Rogers High School - Treasure Chest Yearbook (Spokane, WA)

 - Class of 1951

Page 1 of 160

 

Rogers High School - Treasure Chest Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 160 of the 1951 volume:

{ Treasure Chest Nineteen Hundred and Fifty -One JOHN R. ROGERS HIGH SCHOOL SPOKANE, WASHINGTON Editor GLORIA REAGAN Business Manager . . . BONNIE BAKER Continuity, Lois Zornes; Photographers, Waldo Magnuson, John Morford, Jim Myers; Division Editors, Marion Clason, Laura Belle Fisher, Carol Ann Horey, Betty Reue, Lois Zornes; Advertising, Joanne Elmquist, Deirdre Randall; Artist, Harold Harper; Adviser, M, E. Stoddard. PRINTED IN SPOKANE TRADE SCHOOL PRINT SHOP The pins or emblems that a student earns at Rogers are the symbols of his general success in his school life. The school pin, Girls ' League and Boys ' Federation pins, club pins and the ultimate honor, the National Honor Society pin, are given only when a student becomes a member of the group. Athletic and music letters are awarded when a student has fulfilled the necessary requirements. He merits membership in these organizations only after having un- locked the various doors to success, such as scholarship, personality, sportsmanship, and service. To unlock these doors, he must have keys. Fortunately, the keys aren ' t hard to obtain; in fact, they are actually provided because the master key which unlocks all the doors is the student ' s own effort and hard work. Through hard work, the student can be successful in the various school activities and so earn the school medals of honor. The modern educational system strives to educate the whole student: mentally, physically, and morally. Therefore, our faculty is composed of dif- ferent kinds of instructors, teachers, coaches and advisers. These instructors are actually our leaders. They guide us to knowledge, and good habits through classroom discipline and good advice, in and out of the classroom. V Hhout instruclors, education is not impossible, but it is very difficult and limited. Wrong conc ' usions or answers are often arrived at by a be- ginner who has to work alone, or is trying to learn something. Incorrect methods for work and play are easy to attain if a student is without good advice, gained from experience and knowlodge. k Teachers prevent such Ihings and show us the way to good education and living. Education is an important part of happiness: without it success in modern life is nearly impossible. Education also adds to enjoyment of li. ' e by providing skills that in turn give leisure and entertainment. Sinca our faculty unlocks for us the priceless door to education, our faculty is our Key to Education Key Education Faculty Editors: LAURA BELLE FISHER MARION CLASON When this page is covered with the scribbled good luck messages and signatures of your many friends, I hope that the theme of my message will remain uncovered and remembered. That theme is Pride — pride in a student body second to none. When I say hello to you as I pass you in the hall, I may not know your name, but I do know that you are a student of Rogers, and in most cases I am very proud of it. What you do throughout the school year as shown in the pages of this year book and your scholarship record determines the magnitude of that pride. May I copy the style of your own messages and say — you ' re a swell bunch of kids and I wish you the best of luck. J. L. PURDY, Principal six Where are you going? In the year of 1951 have you mapped a course for the future? Are you using the facilities of the school profitably to fit yourself for life — for a job — for a place in society? If you are hitting your studies hard, if you are taking your part in activi- ties and if you are contributing to your student government, then, you are. Did you make the grade? When you re-read these pages ten years from 1951, where are you? Can you look back and see the omissions and errors? Can you recall the successes and the good times ? Do you measure up to your original plans? Your advisers and teachers hope that Rogers and its Treasure Chest will truly be a chest of treasured memories, of pleasant associates and of realized ambitions. We at Rogers like to be proud of our student, both those in school and those who have been graduated — and we are! PAUL MacGOWN, Vice-Principal seven r r tW2 . • ;■ .? William Aller, B.A.; U.C.L.A., U. of Wash. Speech, Drar.alics Dale Brannon, B.A., B.E.: W.S.C. English Miss Naudia Brockman, B.A.; W.S.C. H istory, . tm. Govt. E. T. Becher, B.A., M.A.; U. of Idaho, U. of Wash. V ocal Music Forest L. Brigham, B.A., M.A.; U. of Idaho Football, P. B. Fred Brown, B.A., B.S.; W.S.C. Biology J. W. Black , B.S.; Penn. State College Study Hall Mrs. Edith Broberg, A.B.; DePauw University Auto Mech., Wood Shop Eernie Bunn, B.A., B.E.; W.S.C. eight English Mrs. Mary Canup, B.A.; U. of Wash. English Mrs. Hazel Crosby, B.A.; W.S.C. Social Studies James Elsensohn, B.A.; W.S.C. Industrial Arts Wayne Chapman, B.S., M.E.; E.W.C.E. Mathematics Walter E. Doolittle, B.S.; W.S.C. English Mrs. Theodora Frisbie A.B.; W.S.C. Commercial A. P. Coburn, B.S.; Ore. S.C. Athletics, P. E. Carl Ellingsen, B.S .; W.S.C. Social Studies, English A. D. Grafious, B.S. U. of Oregon nine Library Mrs. Olivia Harris, Litt. B, B.A.; U. of Hawaii, U. of Illinois English, Science Ray Hubbard, B.A.; W.S.C. English Mrs. P. Bockmeyer, B.A.; W.S.C. English Miss Elizabeth Herbert, B.A.; W.S.C. Library Mrs. Carolyn Kapek, B.A.;U. of Wash. Home Economics Miss Ethel Larson, B.A.; W.S.C. Home Economics Miss Edna Herrington, B.S.; U. of Idaho Industrial Arts E. G. Kienholz, B.A.; U. of Wash. Languages Miss Marion LeFevre, A.B.; Whitman Col., U. of Cal. ten Commercial Mrs. Helen Leland, B.A.. B.E.; W.S.C. History La Verne Mabbott, B.A., M.A.; W.S.C. Fine Arts Mrs. Zola Miller, B.A.; U. of Wash. Mathematics William Lipscomb, B.A.; W.S.C. Physical Education Miss Eleanor Mele, B.A.; W.S.C. History Mrs. Iva Morrison, B.S., M.A.; S.D.S.C., Gonzaga U. Mathematics Miss R. McMahan, B.S.; W.W.C.E., U of Wash. Home Economics Miss C. Mikkelson, B.S., M.S.; N.D.S.C., O.S.C. Home Economics Miss Ella Moyer, B.A., M.A.; W.S.C. eleven English Mrs. C. Oscarson, A.B., M.A.; U. of Md., Geo. Wash. U. Study Hall Mrs. M. Quackenbush, A.B.; Whitman College, Gonzaga U. Physical Education Miss M. Ryan, B.A., M.S. E.W.C.E., W.S.C. Mathematics Alfred K. Ostness, Ph.B., M.S.; Gonzaga U., U. of Idaho Science Ray Roestel, B.A., B.E.; Whitworth College Science L. L. Sabo, B.S.; Ohio U. Languages Mrs. Betty Pence, B.A., B.E.; W.S.C. Metal Shop Herbert Russell, B.A.; W.S.C. Industrial Arts Manley Sackett, W.S.C. twelve Science L. W. Saltz, B.S.; Montana State College History Miss Louise Smith, A.B.. M.A.;U. of Wash. Social Studies Joe M. Stover, B.S.,M.S.: U. of Idaho Commercial Miss Lorraine Schwartz, B.A.;U. of Wash. English Miss Hazel Stevens, B.A.; U. of Michigan Commercial Milton Stumpf, B.S., B.A.; W.S.C. Social Studies Herman Sleizer, B.A., M.A.; U. of Wash. Journalism M. E. Stoddard, B.A.; U. of Idaho, Gonzaga Instrumental Music William Thomas, B.A., B.E.; E.W.C.E., W.S.C. thirteen Physical Education Commercial Mathematics Harold Thompson, B.A., Mrs. E. Van Austene, B.S., Miss Faye Weymouth, B.E.; E.W.C.E., W.S.C. B.A.; Minn. C.E., N.D.S.C. B.A.; U. of Wash. Girls ' Adviser Boys ' Adviser Mrs. LaVelle Black, E. B. Chrisman, B.A., B.A.; Univ. of Ore. B.E., M.E.; W.S.C. These are our teachers, our keys to education at Rogers. During the year three of these instructors— Fred Brown, Ray Roestel, and M. E. Stoddard— were called to active duty in the armed services. We wish them a speedy return. A fourth teac her. Mauley Sackett. left for health reasons. Through four years, our teachers have been our friends, ad- visers, instructors, and policemen. fourteen When seniors graduate, in effect, they win their independence from childhood and adolescence. During high school almost all the students live with their parents and depend upon them for financial and moral support. Certainly, many boys earn spending money by working after school and girls earn by baby-sitting, but after all, they aren ' t paying room and board and paying for all their clothes and necessities for life. After high school the person usually strikes out on his own, either to a job or to college. With this job or living away from home at college comes a new sense of responsibility and independence. New problems arise that must be solved alone. Parents can ' t help you make good on the job or at college; that is an individual problem. With the solving of these problems comes mental maturity and independence. Also, new responsibilities come along, new du ties to be done. The success in shouldering these responsibilities adds to the satisfying feeling of independence. Since the seniors are about ready to begin this new stage, open this new door, they are the Key to Independence Key to- Independence Senior Editors: CAROL ANN HOREY BETTY REUE Seated: Darlene Lemon, secretary; Gloria Hayes, treasurer. Standing: Russ Sorensen, president; Bob Langstrom, vice-president. January Class Elections Russ Sorensen Best Looking Gloria Hayes Don Larsen Most Popular Marilyn Gearheart Bob Langstrom Best All-Round Donna Cooper J. B. Edmonds Most Athletic. Darlene Tiffany Dick Phelps Has Best Line Carolyn Caughey Bob Larson Wittiest Ardith Wilson Bob Dixon Most Likely to Succeed Beverly Watts Dwayne Wolfe Most Changed Since Freshman Year Loretta Dumdai Homer Harding Most Sophisticated... Mary Osborn Kerry Henderson Best Dressed ... Jeannine Robinson eighteen January Class Leaders 151 w ■ IS H - T J Ardith Wilson Valedictorian Carolyn Cauohey Girls ' League Beverly Watts Salutatorian Don Larsen Boys ' Federation President RlSS SOHENSEN Senior A President Bill Gillis Dramatist John Morford Journalist Darlene Tiffany Girls ' Athletics Daklenk Lemon Majorette Pete Sjostrom Mitsicia n Virginia Linden Artist nineteen Alden Armstrong Alderi Arlington Choir 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2; Boys ' Fed Raymond Card Longfellow ' Ray Band I, 2. 3, 4; Pep Band 4: Boys ' Fed.; Football 1. 2: Hall Patrol: Bas- ketball 1; Home Room Offices; Red Cross Rep. Donna Cooper Coop Hamilton National Honor Society 4; Student Body Secretary 4; Song and Cheer- leader 3. 4; French-Latin Club 3, 4; Palette and Brush 2, 3, 4: Home Room Offices; Dad and Daughter Banquet 2, 3; Mothers ' Tea 3; Livewires 2. 3; Big Sister 3, 4; Usherette Comm. 4; Pirettes 2. Kenneth Lee Domke Donkey Longfellow Senior Math Club; Cosmic Club; Foot- ball 1, 2, 3, 4; Choir 2, 3, 4; Hall Patrol; Fire Squad; Interschool Relations Comm.; Boys ' Glee Club; Mother and Son Banquet; Track 4; Senior A Move- up Con Comm.; Tennis 1. ' Lorrie Loretta Ann Dumdai Glenrose OGA Club, Vice President 4; Junior Math Club 1, 2; Pirettes 2; Girls ' League Secretary 2; Home Room Offi- ces; Livewires Chairman; Standards Chairman; Tanglefoot Cochairman; Study Hall Checker 2, 3; Carnival Chairman 3; Girls ' League Rep. 3; Dance Comm. 2. ' Jerry Gerald Gates Whitman Hall Patrol 4; Football 2; Boys ' Fed. 4; Record Staff 4; Home Room Offices; Red Cross Rep.; Conductors. twenty Reese Briggs Hamilton ' Reese Band 2, 3, 4; Home Room President 3; Boys ' Fed.; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; PTA Carnival. Carolyn Caughey Carrie ' Hamilton National Honor Society; Girls League President 4; Thespian Club, Treas- urer 4; French-Latin Club, C o r r e- sponding Secretary 3, 4; Palette and Brush 3, 4; Secretary; Dad and Daughter Banquet 3; Mothers ' Tea 2; Interschool Relations Con 4; Snafu 3; Girls ' League Con Chairman 4; Home Room Offices; Usherette Comm.; Livewire Comm. Robert W. Dixon Bob Longfellow Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Jug Band: French- Latin Club 2, 3, President 4; Junior Math Club 1, 2; Senior Math Club 3, 4; Lyre Club 4; Student Council Rep. 2; Research Comm. Chairman 3: Home Room Offices; Senior Con Comm. Patrick Downing Arlington ' Pat ' Student Council Rep. 1, 2, 3; Boys ' Fed. Rep. 1, 2; Chairman of Mother and Son Banquet 3; Con Comm. Chair- man 3; Ski Club 2. 3. Vice President 4; R Club 4; Football 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1. 2. 3. 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Interschool Relations 4; Hall Patrol 3. Jerry Ewing Jerry St. Patricks Home Room Vice President; Speakers ' Bureau 3, 4; Debate 3; DK History- Club 3, 4; Treasure Chest Rep. 3; Na- tional Honor Society 3, 4; Hall Patrol 2; Rumplestiltskin ; Night Under the Stars 3. Marilyn Gearhart Marilyn Hamilton Usherette Comm.; Tanglefoot 1; Deco- rations Comm. Chairman 3; Nurse ' s Office 2; Home Room Offices; Song and Cheerleader 3, 4; Girls ' League Rep.; Student Council Rep.; Senior Prom Comm.; Color Day 3; Bookroom 4. Stanley Gcarhart Stan Arlington Senior Math Club: Boys ' Fed.; Home Room Offices; Senior Announcement Comm. Homer G. Harding Homer Willard Red Cross Rep. 3; Debate 1, 3. Presi- dent 2: Speakers ' Bureau 3, 4; DK History Club 3, Vice President 4; Boys ' Fed. Rep. 2. Robert L. Harris Arlington ' Bob Spanish Club; Senior Math Club; Foot- ball 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Move-up Con Comm.; Hall Patrol 4; Fire Squad 4; R Club. Walter E. Jordon Longfellow Boys ' Glee Club; Boys ' Fed Walter Lawrence Karlson Larry Bosalia High Boots and Slippers Club 2, 3, 4; Con- ductor 4; Fire Squad 4; Home Room Offices; Photography Club 3: Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Student Council Rep. 3. Robert G. Langstrom Bob Longfellow ASB Vice-President; Senior A Vice- President; National Honor Society 4; Rogers Record, News Editor; Spanish Club, President, Vice-President; Senior Math Club; Interschool Relations Comm. Chairman; Boys ' Fed. Consti- tution Comm. Chairman; Choir 2, 3, 4: Boys ' Glee Club 1; Home Room Offi- ces; Mother and Son Banquet. Ik ml William Gillis Bill Willard Football 1, 3; Basketball Mgr. 2; Junior Math Club; Cosmic Club; French- Latin Club; Thespian Club; DK His- tory Club; Dear Ruth ; Snafu ; A Murder Has Been Arranged ; Out of the Frying Pan ; The Importance of Being Ernest. ' Joy Gloria Joy Hayes Arlington National Honor Society; Spanish Club 3, 4; Senior Class Secretary; Choir 1, 2, 3; Home Room Offices; Student Coun- cil Rep.; Red Cross Rep.; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Study Hall Checker 3; Locker Comm. 4; Play Comm. 3, 4; Dad and Daughter Banquet 3. Kerry Lewis Henderson Havermale Kerry Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4; R Club 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Hall Patrol. Shirley Holquist Cuddles Deer River, Minn. Dad and Daughter Banquet; Livewire Comm.; Tanglefoot Comm.; Vocations Comm.; Big Sister; Prom Comm. ; School Plays; Pirettes; Forget-Me-Not Sale; Carnival. Donald K. Larsen Don Longfellow Football 1, 2, 3, 4; R Club Secretary; Track 1, 2: Photography Club, Vice- President; Boys ' Fed. President; Ath- letic Patrol; Hall Patrol; Fire Squad; Student Council; Dance Comm. 3; Home Room Offices; Cafeteria Comm. Chairman. Robert E. Larson Bob Arlington Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 4; Pep Band 4: Jug Band; German Band: Lyre Club, Vice-President; Spanish Club, Vice- President; National Honor Society; Senior Math Club; Hall Patrol 4; Fire Squad 4; Home Room Offices. twenty-one Darlcne Joyce Lemon Arlington Darlene National Honor Society 4: Senior Class Treasurer; Majorettes 3, 4; Pirettes President 2; OGA Club, Secretary 4; Spanish Club Secretary 4; Palette and Brush 2, 3, 4, Corresponding Secretary, Vice-President; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars 3, 4; All-City Football Rally 3; Study Hall Checker. Dwainc L. Maine Columbia Football 2; Boys ' Fed. ' Squirt Robert Marchioro Bob Butte, Montana Boys ' Fed.: Hall Patrol; Athletic Patrol; Dads ' Night; Home Room Offices. John