLORENCE Y. MIHO VERA PATRICIA MORTIMER NORMA JEANNE MOSER DIANNE MURRAY GLORIA R. NORWALI. NANCY OLDS MARGERY A. PETERSON PATRICIA LEE POWELL EFSTATHIA C, PREOVOLOS DOLORES JEANNE RENNILSON DORIS ELIZABETH RUTAN MARIE LOUISE SCHULDT ELIZABETH ST. CLAIR RUTH SHAPERIO JANET ALBETA SIMON JANET E. SMITH LENORE SYLVIA SMITH SHIRLEY SPARROW GYNNE STREN JOANNE SUSSKIND BARBARA JEAN SUTHERLAND BEVERLY JEAN THOMAS VIRGINIA ROSE TINKER YVETTE VAYSSIE BARBARA MARIE WARE MYRTLE WONG WXNIFRED WONG BEVERLY JOAN WYNN CLASS OF JUNE. 1947 Boys IRVING ABOUDARA MANUEL WILLIAM ABREU FRANK T. ADSHADE STEVEN L. ANDERSON JAMES EDWARD ARNETT GERARD G. ARRIBERE PETER DUNNING ASHLOCK EUGENE H. BABOW RICHARD BADOCK ALAN BAER SAUL BATTAT JOHN HAMILTON BELL CLAYTON BERLING DAVID B. BIRENBAUM DUSHAN BORETA EDWIN E. BRADY JON M. BRIDGMAN RICHARD A. BROHMAN JOSEPH GEORGE BROOK SANDY E. BROUSSEAU DENNIS CALOFONOS WILLIAM SAEGER CALVERT DION CHESSE PAUL EDWARD CLEMENS ALBERT W. CLICK JULIUS NATHAN COHEN HARRY H. COHN RICHARD COHN HARRY G. COLLIS HARTELL RICHARD CORNEW ALEXANDER M. CRAWFORD TRACY CUMMINGS, JR. RICHARD E. DALMAS JAMES RILEY DANIELS ROBERT A. DAVEY ARTHUR G. DAY EDWIN STEWART DETHLEFSEN ANTHONY FRANKLIN DUNSTON EDWIN BERT ERBENTRAUT STANLEY JAMES FARWIG KENNETH F. FOEHR DONALD R. FORSYTH J. ARTHUR FREED ARTHUR FUDEM HERBERT SHELDGN FUNG STANLEY SHIGERU FURUTA JOHN MERRILL GALLAGHER KENNETH D. GARDNER, JR. ALFRED M. GFROERER, JR. CHARLES L. GOFORTH DAVID MALLEY GROVE JOHN L. HENDRICKS WILLIAM JOHN HICKLIN PAUL H. HODGES JOHN LOUISE HOFFMAN AREND L. HORSTMEYER, JR. PERCY THEODORE HUNT KENNETH L. HURBERT GEORGE KEATINGE HURWITZ WILLIAM I. JACKSON ROBERT MICHAEL JACOB ROBERT LEIGH JACOBS CLARK MOORE JOHNSON, JR. RICHARD A. JOYCE MARK O. KASANIN RAYMOND LEE KITCHENER 18,1 Clubs MUSIC CLUB Rauf one: M. Zimmerman, j. Mindlin, Quong. A. Greenlglat. Rau' Iwo: D. Adcock, P. Moore, W. Anglim, D. Flamm, A. Ganiats. H, Von Holt, C. Greenberg. E. Fern, P. MHC.GlHDlS. Row three: G. Davis, S, Davis, B. Pisani, S. jones, C. Collins, J. Beard, T. Gem- perly, M. Basich, S. Clayton. Row four: J. Benet, P. Belmont, -S. Shalit, XV. Schweiger, A. Raphael, D. Rosen, N. Wood, C. Ellis. A. Weise. LATIN CLUB Row one: B. Burk, G. Fortin, H. Von Holt, A. Ganiats, S. Giles, E, Kumamnto, S. Nagase. Row Iwv: K. Adachi, R. Giske. A. Kneed- ler, Bohren, C. Kavanogh. Rau' flaw-ee: S, Jacobs, D. Hess, A. Herc ich, G. Golden, C. McClure. CHESS CLUB Raw one: A. Low, B. Pisani, U. Kapostins, P. Belmont, J. Mindlin. Rau' lun: H, Mitchell, C. Ellis, N, Wocmd, D, Rosen, P. Dare. FUTURE NURSES Row one: G. Giovannetti, A. Witt, C. Covington, P, Piifero, J. Bailey, C, Schenk, A. Kellogg, Rau' fum: H. Pomerantz, N. Tracy, A. Jones, D. Jones, S. Crim. H. Brady, Ron' Ibree.' A. Libby. B. Enmeier, J. Hemstreet. I.. Wfells, HALL GUARDS Fifi! row: A. Wong, C. Sansot, L. Haurat, D. Baron, H. Brady, D. Chan. Rau' Iwo! R. Bartolome, L. Sankowich, D. Meyer, S. Rusk, T. Jacklevich, M. Ekin, J. Browne, J. Edge- man, M. Clirna, J. Fay, Wy, P. Yee, D. Chan. Row three: B. Waight, M. West, L. Suitor, C. Givens, G. Fortln, P. Chew, S, Chuck, F. Wong, C. Lau, S. Chow, S. Leong. Row faur: P. Disterhift. B. Moore, B. Lyttle, M. Tanzer, G. Riddell, J. Phillips, C, Boehme, K. Crean, K. Shiltnn, L. Laws, D. Aram, I. Siewert, B. Brown. FUTURE TEACHERS Raw one: Y. Murcia, J. Wheeler, G. Russell, J. Bailey, B. Herbert, S. Brown, M. Basich. Row Iwo: J. Mindlin, G. Fraile, C. Peterson, I. Boqlrov. N. Oshurkoff, T. Kinstantino, Phillips. Row three: C. Olmg, D. Zabel. P. Watsrmn, W. Schwezger, M. Mialiovich, B. Pisani, D. Rosen. GEORGE KUWATANI JAMES CHAN LEONG VICTOR BERT LEVIT ERNEST HARDING LINDENAU RODGER WILLIAM LOWNEY ROBERT G. LUM JOHN D. LYNCH JOSEPH F. LYON PAUL MAIER FRANK H. MARTELL FRANK MATSUNO XVILLIAM F. MAUS PETER MERRILL ROLAND STANLEY MEYERZOVE MASAMI MIYAMOTO YOSHIAKI MIZUIRI WILLIAM MURL MORROW ROY KENNETH MURDOCK WILLIAM M. NEFF JOSEPH B. NEIL WILLIAM LEO NYHAN DONALD KEITH O'BRIEN FRANKLIN AMES PACKARD MILTON L. PILHASHY THOMAS E. PISINGER BRUCE ELWOOD POND JAMES QUONG IVAN ERNEST RAINER RONALD T. REUTHER CARL DONALD RINGCHOP MARTIN R. RYPINS FUMIO ALFRED SAITO NATHAN SCHNEIDER LOGAN JOSSELYN SCROGGY JAMES LEROY SEAVEY ROGER FRANCIS SHATZ ROBERT J. SIMMONS EDWARD W. SIMONS GERALD M. SLAVIN ROBERT L. SOCKOLOV ERNEST SPITZER HENRY STEIN THOMAS HUNTER STERN KING GEORGE STAHMANN RICHARD HENRY STRANZL HERBERT SUHR, JR. ADRIAN SUNSHINE DONALD SWEET RALPH HURST SWEET EDWIN TAKAHASHI TAKETSUGU TAKEI GARY E. TALBOT ROBERT TELLEFSEN VICTOR J. TORRES TOMOMI TSUCHITANI RALPH E. VAN DER NAILLEN, JR PETER L. VAN SICKLEN RONALD ERNEST VEHLOW DOUGLAS CARSON VERNON DONALD H. WATSON KENNETH HENDERSON WHITE FRANCIS ROBERT WIDDOP DWIGHT LOCKE WILBUR, III ALLEN D. WILLIAMS FRANK S. WILSON MANFRED ERNST WOLFF ALBERT C. WOLLENBERG, JR. DAVID S. WOOD KEIJIRO YAMASAKI YONEO YOSHIMURA Girls NANCY KING AIKEN AUDREY ADELAIDE ANDERSON BETTY ALICE ANDERSON ELAINE RAE ARONS JEAN LENORE ATHERTON DOROTHY BADAL BARBARA MARIE BANE BEVERLY JO BEELER JANETTE RITA BIAGINI JOAN LEIGH BLANK MARILYN BLECHMAN OLIVE ALISON BLISS IRENE EVELYN BLOOMEIELD JANE ANN BOE MARJORIE ELIZABETH BRANDT MAURINE ANN BRILL JOAN M. CANE ELAINE CARSTENS WANDALINE KAHALA CARTER BETTY B. CARTWRIOHT CARMEN ESTELLE CASTILLO HELEN CHAN CATHERINE M, CHAPMAN LORETTA CHERRY JANET HELEN CHILJIAN RHODA N. CHRISMAN CAROLYN NADYNE COEEIN PEARL CORRINNE COHN ROBIN ENID COLLINS SHIRLEY YVONNE COOK ELIZABETH COWEN HARRIET W. CUMMINGS DIANE DAVIDSON 185 HELIA DE KONINCK JOANE CHATFIELD DENBY NAOMI DRUCKMAN JEAN G. ELLIOTT ARLENE JANE ELLIS NANNIE MARIE EVERETT ROSLYN LOUISE EIGEL DOROTHE MARIE FINN LEONA JOSEPHINE FLINT YVONNE EOURNIER BARBARA MARIE FREEMAN ISABEL J. EREUD JOAN M. ERISBIB ALICE ASAKO EURUSHO DOROTHY M. GADD BARBARA JANE GALE RUTH MARY GALLAHER DOROTHY ANN GARBARINO DORIS E. GASS MARIANNE GITZLER SUSAN ELINOR GOLDSMITH DOROTHY JANE GOODING VIRGINIA HELEN GREEN MARLENE L. GREENBERG JOAN MARIE GREGORY JOAN GUNZBURGER BEVERLY LIZABETH HAMMETT JANE NEXVMAN HAMMOND CAROL ANN HEALY MYRTLE MARIE HEDBERG MARYETTA HELEN HEGGELUND ELIZABETH JOYCE HENRY JOAN HOLLEBAUGH SYLVIA C. HUDSON NANCY LEE ILES JACLYN CAROL JACOBS TANYA JEAN JARKIEH KARNA SOEIA JOHNSON SARITA KAY JOHNSON EDNA KATO GERALDINE KAUFMAN GLORIA KENNEDY MARILYN ALICE KING JOAN KOPPICH PAULINE SUE KUNz BARBARA JEAN LANE MARY C. LAUBER YVONNE MARIE LAVIGNE SHIRLENE LILLIAN LEBOVITZ MARILYN LEVY LILLIAN LIPP ANNETTE RUTH LOGASA GABRIELE LOHNBERG LISA EREDERIKA LOHNBERG MURIEL LORRAINE LOWE JANE LOUISE LOXVY CHARLOTTE MARIE LUDEMANN BEATRICE SWOPE LYSANDER EVELYN JOAN MECRAY MARION LEIGH MCKENNEY MILDRED DARLYN MERSICH PATRICIA ELLEN MYER NOELLE MILLER PHYLLIS JEAN MINTLE SERENA JUANITA MOORE YASUKO MORITA VERONICA J. MORRIS FRANCIS EDNA MULLAN BARBARA ANN MURPHY MARTA ANN NAGEL MARILYN LOUISE NAVE BARBARA ALYNE NEILS MARION AMELIA NITZSCHE HELEN S. OKUBO CONSUELA OLIVARES LORRAINE M. O'TOOLE JANET MAE OWEN SUMIKO OZAWA THEODOSIA M. PAPPADAKIS MARGARET CATHERINE PAPPAS LORNA MARIE PECK LUCERNE PERKINS CECILIA B. PESAK JOAN PHILLIPS NORMA LORRAINE PIERCE MARILYN MILLER POORE DELORES RAMONA RAINER DELLA MAYBERY REES KATHERINE L. REMENSPERGER JANE RISI MARY ALICE ROBERTS DIONE JOYCE ROSE BETTY JEAN ROVUAN BETTY JEAN RUMIN JEAN PAULINE SALTZMAN DOROTHY ROSE SAND LONETTE SCHEPPS MARILYN LOUISE SCHNEIDER NANCY ANNE SCHREPEL HARRIET JUSTINE SCOTT BARBARA E. SEID JOY ROSLYN SELIX JANE S. SEYMOUR ESTHER JEAN SIMON GRETA LOIS SMITH 186 Clubs SPANISH CLUB Row one: T. Schwartz, J. Hartman, A. Scott, C. Spalding, S. Swan- son. Row Iwo: A. Chun, -I. Matsuu. R. Lowry, N. Baumann, L. Horenstein. Row Ibree: P, Eisenberg, M. Tilin, E. McKenna, P. Urrea, B. Lyttle, D. Alsterlind. ITALIAN CLUB Row ape: L. Celillo, C. McClure, C. Greenberg, A. Greenblatt, A. Werchick, D, Flamm, J. Mindlin, P. Piffero. Row two: J. Lau- ce1rII1a, J. Hurwitz, S. Dillia, D. Rosen, N. Wmucmd, R. Kert, A. Weise. Row lbree: S. Deming, D. Canonica, E. Logwood, A. Ganiats, H. Van Holt, R, Pisani, D. Alsterlind. I CHINESE STUDENTS CLUB Row one: B. Tong, S. Chuck, J. Low, J. Fay O. Chung, A. Tong, S. Sun, H. Chin, A, Low Row two: P. Dare. R. Woo, F. Wong. A Chew, M. Chew, J. Yee, K. Yee, E. Hing Row three: S. Lee. A. Tom, W. Wong, R Low, I. Gokson, B. Fay, D. Chinn, D. Loo Still More Clubs SAN FRANCISCO YOUTH ASSOCIATION Row one: M. Basich, G. Creighton, J. Mendelson, J. Lehan, D. Sachs, M. Nielson. Tap raw: A. May, C. Peterson, W. Goldman, E. Alterman, M. Larson. USHERS RESERVE Raw one: A. Greenblat, J. Mindlin, C. Greenberg, D, D'Orazi, J. King, B, Beekman, C. Campbell, E. Gay, J. Kelly, L. Baer. Row 11420: J. Lawson, J. Mendelson, D. Sachs, A. Merritt, T. Trosper, D, Flamm, A. Ganiats, H. Von Holt, A. MacDonald, J. Beard, N. Oshurkolf, P. Marquis, A. Scott, G. Davis. Row llwee: S. Friend, K. Kang, P. Moore, J. Smith, A. Wharton, R. Berkoiuer, M. Baker, B. Crabtree, G: Dobbs, M. Molinar, S. Jones, I. Kusuboua, E. McKenna, J. Hartman, I. Kutrousky. Row four: A. Werchick, S. Davis A. Schwartz. D. Poynter, R. Lelane, P. Belmont, B. Erimeier, J. Benet, C. Geaberle, D Rosen, M. Basich, A. Aandroya, N. Wood, H. Weiss, W. Schweiger, M. Zimmerman. NORITA COHEN SOBEL MARIAN SYLVIA STARK JEANNE ELLEN TANAKA GLADIOLA TAYLOR SHERRILL TAYLOR ELLA MARY THORP THEODORA J. VAN LOGHEM HERMINE SHARON VINKLER BARBARA MILDRED VUCCI MARILYN JEAN XVAGNER CORINNE EMILY WALL FLORA ROSE WALTER MARILYN ANNE WARDLAXV JEAN RITA WESTON HAZEL LUCILLE WILSON FLORENCE ELENA WINNING JOANNE DALE WISEMAN MIYOKO YAGO SHIRLEY BARBARA YOUNG CLASS OF JANUARY, 1948 Boys ARISTOS ABRAMOPOULOS OSCAR BALTOR GEORGE CHARLES BANGE BARRY BRENNAN ALEXANDER BUCETA BRILL DONALD B. BROADHEAD MERLE LAWRENCE BUSH HUGO A. CARISSIMO RICHARD ALAN CLARKE WILLIAM MURRAY COHEN GEORGE A. CONDAS THEODORE H. CONWAY BENNING COOK, III WILLIAM DELAY I.LOYD WILLIAM DINKELSPIEL STUART P. ERIKSEN GEORGE LEWIS FRIEDMAN CHARLES EDWARD FOGE BARNEY GALLAND GLASER EDMUND MAURICE GREEN THEODORE HAMM, JR. JEROME B. HARRINGTON WILLIAM JAMES HENRY CHARLES GLEN HOPPER. JR. JAMES MITCHELL HORTON JOHN JOSEPH KINGSTON, JR. RALPH CHARLES LAMPE DAVID LEE PETER GEORGE LORET HERBERT WALTER MAIER HARRY D. MCCUNE, JR. PAUL MURRELL MCKOWEN ROBERT ALAN MILLER MAXIE TOSHI NAKAHIRO BARRY NEWMAN ROBERT JAMES OBERG MERRITT OLDS CHARLES DEAN OLIVER TOSHIO ONO BORIS ORLOFF DENNIS DAVID PATTON PAUL THOMAS POLLARD RICHARD CHARLES RATTO RANDOLPH VINCENT ROSSO ROBERT W. ROWELL HARRY HAMILTON SCOTT DONALD A. SMITH DONALD G. SMITH DUANE A. SMITH HAROLD SYLVAN STEINBERG ANTHONY JOHN STRATTA HOWARD MARTIN STRAUSS TERUMI TANAKA WILLIAM JOHN TUOHY DREW FITZGERALD TURNER ANTONE CORNEI.IUS VAN VLIET ROBERT DOUGLAS VOIGT STANTON GILMORE WARE CHARLES DAVID XVHITCHURCH PAUL MARTIN JOHN XVOLFF JAMES J. YATES, JR. Girls HELEN RUTH AIZENBERG BETH YVONNE ADLER JOAN ALBERSTROM LEONE FRANCES ALBERT BETTY JANE ALLAN ALICE DAHLGAARD ANDERSEN MARIANNE LENORE BAZETT MARGARET JOAN BEAL JOAN SHARON BENNETT DIANE JEANNE BOLGER JOAN ELIZABETH BREWER PATRICIA FLORENCE BRIDGES MILLICENT H. BURGER BARBARA CALLAN LORETTA BLANCHE CLINTON ELEFTERIA CONSTANCE DALES JACKLYN J. DARLING JOY LAVERNE DERRY LOIS MARIE EDDY BARBARA JANICE FALK JUNE LAURA FIDLER 187 LOIS FINGER DOROTHY ELEN FRASCH DONNA JEANNE FRENCH BARBARA GARFINKLE JOYCE ENID GARNER VALERIE DIANNE GREENLEY LOUISE HANFORD NANCY ANN HARDGRAVE TANIA TREDINNICK HERMAN MARY ANN HIRSCH ANN HOUSTOUN XANDRA JORGENSEN GAIL FRANCIS KEATING CHARLOTTE MARY KELLY JEANNE ANN KILSBY BARBARA JANICE KLOR BRENDA KOMSTHOFT CONSTANCE M. M. LERIOS JOAN ARDENE LINEER BARBARA ELIZABETH MASON JOAN MCDERMOTT VIRGINIA MAE MCGINLEY ASSAYE MIZOTA JEAN MORSE MARIANA MOUSSIER PATRICIA E. NOLAN ELIZABETH A. PFLUEGER MARGERY L. ROACH SYLVIA M. ROSEKIND JOANNE ROCK PATRICIA K. SCHERMERHORN BEVERLY IRMA SCHMIERER THAIS CAROL SKONDIN GLORIA ANNE SLACK ELLEN M. SMITH BEATRICE JEAN SPRINGER SALLY ANN STANKARD JANET LAVERNE STARK HELENE ADELE STEUER ZELDA PEARL STONE MILDRED CAROL THOMAS LYNDA WALDRON TYLER ALLA SUGENE UDADOFF JOANN UNGER OLGA S. VALLECILLO PATRICIA LILLIAN WALKER LYNN JUDITH WILLIAMS GLORIA MAY WOODIN CLASS OF JUNE, 1948 Boys ALDEN ADOLPH RICHARD E. AGUILAR FRANK JOSEPH ALBERTI RONALD FRANK ANTONIOLI LOREN HOWARD BAKER RICHARD M. BAKER JOHN C. BANNATYNE, JR. GREGORY STALEY BEAI. FLOYD D. BIRDZELL IBSEN F. BIRGERS MILTON BLAUSTEIN REX LEE BOLITHO HARRY T. BROOK CHARLES HOWARD BROWN HOWARD A. BROWN JR. BARRETT BRUNCH DONALD M. CAHEN CHARLES JOHN CATER, JR. THOMAS F. CAMPANELLA XVILLIAM A. CARTWRIGHT LYNN O. CHAPMAN JAMES CHIAO HIM FOO CHIN YEN BAK CHIN JOHN ANDREW COAKLEY MILTON G. COLLIS ARNOLD LEROY COLMAN GREGG CONLAN RICHARD THOMAS CONLAN ROBERT D. CRAIG LLYOD L. CUNNINGHAM DONALD LOUIS CLAUSEN JOHN J. DALPINO CONSTANTINE DAVIDENKO ' ROBERT DAVILA RICHARD ATTILIO DEMARTINI STEPHEN VUITT DIAMANT RICHARD LARIMORE DODGE ROBERT L. DONAHUE NEIL EDWARD DONOVAN ERNEST MANWARING DU BRAY HOXVARD S. DUDUNE RICHARD WILLIAM ENGESETH MORRIS FELDMAN JOHN FRANKLIN FOX, JR. CHARLES EDWARD FOYE, JR. ALVIN MARTIN FRANK MARTIN ARTHUR FRANKEL GEORGE L. FRIEDMAN MAURICE DELANO FULLER, JR. DAVID P. GEOFFRIAN ROBERT LEE GLENN THOMAS S. GLIKBARG HARRY XXI. GLUCKMAN 188 SLIDE RULE CLUB Raw one: L. Epstein, M. Gospe, P. Dare, R Pisani, S. Weil, P. Unck, R. Gilman. Roz two: H. Costa, D. Gomberg, R. Costa, J Woo, C. Au, V. Gokson, S.'Cohen, F. Becker C. Kaufman, L. Letofsky. Raw three: P. U rea, H. Mitcheu, F. Lopez, P. Wilhite, J Lawry, B. Hall, M. Kaunagh, B. Meyer, D Brando, P. Iwata. I VURITERS CLUB Row one: M. Baker, I.. Kay, D. Adcnck, B. I-Iiu. Row two: J. Freed, S. Snow, D. Addington, M. Jarrell. Row zhree: P. Eisenberg, W. Schweiger. SCIENCE CLUB Row nw.: L. Epstein, D. Gomberg, B. Pisani, B. Nason, R. Costa R. Epstein, A. Lynch. Row two: U, Ka ostins, P. Bonaccorse, VU Hearne, J. Hurwitz, V. Brochard, D. Xislerlind, M, Zimmerman B. Meyer, C. Kaufman. Raw fb:-ee: H. Hnskin , J. Luce, D. Hand D. Turnbell, R. Kmkead, C. Broberg, J. Carroli, S. Jones, T. Trosa per, J. Lawson, R. Schafer, M. Morris. Row fnur: J. Luce, D Keegan, F. Lopez, J. Lawry, H. Costa, B. Hall, F. Becker, J Schwadron, B. Leland, A. Wharton. TICKET SELLERS CLUB Row one: J. Tolson, J. Hartman, S, Levin, P. Matzger, R. Guggen- hime, T. Mathios, S. Friend, H. Raab, V. Goldman, S. Honrg. Row Iwo: J. Horowitz, V, Green, J. Jacobs, Maness, A, Honig, A. Cohn, A. Schwartz. Raw lbfee: D. Alsterlxnd, E. McKenna, R. Gherman, J. B Ines, M. Gospe, D. Poynter, R. Ghermano, V. Fer- nandez, R. Risgrough. POSTER CLUB Row one: Z. Zaretsky, W. Anglim, S. Ferroggiaro, T. Pederson, K. Kang, C. Lee, C. Collins, P. Reynolds, B. Mars, M. Soma, P. Tsuka- moto. Row two: L. Heinecke, B. Garcia, C. Leong, S. Clayton, O. Rudenko, S. Holodilolf, T. Jacklevrch, J. Richards, R. Perry, N. Krutchkolf. Top row: R. Klein, M. Clrma, B. Pisanl, R. Ebert, R. Ebert, D. Shannon, J, Phillips, H. Rodemacher. REGISTRY REPRESENTATIVES Row one: J, Wolfenden, S. Vause, D, Paslin, D. Meyer, B. Chinn. Row two: K. Adachi, J. Yoshinura, V. J. Au, L. Person, T. Jackie- Vich, S. Barnard, D. Petersen, M. Kurzman, P. Reynolds, D. 'But- tolph. Row lbfeex J. Bohren, R. Kandel, R. Price, L. Mannque, N, Urano, L. Sankowith, B. Lehmann, A, Low, B. Nason. Rauf four: B. Henry, B. Miailovich, B. Lyttle, B. Moore, K. Cole, P. Dare, E. Molire, V. Fernandez. 'I 7515 WILLIAM HARRISON GODWIN JOHN LELAND GORDON RICHARD B. COULD TERENCE R. GRAY JOHN LEE HAMMON ROBERT EDWARD HERZ RICHARD A. HICKLIN MARVIN ALLEN HOFFMAN WILLIAM F. HOLMES, JR. HARVEY K. Y. HOM WILLIAM HORSFALL, II WILLIAM FRANCIS HORSTMEYER ROBERT E. HOSMER ROBERT ANTHONY INMAN IAN SCOTT JACKSON EDWARD KAHN ALVIN M. KARSTENSEN DONALD BRITTON KENNINGTON RONALD HARVEY KERSHMAN HERBERT ROLAND KESSLER JIMMY M. LAM HOWARD C. LAW KERN G. LEE MARTIN ELIA LEVIN WALLACE IVAN LEVIN DAVID LEW PHILIP STEPHEN LIBERTY RICHARD LIEBER GEORGE ROBERT LITZ COLIN CAMPBELL LIVINGSTON LAUREN L. LOCEY, JR. MELVIN LOOK NORMAN ULULANI LUCAS HARRY LUM JOHN S. LYND THOMAS JAMES MCFETRIDGE CHARLES MCGRATH JOHN JAMES MACFADYEN FAY ARMAND MAGID JAMES GEORGE MANNHEIMER HUBERT C. MARCUS KURTIS R. MAYER RALPH NORMAN MENDELSON GREGORY EUGENE MERENBACH RALPH ROBERT MORENO WILLIAM H. MORGAN ROBERT R. MORRIS JOHN ARTHUR MORRISON THOMAS L. MORRISON GORDON MUNDAY GEORGE EDWARD MURRAY, JR. ANDREW CRAIGLAND NIELSEN ROGER LAWRENCE NYE ROBERT F. O'BRIEN DANIEL O'CONNELL, JR. GEORGE M. OMI ADRIAN G. PENEYRA, JR. DONAL LLOYD PRAEGER MILAN ROY RADOVICH JOHN RICHARD RASMUSSEN JOHN EDWARDS RICHARDS JAMES RUDOLPH JOHN ALLAF RUSSELL PAUL E. RUSSELL RICHARD W. RUSSELL ERWIN JOSEPH SCHIESSEI. RAYMOND SCHMIEDECKE DAVID M. SCHOENFELD JOSEPH EDWARD SCHWAB SIM SUSUMU SEIKI ROBERT O. SCHEPARDSON JOHN ROBERT SHUMAN ROBERT ARTHUR SMIRLE JAMES MALCOLM SMITH ROBERT PATTON SMITH STANLEY DELBERT SMITH EDMOND ROGER SOULIE GUY L. STEVICK, III DONALD CLINTON STIBICH JOHN DOYLE SUTORIUS FRANK RUSSELL TALBOT, JR. WILLIAM WARE THEISS G. ROBERT THOMPSON LYNN CHARLES ULM, JR. ROBERT L. VEHLOW RICHARD S. VREELAND STANLEY AYRTON WALKER GEORGE WASHINGTON. JR. DAVID CLARKE WAYLAND JAMES ALOE WESTON EDWARD M. WEBER WILLIAM B. WEBSTER JUSTIN LOWELL WILLIAMS JAMES WONG PAUL W. WONG GEORGE WILFRED WRIGHT SHELDON ARTHUR WRIGHT GEORGE YUEN SYLVAIN ZANGER Girls ILA LOUISE ADAMS DIANA ANSON BEVERLY ARDEN BALOGH MARY ELIZABETH BEANE ALDYNE CAROLYN BENNETT 189 ALINE BIER CLAIRE BILLSTEIN BARBARA JOAN BOWEN JANE ANN BROOKE NANETTE GAY BURKET MERLA C. BURSTEIN ROBIN ELLEN CALDWELL VIVIENNE P. CHRISTENSEN IRVENE ALVA CLAYTON IMOGENE MARION CORNELL LOUANNE MARIE COTA CLAUDETT ALOSIA CROCKER BEVERLY JOAN CROCKETT CAROLYN EDITH CROSE MARY I., DAVEY HELEN DIETRICH JOAN GEORGETTE DOHERTY JO ANN DRUEHL MARGOE ISOBEL DUNDAS MARCIA JOAN DUNN NADINE EHRENBERG BONNIE EUADNE EMMONS JERROL EPSTEIN NAOMI E. ETS-HOKIN MERIDEE LOUISE FILMER JEAN MARY FISCHER ALICE FONG BARBARA M, FRASER AGNES AKIKO FURUTA NANCY LOUISE GABA JACQUELINE VERE GEARY THEONE GEORGAS DOROTHY ALICE GERCKE GEORGANNE GETTLER DONA DEE GIPSON BARBARA JEAN GOODWIN DIANE ROBERTA GROSSO JEAN GRUTZMACHER BARBARA READING GULICK IRENE MARGUERITE GWINN LILLIAN ESTELLE HAHN MARILYN ELIZABETH HAMLYN NATALIE M. HANSEN GERALDYNE ELAINE HARVEY DIANE ARLENE HARRIS PATRICIA JUNE HESKINS HELEN HICKS JEAN HIME MARGARET ANN HITCHCOCK ELAINE CONSTANCE HO JOAN L, JAGO JOANNE HOPE JEPSON BETTY MARIE JONES JANET MADELINE JONES EDNA GERDA JORGENSEN LULA KALODIMAS JOAN AILEEN KLINKAM CYNTHIA KOVELL MARY LOIS KURTZWEIL JOSEPHINE C. LAGOMARSINO LILLIAN M. LAGOMARSINO CATHERINE MARIA LANTRY ALICE LEE BETTY ELIZABETH LEE CHARLOTTE MERRILYNE LEE NANCY JANE LELAND MARIE LOUISE LEWIS CAROLYN BARBARA LICHT ELLEN MARGET LLOYDS MOLLY LEE LOW BARBARA ANN MCGAHEY ELIZABETH M. MACDONALD MARY STUART MACEADYEN HELEN MUNRO MACKAY MARTHA JEAN MACKENZIE MEREDITH ANNE MAGNUS MADELINE JOAN MAHONEY YVONNE JOANNE MATOFF ROSE BERYL MAYER MAXINE DIANE MAZZANTI ELEANOR ANN MEREDITH HELENE CAROLYN MERSICH EDITH M. LANKENAU MARY ALEEN MEYER DONA MAE MEYERS ANN MICHAEL ROSALYN MINCER CAROL ELAINE MODLIN AVA DOROTTYA MOLNAR JUNE JUNKO MORIGUCHI PATRICIA J. NOLAN DIANE CORINNE NORWALL ROBERTA FRANCES NUGENT SONYA OEPENBERG BARBARA JEAN PAPAZIAN MARIE ELIZABETBH PERRY NORDYNE VALERIE PETERS EVELYN A. PICETTI LYDIA BARBARA POTTER CLAIRE MARIE PREISSER SALLY ANN PROSSER NANCY ANN REMENSPERGER ANNETTE BEATRICE ROSE ELIZABETH JEAN ROSE JEAN ROSE JOSEPHINE CHARLOTTE ROSE 190 1 Yrs- .Y ,LL ,L Row one E1 n K1 4 J h S LOWELL STAFF - FALL . A .' ame em, om wimmer, Sue Figel, Carol Morrison Donna D .1' A G1 - Sue Lmdner, Barbara Breit, Emery Ottey, Marilyn Levy. Row Ihr-eeg jerry Rggfcsfgl, A105:i1nI:5:se2iiFf?og10btu'g.. . Q , row, Bruce Cohn, Bob Lom, Dean Cleveland, Ed Logwogd, The Lowell San Franciscds oldest high school newspaper, The Lowell, had a very successful year. Under the capable editors, Marilyn Levy in the fall term, and Sue Figel in fhe 5Pf1f18 ffffm, the paper continued the traditional Items as well as adding many new and interesting features. Assisting Marilyn as associate editor was Carole Morrison. Bob Lom was the sports editor in the fall term and the page editors were Emery Ottey, Suzy Linfdner and Sue Figel. .Bruce Cohn, the associate editor, assisted Sue along with Jon Tolson as sports editor and Sharon Deming, Joni Horowitz and Phyllis Gurvitz as page editors, This bi-monthly paper was founded in 1898 and all through the past 58 years it has kept abreast with the times, I if t d I U1 D Cl LOWELL STAFF -- FALL ff J rea e : . an, . eveland. Standilng: S. Lindner. Miidl K1 ' C M ' - . M. Levy. Rigbl, Jealed: J, Swimmer, E. Logwood. Smndingi S.g Figel, l:fil1,LevyI omsoni S' Flgeli J. swimmer, Raw one: S. Deming, G. Dobbs, W. Alter, S. Figel, T, Pedersen, S. Abel. Rauf Iwo! J. Horowitz, B. Colm, J. Falk, K. Kang. Row tim-ee: T. Kettleson, J. Tolson, D. Blackwell, B. Ellcson. if 1 :.':E V :IZ -3 EEE MARILYN LEVY Fall Editor SUSAN EIGEI. sp,-mg Emm- 'X V31 R. 2 1- iff? -1-ff I . ,sp i,Eyikh JOAN RUTH ROSENBERG MARILYN JANE ROTH JOANNE E. ROTHSCHILD SETSUKO S. SAITO ELIZABETH A. SCHEIDTMANN BEVERLY MARIE SCHMIDT ESTELLE SCHNEIDER JOANNE FLORENCE SELENE PATRICIA ANN SERETH HAZEL L. Y. SHEU ELENA V. SHIBINSKY BARBARA GERTRUDE SIMS HARRIET B. SI.OSS BARBARA ANN SMIRLE MICI-II SODA JOAN MARILYN STANLEY MARVIS BLOSSOM STEINBERG CAROLE JEAN STEPHENS MARILYN STEXVART JOAN ARDEN STORIE ANNE HELEN STOVSKY BARBARA ANN TADLOCK MARILYN ELSIE THOMPSON NORA Z. THOMPSON BEVERLY HELEN TIMMONS PI-IYLLIS ANN TOBY MARGARET TROWBIIIDGE KAY VAN VLIET ANGELINA VOZIKES NORMA ANNE XVALSH CATHLEEN PATRICIA XVATERS BETTY ELLEN XWEAVER FRANCIS ANN WEILER JUNE SUSAN WELCH JANET JOAN XVERNHAM HELEN XVINEROTH AMY WONG MARY WONG VERA WONG JANET WOOD CHARLOTTE ANN NVORK JENNIE YEE NANCY YOUNG NORINE ALICE ZAHN CLASS OF JANUARY, 1949 Boys LAWRENCE ARMEND ALBEDI CHARLES D, ALLEN NAPOLEON ARGUETA ROGER P. ARTOUX ALBERT J. BACIOCCO, JR. ROBERT BEALE, JR. HYMAN MAXWELL BERSTON JOHN ERWIN BLANZ RONALD DANA BOOTH EARL PAUL BOSSIER LEONARD S. CAHEN LAWRENCE M. CAHN ARISTIDES ALECK CALEAS GEORGE JOSEPH CALLAHAN. JR. GXVYNNE G. CHAPPELL JAMES EDWARD CLYMO, JR. MARVIN BRUCE COHN DAVID ANDREW CONRAD JOHN ALLAN COOPER PHILIP CHARLES CUNNINGHAM ALAN STANLEY DOCTOR JEFFERSON DOOLITTLE DAVID J. DORWARD DONN CHARLES DOUGLASS ADOLPH LAXVLER DREES MERVYN EUGENE DURLESTER RICHARD FRANCIS EBNER VINCENT FRANK GALLO WILLIAM ROBERT GELARDI LAWRENCE K. GOLDSMITH LAXYIRENCE GRAUBART HERBERT E. GRAYWOOD HERBERT B. GREEN FRED GREEN RICHARD P. GROSS. JR. ALLYN R. HAMILTON LAURENCE RAYMOND HANNA ALAN EREDERICK HENDRICKSON ELBERT MYRON HOHENRATH WILLIAM JOHN HOOY MORTON HERBERT HORN RODNEY RUSSELL HUGHES EARL M. JACKSON MARVIN HARRY JACOBY JERALD D. JAMES THOMAS XVI-IITNEY JOHNSON JAMES C. JONES WARREN E. KARBY JOE KARP KENNETH A. R. KENNEDY JAMES S, KONKEL I.AWRENCE A. KRUSE, JR. EDWARD A. LARK KENNETH G. LEONE STANLEY M. LEVIN CHEW! YUEN LOW EDWARD JAMES MALONE JAMES ADDISON MANEGGIE 191 WILLIAM JOHN MARSICO JIMMIE L. MCCRAY JAMES D. MCMANUS JOHN C. MILLER IGNATIUS NELSON HORACE W. OREAR CHARLES H. OSTEIELD CHARLES LOUIS OVERSTREET PHILIP JOSEPH PAHL JAMES WINSATT PALMER FRANK RAYMOND POWELL EDMUND A. REARDON RICHARD ALBERT SACCANI JOHN C. SCHLOBOHM RUDOLPH JOSEPH SCHULKEN GUNJI GEORGE SHIRO LAWRENCE BARBE SMITH MARTIN HILBERT SOSNICK DAVID STACKPOLE FRANKLIN WILLIAM STORTI RUDOLPH C. SUAREZ STANLEY ROBERT SYDEL WILLIAM WONG TREND STANLEY B. TORNEK WILMER TSUKAMOTO MARCO FREDERICK WEISS FRANK L. WHITE EDWIN SIMMS WILLIAMS SIDNEY L. WOTMAN SHOGO YAMAMOTO STEPHEN W. YEE Girls JACQUELINE APEEL MARIE ESTELLE ATTINGER CAROLINE JACOBSEN BRETT VALERIE JOAN BUSHBERG JOAN PATRICIA BUSSE MERCEDES MEREDITH CARTER MARJORIE EMMA COHN VALERIE JOYCE COHN PHYLLIS P. COOK LOUISE D. CRETAN RACHEL M. CURIEL AGLAIA DALDAS CAROL JOICE DEMICK DEBORAH B. DICKEY HENRIETTA M. EDWARDS JEANNETTE M. ETCHEVERRY AMELIA J FALASCO JEAN E. EOWLER RUTH ELIZABETH EOX RITA ELIZABETH FRANK GLORIA GINN DOREEN EDNA GOLDTHWAITE ZELMA E. GREENBERG MARLENE A. GREENBLAT VIRGINIA LEE GRIFFIN PATRICIA E. GRILLEY ARDYTHE GROSS CAROLYN ELISE HERSHEIELD LOIS JUNE HERTING HELEN JACOBS JANICE CAROLYN JONES JOAN K. C. KILPATRICK SHIRLEY LAVON KINDSEATHER DORIS ELEANOR LEVY JANE J. LUM SUSAN G. LUM DOREEN MANNION BETTY CHARLOTTE MARGULEAS BEVERLY CLAIRE MCCANN ALBERTA V. McKEE DOLORES JEAN MOONEY BARBARA LUCILE MORROW JANA MURIEL NEILL MARIANNE ROSE NYHAN FRANCISCA DE C. OLIVARES MARILYN JEAN OLSON NANCY JOYCE PALMER BESSIE PAPPADAKIS MARGARETTE A. PARKER CHERIE I. PETERSEN DOROTHEA ELIZABETH POLIVKA MARGARET E. POLGLASE AUDREY REGINA POMERANTZ MARILYN ETHEL RABINOVICH DOROTHY CAMERON REYNOLDS CORNELIA B. RHOADS DOROTHY ELIZABETH ROGERS BARBARA A. RUBEN JOAN DENISE SAWYER ANNAMARIE SCHIESSEL JANET CARROLL SCOTT DOROTHY ANN SHOEMATE MARY ANN SLOANE HELEN VALENTINE SMIRNOEE ANNABELLE IRLAN SNYDER JANET ELIZABETH STONE JEANNE E. SUSNOW FRANCES THOMPSON EIKO TSUCHITANI JANICE ANN WACKS BARBARA G. WALKER DENISE DARLENE WAMPI.ER 192 The Red and White RED AND WHITE STAFF - FALL Row one: Barbara Texiera, Arnell Shows, Gwen Davis, Anita Washington, Carole Gold, Judy Rosenthal. Raw two: Mr. Buckley, Sue Barnard, Yvonne Dandy, Roz Perry, Joyce Richards, David Green. Both the fall and Spring Red and While staffs have worked very diligently this past term. Since this year is LoWell's centennial, the editor and her associates de- cided to bring you this 100-year book commemorating Lowell's past. This yearbook is the largest 'book any high school has ever produced and the members of the Staff are very proud of it. We hope that you readers will appre- ciate all Of our endeavors and be as boastful of it as we are. ' Gwen Davis was the editor of both the fall and Spring terms and her associate for the fall term was GWEN DAVIS Editor . 0 E -.4 ,V , 4 -' .fy . 