Roosevelt High School - Strenuous Life Yearbook (Seattle, WA)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 142
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 142 of the 1936 volume:
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' ' 'T' , fpx L' f 1: ',,u. fm, -'25 , ff V I ' f f I. . fe Q Q- P, :Ir ' , . A ,, E- If ff. . .4 ' , lar? CI O N T E N T Sf I f I Q Q 1 I I 1 E1 . -. , b ,wry .Av ADMINISTRATION 4 'T , , 1 K ,Q X 3 . I I I 5' . 'I -I . fan' -5 I I TI ASSOCIATED STUDENTS II I-IONORS AND AWARDS hu . ' I A I ITI ES I I CT v , A3 ' . ' . . 1- L- T T 'I T . of II .' I ' 1 I ' ff .- f ' II P U B LIC TI L1 aT x ' '- ATI-I LETICS III V A -I . .F-X .. , .Ld IQ. . . -,ff 'R if ' I tk' 5 f , :' ,sfix . P Q 7 it ,IV I . s K T.. I , I I V- 7,14 5 fi I Nix! I 2 VF? , v 'Z 'Y aiu.. P . i, A X5 A h 5. rv :Z .I ' ',-rl? ' 1, in if ' r 1 V ,Y P I. a' I i D g..i.iw,- -xg A.1...,1 5 V. .--.fx H z E ffnfbff e ., . - ' -. ,N f.. . .,' 1 ' '.. NM.-.A f 'gf' , .J ,530 .. ,n.- ' I 1 . J:-f'!b?'z' ,, . ,, ,,.,,.,,.,. vgwo- 1 - i --i' M---?-?i-4 'T - 2'f2A-1129-fiff ' ,.,g,a,f,3- fi... kagffvie - 5 P v Qgliii ,,.f ' .ov 1 ff' I , . 'B f ,lr Q I 1 , ' .Y 4, 4-,' '.1 ' 1-gn ,. L - a , 5, P 1 Q ' gigs? :V . Vi? fi ' , ff' 'S' 're- , .': i I I , 1 4 4 A .i,--glsi-,,wf'.'iv r 2' f ' S: gliihl :gag , Sfgffi may ii,-,ga .' L , .2 .Egg - f 'lebffx In , . 1:, ?i 51 . ' H r . .i I, S e iff! XA: H i ai , , ' ' i'.f' ,. if If-'ifiif gif L ' K irjef 9 N Xl' IN MEMORIAM MANNING cox He was o scien+ific scholar, cm +horough feocher. o True friend. He was femperofe in hobifs, religious in +emperamen+, folerczni' in his views. He was Q balanced charocfer. LEN L. TOOMEY, Hud of fha Doparfmonf fb fHIf 'rhnx o sory -57 !'Tsn-. W ' 1 ' . . 1 l l' - UL- H . Q inf., -Ah .JK V FISHERIES On your rivers ai' 'rhe weirs and Ihe dams, I have wifnessed Ihe saImon, Ieaping Ihe ladders Daring Ihe gaun'I'IeI' of spears, In wafer knee-deep, Io win 'rhe heacIwa+ers To spawn. I have seen 'rhe waIer siIver With Iheir pilgrimage, a pageanf of gIory .... Carl John Bosfelrnan 5.3! X :f 35 Nwxwa rv A QUIWJ XX px x - Meg !! if5aj,m vf5QWffffX sf , X X, r CDRCI-IAIQDS Surely 'rhe apple is +he noblesl' of fruifs. Lel lhe rnosl beauliful or Jrhe swiflesl have H. The apple free may be considered The symbol of peace, as well as +he olive free. H has been longer cullivafed 'rhan any olher, and so is more humanlzeol. l-lenry David Thoreau x.fY,f: 447- .. -.H ,gy , 1- ' --ffm A A-Q , .I ,J 3-1 AGlQlQl,ll TUQF These greaf furrowed slopes are lhe olde-sl archi1'ec'rure of man: +he oldesl aslronomy was his guide, lhe oldesl bolany, his oloiecl .... ll is lhe hard lines of discipline and' equalily Thai mark oul a landscape and give if all ils mold and meaning. f . . . . Jrhe Republic is founded on The plow. Gilberl Cheslerlon .W , ,, I UIQ-.m.V, I ' .ii:1'--v.:'7ff M:1T', , W.-- -'5 ' 'Q 4' -rg-'wf:'iQ5.'7.lA71l'15 1 3:'-'1'-fhiifiilfujggrw . In -' Iii '- i ' ' . f , L 1?':::J2L.+'.4x:j1 f5.l if-'- 4+1iI I ' K V - . 'f 'ff' -'f -- '-f-2.1.,il .- '- Jw-. ' f ii? 4- . - ' ' . jj .Q , ,gg .If-. , 1- ,QI-Iv I-vi-wgwI,v:'Iff','f'f fi-I-'ggi' LI - I mr. 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I 'j,, ,III--4- I ' N- L- ,Ig 5 - ' Y 'I Q XI 4 QI '- f 'QR '55 . 'EPM 'YE' . -I .. ,I v. I 'Q V 9x4 ', E U wk? 1. 5 8,12 V . ' , ' . x ' 1 , Nfhfm-,,,I,. ' . - f ,,, . I I 5I.Igsih,III I ,I IqIIXIII:E,,II.YY-5 ,. 1 . I . I I Q- I '1 . if 'X 'L -3233 U- if fx CCDMMERCE Qu Ulmer Coosrwise-crosswise-round Hme world and back ogcin Where Hue flow shell head us or 'rhe full Trade suI'rs- Rudyard Kipling 'pgyfffwfgijdlvk I B 2? f W Wjriffww fwfww VMMMG INDUSTRY So fire runs in. runs out runs . somewhere else again, And The bor of sfeel is Q gun, 0 wheel, 0 nail, o shovel, A rudder under' The seo. Q sfeering- gear in rhe sky .... ' Carl Sandburg S I E 11 I 1 1 i 1 i . 1 1 1 1 5 1 R 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 ,I 1 15 v. 1 I J Q i gif? gig! ,gs 5 5 86,3 wg ,I A. i 5 I 1 If . 312 . Ag E if A I 5 Q, ,if 11 -rf . E Li K 'IJ 5' ff Iv-ff in ji rw 'Ji If I gf Tl IM r if .ff 13 f ilii s- gg - if I. if 'I W I 'F F I ?1 ., 3' if , ,. ff 53 gs gl-f Ip I I is .. it 'gy h 5 g is 'E Asif Nl? ., ' 'ki 'X 5 if ' H: Mei? if v G , A is 'wif ,Q sp, iii if gk rv ff ff uf i X 'g I NH 3' --,.......v Yw , LUMBERING Mony ore 'rhe Ihings I see When l behold cu green-winged free- Prows 'rhcf cleave 1'he eoger fide. Poles. whose mogicicoursers ride Along 'rhe humming wires +o bring Words Ihof Iough ond weep ond sing: Speeding orrow. springing bow, And-rhe besf of all I know- Crockling log on winier nighI', Armchair in 'rhe glowing ligh+-- These ond orher +hings I see When I behold o green-winged free. Cons+once Dole Robbins JY' A Q 2,1 I --f 4, 'lf fm ,.- 1, V.. . N ,Q ,i .Fw Z--,. Q45 ,ir- A- E, L- we N MW x lr 1 ' , 2 . I www rr QJL, WATER POWER Flung from The crogs where fhe wafer goes leaping, Liffed from coverns where shadows come creeping, Blown from 'rhe shollows ogleom .... Arfhur D. Nichols . ,uv .. vu A ' A ' ' if , 1 ,- ,, T10 . 4' . A' -, 115:-X gy-3'--. 1' ' A 'lm .,.l5A5. . L4 . M u , .ld . ig: Jyzgiif, ., snug , fz.,-,-. X 3-L' .. .-.,Qst-.v-v'?,,r.-N 31- -1' i I ' - ' mf1vi1J'::i?'4?'?-'vi' . - -f ,- . -.2-an . X-ff ff' xv, N yr 1 w.,.1g,,,-Wa -fy , -fbi? Alf w , .Q 1, .:,., 'uf' .-.s n, Q -. .. ,Qt Eff 1 -,...1- 50-1. r, .. 'aJ'g- .- A ... .r- ?' .S-f r ff 7 yah. . 99g7flT, 1 W. .w 5 , -1 W. .,.'14' ' F 3':.. 'EKFF 5.44 isa' lit-14 3i ,,,1.,,gL,1t my-L. f ' .21-,715 A .f.f,-- .. . 1 ,,,,.k ,',,,,- 5 -, .. ng.. 'fab , ,.., 'Ui Ir -. J ,av :M 1 4 4 1- Q. -i Ku- --Q .X 1. ,N ,Gil ,7 It :'fT4' n . 33 , W4, 1. . 5 9 . '14 1 5, '. 'L , 1 S, . '?, X, if . qw SQ. 53' 3 ' Ts V W' fff is ' 1? ,hw 4 f f7 fi M JW ,A U75 MLW W Wy M W OEM RMQW wi Dv RESOURCES AND INDUSTRIES OF TI-IE NORTHWEST Nafure has been lavish in providing unsurpassed scenery and boundless resources fo our corner of fhe counfry. Snow- clad mounfains furnish a ravishing sighf of God's handiwork fo fhe lover of The ouf-of-doors. Their slopes feem wifh ever- green frees mafched in maiesfy only by fhe renowned red- woods. They confain rich minerals awaifing fhe miner's machinery. Our inexhausfible wafer-supply is capable of generafing one-sixfh of fhe elecfric power of fhe enfire counfry. The Coulee and Bonneville dams will soon illusfrafe anew man's abilify 'ro make fhe forces of nafure minisfer fo his needs by fhe sforage of wafer power. The climafe of The Norfhwesf is mild and desfined 'Io aH'racf people in quesf of comforfable living. I+ is suifable for dairy farming and for fhe culfivafion of fruifs. The dairy herds of Washingfon are nofed for fheir milk producfion while fhe small-fruif canneries supply a rapidly growing marker. Across 'rhe Cascades undulafing plains of rich soil are covered with golden grain and doffed wifh granaries. Like- wise, apple and pear orchards furnish frain-loads of fruif for home and foreign consumpfion. The Norfhwesf is rich in sea foods. Fresh wafer sfreams racing down from mounfains afford fhe fisherman unlimifed sporf and fhe salf wafers of fhe Sound furnish an unrivaled indusfry. Famed as America's playground, fhe Norfhwesf prom- ises also Io become a cenfer for indusfries of vasf propor- fions. V. K. FROULA E. we if . ., an f .sf ir , W . G .G Am .- it , T1 g ' rf s 7 I , J ' - Y . ,.I.4 ' .--, I f .,. , , , ,u X ' f , . J J E a A J, ... 1, 1 , -I sl A- .1 -, -sh .Q fl 'ie f.. ,I F , 5' ' -,A . A ,A - , 1.-J 1 .- A s 121- - ' ' , 'Q' cl, I I ' , Wi -, W 1 0 'inf 1115? 4-.- Er Q' i. . ..- Vi' 1' ' fv-J4 -M-, f sv? .9 ' V A ' ' 1 ' I li . --3121 1 1 f I K ,- I . - v . , .Q 45 -,EQ 'I - 4 , ig A? y ,N 1 E .34 ,,L, , ,, . 1 ,vt i .lvv I , Y . .NK , v4 .A I -IT -L -- 1-. .- ,mf ,Q I 2 , --:Fi V J- ' 11 . I , -E - 'EC' ' .' 1 rj E l ' , ,,-S -.fi ' if I ,- . , a,. 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' ' -'- ' wi- , , -- fi f,, Y, --1 1 if Q ' M' ,- lil ', 'wa'-f , .,-I , ' is 3 I 0, .-E ' 7 : .V-3' 55- f' ,img . 7 ,E f '- , If , 1,1 71 Sv' ', 1 1 si K V ', ' 1 YQ. - 'fy .' 1'A 3' V , .-' ' . I1 't' is m sg' , , , wg 2 ff' A Q- 3' ' L , If , . if fi - '-Jw, 4 ' .. if ,, . S f jifiif.. Q' - ' ' , . 'T ii' ' ag 'H IL . ,544 - , ' 1' 1 ' 1' 2 ,ff ,, Tv --'QQ wiv .-I -ss - I ,Q A 1 I j, 7- fi 1 K .5 ' if ,-I. 1 , A V . , . i 14 ,- 1, 4-N ' 'M' 1 e. -, .. M A f: -, ,b - 'f . . 'fr 'Q' .- ' X ' YS. 1 QT'-'i . fr? V ' ' ' -- Q To i Q - I S.. A f I X 4 4 gli ,, 9 ' - J . -Q Q . -,I js: 13 gf , -kr A 'Q We E. . -1 -1' E.: -'.-fs 12 I , 'fir I-524 5' i fu , M ' Y ' ff 2 , ,r , ' ar. f' f 11 I :5 -. - . ii 'QM 'fi ' ' -' F e v -' 1.1 1 Av ':,-W, ,-51 - ---'N ,fa , -- -4. , he 'Niue-Q., - A' ' if Jiri? A .3-fi 'T j .,- ii f Y 17- Ihlil- f fi, A g li. ' ' -A-' of-'i'F'V f V 'Miz f ' . , ,,.. ,, sifdujal - - ' - AQ 1 , p. f ' f fi P 5 1 ' f' ,' , 'l V I. 4 Q X :J V Wy, ! Vtl'm'y ' Y T L -W lrcffl L A ' T 6,21 T T A MESSAGE TO THE STUDENTS OF ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL: THE PRESENT school yeor sionds oul in severol ochievernenls: Boslqel- boll Championships, l-ligh Scholorship Rolings, ond Reol Progress in Sfudenl Cooperolive Government These ochievernenls ore worlhy of ernulo+ion by succeeding generoiions of Roosevelr siudenfs. Moy fuiure closses of This school find inspirolion in The occornplishmenis of 'rhis yeor's groduoies ond sirive +o reoch new heighls of ochievernenl. V. K. FROULA. V. K. Froulo, Principal Frank Jones Clark, Vice-Principal WHAT I AM TO BE I AM NOW BECOMING THIS INSCRIPTION of The school seal has sTood before RooseveIT sTudenTs since I922, when iT was originally infroduced here in a speech by Mr. Cam- eron Beck. The seal was designed by sTudenTs of The arT classes. The bud- di n g Rhododendron, WashingTon's sTaTe flow- er, was chosen for The middle of The seal, be- cause iT idealizes blossom- ing maTuriTy. The Class of I936 chose The signifi- cance oT The seal as The Theme of The commence- menT exercises. Miss Carolyn I-IoIT mo ern high .rchooff mm if to give pupilf pmcfiml and ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL'S TwenTy-four hundred and TwenTy-Two sTudenTs sTand on The PIaTeau of Youfh looking ouT over The STaTe wiTh iTs many possibilifies of recreaTion and responsibilifies wondering iusf where They are going To fiT inTo This greaT picTure of surging humanify and The world of Things. NOT The IeasT imporTanT in The picTure is The quesTion of bread and buTTer. How To obTain a fooThoId in The cold and raTher unsympafhefic business or commercial world: whaT Training is viTaIIy necessary in preparing for a voca- Tion? WhaT experience To seek ThaT will be mosT won-Thwhile in saTisfying ThaT age-long desire for self-deTerminaTion? These and many more quesfions keep dinning aT The ear of The ThoughTfuI high school boy or girl who faces This world of people, ideas, and Things. Our modern high school is seeking, as iT has never soughf before, To help The boy or girl answer These all-impoi-Tcin+ life quesTions. Happy is he who learns early in his conTacT wiTh This high school To Take advanTage of all The opporTuniTies offered in The Three or four years of Training. The Resources and Indusfries of The NorThwesT will have real meaning for such a boy or girl who has lem-ned To make The mosT of high school. He will be The one who will be The mosT inTeIIigenT in using These many wonderful resources of our grand sTaTe1 he will be The mosT inTeIIigenT in conserving These resources for Time To come: he will be The one who will lead his fellow men in organizafion and enferprises having To do wiTh Their deveIopmenT. As Vice-Principal, may I again challenge sTudenTs of our mosT glorious school To find Their places in The sun by making adequafe preparafion for The days or opporfunifies and responsibilifies ahead. FRANK JONES CLARK Miss Carolyn I-IoIT as secreTary To Mr. Froula and Mr. Clark, has many varied duTies. Among The mosT imporTanT is keeping a close check on all graduaTing Seniors and regularing among sTudenTs The work creaTed by The NaTional YouTh AdminisTraTion. To Miss HoIT, The sTudenTs and faculTy give Their sinceresT Thanks. 26 Mya in administration e cZency,17w1ffg,.f year FOLLOWING an enfirely new arrangemenf, fhe office increased ifs efficiency one hundred per cenf for The year l936, by esfablishing an Affendance Office. lf is under fhe supervision of Miss Pafricia Chris- fiensen and is separafe from fhe main office. l-lere all absences, fardi- ness, and cuf slips are checked during each period of fhe day. Miss Anna Sfeendahl confinued her work wifh fhe Early Dismissals and Lafe Arrivals. Thus awkward groups in fhe main office were avoided. Miss Dorofhy Kinkaid, fhe only addifion fo fhe main office force, was insfrumenfal in keeping up fhe permanenf grade records o ie ch sfu- cienf, fhe personal records file, bullefins, and mail. She had sol charge of fhe freshmen, sophomores, iuniors, and posf graduafes, and fha check- ing of fhe boys' afhlefic insurance and eligibilify. , Keeper of fhe Keys is a fifle which mighf well be applied fo Mr. James Mclinighf, building cusfodian, for. among fhe mosf imporfanf of his dufies is fhe making of duplicafe locker keys. Under his insfrucfions, school and ifs grounds are kepf in order, mosf of fhis work being done on week-ends and during Chrisfmas and Easfer vacafions. Replacing lighf globes, broken window panes, mowing fhe lawn, and general building supervision leave liffle leisure for Mr. McKnighf. We cannof fail fo menfion here fhe endless work of fhe men and women who cooperafe wifh fhe cusfodian: fo is due much of our school's beaufy. They are Annie Osfronder, Alfred Sorenson, John Morgan, lra Alexan- der, Elliof Johnson, Frances Guesf, Henry Jones, Walfer Dense, and Donald Thompson. Anofher popular phase of fhe mainfenance deparf- menf is fhe Lunchroom Force. Mrs. Neffie Moore com- plefed her eighfh year as manager wifh unparalelled success. Wifh fhe aid of sfudenf sponsors and her work- ers-Mrs. Elizabefh Curnew, Mrs. Elizabefh Driscoll, Mrs. Mariery Williams, and Mrs. Marie l-leusfis-Mrs. Moore greafly increased fhe cafeferia's affendance. This feaf was accomplished by good food, cafchy menus, and a D' variefy of enferfainmenf. Miss Rose Glass and Mr. Sheridan Berfhiaume, filling fhe posifions of Girls' Advisor and Boys' Advisor, re- specfively, have become fhe keynofe of undersfanding ' befween fhe sfudenfs and fhe faculfy. Giving any needed advice wifh cheerful generosify, fhey are now i indispensable fo Roosevelfs harmonious affifudes. To fheir advisors, fhe sfudenfs owe a debf of loyalfy and grafifude. They wish fo fake fhis means of express- ing fheir appreciafion of all of fhese groups which fo- gefher have increased Roosevelf's efficiency, orderliness, and beaufy. These men and women have unselfishly confribufed fheir fime and efforf and have been more fhan pafienf wifh fhe difficulfies which necessarily arise in a school of over fwenfy-four hundred. ln connecfion wifh fhe Girls' and Boys' Clubs, employmenf services are mainfained, by which means sfudenfs in need of work fo earn school expenses are placed in homes or ofher posifions. Confacfs wifh em- ployers are made by fhe advisors, and wifh fhe help of special com- miffees, fhis work is carried on very effecfively fhroughouf fhe year. For fhe firsf fime in Roosevelf hisfory, fhe nafional governmenf was broughf info vifal confacf wifh fhe sfudenf body fhrough fhe medium of fhe Nafional Youfh Adminisfrafion. Needy sfudenfs were provided wifh work as helpers of fhe cusfodian or as secrefaries fo feachers. k- .-f f ,f f ' . f... Miss Pafricia Chrisfiensen, Miss Dorofhy Kinkaid, Mrs. Neffie Moore, Mr. James Mclinighf. prep profy unveil myfterief of claffffoom I V Y 6 , 5 1 1 N 22 acuity picniclqeeff Jlwmfe Haley of rwwelf eeiaeaieenal beware among teacher aetivetief THE ROOSEVELT FACULTY sTarTed an acTive year wiTh The Annual FaculTy Picnic early in SepTember. Here many menTors were seen caper- ing in The waTer or on shore. Food and summer vacaTions dominaTed The conversaTion. The RoosevelTian spiriT was acTually carried To The Tour corners by Miss Helen Vaupell's exTensive Tour oT Europe, Mr. STephen Riggs' visiT To The SouTh Seas, and by Miss ElizabeTh Roude- bush's Trip To The OrienT. THE SPEECH machine, boughT by The English DeparTmenT Through The A. S. R. budgeT, has proven To be oT inesTimable value in voice proiecTs. The apparaTus is capa- ble oT making and playing rec- ords. This device was assembled To relaTe some oT The accomplishmenTs in The inTellecTual Tield, TirsT menTioned is The publicaTion oT Mr. Frank Jones Clark's book Voca- Tional Guidance. Miss Elvina Miller and Miss Edna Breazeale boTh received ouTsTanding honors, The Tormer being elecTed presidenT oT The NaTional Speech AssociaTion, and The laTTer by receiving an award Trom The NaTional ScholasTic Press AssociaTion Tor pioneer work in high school journalism. Miss Achsah MaThews was appoinTed chairman oT local arrangemenTs Tor The American Home Economics AssociaTion's convenTion To be held in SeaTTle This summer. ln The Tield oT Tine arTs, Miss Lois FulTon had szxfcral pieces on display aT The ArT Museum. Mr. Alfred bcheer spenr IasT summer building physics eguipmenT Tor various high schools in The sTaTe, and Mr. Fred RanTz TormulaTed a new anTi-Treeze which has proved iTs worTh in The commercial markeT. Miss Grace Melville and Miss MyrTle Reck conTinued making home movies. They have acquired much skill in This direcTion, as has Mr. ArThur Rarig. by Dr. Karl Windesheim oT The UniversiTy oT WashingTon, an emi- nenT auThoriTy on sound and sound equipmenT. The machine is being used by all oT The oral expression classes and is employed in The Training oT would-be public ora- Tors. Miss Elvina Miller, head aT The Speech DeparTmenT, in ex- pressing her opinion oT The insTru- menT, says: I Teel ThaT This sound recording apparaTus will give The Teachers oT oral expression an un- limiTed Tield Tor correcTion in voice and arTiculaTion. 30 Jporff, other lrobbieffill summer months' ACHIEVEMENTS in The world of sporT cannoT be overlooked here. Mr. ErnesT Wol'Th accredifed him- self wi+h The proverbial hole-in-one, and Miss Dorfhea RiTchie won The women's slalom evenT aT a ski meeT. Exfending sporfs inTo ci larger field, we found a wom- en's bowling Team of greaT renown including Miss Rogers, Miss Vaupell, Miss MaThews, and Miss Sfeen- Iakes and rivers lfor fishl in each spare momenT. The men's ping-pong Team musT, of course, be menfioned among The oufsfanding organizafions. Some of The members of This Team are The Messrs. Kirschner, Van Tilborg, RanTz, Glass, Anselm, Toomey, and Ander- son. Through This common inTeresT The men have be- come beTTer acquainTed, and, To quofe Mr. RanTz, dahl. A Golf Club, which was organized ci few years ogo, held iTs annual inTerschool TournamenT, buT iT had noT been played off aT press Time. The rcnnking members were The Misses Fulfon, Rogers, Vaupell, Beckham, Deuber, and Jergensen. The men golfers in- cluded Messrs. Kirschner, Leaf, Peferson, STilwell, Ed Turner, and Wor'Th. Many laTe winTer afTernoons found Miss Breazeale, Miss Deuber, and Mr. Riggs aT The Ice Arena, ond during The coldesT days Mr. Dvorak was seen inscrib- ing Charlie wiTh The silver blades on The ice aT ouT- lying lakes. ln The spring a young man's fancy lighfly Turns To . . . fishing, and so The followers of Isaac WalTon, Messrs. David Anselm, Cecil Bullock, James Corskie, and l-lorry Deifs, were casTing abouT The 3 I Treasurer, There has been a general improvemenT in Their sense of humor, and They have come To a beTTer undersTonding of The oTher fellow's problems. OrganizaTions of This sorT are as welcome among The faculfy as in The sTudenT body. A mosT unique feaTure among The Teachers' infer- esTs was The aucTion sponsored by The Faculfy Book Club. Mr. Sam Glass, wiTh shirT sleeves rolled, pre- sided as The proverbial aucTioneer. The lasT social gaThering of The year was a picnic sponsored by P.-T. A. l-lere The quarTeT, consisTing of Messrs. l.. Turner, Bullock, Clark, and Glass, sang. Wifh Two semesfers of hard and confinuous work behind Them, The RoosevelT Faculfy are eagerly look- ing forward To o summer full of varied enTerTainmenT. ASSCDCIATFD STUDFNTS TRANSPORTATION HIGHWAYS oT lcmd, seo cmd oir serve NorThwesTern Trons- porToTion. Livelihood ond luxuries ore corriecl over The worlcl. For ploces ore broughT neorg TronTiers broken downg regional hinclronces dispelled. UnclersTondinq eTTecTs ur1iTy. : : 2 : The Three moior orgonizoTions-AssocioTeol STuolenTs, Boys' Club' ond Girls' Club-ore The chormels Through which ore conveyed The ideols onol purposes which uniTy The sTuclenTs oT RoosevelT l-ligh School. : 2 : : : : : : 3 : Standing-Buford, Jones, STewarT, Williams. SeaTed-Miss Glass, Parks, M r. Froula, Brand, Turnure, Des Camp, MaTTson, Lilygren. affociafed Jfudenff. rom mmey,0ne SELF - CONFIDENCE. loyalTy, respecT oT auThor- iTy, culTural appreciaTion - aT all These desirable qualiTies seT beTore The sTuclenT body as iTs model, which is The mosT imporT- anT in a school leader? All oT These and more go inTo The making aT a con- sTrucTive characTer, buT The individual whose greaTesT aim is unselTish service To his school is The one mosT likely To beneTiT ThaT school and To leave his mark There as a leader. Tl-TE COMPLICATED machinery which makes The AssociaTea STudenT Body go around, This year ground ouT The impressive ToTal oT seven maior all-school proiecTs, achieving a signal success wiTh each. EirsT OT all, came The campaign Tor a saTe, sane l-lollowe'en. AcTiviTy organizaTions, such as l-li-Y, Tri-Y, and Rough Riders, Turned ouT in The capa- ciTy oT volunTeer amaTeur policemen To paTrol The school grounds, wiTh The resulT ThaT among SeaTTle's nine high schools, RoosevelT sTood TirsT in orderli- ness and The amounT aT damage leTT undone. AssisTing The lunchroom managemenT To do a proTiTable business received The supporT and originaliTy oT every organized group in school: Through The sponsoring oT unusual menus coupled wiTh noonhour enTerTainmenT, receipTs reached new levels during The winTer monThs. ln connecTion wiTh This proiecT was ThaT oT presenTing consTrucTive programs aT noon Tor The sTudenTs. Ten- minuTe movies and local TalenT were oTTered in This manner unTil burgeoning spring lured RoosevelTians ouT oT doors. The problem oT cliques wiThin The school was handled wiTh eTTecTive under- sTanding by The represenTaTives oT boTh The A.S.R. and The groups under discussion, The laTTer Tinally agreeing To disband as separaTe clubs in The school. lv1ainTaining decorum in The halls was anoTher problem. BuT wiTh The services of over sevenTy vigilanT sTudenTs as moniTors, who inTroduced culpriTs To The Advisory Council, hall condiTions became so greaTly improved ThaT wiThin Three weeks, The moniTor sysTem was dispensed wiTh alTogeTher. ln The manner oT a revival meeTing came a series OT Campus Days in April, sponsored Tor The purpose OT a more uniTied school spiriT in RoosevelT. An all-school breakTasT, rally, dance, l-lello Day and WhiTe CloThes Day sTimulaTed The inTeresT and enThusiasm oT The enTire sTudenT body. This eTTair was laTer chrisTened Mardi Gras in a conTesT To deTermine a disTincTive name. The annual Red Cross Drive during The spring neTTed over 5200, while anoTher volunTary conTribuTion Tor The relieT oT Tlood suTTers in The EasT en- 34 Sfanding-SIaTer. SeaTed-Bever, Mr. L. Turner, Miss Andrews. abled The school To send over SIOO Tor This purpose. One oT The rnosT pracTical and o'uTsTanding accomplishr'nenTs OT The year was The esTab- lishmenT oT a closer relaTion wiTh The roll roorns Through The publishing OT bulleTins Tollowing STudenT Council rneeTings. This pracTice broughT The acTiviTies oT Their elecTed repre- senTaTives, boTh in execuTive and legislaTive posiTions, direcTly beTore The sTudenTs. A closer conTacT was broughT abouT beTween The Na- Tional AssocioTion oT STudenT OTTicers and heads oT The A. S. R. Through The sTudy oT The naTional rpublicaTion, The STudenT Lead- er. An eTTorT will be made To send some oT nexT yea r's oTTicers as delegaTes To The NaTional EducaTion AssociaTion conven- Tion in PorTland This summer. And whaT is The organizaTion ThaT is behind This record OT achievemenT? ln a nuTshell, iT is, TirsT, The oTTicers - pres- idenT, vice-presidenTs, secreTary and Treas- urer: nexT, The Coun- cil, having Two elecT- ed mernbers Trorn each roll as represen- TaTives1 Third, The 35 cabineT, consisTing oT girls' and boys' club presidenTs, presidenTs oT all classes, one represenTaTive Trorn each class, a news represenTaTive, and The A.S.R. oTTicers. LasTly comes The iudicial deparTn'ienT, known as The Advisory Council, having boTh elecTed and appoinTed mernbers. ln The RoosevelT STudenT Council, presided over by The A.S.R. oTTicers, are a boy and girl elecTed Trom each roll as represenTaTives, The chairman oT all A.S.R. sTanding cornn'iiTTees, and all CabineT rnernbers. This poTenT body originaTes and passes all legislaTion aTTecTing The sTudenT body as a whole. The execuTive deparTn'ienT, known as The RoosevelT STudenT CabineT, is direcTed by The presidenT oT The A.S.R. and The secreTary. This group also has power To propose legislaTion aTTecTing The school, and To direcT proiecTs approved by The STudenT Council. MonThly n'ieeT- ings are held. The Advisory Council, A.S.R.'s iudicial deparTn'ienT, requires The presence oT Three Girls' Club represenTaTives and Three Boys' Club represenTaTives, including The presi- denTs oT boTh organizaTions, The A.S.R. presidenT, and Two appoinTed and Two elecTed sTudenT body members. This irnporTanT board, wiTh The help oT TaculTy advisors, admin- isTers punishmenTs aT iTs discreTion. During The year I935-I936, The oTTicers oT The Associ- aTed STudenTs OT RoosevelT were: Julius MaTTson, presi- denTg DoroThy Parks and Torn Jones, vice-presidenTs7 BeTTy Des Camp, secreTaryq and Miriam Lilygren, Treasurer. Much crediT is due To Them Tor Their splendid eTTorTs To bring The 2400 sTudenTs OT The school inTo a closer and more eTTecTive union Tor The greaTer beneTiT oT all. BuT These eTTorTs would have been TruiTless wiThouT The experi- enced and syrnpaTheTic guidance oT Miss l-lelen Andrews. Miss Rose Glass, Mr. Sheridan BerThiaume, and Mr. Lloyd Turner, in addiTion To whose help were given The supporT and advice oT Mr. Froula, principal, and Mr. Clark, vice-principal. To These Teachers and sTudenTs, Then, is owed much appreciaTion Tor a TruiTTul year in RoosevelT High School's hisTory. STudenT Roll RepresenTaTives in Council MeeTing. STUDENT TICKET BOARD OF CONTROL: Sfanding-Snow, McRae, Thomas, ParroTT, LiTTIe. Seafed-Mr. Clark, Miss Glass, Reid, Mr. Turner, Lilygren, Mr. Kirschner, Miss Andrews, Mr. Berfhiaume, MaTTson. INTERSCHOOL COMMITTEE: Schwellenbach, Quigley, Des Camp, Mr. L. Turner, Mason, Farwell, Parks, Morse. TROUBADOUR COMMITTEE: Sfanding-Schuyfen, Osier, Milne, Fairbrook, Heinz. SeaTed-Miss Craven, Hollander, Murphy. HEALTH COMMITTEE: STanding--Brugman, Winger, ArmsTrong, Ellis, STurges, Grunbock. SeaTed-Kennedy, Campbell, Lile, Nordahl, Boies. committees' work forms backbone of ez!! Acrivnies Rscoieoine communes: sending-Perefson, Hurd, Alciyama, BIG BUSINESS and weighlry maTTers oT Graves. SeaTed-Clarkson, Miss Anderson, Cameron, Sfone, Morse Downing. Hug.