Morford Longfellow ' Johnny ' 1 Rogers Record, Editor 4; Associate Editor 3; National Honor Society 3, President 4; Treasure Chest Photog- rapher 3, 4: Cosmic Club 3, 4; Senior Math Club 3, 4; Quill and Scroll 4; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Conductors 3; Mother and Son Banquet Comm. 3, 4; Con Comm. Chairman 4; Senior Move-up Con Comm; Boys ' Glee Club 1, 2, 3. Eugene Olson Gene Longfellow Boys ' Glee Club; Choir; Palette and Brush Club; Photography Club; DK History Club; Mother and Son Banquet Comm.; Hall Patrol; Con Comm.; Senior A Con Comm.; Tennis 1. JoAnn JoAnn Rcvier St. Xavier Tanglefoot 2, 3; Usherette 4; Girls ' League Rep.; Home Room Offices; Big Sister. twenty-two Virginia Linden Ginger Arlington French-Latin Club 3, Secretary 4; Pal- ette and Brush 1, 2, President 3, Sec- retary 4; Locker Room Comm. 3, Chairman 4; Livewire Comm. 4; Senior Con Cochairman 4; Home Room Offi- ces; Student Council Rep. 4; Girls ' League Rep. 3; Dad and Daughter Dec- orations 3; Shop Office Worker 3. Richard McBride Dick Hamilton Boys ' Fed. Rep. 1, 2; Red Cross Rep. 2; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Hall Patrol 2; Fire Squad 2. Nedra Mathison Ned Longfellow OGA Club; Livewire Comm.; Dad and Daughter Banquet; Color Day Comm.; Girls ' League Dues Drive Comm.; Pirettes; Home Room Offices: Student Council Rep.; Study Hall Checker; Treasure Chest Rep.; Book Room Helper; Tanglefoot Comm. Robert E. Merrick Bob Bemiss Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Boots and Slippers; Football 3; Boys ' Fed. Rep. 2, 3; Con- ductor 3, 4. Mary Joanne Osborn Mary Arlington Palette and Brush Club; 2, 3, 4; Busi- ness Office 2, 3; Movie Operator 4; Honor Roll Comm. 4; Home Room Of- fices; Book Room Helper 3, 4: Girls ' League Rep.; Red Cross Rep.; Dad and Daughter Banquet; Pictures and Dec- orations Comm. Janice Pounds Jan Bemiss Spanish Club 2, 4, Treasurer 3; Pal- ette and Brush Club 3, 4; FHA Club 2, 3; Glee Club 2; Choir 3: Dad and Daughter Banquet Ticket Chairman 3, Table Decorations 2; Pirette 2; Flag Twirler 3, 4; A Murder Has Been Arranged. Jeannine Robison Jeannine Longfellow Home Room Offices; Style Trends Comm. 2; Pirettes 2, 3; Information Comm.; Office Worker 4; Study Hall Checker 4; Tanglefoot Comm.; FHA 3; Red Cross Rep. 2; Usherette Comm. 3, 4; Big Sister Comm. 4; Record Staff 2, 3 Ed ' Grace Edith Sorenson Hamilton Pirettes 2, 3, 4; Girls ' Glee Club 2. 3. 4; Mothers ' Tea 1; Gym Checker 3: Study Hall Checker 4; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Usherette 3; Color Day; Big Sister; Girls ' League Rep. Russell Sorcnscn Russ Longfellow Dance Comm. Chairman; Senior Class President; Rogers Record, Sports Editor 4; Quill and Scroll, Secretary 4; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Conductors 3, 4; Fire Squad 4; Athletic Patrol 3, 4; Spanish Club 4, Vice-President 3; Senior Math Club 3, 4. Robert Torrence ' Bob Whitman Football 1, ?, 3, 4; Track t; R Club 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices. John Robert Walker Bob ' Arlington Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Lyre Club 4 Beverly Joy Watts Bev Bemiss National Honor Society, Secretary 4; OGA, President 4; Big Sister Comm., Chairman 4; FHA 3; Home Room Of- fices; Cashier in Cafeteria; Business Office 2, 3, 4; Bookroom Helper 3, 4; Lost and Found Chairman 3; Morning Girls Chairman; Postage Stamps Chair- man 3; Usherette Chairman 4. ill 1 I- D at William Schultz Bill Willard Stage Crew 2, 3; Night Under the Stars ; Red Cross Rep.; Student Coun- cil; Home Room Offices; Football 2; Hall Patrol 4; Production Staff. Six All-School Plays; Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Treasure Chest Rep. Peter J. Sjostrom Pete Bemiss Orchestra 1. 2, 3, 4; Band 3, 4; Pep Band 4: Student Council 2; Boys ' Fed. 4; Play Comm., Snafu , Out of the Frying Pan ; Freshman Con Comm. 3: Hall Patrol 4; Fire Squad 2; Treas- ure Chest Rep. 3; Fall Festival 3. Darlene Tiffany Dar Bemiss Dad and Daughter Banquet 3, 4; Ush- erette 3, 4; Gym Office 3, 4; Business Office 4; Senior Announcements and Cards; Home Room Offices; Tennis Team 2, 3, 4; Tanglefoot 2, 3; Honor Roll Comm. 4; Color Day 2; Study Hall Checker 2, 3; Poppy and Carna- tion Sale. Robert L. Trad Bob Hamilton Football 1; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; DK History Club. Gary Walter Gary Riverside High Home Room Offices; Hall Patrol 4. ' Ardy Ardi th Wilson Longfellow National Honor Society; Junior Math Club 1, President 2; Senior Math Club 3, President 4; French-Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Chairman Tutoring Comm.; Chairman Honor Roll Comm.; Chair- man Carnival Comm.; Big Sister; Vo- cations; Dad and Daughter Banquet; Study Hall Checker; Red Cross Rep.; Home Room Offices. twenty-three Seated: Roily Hjfstedt, president. Standing: Mildred Johnson, secretary; Dick Gillis, vice-president; Marilyn Johnson, treasurer. June Class Elections Ray Derrick Best Looking Carol Ann Horey Mel Clark Most Popular Claire Marchioro Jerry Weise Best Ail-Round Joan Dalton Ron Devine Best Dancer Pegge Fallgren Art Schoening Most Athletic Lenore Slawter Dick Gillis Class Genius Ila Mae VanNotric Ron Anderson Has Best Line ..Shirley Borden Lynn Sailor Wittiest Ida Sloan Bob Hagseth Most Likely to Succeed Laura Belle Fisher Roily Hofstedt Most Changed Since Freshman Year Joyce Berry Jack Haffner Most Sophisticated Pat Bresnahan LesHilby Best Dressed Jo Penna RussGrieb Best Physique ft Best Figure Mildred Johnson twenty-four June Class Leaders Laura Belle Fisher High Honors Bob Robertson Student Body President Dick Gillis Musician Yvonne Shand High Honors Joan Dalton Girl ' League ] ' resident Lois Zornes Rogers Record Editor Ila Mae VanNotric High Honors Bob Marks Boy ' Federation President Gloria Reagan Treasure Chest Editor RoLLY HOFSTEDT Senior President Bob Hagseth Student Body President Carol Ann Horey Majorette Lenore Slawter Girls ' Athletics Art Schoening Boys ' Athletics Tom Blodgett Artist Janet Airey Dramatist twenty-five Joyce Marie Adams Jo Havermale Study Hall Checker 2; Forget-Me-Not Sale 1, 2; Spokane Jr. Retailers ' Club; Carnation Sale 1; Dad and Daughter Banquet; Carnival 2, 3, 4: Mothers ' Tea; Borrowers ' Table 2. Arnold A. Anderson Arnie Regal Student Council Rep.; Home Room Of- fices; Football 1; Hall Patrol; Athletic Patrol; Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Track 2, 3. Bruce Anthony Bruce Arlington Baseball 3, 4; Home Room Offices: Red Cross Rep.; Boys ' Fed. Barbara Balch Sandpoint High Girls ' League. Barbs Vernice Balinski Vernice Longfellow FHA Club, Sergeant at Arms 3; Cour- Forget-Me-Not Sale 2; Big Sister 3, 4; Locker Comm. Dorothy Darlene Barnes Dar McLaughlin Jr. High Home Room Offices; Tanglefoot 1, 2; Girls ' Glee Club 1; Junior Prom Comm.; Record Staff; Treasure Chest Rep. 3; Dad and Daughter Banquet Comm.; Advisers Office; Gym Check- er; Big Sister 3, 4; Modern Dance; Cinderella. ' ' Evonne Adler Bunch Scottsbluff High OGA Club; Three C Club; Girls ' Glee Club; Beginning Chorus; Girls ' League; Courtesy Comm. Janet Gail Airey Jan Longfellow Thespian Club 3, President 4; Spanish Club 2, 3, 4; OGA Club 3; Night Under the Stars 2; Student Council Rep. 1, 3. 4; Junior Prom Chairman 3: Snafu ; A Murder Has Been Ar- range d ; Rumplestiltskin D ear Ruth Comm. Ronald Anderson Ronnie Hamilton Home Room Offices; Student Council Rep.; Hall Patrol 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 1; Basketball 1; Mother-Son Banquet; Athletic Patrol; Red Cross Rep.; Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Rogers Record. Barbara Austin Barbs Regal Tanglefoot 1, 2, 3; Home Room Offices: Gym Checker 2, 3; Pirettes 2; Forget- Me-Not Sale 1, 2: Night Under the Stars 2; Volleyball 1. William Barker Bill Whitman Orchestra 1, 4; Student Council 1, 3, 4; Conductors 3; Hall Patrol 3; Athletic Patrol 4; Fire Squad 4; Music Festival 4; Booster and Bettterment Comm. Chairman 4; Football 3. Beverly Jean Beach Bey St. Patrick ' s Record Staff, Advertising Mgr. 3; Junior Prom Comm. 3; Dance Comm. 4; Nurse ' s Office 4; Big Sister Comm. 3, 4; Recorders ' Comm. 4; Tanglefoot Comm. 1, 2, 3; Elections Comm. 4; Roll Checker 2; Modern Dance 3; Home Room Offices. twenty-six Mirl Beck MirV Libby Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed. Nancy Bicha Montana Poison High Red Cross Rep.; Study Hall Checker; Girls ' League. Dolores Bjordahl Dee ' Libby Jr. High Girls ' League; Girls ' Glee Club 1, 2 Home Room Offices; Christmas Comm. Roll Checker. Betty Jean Black Monkey Columbia Big Sister 4;Gym Checker 3, 4; Shop Office Worker 3; Tanglefoot 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Girls ' League. Delton Lcroy Bohnet ' Del ' Longfellow Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Red Cross Rep.; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars ; Hall Patrol 3; Boys ' Fed; Student Council. Delores Bonser Dee Whitman Girls ' League; Carnation Sale; Forget- Me-Not Sale; Big Sister. Gary Bergevin Gary John Marshall Jr. High Pep Band 2 ,3, 4; Band 2, 3, 4; B Squad Football 4; Home Room Offices; Lyre Club, President; Ski Club; Ski Team; Hall Patrol 4; Booster and Betterment Comm. ' Joy Joyce Mae Berry Hamilton Dance Comm.; Pirettes 2; Information Comm.; Dad and Daughter Banquet; Mothers ' Tea; Elections Comm.; Nurses ' Office; Color Day; FHA Club; Girls ' League Rep.; Home Room Of- fices; Big Sister. Beverly Ann Blancher Bev Logan Pirettes 2; Flags 3, 4; Usherette Comm. 4; Tanglefoot 3; Home Room Offices; Big Sister; FHA Club 1, 2, 3: Fresh- man Cor. 3; Pirettes, Treasurer 4; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Basket- ball 1; Study Hall Checker 2. Thomas Blodgett Hamilton ' Tom ' Spanish Club 3, 4; Palette and Brush 1, 2; Constitution Comm.; Home Room Offices; Mother-Son Banquet; Bulle- tin Board Comm. Chairman 4; Track 3; Booster and Betterment Comm. chairman 4. Pearl Bolich Longfellow Locker Comm. 2, 3; League. ' Pearl Retailing 4; Girls ' Ruth Bonnett Ruth Arlington Spokane Jr. Retail Club, Treasurer; Palette and Brush, Treasurer; GAA, Treasurer; Pirettes; Night Under the Stars 2; Big Sister 3, 4; Home Room Offices: Girls ' League Rep.; Gym Checker. twenty-seven Shirley Borden Shirl Longfellow Main Office Worker 3, 4; Cheer Leader 4; Adviser ' s Office 3; Style Trends Comm. 3; Tanglefoot Comm. 1, 2; FHA Club 3; Gym Checker 3; Big Sister 3, 4; Mothers ' Tea 3: Color Day 1, 2; Live Wires Comm. 2; Home Room Offices. Duane Allen Brandt Duane Longfellow Fire Squad 4: Student Council 3: DK Club 3; Football Mgr. 3; Boys ' Fed. Of- fice Worker 3. 4; Boys ' Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Boys ' Fed. Richard Bright Dick Cooper Suanish Club 2; Boys ' Fed.; Night Under the Stars 2. Helen Jean Bruce Kitten Whitman Choir 2, 3, 4; Girls ' Glee Club 1, 3; Night Under the Stars 1. 2; Movie Projector Operator; Shop Office. Boyd Barton Bumpus Columbia ' Bumpy ' Band 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Treas- ure Chest Rep. 3; Conductors; Hall Patrol. Marjorie Ellen Chapman Margie St. Xavier ' s OGA Club 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Pirettes Dance Comm. 2; Constitution Comm. 2; Red Cross Rep. 1; Gym Checker 3, 4; Pirettes 2; Night Under the Stars 2; Student Council Rep. 4; Tutoring Comm. 3; Modern Dance 2. Bonnie Jean Brady Mo-Jean Staple High Girls ' Glee Club; Girls ' League. Patricia Louise Bresnahan ' Patti St. Patrick ' s Rogers Record Staff 3: Tanglefoot 1, 2; Election Comm. 4; Modern Dance 3: Home Room Offices; Girls ' League. Lovone Brimble Squirtee Brewster High, Brewster, Wash. Spanish Club 3, 4; GAA, Secretary 3; Vice-President 4; Study Hall Checker: Student Council Rep.; Lost and Found Comm.; Honor Roll Comm.; FHA Club; Drives Comm.; DK Club; Borrowers ' Table 1, 2. Barbara Brother Barbara Columbia Girls ' Glee Club 1; Choir 2, 3; Home Room Offices; Tennis Team 3; GAA Club 4, President 3; Book Room Helper 3; Christmas Tree Comm. 2; Dad and Daughter Banquet Comm. 1; Three C Club, Treasurer 3, Vice-President 4; Student Council Rep. 2; Cafeteria Help- er 2; Night Under the Stars 1, 2, 3. John Bush Jack Whitman Hall Patrol; Football 1, 2; Home Room Offices; Track 1, 2, 3; Boys ' Fed. Norman Chappell Norm Arlington Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Con Comm.; Home Room Offices; R Club 3, 4; Boys ' Fed; Night Under the Stars. twenty-eight Kenneth Clark Kenny Kelso High Student Council: Hall Patrol, Captain 4; Boys ' Fed.; Home Room Offices. Marion Clason Mark Columbia Home Room Offices; Treasure Chest; Rogers Record; Quill and Scroll Club; Night Under the Stars ; Student Council Rep. A. : ' } Jacqueline Cochran Jackie Regal Home Room Offices; Cheer Leader; Tanglefoot Comm.; Live Wire Comm., Palette and Brush Club; Study Hall Checker; Student Council Rep.: Girls ' League Rep.: Cafeteria Helper: Gym Helper; Modern Dance. 9 4 r fc Robert S. Conrad Bob Hamilton Hall Patrol; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Chorus. Dee ' Dian Crego Langlois High, Langlois, Ore. Girls ' League; Forget-Me-Not Sale Joan Dalton Joannie Whitman Girls ' League President 4; Adviser ' s Office, Chairman 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Mothers ' Tea Comm. 3; Dad and Daug- ter Banquet Comm. 4; FHA Club Presi- dent 2, 3, 4; Girls ' League Rep. 2; Study Hall Checker 3; Home Room Of- fices; Tanglefoot Comm. 1; Color Day Comm.; Modern Dance. Clara Mae Cheetham Clarabell Peshastin High Locker Comm. 3, 4; Big Sister 3; Re- tailing Club 4; Girls ' League Office Worker 3; Home Room Offices. Melvin Ray Clark Regal Mel Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2: Home Room Offices: R Club 3, 4: Night Under the Stars ; Hall Patrol 1, 2. 3,4; Red Cross Rep.; Student Council Rep. Sally Ann Clark Sally Longfellow Home Room Offices; FHA Club, Vice- President 3, Secretary 3; Retailing Club; Girls ' Glee Club; Locker Co-nr . 3, Chairman 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Forget- Me-Not Sale; Movie Machine Operator 3. Donna Marie Covey Donna Bemiss National Honor Society 3, 4; Senior Math Club 3, 4; Shop Office Worker 3: Nurses ' Office Worker 4; Girls ' Glee Club 1. 2; Tutoring 2, 3; Big Sister 3, 4; Night Under the Stars 2; Lost and Found Comm. 2. 3, 4; Christmas Comm. 4. Clarice Craig Logan Clarice ' Pirettes 2, 3, 4; Usherettes 4; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Big Sister 3, 4; Freshman Con 3; Study Hall Checker 2; Photo Club 3. Gerald Cross ]erry Columbia Boys ' Glee Club; Choir 2; Band 2, 3 4; Hall Patrol 4; Red Cross Rep. 4; Pep Band 3. twenty-nine James Davies Jim Regal Red Cross Rep. 1, 2, 3: Home Room Of- fices; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Freshman Ten- nis; Senior Math Club 3; Choir 2; Boys ' Glee Club 1; Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Booster and Betterment Comm. Marian Ethel Davies Mickey Longfellow Usherettes 3; Choir 3. 4; Office Worker 4; Pirettes 2, 3; Big Sister 4; Informa- tion Comm. 2, Chairman 3: Modern Dance 2: Interschool Relations Con 4; Dad and Daughter Banquet Comm. 4: Gym Checker 2: Girls ' Glee Club 2, 3: Home Room Offices. Dale Decker Dale Regal Band 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 2; Home Room Offices; Pep Band 3, 4; Tennis 1, 2. 3. 4; R Club 2, 3, 4; Lyre Club 4; Three C Club, President 4; Fire Squad; Dads ' Night; Night Under the Stars ; Hall Patrol. Ronald Lee Devine Ron St. Aloysious Baseball 1, 3, 4; Football 2; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Fire Squad; Home Room Offices; Wrestling 2. Clifford Eickstadt Mahnomen, Minn. Hall Patrol; Boys ' Fed. ' Clifford Stuart Evey Stuey North Central Hall Patrol 4; Fire Squad 4; Boys ' Fed. Rep. 4; Athletic Patrol 4; Basketball 3, 4; Football 4. Joseph Cummings Joe Jefferson High, Portland, Ore. Hall Patrol; Conductors; Student Coun- cil Rep.; Boys ' Fed. Rep.: Home Room Offices; Baseball 3, 4; Basketball 3. JoAnn Davis Jo Bemiss Usherettes; Treasure Chest Rep.; Big Sister 3. 