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Page 30 text:
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FOOTBALL ln spite of the fact that our Teddies won but two of their games, the season as a whole was a great success. ln fact this season helped cure our financial difficulties as they have never been cured before. Too much praise cannot be given to every man on the squad, from the captain to the last sub. Although the latter had not much chance to win fame on the field, they were the lads who made the first team possible, and are the ones to whom we look for victory next year. While on the subject of praise, we must save plenty for Coaches York and Garber. Coach York is to be commended for the results he secured from green material. Coach Garber is the gentleman who took what was left, called them the fighting thirds, and walked off with the unofficial city championship of the junior division. The Rough Riders received a tough break at the first of the season when Stanley Second Story Anderson, who showed promise of becoming an all-star, met with an accident that crippled him for the remainder of the football year. The team was built entirely around our triple-threat artist, Joe Gray. As Joe per- formed, so did the team perform. Proof of this is the fact that Joe was awarded the Zell Bros. trophy for being the most valuable man to his team in the city and the fact that he also landed a berth on each of the city all-star teams in the capacity of quarter- back and captain. ' The highlights of the Teddy season were: first, our brilliant 13 to O victory over Benson, second, our 65-yard last-minute touchdown march to give us a 7 to O victory against Franklin, and third, our game with Commerce, in which we went down to a glorious defeat by a score of TO to 7. This game is said to have been one of the toughest, hardest-fought, high school battles ever to be played on the Stadium field. Following is a list of the games played and the seasons scores: Roosevelt Vancouver. Roosevelt St. Helens. Roosevelt Lincoln. . . Roosevelt Benson. . . Roosevelt, .. . Grant. . .. Roosevelt Franklin. . . Roosevelt Commerce. Roosevelt Jefferson. . Roosevelt Washington l'ii,i1i' 'l'1i'mly-uiglit
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Page 29 text:
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SECOND TERM President ...,.,...,....., Vice-President ........... Secretary .....,.. .... Live Wires .........,,... Adams, Edward Adams, Eugene Baumgartner, Helen Beecroft, Maxine Bilyeu La Verne Birdsall, Alice Bo art, lrene Bolln, Bill Bolin, Clarence Candler, Roselyn Cole, William Chambers, Jack Clark, Naomi Clark, Ruby Cole, Iva Cunningham, Chester Dean, Alan Denfeld, Marion Dominick, Mara Lee Dominick, Marjorie Eakin, Dorothy Eakin, Robert Earl, Doris Eberman,Willis Erickson, Edna Frazier, Wesle Freeman, Gorcllon Gilliam, Mildred Grimm, Marion Graham, Violet Hair, William Hansen, Paul Helvogt, William Hughes, Velma lnman, Beatrice Johansen, Margaret Jetfrey, Mary Jay, Jean Ketchum, Donald Le Gall, Ray Lehman, Naoma Loar, Clyde McRae, Florence Madsen, Bonita Wanda Poynor .Doris Earl, Betty Jane Va Paul Hansen Donald Sloan Melton, Woodrow Merrill, James Michel, Roy Miller, Billy Monroe, Alfred Megard, Evelyn Morgan, Margaret Moser, Olive Na Smythe, Perry Na el, Alverta Nellson, Charles Nicoll, William Olsen, Norma Parsons, Blanche Peck, Mary Jane Porter, Hosea Poynor, Wanda Pryor, Cornelia Rolf Archie Robbins, Marcella Saltus, June FIRST TERM President ....,..,.....,.. Ralph Johns Vice-President ........... Bill Parry Secretary ........ ..... F rances Esson Live Wires ..,.... ..... J ames Lemaick, Fredricka Griswold, Ackley, Edwin Agnew, June Beatty, Margaret Beecroft, Dorothy Bell, Bernard Biermann, Margaret Biermann, Marjorie Blanding, Robert Bolin, Frances Bradley, Jack Brenaman, Robert Brougher, Florence Bulk, Geor e Buss, DorotBy Carlson, Lloyd Carroll, Gene Case, Claud Chandler, Audra Churchill, Louise Clinkinbeard, Willis Cook, Robert Curry, Orvetta Delanoy, Esther' David, Stanley Dennery, Edward Dickson, David Edwards, Arthur Erceg, Tony Esson, Frances Fallon, Norma Fassett, Robert Fenton, Richard Feight, William Fisher, Geraldine Fravel, Lillian Friese, Dorothy Gadotti, Joe Gallagher, Marjorie Gannon, Bessie Gray, Eu ene