4' 4- islet' i i' E Rosslyn Perry and in the spring Barbara Texiera. Be- sides her job as editor, Gwen performed all of the art work in this yearbook. Carole Gold and joan Mendelson took care of the linanoial end of the yearbook, while Anita Washing- ton and Yvonne Dandy made up the senior section. The activities editors were Joyce Richards an-d Bar- bara Texiera and the copy editor was Judy Nakamoto. Covering the sports in the fall was Bob Stewart and in the spring Richard Soward was the very capable sports editor. RED AND WHITE STAFF - FALL '55 Lefl freutedj: B. Texiera. fSIandingJ.' D. Green, A. Washington. Rigbl frealedl: R. Perry, A. Shows. The Red and White RED AND WHITE STAFF - SPRING Rou' one: J. Falk, B. Seeley, K. Kang, G. Davis, C. Nickelson, J. Nakamoto, S. Friend, Y. Dandy, M. Larsen. Row two! B. Texiera, J. Kafantaris, J. Mendelson, D. Addington. M. jarrell, P. Moore. Rou' zhrcfer S. Ginsberg, L. Vlautin, J. Erskine, I.. Malfanti. S. Abel, R. Soward, R. Posada. STAFF AT WORK RED AND WHITE STAFF IN ACTION Tap row: jean Erskine and Lynn Maliantig Yvonne Row ane: Gwen Davis, Joan Mandelson, Mimi Fraser. Dandy, Richard Soward, and Al Bent. Boitom row: Raw two: Karina Kang, Diane O'Neill, Sue Ginsberg, jean Erskine and Lynn Vlauting Mike Larsen, Barbara Julie Petersen, Suzy Friend. Texiera, Dianne Addington and Judy Nakamoto. SHIRLEE KATHLEEN WENTZEL ELEANOR H. WONG SHIRLEY WOOLF KAY YAMADA CLASS OF JUNE 1949 Boys JAMES C. ALBERT DAVID CHARLES ALCIATI E. FORREST ANDERSON. JR. GUS ANTONIS NICK J. ANTONIS JAMES M. ARTHURS PAUL LLOYD ASHMORE ANDREW BACHELS. JR. ROBERT E. BAILEY T. JEROME BARNES JAMES W. BARNETT GEORGE DEWEY BARRON JOHN M. BASSUS NORMAN DUANE BEAL ALAN MODLIN BILLE zENE D. BOHRER, JR. ROBERT J. BRACCO ALPHEUS BULL, JR. GILBERT L. CASAREZ JOHNSON CHIAO DONALD CHU EUGENE SPEED CHU BRUCE WILLIAM COLE ROBERT L. CONLAN RICHARD J. COOKE JOHN V. COPREN, JR. RAMON CURIEL ROLAND HENRY DALQUIE JOHN MARTIN DANDFORD LUKE LUIGI DELL'ORTO EARLE THOMAS, DEWEY, JR. REGINALD LOUIS DOGGETT, JR PHILLIP JAMES DONNELLY ROBERT JAMES DONOVAN RICHARD RUDOLPH DRESEL HARVEY CURTIS EDELMAN ARTHUR BISHOP ELLSWORTH WILLIAM H. ESPENSHADE, JR. DAVID KENNETH EVERS FRITZ FENSTER MICHAEL FIEDLER RONALD G. FIGEL JAMES HOBART FINNEY FREDERICK N. FIRESTONE ROBERT SYDNEY FISHER LOUIS FOLDEN, JR. WINTON H. FREY, JR. NORMAN H. FREIDMAN CHARLES WILLIAM FRIEDRICHS HENRY JAMES FUNG, JR. RICHARD STANLEY FYE ALLEN GAN LOUIS JAMES GEISSBERGER JAMES THOMAS GILLESPIE DOUGLAS C. GLADSTONE ROBERT HENRY GLENN ZADO GOLDENBERG LEONARD H. GONG LEON J. GONZALES GERALD A. GOULD TED M. GOULD HAROLD LYMAN GRANT FREEMAN GRANUM JOHN ROBERT GREEN ZAN S. GREEN RICHARD MARTIN GROSS HARRY BISHOP HAMBLY, III RUDOLF HAMMEL CHARLES K. HECKER HAROLD PHILLIPS HILL, JR. ARTHUR ROBERT HILLEBRANDT SUSUMU HIRANO PHIL VER PLANCK HOFFMAN ROBERT BERNARD HOFFMAN LEWISMICHAEL HORNE GEORGE HORSFALL, JR. WALTER ROY HOVESTADT HOWARD HASTINGS HOYT, JR. CROSBY HYDE JACK LELAND HYMES YUKIO ISOYE JOHN KENNETH JESS MORRELL JOHNSON CLIFFORD TERRELL JONES WILLIAM KASNER DAVID KATCH VINCENT KEVIN KELLY WALTER L. KINTZ, JR. MALCOLM STERN KOHN HOWARD JOSEPH KONRAD RICHARD SPIRO KORDELOS JOHN E. LARK VERNE A. LAUGHTON BENJAMIN FRANKLIN LEGERE JESSE M. LEVY, III DOUGLAS WARREN LINDER DEAN RAY LINDSAY HERBERT DONALD LOEW 193 ELDREDGE H. LOEWENGUTH, JR. WILLIAM JOSEPH LOUIE WILLKIE LUM GRANT LIND MARKILLIE WALTER JOSEPH MARTENSON FRANCIS JOSEPH MASCARELLI EDWARD NOBORU MATSUI ALAN DAVID MATZGER THOMAS PLEASANTS MCCREA, III MATTHEW BERNARD MCGOWAN EDGAR BERT MCREYNOLDS DAVID MARK MENDELSOHN LOUIS JOHN MENKHAUSEN HAROLD L. MESSINGER, JR. RONALD JULIAN MIGUEL ROBERT SHORE MISRACH ROGER VINCENT MOSLEY CARL NAGEL GERALD MARSTON NAUMAN PAUL RAYMOND NUSSBAUM WILLIAM ROY OJHANLON RONALD JAY OSTROW WILLIAM HARTLEY OWEN JOSEPH L. PATTISON JOSEPH N. PICETTI DONALD MICHAEL PLATT JAMES PETER PLESSAS ERNEST GEORGE PRINCE LEMUEL PURTEET PAUL EDWARD RASMUSSEN STANFORD A. RAYMOND ALBERT K. REVERE RICHARD W. RHODES HARRY JAMES ROEBLING ADOLPH S. ROSEKRANS SHELDON ROSENTHAL MELVIN LYNNE RUBIN RENE M. SCHOENNAUER DANIEL ASHER SHARP TAKASHI SHIMIZU STANFORD B. SPEIZER ERNEST A. SPIESS EARL LEONARD STERN ALAN ROBERT STEUER WILLIAM B. STEVENSON PAUL J. STEWART EDWARD STILL FRANK BARRY STONE JAMES STUART MIKIO SUZUKI WALTER DEAN SWANSON WILLIAM HUGH TALBOTT SANFORD TANDOWSKY MARVIN JAY TARLOW ROSS D. THURSTON I RICHARD WELLMAN TOPHAM JOHN A. TRAINA, JR- ROBERT L. VAN AUSTEN RONALD B. VOGEL GEORGE VORONIN DELBERT C. XVEAVER PETER E. WATT MICHAEL FITCH VUERNHAM JORDAN ROCKWOOD WILBUR ARLAN NING WONG KARL PAUL WONG JAMES PAUL WOOLLOMES. JR- NORMAN L. YAMRON . FRANK W. YATES KENICHI YOKOGAWA JAMES MITSURU YONEMOTO CLARENCE LOW YOUNG ANDREW JOHN ZORBAS Girls LOUISE BARSOTTI ROSE BECKMAN CATHERINE SERGIUS BELOV ELIZABETH LOUISE BERTRAM SHEILA T. BERKE JOYCE BERMAN NANCY JOAN BJORK LONIE GRACE BLACKMAN DIANA BORETA MARILYNE LOU BOYLE GLORIA BRECKENRIDGE DONNA M. BREWER DEBORAH ANNE BRIDWELL JOAN IRENE BRODERICK ARVIA BROOKS ANNA I. BUCK I.ILA I.. BURNS BARBARA JEAN BURSTEIN JANET LOUISE CARBIENER JEANNE ALAIDA CATUREGLI VERONICA ANN CHU PATRICIA ANN CLARK MARLENE RUTH COHN MARGARET A. CONROY MERIAM ARLINE COOPER ZELMA CIUXMER HELEN CURIEL JEANNETTE SADIE DANIEL SHEILA LOUISE DARLING SYLVIA JOAN DAVIDSON 194 RED CROSS Row one: T. Pedersen, R. Levin, P. Fell, B. Cohn, N. Monasch, L. Vlautin, J. Swimmer, J. Vargo, C. Spaulding. Row two: A. Axt, D. Canonica, W. Anglim, J. Tuhtan. M. Lee, C. McClure, D. Sachs, C. Collins, D. Taylor, L. Malfanti, F. Gama, A. Libby. Row three: J. Fay, P. Moore, J, Steiner, S, Ferroggiaro, P. Ikezoe, J. Hurwitz, C. Carmack, E. Tom, M. Molinar, F. Skillman, S. Sherman, I. Priest, L, Horenstein. Row four: R. Anderson, W. Schweiger, S. Israel, B. Pisani, D. Shannon, C. Logwood, P. Disterheft, C. Sansot, B. Miailovich, P. Unck, S. Shalit. unior Red Cross One of the most active junior Red Cross chapters in San Francisco is the Lowell chapter. They participate in many worthwhile activities on local, national, and world-wide levels. They make tray favors, wall hangings, and nut and candy cups to give to the San Francisco hospitals for all the holidays. Entertainment is provided for the hos- pitals. Wall hangings are made for the USO groups in San Francisco. On the national level, their activities include Sending hogan kits to the Navajos and contributing articles to the Naiiomzl IUZZWILII of the Junior Red Cross. Money is collected each March in the annual membership drive to the Red Cross. Better relationships are developed when the junior Red Cross Sends scrap books and gifts to schools abroad. Illustrated class work is sent to the Eskimos and samples of art work and tape-recorded music is sent to foreign schools. The leaders of this energetic group in the fall of '55 were Charles McClure, presidentg Diane Sachs, vice president, joan Tuhtan, secretaryg and Norma Ivelich, treasurer. Judy Levetin is president this spring with Joan Tuh- tan assisting her as vice president. Mary Ann Lee is secretary and Norma Ivelich is treasurer. NATIONAL RED CROSS Picture taken at the Pacific Area Office of the American National Red Cross which was the former Lowell site. Seated on a bench which commemorates the former Boys' Hi h School and Lowell High School is Mr. D. Zellerbach, a Loweil graduate and a member of the Nations Board of Governors. Standing are Charles McClure, present chairman of the Junior Red Cross Council of Lowell, and Kyra Opper- mann, former chairman of the junior Red Cross of Lowell and of the San Francisco junior Red Cross Cit -Wide Committee, she is now chairman of the Junior Red Cross Colslege Activities for the University of California, Berkeley Chapter. BANK OF AMERICA Bank Of America Awards Row one: S. Vause, J. Burton, I. Davies, P. Belmont. Rau' luv: J. Kiil, D. Rosen, M. Gospe. BANK OF AMERICA AWARDS The basic purpose of the Achievement Awards Pro- ram 15 to stimulate and encourage high school Stu- ents in their academic, vocational and citizenship aining. Six thousand Awards consisting of certificates, Ophy cups, ribbons and 344,900 in cash awards was resented in the spring of this year to outstanding niors in recognition Of scholastic attainment and zrticipation in school and community activities. The Final Selection Committee is composed Of ven outstanding citizens, representative of the area Ider the chairmanship of a prominent educator who Oesn't vote. The seven judges interview the finalists in a group Ind determine the amount of award each Hnalist will :ceive at the Achievement Day Dinner Program, Fri- Clothing Drive day, May 18, 1956, in Sacramento, in the Empire Room of the Senator Hotel. The three students from Lowell who were zone finalists were Peter Belmont, first place in Science and Mathematics, Joan Burton, first place in Liberal Arts, and, David Rosen, second place in Fine Arts. i CLOTHING DRIVE A clothing drive was held in january to help victims of the flood. Miss Lorigan initiated the drive by placing a notice in the bulletin for unused clothes to donate to the Soroptimist drive for relief to Hood victims. The results surpassed all expectations and the drive continued for over a week. The clothes went to Klamath, the Russian River, and Sacramento. Later, Miss Lorigan received a letter of appreciation from the Soroptimists stating that the donations were gratefully received. DONNA KAY DECKER GAY ORELENE DEMING MARIA DMITRIEFF DONA E. DODSON VIRGINIA DRUMM DOROTHY MARY DIXON HENRIETTA EDWARDS PHYLLIS YVONNE EHRENBERG MARILYN JOYCE FNOS JOAN PAVORMAN NORMA ANN FAVORS LOUISE FERNANDES SALLY LEE FLINN DIAN FOSSEY HELEN EONG MAUREEN K. FRANKEN BARBARA LOIS FREEMAN JEANNE GAMMILL ELEANOR LOUIS GATES EVELYN GERLUND ELIZABETH JANE GIFFIN ROSALIE ANN GLANZER BARBARA ANNE GLOVER JUDITH GLUCK BETTY JEAN GREEN LILLIAN GRIMALDI PATSY ANN GROSSMAN PATRICIA ANN HALL SUZANNE HAMILTON MARGARET KAY HANSON ALICE MARILYN HASKELI. MARGOT CAROLYN HELMUTH WILMA JO.ANN HERSH JANET JEANE HICKS JOAN HIGLEY GRAYDON HINDLEY JANE MARGRAVES HOLT ANN E. HUNDERT JANET E. ISHIDA ANITA JIMENEZ MARIJANE JOHNSON NANCY ELIZABETH JOHNSON ELIZABETH JANE JOHNSTONE ILAYNE BARBARA KATZ GLORIA KAY KESSLER THELMA ELIZABE TH KLAES RACHEL KURUMA JUNE DIONE KLAUSER ROSEMARY L. LAGOMARSINO JANET KIM LAU LILLIAN MARLENE LAWSON EILEEN NATALE LEIT DALE I. LEONARD BETTE CLAIRE LEONG LOU ANN LETHER SUE GOAD LEVEIRA IRENE LIND KATHRYN LOWY ELIZABETH L. LUDEMANN DIANE LYNCH PATRICIA ANN MAHAN HILDUR TANNEKE MAHL INA MAE MARTIN MERIEL MILLER DENISE COPLON MODLIN ALVINA E. MONTEVERDE MARJORIE LOUISE MORRISON NANCY A. MULLARKY MARILYN LOIS MUNK NATALIE NEFF JOYCE ANN NELSON EI.LAUISE G. NELSON ROSE KING NG SUSAN MONICA NG DOLORES ETHEL NICOLAI DONNA IRENE PARRISH JOSEPHINE MARIE PAVUSA PATRICIA ANN PEDERSEN EVELYN CLAIRE PIELHOP ANNA MAE POWELL MARCIANNE RAUB HELEN LOUISE RAY JUNE RAY ANNA-MARIE REGALIA ELORENE PAULA RESNICK SHIRLEY ELAINE RHODE ROSALIE ROBLES GLORIA JEANNE ROSEN RUTH DALE ROSENWALD IRENE K. SAKAI ELLEN SANCHEZ JANET SASSOON CARMEN E, SAVAGE IRENE ETHNA SHIMMEL NANCY BETH SCHOENFELD LUCRETIA LEE SCOTT YVONNE THERESE SECAIL MAXINE LOIS SHAPE AUDREY MAY SHAPIRO CAROL MAE SILVERMAN ATHALIE VIOLET SMITH ANNA SOLOMON MYRA LEE SOWLE JOAN WINTHROP SPECK MARY JEAN STANKARD 195 MARUMI SUYEYASU JOY SUGARMAN MARIAN FUJIKO TAKAYAMA LOTUS WONG TEND MARGARET KAY TERRY GAYLE JOANNE TRAVIS KAY KEIKO URANO HELEN MARY VENTURA SONDRA LEE WALDEN JUNE LINNE WALLENBERG JUDITH WELLS SHARON KAYE WHITAKER ELEANOR CLAIRE WILLARD JOAN MARIE WILI IAMS FRANCES JEAN WILSON PATRICIA MAE WILSON GERALDINE RITA WOLF AUDREY JEANNE WOOD KARMA WRIGHT ALMA R. ZITO NANCY H. ZACHARIAH CLASS OF JANUARY. 1950 Boys JESS W. ABRAMOVITZ ROBERT EMMETT ALLEN. JR. HERBERT SVEN ANDERSON JACK EDWIN ANDERSON JOHN JOSEPH APFFEL HAROLD B. AUERBACH DONALD HARRY AUSLEN DANIEL M. BENATAR FRANKLIN BENJAMIN ROBERT K. BLISS WAYNE RAY BROWN LEON BRUSCHERA STERLING BUNNELL, JR. CHARLES HADSELL BYRNS JOHN CAMBOURIS THOMAS E. CASSIDY LLYOD B. CHRISTIANSEN DAVID WASHBURN CHIPMAN IVAN M. COHEN RICHARD P. COHEN DONALD CHARLES COLOTTO GARTH EDWARD COOK CARYL COPE RUSSELL THOMAS CRONIN JAMES ANTHONY DALPINO RONALD KENT DAVEY RAYMOND MARK DIMOND RICHARD FERRARI LAWRENCE FONES DONALD RALPH FRENCH WERNER FREDERICK GEHRKE EDWARD WILLIAM GRENINGER DANIEL GRUNDVIG ALVIN TEVIS GUTHERTZ ANDREW MICHAEL HARRAGON NORMAN LEE HEGGELUND DONALD KEITH HOLMES SHIRO HORITA FREDERICK P. HORSTMEYER STEVEN VICTOR HUTCHISON HARRY S. JACOB WILLIAM BENJAMIN JAMES, JR. BRUCE ROBERT KAUFMAN MARTIN KAUFMAN , FRANK S. KIMURA BASIL WILLIAM KONDE THEODORE GILBERT LEFRANCOIS WALTER COYLE LESTER, JR. STEWART ARTHUR LINDAUER JACK MARLATTE GEORGE MARTINEZ, JR. CHARLES FRANK MARTYN ATSUMU MATSUOKA RONALD MAURICE EDWIN DAVID MAYER FREDERICK SIGMUND MAYER RICHARD B, MCCONKIE ,MARX PETER MOHR, JR. PAUL PETER MORENA ALWYEN JOHN NELSON RICHARD ALLYN NYSTROM DAVID OFFENBERG WILLIAM STANLEY PARDY WILLIAM JOHN PETROS, JR. PAUL POULOS, JR. GEORGE OURAY RICE JAMES HATTON RISBROUGH, JR. PAUL ROBBINS JAMES DAVID ROSENTHAL JOSEPH I. ROTENBERG JACK LINCOLN ROY PETER SARTORIO, JR. IRWIN WALTER SCHONBERGER GRANT ALAN SETTLEMIER ARNOLD LEWIS SIEGEL HERBERT I. SILBERBERG ALEX MICHAEL SLENKIN HERBERT REYNOLDS SMITH ALFRED CHARLES STEINBERG JOHN TARANTINO RICHARD LEE TOWNSLEY 196 Forensic Society FORENSICS Row one: S. Hone, T. Cummings, B. Goldman, M. Axelrad, M. A. Lee, D. Fernandez, Row two: D. Blight, J. T. Carroll, C. Breyer, B. Gilman, L. Young, J. Mindlin. Row three: A. Werchich, R. Burton. Row faur: S. Jacobs, D. Sachs, M. Rucka, L. Snaider, B. Goldman. During this year the Forensic Society has contrib- uted much educational stimulus to Lowell-ranging from the pure speech forms to public discussions of controversial subjects. The backbone of the forensic year is the tournaments held by schools throughout California, in which com- petitive speaking is carried on. Events on the agenda usually include debate, extemporaneous and im- promptu speaking, oratory, and presentations of dramatic and humorous declamations, and oratorical speeches. Besides the tournaments, many outside organizations hold speech contests, included is the Chinese Lions Club, in which Mary Ann Lee took first place, the Native Sons, in which Bill Goldman took second, and the American Legion, in which Mike Axelrad placed third. Lowell High is a member of several national and local speech associations, the most important of the is the National Forensic League CN.F.L.j, a nation honor society of speech students, in which membersh must be earned. Also, Lowell is a charter member the Northern California High School Speech Ass- ciation fN.C.H.S.S.A.j, which is the sponsoring boi for the Northern California tournaments. The thi organization is the San Francisco Forensic Associatic comprised of the San Francisco public and paroch sch-ools. This year's president is Bill Goldman, who aut matically is president of the Lowell Chapter of t N.F.L. and the N.C.H.S.S.A, Bill is also president the S.F.F.A. Besides Bill, fall officers were Jun Biskind, vice-president, Tondi Cummings, secreta. and Vince Fernandez, treasurer. The spring ofiic. were the same for president and treasurer, with Mi Axelrad, vice-president, and Mary Ann Lee, secreta Wins Man Honors Since the retirement Of Mr, George Lorbeer, vet- eran coach, the sponsor and advisor has been Mr. Jack Anderson. The most important of the aspects concerning the Forensic Society are the wide variety of programs it sponsors. For instance, earlier this year the society sent the Lowell delegation to the regional meeting of the Conference of Christians and Jews, and, just recently, ent three delegations representing countries to the odel United Nations atthe University of California. he program of the Forensic Society is both enjoyable and educational. In the field of awards, Lowell has always been a winner-this year's honors included the debate Cham- pionship ar Stanford, won by Bill Goldman and Arne Werchick, the Sweepstakes award for the top school at the Lincoln High School Tournament, best school t the Model U.N, at the University of California, only orthern California high school invited to the Uni- versi-ty of Southern California invitational tournament, fourth place in exremp at State finals, and many others. Presently there are forty members training and par- ticipating, twenty-five who regularly compete in state- wide competition. Lowell can claim not only many of the best speakers in California, but the largest ex-tra- curricular speech association in California. Some Of the top speakers this year were Bill Goldman, Arne Werchick, Mike Axelrad, Mary Ann Lee, and Vince Fernandez. Others who competed regularly were Joey Mindlin, Ken Bley, Bonnie Goldman, Mary Wade, Brenda Gilman, Valerie Dong, Diane Sachs, Leonard Snider, Mike Rucka, Charles McClure, Steve Jacobs, Steve Hone, Tondi Cummings, Judie Biskind, Stan Jackson, Phil Crosby, Alan Lerch, Alan May, and Chucky Breyer. The Lowell Forensic Society is open to any Student, providing an abundance of enjoyment, and also edu- cational opportunity. FORENSIC SOCIETY Row one: Mr. Anderson instructs Speakers. Bill Goldman practices his debate case. Row Iwo: Proud winners pose with trophies won at tournaments, Leonard Snaider holds up membership in N.F.L. ROLAND C. WEDEMEYER RICHARD A. WILLIS HARRY K. WONG WILLIAM EDWARD YOUNG, J R. GEORGE PAUL ZELL Girls IRENE D. AGORASTOS ELIZABETH ANDERSON SALLY JEAN BARBASH JUNE MARIE BATISTICH NANCY JOAN BENSON JO ANN BRYE MARILYN JOYCE COHN NORA MAY COOK ELEANOR B. COOPER JEAN ELINOR CROMBIE JANE HELEN DUFFEY ELLEN CLAIRE DUNCAN BARBARA JOY FISHSTROM CORINNE FOURNIER ' REVA LEE FUTERMAN DOROTHY ANN GREENFELD BILLIE C. GROSCHUP PATRICIA CAROL HARPER EVA MARIANNE KALLIN ADRIENNE MICHELE KRAUT BRUNHILDE LANGE AGNES FRANCES 1.ANTRY HELEN LOW CARMEL DOLORES MALLEN CAROLINE SYLVIA MASTERS LOIS AUDREY MARTINI CAROL LUE MECKLENBERG JEANETTE SHIZUKO OMI SALLY LEE PORTER ZELL ANTOINETTE ROSS SUZIE SHAPIRO CAROLYN JUANITA SCHAROUN LOTHA JOANNE SCROGGY ELSIE MAE SOLOMON FLORENCE ANN STANLEY MILDRED RUTH STEPHENSON ROBERTA TAYLOR SONIA NANCY UNDLIN ELSIE H. UYEDA MARILYN SHIRLEY WACHTER BRIGITTE E. WALLERSTEIN JOYCE ALFRIDA WEED VIVIAN ANN WONG LORNA EVELYN YOULER 1 CLASS OF JUNE. 1950 Boys WILLIAM ARTHUR ABBLEY HILLEL SHERWIN ABEL HOWARD DONALD AKARD EDWARD RONALD ALTERMAN GERALD EUGENE AMBINDER ANGELO J. ANCONETANI, JR. ROY A. ANDERSON FREDERICK D. ARMANINO SETH LESLIE ARNOLD JAMES WALTER ASTRUE FORREST RIDGEWAY BAILY JERALD TRUMAN BALL ANDREW TOM BANIS GRANT ALAN BARNES GORDON A. BEAL RICHARD JOHN BEI-IRENDT RONALD WALTER BERTUCCELLI FRED STERLING BLUETT EDGAR JOSEPH BRAUN ROBERT JOHN BRILLIANT BARTON A. BROWN CHARLES DAVISON CAPP DONALD WAYNE CARLSON RONALD B. CARLSON FRED CHAN DONALD HENRY CHEU JAMES CHIN WILBER WESLEY CLARK MARTIN PAUL COHAN WESI.EY CHARLES COLBERT ROBERT JAMES CRAMPTON JOHN HAUSE CROSSFIELD GERALD C. CULLEN DOUGLAS NORMAN DICKSON DAVID DONALD DODD RICHARD ARTHUR DODGE KEVIN GEORGE DONLON ALLAN S. DOUGLASS LEROY H. DOWNS RONALD WINFRED EDGEMAN WILLIAM HENRY EDWARDS, JR. WALLACE B. ERSKINE DONALD IVAN FEINSTEIN AUSTIN BRYAN FENGER EDGAR PETER FILIPPETTI, JR. PHILIP LEON FLAX THOMAS WILLIAM FLOWERDAY PHILIP L. FONG BERNARD FOX FREDERICK BARON GEORGE ROBERT PEARCE GLASSON 197 DONALD GOLD FREDERICK GRAEBE STANLEY EDWARD GRAUBART DONALD STANLEY GREEN HARMON B. GREEN, JR. DAVID GROSS BRUCE COOPER HAMMON JACK A. HANSON JAMES RICHARD HECHT DONALD K, HEDGPETH, JR. CHARLES HERMAN HEDTKE RICHARD GORDON HENDERSON PHILIP MORLEY HICKS BRIAN ARTHUR HILL RICHARD ARTHUR HOBBS DAVID HOTTENSTEIN, JR. FREDERICK SANFORD HOUSTON RICHARD B. HUGHS FREDERICK B. HULTING, JR. BRUCE WARREN HYMAN RAYMOND STEWART INGLIS HARRY GEORGE ISERSKI DAVID ISREAL JUN IWAMOTO RICHARD LEE JENKINS JAMES JOSEPH JURIK MONROE MORRIS KAPLAN ROBERT C. KEEFE AMES E. KENDALL NORMAN MARTIN KINGSHILL MARTIN KOPPICH CONSTANTINE KORENEFF ROBERT LEWIS KURTZ JAMES G. LAMBERT RONALD MARSHALL LANDAU FRANK CHRISTIAN LARSON, JR. ARCHIE DUANE LIZCOQUE DANIEL CHAN LEE GERALD LEE JAMES WILLIAM LEE BROOKS G. LEFFLER GEORGE JOHN LENCIONI NELSON LEONG ARNOLD MERRITT LEVY LEON NORD LINDBERG JAMES LLOYD JOHN JOSEPH LYNCH JACK BRUCE MCBRIDE WILSON M. MCCLELLAND, JR. GEORGE DONALD MCFARLAND CARSON RODES MCKISSICK JAMES MCOLSON DONALD ROGER MACMILLAN RAYMOND WEI I-ISIEN MAH ERNEST ILYA MALAMUD GEORGE RICHARD MANN LARRY MAR JOHN FREDERICK MAY ALBERT ELLIOT MEISTER JAMES D. MIKKELSEN ROBERT HARRIS MILLER HARRY PETER MISTHOS FRANK O. MORRILL JAMES ROBERT MORRIS EDMUND J. MORRISSEY, JR. HOWARD MORROW. II KLAUS H. MORTIMER ROBERT E. MORTON, JR. JOHN STANTON MUMMA CARL N. MUTO GENE T. NAGASE WILLIAM NAKAHARA, JR. PETER BENJAMIN NEFF GERALD ASH NEII.sON JAMES RICHARD NESSI MORAD NOORILYNEJAD JOHN S. O'BRIEN JOHN J. OWENS TOMIO OZAWA RICHARD NORMAN PETERSON JAMES PRUITT LAWRENCE RABINOWITZ THEODORE REAGH MICHAEL REILLY MANFRED RICE CLAYTON FRENCH RICHARDS JOHN STANLEY RISING GEORGE ALVIN RITTER DOUGLAS LISTER ROGERS PHILLIP ROLDAN ROBERT MICHAEL RYPINS TIMOTHY MASAJI SAKAMAKI MICHAEL SATO RICHARD M. SAXIE DONALD F. SCHOENTHAL HENRY JOHN SCHOFIELD PARVIZ K. SHAHROKH HOWARD LELAND SHAIN WILLIAM CHARLES SHAPIRO AKIRA SHIRAI DONALD BARBE SMITH ROY MORGAN SMITH MARTIN SPELLMAN ALLEN DELBERT STEINMETZ OTTO C. STELLING SAMUEL DRIVER STEWART 198 PTA Fashion Show PTA FASHION SHOW SENIOR GIRLS MODEL AT PTA FASHION SHOW Tai' ow Carol Mflmfm PM .Iacobi Dianne Brookes Carol Aizen ' . ' 4 i , berg, Gail Jacobs. B tt - E1 Janice Yamell, Donna Dowling, Anita Wfashington, Dixie Samuels, Amell Shows, i3aib'i1rh01TindsfZy'1Or Holtz, Twelve high senior girls participated in a dessert. luncheon and fashion Show sponsored by the PTA on N0VCmbCr 29, 1955. The girls modeled Styles of the past 100 years in the fashion show, Then and Nowf' Clothes of years gone by, which were loaned to the models by grandparents and great-grandparents, were contrasted to the p-resent styles which were the models, own clothes. The girls were divided into various categories, each portraying a different period of time and differentu fashions. Groups ranged from Civil War days to the Miss Lowellite of the future. The money raised at this dessert-luncheon was to be. used by the PTA for its Lowell fund. This proved ro. be a very successful affair because it allowed Lowellitesu to be of assistance to the PTA which, in turn, was able. to raise money to help the school. The Science Fair LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL ENTRIES IN THE scIENcE FAIR AT GOLDEN GATE PARK. The six Lowell students who entered the annual San francisco Bay Area Science Fair held at the California kcademy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park were, bot- om row: Jim Lawrey, who showed a new method of Jounting crustaceans without formalin solution, and Ferry Trosper, whose exhibit was effects of bleach on lair. Not pictured is Paul Bonaccorci, who showed his radio-controlled boat. Top row: Jack Luce,s exhibit was vitamins and man. Ames Swartsfagefs exhibit was on the volume of sound and measurement. David Rytand showed some snakes and told some facts about snakes. PAUL SVETCOFF TAKAYUKI TANIMURA MELVIN THORNE DONALD L, TRAUNER DENNIS PATRICK TUCKER ROBERT N. WALLENBERG FREDERICK W. WARREN, III ROBERT CYRIL WEEKS ALAN LAIRD WENDROFF PAUL ALECK WILSON STEPHAN YANG DONALD YEP HERMAN BENJAMIN ZELLES PAUL L. ZINOV Girls NINI AIGELTINGER IRENE ALEXANDRIA ALGAZIN ANGELA MARIE ALIOTO RUTH JEAN ALLEN JOAN ANDERSON NORMA E. ANDERSON BARBARA AILEEN BALCHIN JOAN LOUISE BARKER PAMELA JEAN BARTLETT JANET GLOVER BELL MARGOT BERSTEIN MARGRET ANN BISCHOFF SHEILA JOANNE BLACK CAROLE RUTH BLUMENTHAL JEANETTE ROSE BOLLES BARBARA WENDELL BURR DONNA CATHERINE CAMPBELL LUCY LUDMILLA DAVIDOFF MILA JEAN DAVIES CAROL NADINE DAWSON MAXINE DEBOVSKY ALICE DORTHEA DELL'ERA LYNNE GEORGINA DEVINE SALLY JANE DUBRAY AMY ELIZABETH EDGERLEY OPAL LORRAINE ELSENER DOLORES ENGLUND JOAN FEISEL BARBARA KAY FIDLER PHYLIS DONA FILIBERTI MARLENE MERYLE FLOWERMAN JEANENE FOOTE LESLE JEAN FULCHER PATRICIA ANN GALE CAROLYN JOANNE GALLOWAY EDITH FRIEDA GESCHWER ANN MARCEAU GILCREAST ESTHER JUDITH GREENBERG DORIS GRUTZMACHER ZUZANA MARIANNA GYULAI SHARON ELIZABETH HAMLIN MARGARET ANN HARPER ANN LESLIE HARVEY BARBARA HASSETT NADINE NORMA HICKMAN LILIAN DORIS HOCH ANN MARIE HOLLAND CHARRAN LOUISE HOLMES ARLENE HOLTZ PATRICIA ANN HORNE LOYCE GERTRUDE HEPPE JAN IMBERG CLAIRE NAOMI ISAACS TAEKO HELEN ISHIDA RITA MARIE JAMES MARILYN ROSS-ANNE JENSEN REBECCA ELIZABETH JESSEE CHARLIE MAE JETT JANICE IRENE JOHNSON MARILYN SUE JOHNSON ELINORE KAHN JOANNE AKIKO KATAOKA ANNETTE KELLERMAN KATHERYN ALICE KESLER CHARLINE M. KING LOIS MYRLE KING FLORENCE Y. KODAMA DOROTHY ANN KOENIG JOAN LA VERNE KOPFER PAMELA ANNE KRONMAN KIYOKO VICKI KUMAGAI GEORGIA LIVIA LADUE LOUISE ANN LANDECER LAURA J. LAW CLAIRE ELAINE LEIBOWITZ RHODA CLAIRE LEICHTER MARISE LOUISE LORENZINI AIMEE LOUIE BERTHA L. LUM LOIS TERESA MCCAULEY DORIS LEONA MCGINLEY GLORIA MCKEE PHYLLIS J. MCPHERSON AUDREY RUSSELL MADESON PATRICIA MARIE MAHER SHIRLEY ANN MALINOWSKI MARGARET ESTHER MALONE ALVINA CRUZ MANIBUSAN GLORIA MARTOCCHIA 199 ELAINE CAROLINE MAU DEVORA J. MENDELEVITCH JUDITH LOIS MESHIRER SHIRLEE RAE METCALF EDITH ELLEN MORRIS JUNE MARIE MURPHY BARBARA ANN NEWMAN RUTH MAE NUSBAUM MARY ELIZABETH O'BRYNE PATRICIA ANN O'NEILL JEAN MARIE OWINGS NESYA MERLE PAPO LAVERNE PAYNE SHIRLEY RUTH PETERSON WILMA ANN PFLIEGER PATRICIA ELAINE POTHEIR JOAN PUCKHABER JEANINE DOROTHY RAFALOWSKI CAROL JUNE RENO LOLA ELENA RESHETKO RACHELLE EUGENIA REYES KATHRYN JANE RICE ARLENE ELEANOR RIFKIND SALLY ROSEN ELEANOR RUDERMAN PATRICIA ANN RUNDLE BRIGITA M. RUSTAD GAYLE MARIE SAN FACON ALISON BEATRIX SAUNDERS JOAN SANDRA SAXON ADRIENNE DORITA SCHOLLHORN FABIA ANN SEGAL JOAN MARIE SHELLEY ENIKO SHIOZAKI MARIAN DOROTHY SMITH CLARE MARIE SNOW NORMA STAHL ROSEMARY ANN STEFFAN SONJA MARIE STEPPELER MARGARITA STEVENS PATRICIA STEVENSON NOEL STRAUS BETTY LOU SUMSKI LOIS VIRGINIA SXWAHN JENNIE VICTORIA TAAM MYRA LORRAINE TANNLUND ANN TEEL JUDITH TEEL LOIS ELAINE TESSLER NADINE E. THORSON DORIS MARIE THUNE JEAN ANNE TOOHEY SUZANNE TREADWELL BETTY CAROL TREVOR JOANNE ELIZABETH TUOHEY CAROL ANN WARNER BARBARA A. WATKINS LOIS ANN WAXMAN CARLA WOLFF LOUISE CHRISTINE WONG PATRICIA MALVINA WORLD BETTY A. YAGER BARBARA ANN YOUNG GERRE SUE ZIGMOND CLASS OF JANUARY, 1951 Boys FELIX ADAMS HARRISON L. ANIXTER RAYMOND M. BELL PAUL LEWIS BIXEL GEORGE N. BLOISE JAMES D. BOCEK GILBERT KAY CHAN JAMES A. CONN ANGELO COSMIDES JOHN ALFRED CUMBERPATCH MARTIN W. DEBENHAM, JR. MANUEL PETER DELIS RICHARD ANTHONY DIXON DOUGLAS MCRAE EGAN JOHN CHARLES FLETCHER ROBERT NORMAN FOEHR SIGMUND A. FREEMAN ROBERT GUSTAVE FRICKE KENNETH ALAN FRIEDMAN DAVID CHARLES GOODWIN SIDNEY GOULD MICHAEL DARBY HILL EDWARD ERNEST JACKSON JOHN GRAHAM KELIHER JERRY ALLEN KELLER RAY HENRY KISTLER, JR. CLIFFORD EDINE LARSEN JACQUES JOSEPH LA VIGNE JOHN ARTHUR LAZAR RONALD FARRELL LEE NEIL LINSEY CERRITOS CESAR MANCIA KEITH THOMAS MCDONELL JOHN D. MINTO, JR. FRED MOGANNAM ROBERT LEELAN MUGG EDWARD HIDESHI NAGASE GERALD C. O'CONNOR ARCADIE WILLIAM J. PARROTT 200 Highlights of the Year VARIETIES Upper left hand fomer, top row: Row one: Carol Aizenberg, and Jane Vargo. Row two: Karen Guthertz, Elaine Klein, Audrey Bocek. Row three: Lee Labe. Donna Taylor, Sue Warner. Middle of top row: Finale: Lowell Big Brothers and Big Sisters. Upper right hand comer, tap row: M. Barton, Diane Doyle, and Ed Ford. Row three: lefl corner: Girls 'making-up' for the Varieties. Middle of row three: Senior B0y's present Morning . Right hand rorner, row three: Ken Balling and Mike Gospe in scene from the Finale, Left hand earner of Row two: Song of the Range , Richard Price. Second from left, former of Row two: Judy Freed helps Bob Elleson. Serond from right, Row two: Finale-Bob Moore, Diana DcMun, Harvey Brody, Sue Fisher, Phil Sevier. Right hand earner of Row two: The Lowellettes in action. Bottom rouy left rorner: A Lowell Girl is Like a Melody JoAnne Davies, Sylvia Nelson, Nancy Norton, Sue Lindner, and Gail Jacobs. Middle of holtom row: Lowell girls getting ready for Varieties. Right tomar of holtom 1-ow: Row one: Guy Erb, Al Clark, John Debenham, Jeff Benninger. Row Iwo: Terry Stephens, and Tom Nyhan. Varieties and Progress Parade Once again, under the expert direction of Mr. Polland, the Winter Varieties were a tremendous suc- :ess. The Varieties were given on November 18, 21, ind 25 to sell-out crowds. The outstanding skits included The One Woman ln The World, Adventure, The Great White Sale, On The Lot, The Municipal Davenportf' 'The Lion Tamer, Caught In The Act, and Buy- .ng A Hat. The cast included William Hearne, Tom Caylor, Pat Jacobi, Judy Freed, Bob Dawson, Dick Ander- son, Ross Shoaf, Barbara Baker, Lenore Kay, Arnell Shows, Mike Larson, Robert Rowe, Joelle Rosen, Sue Warner, Charles Breyer, and Jackie Edelstein. They all :lid a terrific job. Mr. Krieger's fine Orchestra played selections in- cluding Fiddle-Faddle and Sandpaper Ballet. The Lowell choir under the alble direction of Mr. Ber- ry sang a fine selection of Christmas carols. Solos were presented by Carol Aizenberg, Robert all, Mary Stallings, Lillian Gardner, Raymond Cau- wet, Carol Leeds, Myrna Molinar, Russ Cantor. Other numbers included Armand Schwartz, Neil Pace, John arks, Sally Hough, Manny Goldman, Eddie Jackson, ichard Price, Jackie Edelstein, Margaret Barton, Lea Malfanti, Diane Doyle, and Diane Sachs. l I A A few senior boys presented a dance directed by Miss Mensing entitled Morning They were Peter Belmont, Jim Nolan, Kevin Harrington, Guy Erb, Al Johnson, Al Clark, Jim Weinberger, John Debenham, Al Katsuyama, Tom Caylor, Terry Stephens, and Jeff Benninger. The Lowellettes: Carol Aizen-berg, Audrey Bocek, Anita Washington, Jane Vargo, Donna Taylor, Sue Warner, Lee Labe, Karen Guthertz, and Elaine Klein, also did two numbers for the show. The finale was composed of the Big Sisters and Big Brothers who presented a very delightful skit entitled Going Home For Christmas. It was composed and directed by Mr. Anino. .I... Lowell played an important part in the Festival of Progress parade, which took place on Sunday, April 22 along Market Street. The purpose of the parade was to show the regrowth of San Francisco since the earth- quake and fire of 1906. Lowell contributed the largest unit in the parade. The float was effectively done, showing the need for a new school. The float was made of 15,000 crepe flow- ers. A red brick schoolhouse was on top with several Lowell students. The float was also publicizing the centennial year of the school. In the lead car of the Lowell unit were the student body oflicers, followed by the oldest alumnus and youngest present student. They were Samuel Sonnen- berg, 93 years old, from the class of 1880, and David Lindt, 13 years old, class of 1959. Then came the color guard along with the ROTC drill team. Following them were the drum majorettes marching in front of the song leaders. The band and drum corp-s came next. They pro- ceeded an 1856 surrey, and two 1906 tandem bicycles. To show the difference in times, a 1926 car with stu- dents dressed in appropriate clothes for that time and a 1956 car in which the senior class officers were paraded. The float ended LOwell's entry in the parade. Lowellites were pleased when the judging was an- nounced and the float took second prize, 3250, draw- ing more attention to the centennial year. Much credit is due to Oxana Rudenko who drew the preliminary designs of the float and also to Mr. James Livingstone, who was in charge of the committee. The float coast 3200 and was built and paid for by money from student activities, and donations from stu- dents. In all, there were over 500 students and teachers who actively participated in preparing for the parade. Lowell is proud of the work they did. GERALD C. POLKE WILLIAM JOHN RANNEY JACK ROBERT RAVEN HERBERT ALDEN REESE DONALD ARKADY REINBERG ROBERT E. ROUDA FRANKLIN SAUL ROBERT STANTON SOSNICK CARL FREDERICK SPIESS CHARLES H. STERN LESTER M. SWEET HAROLD TREACY ERIC JACOB VOORSANGER JOHN WATSON DONALD MARSHALL WHITE STOKELY LONG WILSON HAROLD WOLLENBERG PAUL WONG GALE WILLIAM WRIGHT CAMERON E. WYLIE, JR. Girls PEGGY JEANETTE AMBLER MARIAN ELISA BARRAZA ELEANOR KARLENE BAUMAN NANCY JOY BOBLITT MARIANNA VICTORIA BORG PATRICIA I-IILDA BURGEss LORRAINE CERF MARY L. CHAPPELLE CORINNE I. CHU LYTAMARIE JULIA COLEMAN MARGUERITE JOAN CURINGTON JESSIE H. FONG ERANCOISE GAMBURG ARLENE CLAIRE GARTER JOAN ELLEN GATES ARLENE ROBERTA HAUGNER KAREN ELEANOR I-IERTING KAY NOREEN HUSCHENS MARY ISABEL KASNER BETTE MARIE KINDBERG JOANNE KLEIN ARCI-IIE ANN KUMLER DORA LEE LILLIAN s. LEE JOAN EDESSE LEONARD ANN MARGARET LICKEOLD MATILDE A. MARTINEZ LYNN ANN MCCLURE PATRICIA MCKANNA CAROL JANE MIERSON IIUTTULA MOI-IOLY-NAGY SONYA PADGETT DIANE PATRICIA PERRINE MARIE PHILLIPS LILYAN RADER BERNICE JEAN REED ALICE VALERIE RYAN ROBNETT LOUISE SHIFFLER BARBARA SLAUGHTER MARLENE SOLOMON VIRGINIA RAE TILDEN soPI-IIA WAN TOM PATRICIA ANN VILLEGAS ALYCE J. YIM BARBARA JOAN YOUNG CLASS OF JUNE, 1951 Boys DWIGHT S. ALLEN PHILIP JOHN ANAYA GEORGE M. ATKINS PETER CHARLES BAKER LAWRENCE EARL BABOW PETER WOOLF BARNATO BARRY RENNIE BARTLE JAMES SCHMAUCH BAUCHSPIES PETER PIERCE BEAVER HERBERT BECKER ROY N. BIDWELL ROBERT BONDANZA FREDERICK W. BRADLEY RAYMOND JAMES BROOKS, JR. JOSEPH C. BYRNE ROBERT F. CARSON ROBERT I. CHRIST WALTER CLARK SHELDON COLEMAN LAURAN HENRY COOPER RONALD FRANK COSTANZO WILLIAM O. DEAMER CARLOS DE LA ROCHE HIDALGO LELAND S. DE LUCA MARK DOLAN JERROLD ELLIOTT EISENBERG LARRY L. ELIZARDE STANLEY M. EARBER RICHARD EUGENE FINNIGAN BERNARD FRANKEL HUBERT WAYNE FUNG RAYMOND DANIEL GAMACHE DANIEL LEU GAN DONALD VIRGIL GILLMOR ROBERT L. GOODMAN 201 1 V ROBERT L. GUEVARA WILLIAM ARTHUR GUNN, II JOHN WESLEY HAMILTON WILI.IAM G. HAMMERSMITH JOSEPH J. HARE RICHARD HUGH HARTLEY GEORGE HOWARD HARTSELI. HIDEO BERNARD HATA HORACE OSGOOD HAYES JOHN I.EWIS HEILERON FREDERICK WARREN HELLMAN GERALD E. HILL KENJI HIRANO HARRY JAMES HJUL ARTHUR HOW RAYMOND ARTHUR HOSRING PETER J. IXVAKAMI STANLEY L. JONES DONALD JAMES KERR WALTER GEORGE KLOCK JOHN BARRY KNORP HISASHI ROBAYASHI ROY LEON Koss ROBERT H. KUBIN EDWIN R, KUHN LEONARD A. RULLY PAUL R. LAGAZETTE JERRY MORTON LADAR LAURENCE DAVID LANDA WALTER LIGHTNER WILLIAM E. LINDSTROM. JR. HENRY STIMSON LOVE RAYMOND WILLIAM LUCKY R. . . J CARLOS LUNA MANUEL LUNA RICHARD C. MANNHEIMER PHILIP J. MARCUS EUGENE ALEXIS MARTINEAU ALAN HURLEY MASTERS CAMILLE RONALD