4; Home Room Offices; Pi- rettes 3, 4; Night Under the Stars. Roberta Day Bobbie Whitman Red Cross Rep.; Forget-Me-Not Sale; Big Sister 3; Girls ' Glee Club; Night Under the Stars. Ray Earl Derrick Ray Bemiss Tennis 1; Football 3; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Baseball 4; Fire Squad 2, 3. Donna Doering Regal Girls ' League; Tanglefoot. ' Donna Anita Edwall Anita Longfellow Tanglefoot 1, 2; Big Sister; Cafeteria Comm.; Girls ' League; Gym Checker. thirty ' Peg ' Pegge Lee Fallgren Whitman Home Room Offices; Girls ' League Rep. 4; Gym Checker 3; Study Hall Checker 4; Nurse ' s Office 4; Tanele- foot 2, 3; Record Staff 2: Girls ' Glee Club, Secretary 2, President 4; Con Comm. 3, 4; College Day Comm. 3: Dad snd Daughter Banquet 1; Big Sister; Sports Queen ' 51. Laura Belle Fisher I. B. Cooper National Honor Society 3; Vice-Presi- dent 4, President 4; Girls ' State Rep. 4; Spanish Club 1, 3. Secretary 2, Presi- dent 4; Cosmic Club, Secretary 3, 4; Senior Math Club 3. 4; Quill and Scroll 4: GAA Club 2, President 3, 4; Record Staff, Cony Editor, News Editor: Junior Press Club 4; Big Sister Chairman 4 Tennis Team 2, 3, 4. William Flanagan Bill Hamilton Football 1; Track 1, 2, 3, 4: Cross- country 3. 4: Hall Patrol 4: French- Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Cosmic Club 3, 4; Home Room Offices. Louis John French Duke Phoenix, Ariz. Football 1, 2; Track 1; Interscholastic and Intramural Sports; Pirateers 1, 2, 4; Wrestling 3; Rogers Record 4. Alice Gramlow Alice Lemmon High National Honor Society 3, 4; Live Wire 3; Band 2, 3, 4; Night Under the Stars 2, 3, 4; Forget-Me-Not Sale 2; Home Room Offices; Spanish Club 3, 4; Cos- mic Club 4; Lyre Club 3, 4; College Day Comm. 3; Big Sister 3, 4; Points Comm. Robert Hagseth Bob Hamilton Football 2; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Fire Squad; Hall Patrol; Dads ' Night; Vocational Comm.; Night Under the Stars ; Math Club; National Honor Society; ASB President. Audrey Fischer Aud Bemiss Tanglefoot; Music Contest; Christmas Tree Decorations; Carnival; Music Filing; Borrowers ' Table; Library Worker; Live Wire; Big Sister. Robert Fisher Bob Longfellow ASB Vice-President 4; Dance Comm. 4; Boys ' Fed. Vice-President 4; Hall Patrol 4; Frosh Comm. 4; Athletic Patrol 4; Mother-Son Banquet Chair- man 4; Choir 1, 2, 3, Vice-President 4; Boys ' Glee Club 1, 3, President 2, Sec- retary 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Tennis 1, 2; Fire Squad 2. 1. Lo-raine Gerike Lorraine ' Hamilton High, Mont. Girls ' League. Cecil Richard Gillis •Dick Longfellow Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Orchestra; Pep Band 3, 4; Lyre Club; Tutoring Comm.; Dads ' Night; Night Under the Stars 1, 2, 3, 4; Fire Squad: Senior President. Russell Gricb Russ Helena, Mont. R Club 2, 3, 4; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Bas- ketball 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Student Council; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed.; All-Citv Football 4; Hall Patrol 2, 3, 4; Night Under the Stars 2, 3 ,4; Father-Son Banquet 2, 3. Jack Haffncr Jack Whitman Athletic Patrol 3, 4; Hall Patrol 3, 4; 1, 2, 3, 4; Boys ' Fed. Rep. 4; Student Council 2; R Club 3, 4; Dads ' Night 4; Home Room Offices; Band 3; Fire Squad Easebal ' 1, 3, 4; Tennis 1, 2; Basketball thirty-one Darrel Hall Darrel Hamilton Hall Patrol 3, 4: Conductors 3; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed. Charles Edwin Hallsteen Eddie Beiniss Band 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 4; Lyre Club 3. 4; Pep Band 4; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Boys ' Fed.; Night Under the Stars 2. 3, 4. Nora Mae Hanson ' Norie Hamilton Girls ' League; Girls ' Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Three C Club; Night Under the Stars ; Spring and Winter Concerts 3, 4. Lawrence Harris Larry Regal Tennis 2, 3. 4: R Club 3, 4; Band 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars ; Hall Patrol; Fire Squad. Eugene Harrison Junior Regal Fire Squad: Hall Patrol 3: Track 2; Night Under the Stars ; Home Room Offices; Tumbling 2. Lorraine Charlotte Hayes Lorrie Logan Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars 1; Girls ' League Rep.; FHA Club 1, 2; Tanglefoot 1, 2; Fall Festival Comm. Chairman 1; Dad and Daughter Banquet 1; Big Sister 3, 4; Tutoring Comm.; Retailing Club; Study Hall Checker. Doryce Haines Deer Park High Girls ' League. ' Dorycee Ralph Hankins Ralph Bemiss Conductors; Football Mgr.; Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Dear Ruth ; Importance of Being Earnest. Fred L. Hanson Fred Hamilton Football 2, 3; Basketball 3; Hall Patrol 2. 3, 4: Fire Squad 3; Athletic Patrol 2, 3; Student Council; Boys ' Fed. Secre- tary; Boys ' Glee Club, Sergeant at Arms; Music Festival; Track 2. ' Bugs Marilyn Harris Columbia Boys ' Glee Club Accompanist 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; National Honor Society 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Color Day Comm. Chairman; Dad and Daughter Banquet; OGA Club 4; G A A Club; Forget-Me-Not Sale 2, 3; Christmas Banquet; Morning Girls; Live Wire. Joyce Havercroft Peanuts Orchard Prairie Big Sister 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Fall Festival Comm. 2, 3; Forget-Me- Not Sale 1; Study Hall Checker; Gym Checker. Emerson Harvey, Jr. Bunna Hamilton Football 1, 2, 3, 4; All-City Football 4: Track 1, 2, 3, 4; National Honor Society 4; French-Latin Club, President 4; Cafeteria Comm. Chairman; Hall Patrol Captain: R Club 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Night Under the Stars ; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed. thirty-two Virginia Mae Henricksen Jinny Hamilton Big Sister 3. 4; Courtesy Comm. Chair- man 4; Carnival 4; Band 2, 3, 4; Or- chestra 4; Lyre Club; Three C Club: Home Room Offices; Library Checker 2; Music Ensembles 2, 3, 4: Color Day 2; Night Under the Stars. Ronald Hill Ron Arlington Freshman Football; B Squad Football; Boys ' Fed. JoAnn Hilsen Jo Longfellow Quill and Scroll; Rogers Record, Fea- ture Editor; Student Council Rep.: Home Room Offices; Tanglefoot; Color Day Comm.; Mothers ' Tea Comm.; Big Sister; Style Trends; Treasure Chest; Usherettes. Harold Roland Hofstedt Roily Everett High Pirateers 1; Choir 2, 3, 4; Chairman Constitution Comm.; Football; Basket- ball 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Baseball 1, 2; Hall Patrol; Fire Squad; Senior Class Presi- dent; R Club 4. Dan Hutchinson Bemiss Lyre Club 3, 4; Band 2, Under the Stars 2, 3, 4. ' Dan ' 3, 4; Night Diana Lee I nee DiDi Hamilton French-Latin Club 3, 4; Cosmic Club, Treasurer 3, President 4; Bulletin Board 3; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Pi- rettes 2; Elections Comm. Chairman 4; Student Council 1,3; Study Hall Check- er 2, 3, 4; Tennis Team 3; Tanglefoot 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices. Herb Hettinger Herb Arlington Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars ; Hall Patrol; Fire Squad. Les Hilby Les Crown Point, Fla. Student Council Rep. 1, 3; Boys ' Fed.; Home Room Offices; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Golf 3, 4; Football 1; Dance Comm. 4; Cafeteria Chairman 4; Hall Patrol; Ath- letic Patrol; Conductors. Betty Lou Hoffman Louie Regal Home Room Offices: Girls ' League; Student Council Rep.; Big Sister. Carol Ann Horey Carol Ann St. Patrick ' s Majorette 3; Band 4; ASB Dance Comm. 3; Cochairman 4: Treasure Chest, Associate Editor 3, Senior Co- editor 4; All-City Fox Rally 3; Big Sister 4; Nurses ' Office 3, 4; Elections Comm. 4; Style Trends 4; Night Under the Stars 3, 4; Pirette Dance Comm. 3; T a n g 1 e f o o t 1, 2, 3; Home Room Offices. Dolores Hudlow Dolores Bemiss Tanglefoot; Home Room Offices; Girls ' League. Myra Jarbeau Jonsey Hamilton Pirettes 2; Flag T w i r 1 e r 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Football Banquet 4; Fall Festival; Girls ' Glee Club 2, 3; Big Sister 3, 4; Dance Comm. 3, 4; Library Monitor; Winter rnd Spring Concert 2, 3. thirty-three ' Mary Mary Johnson St. Xavier ' s National Honor Society 3, 4; OGA Club, Treasurer 3, 4; FHA Club 2, 3, 4: Girls ' League, Secretary 4, Vice-President 4; Courtesy Comm. Chairman 3: Morning Girls ' Chairman 3; Dad and Daughter Banquet 4; Big Sister 3, 4: Business Of- fice Worker; Home Room Offices; Stu- dent Council Rep. Mildred Johnson Millie Columbia Pirettes 2; Study Hall Checker 3, 4: Home Room Offices; Student Council Rep. 4; Treasure Chest Rep. 1, 2; Live Wire: Tanglefoot; Lost and Found Comm.; Mothers ' Tea 2; Big Sister 3, 4- FHA Club 3; Senior Class Secretarv Martin Johnson Marty Logan Boys ' Fed.; Boys ' Glee Club; Home Room Offices; Student Council Rep.; Red Cross Rep.; Football 1, 2, 3; Base- ball 2, 3, 4; Tennis 1; Hall Patrol; Fire Squad. Earle Kazmark Earl Shelby, Mont. Football L 2, 3, 4; R Club 3. 4; Home Room Offices; Hall Patrol 2; Student Council I, 4; All-City Football 4; Boys ' Fed.; Night Under the Stars 3; Fath- er-Son Banquet 1, 2. Faye Louraine Kennedy Faydae Hamilton Pirettes 2. 3, Secretary 4; Night Under the Stars 1, 2. 3; Study Hall Checker 3, 4; Spanish Club 3, 4; Tennis 2; Foot- ball Banquet 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Pirette Dance 3, 4. Robert Klasscn Bob Whitman Home Room Offices: Hall Patrol 1, 2, 3; Boys ' Fed.; Student Council. ' Marilyn Marilyn Johnson St. Xavier ' s National Honor Society 3, 4: French - Latin Club 3, 4; FHA Club 2, 3, 4; City Council President 3; Home Room Of- fices; OGA 3, 4: Chairman Nurses ' Of- fice Comm. 4; Cochairman Morning Girls; Big Sister 3, 4; Business Office Worker 3, 4; Senior Math Club, Treas- urer 4; Dad and Daughter Banquet Decorations Chairman 4. Lyla Mae Johannsen Blondic Bemiss National Honor Society 3, 4; Treasurer of ASB 3; Girls ' League, Treasurer 4; Red Cross Rep. 2. 3, 4; OGA 3, 4; FHA Club 2, 3; Dad and Daughter Banquet Chairman 4; Usherettes 3, 4; Business Office Worker 3, 4; Mothers ' Tea 3; Big Sister 3, 4. Edward Johnston Ed Arlington Senior Math Club: Thespian Club: Stage Crew; Dads ' Night; Mother and Son Banquet; Night Under the Stars ; Red Cross Rep. John Kirwin Gonzaga Hall Patrol; DK Club. Jack Leland Kennedy Sandy Hamilton Hall Patrol; Home Room Offices; Base- ball 1; Student Council Rep. Betty Carolyn Knittel Babe Regal Poppy Sale; Carnation Sale; Home Room Offices; Girls ' League. thirty-four Audree Vivian LaFave Butch Wenatchee Jr. High Pirettes 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices 2, 3, 4; Night Under the Stars 3. 4; Fall Festival 3, 4; Football Banquet 4: Girls ' Glee Club 4 :Library Checker 4; FHA Club 3, 4; Bulletin Board Comm. 3; Pirette Dance 3, 4; Big Sister 3, 4. A. L. Lale Curley Columbia Drama 1, 2, 3; Importance of Being Earnest, House Mgr.; Football 2; Home Room Offices. Beverly Clair Lerum Bey Pasco High Girls ' Glee Club 2; Choir 3, 4: Girls ' League; Christmas Box. Jerry Lizer Libby ' Jerry Home Room Offices; Hall Patrol 2, 3; Athletic Patrol 3, 4: Boys ' Fed.; Stu- dent Council. Louis Lorenz Lou Our Lady of Lourdes Home Room Offices; Hall Patrol 2, 3; Athletic Patrol 3; Fire Squad: Student Council; Football 2. Gladys Lowry Dimples Arlington OGA Club; Spanish Club; Color Day Comm.; Student Council Rep.; Girls ' League Rep.; Home Room Offices; Shop Office Helper; Fall Festival Comm.; Nurses ' Assistant; Bookroom Helper; Big Sister; Constitution Comm. Lynn LaFave Lynn Wenatchee Jr. High Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Boys ' Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; DK Club; All-Northwest Chorus. Larry Lancaster Larry Arlington Hall Patrol 3; Fire Squad 3; Senior Math Club 3, 4; Student Council 2; Home Room Offices; Tutoring 2; Band 2: Booster and Betterment Comm. 4; Baseball 3; Golf 4. Dorothy Lee Dorothy Lapwai High Majorette 4; Student Council Rep. 4; Home Room Offices; Girls ' League. Delbert E. Lage Del Orchard Prairie Fire Squad 3; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed. Evelyn Rae Long North Central Girls ' League. ' Rae ' Waldo Magnuson Skip Mt. Vernon, Wash. Track 2, 3, 4; Cross-Country 3, 4; R Club 4; French-Latin Club 3. 4; Cosmic Club 3, Treasurer 4, President 4; Pho- tography Club 3, President 4; Quill and Scroll 4; Rogers Record, Photographer 3, 4; Sports Editor 4; Treasure Chest, Photographer 3, 4; Baseball 2; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed. thirty-jive Claire Marchioro Clarence Longfellow Song-Cheer Leader 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Girls ' League Rep.; Student Council Rep.; Mothers ' Tea Chairman 3; Style Trends Chairman 2; Usher- ettes Chairman 3; Dance Comm. 4; Color Day 3; Tanglefoot 2, 3; Gym Of- fice Helper 4; Big Sister. Elden Manderscheid Eldie Arlington R Club 2, 3, 4; Baseball Mgr. 2, 3; Foot- ball Mgr. 2, 3; Stage Crew 1, 2. Mgr. 3; Basketball Mgr. 2, 3: Hall Patrol 4; Rumplestiltskin ; Home Room Offices. Ronald McArthur Ron Stites High Home Room Offices; President Sopho- more Class: Basketball 1, 2; Publicity Chairman for Out of the Frying Pan ; Stitesonian Sports Editor. Mary Lynn McCauley Mary Regal Home Room Offices; Red Cross Rep.; Student Council Rep.; Office Worker- Tanglefoot Comm.; FHA Club; Dues Drive Comm.; Girls ' League. Arlene McGeath Pepper Hamilton Home Room Offices; Rogers Record, Feature Editor 3; Bookroom Helper 4; Quill and Scroll Club; Girls ' League; OGA 4. Marian Meier Mag Bemiss Night Under the Stars ; Girls ' Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Girls ' League. Robert Lee Marks ' Bob ' Longfellow Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Boys ' Fed., Sergeant at Arms, Presi- dent; R Club, Vice-President; President Boys ' Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Home Room Offices; Sergeant at Arms of Choir 2, David F. Manny Dave Pendleton Jr. High Band 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 3, 4; Thespian Club 3, 4; Stage Crew 1, 2, 3, 4; Lyre Club 4; Snafu ; Rumplestiltskin. Shirley Marquette Dolly Girls ' League. ' Jerry Jerene Ann McDowell Whitman Girls ' League Rep.; Big Sister 3, 4; OGA Club; Livewires Comm. 3; Re- cords ' Comm. 4; Study Hall Checker 2, 3; Shop Office Worker 3, 4; Fall Festi- val; Night Under the Stars 3; Usher- ette Comm .4. Janice Elaine Mcintosh Mac Columbia Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Triple Trio 2, 3, 4- Night Under the Stars 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices. Naola Mae McLean Vanilla Bemiss Big Sister 3, 4; Color Day Comm. 2; Courtesy Comm. 4; Nurse ' s Office 4; Red Cross Rep. 1; Home Room Offices- Girls ' League. thirty-six James Michels Central Valley Boys ' Fed. ' Jim Joyce Carolyn Miller Shorty Whitman Home Room Offices; Big Sister 3, 4; Girls ' League; Fall Festival; Pirettes 2, 3, 4. ' Murph Merle Leon Murphy Gonzaga High Football 4; Baseball 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Boys ' Fed. Vice-President 4; Junior Prom Comm.; Mother-Son Ban- quet Comm.; Dads ' Night Chairman; Intramural Basketball: Senior Prom Comm. Delores Naccarato Dode Arlington FHA 3, 4; GAA, Treasurer; Night Under the Stars ; Big Sister; Fall Fes- tival Comm.; Gym Checker; Girls ' Glee Clu b; Pirettes 2. Anna Marie O ' Neel Rie Eldaah Three C Club, Corresponding Secre- tary; Gym Checker; Library Monitor; Big Sister. Joanne Connie Penna Jo Orville Jr. High Home Room Offices; Secretary of ASB 4; Spanish Club 2, 4, Treasurer 3; Pal- ette and Brush 2, 3, Recording Secre- tary 3; Majorette 4; Night Under the Stars 2; Girls ' League; Dad and Daughter Banquet 4; Junior Prom; Football Banquet 4. Delores Beverly Merkel Kitten Spokane Jr. Academy Livewires Comm.; Tanglefoot Comm.; Big Sister; Home Room Offices. William Moody Bill Longfellow Boys ' Fed.; Tennis 1, 2; R Club 3, 4: Hall Patrol 3, 4; Football 1; Home Room Offices. Ruth Murphy Glenrose Girls ' League. ' Ruth ' Robert Northrop Bob Hoquiam Jr. High Snafu 2; Out of the Frying Pan 3: Importance of Being Earnest 4; Stage Crew 2, 3. 