-ice QT RQQSQVQIT gre The Speciql pl-OV- ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE: STanding-HlnksTon, Chapin, Thomas, DoughTy, ince oT The STudenT Ticl4eT Board OT Con- Ti-ol. Mr. Earl E. Kirschner acTed as TaculTy advisorland Miriam Lilygren, A.S.R. Treas- urer, was chairman Tor The Board, which had The diTTiculT Tasles oT making ouT The budgeT OT The sTudenT Ticlf.eT, and deciding whaT bargains and privileges should be ex- Tended To sTudenTs subscribing To The plan. WiTh eyes Tixed on The goal OT greaTer good will among The high schools oT Se- aTTle, and a beTTer undersTanding oT muruol problems, The lnTerschool CommiT- Tee, under The direcTion oT Sam Morse, chairman, and lvlr. L. Turner, advisor, rea ceived and exchanged new ideas Tor This purpose wiTh rnernloers oT The lnTer-School Council. Trips To oTher high schools in The ciTy yielded rnany suggesTions pracTicable Tor adopTion by RoosevelT's sTudenT body. ShuT-ins and unTorTunaTes oT ,all kinds ThroughouT The ciTy received The TruiTs oT The labors oT The Troubadour commiTTee. This year The group was headed by BeTTy- I ann l-lollander, chairman, and Miss Inez Craven, advisor, who held TryouTs in Their search Tor TalenT and puT The budding arT- isTs and perTormers Through Their paces. Miss Miller, Young. SeaTed-Day, Zorn, Currier, Curran, .. l as LUNCI-IROOM COMMITTEE: Handy, DoughTy, ManesmiTh, Mr. Glass, HinksTan. THRIFT COMMITTEE: Baisden, Clough, Kidwiler, Nickson, Clark, Winkley, KasTner, Snow, I'-larby. LIBRARY COMMITTEE: DisTad, Sfapp, STromsTead, Miss MclnTosh, PeTerson, Denny. SOCIAL SERVICE COMMITTEE: STanding-Jacobsen, Clark, Joy, Williams, Ryan, Boswell, Miss Vaupell. SeaTed-Smifh, Cook. orfgmziqepi rfmiem' body azcfivifief at yahoo! NOT ONLY AN APPLE a day, buT eighT hours oT reTreshing sleep, Tanlss oT Tresh air, and good Things To eaT were recommended by The I-lealTh CommiTTee To help sTudenTs I-seep The docTor away. Supervised by Lillian Lile, chairman, and Miss DoroThea RiTchie, advisor, The group's unre- miTTing eTTorTs included a healTh movie made aT school wiTh a sTudenT casT. The moving picTure was The TirsT in several years, and much eTTorT was puT TorTh To malse iT oT inTeresT To sTudenTs. I-low many hours oT ouTside acTiviTies may one parTicipaTe in? I-low many ouTside hours does each sTudenT spend on This exTra worls? To Tab- ulaTe This inTormaTion is The exclusive duTy aT The AcTiviTies Recording CommiTTee, advised by Miss I-lelen Anderson, wiTh Juleiane Cameron as chair- man. This exTensive worls is underTalsen each year in order To preserve a more nearly equal balance among sTudenTs Turning ouT Tor several acTiviTies. Lives of greaT men all remind us .... And Tor ThaT reason The Assembly CommiTTee, headed by BeTTy Currier and Miss Elvena Miller, planned several assemblies during The year on The anni- versaries oT greaT Americans, such as Theodore RoosevelT and Marls Twain. They underTool4 The diTTiculT TaslsgoT organizing and coordinaTing The diTTerenT parTs oT an all-school assembly, pre- senTing lively sl4iTs, inTormaTive Tallss, and music To The sTudenTs. 37 A group oT RoosevelT's highesT-pressured sales- men, sparlsed by Mr. Sam Glass and Paul Mone- smiTh, puT Their heads TogeTher and sponsored a PaTronize The Lunchroom campaign Through- ouT The year. lTs success was wiTnessed by The crowds of sTudenTs who acTed upon This sugges- Tion. Each school organizaTion and club Tools weelsly Turns in The Iunchroom, vying wiTh one anaTher To obTain The mosT popular enTerTain- menT and +an+alizing menus. Ten-minuTe movies in The audiTorium and delicious sandwiches and specials combined To prornoTe sTudenT paTron- age. Benjamin FranIslin's old maxim abouT The penny saved being a penny earned was The Theme oT The ThriTT CommiTTee, direcTed by Miss Grace Melville and BeTTy Jane Snow. Since Their aim was 'To show The advanTages oT ThriTTy habiTs, Their worls along This line TeaTured a BesT Banls Day and a special assembly. ConsisTenT eTTorT was made To mainTain a high average OT deposiTs aT RoosevelT and To increase The number oT sTudenTs who would regularly budgeT Their allowance. The lesson oT ThriTT was TaughT every Tuesday morning. Checl-.ing ouT boolss oT TicTion, poeTry, hisTory, drama, along wiTh TexTs and periodicals: lseeping The shelves lined wiTh mulTi-colored volumes, in orderly array: helping behind The scenes To pre- pare crisp new addiTions To The well-worn sTocIs. IMPROVEMENT COMMITTEE: STanding-Gebo, Eilerfsen, Greenwald, Andrews, WheTsTone, CarpenTer, Cryor. Seafed-Crowl, Miss Abel, Winslow. ALUMNI COMMITTEE: Weisel, Nordby, Brown, Redlin. DANCE COMMITTEE: Miss RiTcI1ie, Zorn, Burkland, MaTTson, ParroTT, Monesmifh. PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE: Cody, Mr, Anselm, Gregory, Clark, Miller, Newlands. drilvey, procgmmf, can already in The library .... selecTing a corps OT workers To perTOrm These duTies occupied The Library CommiTTee, supervised by Miss Grace Jean MclnTosh and Mary Louise DisTad. The work OT This commiTTee is an impOrTanT TacTor in main- Taining eTTicienT service in The library, Tilled To capaciTy all year. One OT The mosT alTruisTic commiTTees aT RoosevelT is The one devoTed To Social Service, which was headed by BeTTy' Ryan and Miss Helen Vaupell. The prOiecT OT organizing a Thanksgiving drive, in which each roll room con- TribuTed a box OT Tood, led OTT The year's ac- TiviTies, LaTer Tollowed a Toy drive aT ChrisTmasg a conTesT wiTh Lincoln High School To cOllecT Tin- Toilg The annual Red Cross campaign: and a Tlood relieT drive rounded ouT The exTensive program OT service by The commiTTee. WiTh The convicTion ThaT cleanliness is nexT To godliness, The lmprovemenT CommiTTee, su- pervised by Jane EilerTsen and Miss Lena Abel as chairman and advisor, perTOrmed The duTies OT mainTaining The orderly and aTTracTive ap- pearance OT The building and grounds, and soughT To quicken sTudenT inTeresT in This proiecT. Besides The acTual work OT Treeing hall and lawn OT debris, The commiTTee sponsored several clean- up drives. ATTracTive Tloral decoraTions were pro- tein .verve to call vided Tor The main hall, along wiTh The TradiTional holly wreaThs in each roll beTore ChrisTmas. IT a RoosevelT graduaTe wins a scholarship, makes a proTessional debuT, or progresses To an execuTive pOsiTion, his achievemenTs are all duly Tollowed up by The Alumni COmmiTTee, whose chairman was PaTricia Brown and whose advisor was Miss Edna Breazeale. In addiTion To The work OT recording and conTacTing The members OT each ouTgoing class, This cOmmiTTee keeps The Alumni informed OT happenings in The school iTselT, Thus mainTaining a relaTiOn wiTh and in- TeresT in Their Tormer school. STriking a noTe OT social gaieTy in The year's acTiviTies, The Dance COmrniTTee, direcTed by EdiTh Mae MaTTson and Miss DoroThea RiTchie, collaboraTed wiTh The P.-T.A. in sponsoring monThly dances Tor The sTudenTs aT The Green Lake Fieldhouse. TanTalizing music, Timely and aTTracTive Themes, prizes and reTreshmenTs con- TribuTed To The success OT Their exTensive pro- gram. Besides planning The aTTairs, novel ideas were inTroduced in order ThaT more sTudenTs should become acquainTed wiTh one anOTher, Thus adding sTill more To The spiriT OT Triendliness and enioymenT. OTTiciaTing as an amaTeur police Torce aT sTra- Tegic posiTions ThroughouT The building, The Pub- lic SaTeTy CommiTTee carried on iTs work ably 'Ji attention to wortlrwbtle group projectf under The direcTion OT Mr. David Anselm and Ed Clark, chairmen. The knoTTy problem OT keep- ing TraTTic running smoOThIy in such congesTed halls as Those near The locker rooms and sTudy halls was successTully handled by This group OT boys. Through Their work much OT The crowded condiTions were eliminaTed and a speedier pas- sage To and Trom classrooms was eTTecTed. Budding press agenTs volunTeered Their ser- vices To The PubliciTy CommiTTee, headed by Phil Blake and advised by Mr. Frank Jones Clark. This group OT sTudenTs conTacTed news- papers along wiTh oTher high school ancl business Tirms in The RoosevelT disTricT in adverTising ac- TiviTies OT The sTudenT body, such as aThleTic con- TesTs, The Revue, Opera, ConcerT, and Senior Play. As an example OT The commiTTee's orig- inaliTy in handling school publiciTy, one OT The baseball season's biggesT games was adverTised by O Baseball Oueen and her courT OT Tour oTher girls. An annual inTer-roll conTesT was a TeaTure OT The work OT The ATTendance COmmiTTee, whose chairman was Mary Massey, and whose advisor was Mr. Clark. ln line wifh Their purpose OT re- ducing The number OT absences during The year, The commiTTee members kepT a record OT The percenTage OT each roll room's aTTendance on a charT represenTing a baseball diamond. Much OT The crediT Tor The reducTion in The number OT absences is due To The eTTorTs OT This group. The OuTsicle TraTTic CommiTTee mighT be Termed The moTorcycle division OT RoosevelT's volunTeer police Torce. This year The commiTTee was in charge OT AusTin Royal, wiTh Mr. RoberT LeaT as advisor. Their work consisTed OT regisTer- ing The license numbers OT all cars driven and used aT school by sTudenTs. ln addiTion To This TuncTion, The commiTTee TurTher checked The drivers on The pOinTs OT parking and lighTs. Each boy in The group devoTed one Tree period a day To This service. One OT The mosT imporTanT TuncTions OT The STudenT TickeT orgonizaTiOn is perTOrmed by The corps OT STudenT TickeT messengers. Each Mon- day morning The TickeT sTamps are broughT To The roll rooms by These boys To be disTribuTed To The card holders, and aTTerwards The money Trom These sales is collecTed, checked and Turned in aT The A.S.R. headquarTers in room IO7. Thus upon The messengers resTs one OT The heaviesT responsibilTiies OT The enTire plan. PUBLICITY COMMITTEE: Sfanding-Griffifh, Blake, Leaf, Young, HousTon, Anderson, Baker, Mr. Clark. Seafed-Dore, Allen, Day, WhiTe, Dupar. ATTENDANCE COMMITTEE: Seafed-ToTTen, Tarbill, Massey, MacLeod, Hay, Mr. Clark. STandii-ig-Massey. OUTSIDE TRAFFIC COMMITTEE: Bigford, Royal, GrouT, Coplen, Mr. Leaf. STUDENT TICKET MESSENGERS: STanding-Parrof, Arbefhnof, Powell, Richardson, Rouzie, Gross, Gardnier, Mr. Kirschner, Cody. Seafed--Graves, Ross, PeTerson, LiTTIe, Heavly, Simpson, HiITon. 39 az high-.rchool THE GlRLS' CLUB Creed, seffing forfh fhe ideals of fhis organizafion, provides a consfanf inspirafion for fhe many acfivifies and services of fhe Girls' Club. Ever'since 'lhe founding of fhe Club in l922, ifs aim has been fo presenf fo fhe girls upliffing ideals and A Q, highlsfandards for living. This year, under fhe skillful ' rna agemenf of fhe Girls' Club officers and The advis- or, ip of Miss Rose Glass, new friendships have been wdrd molsing l936, fhe fourfeenfh year of fhe Club's x I enc Xia banner year. T. fw fy-eighf differenf cornrniffees of 'lhe Girls' Club are or liz info four maior divisions: fhe Adrninisfrafive, Service, Soc'al, d Culfural groups. These four deparfmenfs have a general anoger and many chairmen. The A inisfrafive group, fhis year, was headed by Rufh Ouigley. Under her care were seven commiffees: Advisor's Office Sfaff, Finance, Loolsouf, Nurse's Sfaff, Publicify, Rec- ords, and Scrapbook. Beffy Ann Hollander was fhe chairman of fhe Advisor's Office Sfoff. She appoinfed girls fo acf as pages and secre- faries for Miss Gloss. Noida Sanders, head of fhe Nurse's Office Sfaff and her helpers, arranged for all Seniors, Fresh- rnen, and Newcorners fo see fhe Docfor and fhe Nurse before fhe end of fhe year. The Finance Cornmiffee, under Edifh Mae Maffson, foolq care of fhe Girls' Club loans and drew up The club budgef. A new addifion fo fhe Girls' Club was fhe Liffle Colonel sfaff. The Liffle Colonel, Club newspaper, appeared fwice a rnonfh under fhe ediforship of Marfha Wahl, bringing news of fhe Club proiecfs fo all Roosevelf girls. ln addifion fo fhe infroducfion of Roosevelf's own girls' club paper, The Liffle Colonel, fhis year Roosevelf was selecfed fo puf ouf fhe infer-girls' club publicafion, The Wheel. Direcfed by Elizabefh Housfon and Marfha Wagner as edifors and Miss Glass as advisor, The Wheel was published once a rnonfh, and confained news of each Seaffle High School Girls' Club, reporfed by a chosen represenfafive. Social funcfions, services of all differenf l-ainds, and every acfivify of fhe cornmiffees and clubs as a whole were recorded for fhe informafion of all girls' club members. ls Sl , . Thes-cheerful afrnosphere creafed by fhis Club has done 'l' Officers-June Day, Recording Secrefary, Miss Rose Glass, Advisory Dorofhy Parks, Presidenf, Pal' Rourke, Corresponding Secrefaryj Beffy Currier, Treasurer, Delores Nelson, Vice-Presidenf. Cabinef-Boflom row: DesCamp, Howell, Cumbo, Hollander, Curran, Hoover, Cahen. Second row: Sayles, Perry, Wahl, G-ebo, Brouleffe, Sil- bauqh. Third row: Buckley, Quigley, Crawford, Henderson, O'Neil, Gray, Reed, Whefsfone, Sanders, Eilerfson, Peckenpaugh, Maffson. Top row: Rhodes, Temple, Waldo, Hull. Deparlmenf Heads-Jane Eilerfson, Social, lsabelle Senior, Service, Rufh Quigley, Adrninisfrafive, Emily Hull, Culfural. Advisor's Office Sfaff-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Beffy Ann Hollander, Chairman. Teller, Hollorp, Tweedy, Hollander, Rolhwell, Harris, Hirch- oerg. 30 on cornmiffee. Nurse's Sfaif-Miss Evelyn Eclcholm, Advisor, Naida Sanders, Chairman. Standing: Wesllund, Sanders, Shireman, Sears, Nysfedf, Selvln. Seafed: Miss Eclcholm, Boles. 9 on commiffee. Finance Cornmiffee-Mrs. Neffie Moore, Advisor, Edifh Mae Maffson, Chairman. Sfanding: Nordby, Weisel, Wesf, Beyer, Goodwin Maffson, Grinnell, Wilcox. IO on comrniffee. Liflle Colonel Sfaff-Miss Edna Breazeale, Advisorg Marfha Wahl, Edi- for. Holcombe, Oldfield, Nelson, Forde, Housfon, Wahl, Sfone Curran, Whefsfone, Wasson. I0 on comrniffee. 40 girl .rlzozzld be true THE LOOKOUT COMMITTEE, under Nancy Gray, published fhe girls' Consfifufion and purchased new furnishings for fhe Club Office. Marfha Wahl, head of fhe Publicify Commiffee, was responsible for all fhe publicify for fhe girls' proiecfs, including posfers, bulle- fins, and arficles in fhe News. The Scrapbook Commif- fee, under Beffy Sayles, compiled fhe Club's memory book, which has been worked on during pasf years by fhis commiffee. All fhe programs, decorafions, and de- scripfions of various Girls' Club parfies and acfivifies may be found in fhis book. Julienne Brouleffe and her Records Commiffee filed all fhe girls' informafion cards and fhe Club acfivify cards, recording on fhe laffer fhe club work engaged in by each girl. I The Service Deparfmenf, under fhe direcforship of Isabelle Senior, was composed of seven commiffees: Minufe Girls, Social Service, Good Cheer, Resf Room, Losf and Found, Aurora Guards, and Employmenf. The Losf and Found Commiffee, headed by Wilma Hoover, fook care of all losf arficles and did ifs besf fo refurn fhem fo fheir righfful owners. The Good Cheer Commiffee, direcfed by Evelyn Buckley, broughf happiness fo fhose girls absenf because of serious illness, by sending leffers, flowers, and felephone messages. Virginia Gebo and her Employmenf Commiffee found parf-fime iobs and posifions in homes for girls who needed fhem. Records were kepf of all fhese placemenfs. Virginia Sil- baugh, head of fhe Resf Room Commiffee, appoinfed an af- fendanf for each period during fhe day. This year fhe Girls' Club elecfions were marked by fhe close- ness of fhe confesfs befween rival candidafes and fhe enfhusi- asm wifh which fhe girls furned ouf fo vofe. The resulfs of fhe campaign were as follows: Edifh Mae Maffson, defeafing lola Helen Brown, will fake over fhe adminisfrafion of fhe Girls' Club as presidenf nexf year, for vice-presidenf, Beffy Lou Winningham defeafed Alice Winger by a small margin, while Marfha Wagner, running for freasurer, defeafed Jane Reed. Jeanne Fairbrook, running for corresponding secrefary, and Dorofhy Sweef for recording secrefary, were vicforious over Charloffe Whife and Peggy Milne. The losing candidafes will fake posifions in fhe cabinef. Lookouf Commiffee-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Nancy Gray, Chairman. Whefsfone, Abbof, Thrapp, Brown, Kidwiler, Anger, Snider, Gray, Larson. IO on commiffee. Publicify Commiffee-Miss Alma Ward, Advisor, Marfha Wahl, Chair- man. Sfancling: Wifzke, Gillis, Cosfello, Baisden. Seafed: Wasson, Wahl, Baker, McDonald. I2 on commiffee. Scrapbook Cammillee-Miss Grace-Jean Mclnfosh, Advisor, Beffy Sayles, Chairman. Sfanding: Selvin, Baker, Nicolay. Seafedz Lounsbury, Sanders, Sayles. 9 on cornmiflee. Records Commiflee-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Julienne Broulefle Chairman. Sfandinq: Currier, Brouleffe, Groves. Sealed: Hinkston, Cooke. 8 on commiflee. Losl' and Found Commiffee-Miss Charloffe Dueber, Advisor, Wilma Hoover, Chairman. Frederickson, Elvidge, Humling, Hough, Haack, Haf- lon, Carlson, Hoover, Daniels. I5 on commiffee. Good Cheer Commiffee-Miss Offie Van Orsdall, Advisor, Evelyn Buckley, Chairman. Sfanding: Hoskyn, Kirk, Myler. Seafed: King, Buckley, Kennedy, Young, Gay, Brislawn. 32 on commiflee. Employmenf Commiffee-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Virginia Gebo, Chairman. Sranding: Burkheimer, Cornwall, Gebo, Lebeck. Seafed: Burk- land, Nelson, Baisden, Enfrop. I0 on comrniflee. Resl' Room Commiffee-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Virginia Silbaugh, Chairman. Norem, l.arson, Allen, Paul, Silbaugh, Kemple. I4 on com- miffee. 4l ushered The six Social o'Clock to the bert and the THE MEMBERS oT The Social Service CommiTTee broughT ioy inTo The lives oT involids and people less TorTunaTe Than Themselves by preparing joke books, dressing dolls, making layeTTes, and compiling scrap- books. AnoTher branch oT The Social Service was The KniTTing Club, which meT every Monday aTTer school. Maxine l-lenderson and DoroThy O'Neil were co-chair- men oT The Two cornmiTTees. l-larrieTTe Dore headed The MinuTe Girls. This commiTTee, The largesT OT The Girls' Club, was divided inTo Three paTrols. Their duTies were To sTraighTen up aTTer parTies, run errands, and do many odd iobs. The Aurora Guards, headed by Eunice Cahen, were a group of auburn-Tressed girls who served as guides aT P.-T. A. Open House and aT various o+her programs during The year. CommiTTees: Fellowship, EnTerTainmenT, Four Tea, Refreshment l-lospiTaliTy, and DecoraTion were under The supervision oT RuTh Quigley. Aileen WheTsTone and her Fellowship CommiTTee provided a big sisTer Tor every new girl enTering RoosevelT. This girl Took her liTTle sisTer To a Girls' Club parTy given To acquainT new girls wirh RoosevelT. BeTTy Des Camp and her ReTreshmenT CommiTTee were responsible Tor The planning and serving of The reTreshmenTs headed P.-T. A. members To'd, h T F . . I c anman o or visiTors To The aT The Girls' Club parTies. PaTricia Brown o'Clock Tea CommiTTee, which served The aTTer Their monrhly meeTings. Helen Craw- The l-lospiTaliTy CommiTTee, provided guides school and gave a hospiTaliTy Tea in honor of The Four The TaculTy members. Iver-ne Perry and her DecoraTion Com- ,-,-, - iTTee had a man and Tavors Tor The sized job, Their duTy was To make decoraTions Girls' Club parTies. wirh The cooperaTion of The Social deparT4 enT The Gills Club TurThered The . be-Triendly spiril' aT such aTheirngs as The Teas 'lor incoming groups Tram BryanT, Ra- enna John Malshall, and oTher schools. A Musical Tea, car- ied ouT in The ValenTine Theme, was given Tor The TaculTy. ach TaculTy member was escorTed by some member oT The :abineT or a roll represenTaTive. This was The TirsT Time such n aTTair had been sponsored by The Girls' Club and iT was 'uch a success ThaT iT will be given again nexT year and in The ears Tollowin During The year TI ' Q . 1 , ' E 11 V Q. Social Service O'NeiI - Maxine Ellis, Henderson CommiTTee-Miss Margaref Tomlinson, Advisor, DoroThy,' Henderson, Chairmen. EllsworTh, Huson, Hoskins, Walsh, , Bowen, O'Neil, Peck, Moore. 85 on comrniTTee. MinuTe Girls-Miss -Rose Glass, Advisor, HarriefTe Dore, Chairman. McKinnell, AinsworTh, Young, Hodgson. Seafedz Dore, , HiaTT, Adams. 97 on comrniTTee. STanding: Alger, Smifh, MacLeod Aurora Guards-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Eunice Cahen, Chairman. SmrTh, Lawrence, Teefs, Holcombe, Cochran, Campbell, Anderson, Mc- Gurgan, Cahen. Z6 on commiTTee. Fellowship CommiTTee-Mrs. MaTilda GiIbreaTh, Advisor, Aileen Wher- sfone, Chairman. Firsf row: O'Hara, Geiger, SweeT, WheTsTone, Ollason Second row: Cowderoy, Cryor, Fairbrook. 23 on comrniTTee. ReTreshrnenT CommiTTee-Miss Ada Kraus, Advisor, Beffy Des Camo, Chairman. Olson, Gay, Anderson, Des Camp, Dupar, HardT, Dehn, l-loTo- viTzky. 20 on commiTTee. Four o'Clock Tea-Miss Ada Kraus, Advisor, PaTricia Brown, Chairman. Randolph, SommerviIle,Pe., RaTTi, Harvey, HaTTon, HeiTeshu, Harley, Call, Sommerville, Ph., Brown. 45 on commiTTee, HospiTaliTy Commiffee-Mrs, AugusTa Kemper, Advisor, Helen Craw- ford, Chairman. McWain, Reyes, Tiffin, Faulds, Krueger, Buckner, HilTner Crawford. 20 on CommiTTee, DecoraTion CommiTTee-Miss Doris Sundling, Advisor, lverne Perry Chairman. STanding: Babcock, Kelsey, Anderson, E., Barndf, Ander- son, M. R. SeaTed: Pedersen, Quigley, Johnson, HoughTon. B7 on corr- miTTee. 42 worrhieff within her THE ENTERTAINMENT CommiTTee, under Jeanne 3eckenpaugh, planned and managed all The Girls' Club parTies. The CulTural group composed oT seven commiTTees was under The direcTorship oT Emily Hull. The CommiTTees were: ArT and CulTure, AThleTics, Dra- rnaTics, Assembly, Music, STandards, and VacaTional. The ArT and CulTure CommiTTee, under Barbara Curran, sponsored programs TeaTuring prominenT per- sons in SeaTTle arTisTic circles ond published bullerins aT culTural evenTs ThroughouT The ciTy. The DramaTic CommiTTee, supervised by JaneT Waldo, provided skiTs and plays aT Girls' Club enTerTainmenTs during The year. Jo Ford assisTed by RuTh Farwell and her Music CommiTTee worked on a Girls' Club Song Book and sponsored a song-wriTing conTesT. They also gave a Musical Tea Tor The TaculTy during February. Jane Reed headed The STandards CommiTTee and iTs accomplishmenTs consisTed OT a middy drive, a sTyle show, and The sale of The Club's ETiqueTTe Book, STepping OUT. Two oTher major evenTs sponsored by This group were a charm Talk by DoroThy Neighbors and Cour- Tesy Week. Marion Cumbo and her VocaTional CommiTTee sponsored Talks abouT imparTanT Tields OT work Tor women, published several arTicles in The News concerning diTTerenT vocaTions, and helped puT over The largesT VocaTional Con- Terence ever held aT RoosevelT, in which all sTudenTs parTici- paTed. There were 6l diTTerenT speakers. The AThleTics Com- miTTee was made up OT The managers oT The various sporTs and was headed by Nancy Jean Temple assisTed by DoroThea Rhodes. The Assembly CommiTTee, wiTh HarrieT Howell as chairman, arranged all The girls' assemblies during The year and secured many inTeresTing speakers. One oT The biggesT proiecTs OT The year was The VocaTional ConTerence sponsored ioinTly by The Girls' and Boys' Clubs. QuesTionnaires were senT To all sTudenTs To obTain Their preT- erences OT Talks. Speakers had To be obTained Tor Those mosT popular vocaTions, and TransporTaTion provided Tor Their arrival and deparTure. Each sTudenT was enTiTled To Two choices oT con- Terences, which lasTed an hour each. Speakers were accom- panied by hosTesses provided by The Girls' Club. SecreTaries Took noTes on each conTerence To be puT in a special vaca- Tional noTebook which is kepT in The Girls' Club oTTice. EnTerTainmenT CornmiTTee-Miss Doris Sundling, Advisor, Jeanne Peck- enpaugh, Chairman. Sfandingz Adamson, Erickson. SeaTed: Hughes, Bar- fon, Bufler, Peckenpaugh, McKniqhT, Klein, Smifh. I4 on commiTlee. Arl' and CulTure Commiffee-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Barbara Curran, Chairman. Sfanding: Presson, Wagner, Moore, Bucey. Seafeclz Kelly, Cur- ran, Cormier, Harris. IO on commiTTee. Drarnalics Commiffee-Miss Borghild Lee, Advisor, Janel' Waldo, Chair- -an. Windus, Lewis, KeilholTz, Waldo, Fry, Balkema, Wilkinson, DisTad, Merrick. 22 on cammiTTee. Music CommiTTee-Mr. ErnesT WorTh, Advisor, Jo Ford. Chairman. STanding: Presson, Carpenfer, Clark, Dehn, Sfeele, RisTe, Olson. SeaTed: Farwell, Ford. 30 on commiTTee. STandards Commiffee-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Jane Reed, Chairman. MaloT'r, Henwood, Mounfain, Richardson, Whife, Reed, Snyder, Nicolay, Winge, RiTTer. I5 on commiTTee. VocaTional Commiffee-Miss Myrlle Reck, Advisor, Marion Cumbo, Chairman. Anderson, Laubenheim, Murphy, Bardue, Laughridge, Crowl, Cumbo, Fisher. I3 on commi'rTee. AThleTics Committee-Miss CaTherine Rogers, Advisor, Nancy Jean Temple-DoroThea Rhodes, Chairmen, Sfandingz Bovee, Temple, Jacob- son, Rhodes, Tanagi. SeaTed: BurTon, Templeron, WeTTerlind, Parfridge, Landaas. IO on comrniTTee. Assembly CommiTTee-Miss Rose Glass, Advisor, Harriel' Howell, Chair- man. STanding: Wood, Wells, Ollason, SmiTh. SeaTed: Morfard, Powell, Ke-nT, Howell, BaThursT. I0 on comrniffee. 43 BOYS' CLUB CABINET: STanding-Winslow, Greaves, Balkema, DoughTy. SeaTed-Jones, presidenTg Sheedy, Leaf, Whife, vice-presZ- denfg Mr. BerThiaume, advisor, LiTTIe, secreTaryg DeFriel, Treasurer. b oy J' cl zz b EVERY ROOSEVELT boy is a member oT The Boys' Club: as such, his qualiTicaTions Tor leader- ship in his organizaTion are noT seT down in The Torm OT a wriTTen code, buT arise Trom The way in which he develops and in- TerpreTs his own personal creed. OuTsTanding lead- ers in The club have al- ways sensed This TacT: and The unwriTTen principles oT sTrengTh and honor, oT sporTsmanship and Toler- ance have Tormed The groundwork oT achieve- menTs by The Boys' Club, an organizaTion ThaT has grown To be an inTegral parT oT school liTe appre- ciaTed by all. aims' fog help each individual THE CABINET oT The Boys' Club, composed oT The club's oTTicers and Two represenTaTives Trom each class, wiTh Mr. Sheridan Bei-+hiaume as advisor, planned a successTul year OT school acTiviTies. One oT The TirsT evenTs spon- sored by The club during The year was The annual FaTher and Son BanqueT held in The laTe Tall in honor oT The TooTball squad. Assemblies were sponsored by The organizaTion during boTh semesTers. One oT parTicular inTeresT TeaTured a moving picTure describing The work oT The CoasT Guard Service. ConTinuing ThroughouT The year The inTramural sporTs program perTormed an imporTanT iob in oTTering on opporTuniTy in aThleTics Tor every boy in school. During The spring semesTer There was The second annual Novice Track MeeT aT which everyone inTeresTed in Track, Trom Freshmen To Seniors, was given a chance To parTicipaTe. The meeT was held, mainly, Tor The purpose aT sTim- ulaTing inTeresT in Track, especially among Freshmen and Sophomores, and To help in discovering possible Track TalenT. As a conclusion To The celebraTion oT Campus Days, a Field Day was held on a SaTurday aT which The boys oT The school were To gaTher Tor The purpose oT improving The exTerior appearance oT The school. ln a Tine Turn-ouT, a large group OT ambiTious boys ioined in The general clean-up as They pushed lawnmowers, painTed The baseball backsTops and gave The grounds a Thorough cleaning. Speakers, some TiTTy or more in number, Turnished inTormaTion and advice abouT as many diTTerenT lines oT work aT The annual VocaTional ConTerence. ThaT iT was a greaT success and one oT The TinesT of iTs kind ever held aT school was The almosT unanimous opinion oT The enTire sTudenT body. ln conclusion, one TuncTion oT The club, perhaps noT so widely publicized as oThers, buT s+iII To which a greaT deal oT crediT is due, is The work oT The Boys' Club commiTTees. The members oT Those groups are To be commended Tor The work which They did To make The club's proiecTs successTul. FaiThTully working Tor The good oT The school. The Boys' Club, Through iTs leaders, labored To make improvemenTs which would be oT lasTing value To The school. The new cinder paTh laid around RoosevelT's Tield being a concreTe example oT accomplishmenT along This line. As The semesTer was closing new oTTicers were being elecTed To carry on and To exTend The work oT The organ- izaTion. 44 arm My own code ROUGH RIDERS: This senior boys' honorary organizaTion specializes in service To Roos- evelT. To wear iTs green and gold sweaTer one rnusT rneeT The sTricTesT requiremenTs oT any club in school. Membership in The Rough Riders is limiTed To ThirTy and is, ThereTore, reserved Tor Those whose characTer and schol- asTic record are known To be ouTsTanding. Slanding-Morse, STewarT, Jones, LiTfle. SeaTed-Pack, Young, Fuii, Greaves, Zorn, Graves, Mr. Berfhiaume, club advisor, Ballcema, WhiTe, Fairbank, MonesmiTh, DeFriel. Cen- Ter-Farwell, presidenf. OTher members: Bussard, Easfer, Guppy, l-larby, Harris, KrogsTad, Mason, MaTTson, Milliman, Parroff, Pearce, Phil- lips, Scoones, Sierer, Thorsos, Winslow. , LEATHER MEDAL COMMITTEE: Sorne sevenTy boys who perTorrned some ouTsTand- ing service Tor RoosevelT during The year were awarded leaTher medals by The commiTTee as a Token OT recogniTion Tor Their eTTorTs. ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE: Arranging and presenTing The program Tor The Boys' Club's assemblies was The work oT This group. Leafher Medal CommiTTee: Pickens, Macdonald, Daniels, chairman. Assembly CommiTTee: Winslow, MonTgomery, De- Friel, chairman: lllman. DANCE COMMITTEE: The TooTball squad was honored in The Tall by a dance sponsored ioinTly by The Boys' Club and Girls' Club, Tor which arrangernenTs were rnade by The Dance CornrniTTee. DecoraTions appropria'Te Tor The occasion were prepared by The cornmiTTee. STandi-g-Jones. lllman, DoughTy. SeaTed-Whife, SelIeriTe, Coey, chairman, STewarT. VOCATIONAL CONFERENCE COMMIT- TEE: EuTure crirninologisTs and archaeologisTs as well as engineers, lawyers and bankers were given a chance To learn abouT Their chosen careers direcrly Trom speakers prorninenT in Those Tields, who were iobTained Through The work oT The commiTTee. Pack, MonesmiTh, Fairbank, Greaves, chairman, DeFriel. BIG NITE COMMITTEE: The cornrniTTee worked diIigenTIy To assure The success oT The EaTher and Son BanqueT. Their eTTorTs meT wiTh approval, resulTing in an excellenT ban- queT Tollowed by a program TeaTuring a wood- chopping conTesT and a liars' conTesT, as well as The award oT The TooTball leTTers. Back-Young, STewarT, Ohail. Fronf-Fuji, Greaves, ParroTT, Whife, Jones. ATI-ILETIC COMMITTEE: The AThleTic CommiTTTee is responsible Tor deTerrnining and conTrolling an aThleTic policy Tor The school conh-olling an aThleTic policy Tor The school. Changes in IeTTer awards musT receive The commiTTee's approval: Their duTies also in- clude assisTing in The inTramural program. Back-Blanchard, KurTzer, chairman, Campbell, Hoffman, Tangen. EronT-Fuji, Nordby, Wolf, TempleTon, Thomas, Barr. 45 I-IGNCDRS AND AWARDS MINING FROM Hme beyond memory, fhe low murmur of Treasure in fhe eor+h's hidden lones hos colled To mon-+he seeking, his joyq +he discovery, his reword. : : : : : : : These, fhen, +he owords of whole-heor+ed endeovor and worfhy performorlce. : : 1 : : : ' : zxi If B a A up I 5: , ! K? -J ,5 gb I l jfffsfg, .. Q' J Q -L? ww 1 ii - ii 4 c S I 5 1 , I 7 1 Q 'Q s 2- i X in -J A Q ,Fd sl f S E Q If Ky'- ll.. ' ff 5.3 'Ike ,ww A JL Elzey, Faxrbank, MaTTson Curran, Pack. Jcholazrf, athletes, Zeawierfglwzrvest honour STUDENTS WHO re- ceive Trophies, pins, or oTher symbols OT The hon- ors They win, do noT re- ceive merely These Tangi- ble represenTaTions OT vic- Tory. They receive much more, noT only aT The con- clusion OT Their successTul eTTorTs, buT during The pe- riod when These eTTorTs are being puT TorTh. The saTisTacTion OT purposeTul labor, OT a iob so well done ThaT iTs meriTs are recognized by oThers, is as greaT as or greaTer Than any maTerial award. IT a Task is once be- gun, never leave iT 'Till iT's done. Be The labor greaT or small, do iT well or noT aT all. .T - I, --5 ...af -1 Ng , R LADlES AND GENTLEMEN, we are honored .... To presenT .... STars in RoosevelT's TirmamenT, wheTher placed There by Their Tellows or by Their elders, occupy Their posiTions Tor many diTTerenT reasons. Accomplish- menTs in The realms OT service, OT inTellecTual abiliTy, OT aThleTic prowess, in TacT, in as many Tields as There are phases OT school liTe, have all received The rewards due Them Trom appreciaTive onlookers. The class OT l935 has chosen as iTs giTT To RoosevelT High School a Trophy case modern in design and equipmenT. This case is locaTed where visiTors To The school as well as sTudenTs may be consTanTly reminded ThaT, Awards and honor come To him who wills. For loyalTy and service as Boys' Club presidenT, and The consequenT incen- Tive To his Tellows, Dick MonTgomery lasT year received The Hi-Y lnspiraTion Cup. AnoTher coveTed honor, ThaT OT being voTed The ouTsTanding aThleTe OT The year, was exTended To KenneTh Madden OT The TooTball Team aT The close OT The I936 season. The Hyllengren Trophy is The symbol OT This honor, and bears The names OT Those boys Thus selecTed by Their TeammaTes.e,ach year. Raymond Royal, sTudenT body presidenT in T934, donaTed a cup To suc- ceeding A.S.R. presidenTs which lasT year was presenTed To Jean Morgan and was This year received by Julius MaTTson. Two memorials To Tormer sTudenTs OT RoosevelT have been esTablished. One is The RoberT Jones Plaque, on which are engraved The names oT boys who are members boTh OT The TooTball Team and OT The honor socieTy. LasT year, Sherman Burd and Wylie Hemphill won This disTincTion, while Julius MaTTson's name appears Tor boTh lasT year and This. The PoTTer Harley memorial award OT 550.00 is given each year by Mr. Harley in memory OT his son POTTer. The selecTion is made on The basis OT need and worThy ciTizenship. ln I935 Gordon DeiTs received This award. A scroll, very beauTiTul in color and design, displaying The many and varied inTeresTs OT PoTTer Harley hangs in The hall by The school library. No names are inscribed Tor iT hangs as a Tramed permanenT TribuTe. The Jackson-Grandiean Cup, presenTed by Two Tormer Girls' Club pres- idenTs, is yearly given To The mosT inspiraTional senior girl. Jean Morgan, A.S.R. presidenT, received iT in l935. Jean was also winner OT a scholarship To WhiTman College. AnoTher scholarship, which sends The winner To sTudy aT Mills College, was won This year by Helen Burkheimer. A corps OT able and ambiTious public speakers broughT TurTher disTincTion To RoosevelT. Each year The Sons OT The American RevoluTion sponsor an 48 ninfiifge QIEJV bzfincgf exTemporaneous speaking conTesT in which Roos- evelT was represenTed This spring by l-lenry Fair- bank. AnoTher annual conTesT given by The ToasTmasTers' Club had Frances Kwapil, l-lenry Fairbank, and Virginia Elzey as TinalisTs Tram This school. DevoTees oT'music, hisTory and liTeraTure like- wise have goals seT up Tor Them Toward which They may direcT Their eTTorTs. The VicTor l-lerberT Cup Tor accomplishmenT in music was awarded To RuTh Greisinger and Phil Reilly in l935. This cup is given To Two sTuclenTs who have con- TribuTed and inspired mosT To group and indi- vidual developmenT in music. They are selecTed by popular voTe by The sTudenTs enrolled in The music deparTmenT. The award is made aT grad- uaTion. The UnivesiTy Kiwanis Club oT SeaTTle presenTs a cup and a cash prize each yea: To The Roose record winning crop O'Brien, ediTor oT The All-American Ro sevelT News, won an honorable menTion in The iTorial division. ScholasTic Magazine's liTerai onTesT winners were represenTed aT Roosevel y JaneT Morris, who received an honorable enTion Tor a TeaTure sTory on My Job, and rbara Cur- ran, who won TourTh prize in The e say division. The Forensic Club, a group o udenTs inTer- esTed in public speaking, s s d a SaTeTy Week campaign This spring ich TeoTured con- TesTs Tor a prize-winning sl an, and an exam- inaTion given on saTe dr: 'n . ards oT S2 and SBI were made by The r cieTy Tor These slogans and TesT ln e i , Ted HilTner, a Treshman, wo T Tir rize T 52, while Donna lvliTchell recei d pri e T a dollar Tor her enTI'y. yn B an George Farwell, seniors, wo The T sT -i es of Two dollars eac in ' g e r velT sTudenT who wriTes The besT paper on a sub OC OdUO H19 l'I'IbGIS OT The lvlinulre lecT penTaann-ug To husToiy Jim Pack Then ci 6 h Ol OT The-I1 names in- lumor Won This pllze in I935 I Cl OI'I O oT l'l'IIS OIgOF1iZO'l'iOI1. uill and Scroll inTeinaTional honor socieTy ivlce rendered during TesT in The several Tields oT newspaper wriTing. IT n awards or honor have been omiTTed iT This year, Jim Conners received an honorab h S ee due To The cliTTiculTy OT obTaining in- menTion in The TeaTure sTory division, while Jack T I aTi . - - h sa dr: T . - 5 . . g . . . . . . I S V . lu 335+ i .- ' ' , ' ' . scr' T e - ' - Q ' - , ' - ' - ' q Iii + n L- ' - - aT high school iournalisTs, sponsors a yearly con- mbeyiip e T : si oT This award. DPiPg+s++bqFrgldH c M 6 HE, I Of, E ef' el' , I'Z ETB , BUSOHI OHHCTS' OVTIS. 49 VicTor Harris, Presidenfp Josephine Ford, Treasurerg DoroThy SweeT, Secre- Taryg Alice Bremer, Vice-Presidenh Miss Roudebush, Advisor. young proalicgief folic at annual banquet ROOSEVELT again leads The Tield OT SeaTTle high schools in paying honor To iTs OuTsTanding scholars. Conceived aT The incep- Tion OT The Torch organizaTion, and designed by one OT The sTu- denTs in The arT classes, The cerTiT- icaTe OT membership in The honor socieTy is given TO each sTudenT earning The required number OT poinTs Through grades and acTiv- iTies. ln addiTiOn TO This decOraTive cerTiTicOTe, sophomore, junior, and senior Torch pins are disTribuTed To The members To wear during The year. Sophomore pins have one bar OT gold on green: iunior, Two bars: and senior pins are in The Torm OT O round gold seal wiTh The insignia OT a Torch in The cenTer. TO be a member, second-year sTu- denTs musT earn 24 poinTs, on The basis OT 4 Tor an A, 3 Tor a B, 2 Tor a C, and I Tor a D: Third-year sTudenTs need 50 poinTs, and sen- iors, 78 poinTs. AT graduaTion, iT a senior has earned a TOTal OT IO8 pOinTs, he may reTain his pin. a-ixs piibabxasvs . .-,5f9jf'1-f f,,.' 5 , -N fr- -Y. rv: - mf... ,M rw igso, :Smile A ,gg i'i,lff'! '7 .fQ2f'35.lf T 75-f ,.zN ..,.gQg,ggDj. f Q r T . V -lint: Shih . 1 . lid .4Ww4.4 +-+!rimipnI 'Mia , SONG! ..... ALL RlOl-IT, all righTl Wirh VicTor Harris, presidenT OT The Honor SOcieTy as masTer OT ceremonies, ROOsevelT's greaT inrellecrs relaxed Tor an evening OT Tun OT The annual Torch BanqueT, March 20. The popular AmaTeur l-lour was The Theme OT The program, and radio in general pervaded The ormosphere boTh in The Table decora- Tions and in The place-cards. The school colors, green and gold, were also carried ThrOughOuT. AmbiTious school TalenT in all fields Turned OuT in compeTiTion Tor prizes and The Tavor OT The audience. Popular opinion gave Lyle PigOrT, bariTone songsTer, an edge over The oTher amaTeurs, wiTh POT GibauT, Tap-dancer, running a close second. Mrs. Froula presenTed a box OT candy TO The public's choice. The appreciaTive audience wished The oTher conTesTanTs BeTTer luck nexT Time! Also on The BanqueT program were Two speakers, Mrs. A. M. Winslow, P.T.A. presidenT, and The Rev. O. A. Bremer, TaTher OT Torch's second-in-command, Alice Bremer. lncidenTally, only RoOsevelT and Cleveland among The SeaTTle high schools give Their honor sTu- denTs This annual parTy. Co-chairmen OT The aTTair were Jane EilerTsen and George Farwell. , , Under The capable guidance OT Miss ElizabeTh Roudebush, The oTTicers TuncTiOned eTTicienTly during The year. The presidenT musT be a senior, and he organizes The several cOmmiTTees, besides acTing as ToasTmasTer Tor The banqueT. The vice-presidenT, always a iunior, assisTs The presidenT in his work. The Treasurer, who musT be a senior, has charge OT all The OrganizaTiOn's Tunds, while The secreTary, a soph- omore, assisTsiin'draTTing The help OT oThers Tor diTTerenT occasions. This year, VicTor Harris acTed as presidenT: Alice Bremer, vice- presidenT: Josephine Forclg Treasurer: DOroThy SweeT, secreTary. ln The conTesTs which were TeaTured as a parT OT ROOsevelT's SaTeTy Weels campaign, Torch donaTed cash prizes. A dollar TO each winner was awarded Tor The winning saTeTy slogans, and winners OT The TraTTic rules TesT received prizes also. Torch is one OT Tew acTiviTies which is nOT sponsored and financed by The sTudenT Ticl4eT. The organizaTion musT earn iTs own money. This is accomplished solely by The sales OT candy aT The larger school pro- ducTiOns, by girls who vOlunTeer The service. CharacTerisTic OT RoOsevelT's inTeresT in scholarship is The TacT ThaT iTs honor socieTy membership is The largesT OT any SeaTTle high school, having sixTeen per cenT OT The sTudenT body, Or Tour hundred and sevenTy members, on iTs rolls. 50 mmrmcg .rcboolir amateur azrfiyrf an theme AMONG Tl-TE COGS in The mochinery oT The l-lonor SocieTy ore The Tive sTonding commiTTees, Tolqing Their membership ond choirmen Trom The rolls oT honor sTudenTs. The membership commiTTee, direcTed This yeor by GloideTh Clorls, wos chieTly concerned wiTh The checking-in oT Torch pins Trom members QT The close oT The yeor. AddiTionol duTies oT This commiTTee ore Those oT recloiming pins from Those persons who were once on Torch buT do noT Top row-AlberTson, Ahrens, D. Balkerna, Beaulieu, Balmer, Andrews, BeckeT,,BarTon. Middle row-Adamson, B. Allen, Adams, R. Balkema Bell, Anger, D. Anderson, Amrine. BoTTom row-Anselm, T. Allen Aners, R. Anderson, Alexander, Adkins, Boals, E. Andersen. Top row-Booker, M. Bower, Brennan, J. Brown, Brand, Boulard Bolsfad, Beyer. Middle row-E. Clark, Coey, Burkheimer, Coad, BraTrud I. Brown, Brislawn, Bossie. BoTTom row-Brugman, Buford, Bird, Brown- ing, L. Bower, BillroTh, BerTch, Buckley. Top rowAG. Clark, Bufler, Davis, Cameron, Carmichael, CaroThers, ChanTry, CarTer. Middle roweDaniels, DalTon, Collins, Dana, Culross, eorn suTTicienT poinTs To reToin Their pins. Also The owording oT permonenT Torch pins To groduoTing seniors is done by The membership group. AnoTher imporTonT TuncTion is performed by The librory com- miTTee, whose worls iT is To checls The number oT Torch sTudenTs using The librory every period. Junior ond senior members ore exTended The privilege oT using The librory Three sTudy periods o week. wiThouT Teocher's signoTure on The permiT. Clarkson, Caldwell, L. Clark. BoTTom row-R. Clogh, E. Clark, l-l. Clark, Challman, H. Clough, Bus, BurTon, Buckier. Top row--Dupar, Cumbo, Crell, Currier, CoopersTein, Day, Elder, Des Camp. Middle row-Cryor, Curran, DisTad, Denny, EgglesTon, Dix, Dawson, Dick. BoTTom row-Dorify, Bremer, EilerTsen, Crawford, Dore, Coplen, Downing, Eckmann. Top row-R. Evans, FleTcher, Elworfhy, Fisher, DennisTon, Dehn, H. Davies, D. Evans. Middle row-A, Fairbrook, A. Davis, Ellsworlh, R. Farwell, Erickson, Fallers, J. Fairbrook, Elsey. BoTTom row-Engel, Fairbank, G. Farwell, DeFreiI, EllioTT, Easler, Ewing, DeiTs. 5 I rooreffelz' honor .rociefaf THE SCHOLARSHIP cOmmiTTee, direcTed by HursT Clark, sends noTices OT cOmrnendaTion every Ten weeks To Those srudenrs whose grades admiT Them TO The honor roll and To Torch members who rnainTain Their high scholasTic sTanding. The Tinance commiTTee, wiTh Jo Ford, Torch Treasurer, as chair- man, had The diTTiculT Taslq OT direcTing The candy sales OT each all-school perTOrmance, Trom which The honor socieTy derives iTs Tunds. These candy sales are Top row-Greene, Gerhard, Garing, Geisf, Goodfellow, B. Geiger, Goodman, Griffifh, Middle row-Gracey, F. Geiger, Goodwin, Giesier, Fry, Franck, Gibauf, Ford. BoT+om row-Glaser, Greaves, Graves Granf, Forde, Gourlay, Gardner, Gebo. Top row-HemsTead, Johnsfon, Henderson, Hoskins, Hollander, Hed sTrom, Hodges, Houston. Middle row-Johanson, Hoff, Johnson M. Heyward, Heafon, Hevly, Harby, HusTon. Boffom row-HorTon M. Heyward, Hall, Howard, Hardesfy, Harris, Herman, Hiesfer. Top row-Lewis, LaVigne, Liddell, C. Mefzger, Magnusson, Kennedy, Mason, McGuigan. Middle row-Lindgren, MacBride, McKinnell, Lind Lundholm, H. Mefzger, McKean, Hunfer. Boffom row-MeTz, Lincoln MaTsen, Leas, Landaas, Larsen, McClinTock, Malone. claims larger! ral! The sole source OT revenue Tor Torch, and are con- ducTed aT The revue, senior play, opera and concerT by girls who are honor sOcieTy members. LasT bur Tar Trom leasT comes The banqueT comrniTTee, having Jane EilerTsen and George Farwell as iTs co-chair- men, whose splendid work on This year's parTy made iT very popular and successTul. WiThOuT The eTTorTs OT These commiTTees, many OT The acTiviTies oT The honor sOcieTy would be impossible. Top row-Harding, Harrison, HaTTon, Gwinn, Dow, Halleif, Burkland, Harley. Middle row-Harris, Hargrave, Greenwood, Grinnell, Hanson, GuberleT, Harfman, Harby. Bo1Tom row-Grunbock, Elzey, Hasemeier, Hargiss, Guppy, Gordon, Harrison, Groui. Top row-KraTT, M. Kincaid, D. Johnson, C. Johnson, Kamikawa, Kelsey, Hurd, Julnes. Middle row-Klein, Kuss, Kelly, D. Kincaid, Kirslen, Kingman, Jordshaugen, Hull. BoTTom row-Jenkins, Leaf, Kuehn, Lawrence, Kwapil, Kennedy, HilTner, Hughes. Top row-Mourik, Murphy, M. Moore, Moulfon, Meagher, Morse, Mannes, Lilygren. Middle row--Mifchell, Loomis, Morden, E. Moss, l. Moss, Miller, McMillan, Milne. BoTTom row-Larson, Magune, Mason, Mclnfyre, Milroy, Medler, Michkils, J. Moore. 52 0 membership in any For lhe lirsl lime in lhe hislory of Seallle high school honor sociely organizalions lhe exacl mem- bership and percenlage of Jrhe 'rolal enrollmenl were delermined and compiled. Roosevell slood lirsl wilh l6.7'X, of irs 23ll sludenls raling honor sociely membership. Nexl came Wesr Secnurle, wilh 270 honor sludenls our ol l823, or l4.8C7o. Ballard, wilh 233 sludenls ou'l ol 202l in lhe honor sociely, had llCX,g Broadway had 9.5270 of ils enrollmenl of Top row-Monrad, Newlands, Myers, Oldfield, Murray, Nordahl Myler, Paflen. Middle row-Miller, Nordby, Nelson, Monfan, S. Nor dahl, Peck, R. Olson, B. Murray. Bollorn row-Mounsey, Nobles, Nissen O'Neil, Neergaard, Paul, Murphy, A. Olson. Top row-Srone, Ruefer, Roberls, Royal, Shores, Pearce, Risie, Snyder. Middle row-Shimizu, Sellerile, Sherriff, Shuler, Riley, Scoll, Robinson Ross. Bollom row-Slewarl, Rogers, Ruclnicki, Safsrrom, Phillips, Rich ards, Schuylen, Sierer. Top row-Turnure, Wicksfrom, Voeks, Wade, Van Vleck, D. Tiffin Taylor, Terry. Middle row-Taguchimi, Uyeii, Walden, Waldo, Thompson B. Upper, F. Tiffin, Wagner. Bolforn row-eMcKinnell, Tollen, T. Upper Todd, Van Ornum, Veblen, Thomas, Tarbill. .rwzfile high whoa! 2l2l wirh high scholarship ralingsy 48 ol Cleveland's IO29 pupils allained lhe honor roll: Frcinl4lin's slu- denl body ol 2l48 was represenled on lhe lisls by 292 sludenls, or l3.59'7,,3 l M8970 ol lhe I967 pupils al Garfield raled honor pins, while 257 our ol l.in- coln's 2567 sludenls achieved 'rhal dislinclionq and Queen Anne had ll.42f7O ol ils sludenl body ol l803, or 206 members in lhe honor organizalion. Top row-Sipprell, Nelson, Milchell, P. Pelerson, Ramsdell, Powell, Presson, R. Peterson. Middle row-Parkinson, L. Pelerson, Plalh, Recfor, Randles, Roebke, Rader, Riebow. Bolforn rowfPilce, Rumin, Pickens, E. Pelerson, Phillips, Piclcrell, Rayner, Reed. Top row-Sloe, Sleen, Teichroew, Templefon, Slack, Sleele, Robinson, Slefien. Middle row-Sleenberqern, Sweel, A. Smilh, J. Sfeele, R. Smilh, Slrong, Spurgeon, Snider. Bollom row-O. Smilh, Slarr, Thompson, Sprague, Slaler, Snyder, Smart, Swale. Top row-Wills, Windus, Warren, While, Wellman, Wellerlincl, Wil- kinson, Wilcox. Middle row--Vllallen, M. Young, Weslin, Wilson, Walk, While, Slover, Williams. Boflom row-M. Young, Winningham, Winger, Williamson, S. Young, Wesfover, Weller, Winslow. - 5. w Hmmm: 53 JWWM' lfgCTIVITIES -ff VL-f'giVq:3.1:1gs-1'-ffji-fVaf5V1v'Qf.' . . . Vf' - . ,Q- . . . -: .' -V..---.fm--A V-'Sad 'S . V'l:'.7- y. '--,Q ' 'Q 'Z'-..' A iiuhux. .4-Q.-, ., -c '-..::., . ''V11..VQj-,.,,',,'Q.g,j: ,g2:5g.V...V. ,,.-.-V.V.Ln':i...:-1-1ig.35-..vias-wm.,..Q-2x,..--gg.:.. - -' , , -2121 Quin, nik-V':'-' ,--:-3..-ff35Z.'qi,i-Sfniicvwe-Lifi-If-:Wliri:-3if-filfliv if..:?1- '-Dfr'- :Wi- lT -'TYV-: z'-:VJ--':T1 ?iP?..-fm .f 1, V '- ' . -. ' V ,n , 1 f- :STM .g. .Vf :V 5. V. Q - f 1: ,-.: 1.-.,-1 Q1-gawk N... g .V '- a,'w1,5nf-Q.,-,, f if f-Z4 --rv -1 ' 1' V Vu ,.- - . - ..fAf ' ' 1 -1 3-e1':e452.-V.. . i.:.- , V. --z , .V mu . f . 1. L -'-,V . . mpgs ' . ' if ff ' .-:fe 5, --.. j ' - - - V A - -V ' . if.L,,f.-IBS V . 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' f i- if 1' A A , ,,.VA,-g'f'ffI.f ,gy-,Vsfg ' 5.gV-35-3':,fV2 fglllig ,Y 'L ' ' ' - ' 'Vl.ge2,VVf1g ' ' 2 ---V 1' : -' I - 1 -ff- 'gf--if - - . e Q , . V V. f -- f .VL-Q yfll- ,,' ,lyk 2 ' - H-Z.3.::d,V5 It r gh 1 -- U 9 V-' -::.- s ' ' ., V H w 1 .-V'- .., ni- -V V. I V - ' lr' ' .:V-1-,1.' ' .'V' V . V . V ,- 5.- ,.V V. ,ph L - A 4 i.5L.:.,. ,... x y . ,VV Q. -V M- Msg, , Pg V .-1.15, ' 1-Q' ' 'fee-if'i- TQQ sf V' .-1'- .- VV' : . WL- 1- .- '1:- -' e ' Y- - -. .- . if we f -Sw ,. I --q yes...-1. V -, - . . -w-1 . -V . --5-qs, , is .,.:-Q 1 . . -Eur If --z. , ' . - VL 'e ' -' W. - W '27, , -.rf5 '- .5-T - .. . . ' V 7 if ' ' '--'E-L'.,V--,,.,a..' ' s' V , QT - V' - fu- . . . - . -- .. V' V- . -- 333 V 'As . ..ff--1 . - .. . 1-1-fm - f V. W .. .V ,..,,,-,s ,.,.,,.r , i ., H m -was .. - ' -5-V f ' w ,5 H .mf .- ,Q - .L+-1 V - A Aj .3 V. 1 ,fn 4,-V ' ' r , ' X. , I ,. Q9 . - -x. -1 Q V- V. ' -. H ' ,J .?.,,,.fl,.V- 1? - -- ' -. ii' , ,Lf-1: ...' ' 'V . :' fdv'-5112151937945 .V 5 .h 0 , b,,.,.,,Q,.a N, ir V life- rf M.,,,f.1 :T ' 1-gig., ' ,5gj,j::- .J-. jwg., - ,ff ng if -V V V.- .Yf'?i5,,i -xy. V- V DAIIQYING SWEEPING meadow ands and grazing herds--an unfailing source of heallh and weollh of The Norlhwesl. Aclive inleresl insures lhe fulure perrnanency of lhis induslry. : : 1 : Clubs, represenling varied inleresrs and purposes, conlribule fo The cullural developrnenl and social well-being of our slu- denls .... diversions which open doors +o larger horizons and lo possible vocafions. : : : : : : : : : : DEBATE: STanding-PresTon, King, Mr. Rehbock, FairbrooL Chali' T M B ll k A de B Tfe Eze r a 'ftbey wa Wt uf Z 11 THE QUESTION debaTed in The Tall semesTer was: Resolved: ThaT The manuTac- Ture oT muniTions should be a governmenT monopoly in The UniTed STaTes. The aTTirm- aTive Team was made up oT Ardene Fair- brook, main speaker, and Virginia Elzey, cross-quesTioner. Mr. Bullock coached The aTTirmaTive Team. The negaTive Team on This quesTion, coached by Mr. Rehbock, was made up oT Jack Coplen, main speak- er, and George King, cross-examiner. The quesTion in The spring semesTer was: Re- solved: ThaT commercial adverTising is more harmTul Than beneTicial. The aTTirmaTive Team was made up oT ArThur ChalTonT and Virginia Elzey, and The negaTive Team, Ar- Thur ChalTonT and Bob BriTTeTT. As an ex- perimenT, The debaTes This year were oT The no-decision Type. lT was TelT ThaT This mighT bring abouT argumenTaTion oT a higher Type. The Forensic Club wasan honorary speak- ing organizaTion open To all sTudenTs who eiTher received an A grade in Public Speak- ing or gave an accepTable Tive-minuTe Talk before The club. Talks over The radio, in The roll rooms, and in assemblies consTiTuTed some oT Their acTiviTies. They sponsored sev- eral proiecTs such as The AnTi-Tubercular Drive and SaTeTy Drive. To cenTer The sTu- denTs' aTTenTion on The all-imporTanT ques- Tion oT saTeTy, The Forensic Club issued The arTicle And Sudden DeaTh. Miss lvliller was The advisor, AlTon Pickens was The pres- idenT Tor The TirsT semesTer, Lewis DoughTy, presidenT Tor The second semesTer, Elzey, Mr. Bullock, Fairbrook Elzey, King, Fairbrook, Coplen Mr, Rehbock, King, Coplen FORENSIC CLUB: STanding-Pickens, BruTon, Fairbank, Doughfy, O'Neill, STone, Elzey, Terry. SeaTed-Bremer, Royal, Cross, ChaIianT, Fairbrook, Miss Miller. special clubs promote .Trudy LOS PANAMERICANGS club disTinguished iTselT by holding Tour unusual meeTings. The TirsT meeTing was called. Felices Pascuas, TeaTur- ing gay ChrisTmas songs, dances and plays. The nexT meeTing was all Mexican, Un Episodio Ro- manTico del Rio Grande. ProTessor de la Torre, Spanish proTessor aT The UniversiTy oT Washing- Ton, was The ouTsTanding speaker oT The year. The oTTicers oT The Spanish Club were RoberT Browning, presidenT: VicTor l-larris, vice-pl'esi- denT: Evelyn l-landy, SecreTary and Treasurer. The sergreanTs-aT-arms were Jean Fisher and Vyn Alexander. Carol Lindh was The hard-working chairman oT The program commiTTee. The advisor oT The Spanish Club was Miss Leona Beckham. One hundred-TiTTy French sTudenTs Tound a very 'pracTical applicaTion Tor Their knowledge in The French Club. This year iT was led by Phyliss l-leaTon, presidenTg DoroThy BurTon, vice-presi- denT: Tom l-largiss, secreTary: and Daphne Eck- erT, Treasurer Tor The TirsT semesTer, and l-larry BruTon, president Louise Harding, vice-presidenT, STanding-Gannon, Browning, Alexander, McLaughlin. SeaTed- Fry, Sipprell, Rice, WhiTe, Byers, STancling-Clark, Klnnell, HorTon, GiesT, Reibow, Coey, Upper, R. Far- well, MaTTson. SeaTed-Leaf, Winslow, Lungharcl, G, Farwell. of language Tom l-largiss, secreTary1 and Daphne EckerT, Treasurer Tor The second semesTer. The programs TeaTured ouTside speakers who gave Talks on France, The people, Their cusToms and language. Songs and plays, among which a drama by Moli- are enTiTled Le Bourgeois GenTilhomme added zesT To The program which helped To achieve The purpose OT The club: To acquainT sTudenTs more Thoroughly wiTh The French lan- guage. Miss Florence Russell was The advisor. The German Club l DeuTsche Verein To iTs many membersl was This year The largesT oT all The school clubs, Toreign language or oTherwise, having a membership oT a-bouT Two hundred. George Farwell was The very acTive pi'esidenT, aided by Alex LeaT, vice-presidenT, Bobby Wins- low, Treasurer, Eleanor Lungharcl, secreTary. Miss Alma Hawkins was The advisor. Besides regular monThly programs oT music and games, The Ger- man Club sponsored a TesTive ChrisTmas parTy and supervised The lunchroom Tor a week, having special German dishes in The lunch:-oorn. Standing-Olsen, BurTon, Hargliss, Harding, EclcerT. SeaTed- gggctih-BruTon, Egqersgluess, Covingfon, Wie and, HeaTon, Don- 57 MUSIC CLUB: Standing-Miss Phillips, SassneTf, A. Olson, ART CLUB: STanding-Anderson, Cochran, Gibson, Byers, Pefer- BarTib, Waldo. SeaTed-Pearson, Olson, Bossie, FreeparTner, Van son, Arrnine, WiTzke, Miss Nordell. Seafedil-ledsTrorn, Lekis, Vleck. Kelly, Cormier, Solheirn. PROMETHEAN CLUB: STanding-Brennan, O'Neil, BurTon, Wolf, OUlLL AND SCROLL: STanding-Clark, KrogsTad, LaurenT. iover, Pickens. SeaTediWersT, Charles, Anderson, Moore, Mr. Sealed-TeeTs, Anger, Mr. Glass, Miss Breazeale, Dore, Curran. arig. cultural clzrbf augment clafyroom mterefz' Tl-lE ART CLUB, revived aT The beginning oT This school year, compleTed a mosT successTul season under The inspiring direcTion oT Miss Anna Nordell. Alice BegueTTe served as president Dorris Lewis, vice-presidenT3 and Jane Byers, as secreTary. This culTural club had as iTs purpose The culTivaTion OT True appreciaTion Tor The Tine arTs. They accomplished This by aTTending arT exhibiTs, hearing lecTures, by slseTching, and acTu- ally doing various Types OT arT worls. ReporTs on leading conTemporary arTisTs were given Tor The beneTiT OT The members. Thus, many TalenTed sTudenTs received enioymenT and experience aT These meeTings. This year, clue To The sTudenT Ticl4eT plan, The membership oT The Music Club increased To Two hundred. Under The TaculTy direcTion oT Miss ConsTance Phillips, and wiTh Randolph SasneTT as presidenT, sTudenTs meT once a monTh To enioy a varied and inTeresTing program TeaTuring musi- cal selecTions aT all Types. The obiecT OT The club was To culTivaTe inTeresT in, and appreciaTion oT Tine music and To give TalenTed pupils an oppor- TuniTy To perTorm in public. An opporTuniTy Tor would be auThors and budding playwrighTs was aTTorded in a new and very acTive club. TalenT and more TalenT was aired while members wroTe sTirring dramas, lighT comedies, and Touching sonneTs. Don'T be sur- prised in TuTure years, if PromeTheans aTTribuTe Their success in The liTerary world To The experi- ence gained in This organizaTion, sponsored by Mr. ArThur Rarig. lTs membership being limiTed To RoosevelT's liTerary TalenT, Ouill and Scroll was exTremely ouTsTanding This year. Good-looking gold pins graced The bosoms of The lucky members oT This NaTional High School LiTerary SocieTy, and Through This organizaTion, wriTers oT repuTe were banded TogeTher Tor one common inTeresT, The developmenlr oT liTeraTure and inspiraTion To would be auThors. Members included The edi- Tor OT The News, The Annual, Their associaTes, and pupils who especially excelled in The liTerary Tield. A special newspaper TeaTuring The com- bined TalenTs of all The members was published and proved Tremendously popular wiTh The sTu- denTs. 