MAZZANTI NEAL GARY MELVILLE STEVEN MARK MERA THOMAS C. MERIGAN. JR. FREDERICK MOORE, III BENJAMIN ALFRED NORTHRUP FRED J. OLSEN THOMAS N. PALMER GEORGE D. PARADIS, JR. CHARLES AUSTIN PAYNE JAMES JOSEPH PETTEE DONALD CLARENCE PICHEI. GORDON KELLOGG REED WILLIAM U. REMENSPERGER. JR. ALLEN RICHARD RESCH DAVID W. RIDENOUR ALLEN RAMON RIORDAN VICTOR RUBON MATTHEW D, RUSSELL DONALD ROBERT SACCANI JACK DAVID SAXE ERVIN HERBERT SCHEPPS MICHAEL F. SCHWABACHER ROBERT LOUIS SEGAL JOHN PETER HEXVINS SELI. MORLEY HART SHAPIRO JOHN HENRY SHEEHY DAVID WRIGHT SHERMAN ROY J. SHIMADA LAWRENCE DARRYL SMITH PAUL JAY STERN LEE HARRY SUTHERLAND TOSHIO SUTO GEORGE GAINS SXWANSON PAUL L. TOM BRIAN L. TURNER JEROME B. VERNAZZA MARK RICHARD XVACHTER AKIRA WATANABE JULIAN ARTHUR WEINBERG RICHARD E. WESTERGREN DAVID F. WILLIAMS WILLIAM WILLIAMSON, JR. ROBERT W. WINES SHELDON HARVEY XVOLFE WILLIAM WONG PETER WING KEE VUOO EDGAR SOBOL XVORMSER Girls JOAN ACHSTETTER KASHIWA AIZAWA JENNY ANNE ANDERSEN FUMIYE ANDO PATRICIA E. APPLEBY DONNA HOPE ATHERTON BERNICE MARY BACIOCCO NANCY PATRICIA BACKSTEDT BETTY JANE BADARACCO BEVERLY HELEN BAUMEISTER BARBARA MAY BERELSON JUNE GLORIA BERNSTEIN BARBARA BLACK ELAINE BETTE BLOOM FRANCES MAE BOSSE SARA JANE BRANLUND PEGGY KATHLEEN BRYANT 202 Lowell Float Wins Place Iqueumcu STU li! I Q' .. A-A EBU! B P QIIISILR1 UQ Sanur' Snnnt H liz Riagg .av nfermiaf LUWEH 352 ANNA MARIE BUONCRIST IANI RHODA FLOR BUTED CAROLE CALENDAR ANN CAMERON VIRGINIA LOURDES CASTILLO PEARL B. CHANG MARTA MINGOYA CURRO ELEANOR ANN DECKER SUZANNE ELLAN DREYER JACQUELINE EMMONS BARBARA RUTH EPP NANCY H. FEINSTEIN PATRICIA ANN FITZGERALD JOANNE MADALYNE FORD CAROLYN MAE FROOMIN NORMA PAULINE GENSBURGER MARION ALBERTA GERCKE BARBARA GLICKMAN JACQUELINE M. GOLDBERG JOYCE LYNNE GOLDSTEIN LORETTA L. GOODALL BARBARA MARION GOUGH BEVERLY GREENBERG CAROL GEORGIA HEINECKE ELIZABETH A. HELMSDOEREER VELMA DEE -HENDERSON PATRICIA JANE HOBERG JOAN ELIZABETH HOLDER JOAN HOOD AUDREY DIANE HYMAN MASAKO IXVAXXIAKI LOUISE JANKELSON ELIZABETH A. JOHNSTONE GERDA KALISCH JO ANN KELLY LEAH INEZ KENNY PATRICIA KING JUNE RITSUKO KOTABE SEIKO KUMANO LORRAINE A. LAGOMARSINO SYLVIA JUNE LANGER ANGELA MOSUI LEE CORDELIA IRIS LEE DONNA MAE LEESON HELEN CHAN LEONG PHYLLIS JEAN LOXWE MARLENE GERTRUDE MAGID MARGARET C. MAGUIRE MARGARET JOAN MANVILLE ANGELA DIANE MATASCI MAUREEN PAULINE MURPHY SUZANNE LYNN MCDONNELL MARY LOUISE MCGOXVAN BEVERLY ANN NADITZ MARII.YN JEAN NAGY GAIL ELEANOR NIELAND MARCIA COBURN OREAR ARI.ENE J. OXVENS DIANE PADEN KAPETALINA I. PANTUHIN MARIETTA SUZANNE PARKER CYNTHIA JOYCE PATSEL PEGGY JUNE PEARSON ELIZABETH ANN PERKINS ALMA PATRICIA PORTA GAIL ARDETH RAEFA'ELLI DORE MARIE RINABARGER PAULA JULIE RIORDAN ALEXANDRA ROBBINS MERLE ROSE ROBINSON CHARLOTTE RAE ROOK ERANCINE ELAINE ROSE MAXINE ROSENBERG ARLENE GRACE ROSSI BARBARA I.EA ROUBELL JULIE ROZ ELSIE JUNE RUBEL PAULINE HATSUE SAKUMA DEBORAH SAMPSON MARILEE GETZ SCHOLL CAROL JEAN SCHULDT JOANNE ALBERTA SCHWEIFLER BARBARA SCOTT CAROLE LENORE SELLMAN PATRICIA JOAN SHANX' DIANE ARLENE SHEMANSKI SYLVIA JOYCE SIEGI. JANET BARTH SLOSS JEAN ELEANOR SOLOMON JUDITH ANN STANTON MYRTLE CATHERINE SULLIVAN EDITH MARIA SXVAN ELEANOR RUTH TARLOXV VIVIAN MILCHANE TOM PATRICIA MERLE TOPALIAN MARIANNE TRUSCOTT HELEN TSINGARRIS LOUISE ANN UTISS JOAN EMILY VAIVA MARY VANGELI LOIS VINKLER DIANA CARROLL WAITE LESLIE ANN WATSON VIRGINIA LOUISE WAXMAN SUSAN LYNN WELLER LILLIE LOXV WING 203 FLORENCE YUNG YING WOO MARILYN YEE CLASS OF JANUARY, 1952 Boys RODERICK WINDELER ADAMS RICHARDSON C. AXTELL SANFORD SYLVAN BERMAN JACK CLARK BISHOP RICHARD AARON BLAUSTEIN ROBERT H. BLUMENTHAL BUD BRODY AUGUSTE BROUCARET, JR. WILLIAM JAMES CARPMILI. JOHN WHITTIER CARY JAMES G. CHANDI.ER ARNOLD WILLIAM COHN RAYMOND COOPER KAYE LAWRENCE DUNHAM JOHN EDMOND EMRY RODGER BRUCE ENOS BARRY S. FISHER PAUL FONG BARRY GILBERT MICHAEL MORTON GOLDEN ROBERT EDWARD GREEN WILLIAM S. HARDEMAN HERSHEL Z. HERZBERG WARREN EDWARD JORGENSEN GEORGE JOHN KAPLANIS JACK KATZ DONALD L. KING PETER J. KISTLER JOSIAH N. KNOWLES, JR. ROBERT B. LEE WILLIAM EDWARD LA PRATH GERALD STEWART LEVIN STUART MORTON LEVIN WILBERT LOUIE EDWARD HILL MACKAY EKHARD BERTRAM MAHL RAYMOND JAMES MALISPINA KIM MALVILLE LEE ROOS MARELLI JOHN A. MOGLIA ALFRED MOY, JR. RUSSELL MURPHY FRANK PRESTON NIBLEY, JR. DAVE ROSS NIXON ANTHONY NICHOLAS PICHARD FRANK RICHARD PIRE NORVIN ETHAN POWELL, III VERNON HOWARD RENO HOWARD FRANK RICE WENDELL CARTER RICE LEONARD C. SCHMITT JOHN RUDOLF SCHWABACHER HARVEY LOUIS SCHUSTER RICHARD DAVID SEIFERT ANATOLE SEMENOV GEORGE ORMAY SHELDON TOM TAMOTSU SHIMIZU SHERWOOD ROBERT SLATT ANDREW H. STONE JAMES CARLISLE STONE GEORGE ALAN SWARTZ BENDY A. VIRAGH RICARDO JOSE WASSMER ALAN EDWARD WICKENS GIRLS SHIELA ZINA ABERS PATRICIA JEANNE ADLER JOANNE FAYE AXELROD ZANDRA DORENE BIRGERS BELVA MAE BORNSCHEIN DIANE CLAIRE BRAAG KATHRYN LEE BRESLAUER CHRISTINA HELEN CALFAS HELEN SUZANNE CHABAN DORCAS GAYNOR COLLISON SHEILA ANN DAHL NANCY RUTH DAVIS KIRSTEN LOUISE DENCKER BARBARA LEE DIAMOND DIANA AMANDA DRAVILLAS CAROLE JEAN EMERY JEAN EMMONS MARY ELLEN ERNST MYRNA FRANCES GALLERSTEIN BARBARA L. GREEN DIANA LEONE HARPER SALLY BELL HAYDEN KAREN ELWYN JAMES ANN KALECHMAN JOAN PATRICIA KAPLOW' GLORIA LEE KENTER HELEN KESSLER MARTHA FRANCES KRAUSE PATRICIA STEWARD LAMB LOUISE MOLINE LAMKINS JACUELINE NANCY MALFANTI COLLEEN MARY MCELROY SHIRLEY ULRICA MCVEY JEAN MURIEL MERTES BEVERLEY RUTH MEYER 204 Lunchtime Scenes THE COURT DURING LUNCH Lunch time is a good time tu get together with your friends. The court is usu1lIx the general meeting place. :is you can see. The Term Pla FLYAXVAY HOME f SPRING, 1956 RUM 0172 Y Dandy M Barton R Shoaf, L. Kay, M. Barton, B. Elleson, R. Shoaf, M. Scott, C. Breyer, R014 1140 S W00dward M Scott R. Shoaf. L. Kay, F. Becker, L. Kay, B. Elleson, F. Becker, R. Shoaf, Rau :hue D Anderson R Shoaf, C. Breyer, R, Shoaf, L. Kay, F. Becker, M. Scott, L. Kay. Row four F Becker, R. Shoaf, C. Breyer, R. Shoaf, M. Scott, L. Kay. YVETTE CARMEN MONTANO ANN MORROW ELAINE PANDELL DOROTHY ANN PFEIFFER NATALIE B. POPOFF NANCY READING ARLENE E. SATTELMAYER MARYANN M. SCHWARZE PATSY JANE SPEER BLENDA SUZANE STANLEY VIOLET SUTO CHRISTINA SUTTI KAY TAKAKUWA MARCELLA VALORIA VIRGINIA WARE TRILBY DUBOIS WILLIAINIS KAORU YOKOGAWA OLGA ZAHARIN BARBARA JEAN ZOROBAI CLASS OF JUNE, 1952 Boys DANIEL M. ANAYA CHRIS ASIMOS GILBERT WILLIAM BAACK JOHN R. BADERTSCHER ROBERT HENRY BANKS GORDON LEE BARBERY MICHAEL JAY BARNATO GEORGE E. BEASLEY KENNETH GROVER BERRY ALBIN JOHN BERTNICK WI1.FRED BAILEY BIXBY LEE BLUM MICHAEL HAROLD BODOURIAN EDWARD HOWARD BORDIN EDDIE BERNIE BRAND FRANK C. G. BRANDES, JR. ROBERT JAMES BRANSTEN JOHN MAYFIELD BRAZIER BRIAN BRENNAN JAMES J. BRUMBACK J. RONALD BYRNE CRAIG TRICOU CALLAHAN SAM CAMBOURIS DONALD W. CARLSON RONALD D. CHAPMAN JOHN CHIN TERRY SEE-WO CHINN CARTER G. COHEN WELDON ELLIOT COLE ROBERT JAMES DALE GREGG WILI.IAM DEGEAR PHIL DELUCCHI GERALD FRANCIS DAHI. CHEE DER RICHARD FRANK DEXVEY ROBERT JOHN DOLAN HENRY DOSDORIAN. JR. PAUL DOUGLASS ALEXANDER DUDOROFF WAYNE RAYMOND DURLESTER RICHARD ALAN FINE JAMES RUSSEL FISHER JAMES EDWARD FISHER THOMAS WILSON FLATTERY HUGH JAMES FLEMING WILLIAM SHARP FLOYD, JR. ISAAC FLUSS CLARENCE NEIL FORTENBERRY GARETH FRIEDMAN CHARLES EDWIN FULLER HERBERT B. GEE LEONARD GLASSER BRUCE IAN GOLDMAN STANLEY JOSEPH GOOBICH STEPHEN R. GOSPE BERNARD ARTHUR GOULD ALANSON XVOOD GREEN, JR, ARLEIGH MARVIN GROSSMAN ELDON MAIMON GRUPP RICHARD STANLEY GUTHRIE BERNARD LEE HAAS ROBERT ANTHONY HABEEB XVILLIAM HANT WAYNE JEROME HELFER HENRY MOHR HERMANN ROBERT I.EWIS HERDON RICHARD CHARLES HERRERIAS FRANK HESS STANFORD MARTIN HORN JOHN M. HOROWITZ PATRICK MICHAEL HUGHES ROBERT BARRET HUTCHINS, JR. HERBERT HENRI HYMANS RICHARD JOHN HYNES JOHN BYERS HUTCHINS WILLIAM JENSEN CHARLES MCCUE JONES DONALD H. KAHN LLOYD KAHN. JR INGMAR NILS KALLIN CHARLES JOHN KAZAKOFF NEIL KIPPERMAN NOEL WILLARD KERSHENBAUM 205 MUTSUO KITAGAWA KARL EREDERIC KNUTH THOMAS JOSEPH LACKEY ROBERT LALANDE LAWRENCE ELMER LANE MICHAEL CHARLES LASKY STEPHEN FREDERICK LAYTON ROBERT M. LESSER JAMES CAMOU LESTER LELAND DAVID LEVY TALBOT SHAW LINDSTROM JOHN GARY LODMELL ALASTAIR MACKENZIE WILLIAM E. MALLORY VINCENT JOHN MARELICH HOWARD P. MARGULEAS MOUNTFORD J. MAROEVICH BRUCE GRANT MASONEK ROBERT C. MCGOWAN, JR. ROBERT M. MCGROUTHER, JR. MICHAEL B. MCKENNA WILLIAM E. MEDIN KENNETH LLYOD MELMON BARRY ALLAN MENDOZA PREDERIC THOMAS METZGER MORLEY EVAN MEYERSON GEORGE URBAN MORE LESLIE EDWARD MORSE, JR. LEWIS H. MOTTLEY, JR. RICHARD FREDERICK NASON RICHARD LELAND NATHANSON ROBERT M. NAUHEIM ROBERT L. NELSON PRESTON JOHN NOLAN GARY LOUIS O'BRIEN RAY O'NEAL VICTOR A. PACQUET WILLIAM A. PARATORE THOMAS DICKSON PARKS RAYMOND WILLIAM PERKINS JERRY H. PLOTKIN JAN POLISSAR CARL QUONG HENRY JAMES RALSTON EDWARD REILLY ROBERT MILTON RESNICK CHARLES STETSON ROSEKRANS RONALD HARRY ROUDA JOHN THOMAS RUSSELL LEWIS SAMUELS JOHN SARGENT SCARBOROUGH THOMAS BARRET SCHAEEER CONRAD CARL SCHWEIZER HORTON SCIONEAUX CARL ELDRIDGE SCOTT WILLIAM ALEXANDER SCOTT STANLEY SHALIT THOMAS W. SMITH NORMAN SOMOZA JAMES MARTIN SPAULDING HARRY JAMES STAMATIS JOHN FRANCIS STAKICH ALVIN M. STEIN MAKOTO SUYEYASU HARRY SHIZUO SUZUKI LEE TENNANT GARREN E. TOOKER DONOVAN THAYER WILLIAIXI BRUCE WATKINS MERVYN WELCH GREGORY FISKE WILBUR FRANKLIN D. WOLMUTH YEE-FUNG WONG RICHARD WING YEE VUILLIAM MANUEL ZELAYETA Girls LUBA ABRAMOFF LINDA LOU ALEXANDER SHIRLEY L. ALLEN ANN ALTSHULER FLORENCE F. ANOLIN LENA S. ANTONGIOVANNI DOROTHY DIANE ARCHER NANCY ARNDT MARLENE AXELROD PAULA ANNE BAKALAR BARBARA JOAN BATISTICH FRIEDA ANN BAY MARGARET ELDER BENNET .IOANNE E. BERRY AUDREY MAE BERTRAM ELEANOR S. BISTRONI GLORIA ANN BOOTH CHARMAINE DOLORES BOOTHE ,IAN ALISON BOUCHARD DOREEN RAE BREWER ROXVENA BUTTENXVIESER CLAUDIA LENORE CASSIDY SHIRLEY ROSE CHILD LENORA CATHERINA GEE CHIN' CAROL ANN CLARK CLAUDINE LAURA CLAUSSEN I.OTTlE JUDITH COHN 206 Newcomers, Reception NEVUCOMERS RECEPTION Raw wie: Shield girl Sally Ann Hough leading the Bunny Hop. Roberta Spivock and Terry Stephens joining in on the dance. Big Brnther Fred Becker dancing with a newcomer girl. Row Iwo: Shield girl joan Burton dancing with a newcomer boy. Band leader Armand Schwartz giving his band members a few instructions. The band in action playing one of its best numbers. Rau' three: An ROTC omcer dancing with newcomer Mimi Frazer, Three ROTC Officers resting after dancing the Bunny Hop. Shield girl Sondra Snow taking part in the Bunny Hop dance with newcomer boys. The spring Newcomers' Reception presented by the Shield and L and Scroll and L introduced many new Lowellites to their classmates and the traditions of Lowell. Barbara Bates, acting as Shield chief, and Ter- ry Stephens as Scroll chief, directed the program. The entire production revolved around an Indian theme. With Richard Price and his guitar, the audience was led in group singing. Comic dances and a pantomime followed. A high spot of the program was a fashion show by the Shield members, which featured clothes: worn from the first days of Lowell in 1856 until the- present, 1956. The program was followed by a get-together in the- Armory. With the aid of a terrific quartette from the Lowell band, a lively jam session was in progress when the bell rang ending an exciting day for many new stu- dents. Time for Youth TIME FOR YOUTH PROGRAM Flu! Irene: Lea Malfanti, Carol Leeds, and Diane Sachs. 52601113 Irene Gail Creighton is giving her opinion on certain matters. Third Irene: Bill Goldman is speaking, Fazuth Sfefzes Mayor Christopher and jim Lehan, BEVERLY ANNE COLE PATRICIA JEAN CONNOLLY MARIAN JOAN CRAMPTON JOAN SUZANNE CRONIN JOELLE CRONIN BARBARA ANN DEBS BETH ANN CAMERON DICKS PATRICIA C. J. DOHERTY MARGARET VIRGINIA DRESEL MARGOT LOUISE EICHMANN IRENE B. ENSTROM MARY FILLINGER JOAN CORINNE FISHER PENINA MAY FLETCHER PATRICIA JANE FREEMAN ANN MARIE FUCILE JOANN M. FULTON JOAN MARIE GOLDAMMER JANETH LESLIE GOTTSCHAMER MYRA PEARL GREENBERG ALLIE SUZANNE GROSSMAN SANDRA GURAL MARLENE JOAN HAGUE ELIZABETH ANN HALL ANN THERESE HARPER JOAN EDITH HART MARILYN C. HARTMANN GAIL FRANCES HETTICH MARTHA INEZ HOAGLUND JUDITH ANN HOROXVITZ GAIL LOUISE HURLEY DIANE BABETTE ISAAC SUSAN ANN JENKINS ELIZABETH MERILL KASANIN ADELE RACHEL KATZ MARJORIE KAY KARLENE DORIS KIMBALL BARBARA FAY KLINEMAN MARTHA ANNE KLOSTER HELEN B. KODAMA BARBARA KOPPICH LAURA MARY LAGOMARSINO NANCY LANGLEY MORELLE IDA LASKY MIRIAM LINDA LEVY JACQUELINE KAY LOXVREY JOAN PATRICIA MANESS LAVERNE CECILE MARTY BEVERLY JOAN MCDOWELL GERALDINE CLAIRE MCKANNA SHIRLEY ISABEL MITCHELL MARJORY JUNE MIZEL LYNNE BEVERLY MOODY JANIS LEE MORGAN MARILYN STUART MORROW JOELLEN LORRAINE MURPHY HELENE NAKAMOTO BARBARA E .NICHOLSON LOIS LORRAINE OLSON DAIMAR FERN PADDOCK GLORIA JEAN PERRY AUDREY MAE PETERS ELIZABETH L. PHILLIPS CONSTANCE MARIE QUARANTA DIANE LOUISE RAY JEAN MARILYN ROWELL ANITA DOLORES RUBIO SUSAN JANE RYMES ELAINE JOAN SCHMIERER ROSLYN SCHWARTZ MARY ADA SEA JUDITH BERTA SETZER REVA SHAFFMAN MARILYN JOAN SIESBUTTEL NAOMI SILBERBERG JULANNE LOUISE SINCLAIR SHIRLEY ANN SMITH JOAN ALEXANDRA SPENCER DONNA PAULINE STEVENS DIANNE M. L. SWARTSFAGER DALE RUTH TABER MARY JANE TALBERT JUDITH ANN TATE JEAN DELORES THOMAS JOAN PATRICIA THOMAS NATALIE TITOFF GRACE TOY ONA TRAGERMAN LILLIAN MAYONILA TRIPLITT JOANN URSO ROBERTA JOHNELL VIOLIN EVA EICHEN WALD CAROL ELISE WALLACE ERIN MAY WALSH MARY ELIZABETH WATTERS JOAN DEE WEATHERWAX DOROTHY MAY XVEIGHTMAN SANDRA JUNE WERDESHEIM LAURETTE ADELE WICKSTROM RUTH XVILBUR MABEL LOW WING MARY LOUISE YOUNG JANE SUZANNE ZELINSKY MILDRED ZYDONIS 207 CLASS OF JANUARY. 1953 Boys EMMANUEL D. AGORASTOS EARL VAN BEST DARRELL BLOOM JOHN DUNWOODY BURROUGHS GLENN EDWARD BURTON, JR. JERRY D. CARVER EDMUND STANLEY CHOLEWA SANFORD COPLIN GRANT V. COOK CHARLES EDWARD COWAN EMILIO VICTOR DACQUISTO JEROME GORDON DARE ALBERT CARL DITTMAN ROGERT JOHN ERHART E. DENNIS GLAFKIDES EUGENE D. HAWKINS JERRY DOUGLAS HORTON JERROLD JAY JACOBY RICHARD KISLITZIN IGOR A. LANDYSHEV JOSEPH J. LEJARZA JUSTUS M. M. LENSCHAU, JR. LAWRENCE ST. JOHN LINN MICHAEL LIOTWEIZEN WILLIAM JOSEPH LOSHUERTOS CHARLES JAMES LUMSDAINE KENT LEE LUNDGREN JOHN S. MCCONNON WILLIAM JAMES MCCUBBIN FRED LOUIS MCNAIR HOWARD D. MEYER DAVID GARY MURPHY HOWARD WAGNER MURRAY WESLEY S. MUTO GEORGE MINORU NAKAHARA KENNETH EDWARD OBENCHAIN DONALD JOSEPH PETERSON FLETCHER S. PYLE ELWYN L. RAFFETTO HENRY D. REPETTO ANDREW ALEXANDER ROGOZIN MICHAEL ROKITIANSKY KENT ALLAN ROSE GUIDO JOHN SPINGOLA WILLIAM A. STIMSON HAROLD HERMAN TEITLER ROBERT MICHAEL THEIN LLOYD SANFORD THORSEN ALLEN S. TOM MATTHEW F. TOM THOMAS L. TUCKER DONALD FRANKLIN WHITE Girls BEVERLY PEARL AIZENBERG EIKO AOKI ATSUKO AWAYA SUSAN JEANNE BENJAMIN GABRIELLE G. BERLINER GWENDOLYN MARY CAMPANA CAROL A. CAMPBELL SUEZANE ELY CARDINAL CONSTANCE JOAN COVINGTON CHRISTEL SONYA CRANSTON FRANCES DAVIS JUDY ESBERG MITZI A. FEINSTEIN HELEN FRANCES FREE MARILYN MARSHA FREEMAN SHARON BEVERLY FRIEDMAN JOYCE ANN GALLIGANI DOROTHY JEAN GEHRKE LIBBY ROSLYN GOLD SHIRLEY ANN GREENBERG MARGARET LOUISE HEDTKE KAY NANCY HELGESSON JOAN ELIZABETH HOLIHAN SANDRA ROSLYN HORN NORIKO ANN ISHIDA ELEANOR ANN JACOBS DORIS MAE JACOBSON ELIZABETH L. JOHNSON HARRIET-LEE KELLER LIBBY SUZANNE KESSLER AUDREY JANIS LANTRY VALENTINE LUHS KATHERINE L, C. MACKINTOSH SIGRUD BIRKLIN MAHL JACKLYN ANN MASCARELLI PATRICIA JEAN MASCARELLI MARILYN CAROLE MOSS HELEN POPOFF GERDA RATKOVSKY CAROL ANNE REILLY CAROL ANITA RIEDEMAN CHRISTIE H. ROBERTS DOROTHY CAROL RYMAN JANE EDITH SARTORI JANET ELAINE SCHWEIFLER MARIE LOUISE DIANNE SCOTT KALERIA SHARIGIN EDITH ROSE STRAUSS ANITA SUNG 208 Busy Term for Rall SPRING DANCE COMMITTEE Raw one: R. Janigian, S. Bates, J. Driscoll. S. Nelson, R. Guggenhime. Row 11005 T. Patch, B. Moore. FALL DANCE COMMITTEE Under the sponsorship of Miss Dealtry the fall dance committee planned three successful dances, which included The Foot-Ball, Gone Fishin', and Frosty's Frolic. The members planned the themes, the interesting tallies, and the eye-catching decorations. The members of the 'fall dance committee included Carol Melmon, Penny Black, Audrey Bocek, Pete Carr, RALLIES Rallies this term were better than ever. Under the leadership of Mr. Anino, who returned from Europe after a l-eave of absence of one year, the rallies were planned by the student body oflicers and the rally com- mittee. The members of the committee consists of Brenda Enmeier, Ross Shoaf, Shirley Hong, Kit Cole, Sylvia Nelson, Mimi Marx, Rhoda Cohn, Dan Nolan Mari- 7 lyn Braverman, Mike Axelrad, and Chuck Breyer. The spirit at the rallies was up to the usual high STUDENT BODY DANCE COMMITTEE The Student Body Dance Committee of the past term had a busy schedule planning the great school dances. Under the able direction of Mr. Anino, the faculty sponsor, and Sylvia Nelson, committee chair- man, the dance committee worked their utmost to make the dances successful. A new plan was tried for the first time at Lowell. Pat Clark, Diana DeMun, Suzan Ferroggiaro, John Kiil, Mike Kuhn, Idele Levy, Mike Mattson, Larry Miller, Ji-m Nolan, Marty Pyle, Joyce Richards, Aud- rey Schwartz, Ross Shoaf, Roberta Spivock, Pete Wil- liams, and Thom Yasukochi. The cooperation between the members is an essen- trial part of the dance committee and through thei helpful and eager efforts all the dances were a grea success and enjoyed by everyone. w standards, and during the term, at one of the big game rallies, Lowell was visited 'by Ketty Frierson, from the Purple Onion, who sang several numbers. This term's cheer leaders introduced their new cen- tennial sweaters and also new yells. The most popular yell was titled Charlie's Indian. At the S.I. game a new type rooting section was organized. Everybody wore white an-d the students were arranged in rows ac- cording to their class. Certainly the 1956 cheer leaders and rally commit- tee did an outstanding job. Each dance was sponsored by the dance committee and a school club. Some of the organizations that spon- sored the dances during the spring term were the CSF, Block L, Big Sisters and Big Brothers, and the Low 12 activities committee. The members of the dance committee were Bob Moore, Sylvia Nelson, Janice Driscoll, Russ Janigian, Tony Patch, Rich Guggenhime, Nan Krutchkoff, and Susie Bates. Student Bod Committees I ' Ls: 3' 4 :its if.: iw WV .F . Q FALL DANCE COMMITTEE Rauf one: Diane DeMun, Roberta Spivock, Audrey Bocek, Carol Melmon, Audrey Schwartz, Pat Clark. Row tufo: Jim Nolan, Penny Black, Sue Ferroggiam, Joyce Richards, Marty Pyle. Rau' Ibree: Pete Carr, Mike Kuhn. Pete Williams, John Kiil, Mike Mattson, Thom Yasuknchi. RALLY COMMITTEE Raw one: C. Breyer, M. Braverman, S. Nelson, R. Cohn, S. Honig. Rauf two: M. Axelrod, B. Moore, D. Nolan. Row lbreep A. Schwartz, K. Cole. CLAIRE TRAIG DARLYNE TREVOR DIANE RUTH WARD NANCY LORRAINE WASSON VICTORIA SU YU FELICIA JOAN ZEIGER CLASS OF JUNE, 1953 Boys RICHARD SCOTT ALVAREZ JAMES MILTON ARMSTRONG VICTOR T. ASANO LAWRENCE ADAMS AXTELI. JAMES A. BASS JERRY DENIS BELFIELD DONN RAPHELD BERNSTEIN WALTER BIRNBAUM GEOFFREY ARTHUR PAUL BLUM RICHARD CHARLES BLUM NEIL BRUCE BLUMENTHAL CLAY POPE BRADLEY ALFRED FISHER BRESLAUER. JR. GORDON STEWART BROWN ELLIOTT DONALD BUCHDRUKER COLIN BRADLEY BURKE HENRY EDWARD CALLAGHAN RICHARD PAUL CAPP ROBERT JESS CELSO SAM GEORGE CHELIOS BRUCE KEMBLE CHESSE LARRY MICHAEL CHIN VLADIMIR M. CHUHLANTSEFF HUNTER BROOKE CLYDE JR. KEITH E. COHN RICHARD S. COLMAN EDWARD JEWETT CONNER RICHARD WALTER COOPER JAMES EDWARD CRILLY, III ALEXANDER CLAYTON CROSBY ANDREW G. CROW, JR. A. CURTIS CULVER PETER ANDREW DAHL MICHAEL A. DANIELS JEROME HAROLD DENHAM JAMES PATRICK DICKEY FRANK N. W. DOODHA. JR. H. ROBERT DULIK KARL JOHN DIAZ WAYNE HUGH EASLEY XVECZESLAW ELSNER HENRY FRANK ESPINOZA NORMAN SAMUEL FAIX PHILLIP JOHN FEHLEN ROMAALD FELICIA ROBERT LOUIS FERROGGIARO DAVID STOPHLET FLATTERY GABRIEL FLAUM FULVIO FORNASIER DAVID FRACTENBERG RICHARD D. FREEMON DONALD CHARLES FUERSTNER MICHAEL DEAN GAINEY JOHN ROBERT GALE RONALD L. GILLESPIE PETER GOLDBERG FRANK P. GOLDER BERNARD GOLDSTEIN DEAN OLIVER GOODRICH GARRETT PAUL GRAHAM FELIX L. GRAUSS, III CHARLES R. GREEN HARRY GREENBERG RICHARD ALLYN GREENBLAT GUY HAMELIN CARL FREDRICK HANKEN LAURENCE A. HARRIS RICHARD ADRIAN HARTNETT JOEL THOMAS HEDGPETH PAUL HIRO ROBERT EUGENE HOELTER ALLAN S. HOLDER KENNETH HRIBAL FRANK ALLEN HUBERT ANTHONY GALE KAHMANN RICHARD DEAN KAMLER JAMES J. KANIHAN MARVIN KEYS JOHN JAMES KING ROBERT GERHART KIRCHHOFF JERALD ALLAN KLER JAMES T. KNOWLES THOMAS MARTIN KULL ALAN ERIC LAZAR MICHAEL BENJAMIN LEASKOU GEORGE LEDERER PETER LEDERER CALVIN MARK LEE JOSEPH J. LEJARZA VINCENT THOMAS LEONARD, JR. WALTER SULTAN LEVISON FREDRIC ALAN LINN EVERETT GEORGE LONG, JR. JOHN DUER LUETSCHER HENRY LURIE GRAHAM TERRIER MACKINTOSH 209 RONALD FRANK MALESPIN HENRY C. MANIBUSAN RAYMOND J. MASON JACOB LENHARDT MATHIS. JR. ALEXANDER WALLACE MCCREA STANLEY BARROWS MCCREA JOHN DUFF MCGILVRAY. IV DVUIGHT LEO MELVILLE NICKOI.AS PETER MISTHOS HENRY WILLIAM MITCHELL BERNARD HERBERT MIZEL RICHARD ALAN MOHR JOHN I.EONARD MOLINARI EDVUARD JAMES MOODY, JR. ALLAN RICHARD MORRISON GAIL ALLAN MOSS FRANK W. MULLIGAN KIRK LAURETZEN NIELAND MARK XVILLIAM NOE FRANK LESTER NORTON RICHARD COBURN OREAR BARTON L. OTT RICHARD WILLIAM PADDACIK JOHN VUALTER PARKS RICHARD JOEL PASSER ROBERT ROY PERRY 'JTTO HENRY PFLUEGER, JR. STEPHEN BARCLAY PLACE FRED GRAY PLAGEMAN GERALD T. POLZIN JOHN BIGELOVU POPE NEXVELL EUGENE RAXTER EDWARD P. RISBROUGH PAUL CHARLES ROSENTHAI. ROBERT BURGESS ROSS PETER SAH, JR. JOHN FREDERICK SAMPSON JACK M. SAROYAN W DONALD ROBERT SCHAI.I.ER MARCU SCHERER ALBERT JULIUS SCHMIDT LIONEL BLACKMORE SCHMIDT RICHARD E, SCHOTTSTAEDT MARTIN ARNOLD SEGOL ROBERT SHAHOVSKOI HOYT 'It SHERMAN, JR. NICHOLAS T, SHEROKOFF EDWIN M. SHONFELD RONALD G. SIMPSON ROY I-IOXVARD SMITH ALPHFRED R, SPRINGS FREDERICK L. STURGEON JAMES F. THOMAS JR. CALVIN BREUNER TILDEN MEDFORD ELUSTER TODD CLIFFORD S. TOM DONALD TONG KURK RICHARD TOOHEY CHARLES N. TRAVERS JIMMY TSE DEVIN HUGH UTTER RICHARD L. VEGA PHII.IP VAN DE VENTER ROGER EDXVARD VENTURI JOSEPH BERNARD VERDU, JR. JOHN BASIL VLAHOS TERRY REED WALLACE MAXXVELL R. WARD I.EON EDMUND NYVAXMAN STEWART WEINBERG PAUL RICIKENBACHER WEST, JR. I.YMAN HERRICK XWILBUR JAMES DONALD XVILKINS GARY ROY XVILSEY JEFFRY ARNOLD XVISNIA ANDREW EVANDER XVONG WING XWONG KAHN YAMADA HERBERT J. YIM Girls JEANNE MAE ALIOTO JOYCE MARILYN ALM MARY ALICE ANDERSON SYLVIA PHYLLIS ANSON CAROL MARIE ARMSTRONG GEORGIA LEE BALDASSARI JUDITH ELENA BARBATA ANN MEREDITH BARNARD KAREN JUNE BAUMANN HALINA BERGEN FRANCES LOUISE BERGER ELAINE MARILYN BERKE LOIS ELAINE BERNSTEIN KATHERINE MARIE BERTRAM ALICE JULIA BIERNOFF INA BIRNBAUM LOIS MARIE BIRNBAUM ANITA LUCILLE BLAU ARLINE PHYLLIS BLUMER NADESHDA I. BOGDANOVA CORA MAE BOLLES MARY ANN BONACCORSI JEAN ARLINE BRAAS NANCY LEE BREXVER CHARLENE E. BRUGGEMANN 210 ' LM SCHOOL DANCES Row 0110: Bob Oddunc and Sylvia Xvuodward, Rau' Iwo: Diana De Mun, Eric Mackintosh, Sue Wfarner, Phil Sevier, Julie Petersen. Raw Ibree: Sharon Johnson and Kevin Hzirrirxgton. Many School Dances SUSAN HELEN BRYAN SYBIL BEATRICE CAHEN NAOMI RUTH CAHN JUNE MARIE CAMORIANI FRANCINE SONYA CATANIA MARY LILIAS CLEVE NADINE RENEE COLEMAN JEAN ELEANOR CONLAN JOANNE DAHL JACQUELINE CLARA DAHLMAN DI RICCI ANN DANIELS STEPHANIE JO DAVIS AUDREY GAIL DE BISSCHOP NANCY CAROL DEMMLER IREN DIE TABENSKY DARLENE ELAINE DEUTSCHER NANCY JANE DICKERSON NICKA DOBBS EUGENIE FRANCES DOODHA CARMEN DORICH BEATRICE EDWARDS DORIS ANN ELMORE DARLENE YVONNE ESLICK NANETTE KAY FIGEL CAROLYN FISHER NATALIE MARIAN FLEISHER LENORE FLESCHLER SHARON LA VERNE FORD LAURETTA FOX WINIFRED LOUISE FREED GAIL GARVIN NANCY GATES CAROL GRANT GERE SUZANNE MARIE GORMAN FRANCES GOTFRID ROBERTA HAMILTON HENRIETTA M. HANSEN MARGUERITE ANN HANSON LEONA MARGUERITE HARPER BARBARA ENID HASSMAN CAROLE LEE HATCHER CAROL LEE HAUGEN MAUREEN PATRICIA HERNAN VIDA JAYNE HERNDON I SUSAN S. HERRINGTON MARCIA JOAN HERST MARILYN DIANNE HEWITT MARIANNE MERRIAM HOBBS JOAN LOREEN HONEK SYLVIA JOAN HOTCHNER JACQUELINE MARGARET HUGHES JOAN MARIE HUTTL RUTH ARLENE HUTZEN BARBARA GRACE IRELAN JOAN ANN JACOBSEN MARY CAROLYN JONES MURIEL REGNA JOSEPHSON NANCY KASSELL JUDITH ANN KELLEHER SHARLENE RENEE KLEIN ANNE KOPELK YVONNE MAY KRAMER JOAN MARY KUMLER YVONNE CELESTE LAMOTHE CORINNE HAMILTON LASSERS SHIRLEY JEANNE LEDRICK JO ANN LIVINGSTONE GRETCHEN MARIE LOUTHAN JOAN CARYL LOVERING AUDREY MAY MACGREGOR JUDITH MAHAN EDITH ANN MALAMUD MARY JOANNE MARSH BARBARA JANE MATTEA GAIL MARGARET MESSINA KAREN BARBARA MILLER BARBARA JANE MURPHY JANE WHITMAN MUTH BARBARA LEE NEILSON CAROLE LEE NICKELSON MARCIA ELLEN NORSTROM PATRICIA ANN O'DONNELL DAISY PARKER BEVERLY VIOLA PETERSON ELAINE SHIRLEY PICETTI DORIS POLLAK ROSELTHA ANN PORTER JANET GAYLE POWELL JOAN EVELYN PRENDIVILLE ADRIENNE ANN RADOVICH SANDRA KAY RAINS SOLIDAD RAMOS CAROLE ADRIENNE RANDOLPH FRANCES OLIVE RATCLIFF DIANE THELMA RICHARD CAROLE JEAN ROSENTHAL JOAN L, RUIZ IRENE MICHELLE RUSS CAROLE BARBARA SAMUEL ROSEMARIE ANN SAUER MARGERY HELBURNE SAUNDERS BARBARA JOAN SCALABRINO EVA RUTH SCHLESINGER BARBARA ARLENE SCHNEIDER ELINER BETH SHEMANSKI SHARLEEN MAE SHEPHARD KATHERINE ANN SINCLAIR 211 JOY ANNE SMITH THERESA JEAN SOLKOV IRENE ELIZABETH SOOHODOLSKY SARAH ANN SPENCER RUTH MAY SPIESS CARMEN MARIE SPINGOLA KATHERINE BERTHA STANLEY CYNTHIA NAN STEARNS ROBERTA MAE STEINBERG JO ANN ADAIR STEWART BEVERLY ANN SWOPE DARLENE GAIL TAYLOR NAOMI ELAINE TENEKJIAN BARBARA EILEEN TERSTEGGE CECELIA JUNE TOLESON VIRGINIA WARD TREADWELL BEVERLY-JO TRYON SHIRLEY ROSIEN TUBBS FRANCES JEAN VAN FOSSEN SVETLANA K. VASILEV VALERIE MAY VLAUTIN JANE CAROLE WAGNER KARIN KIMBALL WALKER BARBARA RUTH WARNER SHELBY LEE WARREN JANET WEAVER JANE BARTON WICKSTROM MARILYN TERRY WILHELMS CAROL LEE WILLIAMS VALARIE ANN XVIMER CAROLEE MARIE WITT PEGGY XVONG CLASS OF JANUARY, 1954 'Boys JOHN SELLER ANSON DAVID JOSEF BAAR TULIE MILLARD D. BARNUM GEORGE BECK DIETER BERGER ROY BEI ERNEST CABRERA GORDEN L. CLARK ROGER W. CLARK RONALD B. CLARK MALCOLM STANLEY COLE CHARLES H. CURI.EY COLMAN DANIEL VASSILY I. DUBENKO JOHN F. EGAN JAMES DILLON EMERSON PETER I-IIDALGO FLOOD JOSEPH RICHARD FREASE DAVID VUALTER FREEMAN GEORGE PHILLIP FRENKEL PHILLIP FRED GEBHARD MICHAEL H. GILBERT CONSTANTINE J. GLAFKIDES DAVID H. GLASSEL SANFORD HABER ROGER ARTHUR HAMBLY XVESLEY ANTHONY HOBBS KAREL JORDACK STANLEY S. KAN FRANK R. KENNEY ABRAHAM R. KRIGER SAMUEL A. KUHN RICHARD WILLIAM LANE HERBERT LEWIS I.ENCHNER BENNETT JESSE MANN DOUGLAS J. MCDONNELI. RICHARD H. MINETTI RICHARD CARL MUNTER LOUIS E. PELFINI HOWARD BERK PLATT ROBERT EDWARD POTTER BRUCE D. PURRINGTON EDXVARD ROBERT QUAN JOSEPH ARLAND RAFFETTO DONALD GEORGE RODGERS DAVID F. ROSENISERG ROBERT SCOTT SHERMAN RAYMOND W. TOM DOLPH THOMAS URBAN ROBERT W, WECK KANE SHEE-GONG YEE YEE JING PING Girls CHRISTINE CAROLINE BERING VERA N. CHIRIKOFF MARTHA CHRISTIN DANIELS JOAN CLAIRE ERBENTRAUT EVA LAURIE FIELD AI.ISON WINIFRED GREEN MILDRED DREW HARMON KAY DIANE HARPER ANN ELIZABETH KIIL STARR KOESTER MOIRA ANN LEE SHARON ADELE LIGHTY IRENE GOTHE MENSHIKOV ELAINE PATRICIA MUELLER FRANCES NATALIE NAPOLIN EDAGMAR CHRISTINE NEICK JACQUELINE DAWN NORWITT 212 Fun at the Rallies Fall Football Banquet ? , . Q If L- in FOOTBALL BANQUET - FALL 1955 Perino, Tap row, lefi la rigbl, mfddle pirfures Mr. Milton, George Linn, Coach at Stanford, Coach Feiling, Mr. Coach Neff, and Dr. Smxth. Middle row, lmzed: Mr. Milton, George Linn, Mr. Perino, Slanding: Jim Nolan, and Coach Feiling. TERUKO OMURA MARINA D. OSHURKOFF TANIA OTZOUP PHYLLIS JEAN PALLADINO JERALDINE M. ROSEN REIKO SEKINO HELEN ESTHER STONE SACHIKO SUGIYAMA ELIZABETH STEWART SUTTON CARLA MAY TASSI CAROL SUE THOMPSON ELLA KATHRYN WAHLGREN JOAN ARLENE WELLS NANCY ETTA WEST TATJANA ZALESSOW PATRICIA LEE ZELLER CLASS OF JUNE, 1954 Boys PAUL M. ADACHI SEYMOUR ALTERMAN KENNETH ARCHIBALD KENNETH ALFRED ARNDT FREDERICK W. BAUMEISTER HARRY GLENN BELL, JR. NICHOLAS BOLONOGOFF MICHAEL BERGER PETER C. BLUETT MAX JENNETT BODDEN YOSHINORI ERNEST BOKURA ROGER LYNN BOHNE PHILLIP HERBERT BRAVERMAN GEORGE LE ROY BREWSTER HENRY HANNA BRIGHAM, III CHARLES BROWN FREDERICK VAN BRUCH RICHARD FRANCIS BULLOCK DAVID HOYLE BURTON JAMES LEWIS CALHOUN ROGER GEORGE CARVER CLEVE W. CARTER RICHARD ANDREW CELLARIUS ROBERT YUEN TSUN CHIN SANDY SEE CHING CHINN WILLIAM ROBERT CHISUM STEPHEN IRVING COHEN VINCENT LEO COOKE RICHARD KENNETH COURTWAY GEORGE A. CUTHBERTSON ARTHUR CZYZ JAMES MILTON DALRYMPLE RICHARD SHERMAN DANA JAMES CLAYTON DAVIS WILFRED DAWES DAVIS ALAN EVERETT DEAR EDWARD J. DOHERTY RICHARD EARL DONAVAN CHARLES A. ERHARD SAMUEL EDWARD FEDELI. JR. XVILLIAM E. FERRITER, JR. JOHN P. FIDLER EARL ARTHUR FILLINGER EMILE E. FORTENBERRY ROBERT MARTIN FRICK EDDIE HOY GONG ARLEIGH CHARLES GREENBLAT PEETER GRUNER PRICE J. HALL DOUGLAS MARTIN HAMILL VICTOR ALOYISIUS HEBERT DAVID MICHAEL HEILBRON DANIEL WARREN HONE LOUIS WILLIAM HONIG LARRY HUSBAND JACK LOUIS HYMANS KUNIMARO ISHIDA JAN M, JANOFSKY PETER ANTON JANSSEN KENNETH WARREN JOHNSTON ROBERT EDWARD JONES EZEKIEL JOSEPH LAURENCE DONALD KAY SCOTT RICHARD KEILHOLTZ ERIC GEORGE KNOX JAMES A. LAYTON . ERNEST CHARLES LEICHTER PAUL LEW LLOYD EDWARD MINNEY MICHAEL DUER MONTEITI-I FRANK PHILLIP MORGAN LECH MARIAN MULLER YOSHITA NUMEHARA THOMAS EDWARD MURNEY RICHARD A. MALDONADO SAMUEL MARCOVITCH JAMES J. MARSHALL JOHN JAMES MCCARTNEY GEORGE RAY MCCHESNEY NORMAN ARTHUR NAGEL JOHN DAVID NEVIN THOMAS BOYD NIBLEY JOSEPH M. O'SHEA ANTONIO PAGSOLINGAN DOUGLAS GOWAN PECK THOMAS C. PETRIG 213 EBEN F. PHILLIPS DALE F. POLISSAR WILILAM WADE POPE RICHARD HAROLD RAMSEY JOHN MOTT RECTOR, II THEODORE JOSEPH REICH ARTHUR ELLIOTT REIDER EARL LOUIS RESCH GARY LAWRENCE RIFKIND DONALD GEORGE RODGERS ROBERT F. RUBIA GEORGE ELSON ST. JOHN PAUL DEWITT SANDERS F. ARNOLD SANDROCK ROBERT EDXVARD SCHIPPER THOMAS KURT SCHWABACHER GILBERT RENATO SCIACQUA KARL SENDER DARRELL SEVILA WILLIAM BRUCE SHAFER BERTRAND JAY SHAPIRO EDDIE SEIGO SHIOSAKI RICHARD CHARLES SISICH EDWARD LAIDLAW SMITH SHERMAN ALLEN SODERLUND ' ALLAN ELWOOD SOMMER CLIFFORD XVALLACE SOWARD ALVIN DAYLEN STURGEON BARNETT JOSEPH SUMSKI BURTON L. SWEENEY GOLDEN ROBERT SWENSON CHARLES ARTHUR THEISS RONALD TSUGITA BORIS I. TOPERKOFF RICHARD L. TORIGGINO DONALD EDWARD VERDU CARLOS PEDRO G. VILLA, II TAKASHI XVATANABE JAMES ASHLEY WEBSTER ROBERT LYNN NVHITE HARVEY L. WHITLEY DONALD E. WILKES WILLIAM WINSTON LAURENCE KLAUBER WORMSER ROBERT R. YAMABE GERALD HIN HING YOUNG ROBERT MARTIN ZWIEG Girls CAROL AARDAL ANN ADAIR AUDREY ANN ALLISON CAROL ANN ANGER ELEANOR AMIKO AOKI BONITA CLEENE BALTHROPE BEVERLY LYNN BARDO BARBARA ANNETTE BATMALE PATRICIA LOU BERELSON CAROL LOU BERGER KAREN OLGA BLAIR BARBARA BRAZIER DEIDRE MARIA BRITTON MARGARET LOUISE BURTON WINIFRED LEE BUTCHER CLAUDIA DALE CAESAR EDITH ELAINE CAMPBELL LORELEI JEWEL CLUFF JOANNE CONLON RHODA MAE CRAVENS DIANNE BRITTON DANDY BARBARA JANE DAVIES ARLENE BEVERLY DAVIS BEVERLY ANN ECKHARDT ANNA INESE EGLITE PATRICIA LOUISE ELDREDGE JEAN KAREN ELLESON WENDY CLAIRE EPPINGER MARGUERITE L. FINMAN ELIZABETH JEAN FLETCHER JANET LOUISE FRANK MARY LOUISE FRIZZELL VIRGINIA LEE GARNOT DONNA GILBERT EVA GOLIGER DOROTHY EVE GORDON SUZANNE GORDON MAURINE SANDRA GRANT DIXIE LEE HALFORD ISABELLE HALL JEAN MARIE HARPER CAROL LYNN HARRIS FRANCES JEAN HARRIS CECILE ROSE HARTMAN MARY ISABELL HENDERSON VIRGINIA ELIZABETH HERNDON BARBARA LEE HILL SYLVIA GAY HOLLINGSWORTH NANCY FLORENCE HOLTZWORTH JUDITH ANN HUDSON KIYOMO ISHII DIANE S. JACOBS SHIRLEY DIANE JACOBSON LENORE JAMES MARTHA VIRGINIA KAHN PEGGY BARBARA KAPLAN ELENA KASHKADAMOFF 214 Lowellites at Pla ore Candid Shot JUDITH KINO WALITA LEE KOENIG PATRICIA ELAINE KOOYER CAROLE DIANE KOTHE LESLIE JEAN KRATZ ARLENE ALICE KROUZIAN YVONNE MILDRED LABOURE MARILYN GRACE LAMB JUDITH LANDAU CLAIRE SERENE LOW ANN KING LOXXIRY MARY LUM GWENDOLYN C. LUNDERVILLE JANE ELLEN MATZGER JOAN MATZGER DIANE MAE MCCLELLAND JUDITH MCDONALD ETTA DELL MCLEMORE MARCIA M. MECKLENBURG ALBINA M. MEREDITH ADRIANE I.. MODLIN CAROLYN XVINNE MONTGOMERY POURAN MOZAPFARI BARBARA RUTH MUGG IRENE MARY MUGGACH BARBARA ANN O'CONNOR PATRICIA KAY OGNEFF NANCY ANN OLSEN KYRA OPPERMANN MARILYN DIANE ORTNER JO-ANNE PATTERSON KATHLEEN ADEA PAUSCH DOROTHY ANN PFLIEGER MARILYN ANN PHILLIPS NANCY LYNN RAUB DALE ARLENE REINHART JUDITH HUNT RICHARDS SUE RILEY ELIZABETH ANN ROBERTS BARBARA DIANE ROSE FRANCES ANN RUSSELL AILEEN MARIE RYAN JOAN RYAN DOREEN LEE SCHUETTE CLARA LENORE SCOTT JACQUELINE GRACE SECAIL SACHIKO SEKINO ROBERTA GRACE SINGER GERALDINE MAE SMITH KATHERINE JAMES SPEROW ALINE SPIVOCK ALMA SPIVOCK JOYCE MARILYN SPIVOCK NANCY SUE SPURGEON SALLY MARGARET SQUIRES SANDRA ANN STEIGERWALD CECELE MARIAN STEVER ALICE SUNG GAYLE SANDRA SUSNOXY' BEATE SUSSKIND MAUREEN ADAIR SWANSON MARGARET MARY URBAN JENNIE RAE VANDAMENT ANN LOUISE VARGO SUMIKO WADA ARLENE SHEILA XWAITE CHRISTINE CAROLE WARREN JOAN LOUISE WARNER CATHERINE ELIZABETH XWEHREN BARBARA JEAN XWELSH MARY LEI WHITE MARIAN MARJORIE WILLIAMS DIANE KYNNERSLEY WITT JOAN LESLIE WOLFENDEN FRANCES JANE WOLIN JOHNNIE I.ORRAINE WOOD JOYCE CAROLYN WORSXWICK HELEN YU NATALIA ZALESSOXV KALERIA ZERCHIKOEF CLASS OF JANUARY. 