4; Thespian Troupe 3, 4; Stage Mgr. 4; Choir 2, 3, 4: Boys ' Quartet 4; Red Cross County Council 3, 4; Home Room Offices. Robert E. Owen Bob Bemiss Boys ' Fed. Rep. 4; Red Cross Rep. 2; Home Room Offices; Conductor 3, 4. Elizabeth Paulsson Elizabeth Regal National Honor Society; Home Room Offices: Study Hall Checker; Librarv Checker; Big Sister; Girls ' League. thirty-seven Dclores Peterson Delores Whitman Pirettes 2, 3; Night Under the Stars 2; Home Room Offices; Big Sister; Dad and Daughter Banquet 2; Girls ' League Rep. Donna Jean Phillips Donna Longfellow Library Checker 2, 3: Girls ' League. Gloria G!o-ia Jean Purdy Lewis and Clark Home Room Offices; Girls ' League Gloria Alleta Reagan Mike Walla Walla, Wash. Treasure Chest Editor 4; Rogers Rec- ord, Copy Editor 3, 4, Associate Editor 4; National Honor Society 3, 4; Jr. Press Club 4; French-Latin Club 4; Cosmic Club, Corresponding Secretary 4; Big Sister 4; Senior Math Club 4; Photo Club 4: Quill and Scroll 3, Secretary- Treasurer 4; Tennis Team 2, 3; Mothers ' Tea, Publicity Chairman 3; Dad and Daughter Banquet, Publicity Chair- man 4. Shirley Ann Repp Dede Cooper National Honor Society 4; Spanish Club 2. 3. Treasurer 4; OGA Club 3, 4: Home Room Offices: Girls ' League Rep. 3; Dad and Daughter Banquet 4; Mothers ' Tea 3; Complaints Comm. Chairman 4- Business Office Worker 3, 4; Big Sister 3, 4: Usherettes 3: Points Comm. Richard L. Rhodes Springdale High Hall Patrol; Boys ' Fed. Dick ' Rose Marie Peterson Rosie North Central Palette and Erush Club 4; Girls ' L ague Style Show 4; Girls ' League; Rogers Record Staff. Sheryl Prui tt Arlington ' Sherh Constitution Chairman; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars : Fall Festival Comm.; Library Checker; Big Sister: Study Hall Checker; Drives Comm.: Bulletin Board; Palette and Brush Club: Office Worker. Marlene Jenny Rand Pat Whitman Home Room Offices; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Night Under the Stars 2, 3, 4; Music Contest 2, 3, 4; Spring and Winter Con- cert 2, ?, 4; Poppy Sale 2; Forget-Me- Not Sale 2; Basketball Team 1; Orches- tra 1; Lyre Club. Albert Reidinger Arlington ' Al Home Room Offices; Student Council Rep.: Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Tennis Team. Betty Joann Reue Betts Hamilton Tanglefoot 3, Cochairman 4; Pirettes 2; Big Sister 3, 4; FHA Club 2, Treasurer 3, President 4; Spanish Club, Secretary 3, Vice-President 4; Rogers Record, Cir- culation Mgr. 4; Treasure Chest, Senior C o e d i t o r ; Quill and Scroll 4: Dues Drive Comm. 4; Junior Prom; Informa- tion Comm. 3; Home Room Offices. Robert James Robertson Bob Hamilton ASB President 4; Baseball 1, 2; Hall Patrol 3; Fire Squad 3; President of American Govt. Class; Student Council Rep. 1, 2; Home Room Offices; Cosmic- Club; French-Latin Club: R Club; Bas- ketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Constitution and Charters Comm. Chairman. thirty-eight Lane Dale Ruud Red Whitman Ski Club 1. 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Boots and Slippers 1, 2, 3, 4; Night Under the Stars 2, 3, 4; Ski Team 2, 3, 4; Project Chairman; The Import- ance of Being Earnest ; R Club 2, 3, 4; Hall Patrol 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2. Lynn Sailor Lynn Marcus High Thespian Club; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Out of the Frying Pan ; The Importance of Being Earnest ; The Valiant ; Cinderella ; Rumplestiltskin : Boys ' Fed. Con Comm. Lawrence Scalero Larry Cooper Track 2, 3, 4; Hall Patrol 3, 4; Student Council Rep. 2, 3; Basketball 1: Photo Club; Home Room Offices: Red Cross Rep.; Boys ' Fed.; Boys ' Glee Club. Arthur John Schoening Art St. Patrick ' s Basketball 1. 2; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Foot- ball 1, 3, 4; Boys ' Fed.; All-City Foot- ball 3, 4; Tri-City Football 4; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars 3; R Club 3, 4; Record Staff 2; Father- Son Banquet 3. Yvonne Shand Millwood Ivan National Honor Society 4; Tennis Team 3, 4; Confessional ; Footlights 2; Dra- matics 2; Three C Club 3, 4; Senior Math Club 3, 4: Makeup Comm. for Dear Ruth 2; Night Under the Stars 2; Vocational Guidance Comm. Chairman. L nore Slawtcr Red Whitman Tennis Team; Palette and Brush 2, 3; President 4; GAA Secretary, President; Girls ' League Rep.; Red Cross Rep.; Badminton Inland Empire Tournament 3; Tennis Inland Empire Tournament 4; Cosmic Club 4. Jo Ann Robinson Jo Hamilton Majorettes 3. 4; Pirettes 2; Home Room Offices; Dad and Daughter Banquet Comm.; Night Under the Stars ; In- formation Comm.; Pirette Dance 3. 4; Tanglefoot 2, 4; Football Banquet 3, 4; Study Hall Checker. Deloris Jan Schaffer Dee North Central Girls ' League Rep.; Student Council Rep.; Home Room Offices Pirettes; Baccalaureate Usherette. Ronald Walter Schmidt Ron St. Francis of Assisi Boys ' Fed.; Stage Crew; B Squad Foot- ball; Cosm ' c Club; Treasure Chest Rep.; Jr. Retail Club. James Shontell Jim Grand Coulee High Hall Patrol 4; Conductors 3, 4; Treas- ure Chest Rep. 4; Photo Club 4; Track 3. Keo Shof f Keo Logan Choir 2, 3, 4; Triple Trio 2, 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Night Under the Stars 2. 3. Iola Sloan Iola Arlington Spanish Club 2, 3; Tanglefoot 4; Home Room Offices; Study Hall Checker; Shop Office. thirty-nine Joanne B. Stall Arlington Jo ' Locker Comm. 2, 3, 4; Red Cross Rep. 2; Home Room Offices; Carnival 4; Movie Projector Operator. Phyllis Jean Teller Phyl Hamilton National Honor Society 4; Orchestra 1, 2, 3. 4; String Ensemble 3, 4; Home Room Offices; Tutoring Chairman 4; Dad and Daughter Banquet 4; Lyre Club 3, 4: OGA Club 4; Girls ' League Rep. 1: Big Sister 3, 4. Arlene Thirkill Bat Whitman Home Room Offices; Study Hall Checker 2, 3: Girls ' Gym Checker 3, 4. Marie Torosian Marie Arlington Study Hall Checker 1, 2; Night Under the Stars 2; Volleyball 1; Girls ' Glee Club 1. 2, 3; Lost-and-Found Comm. |j Student Council Rep. 2. I la Mae VanNotric ' I la Lewis and Clark National Honor Society 4; Orchestra 3 4; Concert Master 4; Spanish Club 3, 4- ' Lyre Club 3, 4; A. S. B. Booster and Betterment Comm., Cochairman 4- Big Sister 4; String Ensemble 3, 4; Dad and Daughter Banquet 4. Patricia Waugh Patty Emery High, Emeryville, Calif. Red Cross Rep. 4; Big Sister 4; Home Room Offices: Girls ' League: Tutoring Comm. 3; Locker Room Comm. 4. ' Myrna Myrna Stine Hamilton National Honor Society 3, 4; Tennis Team 2, 3, 4; Big Sister 4; Complaints Comm. 4; Vocational Comm. 4; Office Worker 2, 3, 4; Honor Roll Comm. 3; Standards Comm. 4; Student Council Rep. 2; Cafeteria H e 1 p e r 3, 4; Home Room Offices: Senior Offices. Evelyn Taylor Eve Arlington Pirettes 2, Vice-President 4, President 4; Flag Twirling 3, 4; OGA Club 4; Tan- glefoot 4; Out of the Frying Pan 3; Production Staff of A M u r d e r Has Been Arranged ; Gym Checker 1, 4; Assistant Mgr. of Rumplestiltskin 3; Big Sister 4; Night Under the Stars 1. 2, 3. 4: Thespian Club 3, Secretary 4- Footlights Club 2. Audrey Thirkill Whitman ' Audrey ' Home Room Offices; Study Hall Check- er 1, 2, 3, 4; Gym Checker 3. Margaret M. Ulrich Peggy Whitman Home Room Offices; Volleyball 1- Night Under the Stars 1, 2; Pirettes 2, 3: Palette and Brush 3; Girls ' League; Big Sister 3. Shirley Wandler Shirley St. Xavier ' s Home Room Offices; Student Cuncil Rep. 4; Tanglefoot 3, 4; Thespian 3 Treasurer 4; OGA Club 4; Night Under the Stars 1, 3; Pirettes 2; Flag Twirl- ers 3, 4; Gym Office 3, 4; Snafu 2- Out of the Frying Pan 3; Rumple- stiltskin 3. Antoinette Waughtel Orting High, Orting, Wash. Girls ' League. ' Toni ' forty J erry Weise Havermale ' Ewald Football 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3, 4; R Club 4; Hall Patrol 2, 3, 4: Boys ' Fed. 3; Stu- dent Council Rep. 2, 3, 4; Boys ' Fed. Sergeant at Arms 4; Home Room Of- fices; Night Under the Stars 2, 3; Father-Son Banquet. Betty Wilhelm Betty Lincoln High, Seattle, Wash. Freshman class President; Glee Club; GAA Club; Girls ' League. Jeannette Wilson Net Whitman Red Cross Rep.; Palette and Brush 1, 2, 3; Big Sister 4. Anna Jean Wood Jeanie Dodson, Mont. Night Under the Stars 3; Study Hall Checker 3, 4; Band 3, 4; Spring Con- cert 3, 4; Winter Concert 3, 4; Music Concert. Larry Woodwick Arlington ' Sk tnny Tennis 1, 2; Football 2, 3; Locker Comm.; Movie Comm.; Student Coun- cil; Boys ' Fed.; Home Room Offices. Marilyn Stirling Marilyn Whitman Girls ' League; Palette and Brush Club 4; Home Room Offices; Tanglefoot. Joan Wickham Mead High Joe Movie Comm.; Spanish Club 4; Junior Math Club 3; Carnival Comm.; Locker Comm. 3; Gym Checker 3; Library Monitor. James H. Williams Jim ' Hamilton Hall Patrol 4; Student Council Rep. 3; Boys ' Fed. Rep. 2. Lois Mae Williams Frenchie Everett High, Detroit, Mich. Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Uniform Mgr. 2, 3, 4. Secretary 1, 2, 3, 4; Board of Control 4; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Roll Checker 1, 3, 4; Big Sister; Student Director of Second Band 3, 4; Night Under the Stars 1, 2, 3, 4; Music Librarian 1, 2, 3, 4; Summer High School Band 3, 4; National Honor Society 4. William Wilson Walla Walla High Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Hall Patrol. ' Bill- Lois Zornes Frankie Ritzville Jr. High Rogers Record Editor 4, Business Mgr. 4, Associate Editor 3; Girls ' League Treasurer 4; Senior Math Club 3, Treas- urer 4; French-Latin Club 4; Cosmic Club 4; Photography Club 4; Quill and Scroll 3, President 4; Junior Math Club 2; Jr. Press Club 3; Librarian 4; Tennis Team 2, 3; National Honor Society 4; Girls ' Glee Club 1, 2. Dwayne Wolfe Bemiss ' Wolfe Boys ' Fed.; Student Council Rep.; Hall Patrol 4; Home Room Offices; Band 2, 3, 4; Dance Comm. 4; Fire Squad 4; Play Comm. 3; Football 1; Mother and Son Banquet Comm.; Night Under the Stars 4. forty-one David L. Monnastcs Cheney High Football 4: Boys ' Fed. ' Day; ' Dave Kohli ' Dare ' Lewiston Sr. High Crors Country 4: Stage Crew 2, 3, 4: Thespian Club; Home Room Offices; R Club 4 Camera-Shy January Seniors J. B. Edmonds J. B. Bemiss Football 2, 3, 4; All-City 4; R Club: Hall Patrol 4; Cafeteria Patrol 4; Senior A Move-up Con Comm.; Boys ' Glee Club President; Home Room Offices. Richard A. Phelps Dick Hamilton Red Cross Rep.; Boys ' Fed. Rep.; Stu- dent Council Rep.; Home Room Offi- ces; Hall Patrol 2, 3. 4; Fire Squad L, 2, 3, 4; Athletic Patrol 2; Treasure Chest Rep. Don C. Zachary Don Salem, Oregon Booster and Betterment Comm.: Boys ' Fed. Office Worker; Choir 4. ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft These June and January seniors have now received their Key to Inde- pendence and, with the door to life standing open before them, can pick their own future. During the four years they were at Rogers, their attitudes, habits and aims were quided by the experienced hands of their teachers and advisers. They were given a taste of the many fields open to them after high school. Their sense of responsibility was sharpened by participating in sports, school clubs student government and music. All have added something to the school; good or bad, it was up to them. In ten years these students will look back at these years and know then, if not now, that high school really was the door to the future. forty-two Friendship is one of the most important elements of happiness. Friends, and enemies, come from the group of people with whom one associates. Strangers can be neither friends nor enemies. Qualities of per- sonality determine largely whether two people are friends or enemies. Since only those who know us know our personalities, they are the ones who will respond to our behavior and become either a friendly associate or an unfriendly one. Friends are made or lost in the everyday atmosphere of home room and class room. These are the people who see us, not only at our best, but at our worst, when we are happy, angry, or disappointed. How we get along with our close associates, how we speak to them, treat them, determines how many and what kind of friends we have. In high school our close associates, outside our families, are usually our classmates. These are the people with whom we talk, study, and play. They are always judges and jury; they decide whether we have the qualities of personality that make it possible for us to pass through that magic door of friendship. Our classmates are our Key to Friendship t Friendship Classes Editor: LOIS ZORNES 12 B ' s 316 — Mr. Ostness Front Row: Mr. Ostness, Bob Berry, Gary Davey, Richard Hanson. Second Row: Alan Bremer, Dwayne Lewis, Joe Ambrose, Richard Cook, Bill Garrison, Vic Bradley. Third Row: Gary Brown, Floyd Brady, Dean Lydig, Vern Hogberg, Dick Astelford, Frank Elliott. 126 — Miss Brockman Front row: Yvonne O ' Conner, Barbara Gamby, Sonja Carlson, Donna Matheny, Marian Dahlgren. Second row: Carol Casselberry, Marilyn Stinger, Jo Ann Hilsen, Rosemarie Thompson, Mary Lou Olson, Donna McAvoy, Third row: Sue Rexroad, Shirley Whipps, Lorna Hawkins, Marie McCarty, Carol Wright, Donna Willard, Mary Burrell, Audrey Fischer. 207— Mr. Stoddard Front row: Mr. Stoddard. Al Raschka, Don Miller, Ronnie Vigil. Second row: Dale Roberts, Don Wahle, Kaye Walker, Ronnie VanDamme, Third row: Larry Woodwick, Barry Parker, Larry Zentz. John Russell. Last row: Clay Swisher, Keith Sannes, Jerry Sims, John Sargent, Charles Smith. 11 A ' s 314 — Mrs. Pence Front row: Janet Watkins. Rosemary Wyman, Patsy Yancer, Joyce Young. Second row: Mrs. Pence, Jean Wood, Barbara Watkins, Corma Tunnison, Pat Wilmott, Dorothy Johnson, Third row: Deirdre Randall, Marie Easely, Shirley Verbance, Errol Jo Warford, Delores Yden, Marlys Thompson. Marilyn York. Last row: Barbara Lierman, Edna Mae Zimbriek, Kathleen Young, Dona Lee Weathers, Carol Wakely, Gwen Uderman, Jean Wiberg. forty-six 301— Mr. Hubbard Front row: Mr. Hubbard, Roger Sakariason, Ronnie Willcocks. Second row: Russell Sweetland, Keith Spangle, Jim Skarset, Frank Totten, Dale Shute. Third row: Richard Yamamoto, Jim West. Daryl Tachell, Harley Yarber, Wesley Wright. John Weber, Dean Williams. Last row: Roy Shook, Edwin Sanger. Dave Torrence, Ernest Vclquardsen, Lee Tracy. Marvin Voss, Roger Wood worth, Tom Young. 303 — Miss Lc Fevrc Front row: Joan Repp, Sandra Storch, Lois Orr. Darlene Soehren, Donna Stejskal, Jackie Price. Second row: Jean Reek, Nancy Mowbray. Donna Smulan, Delores Reardon, Pat Snyder. Barbara Spafford. Third row: Dorothy Shaw, Dina Murray, Barbara Springate, Joy Morton. Lavonne Nelson, Hflma Stecks, Rose Sabo. Last row: Donna Nesmith, Beverly Nurse, Barbara Stewart, Betty Pirtle, Dorothy Spiess, Audrey Ostendorf, Susann McLean. 300A— Mr Sleizer Front row: Mr. Sleizer, Dell Reedy, Fred Miller, Dick Olsen, Chuck Mantello. Second row: Angelo Orrino. John Paulson, Dave Olney, Jim Myers, Jerry Mickey, Albert Martello, Gene McKay. Third row: Jack Mackenzie, Gerald Messer, Dallas Palmer, Danny Naccarato, Bob Olson, Earl Nelson. Jerry Mattson. Last row: John Morris, Llovd Peters. Bob Reed. Bob Mildes. Bill Morrison, Bob Nesbitt, Larry Remm, Gravin McMann, Don McMath. Al Ostness. 217 — Miss Stevens Front row: Miss Stevens, Diana Lorsung, Lorrita Loomis, LaVerne Mier, Charlotte Lemmons, Doris Pettet. Second row: Iris Parks, Verneita Lawrence, Carole McDonald, RaNae Johann, Lugene Horseman, Shirley Lund. Third row: Bonnie Larson, Carol Parkins, Nelda Jacobs, Janet Lane, Donna Howell, Shirley Holt, Louise Holden, Ruthjean Maricle. Last row: Lois Maine, Margery Makey, Margaret Lobe, Elaine Ingalls. Darlene Kunz, Teena Hoffard, Louclia Hutcheson, Shirley Johnson. forty-seven 105— Mr. Stumpf Front row: Mr. Stumpf, Ralph Hankins, Ray Filler, Earl Dolan, Richard Donahue, Don Fisher. Second row: Jack Harrison, Gene Gubli, Don Davis, Ron Green, Dick Dombroski, Daryl Felts, John Gerber, Earl Davis, Third row: Jim Frye, Lynn Geiselbrecht, Eldrege Gibson, Bill Hanely, Ron Hatcher, George Harding, Michael Fagan. Last row: Ted Gese, Harold Harper, Don Foisy, Mel Elliott, Gary Davis, Gerry Dikes, Bob Gibson, Bill Havercroft. 