58 bobby Cgroupf anim Tl-lE EVER-EASCINATING pursuiT oT rare sTamps, boTh old and new, was responsible Tor The revival This year oT a Boys' and Girls' STamp Club. Joe l-lelland had The honor OT being pres- idenT oT The STarnp Club. Don Donaldson was vice-presidenTg Jack Pearce, secreTary7 and Jim GronT kepT The Treasurer's books. The club held bi-monThly rneeTings TeaTuring auThoriTies on sTamps. Several general inTormaTional conTesTs were held To add To The Tun. ATTer The business meeTing, The members usually exchanged sTamps. Mr. Sam Glass was The advisor. Silence and deep concenTraTion were in evi- dence aT The meeTings oT The Girls' Chess Club, buT There was, neverTheless, always an air oT enioymenl' and good comradeship. The Girls' Chess Team was an excellenT one This year. WiTh Mr. Edward STilwell as advisor, Marjorie Solheim served as presidenTg DoroThy WesTen, vice-pres- idenT: JusTine JohnsTon, secreTary: and l-lelen SchmiTT, Treasurer. Many girls joined The club To learn This popular game, and some joined To be- come more proTicienT players. SkillTul chess play- ers are To be envied because iT is cerTain ThaT of Cgd77Z6J'Z'67 .f' to 7 6l7'l J' They have an unusual power oT concenTraTion. TheaTre parTies, hobbies and social acTiviTies oT many kinds occupied The chapTers of The l-les- perian Club, which was sponsored by The Girls' Club Tor girls who worked aTTer school and who Thus could noT parTicipoTe in many oT The school acTiviTies. Their meeTings were held during sTudy periods under The sponsorship oT diTTerenT Teach- ers. Lorraine CovingTon had charge oT The group and was aided by DoroThy Blanchard, RoberTa Lounsbury, Gold l:osTer, Marley Minor, Virginia Ohil, Jean Russess and Mabel ParTridge. CiTy-wide champions!! This was The enviable honor gained by The RoosevelT Boys' Chess Team, which was coached by Mr. Edward STilwell. The boys oT This club played chess Tor The purpose oT developing Their skill and Tor Their own personal enioymenT. RoosevelT's Team Took all-ciTy honors oTTer playing mosT oT The oTher SeaTTle high school Teams, among which were: Lincoln, Frank- lin, GarTield, and Queen Anne. George Adkins was presidenT, wiTh ArT ChalTonT vice-presiclenT: Vyn Alexander, corresponding secreTary, and Dick Anderson as Treasurer. STAMP CLUB: STanding, back-Kain, Donley, Pearce, Mr. Glass, HESPERIAN CLUB fupper righTT: LeTT To righT-MeTz, Coving- PresTon, l-lammerslaw, TempleTon, Sanders. Middle-Clark, Grant Ton, ParTridge, Goldberg, Currier, Blanchard, Ohail, Lounsberry, Donaldson, l-lelland, GlornsTeacl, Olsen. FronT-Green, Frederick- Gilke, Miner. son. BOYS' CHESS CLUB flower righTj: SeaTed lleff To righTT-An- GlRLS' CHESS CLUB flower lefTJ: STancling-Crell, Wills, Lucas, derson, PresTon, Loeselle, Ballard. STanding-Moussey, Downing, Johnson, Mr. STillwell. Seafed-Solheim, Pooser, Wesfin, Down- Mr. STillwell, ChalTonT, Alexander, Morris, Neal, Adkins, Davis, ing. l5 members. BorighT. 35 members. 59 Winslow, Brugman, Davies, lllman, Mr. RanTz, Hill, Clark, Mohr, McCoy, Mr. Cooper, Pearson, PresTon, CorTes, Klamm. Coey. potential .rcientifff watch wbeelf go 'round ROOSEVELTS Radio STaTiOn, W7GN calling! This could OTT be heard in The shack where The members OT The Radio club meT To solve The deep mysTeries OT The eTher waves and incidenTly To communicaTe wiTh o+her amaTeur operaTOrs who mighT be brOadcasTing. Russell Winslow was The chieT Technical advisor and presidenT OT This club. l-lis cabineT was Jack Klamm, MarTin Cordes, STan l-lill, Bob lllman, l-lerberT Davies. and Joe Brugman. The club's chieT pasTime was cOnsTrucTing and OperaTing Their receiving seT: buT on diTTerenT Occasions They displayed moving picTures on The subiecT OT radio, noT only Tor club members, buT Tor The enioymenT OT any Roose- velT sTudenTs who were inTeresTed. Speakers, who were real auThoriTies on radio developmenT, gave Talks Tor The beneTiT OT The members. Mr. Fred RanTz, who was The inspiring advisor OT This Or- ganizaTion, led The club To greaT advenTures. The members gained a wealTh OT inTormaTion ThaT will be invaluable To Them in TuTure years when They become world-Tamous operaTors. Finding ouT such inTriguing TacTs as whaT makes The wheels go round and round is The inTeresTing ObiecTive OT The Science Club. This organizaTion accomplished iTs purpose OT sTudy- ing scienTiTic developmenT and carrying on re- search, by means OT lecTurers who addressed The members Trom Time To Time, and by moving picTures which depicTed science and relaTed sub- iecTs. This was a large group, comprised OT ap- proximaTely 90 members, all inTeresTed, hard- working, and cOoperaTive in making Their club one OT The mOsT purposeTul in RoosevelT l-ligh School. Two seTs oT oTTicers were elecTed so as To give more members OT The club an OpporTuniTy To acT as oTTicials. For The TirsT semesTer OTTicers, Wil- liam Coey was The presidenT and Wilbur Clark was The vice-presidenT. The oTTice OT SecreTary was successTully maneuvered by Merrick Mohr and l-lursT Clark acTed as Treasurer. The second semesTer oTTicers included Merrick Mohr, pres- idenT: Dolores Reyes, vice-presidenT: Don Donald- son. secreTary and Truman STarr, Treasurer. The new speech machine which was purchased This year was demOnsTraTed To The Science Club and as many members as wished To, recorded Their voices and sTudied The process OT The ma- chine. Edward Bird enTerTained The members by bringing his machinery To The meeTing and ex- plaining The Theory OT Telescopic mirrors. The members OT The club also were Tamiliarized wiTh The developmenT OT The public speaking address sysTem insTalled recenTly in RoosevelT. Mr. Cameron Cooper was The advisor who co- OperaTed wiTh The OTTicers and members To accomplish Their worThwhile purposes. The mem- bers were inTeresTed and enThusiasTically received all proiecTs and displays demOnsTraTed. 60 .rervice cgrozrpf ww THE SOCIAL SCIENCE Club conTinued This year, repeaTing lasT year's success. The advisor, Mr. Len Toomey: Arnold Glaser, presidenTq Jay de Eriel, vice-presidenT and I-larry BruTon, secre- Tary. sTarTed The season wiTh an excellenT pro- grarn. Among The speakers who came To address The club was Louis Nash, King CounTy Commis- sioner, who gave The members OT The club an inside view oT WashingTon's poliTics. This ouT- sTanding organizaTion serves To develop among sTudenTs o greaTer inTeresT in social science, and aids more:-iolly in equipping sTudenTs Tor good ciTizenship. Mr. George Scholl's small buT very eTTicienT book room Torce again disTinguished iTselT by Their indispensable service To our school rouTine. Some six Thousand books passed Through Their hands during The year, noT counTing supplies oT paper pads, noTe books, pins, and oTher rouTine equipmenT. This group checks books and supplies in and ouT and keeps Them sysTemaTically ar- ranged. The members oT The commiTTee were: Richard lvlounsey, Jack Mines, Warren Scholl, William ToTTen, and George Adkins. SOCIAL SCIENCE: BruTon, Glaser, DeFriel, Mr. Toomey. MINUTE SERVICE BOYS: BoTTom row-Terry, Rudnicki, SmiTh, SlaTer. Second row-ClinTon, Clark, Gerhard, Williams, Merriam. Top row--Mr. Clark, PeTerson, Richards, Whifman, R. Anderson. e wbeely go 'round The boys of The lv1inuTe Service Club are soph- omores and iuniors ol: good scholasTic sTanding and oT worThy characTer, selecTed by lvlr. Clark To perform necessary services around RoosevelT. IT is an honor To be inviTed To join This organiza- Tion, because qualiTicaTions are high. The major proiecT oT The club is The reToresTaTion hike in The spring. During The lasT Two years, Three Thousand Trees have been planTed in a TracT oT land by Snoqualmie Pass on lvlounT Rainier. Ted Gerhard was presidenT oT This year's group, wiTh Wilbur Clark as vice-presidenT and ErnesT Wil- liams as secreTary. The Locker lvloniTor group was oT greaT service To RooosevelT's rouTine. Their duTy was To super- vise The locker rooms beTween periods. The girls on The commiTTee deserve much crediT Tor giving one period every day To perform This duTy. Super- vision beTween periods eTTecTed a procedure which greaTly conTribuTed To The general order oT The building. The girls working on This Torce were: RuTh Adams, AlberTa lvlinshall, Shirley Fry, Donna Moe Linburgh, and June Scanlon. BOOKROOM FORCE: Adkins, Scholl, Selfzer, Mounsey, TaTTen, Mr. Scholl. LOCKER ROOM MONITORS: SeaTed-Scanlon. STanding- Fry, Minshall, Linburgh, Adams. bl My .fair lr lm ij, f l 'V i ftg, X, , i f Q f T ' . W9 if f - v Q 's OFFICE WORKERS Hop leffl: Gardner, Bower, Senior, Nelson, Walker, Miss Hall, Miss Kinlcaid, Mcl-laney, Cahen, Rl fe, Freeearfner, OFFICE WORKERS Hop righfl: March, Miss Chrisfiansen, Nicolai, Machery, Bingham, Russell,'Broaks, Cowderoy, .Poinfer, Rayner, Lacey. ARY WORKERS flower leffl: Denny, Sforns ead, Sam son, LIBR T p Lappe, Amrine, Brennan, Harris, Hansen, Jay, Ellis, Gould. SECRETARIES flower righfl: Griffilh, Fuller, Sfover, Wesllund, Rufledge, Gardner, Rofhwell, Monfan, Bergensen. ximian! corpf ,giver A NEW PLAN of office roufine whereby all affendance maffers were cared for by Miss Pafricia Chrisfiansen and Miss Anna Sfeendahl in fhe new affendance office, and all ofher school roufine moffers were under fhe direcfion of Miss Carolyn l-lolf and Miss Dorofhy Kinkaid, fhe new office assisfanf, was successfully inaug- urafed fhis year. There were fwo disfincf groups of sfudenf assisfanfs, one of which worked for lvliss Chrisfiansen in her office, collecfing slips, filing affendance maffers and filling ouf absence slips, while fhe ofher group assisfed Miss l-lolf and Miss Kinkaid in fhe main office roufine. Their fasks included filing record cards, working fhe swifch board, mimeographing bullefins and fesfs and serving people coming info fhe office. By fhis plan, affendance maffers were effec- fively handled in one office and dufies of fhe main office assisfanfs were evenly disfribufed. The Library workers under fhe direcfion of Miss Grace Mclnfosh, Roosevelf's efficienf Lib- rarian, added a greaf deal fo making fhe library a pleasanf place fo visif. The books were always in perfecf order, classified according fo fype and aufhors and easily found by anyone desiring fhemq fhe magazines, new and old, were of fhe pzffiytvznce to faculty disposal of all sfudenfs and feachers, and special pamphlefs and arficles covering a wide variefy of subiecfs could be had for fhe asking. The library assisfanfs also checked in and auf books faken by sfudenfs and kepf fhem in excellenf condifion, free from fears and marks of all kinds. Miss Ruby Sfromsfead, graduafe assisfanf fo Miss Mclnfosh, gave unsparingly of her fime fo help make Roosevelf's one of fhe finesf school libraries in Seaffle. This year's secrefaries, under fhe direcfion of Mr. James Chamberlin, fhe head of fhe com- mercial deparfmenf, were especially efficienf. These boys and girls gave up much of fheir before-and-offer-school fime fo become, in real- ify, assisfanf Teachers, as fhey fook over many of fhe difficulf roufine maffers for fhe feachers and performed fhem wifh greaf fhoughf and care. Among fheir dufies were checking offen- dance, grading fesfs, and fyping papers. ln com- pensafion for fheir almosf endless fask, fhe sec- refaries received invaluable experience along fhe secrefarial line and a major forch credif. These srudenf assisfanfs were commercial sfudenfs who did fhis work fo gain greafer proficiency in fyp- ing, bookkeeping, and shorfhand. 62 noon azcfivitief Jule!! lunch room receipts THIS YEAR, a new plan oT sTudenT conTrol oT The school lunchroom was inTroduced in Roose- velT. The purpose was To increase The paTronage oT The lunchroom by means OT programs pre- senTed There during The lunch hour and laTer, in The audiToriumg To The laTTer program, only pupils paTronizing The lunchroom were admiTTed. Mr. Sam Glass, TaculTy advisor, chose members oT his ad-wriTing class To serve on The sTudenT lunch- room con+rol commiTTee. Paul MonesmiTh was The chairman, wiTh Lewis DoughTy, Vivian l-linksTon, and Evelyn Handy as assisTanTs. Each oT The various school organizaTions spon- sored a week oT The lunchroom. During This Time The group in charge was responsible Tor making The lunchroom as aTTracTive as possible To all sTudenTs by means OT lively and enTerTaining pro- grams. The A. S. R. Took over The TirsT week, during which songs and dances were TeaTured. Immedi- aTely The number oT sTudenTs paTronizing The lunchroom increased and enThusiasm Tor The new plan ran high. Among The organizaTions parTici- paTing in This proiecT Tor The TirsT semesTer were: The Girls' and Boys' Clubs, The Rough Riders, Senior Class, Junior Class, Sophomore Class, and Freshman Class. The second semesTer sTarTed vigorously wiTh The Troubadors in charge. This club had The honor aT having The mosT popular and well aTTended programs. Their programs, which Took place in The audiTorium, consisTed oT songs by Maxine Waldi'ip, Bob Reily, Lyly PigorT, and PaT Rourke. The Aurora Guards also sponsored a Tine week. Dishes on The menu were Red-head pud- ding, CarroT-Top soup, and Golden glow salad. Many movies were shown, and, Through a canvas oT sTudenTs, The comedies proved The mosT popular. During The German Club week, The Tamous German dish oT sauerkrauT and weiners was a popular TeaTure. Chile con carne was The mosT popular dish oT The Spanish Club week. The lasT week oT The lunchroom was called Senior Farewell Week, aT which Time The seniors paid Their Tinal respecTs To RoosevelT and bade Tarewell To Their Teachers and Triends. Preparahon, lO:3O. Language DeparTmenT Special. Mrs. Moore, Manager, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Driscoll, Mrs. Curnew. All SeT, II:4O. 63 Nleeeleef of the jury brewbeezz' gentlemen into MRS. LIVINGSTON Baldwin Crane buTTaloed iury members inTo Treeing The deTendanT in The cOurT Trial. She changed The vOTe OT ll guilTy To I innocenT To all innocenT To conTirm her beIieT in Mrs. Gordon. The inside scenes and secreTs OT Vivian I-TinksTon and Barbara Anderson were in charge of The clever programs. The impOrTanT iob oT prompTer was well cared Tor by I-larrieTTe Dore and Ardene Fairbrook. Mr. DeiTs and The sTage Torce were responsible Tor The Tine seTTings and lighTing arrangemenT. Senior Play parTicipanTs adopTed six diTTerenT dialecTs Tor per- Tormances OT Ladies OT The Jury. The mosT diTTiculT OT all These was The ScoTch brogue. enpaugh, Waldo, Wilkinson, Keil1veTz, Anderson, Lilygren, I-leaTon, Cross, Hull, Lounsbury, Collier, Kwapel, WheTsTone, Kidwiler, ck, Dare, SassneTT, Balkema, Mays, Redlin, Zorn, Williams, Young, SeTTerburg, Libby, Bell, Alfenburg, Adkins, Pigorf, Monesmifh, F banks, Doughfy, Hifchcock. a fury room were revealed To The audiences aT The Senior Play. The relaTiOn OT The diTTerenT members OT The iury To each oTher was very amusing. l:OrTy seniors Took acTing parTs in Ladies OT The Jury, which was direcTed by Miss Emma Jergensen. Mariorie Phillips and GerTrude Rinnell, who parTicipaTed in lasT year's Senior Play, were sTudenT assisTanTs To Miss Jergensen. Sandy McLaren Mcliaig, a Typical conservaTive ScoTchman, was a member OT The iury. Doug SeTTerburg Took This pa rT boTh evenings and liTerally broughT down The house wiTh The ScoTTish Twang in his speech. Tony Theodophulus, a well-To-do lralian was porTrayed by Don Zorn and Jack Moys. BOTh boys caughT The rapid-Tire, exciTed Talk Typical OT This race. De Bronx accenT was humorously used by Barbara Anderson in The role OT Mayme Mixler, a Typical, Tough chorus girl. The musical Irish brogue was used by Francis Kwapel and I-lelen WheTsTone who played The parT OT Mrs. Nan McGuire, an Irish cook. Mrs. Gordon, The deTendanT in The Trial, spoke wiTh a yery decided French accenT. Miriam Lilygreri and Phyliss I-leaTon Took This parT. 54 reemcg defendant TI-IE SENIOR CLASS OT RooseveIT I-ligh School presenTed, December Thir- TeenTh and TourTeenTh, The play, Ladies oT The Jury, by Fred Ballard. IT was a delighTTuI, rollicking comedy in Three acTs, Tull aT Tun and amusing sequences. The ploT oT The play revolved abouT a Trial oT a French woman, Mrs. Gordon, who was accused oT The murder oT her husband. The Trial wenT very badly Tor The deTendanT, as her personal maid, Evelyn Snow, swore Thai she saw her mis- Tress over The body wiTh a gun. The quesTions OT Mrs. LivingsTon Baldwin Crane, a dynamic personaliTy, gave humor To This oTherwise serious scene. She would iump up, call Judgy Wud- gy, and proceed in a very uncourTly manner. The seTTing oT The second acT was placed in The iury room OT The courT house. As The curTain wenT up, The Twelve members oT The iury were seaTed around The Table, headed by Mr. Jay J. Pressely, The deTermined Toreman. IT was his plan To casT one balloT, all bearing The word guilTy, To senTence The deTendanT and To go home. All wenT as he planned unTil The very lasT balloT, Then Mrs. LivingsTon Baldwin Crane said NOT guiITy. WhaT an uproar! All The iury members were nearly exhausTed and had hoped To reach a decision immediaTely. As The balloTs were numbered in The Two hun- dreds, slowly buT surely, Mrs. Crane won her cause, ThaT oT Treeing Mrs. Gordon, Tor she TelT sure ThaT The poor dear was innocenT. The Toreman, Mr. Pressely, was her worsT enemy, Tor he resenTed her power over The oTher members oT The jury and also beraTed her Tor delaying Them. I-le was deTermined noT To give in To her. During The nighT and Two clays spenT in The iury room, Two romances developed. Mayme Mixler, played by Barbara An- derson, and Tony Theoclaphulus, who was porTrayed by Don Zorn and Jack Moys, sparked a mosT amusing love aT- Tair, while Miss CynThia TaTe and a poeT, Alonzo Beal, carried on a sizzling ro- mance. All ended comparaTively happily when The relucTanT Toreman gave in and The accused was seT Tree. STanding-SeTTerberg, Zorn. SeaTed-Wi I ke n so n , Kwapil, SasneTT. SeTTerburg, Lounsbury, Williams, Peckenpaugh, Lib- by, Kidwiler, Anderson, Zorn, Wilkinson, Kwapil, SasneTT. Fairbank, I-leafon, Waldo, Kwapil, Zorn, Anderson, Young, SeTTerberq, Balkema, WheTsTone, Lounsbury, MOVS, Bell, Kidwiler. Fairbank. Hull, Redlin, HeaTon, AITenburg, DoughTy. 65 flank! roofevelf AMERICAN WEAKLY! Gor- geous chorisTers marooned on deserT island, capTured by Tierce piraTes in glamorous Tropic se- quence! Tumbling sTars made TronT-page news on The RoosevelT carrefpondenty 1000119 world page. Glamour galore permeaTed The nexT scenes, reporTeo exclu- sively by a special Toreign correspondenT Tram The gay squares oT Venice. Accordions, violins, golden voices, and colorTul dancing were spoTlighTed. ExTra! ExTral Read all abouT iT! BiggesT murder mysTery in all OT hisToryl The mosT popular scene in The Revue burlesqued The irnmorTal If COMMITTEE: LeTT column-Mercer, SrniTh, Quigley, Walske, Anderson, Cray. Righf columnfFarwell, Kelsey, Waldo, SassneTT, l Curran, AbboTT. Upper-VeneTian RhyThm. Lower-Black and WhiTe Tap. Woi'ld as The i935 Revue wenT l-lamleT in nursery music and doggerel verse. To press. STorrny weaTherl mourned a line oT comely Tap-dancers decked ouT in cellophane raincoaTs, while The ThermorneTer shook down sev- eral degrees To make The second page OT The Revue conTrasT cooly wiTh The sizzling Tropics OT The TirsT Oh, she'll be comin' raoun' The mounTain when she comes! was The nasal Theme song OT a group oT TalenTed hill-billies sTraighT Tron-i The Ozarks. SnuTTy SmiTh and his popular crew reduced The audiTorium To someThing very like a shambles, buT The public oT The RoosevelT Woi'ld recovered in Time To enioy The specTacle oT busy businessmen Tapping ouT messages while Their secreTaries Typed in rhyThn-I wiTh Their dances. The Tinale oT The I935 ediTion Took place aT The grand opening oT a new nighT club, known as RoosevelT Rendezvous. 66 V ,Q ,ff news or review THE THEME of The Revue This year depicTed a newspaper office. The program was called The RoosevelT World and was very cleverly carried ouT even To The pro- grams, which were wriTTen in newspaper form. The firsT acT displayed a shipload of marooned passengers and Their encounfers wiTh pirafes and wild animals who all To- geTher puT on an excellenf exhibiTion of Tumbling for The audience. The newspaper phofographer, Bill Mercer, and reporfer, Tom Schwellenbach, nexf Tools us To Venice where a gay sTreeT scene was enacfed wiTh beauTiful songs, dances, accordion solos and colorful scenery. The Third acT revealed a soul-sfirring version of ThaT Shakespear- ian masferpiece, HamleT. The beauTiful singing voices and excepfional acTing of Those parfalqing in This drama lefT The audience wiTh minds Tull of wonder. Ex- Tras disTribuTed before The curTain call explained The drama To be a comical Take- off of The said Tragedy. The dramafic criTic of The RoosevelT Woi'ld was as- signed To view a dress rehearsal of The play POT Boilers. This four-acT play wifh- in a play demonsTraTed in a very amusing way The insufferable ego of direcTors, acTors, and acTresses. Doug SeTTerburg's hill billies now forced Their way info The show. Don Zorn, as Snuffy Smifh, and oTher well-known mounTain follss were very rnuch in evidence. l.asT buf noT leasT, The whole newspaper sTaff wenT To The new and mosT fashionable nighT club, RoosevelT Ren- dezvous, where The floor show of songs by PaT Rourke, selecfions by Cliff Kelso's orchesfra, and several Tap dances proved To be mosT enioyable. Doug SeTTerburg also gave many clever impersonaTions while acTing as masfer of ceremonies. The girls' and boys' Tap lines were especially enTer- Taining and showed The experT Training given Them by Barbara Anderson, Bonnie Jean Berch and Julianne BrouleTTe. The Revue commiTTee, under The guidance of Miss Louise Fowler, is so effecTively organ- ized ThaT members each year have had pre- vious experience. They build inTeresTing conTinuiTy around The TryouT slf.iTs, as This year's newspaper The success of The final producfion is in a large measure due To The resourcefulness of The sTage force. Their quick maneuvers in few seconds of Time are professional. Lighfing effecfs, properfies and seTTings are appropriaTely suiTed To The variefy acTs. Hillbillies Ponder. Julienne Sfeps OUT. Tumblers Brave. l-lamleT's Casfle. Hamlef Serious. 67 concert highlights pictiirefqiie egyptiitii httllet MR. ERNEST WORTH was The conducTor oT The MidwinTer Con- cerT. Miss ConsTance Phillips was The assisTanT conducTor. Mr. l-larry DeiTs was The manager oT The sTaging and lighTing. Mrs. Anne Moody was cosTume direcTor. by Grieg. Miss Phillips nexT led The Junior OrchesTra in The BalleT Music Trom Rosamunde and The Thor-ni-ose WalTz. RoosevelT's Tine A Cappella sang All My l-learT and Send ForTh Thy SpiriT, a spiriTual especially beauTiTul in Tone and expression. The combined girls' and boys' senior and iunior glees, The girls' in Their pasTel dresses and The boys in black suiTs, sang Three numbers, one oT which was The powerTul religious song, The OmnipoTence. lT has been The Milne, BrouleTTe, WesTphaI, Spengler, WhiTe, Linhoff. STaTue-Lindh, Hull, Oldfield. Sfrong, HardT, Cook, Hollander, Powell, GebauT. The concerT sTarTed wiTh The Senior orchesTra playing The Sym- phony No. Five by BeeThoven and The March Trom Tannhauser by Wagnel'. These were very elab- oraTe selecTions wiTh many varying moods. The girls' senior glee sang a selecTion OT songs, among These were Lullaby by Cyril ScoTT, a very sweeT and quieT number, and Capri, a more vivacious composi- Tion, by Charles O. BasseTT. The bays' senior glee sang The old TavoriTe, The BaTTle oT Jericho, by Marshall BarTholomew, also DedicaTion by Franz, and The rollicking Sailor Chorus by Perry. The boys' iunior and senior glees combined sang Land SighTing, cusTom Tor many years To presenT a balleT aT The end OT The concerT. This year, The ballel girls were coached by Miss Gladene La Vinge who graduaTed Trom RoosevelT in l933. The balleT had an exoTic beauTy which was achieved by unique arm movemenTs and swirling sTeps. The cosTumes, Trilly wiTh veils and Trains, added To The seTTing, and a weird mulTi-armed god eTTecTed a Thrilling illusion oT The For EasT. The concerTs have grown in general appeal year aTTer year, unTil now Two evenings are necessary To accommodaTe Those inTeresTed. This may be accounTed Tor in Three diTTerenT ways: TirsT, by The excel- lence and careTul selecTion oT numbers: second, by The enThusiasTic inTeresT OT The ParenT-Teachers' AssociaTiong and Third, by The Roos- evelr STudenT Ticlf.eT Plan. I9OO ouT oT 2450 sTudenTs have The oppor- TuniTy To develop Their appreciaTion oT Tiner music Through Their sTudenT Ticl4eTs. l.ighTs ouT-lock The door-leT's go To anoTher RoosevelT ConcerT. All our Triends will be There-Julius, Dicls, Tubby, DoroThy, BeTTy, and The oThers. l-li There-we'll be seeing you, rain or snow. ThaT is The spiriT ThaT backs The school perTormances. 63 the Jimple life rf NEW FlRES, a play in Three acTs, was presenTed by Miss Emma Jergen- sen's play-producTion class, under The auspices oT The P.-T. A. The maTinee per- Tormance was expressly Tor The enioy- menT oT The sTudenTs, while The P.-T. A. members aTTended The evening perTorm- ance. The ploT oT This clever play re- olved around a Typical ciTy Tamily which moved To The counTry To live. Mr. San- dey, The TaTher who was a novelisT, had already moved To This old-Tashioned home, where he hoped To wriTe his prize novel. l-le senT Tor his modern Tamily To join him in The counTry. They all, excepT The Two youngerchildren, Billy and Phyliss, revolTed againsT being buried in The old hole, buT TaTher, knowing whaT was besT Tor Them, puT Them on Their own To geT along. As The ploT unrolled, a counTry girl exposed The enTire household To scar- leT Tever so ThaT They were all Torced To remain There in quaranTine. During This Time, The sophisTicaTed daughTer, Olive, Tell in love wiTh The counTry docTor and The newly married son developed a plan Tor spraying apples. So when The Time came Tor The Tamily To go back To The ciTy, no one was willing To go. The play ended happily wiTh a parTy Tor The whole Tamily and all Their ruraliTe Triends, aT which Olive and her docTor announced Their pledge To be True. An inTeresTing TacT was ThaT mosT oT The acTors in The play had never beTore acTed before a RoosevelT audience. Willie Tomsen, lverne Perry, Eunice Cahen, Ella Jane Kelsey, and George Adkins were in This group. IT usually Takes Trom Ten To Twelve weeks To compleTe a play, buT The hard-working casT oT New Fires Tinished Their Task in exacTly six weeks in order To presenT iT beTore an evening meeTing oT The P.-T. A. The New Fires casT aTe an enTire meal while saying Their parTs. The mem- bers oT The casT declared ThaT This meal, which was prepared Tor Them by Mrs. NeTTie Moore, was excellenTg however, They lamenTed The TacT ThaT They only had a Tew minuTes in which To eaT and had To keep up a Tiery conversaTion be- sides. The siTuaTion oT The play required The maids in The casT To seT The dinner Table in Three minuTes, a record Time. NEW FIRES CAST-Adkins, SassneTT, Merrick, Handy, McKnighT, Thomsen, Sefferburg, Redlin, Parks, Elzev, Coplen, Thomas, Murray, Mayer, Moys, PigorT, WheT- sTone, Perry, DisTad, HiTchcock, FounTain, Harby, Cahen, Kelsey, HardT, Waldo, Peckenpaugh, Bliss. 69 .fl'ZLV6!6,7fll' prereeeupreeleeereen revevef Heidelberg GOLDEN DAYS! chorus The laughing sTudenTs in The mellow old universiTy Town OT l-leidelberg. The boys' senior glee Turnished The en- rollmenT 'Tor RoosevelT's version oT This Tamous and romanTic German school. Deep in my hearT, dear, sings The charming young Prince Karl Franz To The winsome blond KaThie, TorgeTTing, in The sequesTered liTe OT The old universiTy ThaT he will one day be Torced To reTurn To The splendor oT courT liTe, This Time asking, and ThaT a king may noT marry a commoner. Tenderly, aT lasT, The Two lovers parT and Karl Franz musT leave, mourned by his sTudenT companions. The gay aTmosphere changes To one oT sadness as The sTudenT prince deparTs. Russian balleT in progress aT The prince s q WhaT an inspiring place To learn one's Greek and maThemaTicsl An aTmosphere OT charming, naive peasanTs and dashing soldiers, crowned by The winning beauTy oT KaThie, waiTress aT The lnn OT The Three Golden Apples, combined wifh Tender romance and rollick- ing music, made The STudenT Prince memorable in The annals oT RoosevelT's yearly producTions. Three hilarious comedians added a TurTher elemenT oT joyous good na- Ture To This melodious opereTTa. The Tinale of ACT I shows KaThie and Kalrl surrounded by Their peasanT and soldier friends. The second acT discloses a spirifed Down on The sidelines, keeping one eye on The proceedings on The sTage, RoosevelT's senior orchesTra Tiddled and TluTed The TuneTul lyrics oT Sigmund Romberg, under The baTon oT Mr. Woi'Th. The orchesTro's excellenT handling oT The enTire score oT The opera added greaTly To The producTion's polish and inTeresT. Mr. DeiTs and The sTage Torce, noTed ThroughouT The ciTy Tor The originaliTy and skill wi+h which They execuTe The scenery Tor RoosevelT shows, succeeded in capTuring The guainT and delighTTul aTmosphere oT Old l-leidelberg as a background Tor The bi-iIIion+ music. Much eTTorT was puT TorTh by members oT The cosTuming Torces, direcTed by Miss MaThews and Mrs. Moody, who had The diTTiculT Task oT designing, execuTing, and caring Tor The many seTs OT cosTumes required by The sTory. To These Torces goes crediT Tor The success oT The opera. Thanks are due To Miss Gladene LaVigne, who coached all dance rouTines. 