Griffith, Fgern Griffith, William Griswold, Fredricka Haines, Liberty Bell Hales, Mark Hannam, Billy Harman, Barbara Harriman, Lyle Hinsdale, Harry Hirte, James Hoover, Verl Huber, Beatrice Hyde, Harry Jarvis, Mary Jensen, Marion Johns, Elizabeth Johns, Marjorie Johns, Ralph Johnston, Margaret Jones, Clyde Jones, Lawrence Joy, Lyle Jouno, June Kaady, David Kaufman, Raymond Kennedy, James Kenney, Howard Kenney, Elwood Kerekes, Helen Knutsen, Jack Kopp, Lillianna Krebs, Selma Helen Kerekes, Tony Erceg Lemaick, James Lewis, Irma Mallon, Francis Mallon, John Marchant, Dorothy Mason, Shirley May, Winton McNeil, Roderick Meeker, Edith Medak, John Middleton, Arthur Mikulic, Albert Miles, Robert Miller, Ray Milner, Ward Mossman, David Mulky, Charles Nelson, Marjorie Nelson, Moran Nettleton, Max Niska, Richard O'Halloran, Patricia Ohm, Helen Pili , Ted PurEapile Velma Parks, Della Parry, Della Parry, Bill Pederson, Shirley Penman, Homer Peters, Elma Arline Pulley, Nellie Pysher, Alzata Randall, Lois Redman, Elenora Riggs, Earl n Vlerah, Woodrow Melton Sloan, Donald Stapp, Gordon Smith, Ruth Spoerli, Esther Stark, Lynn Stevens, Dorothy Stevenson, John Stickney, Robert Tennant, George Tennant, Tom Treber, Earl Tharp, Hubert Tweed, William Thorne, Robert Ugarkovich, Martha Vachter, Andrew Van Vlerah, Betty Jane Walton, Dallas Young, Marceil Zimmerman, Walt Zimmerman, Eleanor Riley, Violet Root, Dorothy Rose, June Ross, Ruth Ross, Kina Rowekamp, John Rusicigno, Tony Schroth, Adela Sears, Mar aret Sheppard, Rita Shoun, Betty Sievers, Shirley Slack, Lavelle Smith, Dorothy Smith, Jesslyn Standish, Harold Stark, Janet Stickney, Harry Sturges, Lee Sullivan, John Sutton, Geor e Tabshy, Isabell Talt, Harold Thomas, Dorothy Thompson, Clare Van Lanen, Dorothy Vaughn, Nancy Vernon, Eugene Von Pier, Alice Walker, Bruce Walker, Clyde Walton, Kenneth Warman, George Webster, Dona d Zink, Henrietta Page Twenty-s U n
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Page 31 text:
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BOYS' ATHLETICS SOCCER Although Fred Gosnell, student coach, began the season with only two lettermen, he has developed a team which fully lives up to the Fighting Teddy spirit. Two veterans, Pruitt and Diclcey, along with Pieper, are the mainstays of this year's team. At this writing the team has played several games, losing to Jetierson, Commerce, and Grant. The squad displayed somewhat mediocre ball against Jefferson, but it improved rapidly, losing to Commerce and Grant only by very narrow margins. As there is a number of games remaining on the schedule, the team can still boost itself to a high position in the Final standings. The First eleven is as follows: Reese, goalie, Pruitt and Diclcey, lullbaclcs, Zach, Dutro, and Brougher, halfbaclcs, Kenney, Pieper, Buclc, Childs, and Clarlce, forwards. 0 O 0 ROOSEVELT GROWTH A few years ago, when Roosevelt High School was younger, we wondered when all the room would be talcen and new facilities required. This has come upon us quite rapidly. First we outgrew our auditorium, and our new, spacious auditorium was added. This gave us more room for physical training worlc in the gymnasium, and manual training had to have additional room. Meanwhile enrollment has steadily increased and linds us with more than seven hundred students. A class ol lorty-eight is being graduated at this time, but a freshman class ol about one hundred comes lor the opening of the next term, malcing a natural increase ol more than Fifty. The class rooms and registration rooms are full to capacity, crowded, in lact, and the new term- Spring, 1934-will call for several portable rooms. These will be used until condi- tions warrant the addition of a new gymnasium which will malte possible the construc- tion ol class rooms out ol the present gymnasium wing. l-low to get along pending the change of conditions which will malce these improvements possible is a problem which already worries the management. However, this state of affairs is not the worst that could happen. The school is growing and will grow even more rapidly than before. These changes and additions will be required, and now, when material and construc- tion cost are at a minimum is the time to act. Page 'fuienly-nm
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