214A — Mrs. Broberg Front row: Arlene Hasard, Joanne Hansen, Pat Cook, Joan Day, Teresa Racanelli, Shirley Akerman. Second row: Joanne Elmquist, Lee Gilbert, Joanne Green, Bonnie Baker, Nita Guenther, Anita Durgin, Betty Jean Hansen. Third row: Mrs. Broberg, Jane Durham, Vivian Granlund, Florence Ferguson, Kathleen Hass, Blanche Hanning, Pat Crawford, Carole Glassley. Last row: Virginia Davis, Donna Hays, Jerry Fay, Shirley Ed wall. Barbara Harding, Gloria Dixon, Betty Denham. 202— Mr. Aller Front row: Mr. Aller, Charles Kinzel, Harlan Kifer, Lawrence Lewis, Second row: Dick Kronick, John Lemon, Lyle Jensen, Bob Jacobs, Fred Hobbs, Dave Jeppesen, Kenneth Kingsoliver. Last row: Jim Kofmehl, Don Kamstra, Dick Mclnalley, Wes Kelley, Loren Kohlstaedt, Herschel McArthur, Doug Hopkins. 214B — Mrs. Larson Front row: Jackie Marsh, Sharon Mellon, Barbara Cravens, Pat Anstis, Phyllis Brizendine. Second row: Patsy Cole, Vivian Heckel, Alma Bartenan, Marie Beck, Sylvia Ahlin, Bernadine Biotti. Third row: Billie Jo Andrew, Lucille Akre, Betty Aronson, Joyce Barnes, Teresa Contabile, Cora Lee Hann, Bertha Bachelor, Last row: Mildred Bridgens, Vinnie Baump, Beverly Bell, Martha Adams, Marlene Barnhart, Dolores Collett, Barbara Boberg, Jean Burkhart, Betty Lou Green. forty-eight S-2— Mr. Sackett Front row: Mr. Sackett, Duane Warren, Dennis Clark, James Brown. Second row: Micheal Cox, Robert Burns, Raymond Barnes, Claude O ' Brien. Third row: Robert Adams, Charles Bartholema, John Carr, Kenneth Beneway, Robert Bauer. Last row: Dennis Bernier, Roy Butts, Richard Castner, Marvin Adams, Douglas Berg, Glenn Borden, Robert Bowles, Richard Adsitt. 11 B ' s 125 — Mrs. Bockmeyer Front row: Miss Kneer, Marlene Heinrick, Frances Trogdon, Beverly Watson, Darlene Walker, Diane Young. Second row: Shirley Thornton, Beverly Wilcox, Marlene Uttke, Margaret Thomas, Lois Wyberg, Carolyn Wilson, Lorene Westendorf. Third row: Carol Warren, Betty Strong, Doreen Zingate, Myrna Taylor, Marilyn Wells, Phyllis Vulcano, Darlene Utterberg. Last row: Joyce McCoy, Joyce Sloan, Barbara Wester, Barbara Swan, Donna White, Pearl Teller, Jane Walker, Doris Wanacek, Mary Ann Swanson. 302 — Mr. Lipscomb Front row: Mr. Lipscomb, Leonard Guffin, Melvin Neighbors, Jerry Harnois, John Elliott, Jim Shook. Second row: Marian Eldredge, Conrad Hollander, Dick McGowan, Jerry Hovind, Clinton Merrick, Jerry Armstrong, Al Wagner. Third row: Dick Langdon, Bob McKenney, Cliff Appling, Jerry Hefling, Don Torrence, Bob Bryans, Pete Poquette. Last row: Jphn Deeter, Skip Amsden, Bob Bailor, Don Gest, Don Gunning, Jack Shetter, Al Kiefer, Bob Mclntyre. 218 — Mrs. Moyer Front row: Donna Reue, Helen Wildman, Anna Bradshaw, Blanche Goddard, Charmaine Clark. Second row: Doris Myhre, Barbara Nelms, Juanita Marshell, Bernadine Mildes, Arlene Linden, Nancy Vandergaag, Shirley Hastings, Helen Ryner. Third row: Shirley Stoddard, Mary Reglin, Carol Ekholm, Donna Crosby, Rebekah DeLoreto, Mary Ann Gilmore. Mvrtle Gilmore, Shirley Williams, Lela Sanders. Last row: Freya Peterson, Phyllis Plank, Dona Whitkopf, Marilyn McDonald, Shirley Traylor, Mary Johnson, Pat Babcock, Jackie Driscoll, Joan Mahoney, Donna Newcomb. forty-nine 11 307— Mr. Roestel Front row: Arthur Reek, Larry Moore, Bob Miner, Dean Mock, Jerry Maddocks. Second row: Mr. Roestel, Laney Martin, Earl Noble, Ron Moon, Severt Olsen, Dick Petersen, Bill Noble, Wayne Paupst. Third row: Wayne Ness, Albert May, Harvey Miller, Bill Powell, Alvin Rust, John Peters, Frank Novel, Leon Martin, Ben Redmond, Martin Overhauser. Last row: Roland Meier, Bob O ' Neel, Al Robbins, Gene McGougan, Bob O ' Leary, Nathen Maddox, Joye Miller, John Rutter, Howard Osterud, Fred Weidhardt. 205— Mrs. Miller Front row: Mrs. Miller. Vivian Reinoehl, Mary Ellen Reagan. Second row: Dorothy Shroyer, Delores Scates, Nancy Sjostrom, Dolores Davis. Third row: Gwen Siber, Pat Primmer, Pat Pearson, Gloria Olmstead, Renee Richard, LuWanna Pittman, Barbara Preston, Gail Schalock. Last row: Beverly Sicilia, Nora Russell, Pat Pettet, Shirley Riddle, Lois Reamy, Kay Rasmussen, Pat Ryan, Donna Sager, Geneva Portray. 106 — Mr. Brigham Front row: Mr. Brigham, FranK Colliton, Jim Whitman, Bartus Sutherland, Malcolm Vandersluys, Adrian Weinrich, Marvin Schwartzenberger. Second row: Richard Shute, Vern Zeigler, Bob Waugh, Elton Mitzimberg, Lynn Zumwalt, Mack Williams, Melvin Williams. Third row : Don Taggart, Mike Yturri, Bob Taylor, Bob Shaw, Don Woodman, Jerry Van Leuven, Norman Saferite. Last row: Bill Wilbur, Jack Zurlinden, Ronnie Sweet, David Swinehart, Harold Schell, Jim Stab. Buddy Wallace, David Taylor, Delbert Trad. 211 — Mrs. Harris Front row: Lorraine Keplinger, Hazel Merrick, Barbara Lane, Priscilla Kelley. Second row: Mrs. Harris, Gladys Madsen, Syeria Lambert, Marie Kinsella, Wanda Mitchell, Ruth Miller. Third row: Carol Long, Donna Kienholz, Nadine Nissen, Donna Nelson, Carol Northway, Donna Krogel, Shirley Jones, Joanne Malloy, Michele Jewell. Last row: JoAnne Mayer, Phyllis Mast, Pat Knittle, Maryln Kazmark, Albertha Jackel, Edwina Nelson, Gertrude Neade, Joyce Norton, Florence Johnson, Mary Kingery. fifty 311 — Mr. Stover Front row: Frank Kamin, Jack Lewis, Wayne Herm an. Second row: Glenn Jacobsen, Bert Hywood, Andy Yayton, Pat LaFave, Gary Harms, Lonny Hudlow. Third row: Don Larkin, Michele Kenney. Kenny Loveless, John Lynn, Larry Hagin, Kenneth Hale, Bart Hagin, Bob Johnson, Eddie McDaniel. Last row: Minto Holderman, David Harris, Helmar Hansen. Tom Hofstead, Dick Haines, Bob Hautz. Bill Geile, Lawrence Knorr, Arnold Joirmen. 203 — Mrs. Morrison Front row: Mrs. Morrison. Carolleone Bowen, Doris Dopkins, Kay Cook, Mary Ellen Durand, Delia Clifford, Marlyn Brown. Second row: Sally Christiensen, Mary Ellen Dalton, JoAnn Bogart, Betty Bond, Barbara Babcock, Barbara Ames, Shirley Anderson. Jackie Connors. Third row: Beverly Cole, Jean Clark, Peggy Lou Dahm, Sandra Champion, Roberta Bump, Arlene Dial, Julia Cozza, Mary Jane Bachler. Last row: Edna Anderson, Dorothy Bigelow, Betty Brown, Jean Byrd, Harriet Carr, Patricia Anderson, Arlene Dormaier, Coleen Choate, Gail Bennett, Sally Anderson. S-5 — Mr. Kienholz Front row: Mr. Kienholz, Jim Engle, Richard Grant, Clifford Frady. Second row: Pat Disciascio, David Emerson, Ray Dickens, Ray Davis, Jim Elingsen. Third row: Bill DeLong, Dick Dahl, Owen Davies, Dick Harrison, James Emerson, Bill Groth, Jim Hingston. Last row: Roger Glanville, Francis Conrad, Merlyn Fisher, Floyd Delbridge, Ted Gurr, Jack Elmore, Leonard Elvigan, Kenneth Grillo, Gary Fallgren. 206 — Miss Smith Front row: Miss Smith, Jan Hartman, Irene Hehman, Dorothy Irvine, Ila Ensmenger, Joyce Geislbrecht. Second row: Barbara Heinz, Viola Horton, Pat Grimmett, Ann Griffiths, Rosemary Hilby, Sharon Eckley. Third row: Dolores Gilleo, Joan Forcier, Shirley Hollingsworth, Lovora Greenwood, Louise Finch, Shirley Howard, Pauline Hutcheson. Last row: Darlene Hankins, Lillian Hill, Marjorie Hopkins, Adele Graebner, Pat Gillmore, JoAnn Hopkins, Elva Holloway, Margaret Hoff. my 10 A ' s 300A— Mr. Mabbot Front row: Richard Totusek, Archie Knapp, Larry Westendorf, Jon Sorenson. Second row: Mr. Mabbot, Sill Stillwell, Earl Van Patten, Gordon Vantyne, Jerry Vigil, Jim Woodworth, Cecil Thorpe, Donalt Totten, Tom Taylor. Third row: James Mackin Douglas Weber, Lee Stone, Don Welliever, Willard Tissue, Edward Weiler, Larry Thrasher, Allen Talbot, Gary Thomason.Last row: Don State, Bud Volquardsen Bill Voss, Gerry Ingram, Dennis Ward, Roland Woodward, Earl Taylor, Ronald York, Stavig Raydon. 108 — Mrs. VanAustene Front row: Shirley Tucker, Jacqueline Wilson, Isabelle Wright, Barbara Wicklund, Alice Wheeler. Second row: Donna Wiliams, Arlene Wiedmer, Vernita Wahl, Irene Woods, Beverly Lattin, George Ann Westerkamm, Ida Yancer. Third row: Shirley Venters, Lillian Springer, Barbara Weatherman, Wilma Woods, Carol Yden, Florence Woods, Jackie Williamson, JoAnn Wickwire. Last row: Florence Volquardsen, Shirley Von Ericksen, Nancy Welker, Donna Krogh, Mary Jo Woods, Shirley Van Horn, Vernita Wahl, Donna Wakeley, Shirley Grace Wiliams, Joan Wahl. 309— Mr. Saltz Front row: Dennis Craig, Gary Berginyon, Garry Armitage, Bill Crumbaker, Garry Clawson. Second row: Clark Bollinger, Bill Anderson. Ron Brown, Dale Benner, James Boner, Leonard Cartledge, Joe Binway. Third row: Jerry Brother, Rick Balsaretti, Phil Brandon, Dick Allen, Jim Barbour, Roland Anthony, Monty Bonnett, Ron Corigliano. Last row: Bert Abey, Dale Bridge, Gary Carroll, Dean Corbin Don Coons. 109— Miss Schwartz Front row: Miss Schwartz, Betty Sims, Nancy Rice, Sally Torchie, Roxana Royce, Donna Tosh. Second row: Liola Trogdon Ila Sangborn, Rauline Sweeney Leona Sargeant, Jane Sheppard, Marilyn Simer, Margaret Szulerecki. Third row: Joan Robertson, Charmion Skarset LuJean Rodgers, Sally Seigle, Bertille Tevlin, Arlene Taylor, Donna Richmond, Dortha Roberts. Last row: Janice Shute Marion Sweigle, Joan Richardson, Audrey Ronneburg Alice Solberg, Regina Engle Mary Shoeman. Betty Robblns Lexey Sturmer. Arlene Ring 201 — Mr. Elsensohn Front row: Bob Peterson, Ray Palella, Ronny Pierson, Ronald Smith, Donald Salaney. Leighton Smulan. Second row: Danny Pitts, Charles Potts, James Rhodes, LeRoy Smith, Gene Rickey, Albert Schaff, Edwin Packer, Don Ryan. Third row: George Schaffer, Raymond Russell, Dixon Pool, Laurence Robins, Charles Parker, Gayle Roullier, Monte Sloan, Milton Sannes, Larry Sannes. Last row: Kenny Peckham, Leonard Peterson, Rodney Peterson, Gerald Peterson, Lavern Roullier. Bob Ryan, Harold Sabo, Floyd Robertson, Brian Pugh. 220 — Mrs. Mikkelson Front row: Sharon McCormack, Shirley Olson, Dorothy Mills, Carmen McDonald, Marthene Maycroft, Marvella Ost, Connie Murphy. Second row: Alice McKime, Monna Mathis, Marilyn Moore, Carol Preston, Shirley Nason, Beverly Mowat, Donna Martin, Merlyn Orr. Th ird row : Shirley Poage, Roxanna Porter, Rita Martin, Janeth Park, Kay Repp, Shirley Nelson, Eloise Reinhardt, Doris McCord. Last row: Lois Merchant, Sharon Mackey, Christy Maekay, Shirley Primmer, Wanda Olcott, Peggy Raun, Glenna Wilson, Beulah Paulson. AG — Mr. Thompson Front row: Wayne Mitcnel, Bob Mulenback, Bob Morford, Devald Owens, Glen Mulbray, Roger Oliver, Larry Lief, Craig Oas, LeMoyne Morgan. Second row: Mr. Thompson, Neil Nelson, Jim Morrison, George Laton, Leslie Maddlock, J i-ry Otis, Richard Meese, Walter Ohrling, Jim Marchioro, David Mechals. Third row : Stuart Nelson. Ed Minderman, Ronnie La Flur, Jim Mitchel, Ralph Nagle. Bob Nesbitt, Dick Miller, Bob Lewis, Larry Nelson. Last row: Herb Lamb. Larry Nelson, Art Oberg, Ray Moon, Ralph Nelson, Alan Norby, Ken McKenny, Cecil Man, Larry Nevers. Girls ' Gym — Miss Mele Front row: Miss Mele, Sharon Hingston, Mary Linse, Roberta Jarvis, Joy Jeppeson, Dixie Libby, Jeanne Kennedy. Second row: Pat Kelleher, Barbara Ingles, Nancy Kelly, Darlene Lauritzen, Doreen Johnson, Louella Horseman, Neila Hollingworth, Betty Kinnan. Third row: Janice Hedden, Marilyn Lewis, Beverly Herman, Joyce Kautz, Barbara Hoffman, Eileen Hilsen, Veat Hiatt, Marvel Luvaa s, Sandra Lindsey. Last row: Roberta Jimeson, Carole Johnston, Dixie Lacey, Shirley Haynes, Joanne Knudtson, Babetta Krehe, Shirley Johanson, Donna Irwin, Martha Hazelmeyer, Marie Kromeier. fifty-three 127 — Mr. Chrisman Front row: Richard Duran, Carl Cunningham, Anthony Corigliano, Larry Eisenbarth, Gerald Foster, Bill Davies. Second row: Ronald Gosline, Bill Cuddy, Oliver Gibson, Dale Daniels, Kenneth Davis, Jack Evans, Bob Coutts, Gary Dial, Richard Ginnold. Third row: Ray Giles, Bob Cooney, Leroy Grothe. Bob Garrison, Marion Gassard. John Doering, Paul Gurske. Last row: Clifford Clark, David Gramlow, Don DuPriest, Ronald Gilbertson, Earl Gurney, Maurice Foisy, Lee Land Enright, Allan Fredrickson. 219 — Mrs. Herrington Front row: Joyce Harrison, Marion Gunning, Mary Ann Grimmett, Thelma Eilmes, Donna Ekholm, Frances Futter, Shirley Eiland, Margaret Forcier, Norma Day. Second row: Carol Hamlin, Janice Hardenbrook, Betta Day, Margaret Harris, Marian Gest, Joan Geile, Wilma Goossen, Marilyn Dewey, Zoellen Cruickshank. Third row: Mary Dunn, Phyllis Crumbaker, Karen Ekman, Arleen Galli. Carolyn Crothers, Carol Fry, Darlene Freeland, Betty Eiland. Last row: Pauline Garrison, Joan Donahue, Darlene Ehrgott, Georgia Finstad, Ann Glithero, Joye Harrison, Nadine Gardner, Nancy Freer, Dana Jo Cruickshank. S-3— Mr. Russell Front row: Dwayne Harmon, Larry Holquist, Ben Howard, Ronny Harden, Larry Harman, Donald Hall, Bradley Haywood, Michal Hussey. Second row: Mike Johnson, John Hood, Dwayne Hall, Bill Heinzlmier, Carry Kelly, Dale Hafner, Ronny Jorgensen, Bob Huss, Paul Kann. Third row: Wayne Holden, Larry Hamann, Buster Kelling, Jerry Hereen, Gordon Hammers, Richard Knowles, Don Johnson, Don Henderson, Dave Kalisted. Last row: Dwayne Hogan, Jerry Hinton, Larry Holcomb, Martin Kierneer, Donald Keplinger, Gerry Kenworthy, Gerry Joirman, Paul Johnson, Jim Hanson, Howard Hossfield, David Hale. 221 — Mrs. Canup Front row: Mrs. Canup, Patricia Beams, Jean Airey, Beverly Brown, Myrna Birge, Hazel Carmen, Georgia Cooper, Betty Briggle. Second row: Donna Bruce, Margia Bowers, Karen Balinski, Helen Barnes, Gwen Caudill, Marva Armstrong, Carol Buchingham, Carol Castleman. Third row: Sonny Burrill, Bonnie Borden, Juanita Caffell, Linda Cothier, Gwen Conrad, Yvonne Cooper, Coleen Buck, Barbara Laney. Last row: Mary Clayson, Verda Bolonger, Beth Beams, Louise Anderson, Shirley Brown, Irene Ambrose, Marie Anderson, Randy Aamot, Darlene Cannon, Ethel Adams. fifty-four S-4 — Mr. Chapman Front row: Mr. Chapman, Wilbur Anderson, Terry Booth, Lee Brady, Kenny Bell, Robert Borchers, Terry Bagley, Harlin Absolonson, Harry Carr. Second row: Stanley Atkins, Ed McLaughlin. Joe Burrell, Kenneth Brinkman, Jim Benefield. Vincent Aguirre, Dick Balam, Carl Carlson, Robert Briggs. Third row: Arthur Brison, Wells Alger, Lee Auer, Pat Brady, Melvin Cahalan, Bob Carlton, Bill Brown, Gerry Card, Joseph Carr. Last row: Richard Carroll, Charles Borer, Roger Borden, Kenneth Bradley, Tom Caufield. Clifford Bradley, Ronald Bailor, Chas. Benson, Don Chappell, William Calahan. Lost and Found — I First row: Hellenga, Byers, Smith, Patterson. Second row: Schumacher, Gramlow, Pugh Mizner, Mast, Crain. Third row: Green, Dirks, Barnes, Harris, Craig, Fors, Bennett. Last row: Ententman. Low. Frnaks, Green, Dornbir, Paulson, Nechanicky. Lost and Found — II Front row: Talbot, Eilmes. Second row: Gunther, Kidder, Van Damme, Teriese. Heinz. Third row: Hilby, Talbot, Stranz, Simpson, Evans. Last row: Jolly, Mahony, Tracy, Mosher, Cooper Chapman. fifty-five Success is something everybody longs for, something essential to happiness now and later. In high school, the key to success is activities, such as the various clubs, dramatics, music and journalism. In these activities, the student earns the symbols of success — pins. The student who earns the pin, earns a school honor. When a student has several pins, for clubs and Girls ' League or Boys ' Federation, he has a sense of belonging and success. To become a member of a club or activity, the student must have at least an average scholastic record and be liked by his fellow students. Than ho must be a useful member of the club. To become useful, he must exorcise initiative and good hard work. He has to volunteer for com- mittees and do some of the necessary work of the club. By being a useful member of the group, he