70 dpzyy from pant PEASANT GIRLS and gay sTudenTs mingling in a colorTul crowd Torrned The background Tor a Tlaxen-haired KaThie, singirg n'ielOdiOus love songs wirh a charm- ing, red-haired Prince Karl Franz, in The hisTOrIc scene OT Old Heidelberg. The joy- Tul aTrnosphere OT The old universiTy per- vadeo RoosevelT's T936-Opera, The STudenT Prince H by Sigmund Rornberg. The A-.oung prince, so The sTory goes, haTeo 'ne spurious grandeur and pomp OT liTe ir' 'ne cOurT OT The leing, his TaTher, and welccn-ed The OpporTuniTy TO escape To The guie' seclusion OT l-leidelberg as one OT The sTude s. They accepTed him as one OT Therr 'O his delighT, and TogeTher They spen' nwony golden, careTree hours. The scene :T rnuch OT Their acTiviTy was The lnn OT The Three Arrows, where They gaThered To worship aT The TeeT OT The lovely KaThie, Orphcred niece OT The proprieTOr, T-Terr RueTe.'. In This picTuresque seTTing, KOThie and The young Prince Karl Franz Tell in love. However, iT was Torbidden Tor a cornn-loner To merry The TuTure hing, so when Karl Franz was called back To his counTry's Thone aT The deaTh OT his TaTher, he was com- pellec 'O marry a princess insTead OT KaTh7e. BuT The prince and KaThie were once again uniTed in Their Old haunTs in l-leiaelcerg, where The liTTle waiTress had always remained TaiThTul TO her prince. ln celebrofion OT his reTurn, a holiday was declared, wiTh lighT-hearTed old DuTch songs and dances perTornTed by soldiers and cr-easanTs. The opera's direcTOr, Mr. ErnesT WOi'Th, OT The music deparTrnenT, was assisTed by Miss COnsTance Phillips, who coached The boys' and girls' choruses. Mr. l-'larry DeiTs' sTage :orce designed The beauTiTul seT- Tings, Mrs. Anne Moody and Miss Achsah MaTT'evvs were in charge OT The rnany cos- Turnes while The dances were direcTed by Miss Siadene l.aVigne. The leading 1'Oles OT Kcwie and The Prince were Taken by Maxif-e Waldi'ip, soprano, and RoberT Reilly 'enor, ably suppOrTed by Lyle PigOrT, JO Ford, VicTOr l-larris, and Gordon ClinTon. ln'iporTanT roles were also Tahen by Jach Rodewald, Joseph Osier, AlberT ChilTOne, Goraon MonTgOrnery, JeanneTTe Collier, Randolph SasneTT, Jeanne Pechenpaugh, ElizabeTh Spencer, Douglas SeTTerburg, RoberT MesTOn, Dean BerThiaun'1e, and DOrOTnx BurTOn. ACT I-5 :norus of waiTressesg ACT l-a Toasf To KaThieg AcT Ii- e princess' visiTg ACT IIlAThe celebraTion OT The prince 5 :eThroThal. 7 I .romp carving, panels, printf, show mlenf RECIPE FOR GENIUS, TormulaTed by The well- lsnown aIchemisT, Thomas Edison: Talse one small parT inspiraTion, nineTy-nine parTs perspiraTion, mix well, and There you have iT! IT is The purpose oT The RooseveIT arT deparTmenT To encourage and bring To lighT ThaT TirsT essenTiaI spark, and Then To Teach The paTience and enThusiasm need- ed To TosTer iT, unTiI iT becomes aT IasT The much- soughT Tinished producT-successTul genius. In line wiTh The idea conTained in The moTTo, ArT is an expression oT deep Teeling in obiecTive Torm, Miss Anna Nordell, Miss Lois FuITon, and Mrs. Anne Moody mould The eTTorTs oT The aspir- ing sTudenTs in Their classes, and Thus have To Their crediT The many arTisTic TeaTures around The classrooms and halls oT RooseveIT. As parT oT The deparTmenT's services To The school, in The maTTer oT cuITivaTing an apprecia- Tion oT The cuITural arTs by example, a series oT painTings and oTher Types oT picTures produced by sTudenTs was circuIaTed around The diTTerenT rooms in The building: This exhibiT was displayed prominenTIy on The various buIIeTin boards Tor The inTeresT oT Those noT engaged in arT Training. For several years, advanced arT classes have had a direcT -parT in popularizing The lunchroom. CoIorTuI and whimsical panels, done in oils, and represenTing The Tamiliar scenes and verses oT MoTher Goose and Alice in Wondei'Iand, engage The aTTenTion oT The caTeTeria's paTrons. These painTings on wood provide a unique diver- sion as They marshal Themselves in humorous array abouT The walls. Only The sTudenTs mosT experienced in The handling oT Tigure porTrayaI and painTing Technique are assigned To work on These panels: as a consequence, when Tinished, These producTions are among The cleveresT and mosT reaIisTic Turned ouT aT Roosevelt Along This same line is The work oT designing and execuTing screens Tor special rooms in The building. The girls' resT room conTains several aT- TracTive and decoraTive screens, as do also The women Teachers' room and The nurse's oTTice. Besides adding To The appearance oT The rooms, These screens are used Tor many very pracTical purposes, and oTTen are seen in various produc- Tions. The ChrisTmas season, wiTh all iTs TesTiviTy and signiTicance, has noT been sIighTed by The arT deparTmenT, ever on The alerT Tor new Tields in which To exerT iTs TalenTs. A special window, in eTTecTive imiTaTion oT The sTained glass scenes in churches, has been execuTed by beginning pupils, and when iT is broughT ouT beTore The annual holidays each year, iT Torms an impressive addi- Tion To The school's ChrisTmas preparaTions. Wol'Ised ouT on Tissue paper panels, The large window is superimposed upon one oT The windows in The arT gallery, shedding a mellow lighT along The passage. Indispensable To The success oT large sTudenT producTions is The worlfi oT The pen and inlq arTisTs, whose designs Tor The covers oT programs add much To The pIeasanT impression reTained by audiences oT RooseveIT's annual revue, senior 72 creative skill develop play, concerT, and opera. RepresenTing leading characTers or depicTing The general Theme oT each producTion, The clever designs seT The pace Tor The enTerTainmenT To come. One OT The imporTanT meThods oT Teaching The pupils wiThin The deparTmenT is by The use oT moving picTures, showing in graphic deTail The various processes and Techniques employed by Tamous arTisTs. WiTh subiecTs ranging Tram mod- eling Tigures in clay and casTing sTaTues in bronze, To The processes oT eTching and engraving, The moving picTures are disTribuTed by The SeaTTle ArT Museum, and explained aT The diTTerenT schools by a represenTaTive OT ThaT insTiTuTion. Among The many useTul services oT The arT de- parTmenT To The school aT large, is The parTic- ularly Tine example oT Their cooperaTion wiTh The News STaTT in providing The paper wiTh aTTracTive and engaging linoleum cuTs. Each week during The year one or more block prinTs are cuT, in accordance wiTh The ideas oT The ediTors. These add immeasurably To The inTeresT oT The TeaTures conTained in The News. AT ChrisTmas, Tor use in The special ediTion oT The paper, a series aT small linoleum prinTs unTolding The sTory oT The TirsT ChrisTmas Tree was worked ouT by an enTire class oT sTudenTs. Each year The assisTance aT The arT deparTmenT is secured Tor The ChrisTmas number oT The News, helping To creaTe eTTecTively a holi- day spiriT. AnoTher TuncTion oT The arT deparTmenT, wiTh- ouT which iT would be impossible To publicize successTully The many proiecTs of The sTudenT body, is The posTer service. Every bulleTin board, J in all mfr forms in halls and classrooms, exhibiTs The arresTing work of sTudenTs in display leTTering classes. Each aThleTic conTesT, healTh campaign, social service drive, and oTher special evenTs are dependenT upon The use oT clever, decoraTive signs To puT Them across. lvluch oT The success oT RoosevelT's major musical and dramaTic producTions can be crediTed To The advance publiciTy Turnished Through The arT deparTmenT's posTers. Aside Trom work in The graphic arTs, anoTher branch OT The deparTmenT Torms one oT The in- Tegral parTs oT every school producTion. The cosTume designing and consTrucTion Torces are a maior cog in The wheels oT The opera and concerT. NoT only cosTumes, buT inTricaTe and diTTiculT headdresses are consTrucTed by The TalenTed girls in The millinery and design classes. IT is These added Touches, original and eTTecTive, which have helped To build up The repuTaTion which RoosevelT has gained Through The years Tor The superioriTy oT iTs produclions To Those oT many oTher high schools. Among The ouTsTanding graduaTes oT The arT deparTmenT are several successTul young prac- Ticing arTisTs. Charles Bracken, a commercial arTisT, is now in Chicago, where his workin adver- Tising has broughT him recogniTion. Rendall Wicks is known in SeaTTle Tor his splendid porTraiTs. William Ferguson is s+iIl anoTher alumnus achiev- ing success in his chosen Tield. A graduaTe oT only Two years ago, George Jensen, aT presenT sTudying arT in CaliTornia, was commended as The mosT ouTsTanding sTudenT aT his school by iTs principal. 73 DRUMS, TrumpeTs, Tubas, are on parade when The RoosevelT Band, which is always very much in demand aT assemblies and TooTball games, marches across The field. The sTudenTs depend upon The band Tor accompanimenT To The school songs aT all The games and Tor help To beTTer school spiriT. The yell leaders, wiTh The aid OT Mr. WorTh, The direcTor oT The band, TiT school yells To music To give a unique eTTecT. There are TorTy boys who play diTTerenT insTrumenTs in The band. Their uniTorms are aTTracTive wi+h whiTe Tlannel Trousers and green and gold Capes, capped by green and gold haTs. Besides playing school songs, The band enTerTained aT various assemblies wiTh sTirring marches oT Sousa and oTher popu- lar composers. The Junior OrchesTra, composed oT abouT TorTy-Two TalenTed sTudenTs. pre- senTed Their music aT many evenTs during The year. These young musicians played several diTTiculT pieces in The MidwinTer ConcerT. They perTormed beTore curTain call and beTween acTs oT The Spring MaTinee and in The Annual Music Assembly. AT The RoosevelT Girls' Club inauguraTion exercises which depicTed a rose gar- den, The Junior OrchesTra provided The music which added To The beauTy oT The TesTival. The Frosh Frolic and The Sophomore Glee were made much more enTer- Taining by The performance oT This musical group. They rendered selecTions Trom The popular opereTTa, NaughTy MarieTTa, including l'm Falling ln Love Wi+h Someone, by VicTor T-lerberT, and Kiki and ln TienTsin, by Dominica Savius, before The perTormance oT The Spring maTinee and The BalleT Music Tram Rosa- munde by SchuberT, and Thornrose WalTz -which was very lovely and dainTy -by Tschailsowslsy, aT The annual MidwinTer concerT. Above-Band. Below-Upper: Junior OrchesTra. Lower: Combined Glees. orcbeffmf The Junior Orches- Tra, under The direcTion oT Miss ConsTance Phil- lips, is considered a sTepping sTone To The SeniorOrchesTra.Fresh- men and Sophomores obTain invaluable ex- perience which is aT greaT assisTance in gaining enTrance inTo The Senior OrchesTra. The combined Glee Clubs sang Two inspir- ing numbers in The Mid- winTer ConcerT. The girls in Their many col- ored evening dresses and The boys dressed in Their black suiTs, sing- ing in unison made a lovely scene. The Girls' and Boys' Junior Glees were composed oT The boys and girls who did noT have The experi- ence To parTicipaTe in The Senior Glee. Miss Phillips direcTed These sTudenTs. The Senior Glees were composed aT sTudenTs who had The besT singing voices. Mr. WorTh They ren- dered some very diTTi- culT pieces. All The Glee clubs perTormea in This year's opera, The STudenT Prince.'i The Senior Slee Took The roles of peasanTs and soldiers, while The Junior Glee had less imporTanT roles. The Junior Grches- Tra is oTTered as a reg- ular music subiecT, wiTh The members conven- ing every day Tor c class period and re- ceiving a crediT Towa ra Their elecTives. STrains oT music Tram The greaT operaTic masTerpieces by Bee- Thoven and Wagnei' Tc lighT airy melodies of musical comedies are played by The Senior 74 and gl66J' prove fbvzfffmzwic barb chmfmf OrchesTra. Their mOsT imporTanT perTormance OT The year is in The Tv1idwinTer COncerT when diTTiculT pieces OT widely varying Types OT music are played. The Senior and Junior Or- chesTras presenT one OT The mOsT popular as- semblies OT The year. IT is Their hope TO enTer- Tain The sTudenTs and also TO give Them a beTTer appreciaTion OT Tiner music. The Or- chesTras OTTer Their services TO oTher pro- ducTiOns when They play before curTain-call and beTween acTs OT The Revue and Senior Play. The Senior group plays Tor The SeaTTle Chamber OTCOmmerce and The SeaTTle Kiwanis Club Once every year. ThirTeen members OT The OrganizaTiOn are chosen To represenT RoOsevelT in The all-ciTy OrchesTra which is made up OT The mOsT TalenTed sTudenTs Trom The nine high schools OT The ciTy. ROOsevelT has The largesT number OT sTudenTs in This group. The Senior OrchesTra is composed OT TalenT- ed sTudenTs who have proved Their abiliTies by previous learning. Junior Rosen was The cOncerT masTer and Mr. ErnesT WOrTh, The cOnducTOr. ROOsevelT is TOrTunaTe in having a girls' ensemble made up OT eighT girls selecT- ed Tram The Senior Or- chesTra. They enTer- Tained OT The FaTher and DOughTer BanqueT and in assemblies. 75 SPIRITUALS, sonneTs, operaTic arias, are all included in The exTensive reper- Toire OT The ROOsevelT A Cappella Choir. The major diTTiculTy which conTronTs an A Cappella Choir is The uTTer lack OT accampanimenT. This Tends TO inTensiTy any inharmonious eTTecTs which mighT arise. However, RoosevelT's Choir is TorTunaTely nOT TrequenTly provoked by said eTTecTs and harmony usually reigns supreme. A rhapsody in black and whiTe is The admired eTTecT achieved by The Choir members when They are decked ouT in Their neaT cOsTumes. Their novel halT- moon arrangemenT on The sTage displays Their group TO The TullesT advanTage possible and repeaTedly procures admiring exclamaTiOns Trom Their lisTeners. Head line perTOrmers are These sTudenTs Tor They prOTTered a sTerling per- Tormance when They appeared wiTh SeaTTle's Tar-Tamed Symphony OrchesTra, and were direcTed by The eminenT DOcTOr Basil Cameron. When The YuleTide season rolls around, These singers become ambassadors OT good cheer by caraling The old ChrisTmas carols Through The halls Tor The eniOymenT OT The TaculTy and sTudenT body. A bus Tull OT These ioyous boys and girls ride Through The ROOsevelT and UniversiTy disTricTs on ChrisTmas Eve To sing SilenT NighT and The FirsT Noel and oTher TavOriTes. AT The MidwinTer COncerT, They sang Two numbers, All My HearT and Send ForTh Thy SpiriT, The laTTer was a pOwerTul spiriTual. The members OT The A Cappella Choir all had imporTanT parTs in ROOsevelT's Gpera, The STudenT Prince. Many OT The girls were German peasanT girls and sang in a chorus To augmenT The rendiTions OT The leads and also TO give added color To The picTuresque scenery OT old Heidelburg. The boys were dashing soldiers who maneuvered inTricaTe marching TormaTiOns and sang The rollicking Drinking Song. The eighTy members OT The Choir, beTOre gaining admiTTance, proved Their worThiness Tor membership TO This cOveTed organizaTion by singing scales Tor Mr. WorTh. ln This way The qualiTy OT Their voices could be deTermined. The lack OT accOmpanimenT necessiTaTed Tiner voices, cOnsequenTly only Those who were The besT were admiTTed TO The A Cappella. The music deparTmenT OT ROOsevelT High School has Tar years sTood aT The Top in musical achievemenT in The ciTy OT SeaTTle. Upper-Senior Orchestra. Lower-A Cappella Choir. az loftir-eye view 0 Marge owe? wo k Tl-TE STAGE FORCE is one oT The r'nosT ener- geTic organizaTions in RoosevelT. AlThough They lseep Their work a surprise To The lasT n1inuTe and perTorn'i The rnosT oT iT behind scenes, iT is always The sTage Torce's appropriaTe seTTings, scenery, and lighTing which help To bring RoosevelT's pro- ducTions Trorn The ar'naTeur class inTo The Tinished perTormance. The Torce spends one period every day and counTless hours ouTside OT school Time on big proiecTs which include The consTrucTing oT all seT- Tings Tor The Opera, Revue, Spring MaTinee, Mid- winTer ConcerT and many oTher perTorrnances. They also prepare The sTage Tor The weekly as- semblies and The rnonThly P.-T A. programs. The sTage Torce rnernbers can easily be disTinguished by Their good-looking black and whiTe sweaTers which They wear one day every weelf.. Mr. l-larry DeiTs is The advisor aT This group. The rnernbers are: Dave DeiTs, n1anagergTom Soules, assisTanT manager: Vivian Snyder, secreTary: George Burlsheimer, elecTrician7 Don Ross, loTT sTorage7 VicToria Powell, head poinT misTress: l-lerberT Davies, head loTT rnan: Rebecca SassneT, cosTun'ie misTress: Anders T-lernsTad, head Tloor sTorage: MyrT Brand, properTy rnisTressq Grace ScoTT, painT n'iisTressp Anchor Jensen, elecTriciany and Tom Myers, IoTT man. Handling Ticl4eT sales Tor such acTiviTies as TooT- ball, basleeTball, baseball, Traclf. rneeTs, Opera, Revue, and P.-T.A. dances was The huge Task con- TronTing The TiclneT Torce, under The advisorship oT Mr. George Farmer, wiTh Evelyn Moss, chairrnany Evelyn Larson, Irene Moss and Genevieve Larson. STage Force aT Work. Sfage Force: Back row-D. DeiTs, Davies, Mr. DeiTs, Burkheirner. Middle row-ScoTT, Brand, Mclieawn. SeaTed-Powell, Snyder, SassneT, Myers, HernsTead. Fronf row- J s S I Ross en en, ou es, . Tickef Force: E. Moses, Mr. Farmer, E, Larson, I. Moss, G. Larson, many vlepmffmenff unite on prerenmfionf MRS. ANNE MOODY'S cosTume Torce had as Their major proiecT This year, The cosTuming oT The parTicipanTs in The opera, The STudenT Prince. This was a Tremendous Task, as approx- imaTely Two hundred cosTumes had To be made. The soldiers wore green saTin coaTs wiTh whiTe Trousers: The balleT girls had pink TarleTon skirTs wiTh hundreds oT roses scaTTerecl over Them: The leading ladies were gowned in lovely lace dresses. Besides These, The large chorus wore peasanT cosTumes oT all colors and sizes. The girls on The Torce noT only designed These, buT cuT Them ouT, assembled, and sewed Them. Besides ouTTiTTing The opera casTs, This Torce made cosTumes Tor The Revue, Senior Play and Spring MaTinee. Grease painT, musTaches and beards, mascara and eye shadow. These are The medium Through which The make-up corps proceeds To make a young man old, a Caspar MilqueToasT inTo a deep-dyed villain, and a Tair maiden inTo a griz- zled hag. The Junior and Senior TheaTre corps have one oT The mosT imporTanT Tasks oT all sTage producTion groups. lT is up To Them To make The characTers look as The siTuaTions oT The play require. They glor-iTy The beauTiTul girls and make The plain girls glamorous. Miss Alice Wiley is The advisor oT The Make-up Torces, wiTh CaTherine Sears as sTudenT head. COSTUME FORCE: STanding-Dederick, Boswell, Bissell, WhiTe, Miss MaThews. SiTTing-McCoy, Donnelly, Denny, Barfholomew, Evereff Morse. MAKE-UP FORCE: Sfanding-Nicolay, Jones, Hardy, l-lasemeier, Lounsbury, Monfan, Brennan, Anderson, EnTrop, Sears, Pooser. Sif- Ting-Rufledqe, Solheim, Babcock, Kendall. Making less TorTunaTe people happy is The generous purpose oT The RoosevelT Troubadours. These TalenTed sTudenTs have given Treely oT Their spare Time visiTing hospiTals and chariTy homes, perTorming songs, dances, puppeT shows and plays Tor The enjoyn'ienT oT The disabled paTienTs. Their mosT imporTanT pilgrimage was To The OrThopedic l-lospirol, where, under The auspices oT The Junior OrThopedic Guild oT LaurelhursT, They broughT a gay program and an hour oT happiness To The liTTle sick children. They also enTerTained The children aT The WashingTon Chil- dren's l-lame aT ChrisTmas Time. BeTTy Ann l-lol- lander was The chairman oT The Troubadours, and Miss lnez Craven was advisor. Among Those groups which conTribuTe To The hospiTaliTy and The orderly procedure oT Roose- velT producTions is The Usher Corps. The per- sonnel oT The corps, which is under The direcTion oT Mr. Charles Landes, is made up oT girls Tram The l-lonor SocieTy. The duTies OT The ushers are To disTribuTe programs and To direcT The people aT- Tending The plays To Their seaTs. The lovely eve- ning gowns and bi-ighr Taces OT The ushers always add a cerTain gaieTy and give a Touch aT digniTy To The occasion. The ushers oTTered Their services aT The Senior Play, The Revue, The Opera, Spring MaTinee, MidwinTer ConcerT, and The evening P. T. A. meeTings. TROUBADOURS: Back row-WhiTTle, Klein, Osier, AlTenberg, Kendall Hough Fronf row-Wolever GebauT Sewell Torrance. USHER CORPS: Sfandinq-Williamson, Kennedy, Larsen, Neer- gaard, Morden. Seated-Whang, Olson, HalleT. 77 PUBLICATIONS f- 'Q---- m, - . f1 f ' - v-3, VWN L ' -,- -,,, V 9, F '-R -ww 4 ' .II, - 1 v , -A 2.1 1 K Eg,- .,.' A,,,k, I ,?Y '35? A 5 2 , ,.Ql1 f- A - I 'V ' a5Q'.i'I'4-'f ..- . , KT 7' I, 1 ' , 1.'5i35 fIfg.?fA' . . -, I IWHCZIWIQQ' 2 I ' 1 'Z F 'Wx ' 24? +1 19 , 31 L 'rvi ivn -, in- -f,,,j:..L -, - FA ' 2 '1 I, Wil? 'fl 'V I .. . if 5 '. I I , , 5 - f 4, I I'f -11 f I ' ' ' ' I hike 'QW I IEW FEI, 5 4'1 . '1'-M . .3 . I -:J 5' 173, Q L 5. 'W'MTf?m ' . IQ. 1 . 1 I my 4Aq,., V , 3 I ' Cf, A ,I -' - 4' f , ' 'I ,. E. .-ff X 2, ,Q ,L , -If ' ' ' ' :,. A fi Y1 I , Ei IN TI-IE aisles of our mcu'I4eIs, Iruifs of home IIeIcIs ond of cIisIonI dimes mingIe in o muI+icoIoI-ed pogeonh-y-oII+ende1-ed IcnvisI1Iy. : : : : : : : : : : Our publicofions offer Io Ihe S+ucIenI Body on IQIIIIIUI record of 'rI1eIr encIeovors. : : : : : : : 1 : NBNXXN f N V-R.. fw , lf'x..., f Q an V ' S 'T res n ec n p g Miss Breazeale, ad 'sor' Forde Browning STandlng Bell, KrogsTad, l-lousTon, Reid, ml h, P To, P ke au h, Curran, Scoones, I vi , , , Shio, Solheim. SeaTed-V!aTson, WheTsTone, Anger, Gehrke, Wahl. SeaTed, TronT--Elzey, Hollander. SeaTed, back-Thompson, Pooser, Goff, Conners, Selvin, Grant news receiver Jixfh allwzmerican honor Quill and Scroll: a con- cenTraTed compound of creaTive abiliTy, high ideals, and publishing ex- perience. Membership To This branch OT The NaTion- al l-ligh School Jour- nalisTic l-lonorary was granTed To TiTTeen ouT- sTanding people Trom The Annual, News, and Ad- verTising STaTTs when ap- plicaTion had been ac- cepTed by The oTTicers in The easT. STunning gold' pins and a year's sub- scripTion To The Quill and Scroll magazine were re- ceived. May many more Roose- velTians achieve This honorl COPY! l-'lere's your headline-iT doesn'T counT righTl Don'T sTarT your leads wiTh Thel Whel'e's ThaT cuT! Such wails issued every Monday nighT Tram The News room abouT deadline Time and iusT such exclamaTions made The News a regular Wednesday TreaT To all RoosevelTians. To begin wiTh, This year The News is a seven-column paper. On The TronT page below snappy headlines are The scoops oT The week and Those poignanT paragraphs headed Lemons To and Lollipops To. Second page covers clubs and currenT noTices and Third is devoTed To sporTs wiTh a capiTal S , LasT, buT noT leasT, we Tind The Rumored Ripples, The Dance Snoop, ediTorial, and an enlighTening book review. The News has made a repuTaTion naTionally as well as locally, and Tor The sixTh Time has been given an All-American raTing. More power and honor To The News sTaTT, and especially To Their advisor, Miss Edna Breazeale, Tor creaTing and mainTaining such an excellenT paper. This All-American raTing was awarded on The copies oT our papers which were senT To The NaTional ScholasTic Press AssociaTion. During The TirsT semesTer The News received a score oT 8lO ouT oT The possible IOOO and a special noTe Trom The judges reading, This is a real newspaper. Our iournal also received a second-class raTing Trom The Columbia ScholasTic Press AssociaTion. For NaTional EducaTion Week, a special six-page ediTion oT The News was prinTed. The iTems included The open house program, sTories abouT each oT The deparTmenTs and Their displays, and noTices oT special inTeresT To The P.-TA. This was enTered in a naTion-wide compeTiTion and received an award Tor making an ouTsTanding conTribuTion To educaTion in The school Tor The year oT I935-36. Orchids To The TaiThTul TwenTy-Tive who reaped so many honors Tor Roose- velT. Those who conTribuTed To The News Tirsl' sernesTer and are noT picTured here are Peggy Baker, Dalmer Daniels, RoberTi'Evans, GilberT Geiser, Bob Grunbock, Shirley Lyle, Rebecca Merrick, and Jack O'Brien, The ediTor. EdiTors This lasT semesTer were Jim Conners and Jane Forde. Lollipops To The News sTaTT which speaks and wriTes Tor iTselT in all iTs acTiviTiesl 80 miverfifincg Jmjjt wmf city championship WARNING! RoosevelT High School has pracTice soliciTing ad erTi g, collecTing bills, Trained a squad of super salesmen and is Turn- wrapping and deliv e ewspapers, and ing Them loose on The world. ErnesT Elmo Cal- Taking copy T T rinTer. Man sTudenTs Tollow kins, Bruce BarTon, and all oThers, look To your Thisi ro 'on y Takin '. Q5lass's News Ad- laurelsl v Tis g class 'Th , which comprises The For many hours aTTer school each day dV? ilSl'TQ' P OF3e ' Tiller? Tllei' Wszrk OH bers aT The AdverTising STaTT soliciTed ni- Sp ediTions, make sTa isTical sTudIes OT versiTy, RoosevelT, and dow isTricTs To U emi bUY Q. Qfld drvw Q'PPl15 Oi lille OVSVUQS ec,-i-i +lieii- eig l li i-i - d i- Oni-i-ib ' 0 sp ce sold d X -gy.: ar. OT course, Those The sTuae ' udgeT. D eip ggierii Gnd who ma -1.