1955 Boys FREDRIC LOUIS ADDISON BENHART AGUSTIN ALAN BENNETT AXELROD MILTON CHARLES AXT. JR. RICHARD YONAN BAYBA WILLIAM ROY BELLEZER EDWARD DOUGLAS BENTON GEORGE M. BODROV DONALD FREDERICK BULL PAUL BEST DONALD ALFONSO CARSON, JR. STEPHEN IRVING COHEN BRYANT ROGER COHN LAWRENCE HARVEY COHN WILLIAM GARRY DANENHOWER DONALD ROBERT D'ANGINA RICHARD M. EVANGELISTA PAUL MIKE GOORJIAN CLARENCE LLEWELLYN GRIDER GEORGE EUGENE GUMBEL GEORGE E. HENRY, JR. DUANE M. HINES 215 SYED KHALID AMANAT HUSAIN WILLIAM LLOYD IRWIN BENTON JACKS WARREN GENICHI KOMATSU DONALD PHILLIPS KRAUSS STEPHEN JACQUES KRIEGER BENSON KWAN ROBERT H. LOSHUERTOS TRACY JAMES MCDERMOTT DXVAINE LEO MELVILLE JOHN WESSEL MINDERMAN ACCIE MARION MITCHELL DAVID LAURENCE MISKEL CHARLES EDWARD MALINS. JR. ALBERT TIM MOCK EARL NELSON NORGARD MICHAEL V. ORLOEF ROLAND MARC PERACCA, JR. NEAL LENNARD PETERSEN RONALD STEPHEN PETERSEN JAMES MICHAEL PIRO CHARLES A. PRITCHARD KARL ALFRED PUSHMAN CHARLES STEPHEN RALSTON JULIO A. RAMOS GORDON ENDERS ROSENBERG DONALD EUGENE SILLIMAN CARTER E. SMITH RONAI.D LEE STERN BORIS I. TOPORKOFF JOHN A. VANNUCCI GEORGE ACHILLES VLAHOS BART VOORSANGER NEIL VOORSANGER BOCK HING RINGO XWONG HALL CHUNG WOO Girls PATRICIA JOAN ALECK SANDRA JOAN ANIXTER SON JA ERLA AUZ ELEANOR IRMA BENNER HELEN LORRAINE BERTELSEN DIANA PHYLLIS BRILLIANT BARBARA MAE CLARK CAROL LOUISE CRISLER DIANN ARLEEN DAVID ARLENE JOANN DILLER BARBARA JO DOVE LLLLIAN ELIZABETH EARL BARBARA EDISON ARLENE MARILYN EPP BARBARA JEAN EIGONE JEANNE GOKSON JOAN MARIE HOLCOMB ALYSE JACOBS CAROL ANN KARSTENSEN KAREN BETH KARSTENSEN KATHRYN KERR KING MARY ANN KLINEMAN MARTHA ANN LENDARIS NOEL FRANCES LEONARD PHYLLIS ANNETTE MANESS BARBARA LYNN MARGULEAS MYRA MARKS JEANNE LYDIA MCCUTCHEON CONSTANCE LOUISE MELAVIC SHIRLEY ANN MITCHELL CAROL JOAN Moss JUNE NAKAI YOLANDA NOGUERA LYDIA A. NORWOOD JANET CAROL PETERSEN BARBARA RUSSELLE POLLITT LEONA ROTENBERG JANET HELEN SAMPSON DIANE IRIS SHAFFMAN KATHERINE MAE SMIRNOEE DIANE ELAINE SOMOZA LIV CLAUDIA STEARNS SUSAN DUEEIN STOLL DIANE MARIE TAFORO EVE-BELLE TAYLOR MARGIT SUZANNE UHLMANN MARILYN PAYE URBANK ROSITA THERESA VICENTE ELEANOR IRMGARD VOGEL SUSANA MARY XVHISMAN JOCELYN CARA WHITE BARBARA LEE WILLIAMS CLASS OF, JUNE 1955 Boys KENNETH HOYT ADAMS ROBERT FERNANDEZ ANOLIN CHARLES R. ALPAUGH MICHAEL H. ARONSON ROBERT ALLEN BAKER LARRY ROGER BARNBLATT JOHN A. BLYODER, JR. RICHARD XWILLIAM BLANZ JOHN JOSEPH BROUCARET PAUL MARTIN BLUM VICTOR BOGO STEPHEN PARKS BRADLEY 216 CHEMISTRY CLASS VISITS STANDARD OIL COMPANY Row une: D. Buttolph, S. Cohen, S. Jacobs, K. Jenkins, J. Mendelson, Miss Dealtry, A. Merritt and guide examine machinery. Sefond piftnre: E. Silverman, J. Hartman, XV. Kaufmann, M, Kuhn, M. Olsen, B. Waite, V. Brochard watch an experiment. Row Iwo: P. Matzger, C. McClure, B. Nason, R. Schaeffer, H. Raab, and'M. Ynkoro peer intently at demonstration. Serond piflure: S. Cohen, S. Jacobs, K. Jenkins, R, Hall, J. Mendelson, and A Merritt listen to guides explanation. REG. REPRESENTATIVES LEAP YEAR FESTIVITIES High seniors on Leapin' Lizzie Day. February 29, 1956, High senior girls wore middies and red bows in their hair. 5 5 STEPHEN GERALD BREYER MALCOLM ULMAN BROCK JOHN MICHAEL BYRNE GORDON POWER CALLAWAY JERRY WILLIAM CAMPBELL DOMINIC JAMES CAPPUCCI CHRIS C. B. CHRISTIANSEN RICHARD ALDEN CHEU WOO HONG CHUNG RONALD PAUL COOPER DAVID MCD. CUTHBERTSON ANTHONY W, D'AGOSTINO CLEMENT DARE LARRY DASHIELL LAURENCE BRETT DAWSON KENNETH VERNON DAWSON SAMUEL LAURENCE DEDERIAN PHILIP R. DEANGELO, JR. DAVID LLOYD DEMING PAUL MORRIS DILLER NORMAN C, H. DURIEUX CHARLES LA VALLE EKLOF THEODORE JACOB EISENSTADT EDWARD GERALD EVANS FORREST JOSEPH FALLON GUY EDWARD FERROGGIARO JOHN A. FORDE, JR. SALVADOR JOHN FRANZELLA SHELDON R. FRANKLIN MICHAEL WOODWORTH FULLER HENRY FUNG, JR, ALFONSO E. VALLE GARAY FERNANDO VALLE GARAY MAURICE DAVID GARDNER DEWEY GEE WILLIAM MICHAELS GIBBONS HAROLD M. GOETZ, JR. II JERRALD ROGER GOLDMAN JOHN MARTIN GORFINKEL STUART GEORGE GOULD PETER ARTHUR GRAY LEAL ASHER GRUPP VICTOR z, H, HANSON KING A. HARRINGTON, JR. GEORGE F. HELMSDOERFER ROBERT SAMUEL HERMANN ROGER EDWARD HERST EDWIN LANCASTER HOBBS MICHAEL CURREN HONE WILLIAM CRAWFORD HERBERT JOHN L. ISAACS GEORGE IVELICH JAMES CLINTON JACKSON STEPHEN NELSON JAFFE CHARLES CHUCK JEW BRUCE CAMPBELL JOHNSON J. CLARK JOHNSON JOHN RAYMOND JUNG KENNETH EDGAR KAHN VLADIMIR PAUL KATAEFF THEODORE PETER KERHULAS PHILIP KING ALAN DELBERT KNOX RONALD MICHEL KRAMER FRANKLIN BARRETT KRASNE CARL FRANKLIN KRESS MARSHALL W. KREUTER PAUL F. KROLL ROBERT E. KUPPINGER NELSON LAANGE ROBERT EDGAR LANGE JOSEPH ALBERT LASKY JAMES CLEMENT LATTIMORE MARC E. LELAND GEORGE T. LENAHAN, JR. LOUIS MICHAEL LEVIN THOMAS SULTAN LEVISON THOMAS KELLAM LLOYD CLAUDE LEOPOLD LOWEN ANDRE LUBARSKY FRANK CARL LUDNVIG JAMES T, LUNDE JOHN TERENCE LYTTLE JOHN ERXWIN MAQFARLANE CLIFFORD IRVIN MARSHALI. LEONARD ALLEN MARSHALI. MICHAEL DENNIS MLCLINTOCK DONALD EDWARD MEDOWELI. KIRK MCLEAN ANTHONY CHARLES MELODIA RAINALDO L. MENDOZA GUENTER MERKLE DAVID MIDDLEBROOK JAMES WHITNEY MITCHELL JOHN DESMOND MORAN EDWARD L. MORRISON. JR. KIYOSHI NAITO ALEXANDER NALIVAIKO GEORGE NAZAROFF STANLEY ASCHJAM NIELSEN TOSHIHIKO OKUBO HERBERT SHIRO OMURA ROBERT A. O'NEAL MARTIN LESTER O'SHEA ROBERT JOSEPH PARKER, JR. 217 4 Il at Mrk 9 .','P of x I 1' ' la F' f L ' A f - O O ju v I 5 . 4' L, F W 1 I: in gl I' - 13 If ,mf 'qw rf M I I, K E-zxlliilvz' , J l HE J N N XXX lEx1xLMJ.qE,I .DL ' Jil ' f MICHAEL PEEVEY GEORGE E. PETERSON, JR. STUART POLLAK SANFORD POLSE RICHARD EARL QUAIN ROBERT PAUL RANDALL JOHN XVALTER REED PAUL THOMAS RIBERA DOUGLAS NORMAN ROBERTS FRANK ROLDAN, JR. RICHARD STEVEN ROSE WILLIAM TIM RYAN ROGER KEITH RYMAN EDWARD A. M. SALAIS ROBERT WARREN SCOTT FREDERICK EARL SEAGER WILLIAM JOSEPH SHOPES RICHARD PHILLIP SHUEY THEODORE JOHN SIMMONS ROBERT SHAW SIMPSON DOUGLAS CHARLES SKINNER ROLF XVARBURTON SOLLIE WING SOOHOO WILLIAM CRONI.EY STANARO RONALD ARTHUR STEDMAN THOMAS OTTO STERN HARRY STRAUCH LOREN BENNETT TABER, II KENNETH TAKAHASHI DOUGLAS E. TANNER JOHN SPENCER TAYLOR DONALD THOMPSON EVERETT LEE THORS THOMAS T. TSUYUKI ROBERT BRYAN UNDERWOOD MAURICE ALEX XVEINGER STEIN WEISSENBERGER F. WILLIAM WEISSHAAR ROY ALFRED WELI.MAN XVILLIAM ARNO VUERNER, JR. JOHN MARCUS WHITE LEONHARD S. WIEDENMEYER RAVENALD JOSEPH WILLIAMS MICHAEL MUNN WONG Girls MARILYN ELIZABETH ALLEN SUSAN ALTER ROSALIE JEAN ANDRE LEATRICE E. ANGEL CLAUDE BART DE-LORES REGINA BECCARIA ARLENE GAIL BECKMAN ANNE LINDLEY BEEMAN JANET TYSON BELTON MARGARET ANN BERDEJA PEGGY JEAN BERRY JOAN SANDRAVBLUMENFELD CAROL ANN BOLATIN . SUE CAROL BORSHALL SUZANNE BRAAG CAROL LEE BRODMERKEL SARAH ROSSER' BROOKS ANDREA ALEXANDER BROXVN CONSTANCE ANN BROWN FRANCES DRISCOLL BURD CAROL ANNE CHANDLER IRENE MARGARET CHANDLER AUGUSTA CHASHIN SHIRLEY JEAN CHOATE RUBY BETH COHEN SUSAN COHEN JOETTA ELIZABETH COLWELL PATRICIA ANN COOKSON PAULA GENE COVEY PATRICIA NANCY CRANDALL ROBERTA LEE CRANOW DAWN KATHLEEN CRAVENS TONIA LEE CREIGHTON MARTHA H. DETTNER CHERI PATRICIA DILL DIANE FRANCES DIXON ELYCE E. EDELMAN LOUISE K. EDLER PATRICIA JANE ELLIS . CAROLE ANNE FABIANO JOAN MARGARET FINNERAN SUSAN SELDEN FISHER FRANCES Y. A. FITTING LENORE FITZGERALD MARY JANE FORBES TRUDE FRIEDMAN ARLAYNE EUGENIA GAMBRELL ELIZABETH GRETCHEN GAUSE LOUISE ALBERDING GEERS CAROL LEE GELL ROSALIE L. GENES LYNN MEREDITH GILMAN BARBARA ILENE GLASS VALERIE A. GNESDILOFF LIVIA RACHEL GOLDEEN ANN GOLDEN SUZANNE LYNNE GOLDMAN MECHTHILD GRIESER-FUERST YVONNE JEAN GROSSI 219 SONDRA ELINORE GROSSMAN ANATOLIA GUERRA GLORIA S. GUTTMAN NANCY ELIZABETH HAGE LANA M. HEISKANEN CHRISTA R. A. HERBORN IBUKI HIBI CAROL BARBARA HICKS SANDRA HIRSCH MARY ANNE HOFFMAN MARY LOU HOLLINGSXVORTH ADELYN JANE HONG MARYANN DOROTHEA ILLGE JOYCE MATSUMI IMAZEKI JUDITH ANN JOHNSON VIRGINIA JOHNSON SNOXVDEN SANDRA JOHNSTON LYNNDA PAYE JONES JOAN ALICE KAUFMANN JULIE KLEIN DOROTHY KOSS OLGA KRAINOFE NANCY ANN LACHTMAN LYNNE LACHMAN LETICIA L. LAU CAROLE ELAINE LAX BARBARA JANE LEBRECHT CAROL CHUN LEE ROSIE MOXVHA LEE DALE JAY LEUENBERGER JOAN CURRY LIVINGSTON LOUISE E. LONG MERRILY AUBERT LONG LINDA JOHNSON LOVELACE ODETTE VIVIENNE LUCE ELENA LUNA VIVIAN LOUISE LUND ANN ROSALIND MANN VERA ROBERTA MANN NANCY JOAN MARTIN CAROL ANN MAY JUDY MCCORD META MADELEINE MCGILVRAY SALLY ANNE MIERSON JACQUELINE BARBARA MILLER SANDRA ANN MILLETT SHARON RENEE MOLIEN NELLE CHARLENE NEWTON MARIAN JEAN OPPENHEIM JOYCE ELAINE OTKEN JUDY ELODIE OTTO JANET TOSHIKO OYAMA JUDITH DOROTHY PALMER MARY ELIZABETH PARKER JANET PEOPLES JOYCE DARLENE PRICE LORETTA LONNIE PROVENZO VIRGINIA LEE RAYLA JOSIE ANNE RICH GAYLE ANN RICHARDS JANET MARIE RIGGS MARGIE ANN RITZMAN MARILYN LEE ROSINSKY BETTE C. ROSS NANCY ELIZABETH SAWYER LENORE MARGUERITE SCHENK ANDREA C. SCHXWARTZ LYNNE MARSHA SHERMAN SANDRA ESTHER SILVERMAN PAULA SKENE LINDA ELIZABETH SORENSEN BARBARA ANN STENDELL VIRGINIA STIMSON GAY SUGARMAN OLGA TABOURET JOANNA TOM KAREN ANN TYREE DOROTHY LOUISE UNDERHIIL ALBERTA VAN UTT JO ANNE VEALE LILLIAN M. VITALY GERTRUDE ELIZABETH XVALKER IRIS XYALL MARY COOPER XVARD METTA BELLE XVEDDLETON ANN SOURXVINE XVEYRAUCH DOLLY ALBERTA XYIONG BEATRICE YANOFF LAUREL ISABELLE YOUNG CLASS OF JANUARY 1956 Boys GERALD T. BABA RONALD PETER BACHMAN KENNETH G. BALLING MEHDI BASSALIAN GEORGE R. I. BEAVIN ALAN EDXWARD BELKIN CLIFFORD M. BOBROW ARTHUR E. BURNETT, JR. THOMAS XVILLIAM CARTER ROBERT I.. CASTLE THOMAS O. CAYLOR XVILLIAM A. CHOXV 220 School IS a Busy Place Students Gain Work Experience Helping Out in Offices The offices at Lowell are very active places. Many students work in them instead of taking a study period. The attendance office workers, under the direction of Mrs. Cahen, make up and take around the attend- ance bulletin, check reasons for students' absence, and mimeograph various notices. The main office is always the scene of much activity. Miss Harrison and her staff of three students per period are kept busy filing, answering telephones, delivering messages and working the newly installed switchboard. Room 142, the counseling office, is headed by Mrs. Goldsmith and Mr. Karp-enstein who use a staff of students to help them keep up the permanent record file and various other jobs. Dr. Smith's and Miss L0rigan's office also make use of many students who aid them in discharging such duties as answering telephones, greeting visitors, and maintaining files. Students who work in Mrs. Kendall's ofhce learn how to operate the mimeograph machine and the dupli- cator. The daily bulletins and special notices are run off in the office. The girls gym department uses two girls each period to lock up the dressing rooms, give out balls and play the phonograph for folk dancers. Many students work in the library each period checking out books, shelving, and keeping the library in good order. The bookroom also takes some students each period to give out books, load and unload new shipments and various other tasks. Students like to work in the various offices because they feel that, along with helping to keep the daily routine operating smoothly, they are getting experience in office management. ALBERT G. CLARK RAY A. COLLINS JOHN DEBENHAM NEAL ALFRED DIDRIKSEN PHILIP NEALE DORE MICHAEL ROBIN DUNN GUY PAUL ERB MARK RAYMOND FISHER EMANUEL M. GOLDMAN DAVID S, GREEN JACK FRED HANSEN MARTIN R. HANSEN TOM F. TOM AKIO INOUYE ROBERT K. JEUNG ALAN ELIS JOHNSON ALLEN M. KATSUYAMA EDWARD RALPH KELLER DAVID MASARU KODAMA RICHARD R. LEONG ROBERT WARREN LOM RONALD R. LONG ERIC IAN MACKINTOSH STEPHEN JAMES MATELI.I MICHAEL CRANE MATTSON ROBERT ROY MINNEY GENNADIE MORKS JOHN MATHEW MURNIN JAMES TAKEO NANJO DAVID BAILEY NEFF JAMES A. NOLAN GUSTAVO BUSTAMENTE ORTIZ PETER DEMETRIOS PALOVS VLADIMIR I. PANTUHIN ARTHUR RICHARD PAUL MELVIN F. PRESCOTT JERRY B. REDFORD WAYNE E. ROCKSTROH MICHAEL NIKOLAI RUSS DONALD PETER SAISI SIMON SAMUEL SCHWARTZ PHILIP E. SEVIER JOHN LAWRENCE SUTTI JEFFREY BLAINE THOMPSON DONALD NILS TORNBERG VINCENT TOY ANDREW R. VARGO, JR. DANIEL RICHARD WELSH THOMAS HISAO YASUKOCHI SINCLAIR SHEE-SING YEE Girls CAROL GAY AIZENBERG STELLA A. ALTAMIRANO CHARLYNE MARY AROSIO LORRENE JEWEL ATHERTON BARBARA LYNN BAKER LORRAINE BATIS SOLBRITT HELGA BJORKMAN AUDREY ANN BOCEK BARBARA JEAN BREIT HELEN LOUISE BREWER SUZANNE BROCHARD DIANE MARIE BROOKS NICHAE CANONICA SIV MARIA CEDERING ILUMINADA S. CRESPO DIANE SUE DEMUN DONNA DEANE DOWLING BARBARA GENE ELMAN HELGA CHARLOTTE FAROSS MAUREEN ELLEN FURTADO ROSE MARIE GRIDER JOAN KISSOCK GUNTER GLORIA JUNE HANSEN ELEANOR DIANNE HOLTZ SUSAN HURFF PATRICIA JACOBI GAIL LOUISE JACOBS BETTY T. KAWAMURA SARALEE ANN KNECHTEL MARY LEE CAROL GENEVE LEEDS BARBARA ANN LINDSLEY SONYA JEAN MCKENZIE CAROL TOBY MELMON JACQUELINE ANNE MORIE JEANETTE DE LA CRUZ NICOLAS CATALINA RAMOS ALEXANDER GLORIA ROCES JOELLE ROSEN GLORIA W. ROSS JULIA MARION RUSSELL DIXIE STEWART SAMUELS ARNELL SHOWS NORENE JOAN SIBELL JUDITH ADRIENNE SIRBU NATHA MAE SMITH OLGA TZIKEVICH NELIA LOPEZ VENEZUELA ANASTASIA MARY VLAI-IOS SUSAN CLARK WARNER ANITA LOUISE WASHINGTON BEVERLY JO WILSON HELEN YUNG-FONG XVOO JANICE LEE YARNELL 221 CLASS OF JUNE. 1956 Boys STEPHEN HOWARD ABEL RICHARD WONG ACHUCK VALERIY AKINSHIN PAUL RICHARD ALEXANDER RICHARD ANDERSON CHARLES C, ANDREWS, JR. CLARENCE BARKLEY, JR. LOUIS WAYNE BATMALE PETER ALBERT BELMONT , JEFFERY EDGAR BENNINGER JAMES A. BENTON ' ' BYRON RICHARD BLACKWELL KENNETH B. BLEY HERMAN BIRENBAUM SANDRO LOUIS BOCCARA PAUL SILVIO BONACCORSI DAVID BAKER BRAMY , HARVEY ALAN BRODY DANIEL J. CALLAGHAN WILLIAM CHAN JOEL BRUCE CHASEN ALAN BERNESS CHILDS ROBERT KENNETH CHILDS BUCKY J. CHUNG H. DEAN CLEVELAND CHRISTOPHER ANTHONY COLE RODOLFO HUMBERTO CRUZ WILLIAM A. DAHL RALPH CHANDLER DANIELS II PATRICK G. DARE GEORGE RONALD DARLING WILLIAM JAMES DAVIS ROBERT D, DAWSON JOHN LOUIS DELPIERO MICI-IEAL EDGAR DILLON STEPHEN B. DIMOND MICHAEL DALE DITTES NICOLAUS DOANE BARTHOLEMEW JOSEPH DUNNE ROBERT LAWRENCE ELLESON LEWIS CARROLL W. EPSTEIN DAVID B. FLINN EDWIN CHARLES FORD, JR. RONALD L. FOX HENRY JOHN GALLA DENNIS GALLOWAY FRANK MANUEL GAMA DON GEE LEWIS PHILIP GARDNER DONN S. GARRIOTT STEPHEN N. GLADSTONE JAY MICHAEL GOSPE GERALD H. GRANT ARDEN WILLIAM GREENBLAT MINARD W. HALL HAROLD EDWARD HAND, JR. JOHN PATRICK HARE KEVIN DODDS HARRINGTON WILLIAM ELWOOD HEARN STEPHEN ALLEN HONE WILLIAM HONG JAMES SPENCER HURWITZ TERRY W. JACKSON CRAIG GRANVILLE JAKOBSEN RAY MAURICE JONES ULDIS KAPOSTINS WALTER BENFORD KEOUGH THOMAS ADOLPH KETTLESON JOHN KENNETH KIIL JOHN JACOB KINDSFATHER ROBIN DONALD KINKEAD FRANK ROBERT KLOTZ HENRY CHARLES KORNFELD STANLEY B. KURTZ I THOMAS BENJAMIN LAFORGE MICHAEL L. LARSEN KENNETH I. W. LEE SAMUEL QUIN LEE JAMES QUINLAN LEHAN BRUCE LITTMAN RONALD BOWMAN LOW GERALD FRANCIS LUCE JOHN ROLAND LUCE BRIAN GEORGE LYTTLE WILLIAM MARKEL THOMAS ANDREW MAYER WILLIAM HOWARD MCCAULEY MICHAEL PATRICK McKEE ROBERT FRANK MAIILOVICH C. HUGH MITCHELL ROBERT H. MOORE WILLIAM HUGH MORROW II ROBERT K. MURASE STEVEN YONEO MUTO ROBERT JAMES NOLAN RICHARD JAMES NYHAN THOMAS T. NYHAN ROBERT R. ODDONE ROBERT ANTONE ONORATO KATSUMI OSAKI JOSE RICARDO PANIZO ROBERT LENNARD PISANI MARSHALL LEE PLATT ROBERT GEORGE PODOLL JOSEPH RICHARD BOSADA DANIEL FRANK POYNTER 222 Curriculum The general curriculum at Lowell High School con- sists mainly of courses which will prepare students for college. Lowell sends about 90 per cent of its graduates on to college each term. For a century Lowell students have had the advan- tages of fine educational and social programs. When entering Lowell as a freshman, each pupil is given a counselor to guide and advise him through his four years. Mr. Henry Karpenstein heads the counseling department and under him are assistant counselors and grade counselors who are always willing to give a helping hand. Lowell's English department, headed by Mr. Samuel Polland, offers six courses in English, whiich are re- quired for graduation, and eight electives. Miss Aurelia Osuna heads the foreign language de- partment. Four years of work is offered in each of the four languages. At the head of the social studies department is Mr. Ray Milton.This department offers niine fields of study. The mathematics department is headed by Mr, Ivan Barker. Seven fields of study are offered by this de- partment. The science department, headed by Miss Dealtry, makes available an excellent choice of interesting courses. The courses offered are chemistry, biology, physics, and physiology. All students must take 'four years of physical edu- cation or boys may take ROTC. The physical educa- tion department is headed by Miss Dorothy Flynn and Mr. Ben Neff. Although Lowell is an academic high school, it also offers one year of shorthand and one year of type- writing. Lowellis curriculum also includes courses in art and music. V ORAL ENGLISH CLASS Oral English is a very popular course offered at Lowell. Here we see Mr. Pollands class enjoying a speech. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT There are many courses offered at Lowell in the field of English. Included are English I through VI, dra- matics, journalism, oral English, advanced composi- tion, contemporary literature, prose fiction, and poetry. English I to IV deal with grammar, the first phases of composition, and an introduction to literature. English V has the corresponding name of American literature, since it deals mostly with American authors and their writings. English VI has the corresponding name of English literature and it deals mostly with English authors and their works. Oral English is the study of how to compose speeches and how to present them to audiences. Advanced composition prepares the student to take college board examinations and also to write and or- ganize compositions. All these courses give the students a good founda- tion in English and prepare them for theirfcollege careers. SOCIAL STUDIES DEPARTMENT The social studies department of Lowell is composed Of several sections, with Mr. Raymond Milton as head of the department. Social studies is devoted to a study of Europe, Asia, and the peoples of the Pacific. World history reveals a study of the world from prehistoric times up through the ages. United States history begins with the Euro- pean background of our nation and continues through the various phases of American development up to the present. Senior Civics entails a study in the American government and the problems of a growing democracy. Economic geography is a study of economic resources and world trade, with particular emphasis on the United States. Economics is an outline of economic principles designed to build a vocabulary of economic terms. California history includes the Spanish period of dominancy and the early days of American Occu- pancy up to the present time. English history 'begins with pre-historic Britain and continues up to the pres- ent day. The student drivers are Zeeva Zaretsky, Lynn Vlautin, and Frances Ludlow. Panel Discussion in Mr. Fast's class included Anita Axt, Steve Dimond, Lorelle Cohn, John Hare. , U , -L -I-.--.-,, gg,.m5,,.k lf l it nam I I , . r I 4 I l DAN EDWARD RANKIN JAMES NELSON RAILSBACK GUY A. RASMUSSEN W. STUART REED GLEN LEE RICHARDS PETER ROBINSON RUDOLF OTTO ROKITTA DAVID BARUCH ROSEN ROBERT H. ROWE PHILIP BERNARD RUPPRECHT MANFRED SALOMON ARMAND A. SCHVUARTZ, JR. DAVE KOICHI SEGAXVA OSAMU SEKINO ALEXANDER SHALAR SHELDON SHALIT ROSS PRENTICE SHOAF JERRY HENRY SHOBAR CYRILL GEORGE SINELNIKOFF FREDERICK RAYMOND SKILLMAN BARRY SELWYN SLATT RICHARD DAYNES SOWARD TERRY ROBERTSON STEPHENS DONALD L. SULLIVAN AMES KENT SWARTSFAGER AUBREY EUGENE TENDELL RICHARD CARL THOMPSON JAMES LOUIS TONDA FRANK RUSH TRIGUEIRO JOHN CHISATO TSUKAMOTO NEILL M. URANO STEPHEN D. VAUSE, JR. THEODORE CHARLES WARD JAMES LAWRENCE WEINBERGER STEPHEN WIEL PETER WIENER . HARRY WONG TOMMY WONG CHARLES DEBOSE WRIGHT, JR. LOUIS A. YETTER ROBERT L. YOUNG DENNIS FREDRIC ZICKERMAN Girls DEANNA DALE ADCOCK DIANNE J. ADDINGTON WILMA JEAN ANGLIM SANDRA ANN ARCHER ANITA AILEEN AXT NORMA LEA E. BALTODANO SAGRARIO BALTODANO SUE ELIZABETH BARNARD MARGARET BARTON BARBARA BRANCH BATES ROSELEEN FRANCES BERKOVER JUDITH B. BISKIND SUZANNE BORST JOAN BURTON LAIOLA MARIA CANONICA VALERIE ANNE CHESTER SHIRLEY JEAN CLAYTON LORELLE COHN CATHERINE JEAN COVINGTON BRENDA MARIETTA CRABTREE SUZANNA CRIM CAROL LINDA CRIPPS YVONNE GOODRICH DANDY DONELLA JANICE DAVID JOANNE JULIA DAVIES GWEN HARRIET DAVIS SHARON LYNN DEMING DIANE LOUISE DEUTSCHER AUDREY LORRAINE DIEHL I.UCILLE ANN DIETZ GALE NICHOL DOBBS JANICE HELEN DRISCOLL JOAN CLAIRE DUIZEND VICTORIA JEAN EKSTROM BRENDA JEAN ENMEIER JEAN ERSKINE EUNICE ANN EERN DORIS FLAMM GLORIA FRAILE JUDITH ROZINA BREED NORMA FREED GERALDINE L. GIOVANNETTI GAY LOUISE GIULIANI VIVIAN GOKSON CAROLE BARBARA GOI.D VALERY ANN GREENLAW JULIET MARION GRUEN KAREN ROSLYN GUTHERTZ JUDITH ANN HAIGHT MARSHA ANNE HAMILTON JACQUELINE THERESA HANSON JOSEPHINE C. HANSON BARBARA JEAN HATTER JOY E. HEMSTREET SUSAN ETHEL HERLICK MARIA TERESA HILLEPRANDT BARBARA JEAN HIU SONYA HOLODILOEF SALLY ANN HOUGH PEGGY ANN YOKE IKEZOE CONSTANCE YUKARI IMAZEKI ANN PORTER JONES 223 JANE MARIE KAEANTARIS KARINA KEHAULANI KANG MARGERY JEAN KAPLAN EUGENIA Y. KATO LENORE DOROTHY KAY MARIE KEY ELAINE XVANDA KLEIN JEANNE KLEIN RENEIE KLEIN LOUISE KROUZIAN IRINA KUSUBOVA LEE LABIE JANETTE CLARE LAWSON CHARLOTTE CHAN LEE CAROLYN EONG LEONG MARILYN HILDRED LEVY ALMA PATRICIA LIBBY SUSAN LINDNER HILDA LOSADA ALvA ANN LYNCH PATRICIA DEANN MACGINNIS I.EA JEANNE MALEANTI KATHLEEN MCDONALD JOSEPHINE CAREY MINDLIN MYRNA MARTHA MOLINAR PATRICIA CATHERINE MOORE CAROLE E. MORRISON JUDY TAKAKO NAKAMOTO SYLVIA ANITA NELSON LOIsANN ROSALINE NICHOL CYNTHIA E. NICKELSON NANCY ANGELA NORTON PATSY JOAN NEIMAN SCHARLENE FAY OLING DIANE MARIE O'NEILL NINA D. OSHURKOEE EMERY LAMBORN OTTEY JOSETTE MARIE OUTLAW ESTHER ANITA PIASLIN CAROLYN DAY PERKINS ROSSLYN PERRY DIANE ALICE PETERSEN KAREN LYNNE PETERSEN PATRICIA ANN PIEEERO CAROLYN M. POSTEL JOAN PURCELL JERRY LEE RANKIN DOROTHY MADELINE REESE LURENE PATRICIA REYNOLDS JOYCE HUNT RICHARDS JOYCE ROBBINS TAHITIA K. HEARN RODMAN JUDITH CLAIRE ROSENTHAL OXANA RUDENKO JANICE CHIYEKO SAKAI JOAN REGINA SCANLON SANDRA MONICA SCHILP BARBARA A. SEELEY VIRGINIA BARBARA SIKORSKI TANIA SKRABAK BARBARA HELENE SLEZAK SONDRA LEE SNOW SANDRA IRVENE SMOLEN ROBERTA LEE SPIVOCK KAY KEIKO SUGIYAMA SONJA THEA SWENSON JOAN L. SWIMMER JEAN SUMIYE TAKAHASHI BARBARA ANN TEXIERA KATHERINE ANN THOMPSON PAULA SAYOKO TSUKAMOTO JOAN TUBBS JOAN MARIE TUHTAN IRENE ULAN GRACE sTARBIRD VEGA LYNN VIRGINIA VLAUTIN CAROLYN ALICE WATSON ANN WEISE LUCY LYNN WELLS AUDREY JEANIWITT HELEN LYDIA WOLF NANCY KAY WOOD SYLVIA JULIA WOODWARD TERUKO HELEN YASUKOCHI zEEvA ZARETSKY 224 BIOLOGY CLASSES There are many interested biology students at Lowell. Lell: Roberta Roth. Right: Natalie Gooch, Paula Beavin and Topper Kelley. FOREIGN LANGUAGE DEPARTMENT The foreign language department head is Miss A. M. Osuna. Its purpose is to enable students to learn the use of a foreign language. The languages taught here at Lowell include French, German, Latin, and Spanish. Each language offers eight semesters of instruction. The hrst two years of any of the languages is de- voted mostly to vocabulary, grammar, and the correct use of words. The remaining two years emphasize the fluent use and understanding of the language. In the spring there is usually a language contest, which the students may enter. This gives the students an opportunity to actually use the language and to gain experience. SCIENCE DEPARTMENT In the field of science at Lowell there are four courses offered. These courses are biology, chemistry, physics, and physiology. They are all taught as college preparatory courses. Biology is the study of plant and animal life. The students inspect different articles in the animal and vegetable worlds. Chemistry is taught as a laboratory science. The stu- dents conduct their own experiments, plus occasional demonstrations by the teacher. Physics is the study of energy. The students conduct experiments with different electrical devices. This course includes some phases of atomic energy. Physiology is the study of human anatomy. The Stug dents study the complete anatomy of the human being. SPANISH CLASS Members of Mr. Anino's Spanish class study the history of Spain and Latin America, along with their language lessons. Students at work in Mr. MCCurd's mechanical drawing class. MECHANICAL DRAWING Mr. O. H. McCord, head ofthe mechanical drawing department, has helped many students interested in drawing or engineering prepare for college. To pass this course a pupil must have a knowledge of correct lettering and be able to draw many views of one subject. Among the tools required are a T-square used in place of a ruler, a scale for measuring inches accu- rately, a forty-five degree angle, a thirty-sixty degree angle, a light, fine pointed pencil and eraser, and finally, a darker lead pencil used to darken plates, making it complete and ready for correction, After completing this subject, a student should have a thorough knowledge of equal dimensions and how to draw any objects. MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT Under the direction of Mr. Barker, Lowell's mathe- matics department works hard to prepare students to meet college requirements in mathematics. The depart- ment is large because two-thirds of LoWell's Students are enrolled in math courses. The courses offered are general math, algebra, geom- etry, advanced algebra II, descriptive geometry, solid geometry, calculus, and a math seminar which was just instituted this year. Lowell has had some very fine math students. They have taken four first awards since 1951 in the Bank of America awards and seven honorable mentions in the Westinghouse Talent Search contest. Students who are eligible may also take the Stanford competitive math exam and Math Association of America test. Firfl ,ffF7lL'.' A seminar mathematics Class. Students working to solve a difficult problem. Semnd .scenes Students working algebra problems. 225 ., Phil-vxf mu RX A-.... CRAFT CLASS Seen working in a craft class are Oxana Rudenko, Gerry Rankin, Sharon Lax, john Hare. ART DEPARTMENT Lowell's art department offers students a well or- ganized art curriculum. The available courses include drawing, crafts, design, costume design, commercial art, and advanced art. For students interested in watercolor, sketching, and oil painting, drawing and advanced art are useful in helping them to create various types of techniques. In design, students acquire the knowledge of com- plimentary colors and its use in the organization of designs. Textiles and ceramics are offered to students taking crafts, which teaches them skilled craftsman- ship. Girls interested in designing clothes will find that costume design trains them to study different fashions of dress design. Commercial art students devote much of their time to making posters. Brush lettering still is required in this course to produce an effective poster. Each art course is creative and imaginative, enabling students to produce individualistic work. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT The business department at Lowell High School offers one year of typing and one year of shorthand. The skill obtained in these courses is helpful to all students, whether they plan to go into the business world or on to college after graduation, Typing enables students to prepare assignments neatly and rapidly. Proficiency tests are given to typ- ing students and are recorded for reference if employ- ers wish to know the ability of a future employee. Shorthand helps students with spelling and is useful in taking notes. This course offers a good foundation for those who intend to go on to secretarial school after they graduate from high school. Both these courses have given students enough knowledge in shorthand and typing that many have obtained part-time jobs while going to school. This helps not only financially, but also helps young people to learn something of the business world while getting their education. TYPING II CLASS Seen in a typing II class are Carol Heaney, Alice Tong, Cynthia Nickelson, Ronny Hormiez, Pat Rile, Linda Yatabe, Diane Petersen, Frank Buckley, Tim Curtis, Judy Edgeman, Donna Sarin, Sally O'Connell, Armeka Jackson, Shirley Ramsey, Michael Rogerson. 226 MR. KRIEGER CONDUCTS HIS INSTRUMENTAL CLASS. MUSIC DEPARTMENT PE AND ROTC I From eight o'clock in the morning to the end of The physical education department is a very im- sixth period, Mr. Krieger's music department instructs portant part 'of Lowellls curriculum. Every girl in students in playing musical instruments. The classes Lowell is required to take PE for the full four years. taught are beginning instruments, intermediate instru- The boys are given a choice of taking either ROTC or ments, advanced band, and orchestra. Students inter- PE, but they also are required to participate for four ested in singing may take beginning, intermediate, and years. advanced choir. The band and orchestra play for many occasions- football and basketball games, parades and gradua- tions, term plays, and the varieties to name a few. The choir also sings for graduation, in addition to numerous concerts, this year including one at The Emporium. A big event every year is the Music Festival. Stu- dents form ensembles, quartets, and duets to be rated by judges. Dave Rosen, a music major, took second place in the Bank of America awards in the held of The ROTC, another department of Lowell's curricu- hne arts. lum, is supervised by Sergeant First Class john Potts. The girls' physical education department is headed by Miss D. Flynn. The PE sports offered to the girls include volleyball, ping-pong, kickball, softball, and folk dancing. Once a week the girls are required to have hygiene. The boys, PE department is under the direction of Mr. Ben Neff. The boys taking PE may enter in inter- class or inter-school team competition. THE GIRLS' GYM IS A CROXVDED, ACTIVE PLACE. 227 I r 5 , C v X T YT? I X X 1. fi X mr' Gzkflf ,A thletic A550513 tio n X 'B Q ' ' R N Xkxkjg X X I X Girls, Athletic Association The Girls, Athletic Association, better known as the GAA, offers all girls an opportunity to participate in nine different sports. The sports are under the capable sponsorship of the gym teachers. By joining this organization, the girls are able to make new friends and are able to keep their healthy figures. If the girls take a sport for three years they become members of the Block L. After four years or eight terms of taking sports, the girls in their high senior year are awarded the highest award one can obtain in the GAA-the gold L pin. Bowling meets every Monday and Wednesday un- der the sponsorship of Mrs. Smith. Also on Wednes- days, volleyball and basketball or softball meet under Miss Flynn's guidance. The girls who participate in horseback riding get together everyTuesday and Thurs- day with their sponsor, Miss Sink. Tennis, with Miss Flynn, and swimming, under Mrs. Cain's guidance, meet on Mondays. With their sponsor, Miss Boehm, the girls who take modern dancing get together on Mon-days and Tuesdays. Every Monday the girls who enjoy ice skating meet with Mrs. Smith. Each sport functions with the help of sport man- agers. The following were the managers: Bowling, Joyce Robbins and Sue Ginsberg, volleyball, Dorothy Jones and Mariko Soma, softball and basketball, Ar- lene Chew and Charlotte Lee, modern dancing, Carol Leeds and Lea Malfantig horseback riding, Sue Her- lick and Nancy Leach, tennis, Marilyn Munter and Sandy Dickey, swimming, Sharon Deming and Pat Marquis, and ice skating, Diane Doyle and Anne Mer- ritt. ' The GAA officers for the fall term of 1955 were President Joanne Davies, Secretary Terry Yasukochi, and Clerk of Awards Jerrell Jacobs. The spring term officers were Dorothy Jones, president, and Sharon Deming, secretary. r 230 Lf F ', , ff . 9. . GAA OFFICER5 Row one .' D. jones, j. Davies, T. Yasukochi, Raw two: S. Deming, J. Jacobs. Variety of Sports For the Girls 231 Classroom Scenes J SPOR T S , ,,Q2 . f5Q 5 if X -ni A X f KX H v xxx fl ,J f-W jmg wa - -fy' QQ YMXQM as mv SS E 1 2 5 3 5 ai M 1 f l A as sw- H as E 4 E ll 3 E 5 M ,R SC Q 52? Ks 5 A M ea -N ee ns U UW an F E nm an 3 he S ,Z qu 1? ,--. .,., N M. .,.A..,.,,,.,,. ,... .,..M,....,.,...w,M M.,..Wm...,,- ...... nw.- m - .... mm..-.-....... .. M, Mn.-- . .gi 2 AAA PAGEANT LOWELL 6-SACRED HEART 0 Halfback Bob Oddone scored the abbreviated game's only touchdown, after latching on to a bad pitchout from quarterback Bob Lom and galloping 88 yards to the end zone. LOWELL 26-MISSION 7 Looking like some of the powerful teams of old, Lowell swept past the befuddled 1954 champs in its first league game of the season. Mission, fresh from a defeat at the hands of Washington one week earlier, entered the stadium almost lighting mad, but never- theless could not hold down the somewhat heavier Indians. Quarterback Bob Lom steered the team to three of the touchdowns, taking advantage of Lowell's split- T formation for steady gains from bucks, sweeps, and short passes. Q Mission knotted up the contest at 7-7 just before half time, however, on an 18-yard pass from Bob Hig- ginbotham to Vern Ferguson, and the game wasn't put on ice until Lowell again scored in the third quarter. LOWELL 7-LINCOLN 34 Lowell entered its second game fighting and eager for a playoff berth, but failed to stop the hog-wild and hustling Mustangs. Most of the damage was done on the ground, with the Lincoln team pounding Low- e1l's line for 399 yards. Stan Glass, Link halfback, gathered 173 yards by himself and scored twice. The Indians' only touchdown came in the second quarter, when Eric Mackintosh broke through from six yards out, shortly after he had taken a 19-yard pass from Phil Sevier on a fake punt play. Two Lincoln end zone pushes were turned back in the third quarter. The first was foiled when Tom Ya- sukochi intercepted Art Von Wronski's pass on the Lowell three, the other time Glass fumbled on the four. LOWELL 28-SACRED HEART 24 Lowell managed to top a spirited but insufficient Sacred Heart team late in the game, turning the trick on four one-pointers neatly kicked by Tom Yasukochi. Sacred Heart blazed away in the first few minutes, grabbing a loose ball on the kickoff to Lowell and taking the ball on the 12-yard line. Arnold then went over for the tally. Lowell's first score was set up on a blocked punt, Sevier running to the TD after three plays. The re- maining three were a result of a Lom-to-Oddone, a Sevier-to-Mattson, and a Lom one-yard QB sneak. LOWELL 20-ST. IGNATIUS 0 Lowell entered its third victory of the season in the books, scoring three TDs on marches of 81, 76, and 70 yards. Combining the drive of powerful back Eric Mackintosh and the passing and faking of field gen- eral Bobby Lom, the Indians hammered their way through the Wildcat defense in their most decisive conquest thus far. LOWELL 13-POLY 53 Poly remained undefeated against Lowell for its 13th straight contest, despite the fact that the two teams entered the traditional on at least even terms. Although fighting hard and hustling all the way, never for an instant did the Indians even scare their some- what sturdier opponents. The Parrots went ahead for keeps after only three minutes of play in the first quarter, on Bob Stone's 34-yard pass to Roosevelt Taylor. The next came in the second quarter, after Poly recovered a fumble on the Lowell 43 and passed to a TD, and from there on it was Poly all the way. Bobby Lom again engineered all of Lowell's scor- ing, moving the Indians deep into Poly territory on passes to set up Eric Mackintosh's 6-yard run in the third quarter, and a 27-yard pass to Wfalt Keough in the fourth. LOWELL 20-WASHINGTON 18 Tom Yasukochi's deadly aim on the goal posts again proved the margin of victory, as he and his mates struggled to top the scrappy Eagles in the final period. Tom booted the two telling one-pointers on three at- tempts. After Oddone had already taken the ball over for a TD once, jim Nolan snagged a stray Washington pass and romped 28 yards with only seconds to play in the first half. The third tally came when Lowell drove 70 yards, climaxing with a 14-yard Lom to Se- vier pass. LOWELL 14-GALILEO 31 After coming through in winning colors in most of their tough ones, -the Indians were humiliated by one of the weakest teams in the league, 31-14. Most of the damage was done on interceptions, the Lions swiping Eve from Bob Lom, three of which led to scores. Lowell's only two TDs came through Lom's heaves, however, the first on an Oddone reception in the se:- ond quarter, the second on a Kettleson catch in the fourth period. Tom Yasukochi kicked both extra points. LOWELL 7-BALBOA 28 Although a first division contender at the beginning of the season, Lowell faded badly in the home stretch and wound up beaten badly by their final opponents. SEMI-FINALS LOWELL 13-POLY 39 Revengeful but ourmanned, Lowell made a futile assault on Poly in the semi-finals, with the Parrots, in- cidentally, going on to take the AAA championship from Balboa. Leading at half time by the bare margin of a con- version, the Indians faded in the final half. Poly con- tinued to pound at the line and work the aerials relent- lessly, putting together enough tallies to not only top the Cards, but bring them to their knees, Quarterback Al Clark did brilliant work, working the 'ball into Poly territory for Lowell's nrst score, Lom eventually taking it five yards to pay dirt. The Cards' first score came on a 10-yard run by Bob Oddone. 2 P JUNIOR VARSITY Pete Schwinclt, Bert Ponig, Peter Preovolos, and Tom Hutchins JUNIOR VARSITY Al Alvarez, Ed De La Cruz, Tony Ellis, and Randy Garrison. 238 JUNIOR VARSITY Ken Kelly, Tony Patch, Dan Barter, and Waring Park ', , f 2 .- ' nj .,.,z .,.,. f JAY VEE FOOTBALL Row one: T. Curtis, K. Kelly, D. Barter, O. Matheny, D. Rytand, H. Koonle, J. Eppinger, W. Parks, Row 1100: T. Ellis, T. Patch, P. Preovolos, C. Jackson, B. Ponig, P. Schwindt, J. Bootes, E. Molise, P. Trimble fmanagerb. Row llafee: P. Gibbons, A. Alvarez, T. Hutchins, R. Garrison, E. Del a Cruz, B. Onoda. JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL RECAP A The junior varsity footballers finished fifth in league com- petition, losing only to Lincoln, St. Ignatius, and Galileo, while tieing Poly in a game which saw two touchdowns and conver- sions in the last four minutes when Poly was leading 20-6. This was typical of the type of hustle the future varsity mem- bers displayed. Coach Milton commented that his squad had perhaps the best passing attack in the league, Randall Garrison to Tony Patch and Bert Ponig fit was Garrison, incidentally, who heaved the two telling touchdown passes mentioned abovej. A Also worthy of mention are John Bootes Qfullbackj, Tony Ellis Qcenterj, and Carl Jackson Qguardj. CARL JAcKsoN THE MANAGERS FROSH-SOPH FOOTBALL Although the frosh-soph football team was rained out half of their schedule, they managed to put in three spirited battles against Lincoln, Sacred Heart, and Balboa. The scores, respec- tively, were 33-7, 12-O, and 25-13, Lowell being on the short end of all three. Coach Bob Buckley attributes the bad showing to an in- jured backfield, which was continually cut down all season by sprained ankles and other mishaps. The line, however, was con- siderably better. Bill Cobb Ccenterj, Frank Halldorson Qendj, Dick Lindsley Ctacklej, and Ben Pope Qguardj were particularly promising. FROSH-SOPH INDIVIDUALS D. Shida, J. Wills, C. Prichard, T. Baker, E. Robinson, B. Cobb, D. Lindsley, and J, Garzoli. A. Hove, B. Reid, j. Harris, J. Murphy, A. Lacy, E, Shaskan, J. Lenahan, B. Mayer, and F. Postel. 2 39 SOCCER TEAM Row one: H. Saiki, C. Sinelnikoff, E. Zelaya, E., Chavez, A. Zelaya, R. Miranda. Rau' two: B. Castle fmanagerl, C. Breyer, J. Terino, S. Wiel, G. Ortiz, j. Nanio, O. Johannessen. J. Panizo lassistant managerj. Rau' three: M. Hansen, J. Hare, W. Schaefter, F. Becker, L. Hutkovsky. Soccer Team Places Fourth The soccer team, rarely a winning group at Lowell, ended a fairly successful season in a tie for fourth place with the Balboa Buccaneers. The Bucs, however, were awarded the play- off berth as they had previously defeated the Redmen in regu- lar season play. The death knell sounded for the booters in the concluding game of the season when the Indians could do no better than a scoreless tie with arch-rival Polytechnic. A win over the Par- rots would have insured the Redmen sole possession of fourth place as the Balboans had previously terminated their schedule and could not improve their ranking. On the credit side of their record the Lowells boast a victory over a highly rated contingent from Washington, 'who fell -by a 2-1 margin. Lincoln was also among the hooters' victi-ms and succumbed, 2-0, while St, Ignatius was convincingly waxed by a 4-2 score. A hard-charging Mission eleven edged the Cards, 1-0, in a bitter and hard fought contest. The Indians threatened through- out the game but failed to register on the scoreboard. The aforementioned Polytechnics managed the heart-break- ing tie as did Galileo, 1-1. The bitterest pill to swallow was the 2-0 defeat suffered at the hands of Balboa 240 FROSH-SOPH FOOTBALL Raw one: V. Fernandez, J. Harris, B. Pope, D. Shida, J. Wills, B. Mayer, J. Barnard, J. Lenahan. Rau' luv: F. Halldorson, P. Rowe, B. Urrea, B. Reid, R. Locati, A Hove, J. Garzoli, T. Baker, L, Licudan. Row ihrees C. Metoyer, C. Prichard, F. Postel, J. Hemphill, P. Poling, P. Green, B. Cobb, D. Lindsley, CROSS COUNTRY TEAM A Row one : L. Manrique, B Young, B. Morgan, H. Wheatley, B. Ross, P. Dewar, G, Beavin fcapt.J, L. Martinez, E. Chavez, C. Barkley, R. Guggenhime, B. Barret. Rauf two: Coach Wolf, S. Perkins, A. Dittes, J. Eckloif, R. Price, J. Tolson, J. Carroll, P. Simmons, R. Rowe, P. Kelleher, R. Fox, B. Bramer fmanagerj. Haw lhree: W. Larsen, R. Monteleone, J. Dore, J. Bohren, K. Steinhart, C. McClure, C. Siekert, E. Molise, R. Luetschaer, R. Curley, B, McCauley. Cross Countr Wins Eleven Straight Featuring some of the Hnest runners in recent years, Wolf, he thought he had already finished when john the Lowell harriers galloped their Way to eleven Hammond skipped past him. f straight victories, only to be nosed out in the All-City In the Northern Cam-Omia Championship at P510 tournament bY Washington, 4560- Ahh, Lowell finished third. Ed Chavez hah the 1.95 Ed Chavez turned in first-place performances in ev- mile Stanford Golf C-lub course in 10:17, which in- ery race he ran in, except the one mentioned above, cidentally was four seconds better than john Ham- which he lost because, according to Coach Barney mondis time. CROSS COUNTRY TEAM BANQUET 241 no Basketball Row one: R. Colsky, P, Samuels, F. Dagnino, R. Risbrough, R. Ten- dell. Row tum: B. Goldman, K. Thomas, R. Brayton, D. Borst. Row llaree: B. Turnbow, J. Swanson, M. Badie, T, Dunn, R. Lehmann. Fair Season for Ligbtweights The Lowell lightweight basketball teams had moderately suc- cessful seasons this year, giving their opponents consistently hard and spirited fights, Two Indians were voted All-City, Dennis Hess Q12O'sj and Eddie Jackson f110lsj. The 11O's were defeated only by St. Ignatius, while the 12O's met defeat at the hands of five of their eight opponents. Some of the outstanding members of the squads were Hess, Eddie Shaskan, Lloyd Simi f120'sj 3 Reggie Tendell, Rickey Colsky, jackson Q110'sj. 120 Basketball Row one: L. Simi, D. Herlick, D. Hess, E. Shaskan, D, Jacobs. Row zwa: B. Goldman, D. Williams, R. Turnbell, R. Low. Row three: A. Rose, K. Nakai, T. Inouye, S. Yao. 242 Row one: W. Park, M. Nagase, J. Epginger. B. Reed, V. Strange, Coach Feiling, Raw two: B. Goldman, mgr., G. Wilson, B. Murase, L. Martinez, . D'Agnino, D. Kaplan, L. Draper. Mining: B. Oddone. The 130's were hard hit when Neil Urano and Rich Hudson failed to make the weight. Starting out on a sad note, the 30's lost to Mission, 41-35. Next came the Washington tilt. The Eaglets ripped the defend- ing champions to shreds, 60-25. Then came the exciting but disappointing game with S.I-I. Lowell's 30's stooped to a convincing 41- 29 defeat, In their fourth game of the seas-on Lincoln prevailed, waxing Lowell 46-28. Bob Oddone again gained high-point honor, while George W-ilson, Leo Martinez and Bucky,' Reed tied for second in scoring. In their best game of the year the 30's beat Galileo, 53-38. Paced by Bob Oddone's 14 points, and the driving Bucky,' Reed, the team led all the way to win their first game of the season. Lowell's 30,5 started rolling in their sixth game by scoring a convincing victory over Balboa, 45-34. Bob Oddone and Bucky Reed led their mates by scoring 12 points, while George Dagnino and Leo Martinez followed close behind. The Lowell 30's gave Poly quite a tussle before losing to the Parrots, 49-45. The game could have gone either way. Pete Williams led the Indians with 15 tallies, followed by Bucky Reed, Bob Oddone, Leo Martinez, Magnus Nagase, and Vance Strange. The Lowell 30's ended their basketball season on a bright note by beating Saint Ignatius, 51-37. Unex- pectedly the Little Indians walked over the Cats, Bucky Reed led with 15 tallies while Bob Oddone, George Dagnino, Pete Williams, and Magnus Nagase followed respectively. Others in on the kill were Leo Martinez, Vance Strange, Darryl L, Kaplan, George Wilson, and Josh Eppinger. 130 Basketball 2 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM - FALL Row one: R. Collins, 1. Thomson, N. Caranica, R. Daniels, J. Caranica. A. Tendell, Row iwo: M. Prescott T h B ll . Mesc ery, K. a ing, J. Tonda, W. Keough. Varsity Basketball LOVUELL 35-MISSION 26 Lowell inaugurated the 1955-56 cage season with a 33-26 triumph over defense-mind-ed Mission at Kezar Pavilion. The Missions content with a strong ball-control game froze the casaba during the earlier moments of the initial stanza. With 2:20 minutes gone in the quarter, Lowell got their hands on the ball -forthe first time and Tom Meschery promptly ranked a 20-footer to give the Indians a lead which they never re- linquished. Meschery was exceptionally deadly from the outside during the contest and registered 13 markers in his first outing. LOWELL 49-WASHINGTON 44 The Neffmen overcame a cold first half and squeezed by Washington, 49-44, in a thriller at Kezar Pavilion. An outstanding 23-point performance by Tom Meschery, as well as the dominance of both backboards by the Lowell whiz, pulled the game out of the fire for the Redskins. The Eagles led, 20-19, at the half, mainly on the strength of the sharp-shooting of Jerry Mann and Harvey Merriouns. 244 LOWELL 51-LINCOLN 33 The Lowell cagers prevailed over an ambitious Abraham Lin- coln quintet, 51-33, at Kezar Pavilion. Although trailing at the half, 16-20, the Indian big guns- Tom Meschery, Ken Balling, and jim Caranica-finally zeroed in on the Links' basket and unerringly sank shot after shot to virtually sweep their hapless adversaries off the court. Balance in their attack was the Redskins' main advantage as high point man jim Caranica copped 12 markers, followed closely by Meschery wit-h 10, and Balling with eight. LOWELL 55-SACRED HEART 39 The Lowell Indians continued their victorious ways with a 55-39 rout of the Sacred Heart Irish at Kezar Pavilion. Enjoying a large lead early in the game, Coach Benny Neff mercifully called off the starters and swept the bench in the sec- ond stanza. Ken Balling left the court for the last time in an Indian uni- form halfway in the third period, he topped all scorers with 18 markers. Teammate Tom Meschery retired with 16 digits, 10 of them garnered in the third quarter. Forfeit Ends Championship Hopes LOWELL 40-POLY 46 The sky-scraping Polytechnic Parrots knocked the high riding Indians from the ranks of the unbeaten with a 46-40 comeback victory at Kezar Pavilion. Tom Meschery's unstoppable jump-shot which net- ted him 19 points led the Lowells to a 24-21 half-time lead over the Parrots. However, the surprising Parrots with their decisive height advantage dominated the second half. The Redmen staged a rally of their own in the clos- ing minutes to provide for a climactic finish. Jim Cara- nica ranked two charities to bring Lowell within two points of the victors at 40-42 with 50 seconds remain- ing in the game. Ten seconds later Jim unwittingly fouled Gene Womack who in turn sank his two free throws to ice the game for the Parrots. LOWELL 28-ST. IGNATIUS 44 Led by prep phenom Fred LaCour, the S.I. Wild- cats 'humbled Lowell with a stunning 44-28 victory at a jam-packed Kezar Pavilion. S.I. maintained a commanding lead throughout and only in the opening quarter with the score knotted at 4-4 was Lowell respectably in the contest. Tom Meschery, selected to this year's All-City quin- tet, rang up 15 markers but failed to contain Fabu- lous Freddie of the 'Cats, who led the scoring with 21 digits. THE FORFEITS On the eve before the S.I. crucial it was discovered by league oficials and by Principal A. Perino that an ineligible player, Roy Collins, participated in three of Lowell's contests. The ofiicials ruled that the Indians forfeit the three games. For the first time since 1947 Lowell has failed to attend the playoffsg the team ended the season with an official three won and five lost record, placing fifth in the final AAA standings. VARSITY BASKETBALL - SPRING Row one: Brian Lyttle, Ned Ward, Richard Hudson, Nick Caranica, Jack Tause, jim Caranica. Raw two: Bill Goldman, Mgr., Thurman Robinson, jim Ellis, Wayne Batmale, Al Artoux, Tim Earle, Louis Epstein, Mgr. Mining: Tom Meschery and Ralph Daniels. 246 l JUNIOR VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM R. MIRANDA Row one: L. Feldman, E. Mclrvin, T. Patch, B. Onoda, B. Basso. Row Iwo: D. Lopes. D. Marble, A. Lacy, Cdpldfli V. Strange, R. Lehmann, R Miranda, 1. Tause. Raw lbree: P. Poling, P. Epp, D, McCormick. - unior arsit Baseball Team The '56 season was a new one for Lowell baseball, it was the first year the newly organized J.V. baseball league was in operation. While Lowellls first team failed to be a serious championship threat, they managed to win two league contests, beating Washington and Lincoln. The pitching assignments were handled by Ralph Miranda, Vance Strange, and Eldon Mclrving the latter two also cov- ered third base. Alternating catchers were Robert Lehmann and Dan Marble, while Paul Epp and Richard Locati played first and second base respectively, The short- stop was amply covered by Bob Anoda and theifielders were Bob Basso, Larry Feld- man, Leo Hutkovsky, Alan Luck and Duarte Lopes. The team was managed by Dave McCormack and Paul Poling. Mr. Buckley was the team's coach. JUNIOR VARSITY BASEBALL Top row: D. Marble, L. Hutkovsky, L. Feldman, R. Onada. Row two: R. Locati, A. Lacy, V. Strange, P. Epp. Bolnm ww: D. Lopes, R. Lehmann, R. Basso, E. Mclrwin. 247 BASEBALL TEAM Row one: Bob Moore, Bill Stamos, Brian Lyttle, Jerry Meador, jim Thompson, jim Payne, Bob Curly. Raw two: Cy Sinelnikoff, mgr., Jerry Shobar, Steve Dimond, Brian Gould, Jim Ellis, Al Zelaya, John Cosgrilf, Mgr., Jerry DePois, Mgr. Varsity Baseball LOWELL 3 - LINCOLN 4 The Lincoln Mustangs edged the Lowell Indians 4-3 with a four run outburst in the fourth inning. The Links capitalized on two Redskin errors and two sin- gles for their tallies. Indian hurler jerry Meador suffered the loss al- though pitching a creditable hve-hitter. Meador also blasted a run scoring triple in the Indian half of the fourth. Bob Curley's home run was a high spot of the game. LOWELL 1 -SACRED HEART 7 In their second outing of the season the Lowell nine was solidly trounced 7-1 by defending champion Sacred Heart. Although the victims managed but five safe blows off Tribe starting hurler Bri Lyttle, shaky support which included four miscues cost the Indians the game. Lyttle accounted for the lone Lowell tally when he doubled and later scored in the fourth frame. The Tribe managed six singles off Irish moundsman Alvarado who was credited with victory. LOWELL 3 - MISSION 2 There was joy and dancing on Hayes Street as Lowell finally won an AAA baseball game. The victims at the end of the long drought were the Mission Bears who succumbed to the Tribe for the first time since 1934. Taking advantage of Mission boots and wildness on the part of Celaya, the losing pitcher, the Redskins struck for two tallies in the second inning. The high- light of that rally was a steal home by Stamos, 248 The Bears came back to equalize the score but the Tribe was not to 'be denied. In the fourth frame Tony Patch unloaded a might triple, scoring Meador for the deciding run. Meador went the route for the win. LOWELL 3 - IGNATIUS 4 After winning one in a row, the Lowell Indians dropped a heartbreaking 4 to 3 decision to St. Ignatius. Bri Lyttle, who suffered the defeat, handcuffed the Cats in the hits department, allowing but two safe blows. However, his own wildness betrayed him. He surrendered a pair of runs in the initial frame when he unleashed a wild pitch to top off a couple of free passes. Going into the sixth inning with the score knotted at 3-3 Lyttle walked a man and then hit the next batter. Coach Drysdale promptly decided that that was all for the tiring hurler, and replaced him with jerry Meador. Meador proceeded to walk in the win- ning run! The Tribe provided a nine hit at-tack but were con- tained by the clutch-pitching of Cat Sullivan. LOWELL 8 - POLY 9 In a wild, free scoring affair Poly out-tallied Lowell for a 9 to 8 decision. The Tribe took advantage of a shaky Parrot defense and hurler Knope's wildness to scurry across the plate eight times on but three safeties. Poly -broke loose for nine blows, however it was the lack of an Indian defense that accounted for the de- feat, Lowell committed seven errors. JIM THOMPSON BRIAN LYTTLE AL ZELAYA BILL STAMOS JERRY MEADOR CY SINELNIKOFF, Mgr. COACH D 'N-. JERRY SHOBAR STEVE DIMOND LOWELL 1 - GALILEO 6 On May 9 the Lowell nine met the league leading Galileo Lions at Big Rec. When the smoke and the dust had settled after the battle the Tribe found themselves on the short end of a 6-1 score. The Indians, however, managed to avert a shutout in the last half of the sixth frame when Al Zelaya singled home Bob Curley from second. This run-pro- JACK TAUSE TONY PATCH ducing single ended Lowellls scoring production for the day. LOWELL 5 - WASHINGTON 0 Jerry Meador, stylish Lowell moundsman, hurled a brilliant four-hitter to shut out Washington 5-0. Jerry Shobar provided the power with a prodigious clout, good for three bases, driving in a pair of runs to provide Meador with a cushion. Meador's mates supported him defensively, for a change, handling all of their chances flawlessly. 