earns his pin and is, in the eyes of fellow students and his teachers, a success in high school. Activities, band, orchestra, dramatics, clubs, National Honor Socoety, student government — all these offer the opportunity to any student to earn a pin and become a success. Therefore, activities are the Key to Success Key t Success Activity Editors: LAURA BELLE FISHER JO ANN HILSEN Seated: Donna Cooper, secretary; Mary Lou Olson, treasurer. Standing: Bob Langstrom, vice-president. Absent: Bob Hagseth, president. First row: Hopkins, Jacobs Carlson, Olson, Heinz, Penna, Marchioro, Caughey, Cooper, Gearheart, Weise Kazrnark . Grant, Walker Dolan. Second row: Bigelow, Burkhart. Fisher, Hilby, Larsen, Hanson, Robert- son, Gneb, Hagseth, Libby, Smith, Nagle. Third row: Rouse, Ince, Crosby, Elliott, Sorensen, Langstrom, Hilsen, Airey. Weinrich, Paulson, Shetter, Noble, Voss, Peterson, Loveless. Fourth row: Pirtle Soehren C. Yden, D. Yden, Wandler, Lee, Linden, Simpson, Dieziger, Hogan, Borden The Fall ASB Officers and Representatives head the Associated Stu- dent Body of John R. Rogers High School in the fall semester. The repre- sentatives are elected in the home rooms and form the congress, the student council. The officers and student council work together for the good of the school and hold approximately one meeting a week. fifty-eight Seated: Mary Lou Olson, treasurer; Jo Penna, secretary. S t a n d i n g : Bob Fisher, vice-president I resigned April 26) ; Bob Robertson, president. Fifth row: Loveless, Voss. Clark, Nonnastes. Repp, Warford Berg, weatnerman, i i.ey, Mowat, Hopkins, Huss, Gillis, Teller. The Spring ASB Officers and Representatives take over in the spring semester. In their meetings they decide such things as the spending of stu- dent funds and conduct school competition like the Spring Sports Queen contest and the new project of each class electing officers. Another job for the council is the Student Court for which they recently gave a charter. jifty-nine Just as the ASB is run by officers and representatives, the Fall Girls ' League Officers and Representatives conduct the business of the League in the fall. The officers perform the executive duties of the League and the representatives supply the advice and suggestions from the home rooms. Sixty First row: Rand, Johnson, Fallgren. Second row: Ferguson, Rice, Anderson, Rexroad, Shroyer, Spafford. Third row: Mizener. Wakely, Plank, Harding, Nelson. The annual Mothers ' Tea is one of the outstanding projects of the Spring Girls ' League Officers and Representatives. The Dad and Daughter Ban- quet is a corresponding affair in the fall. In both semesters, the girls are busy with school activities. Committee work takes much of the officers ' time. sixty-one to First row: Bob Fisher, vice-president; Don Larsen, president. Second row: Bob Marks, sergeant at arms; Bob Green, secretary-treasurer. The Falls Boys ' Federation Officers have duties similar to the Girls ' League. As with the League the officers are elected and they are helped by representatives chosen by each boys ' home room. The representatives express the views of the home rooms on such things as cons and awards. sixty-two Officers: Bob Marks, president; Merle Murphy, vice-president; Jerry Weiss, sergeant at arms; Fred Hanson, secretary-treasurer. First row: Olsen, Murphy, Haffner, Borchers. Second row: Hogberg, Meyers, Lauck, Brown, Warren, Deeter, Davies. Third row: Gosline, Peterson, Torrence, Cox, Fagan, Gurr. The Spring Boys ' Federation Officers and Representatives combine with the Girls ' League to sponsor the Spring Dressup Day. Another impor- tant spring event is Dads ' Nite. This year, the boys set up a point system for BF pins. sixty-three The Girls ' League Advisers give guidance and help to girls who have problems, besides advising Girls ' League work. The boys get the same kind of help through their Boys ' Federation from the Boys ' Federation Advisers. Most of these teachers also teach classes besides their advisory work. E. B. Chrisman, E. G. Kienholz sixty-four Members: Fisher, Johannsen, Johnson, Johnson. Brown, Olson, Gramlow, Wilson, Harvey, Stine, Repp, VanNotric, Williams, Lemon, Hayes, Caughey, Cooper, Heinz, Shand, Teller, Zornes, Reagan, Morford, Hagseth, Langstrom, Watts, Larson, Harris. In fall, the Fall National Honor Society members are chosen. Member- ship in this group is the highest honor the school can bestow. Scholarship, leadership, service and character are required for the fall and Spring Na- tional Honor Society. Members: Brown, Reagan, Covey, McDowell, Olson, Harris, Heinz. Johannsen, Johnson, Fisher, Johnson, A. Gramlow, Storch, Cole, Shand, Williams, Wood. Repp, Paulsson, Teller, VanNotric, L. Gramlow, Larson, Rexroad, McAvoy, Zornes, Magnuson, E. Johnston, Scalero, Barker, Elliott, Lancaster, Harvey, Berg, Mickey, Nelson, Northrop, Gillis, Hobbs, Decker, Hagseth, Marchioro. sixty-five sixty-six sixty-eight sixty-nine seventy First row: Sjostrom, Cox, Larson, Bergevin, Second row: Miner Grille Decker. Gillis, Kifer. J Third row: Van Damme, Hallsteen, Felts, Card, Jacobsen, Haas. The Pep Band provides music for school dances besides playing in cons, lis specialty is hot music, but the smooth tempos also earn their places in the band ' s repertoire. The music department has its lighter side, too. This is shown by the Jug Band which was popular in cons. The antics of the band were as funny as the music they played. Left to right: Mike Cox, Bob Larson, Paul Haas, Dick Gillis, Dan Hutchinson, Bob Dixon. seventy-one to right: Jacobsen. accompanist; Fisher, Zumwalt, Emerson, North: The Boys ' Quartet and the Triple Trio are two of the special groups in the music department. They provide music for cons and give public per- formances. They strive for high quality in their singing and they receive extra training from the group ' s director, Mr. Brigham. seventy-two First row: Wandler, Peterson. Kohli, Gillis. Second row: Sailor. Pearson. York. Taylor, Brown, Northrop, Jenson, Johnston, McKay. Manny, Kingsoliver. Third row: Caughey. The Thespian Club is a national honorary association for high school thespians, begun here this year. Lights, curtains, microphones, backdrops, stage settings are all responsibilities of the Stage Crew. Dale Brannan, dra- matics coach, is adviser for both Thespians and Stage Crew. First row: Kingsoliver, Jenson, McKay, Nechanicky. Second row: Johnston, Kohli, Barnhart, Northrop, Mr. Brannon. seventy-three e Importance of Being Earnest The fall dramatic pro- duction, The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde, was styled after the old arena-type plays. The audience was seated in a circle around the arena and they watch- ed the comedy as it un- foided in front of them. This new experiment in staging and direction told the story of two friends who used imaginary rela- tives as excuses to escape from distasteful social functions. The stage was set in the Pirates ' Cove and was pre- sented from November 8 to I I , under the direction of Dale Brannon, drama- tics coach. The character parts were double-cast because of the many per- formances. The staff for the fall play was: Lane _ Bill GlHis ' Larry Thrasher Algernon Moncrieff Earl Nechanicky Bob Northrop John Worthing Jerry Mickey Gene McKay Lady Bracknell Janet Airey Hon. Gwendolen Firfax Pat Ryan Cecily Cardew — Beverly Watson Barbara Brown Miss Prism Pat Pearson Rev. Canon Chasuble ... Lynn Sailor Merriman Lane Ruud seventy-four Belvedere The Rogers dramatists presented Belvedere, by Gwen Davenport, for the spring production. The play is the stage version of the motion picture, Sit- ting Pretty, which intro- duced Cli fton Webb as Lynn Belvedere, the genius baby-sitter, who took over this task to get material for a book. Tacey and Harry King, the harassed parents of three, suppiy the children for Belve- dere ' s experiment. The production was pre- sented in Rogers audito- rium, under the direction of Dale Brannon, and ran two days, April 20 and 2 I . This was one of the few plays where freshmen were used in the cast. The cast for Belvedere was: Harry King Lyle Jensen Tacey King Darlene Barnes Mark King Larry Holquist Bobbey King - Bob Peterson Mr. Appleton _ Larry Thrasher Edna Philby Donna McAvoy Lynn Belvedere Bob Northrop Bill Phillup Lynn Sailor Sam Trout Dick Peterson Alice Foster Marilyn York Mrs. Appleton Fay Worthington seventy-five Seated: Morford, fall editor. First row: Clason, B. Reue, Hilsen, Reagan, Langstrom. Second row: Zornes, business manager, Sorenson, Hogberg, Gates, Fisher. The Fall Rogers Record Staff published eight issues of the school news- paper. The purpose of the Record is to record school happenings and spe- cial events. In the spring, such things as dances and banquets are written up by the Spring Record Staff M. E. Stoddard is adviser for the school paper. Staff members: Zornes, spring editor; Magnuson, French. Kirkpatrick, Randall. Fisher, Kamstra, Fay, Reagan, Baker, Elmquist, business manager; Peterson, Rexroad, bookkeeper. seventy-six Staff members: Gloria Keagan, editor; Lois Zornes, Laura Belle Fisher, Betty Reue, Carol Ann Horey, John Morford. Waldo Magnuson, Jim Myers, Bonnie Baker, Delrdre Randal:, Harold Harper, artist; Marion Clason, JoAnn Hilsen. The Treasure Chest Staff works nearly all year taking pictures, iden- tifying them, getting them engraved and writing copy. Such things as covers and orders for annuals are decided by the Treasure Chest Representatives from the home rooms. Both work together to put out the school ' s annual. First row: Grimmett, Langstrom, Johnson, Garrison. Second row: Loomis, Fisher, O Conner. Carr. Third row: McGeath. Cook, Kazmark, Hayes, McKenna, Butts. Fourth row: Hilsen, Reue Airey Zentz, Fischer. Hobbs Fifth row: Brown, Tevlin. Anstis, Robinson. Spangle, Ginnold, Abbey, Elliott. Sixth row: Davies, Reardon. Von Erichsen. Briggle, Wyman. Wilson. Huss, Talbot, Peterson. Harris, Moody. seventy-seven Members are: Traylor, Reichard, Dalton, Shook. Evans Miller, Mock, Jaeobson, Wright . Shoc- n an Taylor Frady. Zu -walt. Cox, Vigil, loveless, Vulcann, Scal-ro. Hartman, Utterburg, Wilson, White, Airey, Zingale, Crumbaker, Harris, Peterson. The Junior Math Club is the mathematics organization for freshmen and sophomores with Alvin Ostness, math teacher, as adviser. Its events are mainly social. The Algebra II contest is the most important activity of the Senior Math Club, composed of upperclassmen. Adviser, W. E. Doolittle. Members are: Thomsen. Harris, Langstrom, Wilson. Domke, Harding, Zornes Hawkins. Brown, Shand Whipps Rexroad, Nelson, McMath, McMann, Remm, Young, Yarber, Covey, Johnson, Fisher, Morford, Elliott? Hobbs, Warren, Reagan, Larson, Lancaster, Berg, Dixon, Jeppeson. seventy-nine Members: Brizendine . Reeck Hawkins, Whipps, Kennedy, Brimble, D. Reue, B. Reue, Lowry, Wright Wlckham, Lemon, Wyman. Pounds. Hayes. Berg, Linden, Blodgett Langstrom, Repp. Fisher, Harris, Larson, Bartanen, Peterson. ' The Spanish Club is one of the two language clubs at Rogers. Mrs. Betty Pence directs the club ' s activities. These clubs promote interest in foreign languages. Both are very active. An annual banquet is one of the chief activities of the French-Latin Club under supervision of Miss LeFevre. .0 Cau?hev r„™ T ' o ( Ml ? e J ' Harvey, Flanagan, Magnuson, Linden, Cole, Johnson Caughey, Cooper, Storch, Zornes, Reagan, McAvoy, Glassely, Matheny, Wilson Robertson, Swinehart, Williams. Heinz, Woodworth, Gillis Kimz eighty First row: Brown, Granlund. Bogart, Wilson, Mrs. Miller, Sjostrum, Vulcano, Hoffard, Penna, Burrill, Fay. Second row: Kiefer, Pruitt, Linden, Pounds, Jeppeson, Harper. Art know-how is gained in the Palette and Brush Club by the students under direction of Mrs. Zola Miller. The club is composed of advanced art students. Social activities are part of the Rogers chapter of the national journalism honorary, Quill and Scroll. M. E. Stoddard advises the group. First row: B. Reue. Clason, Reagan. Morford. Zornes. Second row: Magnuson, Fisher, Langstrom. eighty-one First row: Johannsen, Johnson, Wandler, Chapman, Watts. Second row: Repp, Harris, Brown, Lemon. Third row: Pruitt, Lowry, Adler, Johnson. The Order of Gregg Artists (O. G. A.) is an honorary club for students who are outstanding in shorthand. Practice is given by Mrs. Ethel Van Austene, adviser. Field trips are one of the most interesting activites of the club for advanced science students, the Cosmic Club. E. B. Chrisman is now advising. First row: Zornes, Allen, Elliott, Flanagan, Felts, Morford. Second row: Reagan, Grarnlow, Fagan, Schmidt, Cook, Magnuson. Third row: Fisher, Ince, Harding, Berg, Robertson, Gillis, Olney, Mr. Roestel. eighty-two Seated: Storch, Balinski, Rice, D. Reue, Clark, LaFave, Shand, B. Reue. Standing: Dahm, Bab- cock, Swanson. Miss Larson, Anderson, Pugh, Taylor, McDonald, Mildes, Gramlow, Traylor, Ekman, Dunn, Hiatt, Jeppesen. The Future Homemakers of America (F. H. A.), a national organiza- tion, performs many useful services throughout the year. The girl athletes of the school have their own club, the Girls ' Athletic Association, which promotes girls ' athletics. The activities are advised by Miss Mele. Left to right: Miss Mele, Brimble, Green, Naccarato. Nead, Lorsung. Seiber, Ferguson. eighty-three First row: Totusek, Matheny, Elliott. Elmquist, Mr. Grafious. Second row- Nelson, Randall. Bradshaw, Burkhart, Peterson. Voss. The Speakers ' Bureau is composed of students who are interested in public speaking. They speak at special events and for different groups. De- bates with other schools, climaxed by a debate tournament each year, are the activities of the Debate Club. Arthur Grafious directs both groups. First row: Randall. Totusek. Peterson, Nelson. Second row: Voss, Mr. Grafious. eighty-four Sitting: Covey. Standing: Durgin. Granlund, Randall, Ferguson, Pugh, HUb3 Second row: Gillis, Ewing, Hobbs. McArthur, Yoi;ng, Olsen. The DK History Club, which was begun this year, made, as one of its projects, a Korean Service Flag for rhe school. Mrs. Iva Morrison directs the club activities as adviser. They also have an annual banquet in which members of the history classes are also invited. • ■£? r Due to the loss of the Three C ' s cut our only alternative is to tell a bit about the club. The club was newly started this fall under the advisership of Ray Roestel. The purpose of the club is to promote cleaner speech, cleaner living and cleaner thinking at school. The students have their meetings at the school and also in the homes of the members. They have parties and other social functions but also have their serious meetings, when they discuss the prob- lems in the school. The members of this club are: Henricksen, Babcock, San- deno, Adler, Hutchinson, Mowat, Brother, Irvine, Martin, McLean, Shand, Roberts, Gilmore, Dahlgren, Williams, Bollinger, Harris, Haines, Swinehart, Zumwalt, Loveless, Decker, Mock, Brother, Elmore. eighty-five First row: Manny, Cook, Hallstein, Weathers, Brizendine, Smith, Lund, Henrickson, Williams, Cox, Maine, Rand. Second row: Dahlgren, Watkins, Gramlow, Ostendorf, Walker, Warren, Larson, Hutchinson, Dixon. Third row: Mr. Thomas, Haas, Decker, Gillis, Kifer. The advanced instrumental students and their adviser, William Thomas, make up the Lyre Club. They learn more about and practice music in this club. Skiing trips and knowledge of skiing are the aims of members of the Ski Club, students interested in skiing. Their ski coach is Carl Ellingsen. First row: Bergevin, Olson, Downing, Ruud. Second row: Airey, Paulson. eighty-six First row: Marks, Larsen, Kazmark, Davis. Donais, Murphy, Decker. Moody. Second row: Henderson, Ruud. Cook. Lydig, Weise, Grieb, Harris. Third row: Davis. Brown, Sims, Astelford, Haffner, Chappell. Robertson, Edmonds. The Rogers R Club is made up of boys