--525' 71 ng records receive promo- . , . - -'Sf' . Consmenl Orig of male members' Oll l y... advanced sTudenTs work as ad- quoTas have mainTained. The Roose e Qdif' ' 'C 0Qe 5- Collechof' m0 '09e 5- Und lOY' News lic, YS pciicl ils bills in ciclvcii-ic ggfifl' ouT manag rs. Many sTudenTs Tound Th.aT They Cpedil is good. if ' hqd adv r sing abiliry and have decided To Clecllng live ideas +0 O Qdverli , co ' in This Tield as a life occupaTion. Six so llwl. lie will bu b,:,, f , +0 inle e llc uTsTanding adverTisers were chosen To become public SG llicl ii convinced of Q i- in members of The Quill and Scroll, our branch oT is The mosT diTTiculT buT sTimulaTing parT oT ad- verTising work. This year, in addiTion To The regular ad pyramids, o special Sales and Swap column wiTh a cenT a word raTe mode iT possible Tor sTudenTs To have separaTe wanT ads. Because oi The sTudenT TickeT budgeT, pracTically every one in RoosevelT receives The News and so iT con- TacTs many homes when iT is leTT Tor Mom and Dad To read. AdverTisemenTs include such iTems as cloThes, ice cream, cleaners, groceries, pic- Tures, dancing lessons, sporTs equipmenT, Tonsorial service, movies, and ocular examinaTions. Beginners are recommended by Freshman and Sophomore English Teachers and advisors. They The NaTional JournalisTic Honorary, and one who graduaTed in mid-year is puTTing herself Through The UniversiTy by This work. Dynamic, energeTic Mr. Glass deserves much oi The crediT Tor The AdverTising STaTT's success. Because oT his superior Teaching and advising, sTudenTs aT RoosevelT produced more inches OT adverTising Than any oTher school paper in Se- aTTle, averaging sevenTy inches each week. Head oT The AdverTising STaTT, Tall semesTer, was Karl KrogsTad and spring semesTer was Vivian Hink- sTon. As The AdverTising STQTT would say-iT pays Sfarcing-Harcus, .l.Thomas, Logan, Hinson, Kendall, Krogsfad, Mr. Glass, advisori Wollever oser, Helland, LeisTer, Morse, Royal. SeaTecl-HvnksTon, Currier, Wells, Doughfy, Teefs, BurTon, Ongsfad, L. Thomas, Parks. To adverTise. ', K ali' I' ' i ' O 5' ' I 1 8 I ammml Zllzwtmfionf Tl-IE ART VIII class, under fhe direcfion of Miss Anna Nordell, specializes each year in making Annual illusfrafions. This year fhey designed fhe fronf secfion of fhe book and fhe decorafions af fhe division pages and fhe end sheefs. As soon as fhe fheme, Resources of fhe Nor'rhwesf, had been decided upon, if was discussed for all pos- sibilifiess of illusfrafions. Then, by eliminafion, fhe mosf imporfanf and feasible phases were chosen. Each arfisf selecfed several fopics fo illusfrafe so fhaf fhere were four or five designs represenf- ing each resource. From fhese a commiffee of six faculfy members and 'rhe Edifor-in-chief and Associafe Edifor of fhe Annual selecfed fhe de- signs used in 'rhe book. The excellence of fhe de- signs made choices difficulf. Everyone in fhe class made an illusfrafed map of fhe Sfafe of Wash- ingfon for fhe end sheef and if was especially difficulf fo choose from fhese fiffeen. Roosevelf's Annual arf sfaff has a fine repufa- fion fo mainfain. Lasf year fhe judges for All- American awards mode special commenf on fhe division-page lifhographs and fhese illusfrafions were also picfured and discussed in on arficle in fhe magazine Design. All sfudenfs who worked on fhe arf of fhe Annual deserve recognifion. Those whose illusfra- fions appear in fhis book are Annabelle Hed- sfrom. Alfon Pickens, Jackson I-larby, I-lelen Crawford, Phyliss I-leafon, Marjorie Kincaid, Eileen Andersen, and Jeanne Plafh. Addifional appreciafion is clue fo Annabelle I-Iedsfrom who execufed fhe cover design of fhis book: fo Rich- wm mforinig comment ard Demenf, who carfooned fhe woodblock iackef, and fo Doris Shio, who cuf fhe iackef design in Iinoleum. The Sfrenuous Life in capifal leffers is fruly fhe life of fhis, fhe Annual sfaff. Fourfeen years ago, fhe name was one of hundreds of suggesfions sub- miffed for fhe yearbook fifle. Sfrenuous Life was chosen because Theodore Roosevelf, offer whom our school was.named, wrofe a series of essays by fhaf fifle, and fhe connecfion seemed appro- priafe. If is doubfful, fhough, if even fhe iudges realized how appropriafe if would be for fhis annual publicafion. One period every day and many exfra hours for bofh semesfers are devofed fo 'rhe Annual. Dusfing off vacafion brains and searching fhe corners for fheme ideas is 'rhe firsf assignmenf. Filing exchange Annuals in fhe cupboard library is anofher. Soon fhe dummy pages are planned and replanned and made up and changed. Nexf comes picfure schedules wifh a few refakes so fhaf fhis Annual may have affracfive picfures and be fhe besf yearbook yef produced. And fhen, when glossy prinfs are developed, fhere is painsfaking, fime-eafing, infricafe mounfing fo be done. However, perhaps fhe biggesf worry of each edifor is geffing fhe copy for his secfion 'ro meef fhe approval of fhe acfivify advisor, and fhaf of our devofed and energefic Annual Sfaff advisor, Miss Lois Fulfon. Lasf year Miss Eulfon supervised and planned wifh fhe sfaff fhe producfion of a book which broughf an All-American rafing cerfificafe for Sfanding-Pickens, Hummer, Mayer, Miss Nordell, Kincaid, Har by. Seafed-Babcock, Hedsfrom, Bledsoe, Baker, Wifskie, M. Ander son, Gillon, E, Anderson, Plafh, Cormier, Crawford, Heafon. 82 firtremmzu life mfef pzllwmerimn in 193j STanding-Challman, W. Clark, Miss FulTon, advisor, Ringrose, Glaser, Moore, Curran, Rogers, Mr. PeTerson, business manager, STorey, Sheehan. SeaTed-Buckler, Snyder, Wagner, Rufledge, Harby, Pearce, G. Clark, Dore, McGuigan. The TirsT Time in RoosevelT's hisTory. Three cheers! This year's sTaTT has sTriven under The same in- spiraTional guidance To produce even a beTTer Annual. All members aT The yearbook sTaTT were chosen aTTer careTul consideraTion of Their scholasTic sTanding, characTer, and inTeresT. ApproximaTely TiTTy sTudenTs Tilled ouT applicaTions Tor posiTions on The Annual STaTT lasT spring. OuT oT This group, The sixTeen ediTors were chosen. ln order To sTarT acTiviTy immediaTely in The Tall, The EdiTor-in- chief, C5laideTh Clark, and AssociaTe EdiTor, l-lar- rieTTe Dore, were selecTed Trom Those who have had previous Annual STQTT experience. The resT oT The sTaTT consisTed oT Wilbur Clark, PicTorial EdiTor, wiTh Arnold Challman, his assisTanT. Classes were covered by Barbara Curran, Senior EdiTorg Marie Moore, AssisTanT: Neil Ringrose, Junior EdiTorq Allan Rogers, AssisTanTg GerTrucle l-larby, Sophomore EdiTorg Phillip Buckler, AssisT- anTg Be'H'y Ann Sheehan, Freshman EdiTor lwho sailed Tor balmy l-lawaii iusT beTore The close aT The Termi: Joanne STorey, AssisTanT. AcTiviTies were ediTed by MarTha Wagner, clubs and Audrey Snyder, commiTTees. The STaTT's TaiThTul TypisT was RuTh RuTledge, and The Exchange Ed- iTor and Librarian was Arnold Glaser. Jean McGuigan ediTed girls' sporTs, and Jack Pearce. boys' sporTs. ln acldiTion To rouTine Annual work, a new library sysTem was inauguraTed This year and, Tor The TirsT Time. reTouching picTures was pracTiced. 83 GerTrude l-larby, besides ediTing her class sec- Tion, Took charge of The laTTer job. Much crediT goes To Wilbur Clark Tor operaTing The school's new Zeiss ConTax Camera and Taking The major- iTy oT The picTures in The book. l-le also prinTed all The negaTives and made his own enlarger To prinT bigger picTures. Wilbur spenT many ouTside hours on Annual work and deserves special commenda- Tian. Laurels musT also be awarded To Barbara Curran Tor wriTing headlines and oTher parTs oT The copy in This book. An appreciaTion is due To The TaculTy also. ln parTicular To Mr. PeTerson, business manager aT The Annual, and To Miss Borghild Lee, who supervised The arT copy aT our book. The Annual STaTT wishes ThaT This book may meeT wiTh'wholehearTed approval, aTTord much pleasure, and remain an accuraTe, inTeresTing record oT school days. A new plan oT organizaTion, an enTire opening secTion oT arT work, and universal acTion poses were included in This year's STrenuous LiTe, wiTh The hope a book unique in sTyle and in- creased value and inTeresT To The sTudenT body as a whole mighT be achieved. NaTurally, The sTaTT Tried To coorclinaTe The ideas OT sTudenT appeal and All-American qualiTy. IT boTh These aims are accomplished The Annual STGTT will Teel ThaT iTs year aT consTanT acTiviTy has been well won-Thwhile. l-lere iT is, RoosevelT - The I936 STrenuous Life! ATHLETICS if W . ., .,.. -,s-1....e:a--. .,., , . . . was- - T4 1 .-- -. . , f' A -, ,.. -waz' . ,. f, fg3::.'r'--Q i':F,r'fff, ' '-:,Ef- ' ' , ' ' 51 ,,, V- .W i A A K -'-f: ' A 1 - ' ef ' i 1 . ' .' f '11 1 ,- ill , ggssevfs-sf . I , 'Q' -'izwfn' . T 11 ' , ' ' f , F 'I E Q 'x W, 1' 5 - ii 2' fl ' 'ATX--5' ' ' V 1 , . 3-1, -- .- ' ,i.v 'Y fggfffr- Q , , . x ' I I ' ,aff Y' . 5.0: - ' - - T.-5 iff . 'f ' ef-f. , ' ., .' '- ,FSE 1' ' 'hifi ' ' 1 ' ixlq5':, -',- ,Y--ETV. ' 1 f 114-El ' ' ' -, T' 5' T , sk, S flff 'eu iF,i ' ,A T-'AX WL 5- Z' ' ff '-' 'FA' bf ' L , V ,,1:, i,'j1s,f-:- - ' E f' - ,fiswrgi . r H , , Milulzwig-.+5':f....' '--257: L 3- ' ' ,qynsswl ff - f,,.f. ,. ' - Az., . ,I Q' f,., '- ' 'H ff ' , - ..,..',f -Y . ' :en:,:.jff '-3 j L . -5 -ef, 41 'i wtf:-.--' , , - J. 5, -tg, , 'Ay ,- ,- ,. I -gf A . W -r f. J: --1-4-F.-V , wvzug ' if - 'ii , 3-N ' .,., ., Mfr: ', ij 5. 1 1 - fu- . V., .:Q,:fL.?' 1. Y' if -2 , 'hf:i nL2if'V ' H' 5 ' 11-fggg:5,,iV 'A .ef ' , mf ' 1' t g - - .3 T SPORTS lVlOUlNlTAlNS-wilh cone-sprinkled Jrroils ond cryslol run- woys: The seo-wilh cresled surf breolqing upon curving sends, oncl blue, winding inlel's beckoning while soilsq cleep, froqrcinl woods, eloquenl wilh silenceg hillsicle Sl'I'9OITlS onol slill pools- lhese ore lhe gills of our Norlhwesl. : : : : The spiril' of This vcxsl, nolurcl ploylielcl inspires cu ioyous pol'- Jricipolion in cornpelilive sporls. : : : : : : W l E 36 B. C. SparTan girls were The Torerunners oT modern women in aTh- leTics. The SparTan girls had Their own exercise grounds and joined Treely wiTh The boys in aThleTic evenTs oT every lsind. They learned To leap, run, casT The iavelin, Throw The dis- cus, play ball, wresTle, dance and sing. AT Chios The girls even wresTled wiTh The boys. AT Olym- pia, however, women were noT allowed To oTTend The aThleTic evenTs, even as specTaTors. There was only one special TesTival Tor The women aT Olympia, called The l-leraea, wiTh races Tor girls oT various ages.There was a disTance oT 500 TeeT, only IOO TeeT less Than a similar men's race. The girls wore a shorT Tunic noT quiTe reaching The lsnee and wiTh righr shoul- der bare and hair un- bound. Their cosTumes per- miTTed Them so much Tree- dom oT movemenT and Their acTions were so lighT and airy ThaT They ap- peared To be grace per- soniTied when They par- TicipaTed in The evenTs oT Their colorful TesTivals. The sporTs parTicipaTed in, as well as cosTumes, have changed since Then. Miss Ritchie and Miss Rogers, Advisors. rho club ajfem incentive to THE Rl-lO CLUB Torged sTeadily ahead during The pasT year in promoTing healTh and good sporTsmanship among RoosevelT girls. Under The sl4illTul guidance oT Miss CaTherine Rogers and The oTTicers, The Rl-lO Club sponsored all oT The girls' aThleTic evenTs and did much Toward malsing RoosevelT girls conscious oT The Tun ThaT can be had Trom Turning ouT Tor The aThleTics. A NauTical BanqueT was given in December in honor oT Rl-lO Club iniTiaTes. Jane Bovee, The general chairman, was luclsy in securing Alice Ogden, a Tormer Rl-lO Club presidenT, as guesT speaker. A Fun FesT was held in Febru- ary, honoring all The girls inTeresTed in aThleTics. Several new members were iniTiaTed inTo The mysTic riTes oT The Rl-TO Club aT a MoTher-DaughTer Tea given in April. AnoTher highlighT was The welcome Tea in honor of Miss Doro- Thea RiTchie, The new gymnasium insTrucTor. Miss RiTchie enTered hearTily inTo The school life and iT was due To her suggesTions ThaT The A. S. R. movie was produced. She also coached several Tap lines, which perTormed Tor various school TuncTions. Miss RiTchie, a Tormer RoosevelT graduaTe, was an inspiring inTluence To The girls because oT her undersTanding viewpoinTs. RHO Club-STanding: Greenwood, TempleTon, McNeil, Reed, Winger, Hanson, ParTridge, Kingman, Fuiihara. SeaTed: Tanaqi, Rainey, Anderson, Nelson. Workman. 86 RHO Club Officers-Lola Jacobson, Vice-Presidenh Doroihy Burfon, Secrefaryg Nancy Jean Temple, Presidenfg Lorraine Wesflund, Adver- Tising Manager. cgooof Jportrmonfbip among girly Tl-llf Rl-lO CLUB hos been selling candy aT The boskerboll games Tor several years and up To The presenT Time They have collecred approximaTely 3460. When enough money is earned The ToTal will go Tor a Tennis courT. Various girls were appoinTed by The presidenT and general manager To man- age each diTTerenT sporT. Girls acTing as managers were given one hundred poinTs Toward Their leTTers. lT is hard Tor one noT acquainTed wiTh an organizaTion such as The Rl-IO Club To realize The exTenT oT iTs acTiviTies. Managing sporTs, creaTing Triend- ships, sponsoring social evenTs, and promoTing cheerful cooperaTion among The girls are only a Tew oT iTs duTies. The members OT The Rl-TO Club all Took parT in The A. S. R. movie by demonsTraTing various sporT. Several shoTs were Taken of The Rl-lO Club girls playing Tennis and ping- pong. Also, scenes were shown oT a Tew girls shooTing in an archery Tourna- menT and They were greaTly enioyed by The sTudenTs who saw The movie because iT clearly showed The correcT sTance and Technique aT a good archer. The members OT The Rl-IO Club do noT conTine Themselves To aThleTics alone buT are ouTsTanding in all oTher school acTiviTies. RHO Club-STanding: HedsTrom, Jacobson, Bovee, Winningham, Wilcox, Landaas, WeTTerIind, WesTlund, Nelson, Cordiner. SeaTed: BurTon, Rhodes, Temple, SechrisT, Rice. 2036 A. D. And wha? will The women of 2036 be doing? Will They be hav- ing air races around The world or will They have dropped ouT oT The lime- lighT enTirely? Will The woman OT Tomorrow be more aThleTic or less aTh- leTic Than The woman oT Today? lvlosT likely wom- en will be begging Their husbands To please buy one OT Those cuTe li++Ie monoplanes like The one The Jones have. Or may- be They will be pleading Tor a week-end Trip down To The SouTh Pole. Per- haps The all-Amer-icon TooTball Team will be com- prised mainly oT girls and The Chicago CuTies will be winning The World Series. Men will become more eTTeminaTe and women will replace Them in all sporT insTiTuTes. Why noT - They are already equal To Them in Tennis, swimming, horseback rid- ing, and archery. lT is only naTural ThoT women should equal men in aThleTics as well as poli- Tics and business. The nexT one hundred years will probably see more changes and drasTic sTeps Torward Than any previ- ous era ever has. 87 iiidiifidiidl .rporzir provide recredfioiidl trdiiiiiicg Tl-lE FIRST oT The Toll sporTs was hoclf.ey. Under The able managemenT oi Frances WeTTerlind, The :our class Teams all Tied Tor TirsT place. Because oT iTs ouTsTanding playing abiliTy, The Treshman Team was cnosen To appear in The Annual. l3adminTon, which is becoming more and more popular, was managed by Mooel ParT- ridge. The winners were: Pauline Marlaen, Thelma Jean Snider, Treshmen: Geraldine Culross, Minerva l-lunTer, sophomores: Marjorie Kingman, Jean Townsend, iunio's7 and l-lelen TempleTon, MargareT Grimes. seniors. Juniors and seniors were The only ones allowed To Turn ouT Tor archery because oT The lacls oT suTTicienT equipmenT. Wenonah Ramsdell was The winner oT The The senior TournamenT, wiTh l-lelen Lawrence and Irene Nelson Tying Tor second place. BeTsy Thompson won The iunior TournamenT and Dorsey Reed was runner-up. Mabel ParTridge was The archery manager. Ping-pong TournamenTs were held aTTer school in The lunchroom, wiTh Lola Jacobson as manager. Winnei's Archery-Nelson, Lawrence, Reed. Ping-Pong-Tennis-Young, Wilcox, Winger, TempleTon, Dunham, Brown, Reed, AllingTon. Badminfon-Sfanding: TempleTon, Grimes, Snider, Marken. Kneeling: Townsend, Kingman. Freshman Hockey Team-STanding: Pooser, Marken, Snider, HaTTon, Turnure. Kneeling: Brislawn, LeVasser, Young, Phyllis Turner, Capfain. were: Barbara AllingTon, Anne Goodfellow, Shirley Leos, l-lelen Lawrence, BeTsy Upper, and Marjorie Young. Tennis proved To be exTremely popular and more girls signed up Tor The TournamenT Than ever before. lT was under The direcTion of l-lelen TempleTon1 The winners were noT lsnown aT press Time. Any Monday or Wednesday during The second period a person peelsing inTo The boys' gymnasium would have been surprised To Tind a group oT girls rolling over maTs, Turning inTricaTe carTwheels, performing mirac- ulous handsTands and doing all manner oT diTTiculT TeaTs. These are RoosevelT's girl Tumblers-a group oT girls who have become so sl4illTul in The arT oT Tumbling ThaT They have appeared several Times aT diTTerenT school TuncTions. A group oT borh boys and girls gave a Tumbling acT Tor The Revue and iT proved To be one oT The mosT popular TeaTures oT The enTire show. The girls also puT on a Tumbling exhibiTion Tor a John Marshall assembly. Four OT The girls are worl-sing wiTh The boys' group oT Tumblers on an acT Tor The Commencement The CommencemenT This year will be enTirely diTTerenT Trom anyThing ever Tried beTore and The Tumbling will be quiTe a novelTy evenT. The girls are coached by Miss Rogers and Mr. BerThiaume. A MoTher-DaughTer banqueT was held in May Tor The spring iniTiaTes. ATTer having Their Taces plasTered wiTh molasses and Tlour and aTTempTing To ducla Tor Tax Tolsens in a Tub oT waTer, The girls cleaned up and escorTed Their moThers To Tea. Each moTher was given a beauTiTul corsage. E3 gamer, biking tripf are mixezcr or ,girly BASKETBALL SEEMED To be The mosT popular spo.'T, iudging by The large number who Turned ouT. The seniors were again The champions. Virginia Landaas supervised all The games. WiTh DoroThy BurTon in charge oT The volleyball Turn ouT, The iuniors were The champs. A new club was Tormed This year Tor The Treshman girls who won li+Tle R's, and was named The RhoeTTes. The club was quiTe a success and wiThouT a doubT will be- come one aT The insTiTuTions oT RoosevelT. A consTiTuTi3n was drawn up, by-laws made, and oTTicers elecTed. DoroThea Rhodes arranged The various hikes held d.ir'ng The year. The mosT inTeresTing was The one Taken wiTh The Ballard girls To Sand PoinT. OTher hikes were around Green Lake, To Seward Park, To Alki, and To MT. Baker. Baseball was under The managemenT oT Aya Tanagi. As The Annual had gone To press loeTore The play- oTT, This season's winners could noT be picTured. If Gymnasium was a requiremenT buT each girl was given The privilege oT choosing her own Two classes, Fresh- Senior Baskefball Team-Standing: TempleTon, Grimes, Hanson, BurTon, SechrisT. Seafedz Temple, McNeil, WeTTerlind. Mary Ellen McNeil, CapTain. Junior Volleyball Team-STanding: Clark, Wilcox, Rice, RaTTi, Winger, Harrison, Olson. Kneeling: Kingman, Gumlam, Reed, Brefz, Townsend, Greenwood. Dorsey Reed, CapTain. Hikis-Back row: Carmichal, Kingman, TempleTon, Rhodes, Rice, Tempie. F.ronT row: Bovee, Erickson, SmiTh, Bell, Greenwood, McNeil, Fairban . Sgphohmore Baseball Team-STanding: Clark, AshTun, Hardin, Allingfon, Gumlam, BreTz. Kneeling: Bell, Carmichal, Goodfellow, Erick- son, miT . men and newly arrived sophomores were obliged To Take General Gym and a dancing class, buT The upper- classmen had Tree choice. Among The classes oTTered were: AThleTics, Individual SporTs, l.eader's Class, Tumb- ling, PosTure, RhyThm, Folk Dancing, and CharacTer Dancing. The lndividual SporTs Class TaughT The girls The TundamenTals oT Tennis and golT. AlThough The girls had no chance To play on a regular golT course They pracTiced Their drives and learned all The Technical Terms relaTive To golT. BadminTon was played in This class because iT helped prepare The girls Tor Tennis. The Ballard girls and The RoosevelT girls had a wonderful Time on Their hike To Sand PoinT. ATTer The long hike ouT There The girls were all ready To eaT The delicious lunch They had Taken wiTh Them. SiTTing on The decks oT The old Ship, much Tun was had in swapping sTories abouT The miraculous powers oT Their respecTive schools. The Queen Anne girls enTerTained all The aThleTic girls Trom The various high schools aT a special breakTasT. RoosevelT had a Tair percenTage presenT and They all enjoyed The breakTasT and The dancing aTTerwards. NOT only was iT a TreaT Tor Them To have The chance To see how This high school compared wiTh RoosevelT, buT iT gave Them The opporTuniTy To meeT girls Tram The oTher eighT high schools. As iT is always pleasanT To meeT people who are inTeresTed in The same Things, The girls.reTurned home wiTh a very Tavorable impression oT Queen Anne l-ligh School. ' 4 E9 l 1 Top-Madden, Berg, Dammon. Second row-Wolf, MaTTson, Glaisyer. l'hird row-Thomas, Hoffman. Boffom-Grunbock, KeenhoITs, Blanchard. breaks put wzlmnt rough Mderf in cellar ON Tl-IE GRIDIRON RoosevelT's Team was lasT in The league sTandings buT by no means lasT in spiriT. Lack OT scoring punch was minimized by Tine deTensive work. Of The six Teams They played, There was only one-Lincoln-which was able To beaT Them by a margin aT more Than six poinTs. ln The opener, Franklin won by 6-O on a Treak inTer- cepTion aT a Tumble in The closing minuTes OT The game. RoosevelT sTarTed wiTh a deTiniTe edge, buT The Quakers came up sTrong in The second halT. The win was, neverTheless, a lucky one Tor Franklin. Lincoln sTopped RoosevelT, I3-O, wiTh The click oT Their FOOTBA LL SCO RES R.l-LS. vs. Franklin ,,,,,... O-6 R.l-l.S. vs. Lincoln .,,,..., O-I3 RJ-LS. vs. Broadway ,,,. 7-I3 R.l-l.S. vs. Garfield ..,...., 0-O R.l-l.S. vs. Cleveland ..,. O-6 R.l-LS. vs. Queen Anne ..6-7 passing aTTack being The sole margin oT vicTory. The Teddy line perTormed well as iT ouTplayed The RailspliTTers on The ground, gaining over Twice as many yards Trom scrimmage as iTs rival could collecT. Broadway, who Tied Tor The Toolball crown, deTeaTed RoosevelT I3-7. ln This game a ThirTy-Tive yard Berg-To-KeenholTs pass wiTh a conversion by Berg gave The Rough Riders Their TirsT score since The I933 season. ln Their besT showing aT The season The Colonels Tied GarTield O-O in a deTensive duel, wiTh The RoosevelT forward wall smoThering GarTield's oTTense. The deadlock wiTh The 90 X .mann--Q Top-Greenwood, Dvorak, LiTTIe, Coach Haroldson. Second row-Campbel Barr, HuTchinson. at conclzwion of 1936 Bulldogs became all The more noTeworThy when They Tied wiTh Broadway Tor TirsT place in The Tinal sTandings. DespiTe making almosT Twice as many TirsT downs as Cleveland, The Teds wenT down To a 6-O deTeaT. The score was mode in The closing minuTes Through The Eagles' recovery oT a Tumbled punT close To The RoosevelT goal line. Queen Anne, lasT on The sched- ule, nosed ouT The home Team 7-6, scoring on a RoosevelT Tumble as The game was ending. lvladden's recovery oT a Quay Tumble deep in Their TerriTory paved The way Tor The Rough Rider Touchdown by Dammon early in The game. As a whole, The Rough Rider Team had more Than 91 I, Harris, ArbuThno'r. Third row-Jones, Hanson. Bofiom-Weiland, prep football 56415012 iTs share oT Tough luck in losing boTh The Franklin and Queen Anne games in The lasT Two minuTes oT play Through Tumbles. Coach l-laroldson, in his iniTiol year as The RoosevelT TooTball menTor, developed whaT was considered To be one oT The sTrongesT lines in The league. RoosevelT had a group oT ouTsTanding lines- men, and They deserve crediT Tor pulling The Teddies ouT oT many TighT pinches. The loyal supporT oT 2400 husky voices, clever maneuvers oT The Tive yell kings, and sTirring music oT The pep band kepT spiriTs oT The Team well above par. RoosevelT, RoosevelT, True blue are we To you- Spring pracTice was well under way in April. Re- Turning leTTermen and raw beeT knuckled down. YELL LEADERS: Gerhard, LinToTT, Balkema, yell king, Thorsos, Harcus. CenTer-Rechow, McConnell, Topping. Freshman-Sophomore Squad: Upper group, Top row-Woolhouse, Milroy, Van Buskirk, Topping, Rechow, Pike, Pooser, Roberfs. BoTTom row-P. Wo T, Ross, RoIsTon, Marfin, Josse, Har- rison, McQon.nell. Lower group, Top row-Eisenman, GiIeT, Field, Harding, Glaisyer, BerThiaume, Powell, Newlands, Leber, Graham, SlaTer. BoTTom row-lludnrcku, L. Wolf, Killeen, LaMaine, Madden, Bilodeau, Richards Wise. Upper righT-Coach Scheer, Ross. Lower righT-P. Wolf. rail:-.ropb line provider jlromifmfg material THE l935 RoosevelT Frosh-Soph aggregaTion, aT The Tinish oT The year's schedule was Tied wiTh Lincoln Tor second place in The league sTandings, being headed only by The WesT SeaTTle Indians. A large squad oT some TorTy enThusiasTic gridders Turned ouT during The season and received Their leTTers. ln The iniTial game Coach Scheer's squad over- powered The Ballard Beavers I9-O. ln Their second game The young Rough Riders suTTered Their TirsT and only deTeaT, and ThaT aT The hands oT RoosevelT's old rival, Lincoln, who managed To win by a I3-O score. NexT Cleveland's EagleTs were humbled by The sTrengTh and reserve power of The hard-hiTTing Rough Riders who walked away, 3 I-O, ThaT being The largesr margin aT vicTory rolled up by any RoosevelT TooTball Team during The year. ln The Tinal game on The sched- ule, The Colonels Tied The champion WesT SeaTTle eleven O-O, which was a crediTable TeaT, as every oTher Team in The league had been scalped by Them. Looking baclsward, The season was a successTul one, having resulTed in Two wins, one Tie, and one loss in The Tour games played. , 92 T l 1 l FOOTBALL MANAGERS: Filbin, Tanagi, Tanqen, ClinTon, Fuii, Cody, SaTsTrom, 6. Richards, Osborne. Second Team: BackfLuschen, McCIinTock, Darrow, Downey, E. Richards, Green. FronT--Allen, Parker, Peabody, Amexde, SafsTrom. Upper leTT-McClinTock. Lower leff-Parker. ,reeemi feezm Jfemelf next fe top in leezgzee ROOSEVELTS second Team had a more successTul season Than did The TirsT Team, Tor, according To The record boolss, They were able To score Three Times as many Touchdowns as The TirsT squad. A Tie Tor second- place honors was The Tine record OT This Team, who collecTed Three wins, Two Ties and buT one loss in The course oT The season's play. The Teddies opened wiTh a lopsided vicTory over Franklin, winning by 26-O. ln The second game The Rough Rider reserves barely succeeded in beaTing Lincoln 6-O, making Their sole Touchdown wiTh buT 93 seconds To play. The Team's only deTeaT came aT The hands oT BroadWay's squad, when The Tigers beaT RoosevelT 7-O. The Teddy squad Tied C5arTield's cham- pionship Team O-O in an unusually TighT, deTensive borrle in which neiTher Team could work iTs way pasT The opponenT's TwenTy-yard sTripe. ln The Cleveland game FaTher NepTune rained supreme, a sea oT mud slowing The play and malsing scoring diTTiculT, as shown by The Tinal score oT O-O. The squad compleTed The season winning 6-O over The Team Tram Queen Anne l-ligh School. all-ettaf roosevelt .rtetrf tetke betffqetbetll title Cl-lAlv1PSll For The TiTTh Time in TourTeen years RoosevelT walked away wiTh The baslf.eT- ball crown. The veTeran Rough Rider Team ended on Top by winning Twelve conTesTs and losing buT one in The season's play. RoosevelT sTarTed by beaTing Franklin and WesT SeaTTle wiTh commanding scores. ln The sea- son's Third game Lincoln Turned The Trick, deTeaTing The Teddies in a 33-32 Thriller on The RailspliTTers' home grounds. The Colonel quinTeT succeeded wiTh successive wins over Queen Anne, Ballard and Cleveland. STarTing The second halT oT The schedule RoosevelT smoThered Franklin, holding Them To one poinT in The TirsT halT and Two Tield goals in The enTire conTesT. One more win was I-egisTei-ed over WesT SeaTTle, Tollowed by revenge over Lincoln in a 36-27 vicTory as a capaciTy crowd hung Trom The raTTers. ATTer a successTul encounTer againsT Queen Anne, The Rough Riders broughT home someThing welcome always aT RoosevelT-The TiTle-by winning a crucial encounTer, 37-3 I, Trom Ballard. ln leaving Cleveland behind, 45- 22, The Colonels Tinished Their regular season. By a margin oT 3l-27 The TwelTTh Teddy vicTory came as a posT-season evening exhibiTion aT The UniversiTy Pavilion, when, Tor The Third Time, Ballard Tried un- RoosevelT vs. Franlslin ........... WesT SeaTTle Lincoln ,,,s,s,s,,s,, Ballard ..,,,s,,,,,,. PosT-Season: BASKETBALL SCORES Queen Anne ..,,,, Cleveland .,,,.,.,...,..Y, RoosevelT vs. Ballard ,... successTully To Top The Rough R351 522323 Riders- 45- I 5 42, I 5 The enTire RoosevelT Tive was 46,23 35,29 ouTsTandingp a Team ThaT well 32-33 36-27 deserved The sTars worn on Their 30,26 33-I I sweaTers. The Tive reTurning TirsT 42-36 37-3I Team leTTermen Turnish hopes 46-23 45,22 Tor anoTher sTrong Team nexT year. 3I,27 The second Team in basl4eT- ball broughT RoosevelT iTs sec- ond aThleTic championship oT The year by compleTing a successful season wiTh Ten wins, one Tie, and one loss. In The opener The Rough Rider seconds Tinished ahead oT Franklin, I6-l2: The Tollowing game wiTh WesT SeaTTle resulTed in a I9-I9 Tie. VicTories over Lincoln, Queen Anne and Ballard were earned by scores oT 2I-I6, I8-I I and 27-I3, respecTively. Cleve- land was beaTen by I9-I5 and Franklin losT nexT To The home squad by an idenTical score. ATTer a 22-I8 win over WesT SeaTTle, The Teddies puT The bralaes on Lincoln, 30-5. ln a low-scoring conTesT The Colonels overTurned Queen Anne I4-IO, Then, caughT oTT guard, The Team losT a close one To Ballard, I8-20, and closed Their season wiTh a 22-20 vicTory over Cleveland in anoTher close encounTer. The RoosevelT sophomores Tinished The season Tied Tor TiTTh place. STarTing wiTh vicTories over Queen Anne, Lincoln and Franklin by 29-I4, I5-I2 and I9-I8, 94 een canteen meeelqe respeclively, lhe Teddies losl lo Cleveland and Wesl Seallle, I8-20 and IO-20. Allen' dropping one lo Garfield, 'rwo more deleals al The hands ol Ballard and Broadway wilh scores of 6-30 and I5-4l ended lhe year's games. The Frosh squad ended Their schedule lied lor lourlh place wilh an even breale ol four wins and lour el by eezleeee of play losses. The lirsl game resulled in a win over Queen Anne, ll'8. Allen' losing lhree in a row 'ro Lincoln, Franlalin and Cleveland-l9f2l, I6-27 and l8-25- lhe Rough Rider leam beal Wesl Seallle 2l-8. Fol- lowing a deleal by Garfield, Roosevell finished wilh wins over Ballard and Broadway by scores ol I7-5 and 2l-l l. Top-Berg, D. Smilh, Barr, Arlhaud, Mulford. Managers: Filbin, Brown, Grunbock. Second Team: Top row-Loomis, P. Wolf, Freese, Milroy, Amende. Middle row-Mclnfvre, Gilberl, Halse, McConnell, Easier, Bollom row4Reilly, McFarland, Sierer, Cochran. Managers:.Weiland, Templelon, Thomas, Cole. Freshman Team: Back-Field, Henderson, Evans, Murdey, Nicolay, Glomslad. Fronl- -Harrison, Ralston, Olson, Pike, L. Wolf, Tropho, Sophomore Team: Back-Gordon, Sibold, Roberls, Coach E. Turner. Fronl-Manager Burkhead, Miyake, Kush, Madden. 