1 250 GOLF TEAM Row one: Steve Abel, Harvey Brody, Charles Levin. Raw two: Rich Canatella, Harvey Brody, Rich Canatella, Golfers Take Second Place The Indian divoteers had a successful season this year as they managed to take second place. Comprising the six man team were Harvey Brody, Dick Canatela, Rich Shermano, Charlie Levin, Steve Abel, and Mike Tanzier. The entire team was capable of shooting in the 70's and Harvey Brody and Dick Canatela were the best one-two punch in the A.A.A. league. Both of these boys averaged scores of 71 and 72 during the practice and regular season matches. In practice matches the Indians met Riordan, Capu- chino, and the Cal Frosh. They beat Riordan twice, Capuchino once, and lost a close match to the Cal Frosh, 14-13. The regular season started with a sharp 6-3 win over the Lincoln Mustangs, who were considered -to have one of the best teams in the league. Medalist of the day was Harvey Brody. The next three matches included Balboa, Poly, and Mission, all of which the Indians won easily by scores of 9-0. The entire -team looked good in these matches. I.owell's only loss of the season came from Wash- ington, GW-ZVZ. If it wasn't for the fact that the team fell behind at the start, the Indians might have pulled a victory. After the first five holes the entire team was down and they just fell short of a thrilling comeback. VARSITY TRACK Row one: J. Ellis, Terry Stephens, Horace Wheatley, Ed Molise, Steve Muto, Tony St. Amant, Ken Kelly, Dennis Brahney, Fred Ziegler, Paul Alexander. Row tum: Mr. Wolf, Bill Lambert, Pete Schwindt, Lance Miller, Craig Swanson, R. Young, R. Shemano, B. Scott, S. jackson, D. McCauley, Bob Elleson, Mr. Anino. Row three: Ronald Zuckerman, Bert Ponig, Kevin Harrington, R. Shoaf, B. Morgan, Bob Streltzoff, L. Martinez, Burnett Ross, T. Curtis. Track and Field Teams Low-ell's '56 track team under the direction of Coach Barney Wolf completed a strenuous prac- tice season which included several grueling meets, according to Coach Wolf, proved very successful, his only regret was meeting the strong Eagles as the league opener. The '56 league opener ended as predicted, but still disappoint- ing, Washington dropped the high spirited In- dians 88-35. Lowell's first place srandouts were Bob Young's 2107.2 in the 880, Tim Curtis' :52.3 in the 440, Ross Shoaf's eleven foot pole 130-POUND TRACK vault, Paul Alexander's discus throw of 119 feet 7 inches. Jim Bush and Jack Schwadron paced the 130's to victory. The Mission Bears fell easily under the poised hand of the Redmen. Tim Curtis' victory in the low hurdles and the high jump, Rich Hudson's winning in the dashes, Ed Chavez's 4:44.4 mile, and Paul Alexander's 113-10 discus left the Bears stymied. Jim Bush and Henry Kornfeld led the 30's, and both broke Lowell's high hurdles record. The 120 tracksters took a con- 120-POUND TRACK TEAM Rnw one: J. Schwadron, No Ident., R, Turnbell, S. Reed, V. Brochard, S. Martinez, L. Raw one N. Quong, D. Belkin, A. Cobo, E. de la Cruz H Nakai Manrique, Row two: K. King, M. Tobriner, R. Barrett, D, Simmons, O. Sekino, B. Pope, Row Iwo: R. Monteleone, D. Harrison, I, Swanson A May S S. Braley, B. Bramer, A, Dittes. Raw tlJ1'ee.' J. Bohren, L, Simpson, Henry Kornfeld, T. Perkins, S. Yao. Row three: B. Turnbow, Bill Cobb E Jackson Mike Mathios, P. Carr, J. Caranica, J. Eklof, K. Steinhart, C. Bruggemann. West, 1. Lanham, H. Sakai, D. Meyer. l 2 vincing 38-28 victory over the stunned Bears. In the following meet with St. Ignatius, the Indians' varsity was edged out 64-49. The 20's, however, plowed their way past the Cats to a 47-21 margin, while the 30's filled out a 69-24 victory. The 30's took every event except the 880. jim Caranica broke the school record for the shot by putting it 52-10, Rich Berk's 9.5 in the high hurdles was also a new Lowell record. In the 20's division two more school records were shattered. Ed jackson tossed the shot 45-11 and Ross Shoaf poled 12 feet. In their next meet Lincoln's varsity dominated 74-39, and the 30's also toppled to a 52-45 de- feat Only the powerful little 20's came through with a smashing 45-25 victory. Even in losing Lowell's top two division remained unsurpassed in some events, among there were Tim Curtis' :10.2 in the 100 and :22.2 in the 220, Rich Hud- son's 180 lows, and fAll Cityj Ross Shoaf's 11-6 pole vault. Ed Chavez smashed the school record for the mile 4:35, as the Lowell varsity track team was downed by the Balboa Bucs' 79W-41M victory, but the 20's slumped to a 44-24 defeat. Tim Curtis took both varsity sprints, the 100 in :10.5 and the 220 in :22.5 to become the only double winner for Lowell. Outstanding performances were turned in by Bob Oddone and Sam Sekino in the 30's divi- sion. Oddone ran :53.4 in the 440 and Sekino was clocked in 14.6 in the low hurdles. All three of Lowell's divisions bowed before the Polytechnic Parrots. The varsity, which lost by a score of 89-24, had some fine performances in Bob Young's 2.04.6 in the 880, Ed Chavez's 4:42.1 mile, and Ross Shoaf's 12 foot pole vault. jim Caranica, the 30's top shot putter, got off a 54 foot heave. While the 20's lost 50 to 18, Eddie Jackson broke his previous record by throwing the 8 pound shot 48 feet 10 inches. Other win- ners were Pat Kelleher, Mike Tobriner, and Hiedo Saiki. All .three of Galileo's divisions fell below the thundering spikes of the Lowell Indians. Lowell's varsity headed a 78M-34M victory over hapless Gal, while the 130's and 120's won a 70V-Z-135, and 40-27 victory, respectively. Ed Chavez paced the varsity with a 4:42.8 rain- soaked mile. The relay team swept through with the time of 2:31.6. The 130's were proud of wins from jim Bush, Bob Oddone, Jack Schwadron, Mike Tobriner, Pat Kelleher, Vic-tor Brochard, and Tony Math- ios. Filling out the wins for the 20's were Ave Cobo, Norman Quong, Hiedo Saiki, Alan Bel- kin, and Ed Jackson. 2 .1 if des? 5 G I ri H if is I 7 3 .. f A ..-,, I . . ssts S ,:,. I ,,V.: . N V VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM Row one: S. Hone, P. Goorjian, E. McKenna, L. Tambor. Row !1ll0.' E. Shaskan, P. Urrea, T. Hutchins, P. Cantou. Row three: R. Gilman. Swimming Squads I-lave ln and Gut Season The 1956 edition of the Lowell High high in the final standings in the All-City swimming teams proved themselves to be meet- a Weufounded group of Hue athletes' In the varsity meets, Lowell lost to Lin- coln, Washington, Galileo, S.I., and Poly. They pulled down Balboa and Mission Working together under the direction of Coach Bill Feiling all three divisions placed 120-POUND SWIMMING TEAM 150'POUND SWIMMING TEAM Roux one .' L. Epstein, R. Nicol, M. Morris, J. Marks. Row Iwo: R. Tretten Row one: J. Falk, S. Koenigsberger fcaptainj, J, Eppinger, T. Inoye. Row S. Wise, F. Sansot, B. Mittel. Row three: R. Nickolaisen, R. Colsky, P two: C. Sansot, K. Petrovic, B. Urrea. Samuels. Row four: B. Nicol. 2 38-27 and 42-17, respectively. Starring for the varsity was All-City candidate Ralph Gilman, Ralph won all the free-style events he entered, he also helped the medley re- lay team to three victories. Others who placed in all meets were Ed McKenna, Ed Shaskan, Pete Cantou, and Peter Goorjian. In the light weight meets, the 13035 came out on top three times, beating Galileo 13-0, Mission 29-16, and Balboa 38-10. The 30's were paced by Dick Pe- tronic, Cliff Sansot, Stan Koenigsberger, and josh Eppinger. The little 20's stayed ahead of their fellow divisions, scoring the best record of wins, five out of six. Their only loss being to -the new '56 champions, Washington, 27-30. The 20's came within three points of beating Washington and winning the round-robin -championship. Rich Colsky, captain of the second place 20's, accounted for Hve firsts in the 50 yard breaststroke, and the 50 yard backstroke. Others who placed in all meets were John Marks, div- ing, Pete Samuels, 50 yard breaststrokeg and Brad Nicol in the 100 yard free-style. The varsity, 130's and the 120's all par- ticipated in the All-City swimming cham- pionship. The varsity took third place, while both the 20's and the 30's came in second. The only member of the varsity to place first was Ralph Gilman in the 100 yard free-style. The unlimited team placed third in the four-man medley relay. It was composed of Pete Urrea, Ed McKenna, Ralph Gilman, and Pete Cantou. In the 130 pound division, josh Eppin- get placed third in the 100 yard breast- stroke. The 30's medley relay and the four- man relay team also placed in the All-City meet. The four man relay .took first, while the medley relay team placed third. The four-man relay was made up of Cliff Sansot, josh Eppinger, Tom Inouye, and Kirk Patronic. The 120 pound team placed second with Ricky Colsky taking a first in the 50 yard free-style and second in the 50 yard back stroke. Brad Nicol placed third in the 100 yard free-style. In diving john Marks of the 120 pound team took first place with 142.30 points. Ed Shaskan placed third for the 30's with 134.50 Points. Tennis jim Wfatson and Steve Abel TENNIS TEAM F7 row: Walter Chetverikolf, Paul Matzger, jim Weinberger. Middle row: Richard Gherman, Larry Draper, Bob lley. Bottom raw: Bob Burton, Dennis Wlong, Don Krug. TENNIS TEAM This year's tennis team, while not as good as in pre- vious years, more than held its own against all oppo- nents except Washington and Burlingame high schools. Faced with the loss of nine members of the team, 256 Coach Livingstone nevertheless trained many players, some transfers from other sports, to fill their places. Leading players were jim Watson, Vic Sashin, Larry Westdahl and Larry Draper. The team made the hnals against Washington but lost 4-3. The Clam 0 mfzumf , I9 6 13 5 T 4, b-1 A, N 'GPN 5 -i A V A , LL y-J' of 'i V.. if . X 1,,. uw W W Q x Wm' K . J . -M N ga ff' W ' W I 1 7 Bo M DY . Q' V A l I, Y ' .1 1 9 ,Q N N J Js g q f 409 ' !VQM fx K hh my 2 f f f I jflf w X R ' N' ' ff 171,21 wa 1? xx 'Q' WJ- 'jf 1 f 1,71 Y' if P555 1- 1 ' I, 5 ,fi J .if N. CAROL AIZENBERG . . . Carol was Red Cross Rep., Block L. member of The Lowell stall and appeared in Varieties. P ans to attend City College. STELLA ALTAMIRANO . . .Stella came as a junior from St. Peter's. Belonged to Future Nurses' Club and Usher's Reserve. Will go to St. Mary's Nursing School. CHARLYNE AROSIO . . . Charlyne was on Block L, Big Sisters, Red Cross, and Usher's Reserve. Science, math, language were her majors. Will go to S. F. State. LORRENE ATHERTON . . . Lorrene came from Hayward High as a senior. While at Lowell she participated in swimming and dancing. Her major was English. JERRY BABA . . . While at Lowell jerry participated in swimming and J. V. football. He had science and math majors and plans to attend City College. RON BACHMAN . . . Ron was Room Rep., and Treas. He was on Big Brothers, Rally Comm., -CSF, L-11, and L-12 Activities Comm. Will attend Cal after graduation. BARBARA BAKER . . . Barbara came in her senior year from Lin- coln. She participated in tennis and modern dance. Had an Eng. major and plans to attend U.C.L.A. KEN BALLING . . . Ken was a four year varsity basketball player and on the Block L. He had a math major and plans to attend Stanford University. MEHDI BASSALIAN . . . Wliile at Lowell Mehdi had a math major. After graduating he plans to go to City College. LORRAINE BATIS . . . Belonged to Usher's Reserve, GAA. Block L, Forensics, Chemistry Club, and Future Nurses' Club. Was actgfe in bowling, swimming, and softball. Plans to go to City Co ege. GEORGE BEAVIN . . . George participated in track and cross country and was in the Spanish Club and Chess Club. Plans to attend City College. ALAN BELKIN . . . Al was Room Rep. and on Block L Dance Comm., Carnival Comm., J. V. football and varsity swimming. Plans to attend Univ. of Oregon. X SULBRITT BJORKMAN . . . Sunny came from Stockholm, Swed- f'sf' A 5 en. She majored in art and was active in the Usher's Reserve. After graduation, she plans to attend City College. Q 'Q i Re CLIFF BOBROW . . . Cliff was Room Rep., and Treas., and was 1 E on Carnival Comm., and The Lowell staff. Had Spanish and science x 5 majors and will attend Cal. HN- ,W AUDREY BOCEK, Song Leader, Red Cross Rep., Reg. treas., Stu- ., .1 dent Body Dance Comm., Block L, GAA. Pans to attend City College and become an air line hostess, . 2 BARBARA BREIT . . . Barbara was on GAA and The Lowell staff. K ,M Her favorite sports were swimming and horseback riding. She will gf attend Univ. of Colorado. I N, X,p5 ,f l ii if V i n ' HELEN BREWER . . . Helen had math, science, and art majors. N N Was on the library staff. Plans to attend Marin J.C. i , ' I A sUzANNE BROCHARD , . , President of Shield, Red cross Rep., j . :E ' Q ,af in is GAA, CSF, Big Sisters, Exec. Board. Sue had English, French and 1 I N , ' Q ' 'i . I ,Q history majors and will go to Cal. ' ,fl . ' Y , W W : 'ii DIANNE BROOKS . . . Dianne had a music major and took part :pf .,,X,.. 1 1, 5 in Block L, GAA, orchestra, band, and choir. She plans to attend P at NICHAE CANONICA . . . shams Reg. Reip., Red cross Rep.. ,l,, - ' ' and Student Body Dance Committee. She ha a math major and E .. Y' ,gag 'V plans to attend a medical school. , ,S A YQ, by if 5 ii f -. - . S ill his a 4 i THOMAS CARTER . . . Tom was on Block L and Silver Spikes. Participated in track and cross country. Had a math major an will attend City College. ROBERT- CASTLE . . . While at Lowell Bob was on the A.V. Club, Science Club, and Chem., Club. He participated in soccer and will attend City College. THOMAS CAYLOR . . . Room Rep., Reg. Treas., Scroll secretary, Big Brothers, Rally committee, staff of The Lowell, and H-11 Activi- ties Comm. Will attend Stanford. Q - Jw 4 .S fe! SIV CEDERING . . . Siv came from Sweden. joined Usher's Re- serve and had a German major. Afler a trip to Europe, she will go to Ca . WILLIAM CHOW . . . While at Lowell, Bill majored in science. Has an interest in engineering but will join the Air Force after graduating. ALBERT CLARK . . . L-11 Pres., Block L Pres., Big Brothers, Scroll, Executive Board, football, basketball, track. After graduating he will attend Univ. of Washington. ROY COLLINS . . . Roy was Room Rep., and Pres. of Student Council and on Big Brothers, Block L, basketball and track. Will attend City College. ILUMINADA CRESPO . . . Has a history major while at Lowell. She participated in Swimming and GAA. Plans to attend Heald's Business College. JOHN DEBENHAM . . . Scroll, Block L, Student Body Dance Committee, Rally Committee, H-11 and H-12 President, CSF, 12O's and 15O's basketball, and football. Will go to Stanford. DIANA DE MUN . . . L-12 and H-12 Vice Prexy, Big Sisters, Red Cross Rep., Student Body Dance Comm., LA11 Activities Comm. She plans to go to Commercial Art School. NEAL DIDRIKSEN . . . Neal belonged to Slide Rule Club and par- ticipated in basketball. He had science and math majors and will attend City College. PHIL DORE . . . Phil came from S. I. He had a math major while at Lowell. Will attend City College upon graduation. DONNA DOWLING . . . Shield, Big Sisters, Block L, bowling mann- ager, Business Manager of The Lowell, Reg. Treas., H-11 Activities Comm. Plans to attend Cal. MIKE DUNN . . . Mike was on the Stud-ent Body Dance Comm, and H-11 Activities Comm. He also participated in basketball. Sci- ence and math majors. Will attend City. BARBARA ELMAN . . . Barbara was on Shield, Block L. Big Sisters, GAA, and was Red Cross rep. She plans to attend Cal after graduation. GUY ERB . . . Pres. of Scroll, Pres. of L-12 Class, Pres of Red Cross, Room Rep., Big Brothers, Exec. Board, L-11 Activities Comm. Will attend Cal. HELGA FAROSS . . . Helga came to the U. S. from Germany. While at Lowell she was in the Usher's Reserve and GAA. She is planning to attend City College. MARK FISHER . . . Mark participated in 110's and 120's basket- ball, and 150's and varsity track. Had math and science major. Will attend Calif. Maritime Academy. MAUREEN FURTADO . , . . Maureen belonged to Block L, GAA, and -the Golden Gate Club. She participated in swimming and bowling, She plans to attend City College. MANNY GOLDMAN . . 4. Manny was on Scroll, Big Brothers, Band, Orchestra, L-12 Activities, Comm. He was football equip- ment manager. Will attend Cal. DAVID GREEN . . . David was on the stat? of Red and While, gshers Reserve, and Band. After graduating will attend City o ege. ROSE MARIE GRIDER . . . She was on the Rally Comm., Red Cross, Choir and GAA. Had a music and Eng. major and wants to study singing. JOAN GUNTER-.' . . While at Lowell Joan had history and art majKrs.b Slrxe participated in bowling. She will continue her work at t e an '. GLORIA HANSEN . . . Gloria was on Block I. Dance Comm., GAA, and The Lowell staff. She had English and History majors and plans to go to S. F. State. JACK HANSEN . V. . Jack was on Block I., Knights of the Grid- iron, and Audio Visual Club. Majored in German and will attend City College. MARTIN HANSEN . . . While at Lowell Marty was on the soccer team, He majored in English and will enter the Marines after graduation. ELEANOR HOLTZ I. . . Ellie- served on Carnival Committee, and participated in Varieties and swimming. With Eng. and history majors she plans to attend Univ. of Arizona. TOM HOM . . . Wlhile at Lowell Tom participated in the Chinese Students Club. He majored in English and plans to attend City College. SUE HURFF . . Y Vice president of Shield, Secretary of GAA, Room Rep., Red Cross Rep., Reg. Treasurer, Big Sisters, Block L Dance Committee. Will go to Cal. Y, .f i AKIO INOUYE . . . Akio was Room Rep. and on the H-12 Activi- ties Comm., and Block L. He participated in track and plans to attend Cal. PAT JACOBI . I . Pat was on the Rally Comm., Carnival Comm., H-11 Activities Comm., Varieties and Term Plays. Science and French majors and plans to go to Cal. GAIL JACOBS . . . Prexy of Big Sisters, Reg. Treas., Orch. Carni- val Comm., I.-I1 Activities Comm, Majored in Science, French and Music and will attend Cal. A. JOHN MURNIN . . . John came as a high senior from Mission. He majored in history and will go to City College upon graduating. JIMMY NANJO . . . Jimmy was on Big Brothers, and Block L and took part in baseball and soccer. Math and science majors and will attend City College. ROBERT JEUNG . . , While at Lowell Robert majored in art. After lgraduation he will attend City College and go into com- mercia art. ALAN JOHNSON . . . Al was President of Big Brothers and Band Leader. Also on Scroll, Music Club, The Lowell rmf. Plans to attend Cal and study music. ALLEN KATSUYAMA . . . Al was on the Scroll, Big Brothers, Block L, H-11 and H-12 Activities Comm., and CSF. He was H-11 secretary and Room Rep. Going to Cal. BETTY KAWAMURA . . , Betty was in the Future Nurses' Club while at Lowell. She majored in science, French and Music and will go to Cal. EDWARD KELLER . . . Ed had a science and math major. Went out for 110 basketball and football. He will attend City College, SARALEE ANN KNECHTEL . . . Came from Mar land as a junior. Was on Usher's Reserve and Music Club and toolc modern dance. Plans to go to S. F. State. DAVID KODAMA . . . David was on the 120's .track team. He had math, science, language, majors. After graduation, will attend City College. MARY LEE . . . Mary belonged to Usher's Reserve, Forensics, and CSF. She had a math and language major and will go to Cal. CAROL LEEDS . . . Carol was manager of Modern Dance and on the Big Sisters and Block L. She will join a ballet company after graduation. RICHARD LEONG . . . Rich came from S. I. and was Pres. of the Chinese Student's Club. He had a history major and will attend City College. BARBARA LINDSLEY . . . Barbara was on the L-11 Activities Comm. and was Red Cross Rep. Was also in Choir. Plans to be P.E. teacher. BOB LOM . . . Bob was on Block L, Knights of the Gridiron, L-11 and H-11 Activities Comm. He had a language and English major and will attend Cal. RON LONG . . . While atxLowell Ron had a math and science major. After graduating he will attend City College. SONYA MCKENZIE . . . While at Lowell Sonya took part in izoftgall and bowling. She majored in English and will go to S. . tate. ERIC MACKINTOSH . . . Eric was on Block L, Big Brothers, and Kni hts of the Gridiron. He participated in football, swimming, and traci. Had history major and will attend Menlo J.C. STEVE MATELLI . . .' While at Lowell Steve participated in choir and football. He had history and music majors, and plans to attend City College. MIKE MATTSON . . . Mike was on Block L, and Student Body Dance Comm. His sports included football, basketball, and track. Will attend Santa Clara. CAROL MELMON , . . Student .Body vice president, L-11 vice president, Shield, Block L, Big Sisters, GAA, Rally Comm., Reg. Treas, Will study to be medica secretary at U.C.L.A. ROBERT MINNEY . . . Bob was Student Body Treasurer, Execu- tive Board, Scroll, Block L, and took active part in baseball. Majored in English and art and will attend an Art School. JACQUELINE MORIE . . . Jackie was on Block L Dance Comm., GAA, and was Red Cross Rep. She will attend State College to become a teacher. JEANETTE NICOLAS . . . Jeanette belonged to Big Sisters, GAA, and Future Nurses' Club. Majored in Spanish and science and will go to City College. JIM NOLAN . . . Student Body President, Scroll, Big Brothers, Knights of the Gridiron, and L-11 secretary. Played football. Will attend Univ. of Penn. BAILEY NEFE . . . While at Lowell Bailey had history, math, GUSTAVO ORTIZ . . . Gustavo participated in soccer and track. and science majors. He plans to attend California. He had a math major and will attend City College. PETE PALLAS . . . Pete was in Choir and Knights of the Grid- iron. He took part in football, track and baseball. Majored in history and will attend City College. ARTHUR PAUL . . , Art had a. history major while at Lowell. After graduating he will attend City College. MEL PRESCOTT . . . Mel was on Block I., Student Body Dance Comm., H-12 Activities Comm. He took part in basketball and track. Will go to City College. CATALINA RAMOS . . . While at Lowell she took part in modern dance. Majored in Spanish. After graduating she will attend City College. JERRY REDFORD . . . Jerry was on Usher's Reserve and The gofuell staff. Majorecl in Spanish, math, and history. Will go to a . GLORIA ROCES . . . Gloria came from Notre Dame as a senior. H-12 secretarff, Reg. treasurer, CSF secretary and treasurer, member of Writer's C ub, GAA and Library staff. JOELLE ROSEN . . . Joelle was Student Body secretary, Shield, Big Sisters, Block L, GAA, and Exec. Board, English, French, history, were her majors. Plans to go to Cal, GLORIA ROSS . . . Gloria was Reg. treas., Red Cross Rep., GAA, and Carnival Comm. Participated in bowling and swimming. Plans to attend City College. MICHAEL RUSS . . . Mike was on Big Brothers, Executive Board, CSF, and Slide Rule Club. He was ROTC battalion commander and will attend Cal. JULIA RUSSELL . . ,Julia was on Block L, B? Sisters, Future Nurses' Club and Italian Club. She will attend ity College. DIXIE SAMUELS . . . Dixie was prexy of Girl's Block L, on Big Sisters, CSF, and Exec, Board. Participated in bowling and volley- ball. Will attend Cal to study merchandising. SIMON SCHWARTZ . . . ,While at Lowell Simon majored in science and math. He will attend City College after graduating. PHIL SEVIER . . . Vice President of Block L, Reg. treas., Bi Broth! ers, Knights of the Gridiron, Rally Comm., and L-11 ictivities Comm. Played football and track. Will attend Menlo J.C. ARNELL SHOWS . . . Arnell was modern dance manager. She was on Block L, GAA, and Big Sisters. After graduating will attend Cal. NOREEN SIBELL . . . Veep of Big Sisters, Block L, GAA volleyball. Noreen majored in Spanish and wi 1 attend C.C.S.F. JUDY SIRBU . . . Red Cross Rep., Block L, Big Sisters, Varieties, term play. Judy majored in English and plans to go to Cal. NATHA MAE SMITH . . . While at Lowell Natha participated in softball, and swimming. She majored in history. Plans to attend University of Missouri. JEFFATHOMSON . . . Jeff was Rei. treas., Block L, and I-L12 Activities Comm. 'He was also on the asketball team. He will attend University of California. DON TORNBERG . . . Don was on, the 130's basketball team. He had math and English majors and will join the Navy. VINCENT TOY . . . Vincent came as a junior from S, H. He was in the Chinese Student's Club. Had a history major and will attend City College. OLGA TZVIKEVICH . . . Olga was on the poster club and Usher's Reserve while attending Lowell. She participated in ice skating. Her plans include City College. ANDREW VARGO . . . Buddy has a history major and partici- pated in track and basketball. Will attend City College. NELIA VENEZUELA . . . While at Lowell Nelia was on GAA and participated in bowling. She had a history major. She will return to the Philippines. .iw j 5 ,..,.r, Q gf .G ,,.,,. H l' i I , -' ix A TASIA VLAHOS . . . Tasia was H-12 treasurer, H-11 Vice presi- dent, and Red Cross Rep. She was on Big Sisters, Rally Committee, and Choir. Will attend City College. SUSAN WARNER . . . Sue was Room Rep., and was on the Library stalf, Counseling Office and Varieties. Had English and science majors and will attend San Jose State. ANITA WASHINGTON . . . Shield, Big Sisters, Block L secretary, GAA, L-12 acting Vice President, Senior Editor of Red and While, and choir. Will attend S. F. State. xv t ...sv he fee Xa? ,.... V . .,:,...,,,, SEZ ul. E., Z. 14... worked in Dr. Smith's ofhce. l-le will attend S. F. State. 2-Q BEVERLY JO WILSON . . . Bev came as a junior from Southern California. She participated in GAA and chorr. She had science and English majors and will go to City College. HELEN WOO . . . Helen was Red Cross Rep. Sec. of Chinese Students' Club, also on Block L, Big Sisters, and H-12 Activities Comm, Wfill major in art at Cal. -2:- 1 .g. .. 2 JANICE YARNELL . . . Janice was Reg. Treas., and Room Rep. She was on Rally Comm., Student Body Dance Comm., H-11 Activi- DANIEL WELSHA. . . Dan had history and math majors. Also Q? ak, f .A f x A gag' Q il ti, tics Comm. and Choir. XVill go to S. F. State. Q. , f THOM YASUKOCHI . . . Thom was Reg. Treas., Block L, Silver Spikes, Knights of the. Gridiron and Student Body Dance Comm. XVith math maior he will attend City. SINCLAIR YEE . . . Sinclair belonged to the Chinese Students' Club. He had math and science majors and will go to Cal. GRADUATION, JANUARY 1956 Top row: Seniors taking part in opening procession. Second row: Salute to the flagg Speaker Mike Russ. 'W??iw 'hm' r ng, 2235, 'Y iii WV 9' WG sf? fe-QM! . i X pu E Q f E 2-E T '-r .-. ' xf 1 ex 3 .wa X an u , wr 34 y .swf 2 v '24- W keg? .. ,i ? , ,wk gf Yew I i b Clam 0 une 1956 JANUARY SENIORS Helen Woo tells about the history of the Graduating Class. John Debenham, class president, gives the address of Welcome. STEPHEN ABEL . . . Reg Rep. and Treas., Block L, S. B. dance comm., L12 act. comm. and participated in golf and tennis. Stephen majored in English, science and math and p ans to attend Stan ord. RICHARD WONG ACHUCK . . . Came to Lowell from Pui Ching Middle School, Hong Kong. While at Lowell, Richard belonged to the Chinese Student Club and majored in math. DEANNA ADCOCK . . . Member of the Writer's Club, Music Club, Block L, and GAA swimming, ice skating, volleyball and modern dance. Deanna served as Red Cross alternate and majored in history. Will attend City College. DIANNE ADDINGTON . . . Dianne was on the Red and While start, Block L, GAA bowling, swimming, Girls' G-lee, Centennial Com., and Red Cross Rep. She majored in English, Science, and Latin. Plans to attend St. Mary's College of Nursing. PAUL ALEXANDER . . . Came to Lowell in his junior- year from Milford, Pennsylvania. Paul played football and participated in track. Majored in history,, math and science and he plans to attend college and study aeronautics. DICK ANDERSON . . . L12 Class Pres., Reg Rep. and Treas., Red Cross Rep., Forensics,.term play, Varieties and baseball. Dick majored in English and will enter San Francisco State. CHARLES ANDREWS . . . Drill team. band, Saber Club and track. Majored in science and math. After graduation, Charles plans to study medicine at Howard University, in Washington, D.C. WILMA ANGLIM . . . Majored in art and science, Red Crossrart comm., Poster Club, Music Club, carnival comm, GAA swimming, gdingAand ice skating. Plans to attend the California School ot' ine rts. SANDRA ARCHER . . . Came to Lowell from,Logan Senior High, in Logan, Utah, While at Lowell, Sandy participated in GAA riding an majored in music and business. VALERIY AKINSHIN . . . While at Lowell, Valeriy majored in math and plans to attend college, after graduation. ANITA AILEEN AXT . . , Life member of CSF, Reg Treas., Red Cross exec. bd., S. B. dance comm., CSF dance comm., Block L banquet comm., Big Sisters spec. activ. comm., Shield and L, GAA swimming and bowling. She majored in English, French and math. Will attend Stanford, Cal or S. F. State. DAVE BAKER . . . Veep of the Spanish Club, Reg Rep. and Treas. Dave majored in English and will attend Marin junior College, after graduation. NORMA BALTODANO . . . Came from Colegio Bautista, Managua, Nicaragua. Norma majored in Spanish and particilpated in GAA swimming. After graduation, she plans to attend col ege. SAGRARIO BALTODANO . . . Sagrario came to Lowell from Nica- ragua and majored in Spanish. She participated in GAA swimming and wi l attend City College after graduation. CLARENCE BARKLEY . . . Was on the Cross Country, Block L and majored in history. Clarence hopes to attend CCSF. I-IERMAN BIRENBAUM . . . H11 Act. Comm., adv. band and SUE BARNARD . . . Reg Rep., Red Cross Rep., Secty of the Student Council Shield and L, Big Sisters, Block L, GAA swimming, bowl- ing and modern dance. She majored in English and French. She plans to attend either Santa Barbara State or San Francisco State, to major in education. MARGARET BARTON . . . Margaret beloraged to the Big Sisters, Junior Achievement, modern dance and Red ross Rep. She majored in English and German and plans to attend college after graduation. BARBARA BATES . . . AL11 Veep, Shield and L president, Big Sisters, Block L and GAA riding and swimming. Barbara majored in languages and will attend Pembroke. XVAYNE BATMALE . . . Wayne played on the Varsity basketball team. He was Reg Rep., S. B. dance comm., Block L, track and student council. History and math were Wayne's majors and he plans to attend USF. PETER BELMONT . . . Commander First Reg't. San Francisco ROTC, Reg R?., President of the Chess Club, eMusic Club Veep, Slide Rule, Sierra lub, Usher's Reserve, CSF, and exec. bd. Peter's majors were math, science and music. Will enter Reed College and study physics or electrical engineering. JEFFERY E. BENNINGER . . . Reg Re ., Red Cross Rep., Scroll and L, Big Brothers, Cent. Comm., L11 Act. Comm, and a member of the CSF. Jeff was on the 13O's track aand played on the 110's basketball team. His majors were math, science, and Latin. Plans to attend Stanford. JIM BENTON . jim attended Reno High and North Phoenix High before entering Lowell. He majored in English and hist. Will attend City College after graduation. ROSELEEN FRANCES BERKOUER . . . Came to Lowell in her senior year from Hollywood Hi. Sch. Majored in history. Roseleen was sectiy of her junior Achievement Company and she'll attend City Col ege of San Francisco to be a secty. or professional model. E i j r , -. . ' .i .iii ..JE:. gig 1 VM, .. or f Ba., Y .Q . as . .. , .I Y f . . M..