who have earned their letters in football, basketball, baseball or other sports. To keep order at the games is the duty of the Athletic Patrol, a Boys ' Federation committee. It is their responsibility to have seats available for Pirettes and cheerleaders at games. First row: Fisher, Haffner, Hofstedt. Second row: Hogberg. Lydig, Larsen, Hilby, Hobbs. Third row: Lizer, Harrison, Green. Grieb. Derrick. eighty-seven TOP — First row: Gilmore, Matheny, Loomis, Snyder, Morton, Ince, Fallgren. Cole, Bicha. Second row: Orr, Sorenson. Granlund, Durgin, Warford. Graebner, Thirkill, Sabo, Shand. Third row: Robinson. Ferguson, Pugh, Peterson, Hansen. Fourth row: Dalton, Beach, Barnes, Santora, Pruitt, Lobe, Ackerman, Harding, SJostrom, Seiber. MIDDLE: Scholars Study Scholarships. BOTTOM— First row: Merrick, Pearson, Phillips. LaFave, Kennedy. Nechanicky, Wilson. Second row: Stecks, J. Wiberg. Kingery, Baump, Paulsson, Long, L Wiberg. The Study Hall Checkers have the responsibility of taking roll in the study halls. These girls receive Girls ' League points for their work. They also help the study hall teacher in her work. The same job is done in the library by the Library Checkers. They also check out books to the students. eighty-eight The school has many helpers that help keep order and give aid to the teachers. These helpers are in the form of committees. The Girls ' League, Boys ' Fed. and Student Council all appoint committee heads for each se- mester. The Girls ' League has committees like bulletin board, girls who sell stamps and kleenex, color day, courtesy, usherettes, and many others. Boys ' Fed. has the Dads ' Nite committee, B. F. con committee and others. The Stu- dent Council appoints committees for Booster and Betterment, elections and cafeteria and dance. One committee that works for the good of the school, yet isn ' t chosen by any of the leading groups, is the Locker Com- mittee. These workers check the lockers out at the beginning of the year and see that they are kept straight throughout the year. They also check each lock every period to see that the students keep their lockers locked. If they find one unlocked they put a red lock on it and the student must pay 25c to have it taken off. Those on the Locker committee this year are: Balinski, Linden, Aronson, Nelson, Spafford, McKay, Shook, S. Clark, Hayes, Hol- quist, Sorenson, C. Clark, Ryner, Osborn, Lemon, Stall, Matheny. •d £ ? For Girls ' League points the girl Gym Office Workers do jobs for the gym teachers. They check the dressing rooms after the girls dress for gym to see that no purses are left out, check to see that the girls take showers, and check the towels in and out before and after class. First row: Cochran. Marchioro, O ' Connor. Wandler, Taylor. Second row: Tunison. Nelson. Howell. O ' Neil, Thirkill, Chapman. Third row: Mast, Yden, War£ord, Mastis. Black, Rouse, Whipps, Zimbrick. eighty-nine First row: Naccaroto, Marchioro, Cochran, Covey. Reichard, Williams. Second row: Scalero Storch Beach, Fallgren, Barnes, Holt, White. Third row: Lowry, Johnson. Ames, McLean Fisher Inset: Students count votes. Standing: Harper. Left to riant: Bauer, Wilcox, Russell, Kirkpatrick, Brandt, Mr. Chrisman. The Nurses ' and Advisers ' Office Workers take care of sick girls, run errands and such things for the nurse and girls ' adviser. The same kind of duties are performed by the Boys ' Federation Office Workers. They also do office work for the advisers, Mr. Chrisman and Mrs. Black. ninety First row: Cooper, Borden. OConner, Sturmer. Seconc I row: Slawter, Hilby Moore s Bicha R ™j. rd row: Worthington, Elmore, Lund, Harding. Fourth row: Ryan, Hatcher, Cox, Berg, Bradley, Robertson. The Red Cross Representative elected by students in each home room handles the filling of the Red Cross boxes. Each period of the day, a girl is at the bookroom window to sell supplies. She is one of the busy Bookroom Workers who helps Mrs. Margaret Long in her many duties as their adviser. First row: D. Reue, Lowry, Yancer, Thompson, B. Reue. Second row; McGeath, McCarty, Mrs. Long, Weathers, Anderson. ninety-one The Business Office Workers take in money and keep books for the various school organizations that do business. Mr. Coburn directs the work of the busy girls. Sorting and filing cards and looking up students are some of the jobs of the Main Office Workers. They also keep attendance records. ninety-two Woodwick, Shook, McMann, Wickham, Edwall, Osborn, Gearheart. The Movie Room Workers run motion picture machines when classes have movies and keep records of movies to be shown. They are selected by E. T. Becher, history teacher. Every period, there are students in the halls who check on students out of class. These are the Hall Patrol, who give tickets. Firit row: Edmonds. F. Hanson. Marks. Anderson, Robertson, Harvey, Kennedy. Second row: R. Davis, Murphy. Brown. Kazmark, Hilby. G. Davis, Hall. Davey, Sweetland. H. Hanson. Third row: Woodworth. Grieb, Weise. Gates, Jollv. Williams, Frye, Haffner. Harris. Fourth row: Schroeder. Remm, Schell, Tor- rence, Devine. Ruud, Bush, Spangle. Conrad, Kirwin. Fifth row: Haynes. Scalero, Weber, Rhoads, Messer, Blodgett, Klassen, Paulsen, Sargent. Avery, Grothe, Tracy, Raschka, Astelford. ninety-three Fint row: Brandt, Anthony, Hettinger. T ancaster, Hagseth, McMath, Warren, Russell. S ' cond row: Sann-s, Shontell, Schmidt, Hall, Grieb, Elliott. Young, Abev. First row: Kinzel, Karlson, Martello, McKenzie. Second row: Hobbs. Wilcox, Bradley, Owen, Moms. Third row: Hanley, Harper, McArthur, McMath, Young. The Fire Squad functions during fire drills. Its members see that the building is cleared of people in a minimum amount of time. During cons, students are kept quiet and in order in the auditorium by the ASB Conduc- iors. They are a committee of the student council, chosen each semester. ninety-four Knapp, Dasbach, DeChenne, Wodell, Hull, Minehart. The Janitors have the job of keeping the building and grounds clean and keeping the rooms warm. They repair desks and are the general workhorses around school. Cooking and serving the food for the students and teachers in the cafeteria is done by the Cooks. They also cook special dinners. Mary Gross, Mrs. Katherine Coleman, Helen Brandt, Elizabeth Dean, Ellen Clough, mgr. ninety-five Top left: Vote Today! Top right: Nuts . . . Bottom left: Color Day department. Bottom right: Shoe shine, anyone? Bottom: Dance demons. ninety-six School Day . . . 8:30 a. m. +o 3:00 p. m. ninety-seven 8:30 a. m. to 3:00 p. m. Top left: Woof. Bottom left: If the shoe fits ninety -eight Top right: Platter chatter. Middle right: We ' re off! Bottom right: YOU did it! School Day . . . 8:30 a. m,4o 3:00 p. m. Bottom left, The Pirate crew. Top right, They did it again! Bottom, Music, maestro, please! Bottom right, Head of the class. ninety-nine The Pirates meet the LC Tigers in the Mud Bowl. Here ' s the scoring punch against NC. one hundred Calendar Portrays Active Year September 6 School Started 15 Merry-Go-Round 19 Freshman Open House 20 First Pep Con 21 Rogers vs. N. C. (football) 29 Rogers vs. L. C. (football) October 5 Rogers vs. Gonzaga (football) 13 Rogers vs. N. C. (football) I 6 Shrine Game 17 P.-T. A. Open House 18 After-School Mixer 20 Rogers vs. L. C. (football) 23 Report Cards 24 Blind Con 27 Rogers vs. Gonzaga (football) 28 Halloween Dance 3 I Victory Con November 3 Student Elections 6-1 I Fall Play The Importance of Being Earnest 9 Armistice Day Con 1 I Armistice Day Rogers vs. Great Falls (football) 17 P.-T. A. Carnival 18 Sadie Hawkins ' Dance 23 Rogers vs. Roosevelt at Seattle (state football) 23-24 Thanksgiving Vacation 29 Interschool Relations Con December I Pirette Dance Bird Con 4 Report Cards 13 Dad-and-Daughter Banquet 18 National Honor Society Con 20 Christmas Concert 2 I Christmas Dance 22 Christmas Vacation January 5 Rogers vs. L. C. (basketball) 8 First Aid Starts 1 0 Frosh Con !3 Cinderella Performance I 7 Winter Concert 19 All-City Prom Senior Dress-Up Day 20 Cinderella Performance 21 Baccalaureate 22 Move-Up Con Graduation Senior Breakfast 26 Semester Grades Rogers vs. W. V. (basketball) 27 Cinderella Performance February 2 Rogers vs. Gonzaga (basketball) 9 Rogers vs. L. C. (basketball) 16 Cinderella Performance at Colfax 19 School Mixer 21 Installation Con 23 Rogers vs. N. C. (basketball) MARCH ■ l Cinderella at Rogers t Kogers vs. vv. v. [DasKeToaiij 7 Rogers vs. Gonzaga (basketball) i a Report Cards 20 P.-T. A. Open House 22 Spring Concert 24 Easter Dance 29 Dads ' Night 30 Rogers vs. Lewiston (basketball) April 4-6 bpring Vacation (T)ii£a£in f An 14 Track Meet at Yakima 18 ' Belvedere Introduction Con 20-21 Spring Play, Belvedere 30 Report Cards May 1 Rogers vs. L. C. (baseball) 3 Introduction Con 4 Rogers vs. L. C. (track) 8 Rogers vs. N. C. (baseball) 10 Rogers vs. Gonzaga (baseball) 1 1 All-City Track Meet 15 Rogers vs. L. C. (baseball) 16 Mothers ' Tea 22 Rogers vs. N. C. (baseball) 24 Rogers vs. Gonzaga (baseball) 26 Senior Prom 30 Memorial Day 31 Senior Con June 1 Senior Grades 3 Baccalaureate 4 Senior Breakfast Move-Up Con Commencement 8 Summer Vacation Begins one hundred one Sportsmanship, fair play, these are American ideals. They are also factors that contribute to success and happiness. The student who doesn ' t play fair is never liked or respected and doesn ' t usually get far in high school or in business. The two-faced girl or boy is likely to be one of the loneliest. In sports, the student has to play by the rules. This teaches him to play by the rule in everyday life as well, for when he violates a baseball rule, for example, he is very likely to get a penalty for his team or even be thrown out of the game. This teaches a healthy respect for the rules and thus develops sportsmanship. This is good training for other things. The habits formed in sports carry over to other work and the fair play learned is used. All boys and girls must take part in games. Not all boys and girls learn fair play, but those who are intelligent and wish to be successful, Sports teach this lesson in the best way. Fair play is learned easily. learn the lesson well. Sports open the door to sportsmanship. Sports are the Key to Sportsmanship Key u Sportsmanship Sports Editors: CAROL ANN HOREY BETTY REUE The Varsity Football Team, the most outstanding in the city, contended for the one hundred four mythical state championship at the tourney held in Seattle on Thanksgiving day. one hundred five FOOTBALL SCORES Non-League League Merry-Go Round Rogers . . 7 North Central . 7 Rogers . .13 North Central . 7 Rogers . 30 Lewis Clark 7 Rogers . 6 Lewis Clark 7 Rogers . 1 3 Gonzaga . . 7 Rogers . 21 Kennewick . 14 Rogers . . 20 North Central . 0 Rogers 6 Great Falls . 6 Rogers . . 27 Lewis Clark 7 Rogers . . . 12 Seattle . . . 18 Rogers . . 20 Gonzaga . . 20 The Pirate football team ' s season scores show how hard and how well the team fought for Rogers this season. The scores are also an indication of the excellent staff of coaches the school has. Coach Fred Brown, head coach, was called to active duty in the Navy midway in the season. Athletic Director Carl Ellingsen finished the season as head coach. Carl Ellingsen, J. M. Stover, Harold Thompson, one hundred seven High steppers in action during half-time. Coach Brown watches his champs for the last time. First row: O ' Leary, Remm, Torrence, Martin, Miner, Benway. Second row: O ' Brian, Simpson, Vigil. Fisher, Miller, Fagen, Davies. Third row: Coach Mabbot, Elvigan, Mays, Bonnett, Nelson, Hobbs, Skarcet, Zumwalt, Zentz, Niedhardt, Gest, Coach Roestel. The B Squad Football Team is the training grounds for the varsity play- ers. Here, boys learn the techniques of football that they will need to be- come varsity players. Boys begin to learn the importance of team play and sporlsmanchip on the Freshman Team. This is the beginning for the later stars. First row: Carlton, Stone, Schaffer, Taylor, Hogen, Russell, Peckheni, Johnson. Second row: Carroll, Pitts, Moon, Vigil, Talbot, Kenworthy, Ward, Oberg, Woodward. Third row: Coach Lipscomb, Morrison, Enright, Dieziger, State, Potts, Peterson, Coults, Hinton, Coach Sabo. one hundred nine A Pirate blocker leaves his Marks on the Gonzaga team. Yea ! ! A touchdown. one hundred ten Paulsen scores again; Clark snags a pass. Ever faithful managers . . . on the 50-yard line. one hundred eleven one hundred twelve First row: Robertson, Sims, Paul sen, Lydig, Haffner. Second row Adams, Hofstedt, Woodworth Third row: Astleford, Davis Donais, Chappel. The A Basketball Team saw action in league play under the leadership of the basketball coaches. r COACH LIPSCOMB one hundred thirteen Left: Fallgren. Miller, Mclnally, Guest. Center: Ellingsen, Torrence. Right: Ostness, Joireman, Carrol, McGoogan. As in football, the B Squad in basketball serves to get boys used to playing ball before spectators. The same realistic atmosphere is carried out in Freshman team play to give the boys more experience. These boys for both squads are also learning more about the importance of teamwork. First row: Nelson, Schaeffer, Kenworthy, Oberg, Ward. Russell. Second row: Peckham, Sannes, Goslene. Stone, Peterson. Third row: Morgan, Jeppesen, Vigil, Kelling, Woodworth, Booth, Mitchell. Fourth row: Nelson, manager; Jorgenson, Glnnold, Aguirre, Van Patten, Coach Thompson. Fifth row: Deiziger, Gursky, Hussy, Apperson. one hundred fourteen CONFERENCE GAMES Rogers 41 January 5 .... Lewis and Clark 64 Rogers 35 January 19 .... North Central 46 Rogers 52 January 26 West Valley 34 Rogers 46 February 2 Gonzaga4l Rogers 39 February 9 .... Lewis and Clark 40 Rogers 51 February 23 ... . North Central 56 Rogers 47 March 2 West Valley 46 Rogers 38 March 7 Gonzaga 52 The Basketball Scores can only show how one team performed against other teams. Scores can not give a picture of the team ' s morale, spirit, and playing ability. These award winners always played their very best for Rogers. FOOTBALL AWARD WINNERS Bob Marks, J. B. Edmonds, Del Bohnet, Melvin Clark, Emerson Harvey, Art Schoening, Russell Grieb, Earl Kazmark, Al Paulsen, Kenneth Domke, Merle Murphy, Gary Bergevin, Bill Morrison, Gary Davis, Fred Miller, Victor Bradley, Roger Woodworth, Ray Davis, David Torrence, Dick Astleford, Jerry Sims, Don Gunning, Charles Mantello, Bill Anderson, Pat Downing, David Monnastes, Jerry Weise, Jim Myers. BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS Norman Chappell, Jack Haffner, Roily Hofstedt, Bob Robertson, Marvin Adams, Gary Davis, Dean Lydig, Alvin Paulsen, Jerry Sims, Roger Wood- worth. one hundred fifteen Top It ' s a bird, it ' s a plane, no, it ' s Paulsen. Bottom Sims snatches rebound. Top Up, over, and in. Bottom Timber ! one hundred sixteen one hundred seventeen one hundred eighteen one hundred nineteen Top: Stover. Second row: McKenney, Cook. Third row: Grieb. Murphy. Fourth row: F. Miller. Brown. Nelson, Armitage. Mosher. J. Miller. The Varsity Baseball Team played br.H with other schools during the spring sports season. At the first game of the year, with Lewis and Clark, the Spring Sports Queen was crowned and she threw the first ball out to start the season. one hundred twenty The baseball team, under the coaching of Joe Stover, played in a round robin match with the other city high schools — Gonzaga, Lewis and Clark and North Central. They played three times with each school to determine who would cop the 1951 Baseball crown. The Rogers squad learned the value of having a team and not depending upon one or two players to carry them through a victorious season. Although they lost several games, l k they had fun and their feeling of fair play and good sportsman- Ik ship kept their spirits up and they played every game to win. Top — Down: Davis, Amsden, Haffner. Right: Harrison. Absent: Bohnet. one hundred twenty-one First row: Davies, Miller, Euingsen, Morgan, Frye, Lewis. Second row: Dahl, Mantello, Barnes, Martello, Kaggin. Conrad, Armitage. Third row: Akins, Adams, Cruzcn. Craig, Sweet, Swinehart, Thompson. Baseball, too, has its B Squad. The B Squad practices at the same time as the varsity team. Many of its players will be on the varsity next year, if they show the proper results. The Freshman Team is the place where the good and bad players are weeded out. If they show the proper interest in the game, they will probably be on the B Squad the next year. Fir t row: Moon, Gosline, Schaffer, Ward, Kenworthy, Oberg, Russell, Stone, Second row: Sleizer, Atkins, Mitchell, Gilbertson. Otis, Thomason, Miller, Sannes, Nelson, Hussey. Qne hundred twenty-two BASEBALL SCORES Rogers 0 April 19 Lewis and Clark 4 Rogers 9 April 24 North Central 2 Rogers 0 April 26 Goniaga 7 Rogers I May I Lewis and Clark 2 Rogers 2 May 8 North Central 6 Rogers 6 May 10 Gonzaga 5 These are the Baseball Scores for this spring as far as May 10. These scores show how the team compared against the other city schools. They play each school three times and this was the first round in the round-robin games. The Varsity Baseball Team is composed of boys who show their abil- ity to come through when needed and are strong in sportsmanship. one hundred twenty three one hundred twenty-four one hundred twenty-jive one hundred twenty-six the shot, high jump, broad jump, and run races. one hundred twenty-seven INTERCLASS TRACK RESULTS Event Winner Year % Mile J. Tracy Senior High Jump McMann Junior Broad Jump Geile Sophomore High Hurdles ....Nesbitt Junior Low Hurdles Mock Sophomore 75- Yard Dash Geile Sophomore 330- Yard Dash Geile Sophomore 660- Yard Run J. Tracy Senior Pole Vault Trad Sophomore Shot-Put Weise Senior Relay Juniors Junior The boys in the different classes enter into a yearly Interclass Track Meet to see which class has the best athletes. Long, hard runs over country that can be hilly, rough, straight or smooth is the lot of the boys on the Cross- country team. This is one of the main fall track events. First row: Maddocks. Louis, Weber, Masters, Davis. Second row: Kohli, Dombroski, DeMers, Moon, Meese. Third row: Coach Elsensohn, McMann, Stintzi, Geile, L. Tracy, Magnuson. one hundred twenty-eight GOLF TEAM — Front row: Woodworth, Cummings, Dolan. Second row: Walker, Hilby, Lenca-tsr, Jeppesen. The Boys ' Golf Team practices and plays matches with other golfers on local municipal links. The team competes against the teams of the other city schools. The Boys ' Tennis Team is one of the best in the city. Under the coaching of LaVerne Mabbott, the boys learn to play better tennis. TENNIS TEAM — Front row: Ostnoss, Remm, Chappell. Bauer. Decker, Harris. Second row: Mabbott, Paulson, Reeck, Adams, McDaniels, Wienrick. Third row: Coach Mabbott, Havercro-t. Baines. Elmore, Hass, Felts. , one hundred twenty-nine one hundred thirty Left to right: Robinson, Nelson, Penna, Malloy, Strong, Lemon, Brown, Evans, Gilniore. Johann, Lee, Mackey, Horey. The Rogers Majorettes strut in parades. Marching and twirling, they perform in stunts with the Pirette unit. Flags fly in the stunts and parades, too. These are wielded by the Flags, another part of the Pirettes, coached by Miss Mildred Ryan and Miss Eleanor Mele. Left to right: Hawkins, Aaronson, Blancher, Traylor. (kneeling) Wandler, Taylor, Jarbeau, Pounds. one hundred thirty-one Left to right: Olson, Cochran, Mickey. The Cheerleaders lead both songs and yells to help build up the school pep. They perform at games, on the line in fair weather and foul. These Pepsters are the chief factor in the tradition of Rogers ' school spirit. They sell tickets to the games and promote the many sports events. First row: Borden, Gearheart, Marchioro. Second row: Tunison, Cooper, Kunz, Nelson. one hundred thirty-two Girls ' Athletic Awards Girls also earn rewards for participating in sports. Some earn letters, others ribbons, all earned their right to their athletic awards. Members of the Pirette unit also receive awards. The Majorettes and Flags are awarded the emblems they wore during the year. The marchers receive chinille emblems. The outstanding majorette, marcher, and flag twirler receive a pin. The school ' s song and cheerleaders each receive a pin for their service to the school. The winning basketball intramural team now gets their team ' s name on a cup. This cup was given to the Girls ' P. E. department by the P.-T. A. this year. Another trophy awarded this year was the Softball plaque, the girls on the winning team get ribbons and the name of the team is engraved on the plaque. Tennis offers many opportunities to girls. Girls on the tennis team can earn letters, and according to Miss Mele, the qualifications have changed. It no longer depends upon how many games the girl wins, but according to how faithfully she practices, her tennis matches and her improvement dur- ing the tennis season. The Girls ' Tennis Team is equal to that of the Boys ' Tennis Team as they also practice hard for the city competition. The girls turn out sixth period and after school. The city matches held in Spokane, include Lewis and Clark, North Central, and West Valley. The girls ' showing in these matches deter- mine partly if they receive a tennis letter. First row: Coursey, Hutcheson, D. Reue, Bump, Crosby, Lorsung, Shand, Lund, Baker, Hansen. Second row: Miss Ryan. Whipps, Fay, Santora, Warford, Yden, Mahoney, Rexroad, Vandergoog, Uttke, Green. one hundred thirty-three Girls Athletics Boys and girls at Rogers who are in terested in horse- back riding have the chance to practice the hobby through school gym classes and after school on scheduled days at the Wellesley Riding Stables. Girls as well as boys can earn basketball team trophies now, thanks to the Rogers P.-T. A. which donated two trophies this year for girls intramural sports. Much valuable playing experience is gained in regular gym classes, too. Here girls learn the fundamentals of sports such as basketball so that they can play on teams. one hundred thirty-four Girls in beginning gym classes are taught how to play many different games. In the fall, volleyball is of prime importance. Knowledge of the rules as well as skill in playing are stressed. Practice games with classmates and real competitive games with other schools promote enthusiasm and fair play. The excitement of playing is evident from the tense looks on the girls ' faces and their shouts to teammates. Basketball is the game in the winter along with badminton. The girls form teams to play not only other teams in the city but other towns as well. one hundred thirty-five Girls Athletics After the winter sports of basketball and volleyball, badminton and swimming, come the spring sports. Girls ' tennis and Softball lead the field. Te nnis is one of the regular spring and fall girls ' sports. The girls play the different city schools and also West Valley and Central Valley. Softball is the other major spring sport. The girls turn out after school and practice for their coming spring matches. They play the other schools including the junior high. Some times they also play teams from different cities and out of state. one hundred thirty-six In the golden sunset of the Westland, In each contest we ' ll uphold thee, None her splendor to deny, Lift thy banner to the sky. Staunch and noble stands our Alma Mater. Laud and honor to our Alma Mater, We love thee, Rogers High! We sing of Rogers High. Among the PAGES We find the memories of pleasant associations with the many business houses who have supported us, and we them. Fishing Tackle Hunting Supplies Evinrude Motors Odegard ' N. 5218 Market IBIS SIP GL. 9257 OUR BUSINESS IS TO HELP YOUR BUSINESS . . . Let us serve your office with effi- cient OFFICE SUPPLIES, PRINT- ING and TYPEWRITER and ADD- ING MACHINE Tune-up SER- VICE. Shaw Borden Company Stationers Office Outfiters Printers W. 325-7 Riverside MA. 3361 W. 326-8 Sprague | I BURCHETT STUDIO «s4ta£e 4 of ine. iPortraiti. S. 13 Howard MA. 2831 one hundred forty PHOTOGRAPHS -a -3 DORIAN STUDIO Spokane ' s Leading Siudio « jj. 9 IFi A a Personnel of the Best in Camera Artists, Colorist and Retouchers, DOR AN mil tfiVe 3 oi Portraits that You and Your Friends will truly Admire. 436 Peyton Building MA - 6815 one hundred forty-one GRADUATION SUITS AT BROOKS All Sizes Regulars, Shorts ff V and Longs, Single or Double-breasted Models. h 49 50 Others 39.50 to 75.00 J SHOE SHOES FOR MEN Department Store lor Men Main Howard Spokane J 1 (Best Wi$ cs from M M JEWELERS Famous for Diamonds and Watches Since 1907 Registered Perfect Diamonds America ' s Finest Watches Convenient Credit Terms West 807 Riverside one hundred forty-tivo DENSOW ' S ELECTRIC • Sporting Goods • Hardware LOCATION • S. 301 I Grand Rl. 7522 • N. 5101 Market GL 7919 • W. 815 Garland BR. 2681 • 3016 Queen GL. 8844 • 2609 N. W. Blvd FA.4I7I STANLEY DENSOW BUSINESS TRAINING to meet today ' s needs in business Busines s is one of the largest fields of employment. Prepare yourself to enter this field by enrolling at Kinman Business University. Courses Offered — Business Administration Accounting and CP. A. Coaching Private Secretarial Secretarial Stenographic Office Machines Pre-College Bookkeeping Comptometer Business and Salesmanship Short intensive com ' l course for high school com ' l grads FREE LIFETIME EMPLOYMENT DEPARTMENT Enroll any Monday Write or phone MAin 1131 for free Outline of Courses KINMAN BUSINESS UNIVERSITY South 110 Howard Street Spokane, Washington one hundred forty-three s E N I O R S Congratulations! from ATHOW STUDIO 416 Fern well Bldg. RI. 5482 This ad is worthless, without the good will of the students, which is worth $1,000,000 For Your Hats and Furnishings see HAT FREEMAN ' S N. 117 Post Street MA. 2795 DODSON ' S 517 RIVERSIDE AVENUE FINE JEWELERS FOR 64 YEARS Diamond Merchants The World ' s Finest Watches at Standard Prices ELGIN, GRUEN, HAMILTON and GIRARD PERRIGEAUX WATCHES one hundred forty-four E Small enough to be friendly, large enough to be good, E. W. C. E. offers thoroughly practical courses leading to the degrees of bachelor of arts, bachelor of arts in edu- cation, master in education. 11 The beautiful campus in Cheney, center of much stu- dent activity the year ' round, is within a few minutes ' drive or bus ride from Spokane. Write today for information. E Eastern Washington College of Education Where Theory and Practice Meet! one hundred forty-five ' Thanh You 9 Seniors It has been a pleasure serving you. We will look forward to photographing you again on the next important occasion FOR Personality Portraits Always Choose The CHRISTIAN STUDIO N. 104 Howard St. MA. 1025 CORRECT COLLEGE CLOTHES When you are ready Reddy says, Let ' s Go FORWARD . . . the American Way! Your friends at the Washington Water Power Company wish to congratulate you on your graduation . . . and to welcome you to the larger world of service which lies ahead for all Americans! Whether you continue your studies or enter fields of business, industry, agricul- ture, or home-making, the American en- terprise way of life offers you unlimited opportunities for both self-advancemsnt and service to others! THE WASHINGTON WATER POWER COMPANY Repair Service for All Sports Guns Reels Rods Athletic Supplies MORLAN ' S OUTDOOR SPORTING GOODS W. 825 Main MA. 7751 Compliments of FONK ' S 5c to $1.00 Store Headquarters for School Supplies N. 5207 MARKET STREET one hundred forty-six So that you need not guess! We maintain the finest equipment and an experienced staff of artists, photog- raphers and engravers so that our patrons need leave nothing to chance. 402 CHRONICLE BLDG. SPOKANE one hundred forty-seven Sartori Congratulates the Graduates of 1951 May Your Fortune Always Be in Proportion to the Standard of Your Service ♦ SARTORI Master Craftsmen in Jewelry N . 10 Wall IGA LIBERTY MARKET and GROCERY Corner of Market and Diamond Liberty Means Low Prices and Low Prices Mean Liberty The Best Quality Groceries, Meats, Fruits and Vegetables one hundred forty-eight Compliments of Diamond Cash Grocery Meats and Groceries 38 Years in Business Serving Hillyard E. 2902 Diamond GL. 1664 George Elmer Brown INSURANCES LAWYER NOTARY PUBLIC N. 5202 Market Street Spokane i - There is Always A Better Show at the Evergreen Theaters at DHF HILLYARD MOTORS Home of the Henry J ' N. 4726 Market Congratulation! HILLYARD FURNITURE CO. Free Parking Terms N. 5118 Market Spokane CONGRATULATIONS Class of ' 51 Carnation Company Fresh Milk and Ice Cream W. 411 Cataldo EM. 1581 VERN ' S SHELL SERVICE Stop at Vern ' s for Speedy Service The Kind of Service You ' ll Enjoy N. 4904 Market Hillyard For a Good Meal and Quick Service It ' s FRENCHIE CAFE N. 5012 Market GL. 0017 FRED ' S Seed and Work Clothes N 5315 and 5317 Market GL. 1018 ERIE DAIRY Farm Fresh Dairy Products N. 5501 Market GL. 2311 SANDBERG MOTORS Parts and Repairs N. 5609 Market GL. 5919 one hundred forty-nine STOP!!! and get it easily at BLODGETT ' S N. 461 7 Nevada HU.459I 7 r- ERICKSON ' S FIRESTONE PRODUCTS Home and Auto Supplies N. 5217 Market GL. 1669 Congratulations from Spokanite Cleaners N. 5126 Market S E PLUMBING Heating and Appliances - 1576 N. 5215 Market St. Best of Luck to All of You SPROUSE-REITZ and CO. N. 5009 Market School Supplies, Notions, Toilet Goods, Greeting Cards, etc. HENNESSEY FUNERAL HOME We serve every Faith, Creed and Fraternity N. 2203 Division BR. 1010 Bus McDonald Norm Ayers Authorized Dealers WESTERN AUTO STORE N. 5212 Crestline HU. 3470 CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF ' 51 H Arden Farms Co. W. 729 Mallon Buy Everything You Need From Treasure Chest Advertisers one hundred fifty Your Swift Entrance Into the Business World Is Through the KELSEY-BAIRD SECRETARIAL SCHOOL . . . WHY? 1 . PERSONAL ATTENTION— thus assuring you of the fastest progress possible. Your rapid advancement here means real money saved in tuition and supplies. 2. UNIVERSITY TRAIN ED TEACHERS— to give you the advantage of thorough instruction. 3. UP-TO-DATE EQUIPMENT— to train you on the newest machines to fit yourself into the modern business offices. 4. EMPLOYMENT SERVICE— to place you in a good position that you have been trained to fill capably. Kelsey-Baird Secretarial School BUTTON BUILDING PHONE MAIN 6 one hundred fifty-one OPTOMETRISTS 1 J. J. Davey, O. D. N. 4801 Market St. V. P. Ellis, O. D. GLenwood 5172 WE SPECIALIZE IN PERMANENTS Also Have Blouse Bar LEE ' S BEAUTY SALON N.4821 Market GL. 5183 Headquarters for Genuine LANE CEDAR CHESTS Pratt Furniture Co. N. 215 Post St. RI. 6119 HOLQUIST ' S SHOE STORE Is Featuring the Latest Styles in Men ' s, Ladies ' , Teen-Ager ' s and Children ' s Shoes E. 3009 Diamond GL. 9477 Everything to Eat And Wear at The LeRoi N. 5117-21 Market GL. 2718 Dry Goods Groceries and Meats Hillyard Texaco Service Thos. E. Jewell N. 4808 Market GL. 9071 Peters and Sons Flowers for All Occasions In Hillyard MA. 4151 N. 4702 Market Drive to Hillyard and Save MADREN BROS. Studebaker New and Used Cars and Trucks N. 5303 Market GL. 1627 Congratulations Class of ' 51 Market Street Feed Store John Wergeland N. 5711 Market St. GL 3500 one hundred fifty-two


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Rogers High School - Treasure Chest Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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Rogers High School - Treasure Chest Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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Rogers High School - Treasure Chest Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

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Rogers High School - Treasure Chest Yearbook (Spokane, WA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

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