95 19 treeekfrerr meelze ure 0 new Cinder perth AFTER TRAINING on a new, improved cinder paTh, RoosevelT's Track aThleTes proved Their abiliTy in winning Two dual meeTs and one Triangular conTesT. To conform wiTh naTional prep Track regulaTions, changes were made in The Two hurdling evenTs as The disTonce Tor The low hurdles was moved To Two hun- dred yards and The high sTiclns were cuT down Three inches. Coach Dvoral4's squad showed promise by beaTing Ballard 69-44, wiTh Jack ArThaud, Les Dammon and Ed and EI Grunboclf. Taking Their share oT The poinTs. A hard rain during The Queen Anne conTesT did noT sTop RoosevelT Tram winning 77-36, nor did iT sTop Bob Mason Trom Taking TirsT in The cenTury and Two- TwenTy as well as assisTing in The relay Team's vicTory. The Rough Riders gaThered nine TirsTs wiTh ArThaud again o double-winner. In The annual Relay Carnival RoosevelT placed six,Th, Lincoln winning. ln The only Triangular conTesT RoosevelT won, gaThering 57 poinTs as Broadway Tools second wiTh 3I and .Franklin Trailed wiTh 25. For The Third successive Time Ed Grunbocln Hurdle-EI Grunbock, LeTT: Back row--EI Grunbock, SpiTIer, Damman, Herman, McKinnell, plpr, Link, McCoy, ArThaud, Mason, Schwenk, Bressler. RighT: Back row gr. Upper, Mgr. ArbuThnoT, Mgr. Josse. FronT row-Challman, Chapin, won The Tour-TorTy, Jack ArThaucl wenT highesT in The pole vaulr, Darrell Barr capTured The discus Throw and The relay Team was vicTorious. ln The Freshman- Sophomore conTesTs RoosevelT Tinished o sTrong Third in The Freshman evenT and sixTh in The Sophomore secTion. Giving The reserves an opporTuniTy To show Their abiliTy, a novice meeT was placed on The sched- ule Tor The TirsT Time To Take place laTe in May. The Teddies were looking forward hopefully To The All-CiTy meeT held aT The season's end, managed This year by RoosevelT, This meeT includes ThirTeen evenTs: low and high hurdles: one hundred and Two hundred and TwenTy yard dashes: quarTer mile. halT mile and mile runs: as well as The relay and Tive Tield evenTs- shoTpuT, discus, broad iump, high iump and pole vaulT. Lasr year RoosevelT even aTTer having losT all The meeTs oT The regular season. Tinished second in This AlleCiTy conTesT, Topped only by Lincoln. The All-CiTy meeTs, held aT The UniversiTy STadium, were well aTTended. STudenTs Trom all schools became beTTer acquainTed and Tine Tellowship resulTed. Pole VaulT-Jack ArThaud. Blanchard, Parker, Glaisyer, Fairbank, Ed Grunbock, Barr. FronT row-Hap Darrow, Whipple, Green, RolsTon, McCIinToch, Whifney, Brugman, Giske, Fearn, Harding, Hanna, Lyons, Sheedy, Mgr. Husband. 96 bawebazll turnozrty firm' HALFWAY THROUGH fhe second round of fhe schedule Coach Anderson's baseball feam had won l'wo and losf seven games, being placed in The sevenfh spof in fhe circuif, bul' having fhree more opporfunifies fo raise ifs posifion in 'rhe sfandings in fhe confesfs wilh Garfield, Franklin and Wesf Seaffle. The Teddy baseball squad opened al' Queen Anne, losing by 5-2, followed by lhe firsf home game al' which Roosevelf was defeafed by Ballard 7-4, before a large Campus Day crowd. The Rough Riders dropped anofher close one, 5-4, fo Cleveland when fhe Teddies again oufhif fheir opponenls fo no avail. Errors in lhe crucial spofs proved fo be Roosevelf's nemesis in 'rhe season's fourfh game when, playing af fhe Civic Audiforium field, Roosevelf was beafen 4-2 by Garfield's 'reamg again Roosevell' collecfed more hi+s fhan i'rs rivals. ln o game wilh Franl4lin's 'rifle- seelsing Quakers, Roosevell was decisively frounced, IO-O, in 'rhe firsf loss of l'he season. By fhe slender margin of 6-5 Wesf Seaffle 'l'OOl4 whaf seemed lo be bd1 bf7'lg61 J' of .rprmcg a cerfain vicfory for fhe Colonels as Roosevelf bogged down in fhe ninfh frame, allowing fhe Wesf- siders fwo follies. Pulling oul' of a six-game slump, fhe Rough Riders came 'rhrough by blanlsing Queen Anne 8-O in fhe firsf game of fhe second round. Sierer, fhe Teddy pifcher-capfain, allowed fhe l-lillfoppers buf fwo hifs and fwo bases on balls as he sfrucls oul' fiffeen Kuay bafsmen. Nexl on 'rhe schedule, Garfield emphafically shul' our Roosevelf wifh a 6-O score. Playing Cleveland on The Civic Audiforium diamond, Roosevel+'s base- ball squad sfarfed fhe lasf half of fhe ninfh one run behind, buf rallied fo bring fwo 'rallies across fhe plafe, giving fhe Rough Riders a 4-3 vicfory. Some facfs which fhe scores in 'rhe firsf nine games have nol' shown include Sierer's impressive record of over fiffy sfril-ae-oufs, and 'rhaf Roosevelf acfually had collecfed more hifs fhan ifs opponenfs. The predeces- sor of Jrhis year's squad finished in a fie wifh Cleve- land for lasl place wilh fhree wins and eighf losses. Top ielf-Chrisfian, 3rd base, Milroy sliding. Top righf-Chrisfian baflingg Hill, Garfield, cafching. Top row bolfom picfure, lefl' To righf-Fuii, Mgr., Mclnlyre, Wolf, Gordon, W. Sierer, Capfain, Milroy, Templefon, Phillips, B. Sierer, Liflle, Erickson, Anderson, Coach. Boflom row, left lo righl-Wieland, Oldfield, Chrisfian, Scoones, Frye, Lundy, Wasson, McConnell, Wells. V 97 rntranrnral toanzf .ftafge .reboot toarnarnonts lN A SCHOOL the size ot Roosevelt, inter-school athletics necessarily turnish an opportunity tor com- petition tor only a comparatively tew at the boys in school. To give everyone a chance to participate is the aim ot the intramural program under the direction ot Mr. Smith. A large variety ot sports is ottered including basketball, baseball, horseshoes, handball, galt, tennis and ping pong. ln the tall intramural basketball, the Rehbock-Leat team took the major league title and in the minor league l-laroldson's roll captured the championship. The spring basketball league was organized by the players, the major league crown going to Barnett, with Nobles winning the pennant in the minors. The play in the more individual sports resulted in l-laskell winning one-up on Simpson in the golt tinals, and Forde beating Cochran to take the tennis crown. Wetter deteated Kirschner in the ping pong tourna- ment: Logg and Whipple were tirst and second in the horseshoes singles competition, and in the horseshoes doubles event tvlounsey and Rober ended on top, tollowed by Preston and Loomis. ln another series ot contests, Ohail and Spoor annexed the handball doubles title by deteating Trostad and lvlcGuire in the tinals. ln a toul-shooting contest Klein surpassed. Roosevelt's new cinder path received its dedica- tion in the second annual Novice Track Meet as more than two hundred competitors took part in this pre- liminary contest ot the track season. An emblem bear- ing his class numerals was awarded to every man earning three points in the meet: torty-eight such numerals were given out to eleven treshmen, tourteen sophomores, tourteen iuniors and eight seniors. Schwenk was outstanding in winning two tirsts and two second places. As the annual went to press the spring competi- tions in baseball, handball, horseshoes, tennis and golt were well under way. Interest was especially strong in handball, tor which nearly halt a hundred had signed. The work done by the intramural man- agers in handling the tournaments deserves a great deal ot recognition. Upper, left: Tournament Finalists and Semi-Finalists: Back-Glamstead, Loomis, Mounsey. Front-Rober, Preston. Upper rkghg lntglrgprrili Bjsketballz Back-Gilbert, Wolf, Barnett, Winslow, Schmalle, Chapman, Miyake, Kiichili, Gere. Front-Harcus, Tem- Ol'1 . pe , o es, ne , ones Lower left: Tournament Finalists and Semi-Finalists: Back-Forde, Nobles, Wetter, Gardner. FrontfTrostad, McGuire. . Lower right: lntramural Managers: Back-Donaldson, Baskerville, Cody, Malone, Howard, Trostad, Simpson. Front-Husband, Richards, Bernsee. 98 balmy air lzzrey fennifzir, Cgolfem outdoorf COMPLETING A FULL YEAR oT acTiviTies, Roos- evelT's Tumbling Club proved successTul in iTs TirsT season as a club-previously Tumblers had been TreaTed only as a class which meT early in The morning. Over TorTy exhibiTions were given during The year by groups Trom The club beTore lodges, TraTernol soci- eTies and oThers, many Times To large audiences. WiTh Sherry BerThiaume as club advisor, The or- ganizaTion meT every morning aT The early hour oT halT pasT seven, Thus giving an excellenT opporTuniTy To The many RoosevelTions inTeresTed in Tumbling. RoosevelT's Tennis squad had won Three and losT one aT press Time wiTh Three games sTill To be played, The possibiliTy oT bringing home The championship ex- isTed and a Tinish in The TirsT division seemed cerTain. ln The TirsT oT The year's neT games Garfield, seeking iTs TourTh s+roigh+ championship, deTeoTed The Rough Riders 7-2, and Ballard's squad was beoTen likewise by a 7-2 score. RoosevelT made iT Three in o row by Taking Lincoln, 6-3. The experience oT The six leTTer- men on The squad was an imporTanT TacTor conTrib- uTing To The Team's success. The record oT This season's squad was a marked improvemenT over ThaT oT lasT season when RoosevelT won buT a single mciTch and Tinished in lasT posiTion. WiTh buT one game-wiTh WesT SeaTTle-remoin- ing on The schedule, RoosevelT's golf Team was as- sured aT leasT a Tie Tor Third place-having won Tive and losT Two up To ThaT Time. ln Their iniTial maTch The Teddy golfers deTeaTed Broadway I8-6, conTinuing wiTh success againsT Cleveland, Ballard and GarTield and winning by scores aT I5-9, I4-lO and I8lf2-5lf2. Lincoln, The year's poTenTial championship golT aggre- goTion, proved Their superioriTy in adminisTering ci beaTing To The Teddies in a criTical game, score 6lf2- l7lf2. ATTer whipping Queen Anne 23-I, RoosevelT dropped iTs second maTch, 6lf2-l7lf2 To Fronlalin. This year's Team Tared very much as did lasT year's when The Tinal sTandings showed RoosevelT Tied wi+h Lincoln Tor The Third spoT, having won Tive and losT Three. DISCUS: Barr. TUMBLING CLUB: On shoulders-H. Lewis, J. Gillespie, G. Lewis, Scholl. STanding--Cody, V. CarTer, WalTz, George, Taylor, B. CarTer, SpiTler. Kneeling-Payne, ArmsTrong, Morris, Donaldson, ProuTy, Dick. TRACK: Fairbanks. TENNIS TEAM: Geoghegan, Gardiner, Forde, Mr. Leaf, coach: hMorris, Jay, Moore, Jacobson, SmiTh. GOLF TEAM: D. Simpson, Mr. SmiTh, coach, Ryan, Alger, Evans, BerT, B. Simpson, Gress, Guppy, Luschen, Kue n. 99 , WW was- 'f ,,,,w-'- ya! EDUCATICDINI EDUCATION has been called The debT due Trom The presenT To TuTure generaTions. Our NorThwesTern pioneers early recog- nized and readily assumed This debT, wiTh The resulT Tha+ our schools have long Taken Their worThy place among The educa- Tional insTiTuTions oT America. : 2 2 : : 3 : May our sTudenTs become sensible To The varied, signiTicanT beauTy which lies abouT Them: and may our schools reveal To Them The nobiliTy OT purposeTul vvorl-4 and human service. : : li 5 gl if V5 4, . A... 2 in f Sky 5 flggkigl,-f 1-A Sl Sk' ff .Wi rw 3 ,Q Sk, .F, 5 ? , ,if 4 ,K Es 'Q' 5' LAS? -, ' ,, 2 2 9 fam S 2' 5,4 uk Tx ' 5' as ff! ,A . Nxgfx j?:vg,Af' 025- ,J LF 1 wx-' A 4 - lx + ,z 7 .K ' '-5 I ' 53-' 5 4, v A 9 5 5 UQ, Q , ---. -M i-...A N-X. g ,,,. NA. .Q -wifi' , V , il? y , Ah . Mtn, w w ' ' M ' 5 , 5 ' X, ' ' ,m , 3 . our hundred .rexty-fiv ON SEPTEMBER 6, l935, approximaTely Tour hun- dred bewildered Treshmen were inTroduced To Their class advisor, Miss Grace NorTon. Under her compre- hensive and experienced guidance, They elecTed Their class oTTicers Tor The year. From graduaTes OT six diTTerenT grade schools, The BryanT pupils made a clean sweep oT The elecTion of class oTTicers. Those chosen were Dick SlaTer, presidenT: PaT l-largrave, vice-pres- iclenTg Pauline Marlsen, secreTary7 and Bob Harding, Treasurer. The Treshman class had a splendid Time as parTic- ipanTs in Their annual Erolic. Two rollicking one-acT plays enTiTled, Wienies on Wednesday, and Who Says Can'T7 were given. A boys' vocal dueT, a piano solo, Paderewsl4i's MinueT, and a shorT speech given by The class president Dixies were served aT The close oT The Frolic. Z , Young, gay and careTree, growing To be men and women worThy aT liTe's greaT problems. Eroliclf.ing buT seriously concerned. YouTh is such a lovely Thing said The poeT, and The upperclass sTudenTs smoThered smiles as empTy Dixie cups scaTTered in The air. ln sporTs The Treshmen were well represenTed by Their TurnouTs in TooTball, basl4eTball, and inTramural games, and in The annual ConcerT and Revue. ln Turn, Mrs. MaTilda 6ilbreaTh, Miss Grace NorTon, Class Advisors. Bob Harding, Treasurer, Peuline Marken, .SecreTaryg PaT Hargrave, Vice-PresidenTg Dick SIaTer, President e refbmefe enter They had Their weelq in The lunchroom which was made successTul and inTeresTing, by daily movies and enTerTainmenT in The audiTorium. An encouraging number oT Treshmen appeared on Thewhonor roll Tor The TirsT semesTer, proviriq 'ThaT They are eagerly loolsing Torward To The opporTuniTy OT becoming members oT The Torch SocieTy. May The members oT The Class oT '39 have a Teeling oT saTisTacTion ThaT Their TirsT year has been successTul boTh in scholarship and in acTiviTies. As They go Torward, may even higher scholarship and greaTer par- TicipaTion be Their goal. AT The beginning oT The second semesTer in January, sevenTy-Tive mid-year Treshmen oT l94O, Trom Ravenna, LaurelhursT, John Marshall and BryanT schools were greeTed by The veTeran pupils wiTh a hearTy wel- come oT l-lello Fresh and were Talnen in charge by Their advisor, Mrs. MaTilda Gil- breaTh. They have noT, as yeT, elecTed Their oTTicers Tor The coming year, buT have been considering Their candidaTes Tor The coming elecTion in The spring. These newesT, and somewhaT bewildered, members oT RoosevelT during Their TirsT semesTer have been largely concerned in geTTing acquainTed wiTh The seT-up and The acTiviTies oT a large school. Their TirsT Tour crediTs have been Their greaTesT inTeresT. In due Time They, Too, shall be ready To play Their parT in The school acTiviTies, share in iTs vicTories and add To iTs laurels. May each oT Them in The nexT seven semesTers Tind a deTiniTe place Tor his TalenTs, malse many loyal Triends, and enioy high school Tully and compleTely. The classes oT nineTeen hundred and ThirTy-nine and nineTeen hundred and TorTy have beTore Them Tour enjoyable, acTive and progressive years aT school liTe. l-lere's To Their advancemenT and success. lO2 frightened frefbmen rumble into roofevelr belly JOAN l-lATTON-Scholarship-l believe lhal gelling high grades simply means always being prepared and develops sludy habils ol greal value as well as making a sludenl eligible lor all school aclivilies. BOB l-lARDlNG-Treasurer-Being an ollicer makes you leel lhal you are really doing some- lhing worlhwhile in lhe work ol lhe school. And il gives you a leeling ol responsibilily which each ol us should have. MARGARET LARSEN-Dramalics-Dramal- ics encourage originalily and develop poise and assurance. The phase ol dramalics lhol mosl in- leresls me is sludying dillerenl lypes ol people and porlraying lhem in characler. Top row-Bigford, Creech, Alenburg, Berlhiaurne, Caraher, Brown, Brickler, Anklam, Burkeheimer. Middle row-J. Brown, Allsop, Courlney, Cocklin, Auer, Burr, Brugman, Allen, J. Can- non. Bollom row-Benlon, Davies, J. Campbell, G. Campbell, Cannon, T. Allen, Boals, Bilodeau. Top row-Huff, Hergel, Gaskill, Macdulf, Heller, Lewis, Mc- Cullough, Keilh, Linloll. Middle row-Hoskins, D. Larson, Field, Lavelle, Huey, Kriebel, Jacobson, Hubbard, S. Larson. Bollom row-Jacobs, Kruse, Ewarl, Lawrence, Kelso, Lewis, Krippner, Loesell, Holman. Top row-Nicola, Price, E. Smilh, Quigley, Phelps, D. McLeod, Pelers, O'Neil, Merriam. Middle row-Shimizu, Polson, Quandl, Rindahl, O'Brien, McGralh, Murray, Nysledl, Simpson. Bollom row-Pelerson, Powers, Robison, Slaler, Salslrom, Rolsron, Mc- Gregor, Murdey, Norris. PAU LINE MARKEN - Secrela ry - Being lhe secrelary lo lhe Freshman class gave me enioy- menl and many new lriends. ll also lurnished me wilh experience in secrelarial work lor lhe lulure. Freshmen, lhere are lhree years ahead ol you lo be lilled wilh happiness and sell-developmenl. Your presenl ambilions and aclivilies are indic- alive ol whal you are lo be. ln no way can you dodge lhe lrulh engraved on our school seal- Whal l am lo be-l am NOW becoming. l-low long does lhe average person live? l-low much lime have l lo spend on preparalion lor lhe vocalion ol my choice? l-lave l already explored lhe allraclive lields ol grealer knowledge? These and many more are serious queslions lor Fresh- men lo ponder. Top row-Flelcher, Framplon, D. Evans, Gillespie, Glomslad, Glaisyer, B. Evans, Euslis, Hamrnersia. Middle row-Dawson, Forhan, Greene, Hallberg, R. Evans, R. Graham, Dupar, Fearn, Demenl. Bollom row-Elzey, Harding, Donaldson, Cleaver, Dislad, Fuller, W. Graham, Ferguson, Fry. Top row-McGuire, Johnslon, Morgan, May, Marlin, Malhews, Johnson, F. Henderson, Hunder. Middle row-Hume, Morse, Mer- rifield, Olin, Melzger, lrvine, M. Jones, Haven, MacDonald. Bol- lom row-Massey, L. Jones, Peck, Lauer, Henderson, Jensen, Mason, Hedrick, Madden. Top row-Swap, Rulherlord, G. McLeod, Temple, Payne, R. Simpson, Meyer, Sheedy, Soderberg. Middle row-J. Slaler, Schroeder, Sayer, Taylor, Reynolds, Sparks, Scoll, Schively, Slileler. Bollom row-Sanders, Van Soelen, Rudnicki, Slorm, Nicolay, Rogers, B. Smilh, Pooser, Pike. IO3 mmidmcg crowd orcgaznigef, mjoyf varied fzcfivizjf DICK SLATER-PresidenT-I consider my elec- Tion To The Presidency oT The Freshman Class The mosT imIoorTonT evenT OT my high school career. This posiTion has given me a broader ToundaTion Tor The resT oT my high school liTe and acTiviTies which I Teel is invaluable. PAT HARGBEAVES--Vice-presidenT-I have cerTainly enjoyed being Freshman Class Vice- presidenT. IT is an experience I shall never TorgeT, Tor iT has given me such a good o1oporTuniTy To make new Triends. BLAKE ROLSTON-Boys' SporTs-I like aTh- leTics because iT is good exercise. lnsTead oT siT- Ting aT home aTTer school reading a deTecTive magazine or wasTing Time, sTir up some oT your ambiTion and go ouT on The Tield and show The oTher Tellows ThaT you are a good RoosevelTian. Top row-Wood, TaggarT, Welch, Youse, Sylvesfen, Waldon, Umphrey, Weisel, W. Williams, L, Young. Middle row-Schu- macher, Weeks, Thompson, J. Young, Williams, Wills, TuTTle, Turner, Torheim. Boflom row-Tipper, WesTling, WeTTer, Wood- burn, Yafes, Weidner, Wise, Wolf, Walgren. Top row-Denny, DeDonTney, Dell, A. Davis, DifTman, Dana, Dakan, Claudon, Cross. Middle row--DahlsTrom, H. Davis, Copeslick, BrewsTer, Denz, Donnelly, Dunlop, Dunbar, Daniels. BoTfom row-Feafhersfone, Erikson, Duchow, Dick, Connor, Down- ing, Fairbank, Collyer, AlberTson. Top row-Lalie, Laing, Linhoff, Loomis, Kindig, Gerde, HarT- man, Jenkins, Hinson, Middle row-Gough, Kirk, Joy, HolTorp, Harp, LeVasser, Husfon, Lehman, HunTer. BoTTom row-M. Lewis, Kirksey, Link, B. Greene, V. Johnson, Gwinn, Holcombe, M. Gard- ner, HuTTunen. MARGIE YOU NG--Girls' SporTs-l Thorough- ly enioy solving a diTTiculT problem in geomeTry, buT I lilse even more playing an exciTing game oT baseball or a TosT-moving one in baske-Tball wiTh The upperclassmen as our worThy opponenTs. WiTh These TesTimonials oT ouTsTonding Tresh- man class members as examples, The class as a whole showed iTs ambiTion and abiliTy To become leaders in The diTTerenT Tields oT school acTiviTy. NOT only in poliTics and aThleTics, buT also in scholarship and service The Treshmen oT 'l939 and l94O gave promise oT becoming one oT The mosT eTTicienT and acTive organizaTions aT Roose- velT. WiTh The advisors' guidance, The oTTicers and class members Thus had Their TirsT TasTe oT successTul high school social acTiviTy and service, Top row-Brandlund, AnThony, L. Charles, Bolan, Bigelow, M. Carlson, Barrow, Balkema, Caples. Middle row-Brons, An- drews, Carmichael, Berg, Clark, Brislawn, C. Charles, Bunn, Blanchard. BoTTom row--Brosche, B. Clarke, Bourke, Ayres, Car- penTer, Cave, ChiTTenden, S. Anderson. Top row--Fallers, Hill, Frese, Heileshy, Fry, T. Field, K. Field, Hillman, Faulds. Middle row-FlinT, Hardow, Gregory, Harley, Gardner, Hargrave, Franck, Frederickson, Girolamo. BoTTom row -Fluckinger, Harlan, Greaves, Giske, Gould, HaTTon, Flynn, Greene, Goodwin. Top row-Landsfrom, Marken, LundquisT, LaVigne, Kelpach, Lilygren, Johanson, HueTer, Kennisfer. Middle row-Hoover, Kuss, H. Mench, M. Mench, McCallum, Madison, Larsen, Meekhof, MacEwell. BoTTom row-Holmes, Lindburgh, McClinTock, C. John- son, McGraTh, Lucas, LaTour, McCoy, Larelle. '04 firrryeazr mzle fulfillr boper, Zmlicarfer future SEPTEMBER MORN - LiTTle Freddie awoke Trernbling wiTh exciTernenT, Tor he was going To RoosevelT, The big high school. Freddie's big broTher had Told him'ThaT There wasn'T any elevaTor or roof garden, so he walked conTidenT- ly up The sTepsg bur iusT as he reached The Top he sTumbled and wenT rolling To The boTTon'l.Con- fused by The laughTer, and embarrassed, he sneaked around To The side door. Once inside The big halls he losT his sense aT direcTion. Pushed and iosTled, he discovered himself in The girls' locker rooms. Oul' in The crowd again he was elecTriTied by The lourl' OT a bell. Whel'e, oh, where was his new roll room. CLASS or l939 Top row-McElvain, Peek, Ralls, Moore, Myler, MacLeod, Miner, B. Oliver, R. Oliver. Middle row-Peabody, F. Olson, E. Olson, Nese, PaTTer, Pooser, Powell, PraTT, Rainey. BoTTom row-Powers, Philips, D. Olson, Murphy, Osborne, Sheehan, MarTin, Nessman, A. Powell. Top row-STreeTer, PeTers, Rinds, STephens, Reynolds, Marshall, Segur, Robinson, Shuler. Middle row-Schenck, Randolf, Rose, Moir, Slorey, Riley, PonTing, Rusfuen, ReinharT. BoTTom row- Snider, Schoenberg, Sasner, A. Smifh, STabler, Soehle, M. Scoff, Ryning, M. Robinson. Top row-Warrenf Sfark, M. Young, Ward, Weber, Wood, Tischer, Walden, Wolf. Middle row-M. Young, Sperling, Steen- bergen, H. Taylor, SymingTon, Thorsus, SweeT, Willis, Wallen. Bofrom row-RecTor, Thomas, OsTerhouT, Whelan, M. Young, Whipple, Turnure, STrong, Wicl4sTrom. Under The vigilanT eye oT The lady Teacher, Freddie Took ouT his lilrle noTebook- always prepared was Freddie's rnoTTo-and drew down his brows in a sTudious scowl. l-lis second period came easier: This Time iT Took hirn only eighT rninuTes To Tind The class, and by The Time noon had crepT around, Freddie TelT like an old-Tirner in The halls, nonchalonrly sTooping To drink Trorn every TounTain he passed. Even The huge, bab- bling sTudy hall ceased To TerriTy hirn aTTer his second Trip There. Finally, when The halT day was over, Freddie walked iaunTily horne, already re- solved To become A. S. R. presidenT and singing FighT on Tor RoosevelT in his clear boyish voice. CLASS OF l940 Top row-Baillargeon, Cornell, Chanfry, Erickson, Brown, Annen, Ellis, Deming, Cunningham. Middle row-Brisiow, Douglas, BolTer, Bovee, CaTTle, Brigham, Carlson, P. Anderson, Bell. BoTTom row- Clifford, DalquesT, Chapin, DewarT, Henry, Burns, Chrisholm, Ausf, Cormier. Top row-D. Jones, Kirby, Hardman, Hill, Gearin, McClellan, J. Anderson, Haase, Haggen, Love. Middle row-Plummer, Mac- Donald, McCrary, HilTner, Marshall, Gillon, Morgan, Hume, Hancock, Fairbairn. BoTTom row-STuberg, Dresslar, Gregory, Gourley, Jacobsen, Lewis, Kenny, McNaughTon, McKenzie, McCordy. Top row-SchmidTke, Richardson, Gray, Shaffer, ShulTz, Sfopp, Wilson, Sobioalski, M. Sfopp, Torrance, WyaTT. Middle row- WhiTe, Schwarz, GierTsen, Tuning, Sparling, Wamba, Whalen, Nyberg, Phillips, Williams. BoTTom row-Uyeii, Rufledge, Sund- berg, TalboT, ScoTT, Wolff, Slater, Whiftle, Shigley, Green, HoughTon. ' ' - V , X.. IOS Jacqueline BeckeT, Treasurer, Frances Tiffin, SecreTaryg John Newlands, Vice-PresidenTg MyrTle Brand, PresidenT. one bnnoireol two .ropbr win honor pony THE SOPHOMORES have Tound Their niche in school liTe and are now working hard To make Their names known. They discovered and uTilized The TacT ThaT The TirsT and greaTesT obligaTiOn in school liTe is TO sTudy. FiTTy made grades high enough To enTiTle Them To a place on The RoosevelT l-lonor Roll. Mary Neergaard and CurTis BuTOrd OuTdisTanced all, how- ever, by earning Tive A's each. OUT OT The six hundred and sixTy sTudenTs, one hundred and Two OT Them are now Tlashing The liTTle green and yellow pins showing Them To be Torch members. The elecTions Tor The year were held early in The Tall. ATTer a very inTeresTing campaign, The class re- elecTed IvlyrTle Brand Tor presidenT. The assisTing oTTi- cers consisTed OT John Newlands as vice-presidenT: Frances TiTTin, secreTary, and Jacqueline BeckeT, Treas- urer. This group aTTended To all The business OT The class. They also Took over The responsibilify OT plan- ning The Sophomore week in The lunchroom and organ- izing The Glee program. A special TeaTure OT The lunchroom program was o serial movie shown every noon Tor Ten-minuTe periods. AlThough The sTory was a romance, much inTeresTing inTormaTion was given. The sTory was Tilmed along The rugged coasT OT Norway. lT picTured barren rocks, birds, boaTs and The hardships OT living. The general sTudenT group appreciaTed The eTTorTs OT The Soph- omore COmmiTTee. Miss Inez Craven, Miss Ohe Van Orsdall, Class Advisors. John Newlands acTed as chairman OT The lunchroom commiTTee, wiTh Jacqueline BeckeT and Frances TiTTin assisTing. This duTy was handled very successTully as was shown by The weekly receipTs which were- excepT Tor The special Thanksgiving week- higher Than any previous Ones. Peggy lvlilne, chairman OT The Scrapbook CommiTTee did Tine work in keeping This book up-To-daTe. lT was sTarTed during The Treshman year so ThaT in l938 The gray- haired seniors could Trace The rising glory OT Their class. The boys had a sTrong TurnouT in The Tield OT sporTs. They earned places in The school Teams as well as making a good showing in inTerclass games. ln The TuTure These Tellows will make ROosevelT Teams Tor which we can roar wiTh pride. The girls upheld The honor OT The group well by having an unusually large and Tine TurnouT. By The Time The maioriTy OT second-year sTudenTs begin To realize ThaT nexT year They will be juniors They also discover ThaT some OT Their companions have hasTened on ahead in scholarship. By Taking Tive sub- iecTs each semesTer, They now have senior sTanding. Such rapid pace was seT by Dor- oThy SweeT and CurTis BuTord and several oThers. Their progress is TO be commended. An unusual TribuTe has been paid lvlyrTle Brand, presidenT OT The class, by The enTire class, when They elecTed her Tor The second Time as presidenT OT Their group. This has never occurred beTore in The hisTory OT RoosevelT l-ligh School. Two sophomore girls, Barbara Erickson and RuTh SmiTh, made The much-coveTed Rho Club. Pauline Marken and Phyllis Tur- nure became members OT The RhoeTTe, a new girls' aThleTic honorary. lniTiaTes inTO This OrganizaTion musT be all-around sporT girls wiTh IOO poinTs or more. SOO poinTs are necessary Tor membership in The Rho Club. IO5 .recomiymr J'Ch0!d1 .f select semester J'Zlbj6Cf.f UNDER THE SMOOTH currenf of every-day school life fhere are many personalifies and falenfs of which we lenow liffle. This year in fhe Sophomore Glee fhe class displayed many of ifs hidden accomplishmenfs. Dancers, singers and acfors were found hiding under fhe garb of common every- day Sophomores. The sfudenfs held fheir sides fhrough fhree rolliclsing plays and clapped vigorously for fhe songs and dances fhaf rounded ouf fhe program. As a fiffing climax, ice cream was served fo fhe fun-filled audience. One of fhe purposes of fhe Glee is fo provide a means for