- ,- i.,,..J P majored in English, physical science and language. Herman plans to attend CCSF and then go on the University of Cal. JUDIE BISKIND . . . Judy was Secty. and Veep of the Forensic Society, Reg Rep. and Red Cross Rep., GAA riding and modern dance. Majored in English and science and after graduation she plans to attend U.C.L.A. BYRON RICHARD BLACKWELL . . . Dick was on the L12 Act. Comm., Carnival comm. and track. His major was science and will go to CCSF after graduation. .Br 265 2 f is , Q 3-f. ji. 4- ,. i ,,2 , YVONNE DANDY . . . Reg Rep. and Treas., Senior Editor of the Red and While, P. E. Service. Usher's Reserve, Shield and L, worked in Mrs. Kendall's office and Main otiice, Big Sisters, Varieties, Block L, GAA bowling, tennis, swimming, volleyball and modern dance. Plans to attend City College and study merchandising. RALPH DANIELS . . . Re Rep. and Treas., Jr. Red Cross, Block L, lightweight and varsity Basketball, and track. Ralph majored in French and plans to study agriculture at Davis. PATRICK. DARE . . . Reg Rep., social chairman, Treas. and Pres. of the Chinese Student'sA Club, Big Brothers, CSF and played basket- ball. Patrick majored in math, science, mechanical drawing and language. He plans to attend Cal. KEN BLEY . . . Assist. Yell Leader, rally comm., Forensics, All-City diving and track. Ken's major was math and he plans to study engineering at M.I.T. or Cal. SANDRO BOCCARA . . . Member of the choir and adv. orches. Sandy majored in English, science and music. Will attend the University of Cal. PAUL SILVIO BONACCORSI . . . Came to Lowell from St. Ignatius as a socphornore. Majored in math and science. Will attend CCSF after he gra uates. HARVEY 'DOC' BRODY . . . H4 class president, golf, Scroll and L, Block L dance comm., Big Brothers, basketball, H3 act. comm., S. B. dance comm., Reg. Rep., and clerk of Student Council, Majored in Spanish and will enter U.C. and study dentistry. JOAN BURTON . . . Life member of the CSF, sect . and president of CSF, Reg Rep., Red Cross Rep., AFS Exchange Student in Belgium, Shield and L, Big Sisters, Ush-er's Reserve, Ticket Seller's Club, carnival comm., Block L and assist. mgr. tennis. ,Ioan's majors were science, French and math. She plans to attend either Cal or Stanford. DAN CALLAGHAN . . . While at Lowell, Dan participated inrfoot- ball and track, and was Reg Treas.-He majored in math and science. Dan will attend U.C. to study engineering. LAIOLA CANONICA . . . Laiola attended her freshman and sopho- more years at the Dominican Convent. While at Lowell she was Reg Treas., Red Cross Rep., belonged to the Italian Club and GAA tennis, ice skating and bowling. Her majors were languages and English and plans to attend Cal at Santa Barbara. XVILL CHAN . . . Will majored in Spanish, math and English and was Red Cross Rep. Will plans to attend college after graduation. JOEL BRUCE CHASEN . . . Majored in history and art. Was in the Poster and Biology Clubs. joel plans to take up dentistry. VALERIE CHESTER . . . Assist. mgr. ot' softball, Red Cross Rep., ROTC band majorette, term play, varieties, and GAA volleyball. She majored in French and art. Val plans to attend either San Francisco State or City College. KENNETH CHILDS . . . ROTC Color Guard, Italian Club, library Staff. Kenneth majored in English and social studies while at Lowell. He plans to attend college and study law. BUCKY CHUNG . . . Carne to Lowell from Oceanside Carlsbad Union High. While at Lowell, Bucky was a Hall Guard and majored in math. Will attend Technical College. SHIRLEY CLAYTON . . . Shirley majored in Spanish, English and art. She worked in the Girls' Dog House, Poster Club, Music Club, GAA swimming, riding and bowling. Will attend State College and go into the teaching profession. DEAN CLEVELAND . . . Dean came to Lowell from Eureka Sen. Hi. in Eureka, Calif. Reporter on The Lowell, and Spanish Club. Major was English, and he plans to attend C.C.S.F. and enter the held of journalism. LORELLE COHN . . . Reg Treas., Future Nurses Club, Big Sisters, GAA bowling, tennis, vol eyball and softball. Majored in history, English and language. XVill attend U.C. CHRISTOPHER COLE . . . Veep of the Big Brothers and Student Council, rally comm., H12 act. comm., and Reg Rep. Before coming to Lowell, Christopher attended Tamalpais and his majors were history, French and English. Will enter Stanford. CATHIE COVINGTON . Q. . Attended Chico High before coming to Lowell. Secty. of Big Sisters, CSF, Future Nurses, GAA modern dance and worked in the attendance othce. Majors were in science, math and language and will attend Cal Nursing School. SUSANNA CRIM . . . Susanna belonged to the Future Nurses Club, GAA swimming -and participated in the Science Fair. She majored in science and will take up nurses's training after graduation. RUDY CRUZ . . . While at Lowell, Rudy participated in the Slide Rule Club and the Biology Club. His major was science and he plans to attend C.C.S.F. and then go on to U.C. LINDA CRIPPS . . . While at Lowell, Linda was a drum majorette tor the school band and participated in the school Varieties. RON DARLING . . . While attending Lowell, Ron belonged to the adv. band and majored in English. Heglans to enter the Navy and then take up business administration at 'CSF. DONNA JANICE DAVID , . . Donna came to Lowell in her L12 year from Burlingame High. She worked in-Mrs. Kendall's office and majored in history. Plans to first attend City College and then San jose State. GWEN DAVIS . . . Editor of the Red and While, H11 class secty., Reg Rep., Red Cross Rep., Executive Board, Shield and L, Big Sisters, Block L, CSF, Usher's Reserve, Forensics, GAA, tennis and volley- ball. Gwen's majors were science, math and French. Plans to attend Reed's, I I l , H ilii Iii . M :..g . A : v -'-:- WILLIAM DAVIS . . . William was Reg. Treas. and he belonged to the Italian Club. His majors were history and English and plans to attend City College and then Cal. JOANNE DAVIES . . . Life member of CSF,. secty, veep and pres. of CSF, pres. of GAA, Manager of GAA swimming, rally comm., Reg Rep., Centennial Comm., Big Sisters, Block L, Shield and L., G, A basketball and riding. Joanne majored in French, Latin and science. She plans to attend either Stanford, Cal or S. F. State. BOB DAWSON . . . ROTC Battalion Commander, Biology Club, ROTC Drill Team and Big Brothers. Majored in history and English. Bob plans to enter City College and later join the Marine Corps. JOHN DEL PIERO . . . John majored in history, science and math. Regj cRep,, carnival comm. and track. Will attend CCSF and go on to . . SHARON DEMING . . . GAA secty. and Clerk of Awards, manager and assist. manager of swimming, page editor of Tbe Lowell, Block L dance comm., Italian Club, Big Sisters and GAA modern dance. Sharon majored in ?aanish, Eng ish and science. Plans to attend the University of Cali ornia. DIANE DEUTSCHER . . . Veep of Block L act. comm., Big Sisters, GAA bowling, volleyball and softball. Diane's majors were Latin, math and science. After graduation she plans to attend State College to study nursing. AUDREY DIEHL . . . Audrey was a life member of the CSF, belonged to ith? Shileld and L, Big Sisters and Block L. She majored in science an renc . LUCILLE DIETZ . . . While at Lowell, Lucille participated in GAA bowling and Block L. She majored in history, science and English. Will probably attend City College of San Francisco. MICHAEL DILLON . . . Came to Lowell from Mission High School. While at Lowell, Michael majored in English' and socialvstudies. He plans to attend Nevada U. and study business administration. STEVE DIMOND . . . Steve played on the baseball and basketball teams. He majored in math, and attended Santa Rasa High for one year before entering Lowell. He'll attend college after graduation. MICHAEL DITTES . . . English and history were Michael's majors while at Lowell. He plans to attend City College of San Francisco after graduation. NICKY DOANE . . . Nicky's majors were math, history, English anvil science. He participated in the Italian Club and will attend City o ege. GALE DOBBS . . . Came to Lowell from Fresno High School. Gale belonged to the GAA swimming, bowling, modem dance, ice skating, Block L banquet comm., CSF, The Lowell staff and Usher's Reserve. Plans to attend CCSF and then UC. JANICE DRISCOLL . . . H12 Veep, Reg Rep., and Treas., Bag Sisters, Block L, S. AB. dance comm., L12 act. comm., CSF, GA bowling and ice skating. Janice went to Hamlin's and entered Lowell in her junior year. She plans to attend either Pomona or Cal. JOAN DUIZEND . . . L12 act. comm., The Lnwell staff, Miss Lori- gan's ofhce, Red Cross Rep., GAA volleyball and bowling. Joan rrrajgred in English and Spanish and will attend the University o a . . BART DUNNE . . . Bart came to Lowell from Sacred Heart for his high senior term. He majored in English. VICKI EKSTROM . . . Before coming to Lowell, Vicki attended Lincoln High in Portland, Oregon. She majored in history and math and was on the S. B. dance comm. and L12 act. comm. Vicki plans to attend college after graduation. ' ROBERT ELLESON . . . Came to Lo-well in his sophomore year from Stockton High School. Reg Reg., carnival comm., picnic comm., basketball, baseball, soccer, foot all and track. Ma'ored in English and plans to attend S. F. State to study radio and teievision announc- ing and producing. BRENDA ENMEIER .- . . Attended Alamo Heights High School in San Antonio, Texas. Life member of CSF, rally comm., Big Sisters, Future Nurses, Usher's Reserve, GAA tennis, bowling, basketball and volleyball. Brenda majored in English, science and math. LEWIS CARROLL EPSTEIN . . . Lewis was president of the Science Club, belonged to the Slide Rule Club, Forensics and manager of basketball. His majors were math and science. JEAN ERSKINE . . . While at Lowell, Jean was on the Block L dance comm., GAA bowling and the Red and White stalf. She majored in English and history and plans to attend City and then U.C. EUNICE ANN FERN . . . Eunice came to Lowell in her junior year from Punahou. Reg Treas., Music Club, library staff, GAA swim- ming and ice skating. DORIS FLAMM . . . Red Cross Rep., Big Sisters, Ushers Reserve, Music Club, library staff, Italian Club, Junior Achievement, and GAA ice skating. Doris majored in French and English. ... ref ' .j.' ,., y T ' X32 ..- DAVE FLINN . . . Reg Treas., Red Cross Rep., carnival comm., track and cross country. Dave's majors were English, French, science and math and will attend Cal and major in history. ED FORD . . . Reg. Rep., basketball and baseball. Ed majored in English and plans to be a highway patrolman. RONALD FOX . . . Attended J. A. O'Connell Tech. and Voc. High before coming to Lowell. Ron majored in math and participated in track and cross country. Wfill attend CCSF after graduation. 2 268 JUDY HAIGHT . , . Attended Balboa before coming to Lowell. Judy belonged to the GAA and majored in French. She'll attend San Jose State after graduation. MARSHA HAMILTON . . . Reg Treas., Block I., GAA, riding, soft- ball and basketball. Majored in history and English and Marsha plans to attend San Francisco State. HAROLD HAND . . . Secty. of Big Brother's, Reg Treas., Slide Rule Club, and worked in Dr, Smith's office. Harold majored in French, English, science, math and history and will attend Creighton Uni- versity. 8,2 GLORIA FRAILE . . . GAA swimming and volleyball, Red Cross. Future Teachers Club, and carnival comm. Majors were history and English. Plans to go to S. F. State and become a teacher. JUDITH FREED . . . Veep of the L12 class, Mrs, Santa Claus , rally comm., Big Sister, term play, Varieties and carnival comm. Judy majored in English and language and hopes to go into the theatrical field. NORMA FREED . . . Norma belonged to the band, the Block L, GAA bowling and was a band majorette. Majors were history, English andgart. Wil go to State College and then to the San Anselmo Seminary. HANK GALLA . . . While at Lowell, Hank was on the track team. He majored in math and science and plans to attend CCSF and go on to Cal.Poly. DENNIS GALLOWAY . . . Dennis majored in math and science and will attend City College and then go on to the University of California. FRANK GAMA . . . Red Cross Re ., belonged to the Kings and participated in football. Frank majoreciin art and will join the United States Navy after graduation. PHILIP GARDNER . . . Came to Lowell from Greenfield High School in Indiana. Phil's major was math and he'll attend City College of San Francisco after graduation. DONN S. GARRIOTT . . . Donn was on the Centennial Comm., and majored in math. Will enter City College after graduation. DON GEE . . . Don went to Washington before attending Lowell. He belonged to the Chinese Student Club and majored in math. Plans to attend CCSF. GERRY GIOVANNETTI . . . Future Nurses Veep, co-ordinator of Big Sisters, Shield and L, library staH,. CSF, band, orchestra and GAA bowling. Gerry's majors were music and Spanish and plans to study nursing at USF. STEPHEN GLADSTONE . . . Stephen was on the carnival comm. and belonged to the Forensic Society. Majored in English and history and is going to Cal. VIVIAN GOKSON . . . Vivian majored inlmath and science. She belonggdl to the Chinese Student Club and Slide Rule Club and will enter a . CAROLE BARBARA GOLD . . . Reg Rep., Big Sister, Red api! While staH, and GAA tennis. Carole majored in French and English and plans to attend U.C. MICHAEL GOSPE . . . Life member of CSF, act, comm. of CSF, Scroll and L, Big Brother, Block L, Ticket Seller's Club, Slide Rule Club, 130's track, mgr. of football, track, and cross country. Mrke's majors were math, science and English and plans to enter Stanford and major in math and physics. l - GERALD H. GRANT . . . While at Lowell, Gerald partici- pated in the Forensic's Society and majored in English, science and history. Plans to attend U.C. h U ARDEN WILI.IAM GREENBLAT . . . President of the Italian Club, co-chairman of Usher's Reserve, editor of Summer High School news- paper, Centennial Comm., Music Club and Junior Achievement. Arden majored in English, history, Latin and math. He plans to attend college and major in languages and history. JULIET GRUEN . . . CSF, Block GAA tennis, ice skating and swimming. Juliet's majors were English and history and will attend either U.C. or U.C.L.A. GAY GUILIANI . . . Red Cross Rep., Centennial Comm., Block L and GAA bowling. Majored in history and English. Gay plans to attend CCSF. KAREN GUTHERTZ . . . Reg. Rep., song leader, H11 act. comm., Writer's Club, Ticket Seller's Club, 'Lowellettes', Varieties, New- comers' Reception, carnival comm., GAA bowling and modern dance. Majors were English and Spanish. Will attend U.C. MINARD HALL . . . Minard belong to the Big Brother's and library staff, His majors were math, science and English and plans to attend college. JACQUELINE HANSON . . . The Lowell staff, CSF, adv. choir, Big Sister, Block L, Carnival comm., GAA riding, modern dance and swimming. Majored in English. Jackie plans to attend S. F. State. JOSEPHINE HANSON . . . Reg Rep., Big Sister, Block L, GAA, swimming, modern dance and riding. Majored in English, language and art. Plans to be a teacher and will attend S. F. State. JOHN HARE . . . While at Lowell, John was on the soccer team. His major was history and will attend City College of San Francisco. KEVIN I-IARRINGTON . . . Pres. of the L11 class, secty. and treas. of the Scroll and L, Big Brother, S. B. dance comm., rally comm., CSF, Centennial Comm., Reg Rep. and Treas., basketball and track. BARBARA JEAN HATTER . . . Entered Lowell in herhsophomore year. Participated in GAA swimming, modern dance and ice skating, History major and will attend CCSF. WILLIAM HEARN . . . Term play, Varieties, ROTC, Parent's Night and Science Club. Majored in math and plans to attend City College or Cal to study engineering. JOY HEMSTREET , . . Before coming to Lowell-in her sophomore year, Joy attended Escola Americana in Riolde Janeiro, Brazil. F.N'.A. L12 act. comm., GAA softball, locker assist. and Big Sister. Majors were science, language and English. SUSAN HERLICK . . . Sue majored in math, science and language. Participated in GAA riding an belonged to the Block L. Plans to attend Davis after graduation. TERESA HILLEBRANDT . . . Attended school in Central America before coming to Lowell. Teresa majored in Spanish and will enter CCSF to study business. BARBARA JEAN HIU . . . came from Robert Louis Stevenson in Honolulu, Hawaii. GAA, Big Sisters, CSF coaching, Writer's Club and Chinese Student Club. Her majors were English, Latin, and math and she'll attend Cal. SONYA HOLODILOFF . . . Shield and L, Big Sister and Poster Club. Sonya's majors were Spanish, English an science. Plans to enter the University of California. STEPHEN HONE . . . Reg. Rep., N.F.L.Rep., Veep ot' Visual Aids, Scroll and L, Forensics, swimming and football manager, Majored in English, math, language and science and plans to attend college. WILLIAM HONG . . . While at Lowell, William belonged to the Chinese Club, His majors were math and science. Will attend City College and then go on to U.C. SALLY ANN HOUGH . . , Re Treas., Music Club secty. and assist. band leader, Shield and L, Blogs L, Big Sister, band Block L, GAA swimming, bowling and ice skating, Majored in English and music. Sally will attend San Francisco State and take up radio and T.V. JIM HURWITZ . . . Football, track, Reg Rep., Chemistry Club, Sci- ence Club, H12 Act. comm., and Biology Cub. Jim's majors were science and math. He'll attend either Purdue University or the Uni- versity of Michigan to study medicine, PEGGY IKEZOE . . , Red Cross Rep., Reg. Rep. and Treas., Block L., Big Sister, H-3 act. comm., GAA tennis, swimming, basketball, and volleyball. Peggy majored in English, history and Latin and plans to attend business co lege. CONNIE IMAZEKI . . . Connie attended Narimasu, an American High School in Japan, and entered Lowell in the junior year. Wfhile Will attend CCSF. CRAIG JAKOBSEN . . . Life member of CSF, CSF dance comm., Reg Rep., Scroll and L., Big Brothers, L11 act. comm., and tennis. gIaij?edhin science, math and language and plans to attend U.C. or a ec . ANN JONES . A. . Ann was GAA riding manager and belonged to the Block L, Shield and L, Big Sister and library staff. Her majors were Spanish and science. RAY MAURICE -JONES . . . Came to Lowell from Sacred Heart. Ray matjored in history and English. He'll attend either City or S. F. State a ter graduation. KARINA KEHAULANI KANG . . . Poster Club pres., Usher's Re- serve, Red and While staff, art editor of The Lowell, GAA swimming, bowling, softball and modern dance. Karina majored in English and art. A ter graduation she plans to attend college. JANE KAFANTARIS . . . While at Lowell, Jane participated in adv. choir, Red qnd While staff, varieties and GAA swimming. Her majors were English and music and she plans to attend college and become a teacher. MARGERY JANE KAPLAN . . . Margery was on the CSF, Forensic Society, GAA bowling and tennis. She majored in language and math and will attend USC. ULDIS KAPOSTINS .. . . Uldis was pres. of the Chess Club and also participated in the Science Club. Majors were science and math. He plans to attend college after graduation. EUGENIA KATO . . . Block L, Usher's Reserve Comm., Reg. Secty., GIAA siwrmming, basketball and bowling. Eugenia's majors were Span- is an art. LENORE KAY . . . Shield and L, Big Sister, Block L, Writers Club, Centennial Comm.,'Jr. .Red Cross,.CSF, Varieties, term play, GAA tennis, bowling, swimming and riding. She majored in Eng ish and French and will attend U.C. WALT KEOUGH . . .Reg. Rep., Jr. Red Cross, Scroll and L, Big Brothers, Block L, varsity basketball and football. Walt majored in English and history. He'll attend City College and then USF. TOM KETTLESON . . . Came to Lowell from Poly.. Played on varsity football and was on The Lowell .riff and audio vision. Majored in history and will enter CCSF. MARIE KEY. . . Marie belonged to the Forensic Society, worked in Mrs. Kendall's oiftice and majored in English and plans to attend college after graduation. 2 JOHN K. KIIL . . . Played on the J. V. football team, was on the S. B. dance comm., and was Reg Treas. john majored in art and mechanical drawing. He will enter the Army JOHN KINDSFATHER . . . Varsity football and Block L. john giajolged in history and plans to attend City College and later join the ir orce. ROBIN KINKAID . . . Reg. Treas., president of the Biology and Chemistry Club and manager of the library staff. Majored in English and math and science. Will attend Reed. ELAINE KLEIN . . . Song leader, Reg. Rep. and Treas., chairman in Miss Lorigan's office and GAA riding. Majors were art, history, and French and she'll attend Mills. JEANNE KLEIN . . . Big Sisters' act. comm., Block L,. worked of Block L dance comm., 'Lowellettes', Varieties, GAA bowling, and tennis. Majored in English and plans to go to Cal RENEE KLEIN . . . Shield and L, Block L, Big Sisters, GAA, riding, song leader, Poster Club, Reg Rep., and carnival comm. Majored in French and art and will attend Mills. FRANK ROBERT KLOTZ . . . Frank was on the Block L and .played football.-His major was history and he'll attend the University of Washington after graduation. HENRY KORNFELD . . . Reg Rep. and Treas., .Treas.. of Silver Spikes, Block L, CSF, rally comm. and track. Majored in French, math and English. Frank will attend Cal. LOUISE KROUZIAN . . . CSF, Red Cross Rep., and Secty. Louise came from the Convent of the Sacred Heart in her sophomore year. She majored in history and will attend the University of Cal and major in journalism. STANLEY KURTZ . . . Reg. Treas., Mrs. Kendall's office, and Sci- ence Club. Stanley's majors were science and math and he plans to attend CCSF and major in business administration. IRINA KUSUBOVA . . . Came to Lowell from Mission High School. Ushler's Reserve and library staff. Irina's majors were English and mat . LEE LABE . . . Reg. Rep., Shield and L, Block L, Ticket Seller's Club, Wr1ter's Club, H11 act. comm., Spanish coach, Big Sisters, The Lowell staff, 'Lowellettes', Varieties, GAA, bowling, tennis, ice skating and modern dance. Majored in Spanish and English and plans to attend college. TOM LA LORGE . .A . Attended Texarkana Senior Hi. in Texarkana, Arkansas, before coming to Lowell. Tom majored in math and science. Plans to attend college and major in architecture. MIKE LARSEN . . . Came to Lowell in his sophomore year from Sacred Heart. Delegate to S. F. Youth Association, Red and White staE and track. Majored in English and will enter U.C.L.A. JAN LAWSON . . . Jan came from Glide High School in Glide, Orson. Belonged to the Science Club, Usher's Reserve and GAA mo ern dance. She majored in English, science and math. Will attend college after graduation. JAMES LEHAN . . . James attended Montezuma School before coming to Lowell. President of the Lowell Chapter, San Francisco Youth Association. He majored in science and history, and first, he plans to attend CCSF and then go on to Stanford. CHARLOTTE LEE , . . Secty, of the Poster Club, mgr. of GAA soft- ball and social chairman of Big Sister's. Charlotte belonged to the Block L Land CSF, and participated in basketball and swimmin . Majored in English, Spanish, math and science. Attended Vacavillze Union High before coming to Lowell. Plans to attend Cal. KENNETH LEE . , .Entered Lowell as a senior from Kaimuki High. Kenneth majored in math, literature and music and will attend col ege at Seattle Pacific. SAMUEL LEE . . . While at Lowell, Samuel belonged to the Chinese Student Club. His majors were math and science and he plans to enter City and study engineering. CAROLYN LEONG . . , Big Sisters, Block L, GAA, Poster Club, H11 Activities4Comm. Carolyn majored in math., French, and science. She will attend U.C. and become an elementary school 270 MARILYN LEVY . . . Editor of The Lowell, secty. of the Shield and L, Reg Rep., Big Sister, Block L, carnival comm., and GAA bowl- ing. Majors were French, science and English, Sbe'll attend San Francisco State. ALMA LIBBY . . . Big Sister, Block L, Usher's Reserve, Music Club, Forensic's, Future Nurses, library staff, orch., and jr. Red Cross. Alma majored in music and she plans to become a nurse. SUSAN LINDNER . . . Bi Sister dance comm., Red Cross Reo,, Shield and L, Block L, seconcfpage editor of The Lowell, Cent. Com., L11 act. comm., carnival comm., and GAA bowling. Majored in English, history, and French and she'll attend college. I ' i'f::.,. ,,. ': W lim ' A I I aims S -:sf-:Q P 5 , 5 I . ' ii lt. a as teacher. BRUCE LITTMAN . . . While at Lowell, Bruce majored in English and history. He plans to attend U.C.L.A. after graduation. HILDA LOSADA . . . Hilda attended a school in Buenos Aires before coming to Lowell. While at Lowell, she belonged to the Italian Club and GAA swimming. She majored in Spanish and will enter City College after graduation. RONALD BOWMAN LOW . . , Life member of the CSF, Scroll and L, Big Brother, Block L, S..B. dance comm., Reg. Rep., carnival comm., library staff and Chinese Student Club. Ronald played on the 110's and 120's basketball teams. His majors were German, science and math. Plans to attend Stanford Medical University. JACK LUCE . . . Majored in science and English. Belonged to the Centennial Committee and Science Club. Plans to attend college. GERALD LUCE . . . Gerald participated in the Science and Centennial Committees. Majored in English and science and plans to attend college. ALVA ANN LYNCH . . . Alva majored in English, science and German. CSF, Shield and L, Bi Sister, Block L, Usher's Reserve, Future Teachers, Science Club, GBA swimming. Alva plans to attend Cal. and go into the teaching profession. BRIAN LYTTLE . . . Student Council Pres., secty. of Spanish Club, Reg. Rei., Bi Brother, Exec. Bd., Cent. Comm., Block L, baseball and bas etballgl Brian majored in math and plans to attend either Oregon State or Cal. PATRICIA MACGINNIS . . . Pat attended Jefferson Union High and entered Lowell in her junior year. While at Lowell, she participated in the Music Club, GAA swimming and volleyball and was on the library staff. Majors were English and science and plans to attend San jose State. LEA JEANNE MALFANTI . . . GAA modern dance manager, Shield and L, Red Cross Rep., Reg Treas., Block L and Big Sister. Lea's majors were French, English and art, and she'll attend U.C. VVILLIAM MARKEL . . . Reg. Rep., Cent. Comm. and Carnival comm,, English language and history were Will1am's majors and he hopes to attend Cal. TOM MAYER . . . Before coming to Lowell, Tom attended Saint Ignatius. Tom's majors were history and math and will attend City College and then Davis. BILL MCCAULEY . . . Came to Lowell in his freshman year from Saint Ignatius. Bill was Reg. Treas, and played Soph-Frosh football. Majors were history and mechanical drawing. Plans to attend City College. KATHLEEN MCDONALD . . . Secty of CSF, orchestra, Big Sisters, Poster Club, Usher's Reserve and GAA modern dance. Major was English and she'll attend Brigham Young University in Utah. MIKE MCKEE . . . While at Lowell, Michael majored in history. He plans to attend City College of San Francisco and become a photographer. BOB MIAILOVICH . . . Big Brothers, library staff, Reg. Rep., and Treas., Future Teachers and CSF. Majors were English, math and science. Will attend U.C. and become a teacher. JOEY MINDLIN . , . joey came to Lowell from St. Petersbury High, St. Petersbury, Florida in her senior year. CSF, band, Music Club, Future Teachers, Usherfs Reserve, National Forensic League, orches.. library staff and Varieties. Majors were music and English and will attend San Jose State. C. HUGH MITCHELL . . . Came to Lowell from St. Mary's College Press Radio Club, Slide Rule Club and Chess Club. His major was mat . MYRNA MARTHA MOLINAR . . . Myrna came from Salvatierra College in Mexico. Varieties, term play, Red Cross rep., Red Cross entertainment comm., adv. choir and G.A.A. ROBERT MOORE Z . . S. B. president, Reg Rep., Scroll and L, Knights of the Gridiron, Block L, Student Council, carnival comm., Big Brother. rally comm., S. 'B. dance comm., and played football and baseball. Bob majored in history, math and English. PATSY MOOREfAttended Franklin High in Seattle. Red Cross Rep., Music Club, choir, Usher's Reserve, Red and While staff and GAA swimming. Pat majored in English and music. CAROLE MORRISON . . . Song leader, Reg. Rep., Red Cross Rep., Block L dance comm., assoc. editor of The Lowell, rally comm., CSF, GAA bowling and tennis. Carole's majors were English, French and science. She plans to attend U.C. WILLIAM MORROW . . . While at Lowell, William belonged to the Chess Club and majored in mechanical drawing, After graduation he'll attend City College. ROBERT MURASE . . . Basketball, track and Block L. Robert majored in math and science. He'll attend CCSF after graduation. STEVEN MUTO . . . Reg. Rep. and Treas., life member of CSF, rally comm., Scroll and L and track. Majors were language, science and math. He'll study engineering at Cal. ,IUDYANAKAMOTO . . . Judy belonged to the Block L, GAA swimming, tennis, volleyball and the Red and IVbite staff. Her majors were science and French and plans to attend Armstrong Business College. LOISANN NICHOL-. . . came.to Lowell from Bethlehem Catholic School: Participated in GAA swimming and her majors were science and history. After graduation, Loisann plans to work for the Tele- phone Company. if 1 5 .V if f we -- I -ff- I SYLVIA NELSON . . . S. B. Veep, H11 Veep, secty. of Big Sisters, Reg treas., Shield and L, Block L, L11 act. comm., rally comm., dance comm., Exec. Board, GAA bowling, tennis, modern dance. Majored in science, French and English. Sylvia plans to attend eitther Cal or Stanford to study dental hygiene. CYNTHIA NICKELSON .n . . Cynthia was on the Red and White staff, Block L, and participated in GAA bowling and swimming, She majored in English and plans to attend CCSF. BOB NOLAN. . . Bob was on the-track team . . . His majors were Scienceland art. Plans to attend City College of San Francisco after graduation. 2 at We an I 1 1 M, 1 ,. i If a , - at , . Q4 ' . ROBERT PODOLL.. . . Entered Lowell in L11 year from Green- ville Jr. and Sr. High School in Greenville, Calif. History was his major. He will attend CCSF and plans to be a mortician. RICHARD POSADA-Big Brother, Photographer for Red and White, Jr. Red Cross Rep., Science, math and German, were his majors. Will enter Pre-Med at Cal. ' CAROLYN POSTEI. . . . Penny was Red Cross Rep., Block L and participated in GAA bowling, ice skating and tennis, Her majors were music and English. Hopes to attend San Mateo J. C. NANCY NORTON . . . Red Cross Rep., Reg. Treas., secty of Block L, assist. manager of terinis, Shield and L, Big Sister, library staff, Miss Lorigan's ofhce, Varieties, carnival comm., GAA swimming, bowling and modern dance. DICK NYHAN-Reg. Rep., Block L and Student Court. Dick majored in science and math while at Lowell. Plans to enter the U. S. Naval Academy. TOM NYHAN-Tom belonlged to the 'Knights of the Gridiron, H11 act. com., Block L and eg Rep. Majors were Spanish and Eng- lish. Tom plans to attend Oregon State College. BOB ODDONE . . . Football, basketball, track, golf, Block 'L, Knights of the Gridiron and Visual Aids Club. Major was Spanish and he'll study medicine at Tulane. SCHARLENE OLING . . . Red Cross-Rep., Historian of Future Teachers and GAA. Scharlene majored in English and will attend San Francisco State College. DIANE O'NEILL . . . Red Cross Rep., Reg. Treas., Big Sister, L12 act. comm., Red and White staff, GAA bowling, swimming and volleyball. Diane's majors were Spanish and English and she'll attend San Mateo J.C. ROBERT ONORATO . . . Attended Sacred Heart before entering Lowell. Bob belonged to the Italian Club, and majored in history and English. Plans to go into the field of photography. KATSUMI OSAKI . . . Katsumi came from Half Moon Bay High to Lowell. While at Lowell, he participated in the Poster Club and base- ball. Majored in math and art and hopes to attend CCSF. NINA OSHURKOFF-Usher's Reserve staff comm., Future Teachers and GAA modern dance. Nina's major was English and she'll attend State and hopes to become an elementary teacher. EMERY OTTEY . . . Attended Katherine Delmar Burke's before coming to Lowell in her junior year. Emery worked in Dr. Smith's office and participated in the Usher's Reserve, GAA tennis, bowling and modern dance. Her majors were math, language and English, and hopes to attend Scripps. JOSE PANIZO . . . Reg. Rep., and soccer team. Jose majored in history and languages and will attend college after he graduates from Lowell. ESTHER ANITA PASLIN . . . attended Lincoln High before coming to Lowell. CSF, Red Cross Relp., GAA bowling and riding. Majors were English and math, and p ans to attend Ca . CAROLYN PERKINS . . . Red Cross Rep., Big Sister Co-ordinator and chairman, Shield and L, Block L, carnival comm., S. B. dance comm., worked in Miss Loirigan's office, orchestra, CSF, and GAA gorvling. English, language, and science were her majors. Will attend a . ROZ PERRY . . .Came to Lowell from Lincoln High. Assist. editor of the Red and White, Bi Sister, ,Poster Club, Writer's Club and GAA bowling. Roz majoredg in English and will attend college, after graduation. DIANE PETERSEN . . . Reg. Rep., GAA bowling, ice skating, tennis and was in the Block L. Her majors were English and science and she plans to attend San Mateo Jr. College. KAREN PETERSON . . . While at Lowell, Karen majored in English and participated in GAA swimming and bowling. Will go to City College and study interior decorating. PAT PIFFERO . . . Pat came to Lowell from St. Peter's in her L11 year. Carnival comm., Future Nurses, Italian Club, GAA, modern dance and swimming. Math was her major and she'll attend City and study to be a nurse. BOB PISANI . . . Chess Club, Science Club and Music Club. Bob majored in math and science and plans to attend either C.I.T. or Cal and will major in math. MARSHALL PLATT . . . Reg. Rep., and Treas., carnival comm., rally comm., and football. Mashall .majored in English, math and history, while at Lowell. Plans to attend Stanford. JOAN PURCELL . . . Big Sister, Block L, library staff, orchestra, GAA modern dance, riding and softball. Joan's majors were science math and French. Plans to attend U.C. at Davis. DAN POYNTER . . . Ticket Seller's Club, school messenger, Radio Club, Block L, swimming and carnival committee. Majors were English, math and science. Will go into the Coast Guard after graduation, JAMES RAILSBACK . . . While at Lowell, Jim majored in.history. He will attend City College of San Francisco after graduation. DANIEL RANKIN . . . Pres. of Knights of the Gridirong Block L and football. Dan's major was history and he'll go on to San Fran- cisco City College after he graduates. AMES SCI-IWARTSFAGER . , . Ames was a member of the Usher's Reserve and the band. Music and English were his majors. Would like to attend Brokerage Business School. BARBARA SEELEY . . . Bigi Sister, Red and White staff, Ticket 5eller's Club, Mrs. Kendall's o ce, Counciling O5ice, GAA swimming and modern dance. Barbara's major was English and she plans to take up modeling. OSAMU SEKINO . . . Reg. Treas., and track, Majored in math and science, Plans to attend Cal and study engineering. GERALDINE RANKIN . . . While at Lowell, Jerry majored in history and art. She participated in GAA volleyball. GUY RASMUSSEN . . . Guy participated in swimming and majored in science. He'll enter Oregon State to study forestry. STEWART REED . . . H4 Class Treas., Reg. Rep., President of Silver Spikes Society, Block L Sgt. at Arms, Act. Comm., Scroll and L, Big Brother, basketball team and track. Majors were French, Science and math, Will attend Cal. DOROTHY REESE . . . Red Cross Rep., Future Nurses, GAA volley- ball, softball and bowling. Dottie majored in language and science. Hopes to enter either CCSF or State. PATRICIA REYNOLDS . . . Reg. Rep., Red Cross Rep., Poster Club Veep, H11 and H12 activities committees, Big Sister. GLENN RICHARDS . . . While at Lowell, Glenn lparticipated on the rifle team and majored in math and science. Wil attend C.C.S.F. JOYCE RICHARDS . . . Veei of Big Sisters, S. B. dance comm., Poster Club, GAA tennis, Bloc L, Jr. Red Cross Rep., Reg. Treas., and Act. Editor ot' the Red and While. Joyce majored in English and language and plans to take up business administration at the Lewis and Clark ollege or S. F. State. JOYCE ROBBINS . . . Secty. of H12 and L11 classes, CSF Veep, assist. manager and manager of GAA bowling, Reg. Treas., and Student Council Rep., Shie d and L, Big Sister and Block L. Joyce majored in math, science and lan uage. She plans to attend either U.C. or Stanford and major in Puilic Relations. PETER ROBINSON . . . Came to Lowell in his L11 year from Tamalpais School for Bo s. Peter played soccer while at Lowell and majored in science. Atyier graduation, he plans to attend college. TAHITIA RODMAN . . . Varieties, Writer's Club, Forensics, Red Cross Rep., Future Teachers, and Reg Hostess. Majored in English and math and will attend San Francisco State and become a teacher or an author. RUDI ROKITTA . . . Came from I.incoln High to Lowell. While at Lowell, Rudi belonged to the Poster Club, Music Club and Block L. Majored in music and history. Plans to be a telephone ineman. DAVID ROSEN . . . Life member of CSF, President ,of Music Club, Reg. Rep., Red Cross Rep., Regimental Executive Officer, Chess Team, Scroll and L, Big Brothers, Usher's Reserve, band, orchestra, Italian Club and Golden Gate Club. Dave's majors were English, French, social science and music. He'll attend Reed and hopes to become a lawyer. JUDY ROSENTHAL . . .GAA riding, Block L and Red and While staff. Judy majored in English and science and will attend Cal or Davis. . ROBERT ROXVE . . . Robert played on the 110's and 120's basketball teams, swimming and cross country. His majors were English and history. Will enter the service and later attend college. OXANA RUDENKO . . . Big Sister, Poster Club, German Club, Hall Guard, library staff and GAA swimming. Oxana's majors were German and art. She'll work for the Bank of America. PHIL RUPPRECHT . . . While at Lowell, Phil majored in mechanical drawing. He plans to attend City College and go into aeronautics. JANICE SAKAI . . . Janice attended Edison High, Fresno, Calif. Was a member of the Music Club and majored in history and math. She'll enter college after graduation. JOAN SCANLON . . . Block L, GAA, bowling and swimming. Major was English and she'll attend CCSF. SANDRA SCHILP . . . Reg Treas., Red Cross Rep., Block L. S. Elance hcomm., GAA bowling and modern dance. Sandy majored in ng is . ARMAND A. SCHWARTZ . . . Student leader of band, Scroll and L, Big Brother, life member of CSF, adv. band, adv. orch., rally comm., carnival comm., Music Club and Usher's Reserve. Armand's majors were science, math and music. Plans to attend Reed College in Portland, Oregon. DAVE KOICHI SEGAWA . . . Came to Lowell from Waseda High in Japan. Dave majored in math and will attend Cal and study engineering. ALEX SHALAR . . . Reg. Treas., Block L, track. cross country and football. Majors were math, science and Spanish. XVill attend either Cal or State. SHELDON SHALIT . . . Santa Claus, Reg. Rep., and Treas., CSF, Big Brothers, H11 act. comm., carnival comm., and 120's track. Sheldon majored in Spanish, math and history and will attend U.C. 3 ROSS SHOAF . . . Reg. Rep. and Treasurer, S .B. dance comm , Cent. Comm., rally comm., L11 act. comm., Big Brother, Scroll and L and Block L. Majors were math and English and he'll attend Cal i JERRY SHOBAR . . . While at Lowell, Jerry played baseball His . majors were math and history and he plans to attend Marin JC VIRGINIA SIKORSKI . , . Virginia participated in GAA ice skatin and swimmin . She majored in English and history and will vsor for the Telephone Company. w was ' ,,., own a butcher shop. BARBARA SLEZAK . . . Reg Rep. 8: Treas., worked in the Counseling Office and Miss Lorigan's Office, library staff, GAA ice skating and softball. Her majors were English and History. Plans to attend State SANDRA SMOLEN . . . Reg. Rep., Red Cross Rep., GAA ice skating and bowling. Sandy's majors were English and language. Will First attend City and then Cal. Stanford. of San Francisco and major in journalism. 2 f 2? 274 AUBREY E. TENDELL . . . Aubrey participated in basketball and belonged to the Block L.. His major was history and will attend the University of San Franc.sco. BARBARA ANN TEXIERA . . . Act. and Associate Editor of the Red and While, Reg. Treas., Block L and GAA ice skating. Majors were English and French. Plans to attend Cal. KATHERINE THOMPSON . . . While at Lowell, Kathy participated in swimming and her major was history. After graduation, she plans to work for the Telephone Company. hopes to attend U.C. the University of Maryland. College of San Francisco. she'll attend State. cisco State and major in real estate. and major in sociology. Jean's majors and she'll attend City and take up nursing RICHARD THOMPSON-Richard majored in science, and will first attend City College of San Francisco and then University of California. JAMES TONDA . . . While at Lowell, Jim played on the varsity basketball team and was awarded his Block L. Majored in science and plans to attend SFCC and become a pharmacist. FRANK MARK TRIGUEIRO . . . Frank came to Lowell from Saint Ignatius. His major was science and he'll first attend City College and then Cal. CYRILL SINELNIKOFF . . . Soccer manager, baseball manager came from Lincoln High in Portland, Oregon. Cyrill's major was math and hopes to attend Cogswell and stu y radio, television-engineering FREDERICK R. SKILLMAN . . . Reg. Rep., and Treas., Head of Usher's Comm., Red Cross.Rep., adv. choir, and adv. orch Major was music. Fred plans to join the Navy and later on he hopes to TANIA-SKRABAK . . . Red Cross Rep., Poster Club, S. F Youth Association, GAA modern dance and swimming. Majors were English language and art and will attend the University of Nevada BARRY SLATT . . , Barry was a Student Council Rep., and on the Big Brothers. Majored in math and French and will attend Cal SONDRA SNOW . . . Shield and L Veep, Reg Treas., Block I. Big Sister, Writer's Club, carnival comm., GAA bowling and modern dance. Spanish, math and science were her majors. Hopes to attend RICHARD SOWARD . . . Came from Grossmont High in El Cajon Calif, Richard majored in English and history and was on the Red and Wbzie staff, Centennial comm., track. He'll attend City College ROBERTA SPIVOCK . . . Re . Rep., Shield and L, Student Council Big Sister, Block L, carnivai comm., S. B. dance comm GAA i modern dance and bowling. Majored in Spanish and English and GRACE STARBIRD . . . Came to Lowell from Douglas High in Arizona. Grace belonged to the Italian Club and Junior Achieve ment. Spanish, English and science were her majors, and shell attend TERRY STEPHENS . . . Scroll and L President, Big Brother Veep Block L Sgt. at Arms, and Clerk of Awards, H-3 class President S B. dance comm., L11 act. comm., Silver Spikes, Assist. Yell Leader The Lowell staff, J, V. football and 120's and 130's varsity track Majored in science and math and will attend Cal or Stanford SANDRA STOLL . . , Sandy came to Lowell from Washington High School in her L12 year. After graduation, she plans to attend City KAY SUGIYAMA . . . Big Sister, library staff, Music Club GAA swimming and bowling. French and music were Kay's majors and DON SULLIVAN . . . .Carnival comm., J. V. and Varsity football Don's majors were English and history. He plans to attend San Fran SONJA SWENSON . . . Big Sister, Block L, orchestra, library staff GAA volleyball, basketball, modern dance and swimming Majors were English, history, Spanish and music. Will attend State JOAN SWIMMER . . . Song leader, Red Cross Rep., L12 act comm feature editor of The Lowell and GAA bowling. Before coming to Lowell, Joan spent one term at University High in Los Angeles She majored in English and plans to attend the University of Colorado JEAN TAKAHASHI . . . Block L, Future Nurses Club, bowling tennis, swimming and volleyball. French, science and math were JOHN TSUKAMOTO . . . Track, L11 act. comm., Reg. Rep., and Bii Brother. Latin, Math and science were John's majors. He'll attend ext er Cal or Stanford and study chemical engineering. PAULA TSUKAMOTO . . . CSF, library staff, Poster Club, Block L and GAA volleyball. Majored in French and math. She plans to attend either Cal or State and become an elementary teacher. JOAN TUBBS . . . While at Lowell, Joan participated in GAA ice skating and riding. She majored in English and Science. She'll enter Abilene Christian College, after graduation. JOAN TUHTAN . . . Shield and L, Block L, Big Sister, CSF, band, orchestra and GAA bowling. English, Latin and music were her majors and she'll attend San Francisco State College. IRENE ULAN . . . Big Sister, Reg Treas., Red Cross Rep., library staff supervisor, Cent. Comm., Shie d and L, Block L, GAA, attend- ance ohfice and main ofhce. Irene majored -in English, math and history and will attend college after graduation. PAT UNCK . . . Reg Rep. and Treas., Red Cross Rep., assist manager oflmodern dance, Big Sister newspaper,. Forensic's, Ticket Selling, Science Club, Slide Rule Club, Block L, library stali, carnival comm.. GAA volleyball, bowling and basketball. Math, science and German NEILL URANO . . . Reg. Rep. and Treasurer, Big Brother, Cent. Comm., H12 Activities Comm., 110's and 120's basketball and Frosh- Soph and Varsity baseball. Majored in science, math and German. Neill will attend Cal and study pre-med. STEPHEN VAUSE . . . Life member of CSF, Reg Rep. and Junior Varsity. Stephen's majors were English, math and French. He'll attend the University of California. LYNN VLAUTIN . . . Big Sister, H12 Activities Comm., Block L, S. B. dance comm., Red Cross Rep., Reg Treas., Red and White staff and GAA bowling. Lynn's majors were En lish and language. She plans to attend either S. F. State or City Coglege. TED WARD . . . Ted came to Lowell from St. Vincent's in San Rafael. He played football and belon ed to the Block L. Majored in history and will attend CCSF and LFSC. CAROLYN WATSON . . . Shield and L secty., Block L pres., G.A.A. secty., tennis manager, L11 act. comm. and Big Sister act. chairman. Carolyn majored in French and history and will attend Cal. JIM WEINBERGER . . . L11 act. comm., Big Brother President, Reg Rep., Scroll and L, Cent Comm., and tennis team. Jim majored in Latin, math, history and science. Plans to study law after graduation. ANN WEISE . . . Block L, Music Club, Music Block L, Poster Club, gand agld GAA bowling. Majored in art and music. Ann will attend enn. tate. LUCY WELLS . . .Block L and GAA bowling. Lucy majored in history and plans to attend City College of San Francisco. STEPHEN WEIL . . . CSF, Re Treas., Big Brothers, Slide Rule Club, Poster.Club, Forensics, Soccer and manager of baseball. Majored in science and math and will enter either Stanford or C.I.T. to study Chemical Engineering. PETER WIENER . . . Peter majored in mechanical drawing and math while at Lowell. He plans to attend CCSF after graduation and study electronics. AUDREY WITT . . . Secty. of CSF, social chairman of Big Sisters, Eresrdent of Future Nurses Club, Shield and L, Block L ushering and anquet, GAA riding, ice skating, tennis and basketball. German and science was -her majors. Plans to attend college and study in the field of nursing. HELEN WOLF . '. . Reg Treas., chairman of special act. of Bi Sister's, Block L, Library staff, main office and GAA bowling. Majored in math, sci. and lang. She plans to attend college after graduation. HARRY WQNG . . . Harry majored in history, while at Lowell. After graduation he plans to attend college. TOMMY WONG . . . Tommy came to Lowell from Pacific Union College Academy, While at Lowell, he has belonged to the Chinese Stu ent Club and played basketball. His major was math and he plans to attend college. NANCY WOOD . . . GAA, Music Club and Ushers' Reserve. Nancy majored in music and English and will enter S. F. State College. SYLVIA WOQDWARD . . . Came from Liberty Union High, Brent- wood, Calif., in her L10 term. Term play, GAA, Red Cross Rep. and L12 act. comm. Her major was English. Sylvia will attend State and take up teaching, CHARLES WRIGHT . . . Charles participated in soccer and majored in math. Plans to attend City College of San Francisco after gradua- TERRY YASUKOCHI . . . GAA secty., S. B. secty., Reg. Rep., man- ager of softball, Block L, Shield 8: L, Big Sister, GAA basketball and bowling. Terry majored in French and science and will attend Zweegman Medical Secty. School. LOUIS YETTER . . . played soccer while at Lowell and participated in the Music Club and.Biology Club. His majors were adv. choir and history, He'll attend City Co lege. ZEEVA ZARETSKY . . . Came to Lowell from Israel. Participated in the Poster Club and GAA swimming. Majored in science, math, artij and English. Will enter Cal and plans to become a medical tec nician. tion. W ,iw get 5 l l 2 DENNIS ZICKERMAN . . . Dennis belonged to the Big Brother s and carnival comm. His majors were English and French and he'll attend either Stanford or State DIANE DOYLE . . , manager of GAA ice skating, Block L, band maioretteg Diane majored in art and plans to continue art work and dancing. Q lll IRENE KONKOFF . . . Irene majored in Spanish. Plans to attend San Francisco City College after graduation and .maior in music. 6 farmer to 3 raises your first year at Pacific Telephone Young men and Women like yourself, looking for- ward to their first paycheck, find Pacific Telephone an ideal place to go to Work. And no wonder! You have a lot more to look forward to, when you start on one of many interesting, varied jobs open to you at Pacific Telephone. See for yourself: if 3 raises your first year on the job -k Full pay while you learn a specialty -if New, higher starting pay-rates now in effectg no experience needed There's a good job for you -A' Steady, year-round work ir Plenty of room to get ahead -A' Paid vacations and liberal benefits iv A friendly place to work We think you'll find it worth your While to look into these and other advantages Pacific Telephone offers you . . . and the time is now! See your vocational guidance counselor, or call Operator and ask her for our employment otlice. at Pacific Telephone -l-Typical job openings YD U N G M E N Telephone Installer Y0 U N G W 0 M E N Service Representatives Central Office Equipment Man Telephone Operators Telephone Representative Cable Splicer Typists Business Oflice Clerks BEST YISHES COMPLIMENTS CONGRATULATIONS BORDEN'S of fm' DAIRY DELIVERY MILK ACME PAPER COMPANY I-IECTOR ESCABOSA 1325 Potrero San Francisco Class of 1926 D1GTfff3TfC1ZAfYHA1RCUT CONGRATULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS 0 0 I 2 6971-dgE'7'5 SENIOR ORTIZ ffm ffm ORTIZ BEAUTY STUDIOS A 407 O'Farrell CONGRATULATIONS CONGRAJQPULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS 70771 from from WESTERN GORDON DETTNER A FRIEND TOOL RESEARCH CI 1 715 Lmwln I LO 6-7028 an of 940 Con graiulations on Your Centennial fmm CONGRATULATIONS ESPENSHADE'S STATIONERY For the Finest in STATIONERY, PRINTING 8: SCHOOL SUPPLIES BAyview 1-8859 1943 Hayes Street San Francisco 17 from A. SHRAGGE YOUR ANNIVERSARY THE LEXICON PRESS YEARBOOK A COVER 1,0615 PRINTERSOF DESIGNED amz IOOH1 Anniversary MANUFACTURED . b Red and White I The S. K. Smith Company A 5260 West 104th Street L05 Angeles 45, Calif- 500 Sansome Street GArfield I-6859 278 I Congrotulotions VUGUE LUGGAGE as good-looking to coming home, too! the Class Testimony to your travel know-how! Cap matching bea t by VOGUE pth p kl gg dl k In f t f h ht I d y tt tddgttoy tp P L Y M O U T H P I C T U R E S 76 Turk Street VIII IG ID IE xOF CALIFORNIA S A N F R A N C I S C O 5 AT FINE LUGGAG STUIKES AND Lowell High School Centennial Compliments 0 f CHARLIE HARBAND--December '50 N CONGRATULATIONS The HERMANN SAFE CO. Bea' Wahea f r o m MOORE MANUFACTURING CO. J. MAX MOORE A Division Of The QUAKER PACIFIC RUBBER CO. Potrero Avenue ond 'I8th Street Son Froncisco . 279 COMPLIMENTS OF SYLVAN FRANK January I 927' YOlI'II have to make a choice pretty soon. Will you settle for any old job, or are you setting your sights on a career in business? If youfre looking for something more than just a weekly pay check, here are a few tips to help you lrind it: 1. Pick a good company. Metropolitan Life enjoys an outstanding national reputa- tion. Here you can broaden yourself both culturally and socially. 2. Choose a iob with a future. Metropolitan Life fol- lows a policy of advancement from within. You may start in a general clerical capacity de- pending on your ability and training for such positions as: General Clerk, Key Punch Operator, Typist, or Begin- ning Stenogtapher. The start- ing salary is 35215 per month. 3.Look for pleasant work- ing conditions. Metropolitan Life's building is modern and . ,.,. 0 LUJOB A figf i t 04 ' '- - -:s':1525:I'5Ss:.'Ft . f: f e ff 52:1-., Y. srtiit I A r ' sfrr lzl :.f1 ' fr. l tilii....llil 'iiiiii well kept. Attractive lunch- room and loune-a comfort- able place to relax after an appetizing meal as guest of the Company. 5-day, 40-hour week all year round with lib- eral vacation schedule.Athletic and other recreational groups. 4. Insist on security. Metropolitan Life provides Life, Sickness, Accident, Hos- pital and Surgical, Medical Expense Insurance and Pen- sions. A well-equipped medical service helps you stay phys- ically fit. Employment is steady in good times and bad. YOU ARE SOMEBODY WHEN YOU WORK AT METROPOLITAN! For full information come to the Personnel Division, Monday through Friday, any time 'between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 765 California Street San Francisco 20. Calif. I III ARI! M085 M0llE.V.' LEARN TO OPERATE NCR BOOKKEEPING MACHINE Short Course - Low Tuition Wfly Students Cfzoose NCR School ' Individual ins+rucI'ion by NCR specialisfs wi+h acI'uaI business experience. ' Morning, afI'ernoon or evening ins'I'rucI'ion arranged 'Io suii' your schedule. ' Shor'r course wi+h low +ui'rion. ' Free life-1'ime placemenf service for NCR graduafes. ' Personal recommendafion from NCR School gradua+es now employed in bookkeeping posi+ions. ' An NCR School Diploma offers I'he mosf excellenl' inI'roducI'ion fo a busi- ness career. LIFETIME FREE EMPLOYMENT Make Your Dreams Come True WRITE OR CALL TODAY FOR FREE BOOKLET NATIONAL CASH REGISTER TRAINING CENTER 821 MARKET STREET ' SAN FRANCISCO ' EXbrook 2-4838 Lanolry C. Babin Company REAL ESTATE - 423 Kearny Street Telephone: San Francisco EXbrook 2-1418 CONGRATULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS ROBERT? KNOX from ffm am of Q942 DALE FARNOW AN GELO MAY Russ Building San Francisco Class of 1938 Class of 1929 CONGRATULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS COMPLIMENTS f 1, 0 m from of LEE KRIEGER MORTON COHN am of 1927 SIERRA PRESS CONGRATULATIONS COMPLIMENTS CONGRATULATIONS from BIG SFNK from CAREW 81 ENGLISH LQOK JOHN WALKER 8: CO. 350 Masonic San Francis C BARS 111 Montgomery Street Be5lWi5bg5fr0m from CALIFORNIA SCHOOL af WALTER LEVISON OF BEAUTY CULTURE Class of 1920 908 Market St. SU 1-8795 CONGRATULATIONS LEWINDRUGCUMPANY CONGRATULATIONS Agents for from MAX FACTOR'S from MELVILLE MARX THEATRICAL MAKEUP HARRY COLE C14-V5 af 1926 Geary 8cTaylOr San Francisco Cla-U of 1913 CQNGRATULATIQNS KINDEST REGARDS CONGRATULATIONS from from from ALBERT SAMUELS, IR. MAURICE ELIAZER Former Lowellite Class of 1927 V A N W O R M E R 8: CONGRATULATIONS COMPLIMENTS RODRIGUES, INC. gf from Representing P Nationally Famous TWO FRIENDS HURFF JONES CLASS RINGS C1455 of 1926 126 Pos: Street San Francisco COMPLIMENTS CONGRATULATIONS CONEZESSLTQXIONS of from NEW LOWELL! ADOLPH SCHUMAN MARVIN LEWIS A Cla!! of 1926 C1455 af 1924 283 CONGRATULATIONS F r o m ELYCE GRANT FELICE GOLD BETTY GORDON HARMON SHRAGGE 6n of AMERICAN BUILDING MAINTENANCE COMPANY WORLD'S LARGEST .IANITORIAL CONTRACTORS EET LOWELL HIGH SCHOOL okleft Jecondmfy .fclaool west of the M iyfiysqapi G0 ing Placer in J It is a proud thing to be the alumnus of a school with a tradition. For over 100 years Lowell has been equipping graduates to make their way in the world . . . and the bright eyes and bright minds of the class of '56 tell us old grads that they're going to do us one better in making a success of their lives. There's a lot of history in 100 years . . . and Lowell educators can be proud of the contribution their alumni have made in shaping the business and cultural history of San Francisco. Qelaff Y Y V :- - - T- -'-'----:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:3:3:1Z5Z5Z5Z5:5F?5F55?FI5'I5'I5'5'5595'95?3E:2:1:l:5:1:f:2:1:-:-:-L-1-ET. ..,.5,:5:5:52 -j'j-3-1 5 5 5 5 5 5 , 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5E5E5E5E5E5E5E5E555Efifffiififigiiifififiii Eff- -. f' - - -5222323 nfffilflfii- . 5 I-:-23315,'f'f:,'Q:,-gr, 3:52 :yg:1:- J . 1 J, iv. Ziglar' .. . 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' 7:1:1:5:I:I:I: ..oc-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:::::::::::::::::::y''I' ' :5:5:12:1:2:I:I:I:I:I:I:Q55:5:f:::::::::::::::::::-' 5 ,' ' ' -,. -.5:g:g:g:g:g:5:1151::5:::::g:g:g:g:g.,.. -Ii: ' ' '- ---2:-:-:-:-:-b:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:- A ' ':7 : : :': : y , ' , - U 2532:33:5:Ez2:S:5:2:2:2:1:2:E:E:2:g.,., . . - 4355555F5E5E3525232555555E55E555332555E5255Z,Sj.31 115S1312E1ErErE:ErE1E1E1ir32E1E1Eri2i:ErE3EgSg55Eg:5:5:5:gig' 'W 4-.., IEEE55555S5E5E3E555555Ei5E5EEE5E5EiE1i::-:Q r K -l ' 2, IW 4 '11'I1ifif5151?15:?1 11ifEfiff152Efi1??ig f 'im ':2:1'255:1:5:-:-:-:5:-552:11111:55:11:g:5:5:g:1:g15511212:2:I:5:I:1:1:I:2'2:1:1:2:1:7:7:2:1:!:f:-:-:-vg:g::.,:1 -. Y. -1- '29 , - .-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.e.:.:.:.:.:-1-:-:-:-:-:-:1:-.1:f::::::::::::::::!:15:2:25:-:-:-:-' gi jgff Bel Air 4-Door Sedan l2403l flncidentally if any of you alumni are thinking of going places in '56 . . . you'll be going in style in one of our new '56 Chevrolets. The hot ones even hotter this year . . . and I'd like any one of you to stop in and take a drive. I'll guarantee you'll enjoy it.j Z Qs?-eegfar Market and Van Ness Acknowledgments To create a book of this size and content was a tremendous undertaking. I will always remember on the ihrst day of school, Mr. Buckley holding up a college annual and saying This is what this year's Red and While will be like, then he characteristically added what was to become the slogan of the staff, Get to work. The staff got to work, at times the tasks were simple and interesting, other times they seemed impossible, such as identifying the names of alumni in old snapshots, or compiling all the Lowell grads who are lawyers. Often we wondered if the book would ever be compiled from the jumble of material we collected as the months went on. The fact that it was possible is due to the wonderful assistance received from so many people. Without them there would be no book, and it is here that I would like to express my sincerely felt appreciation. If there is one person who deserves the credit for the book it is Mr. Buckley, our advisor. It was his idea to have a book commemorating Lowell's one hundred years, and in carrying out the project he has devoted not only his school hours but countless week- ends and vacations. Any questions that arose he answered, any task too difficult for the staff he did. The staff and I feel greatly indebted to Mr. Buckley and we would like to express our inadequate thanks here. The photographs for a book like this are countless, the job of taking them is exasperat- ing, but Mr. and Mrs. Ken Hall of Plymouth Studios did a fine job and we are very grateful to them. Also thanks are due to Marvin Bonds, Vic Anders-on, and Bob Thain of the California Arts and Engraving Company for their splendid assistance, the S. K. Smith Company for the covers, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Watson of the Lexicon Press who spent many extra hours in order that the book would be printed on time. I want to express my thanks also to the students who worked on the book, Bob Jeung and Karina Kang were responsible for the cover, jerry Falk for the many action shots. The staff deserves credit for their work and I am sorry I do not have space to mention them individually. The combined efforts of all these people have resulted in this yearbook and it is with pride that we place it in your hands. All those connected with the book had one purpose in mind-to create a lasting tribute to a fine school. We hope you will find the book as interesting as we do, and that while perusing its pages many happy experiences will be recalled to mind. GWEN DAVIS, Edizor
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