sophomores fo become beffer acquainfed. Hours of rehearsal developed new friendships, slsill and an undersfanding of whaf if falses fo become a real Roosevelf Sfar. No doubf, secref ambifions were born, resolufions made fhaf- Some day l'll be fhe leading lady in fhe Senior Play or I believe I can some day preside over an All-School Assembly- Sfage frighf - gef fhee behind me for I will become -and so on. The self-confidence and ambifions aroused by fhe Sophomore Glee will more fhan iusfify fhe many weary hours of efforf. l will sfudy and gef ready for Someday-- so said Abraham Lincoln and 660 enfhusiasfic soph- omores af fhe class elecfions. A definife class organizafion is planned by fhe newly elecfed officers and advisors. A survey of fhe class honor roll, fhose nof passing in fhree subiecl's, and fhe acfivify possi- bilifies was made in fhe fall. Sfudenfs were advised how 'ro plan programs and recommended for respon- sible posifions. To Miss Ofie P. Van Orsdall and Miss Inez Craven, advisors, fhe Sophomores are grafeful. Their generous and kind advice has led fhe class info much fun and ouf of many difficulfies. Noi-dahl, Wilson, Whife, Klein, Tiffin, Mafheson, Schuyfen. Top row-Bailey, Baskerville, Blanchard, Bledsoe, Buford J. Brown, Anshufz, Alexander, Baker. Middle row-Burfon, Buell Brinsmead, Burd, Bolsfad, Boggess, Bernsee, Anasfos, Campbell Bolforn row-Andrews, N. Brown, Burkhead, Alton, Anderson Adams, Ainers, Branson, Buckler. Top row-Hay, Johnson, Gray, Gwinn, Hale, Giberson, Garing Gillef, Granr. Middle row-Hildahl, Gregory, Gibson, Gress: Hall, Gannon, Flock, Geoghegan, Forde. Boffom row-Green Giske, Gordon, Gilberf, Fraley, D. Fowler, B. Fowler, Friedman Firsfenburg. Gibaul, Campbell, Moseley, Gunning, Mohr, Vincenf. Top row-Fearn, Dawson, Cone, Farnsworfh, Crosby, Emmons Eveligh, Densler, Dick. Middle row-Campbell, Arnelf, Dodds Donley, Chanfry, DuBruille, Egglesfon, Dory, Coffin. Boflom row- Carlson, Cox, Douglas, Cook, Collman, Dorify, Copesrick, Eisn man, Cibulka. Top row-Keenholfs, Kelley, B. King, Howard, Jackson, Iverson Inman, Josse, F. King. Middle row-Jones, Harcus, Krafr, Daniels Kain, Hemsfad, Jacobson, Grunlund, I-Iowell. Borfom row-How ard, Johnson, Hobbs, Heuslis, Hume, Herman, Hanson, Halvor sen, Haskell. IO7 ri Yee P ll' l . X Jeinrellaeincg Jeereef melee fephemere glee .rzeeeefr Top row: Medler, Loesell, Larsen, Marshall, Madden Lloyd, Lehman, Krummel, Kirschner, C. Middle row: Mor- gan, Kirchner, Miyake, Lyons, MacBride, Mangold, Malone Berkley, Klein, B. Bollorn row: McConnell, Lines, Marlin Killeen, King, MacDonald, Kush, Magnuson, Klein, R. Top row: Ross, Rechow, Ryan, Sorver, Robison, Bryce Ruslad, Reinharl, Porler. Middle row: Slenslram, Kindahl Robinson, Roberls, Rueler, Richards, Priebe, Penlield Paine. Bollom row: Pelerson, Rogers, Saernen, Reser, Reed Payne, Powell, Parker, Osborne. Top row: Wesloyer, Wager, Whipple, Young,S., VVesl Woodcock, Weaver, Tollon. Middle row: Wade, Wong Young,G., Wilson, Veblen, Troslad, Thrapp, Winslow Bollom row: Wallers, Vincenl, Wyman, Williams, l-l., Wolf, Williams, B., Wrighl, Woolhouse. Top row: Chesler, Carr, Coll, Cole, Brand, Clingenpeel Coad, Cady, Chrislenson. Middle row: Blomberg, Cowde roy, Balchelder, Caldwell,A., Caldwell, L., Carlson,J., Brons Brundage, Brelz. Bolfom row: Carlsen, B., Buckley, Buller, Carmichael, Clark, Erewsler, Brigham, Brulon, Clingenpeel, C. Top row: Morris, McGuire, Nilsen, Ledbeiler, Olsen, Osborne, Oldfield, O'Toole, Oswin. Middle row: Mullord. Mahler, Nye, Noser, McElhiney, McKinnell, McMillan, Miller, Manory, Bollorn row: McCready, Mohr, Mallefl, Myers, Nilsen,C., Milroy, Mason, Mishkils, Mallson. Top row: Tullle, Sluyls, Schmilz, Syminglon, Sechrisi, Terry, Slarrell, Sulherland, Sevarg. Middle row: Topping, Spence, Upper, Reilly, Van Buskirk, Taguchi, Tanagi, 'Wal- ker, Sibold. Boilom raw: Thompson, Slack, Sprague, Sewell, Sierer, Shores, Sawers, Senechal, Schuylen. Top row: Bower, Bell, Bossie, Alexander, Allinglon, Beau- pre, Anderson, E., Andrews, Adams. Middle row: Barlon, Bennell, Bard, Booker, Baer, Beeson, Baker, Bachlell, Alger. Bollom row: Becker, Bailey, Bach, Barih, Allen, Ander- son, C5., Ashlon, Billroih, Ahrens. Top row: Frye, Culross, Elmer, Erickson, Geiger, Ci-ell, Colgraye, Coy, Cox. Middle row: Geisler, Flelcher, Fenner, Dalziel, Gay, Dix, Ernsl, Dolson. Duslin. Bollam row: Free- parlner, Edwards, Emanuel, Casey, Carolhers, Dew, Dahl- slrom, Dickerson, Clark. IO8 mmmmfy of yahoo! Jojozmfn Citef mlieni fervice Top row: Guberlel, Gwinn, Grimes, Green, Gregory. Farr, Foirbrools, Donnovan, Dehn. Middle row: Hamillon, Gumlom, Hall, Guslalson, Gray, Gordon, Graham, Grocey, Giboul. Bollom row: Hoqqen, Gunning, Groves, Goodman Goodlellow, Gonser, Gouriay, Davis, Eiyidge. Top row: Hoorn, Solveig, Loomis, Johnson, Kennedy, Lid dell, Hodges, Kelsey, Lundquisl. Middle row: llasen, Kopo nen, Kirslen, Kincaid, Lundholm, Kenl, Lawrence, Lucas, Jacobsen. Bollom row: Kenney, Lunder, Leos, Laing Loppe, Kohlo, King, Kendall, Hedberg. Top row: Owings, Perry, Murray, Pollen, Oellerman Moullan, Nallingham, MacDonald, Nordohl. Middle row Munn, Ozepecl-4, Picardo, O'Harra, Palmer, Oakes, Paine Orrill, Milne. Bollom row: Olsen, Pearson, Milchell, Norern Palricls, Neerqaard, Nash, Morden, Merriam. Top row: Webb, Walerman, Varelsamp, Trinholm, Whelan While, Walla, Thomas, Slorey. Middle raw: Warner, Wersl Windus, Uyeii, Upper, P. Wallace, K. Wallace, Tillin Wesllund. Bollom row: Wilson, Whelslone, Wolaver Worlhinqlon, While, Thompson, Swale, Speemer, Slaup. Top row: Jeannenl, Houslon, Hopkins, Heyword, Hodg- son, Hillon, Hinlan, Hunler. Middle row: L. Hullunen, J. Hullunen, Hammarslrorn, M. Hicks, A. Hicks, Holl, Hen- wood, G. Harby. B. Horby. Bollom row: Hood, Hioll, Hin- son, Gierlsen, Gwinnn, Heinz, Hordesl, Hardin, Hasemeier. Top row: Malhews, Melz, Marlin, F., MacDonald, LaRiv- iere, Mee, Lillell, Marclsmann, Manley. Middle row: Miner, Meyer, Monesmilh, Merlq, McKeown, Magee, Lauderbacl-4, Liyinqslon, Melzqer. Bollom row: Marlin, Lowe, Lurvey. McKean, Moqune, MacLeod, Mcliarlan, Massarl, Malsen. Top row: Sleele, Smilh, Pelersen, Show, P. Pelerson, Roeblse, Riebe. Symes. Reynolds. Middle raw: Schillrell. Ready, Spurgeon, Slewarl, Smalley, Riebow, Spenqler, Schroeder, Pelersan, L. Bollom row: Smilh, Sweel, Slrong, Ross, D,Slrong, Ramsdell, Scanlon, Reeves, Schworlz. Top row: Sleen, Sweel, Reese, Voelns, Malherson, Slacl-4, Boulard, Sluberg, Warner, Slellen, Moseley, Templelon. Middle row: Froney, Sullivan, Smilh, Rader, Woodcocls. Walson, Rolls, Sawers, Rice, Ronne, Smyser. Bollom row: Turner, McKinnell, Piclserell, Williamson, Paul, lvorsen. Gerlin, Bice, While, Richardson, Horlzell. 1 l Q 109 , l- ? ll l-. 2,1 X xl .l L X' y R x jrmiorf number we DURING Tl-lE pasT year The Junior Class has assumed a prominenT posiTion in The social evenTs and aThleTic acTiviTies OT The school. Guided by The capable advisorship OT Miss Florence Russell and lvliss Alma l-lawkins, The class indicaTed iTs good iudgmenT early lasT Toll when iT elecTed iTs class oTTicers. The OTTicers elecTed were: Lois Bever, presi- denT: l-lursT Clark, vice-presidenT7 Frances Geiger Treasurer: and Jack Coplen, secreTary. ThroughouT The annals OT school acTiviTies one may Tind TrequenT menTion OT ambiTious iuniors who have given Their Time and energy To help mainTain The democraTic gOvernmenT and spiriT OT ROosevelT High School. The iuniors invaded all Tields-schOl- arship, governmenT, aThleTics and social. The Boys' Club, Girls' Club and AssOciaTed STudenT commiT- Tees all cOnTained The names OT numerous juniors who may be counTed on To lead nexT year's senior class. The Class OT '37 is proud OT The large number OT aThleTes iT has given TO uphold The school's records and TradiTions. Among Those ouTsTanding were Al Olson and Paul SmiTh, who played TirsT-sTring bas- keTball on our championship Team. The Juniors were noT conTenT To make a name Tor Themselves in baskeTball alone, Tor Bob WolT, Les Dammon, Ken Wieland, and Elmer Berg all won honors Tor Them- selves and Tor Their class by playing on The Toorboll Team. ln scholarship, TOO, The Junior class has excelled. Miss Alma Hawkins, Miss Florence Russell, Class Advisors. CLASS OFFICERS: Jack Coplen, SecreTaryg Frances Geiger, Treasurerg Hursf Clark, Vice-PresidenTg Lois Bever, President bzrrzdred ninety-fre ranking high among The classes. OuT OTVO class OT apprOximaTely six hundred Juniors, One hundred and Three succeeded in making Junior Torch, while a surprising number were on Senior Torch. ConsequenTly, acTing as a propheT and Trying To guess The selecTiOn OT class speakers aT graduaTiOn will be diTTiculTg buT, no doubT, There will be an exciTing baTTle Tor supremacy, as There is every year. One OT The numerous Junior class commiT- Tees, The Torch, headed by Alice Wingei', did yeoman service in encouraging The sTudenTs To beTTer Their schOlasTic sTanding. The oTher members OT This scholarship group were Vir- ginia Hevly and John Kushin. The Junior-Senior Picnic commiTTee This year cOnsisTed OT l-lursT Clark and Bob lllman. These boys will aTTend This year's Senior Picnic and will Then serve as chairmen or advisors Tor nexT year's picnic OT The class OT l937. The Junior dance climaxed The midwinTer social acTiviTies OT The school as well as Those OT The Junior class. DecOraTions carried ouT The TiTle OT The dance, The Barnyard Ball. COrnsTalks, pumpkins, and arTiTicial animals Turned The gymnasiums inTo a veriTable coun- Try scene. To Shirley MounTain and Barbara Nordby The success OT The dance was largely due. During The inTermission, Phil Riley sang while reTreshmenTs were served To The Junior and Senior dancers. ln keeping wiTh The TradiTions OT The pasT, The Class OT I937 will pay a TiTTing Tarewell TO The Senior Class when iT decOraTes The pavilion Tor cOmmencemenT. Special eTTorT will be made To provide a beauTiTul seTTing Tor The impressive gradua- Tion exercises. A laTTice screen purchased by The Junior Class will add much To The unusual eTTecT OT The background. The way in which The iuniors have enTered whole-hem-Tedly inTo acTiviTy parTicipaTion in- dicaTes quiTe clearly ThaT nexT year's Senior Class, I937, will be mOsT OuTsTanding. third yedr .rmdemir Top row: Jack Amende, Jack Arlhaucl, dudson Benner, Richard Bell, Alberl Eeebe, Roberl Arnold, Roberl Anderson, Richard Anderson, Ted Bardue. Middle row: Winilred Bell, Belly Bardue, Carolyn Balmer, Dorolhy Beaulieu, Roberla Earlon, Belly Lou Barndl, Kalhryne Ander- son, Erma Adams, Elise Abboll, Bollom row: Madge Barlholomew, Velma Alleman, Mabel Barlon, Barbara Barlon, Mary Alice Ainsworlh, Alice Ainsworlh, 'Jorolhy Allard, Nancy Dale Anderson, Elaine Amrine. SCHOOL LIEE Too row: Arnold Challrnan, Alec Boies, Rex Bollis, Eileen Breeze, Dick Bauer, Joe Brugman, Saylor Black, Calder Bressler, Elmer Burg. Middle row: lola Helene Brown, Alberla Brown, Virginia Bowen, Jean Brown, Jane Bovee, Virginia Bowers, Mary Jane Boles, Bonnie Jean Berlch, Sylvia Bralrud. Bollom row: Josep hine Brooks, Naomi Brown, Julienne Broulelle, Shirley Boswell, Jane Bissell, Helen B ledsoe, Eleanor Bol- slad, Lois Beyer, Jeannelle Benoil, SCHOO Top row: Gordy C Wilbur Clark, Sidney Edward Clark, Dilla Carr, Alice Bremer. Middle row: Joyce son, Evelyn Claudon fed Carlson, Douglas Cameron, Leona Bus, , Gordon Chal L LIFE linlon, George Cody, Clark, Hursl Clark, rd Chapman, Slan Cole, Audrey Clark- lsledl, Carmichael, Juleia ne Lou Campbell. Bollom row: Rose Chillone, Belly Buck- ingham, Winnie Cooney, Mildred Chap- man, Joan Chapman, Shirley Cameron, -ouise Burlon, Jane'Burgunder, Jane Buck- ner. i .2 F inf' ,li - sql-y ,gDgOLLIi-E .VE -, L74 Top row: Kennelh Darrow, Kennelh Col- iel, Schallner Dickerson, Roberl Dempsey, Bob Deacon, Les Damman, Donald Cook, Slallord Crowley, Rex Crockell. Middle row: Eloise Dobrin, Bob Connor, Lorraine Covinqlon, Bill Cochran, Emmere sen Cornell, Jack Coplen, Bud Cook, Hor- ::e Conway, Sleve Cole. Bollom row: Eleanor Cryor, Helen Gusi- mano, Marilu Dickey, Marion Cumbo, rlelen Crowl, Vivian M. Cook, June Day, Virginia Dallon, Jean Clinlon. SCHOOL LlFE binge new rmzlf 211 zzpperclvzffmazn rzcbzevemenff lll 1 Top row: David Deils, Joe Franckevilch, Howard Elerding, Herberl Davies, Ed Fai- kenberg, Leonard Ellioll, John Exe, Ed Duffy, Earl Drummand. Middle row: Jean Fisher, Dave Gamble, Gene Gilberl, Corinne Fagerland, Don Davis, Elizabelh Elworlhy, Jim Downey, Ernesl Degner, Earl Field. Bollorn row: Frances Geiger, Belly Dy- rno'd, Dorolhy Everell, Rulh Engnwan, lrene Elder, Jayne Douglas, Glen Dunbar, Al Douglas, Don Donaldson. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Slan Green, Bob Freese, David Fornia, Charles Forkner, Clarence Gere, Dan Frilz, Ed Fry, Donald Filbin. Middle row: George Graham, Yoshio Hiralo, Myrlle Gillis, John Gilson, Bob Gallagher, Tom Geisl, Phil Gere, Barbara Fowler, Bollom row: Yoshie Fuiihira, Eileen Fry, Margarel Grinnell, Jayne Gilberl, Mar- jorie Gibson, Jean Forsler, Margarel Flynn, Calherine Grillilh, Belly Floren. , l QVSC4-lOOL LlFE Top row: John Harris, Harrison Harl, Helmer Harper, Ed Hanna, Clarence Hag- gen, Sharod Gray, Wall Guidinger, Elwyn Grunbock, Allen Halse. ,A Middle row: John Hodges, Nevin Hie- sler, Kennelh Harris, Rulh Groul, Alice Hallell, Frances Haack, Bill Glaisyer, Richard Gray, Julia Goldberg. Bollorn row: Mariorie Herrmann, Larry Hogan, Dick Heckard, Louise Harding, Audrey Hardy, Muselle Haack, Lorraine Gray, Dean Goodwin, Bealrice Graves. S C H O O L L l F E Top row: Torn Hulbush, Ralph Jenkins, 1 Anchor Jensen, Ross Jal, Alberl M. Ingalls, Herberl Hoover, Clifl Hopkins, Joe Hel- land, Leonard Hays. Middle row: Jeanne Jacobs, Vernice Hughes, Don Husband, Annella Jelleberg, Lloyd C. Hildie, Marlha Huson, Belly Hen- derson, Ernie Hold, Jean Hillner. Bollom row: James Hong, Dol Hoskyn, Eleanor Hoskins, Virginia Lee Hevly, Max- ine Henderson, Louise Hurd, Bellie Harris Eloise Hargrave, Celia Harrison. SCHOOL LIFE jwieafial feaiorf clamber on political bandwagon Top row: Harold Kelly, Winslon Johnson, Leonard Kennedy, Bob lllman, Berl Kiichli, Leonard Johnson, Waller Jolly, Sarn Jones, John Johnson. Middle row: Marion Kinney, Waller Johnson, Eleanor Kempel, Arlene King, Jean Kennedy, Kiyoshi Karnilcawa, Herb Johnson, Agnes Johnson, Rulh Johnson. Bollorn row: Helen Kirkland, Alberla Klein, Mariory Kingman, Berry Kennedy, Joyce Jordshaugen, Jusiine Johnson, Clare Johnson, Mariorie Kincaid, Jaguelin Ingalls. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Virginia Landaas, Bob Link, John Kuehn, Dick McArdelI, Louis Levy, Paul Lavigne, Oliver Lawrence, Pearl Law- rence, Joan Lacey, Middle row: Leon McCoy, Elaine Lillell, Ray McCoy, Jr., Bill Linder, Mariorie Laubenheirn, Juanila Ludwig, Earl Lamb, Howard Krippner, Mary Anne Kohls. Bolfom row: Margarel Lyons, Carol Lindh, Elsie Lind, Shirley Lyle, Elsie Legg, Elsie Langschrnidl, Eleanor Lange, Jean Louise Krueger, Emily Kollenborn. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Jack Mclnlyre, Marshall Mc- Donald, Clinfon McFarland, Malcolm Mafheson, Dan Larsen, Alex Leaf, Allan McRae, John Margeson, I-Ierberr Larson. Middle row: John Mayall, Dare Nason, Peer Mayberg, Virginia Jackson, Belly Jean Mcllrailh, Helen McComb, Jean McGui- gan, lrene Linholf, Ernesline Loughridge. Bollorn row: Grace Mead, Lucille Mag- nusson, Alice McKinney, Nancy Marsh, Rulh McLeod, Kalhleen McGra'I'h, Mary McCabe, Daisy Bell McCarTy, Harrie? Maloll. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Bill Murphy, Bob Morrison, Ralph Maxwell, Thomas Melusky, Bob Merle, Roberl Melius, Norman McDonald, Bill Mercer, Doug McOuarrie. Middle row: Joe Miller, Royal Mullin, Bill Monroe, Jack Donald Myers, Marie Murohy, Aileen Murphy, Shirley Mounlain, Edith Mae Mallson, Marjorie Meagher. Bollorn row: Fred Muller, Ray Monrad, Eleanor Milchell, Helem Mellce, Jeanne Massarl, Virginia Morford, Vida Morse, Jean McKnighI', Shirley McWain. SCHOOL LIFE jzmiorf jig joyfully or 600161620145 bmfnymfrl ball II3 Top row: Paul Odsen, I-larolo Ongslad, Harold Parrish, Gerald Perry, Lawrence Pelersen, Arlhur John Perry, Jorn Peabody, Paul Newman, Don Murray. Middle row: Al Olsen, Doroliiy Purdy, Alberla Jean Olson, June Parkinson, Rulh Marie Olson, Irene Oldlielo. Virginia Ohail, Olive Nelson, Jane Nilsoi Bollom row: Willard Newlon, lverne Perry, Vicloria Pelers, Aida Pace Bealrice Owens, Helen Pearson, Barbara Nordby, Belly Pedersen, Marian Noma. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Alanson Powell, Jane Reed, Dorsey Reed, Margarel Rayner, Clarke Raulh, Johneida Rapp, Eddie Prince, David Rabak, David Pelherick. Middle row: Mary Louise Riller, Dolores Reyes, Dorolhy Richardson, Irene Reynolds, Willis Rawlings, Bob Ouandl, Enid Ralli, Vic Powell, Virginia Kresson. Bollom row: Laurine Rhoads, Mildred Randolf, Helen Ramsey, Barbara Quigley, Georqella Peinler,Jea1 Ollason, Mildred Powell, Rulh Pelerson, Jean Osborn. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Roberl Rulherlorj, Allan Rogers, Don Sanlee, Rusly Rosling, Jim Mc- Kinnell, Bill Rouzie, Jack Reed, Junior Rosen, Dio Richardson. Middle row: Bob Ryning, Clillord Rurnin, Neil Ringrose, Miriam Ryno, Laverne Roal, Eyrlis Risle, Mary Belle Preslon, Barl Proper, Virginia Rice. Bollom row: Barry Rogers, Pal Rourke, Doris Russell, Jean Russell, Mariorie Samp' son, Belly Rusch, Josephine Roberls, Don! Ross, Sumner Rice. - Q' H, ,IP ex 4 1 S C I-I O O LQN' Lkd F E li f um' 'IJ . I it ...- ,F if ,jf 4 Y' ' Top row: Bo'bil'Scha klie, Malcoirn Simp- son, Belly Ryjn, Maxi e Sniilh, Jerry Shel- don, Arlhpr Simpson, Bob Schoen, Phil Smarf, R,uoerl,Sl'xarp. , , L . Midgliexvrowi NorPan Schedin, Don Sor- rels,- red ,Sl1aw,JP6nSwanson, Bill Schulz, Vii1gjiniajSIlbaugh, Mary Louise Schrnill, Tdiri Sclawel enbaclc, Boyd Snyder. I Bciflolm gow: Ed Tangen, Grace Scoll, 'nervil-' kau, Calherine Sherrill, Elinor 'S role er, Rulh Seaman, Calherine Ship' y'afg5en, 'l-lelen Smilh, Jean Sipprell. ,M .P N 1 All '11 .. , 1 ,A-7, n R SCI-IOOL LIFE .rtellmf .rpoifzirmen ,gather lrrzzrelf en athletic field II4 Top row: Tom Soules, Bob Tressell, Paul Smilh, Clarence Spiller, Jack Taylor, Roy Tailrnan, Belly Slillwell, Jack Thornas, Wen- dell Tewell. Middle row: Alpha Teller, June Sleele, Alma Sloe, Verna Spencer, Joyce Sweel, Vivian Snider, Audrey Snyder, Jack Tem- olelon, Sluarl Todd. Bollom row: Jayne Thomas, Susan Smilh, Aya Tanagi, Rulh Slewarl, Elizabelh Spen- cer, Barbara Snyder, Billy Sobieralski, Lionel Summers, Jack Thornberq. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Don Whipple, Kennelh Wie- iand, Ernesl Williams, Howard Wickslrom, Roberl Whilney, Bill Whilman, Douglas Whipple, Louis Wallace, Madge Walske. Middle row: Aileen Whelslone, Jean Townsend, Jacqueline Wieland, Bob Wes- lon, Millon Vereide, Bard Tischer, Danella Tillin, Madalyne Tisher, Grace Welch. Bollom row: Barbara Weisel, Marqarel Walerman, Edilh Wade, Rulh Walker, Vivian Walsh, Dorolhy Weslin, Marlha Wagner, Marlha Torbill, Belsy Thompson. SCHOOL LIFE Top row: Dave Woll, Norman Troslad, Bob Wolf, Bob Yancey, Alice Winger, Belly Lou Winningham, Harold Wolever, Rosalea Wilcox, Claylon While, Waller Vifuelhrich. Bollom row: Jack Wieling, Chuck Bullis, Jim Wilson, Arlhur Jerberl, Madeline Willsie, Emma B. Yarborouqh, Audrey Yales, Irene Zuercher, Belly Wolever. CAMERA SHY Chesler Allen, I-Iarriel Allen, Earl Amick, Alice Balmer, Palricia Brook, Jim Bayne, Jean Bergeson, Donald Bondelid, Frank Buckler, Lorraine Cambridge, Lind Camozzi, Francies Casey, William Chandler, Rulh Chinn, Belly Coy, Teresa Curran, Erain Danley, Melva Dawson, Daphne Eckerl, Rulh Farwell, Dorolhy Fowler, John Gard- ner, Doerise Godfrey, Mercedes Green- wood, Larry Hogan, Leone Hallie Ernsl Halse, Leslie Harcus, Lydia Holovilzky. Vivian Helme, Rosemary Hirshberg, Edilh Holbrach, Ernesl Holm, Shirley Howe, Alberl Hughes, Fred llo, Frank Jackson, Virginia Ann Jackson, Russ Jay, Charlolle Jeannerel, Dave Jellords, Franklin Jellison, Annella Jelleberg, Winslon Kernmell, Jean Kirkman, Mary Kilchell, lnezmaye Kohler, Doris Lawe, Ruby Malslrom, Jeanne Mas- sarl, Ervin Malheson, Tommy Maxwell, Colin McClinlock, John Minkema, Carlos Moore, Janel Morris, Ted Ogle, Virginia Palmcrlon. Joana Peck, Evelyn Pelerson, Jeanne Pelerson, Carila Poek, Clarence Rader, Lillian Randoll, Joe Rornberg, Auslin Royal, Helen Sampson, Marjorie Schollhorn, Gray Sharod, Elizabelh Shaw, Howard Sloan, Donald Smilh, Gayle Smilh, Mariorie Sol- hiern, Truman Slarr, Tucker Slella, Louise Taylor, Don Thompson, Julia Tibeau, Nor- 'nan Troslad, Adam Vaukarnp, Jean Webb, .lean Wild, Audrey Williams, Iris Zachau. S C H O O L L I F E activities rim IIS Cgimiiif from poliiicf to Jcbolmffbip CLASS OFFICERS: Roberfa Lounsbury, SecreTaryg Larry Young, Vice-Presidenh Howard STewarT, President Jane Eilerf- sen, Treasurer. femur arewell appearance taker Jpatlicgbf I936-SPOTLICSHTTNG The Seniorsl WiTh Howard l Tubby l STewarT as presidenT, Larry Young as vice-presidenT, Jane EilerTsen as Treasurer, and RoberTa Lounsbury as secreTary, The TourTeenTh graduaTing class OT RoosevelT compleTed a year sTudded wiTh venTuresome new acTiviTies. and Time-honored old ones. The sympaTheTic guid- ance aT Miss Virginia Roe and Miss Annabel John- sTone as TaculTy advisors was exTended To The class ThroughouT The Tour years oT iTs high school career. lnauguraTing a new cusTom, The class oTTicers were elecTed in The spring oT l935 insTead oT The Tall. ConsequenTly The Senior acTiviTies were begun sooner Than usual aT The sTarT oT The new semesTer, and no Time was losT in organizing The members. FirsT on The calendar came class pins, which were selecTed by popular voTe aT all The Seniors. AT The head oT The Pin commiTTee were Dean Ballsema and Phyliss l-leaTon. Advisors: Miss Annabel JohnsToneg Miss Virginia Roe. When The TirsT drive was launched in OcTo- ber by The STrenuous LiTe Tor Senior yearbook picTures, an overwhelming response on The parl' oT The class broughT The Tinal ToTal To 576, a new highlighT'in The hisTory oT The school. This was only one indicaTion oT The lively inTeresT displayed in all fields oT acTiviTy. EvidenTly The class made some good resolu- Tions during The ChrisTmas vacaTion, Tor They sTarTed ouT The new year by sponsoring Senior Week in The lunchroom The TirsT week in Jan- uary. This was parT oT a school-wide campaign Tor larger sTudenT paTranage oT The caTeTeria. Moving picTures were presenTed during The noon hour in The audiTorium and TiTillaTing specials were TeaTured aT The lunch-counTers. An unusual deparTure Trom former years was The sponsoring oT Tull-lengTh moving pic- Tures in The audiTorium aTTer school, which were open To The enTire sTudenT body. Five hundred TiTTy enThusiasTic specTaTors aTTended The TirsT, which was a NorThwesT premiere oT a Swiss-made Tilm enTiTled William Tell. IT reTold The Tamous Tolls sTory amid beauTiTul naTural scenes. AnoTher TeaTure-lengTh picTure was presenTed on February 20, and drama- Tized The popular TicTion characTer oT Tar- zan, Larry Young was chairman oT This new and successTul experimenT. GayeTy and originaliTy were The lf.eynoTes oT The year's social acTiviTies. Among several successful maTinee dances was The Leap Year Lope on February I2, wiTh a double Theme in which boTh Leap Year and ValenTine's Day were TeaTured. Helen BaThursT and Sam Ar- buThnoT were chairmen. II6 ATTracTive decoraTions were provided by a large, Trilly hearT suspended Trom The cenTer oT The boys' gym, wiTh red and whiTe sTreamers exTending ouT Toward The walls, The reTreshmenTs were cIisTribuTed aT The door in The Torm oT candy lollipops aTTached To valenTines. Dance music was played by The Cavaliers, wiTh an inTermission program sTarring Juli- enne BrauleTTe, Helen WiTzke, Don Kendall and Lyle PigorT. SchoIasTicalIy speaking, The class oT I936 had an ouTsTanding year, wiTh many oT iTs 606 mem- bers winning membership in The Torch SocieTy, and aTTaining Per- manenT Torch, which permiTs The sTudenTs who earn IO8 poinTs To reTain Their honor socieTy badges. This year The Scholarship Com- miTTee was headed by Spencer Greaves and BeTTy Jane Snow. Preliminary To graduaTion came The Senior Picnic, held aT I3leTcher's Bay on Bainbridge Island. AT The CommencemenT exer- cises, The Tollowing speakers Trom The graduaTing classes gave ad- dresses: Dorris Lewis, ValedicTor- ian: George Farwell, SaluTaTorianq Ardene Fairbrook and I-Ienry Fair- bank, Class Speakers: GlaideTh Clark and Julius MaTTson, FaculTy Speakers. WhaT I am To be I am now becoming 'Furnished The Theme Tor The program, which broughT To a close The acTiviTies oT The Class oT I936. Upper: Senior Dance. Lower: STandinge-ArbuTI1noT, Sierer, Young, Sayles, Snow, Fairbrook, Greaves, HeaTon. SeaTedMWefTerIind, Zorn, Quigley, BaThursT. II7 lf' uibn. ,x Q ws.. an --.W Sow GPO' 'XI' i. v-.s -qu.-if 'lv wls-Nl fb. w.,,k 5+ qi ,M -.aw -'bs -ity S. 'af 9+-vs in 'SP sw E ww- Aw View ww fmx ww. .,...,. 1, .af- .4,x me Row I. PEGGY ADAMS-Torch: Music Club: French Club: Orchesfro. DOROTHY ADAMSON-Torch: Senior Glee: Girls' Club Comrniflees: Alumni Commillee: Tufor. GEORGE ADKINS-Vice-Presidenl of Sophomore Closs: Torch: Senior Play: Presidenf of Chess Club. GERALDINE AINSLIE-Senior Mol-ne-up Corps. KIYOKO AKIYAMA-A. S. R. Recording Commiilee: Librory: Girls' Club Commillees. VYN ALEXANDER-Torch: Chess Club. DANIEL ALGER-Golf: Boslsefboll: Swimming. JOHN ALLEN- Germc' Club: Revue. Row 2. CARL W. ALTENBURG--Creofive Wrifing Club: Science Club: Chess Club. BARBARA ANDERSON-Donce Choirmon of Revue: Ad Siclff: Opero: Roll Represenfolive: Junior Donce Com- miflee: Senior Picnic CommiHee: Girls' Advisor's SIQTT. DOROTHY ANDERSON-Torch: Molse-up Corps: Vocofionol Commiliee: Roll Represenfolive: Four o'CIocI4 Teo Commiilee. FRANCES ANDER- SON-Torch: Librory: Teocher's Secrefory: Girls' Club Office Sloff: Music Club: Employmenf Com- milfee: Orcheslro. MARALEE ANDERSON-Heollh Commiflee: Rodio Club. MARY-RADLE ANDER- SON-Junior Glee: Concerl: Decorofion Commifiee. VERA AN DERSON-Enfered from John Marshall, Seoflle, Woshingfon. JANE ANDREWS-Improvemenf Commiflee: Four o'ClocI-Q Teo Commiifee. Row 3. MARY JANE ANGER-Adverlising Monoger: Revue: Music Commilfee: Troubodours: Music Club. COURTENAY ANSELM-Enfered from John Morsholl, Seoffle, Woshinglon. SAM ARBUTHNOT- Tri-Y: Sfudenl Ticl-wel: Foolboll: Roll Represervlofive. VICTOR S, ARMSTRONG-Track: Creofive Wrif- ing Club: Science Club Council. BOB ASI-IBY-Revue: Roll Represenlofive. FRANCIS ASHLEMAN- Enfered from Bryonf School, Seollle, Woshingfon. MARIJANE ASI-ITON-Enlered from Oueen Anne, Seoffle, Woshingfon. BONNIE BABCOCK-Opero: Molse-up Corps: Ari' Club. Row 4. TOMMY BAINBRIDGE-Tumbling. BETTY BAISDEN-Roll Represeniolive: Glee Club: Girls' Club Cornmiffees: Torch. DON BAKER-Torch. PEGGY BAKER-Roll Represenfofive: Ari Club: Music Club: Girls' Club Commilfees: News SIGTI7. DEAN BALKEMA-Yell King: Rough Riders: Choirmon Senior Pin Commifiee: Spring Mofinee: Revue: Torch. DAVE BALLARD-Chess Club: Science Club. GERALDINE BALLARD-Music Club: Science Club: Torch: Junior Glee: Cosiume Force: Girls' Club Commi+'ees. JACK E. BARNETT-Boslqefboll: Roll Represenioiive. Row 5. DARRELL BARR--Fooiboll: Bosl-Qelboll: Track. JACK C. BARROW-Senior Represenfolive: Ad Sfolf. HELEN BATHURST-Revue: Opera: Concerf Boller: Choirmon Senior Donce: Roll Represeniolive. WAYNE G. BELL-Tumbling: Revue: Senior Ploy. FRANCES BENDER-Junior ond Senior Glee: Con- cerl: Orcheslro. HERMAN BENNER-Junior Glee: Music Club. ALICE BEOUETTE-Torch: Ari' Club. BETTY BERTHELSEN--Junior ond Senior Glee: Conceri: Opero: Losl ond Found: Thrill Commifiee: Cosrume Force. Row 6. EVELYN RAE BIGFORD-Roll Represeniofive: Music Club: Four o'Clocl4 Teo Commiffee. GERALDINE BINGAMAN-Enlered from Blessed Socromenl School, Seoffle, Woshingfon. E. WILSON BIRD-Boslsefboll: Sociol Science Club: Science Club: Deloofe: Senior Council, MARGARET BISHOP- Revue: Moke-up Corps: Recording Commiifee: Losl ond Found. EDITH BJERKAGER-Enfered 'From Bollord High School, Seoifle, Woshinglon. BEVERLY B. BLACK-Opero: Orchesiro. PHIL BLAKE- Generol Vlfelfore Commillee: Infer-Sch ol Commiliee: Foolboll: Roll Represen'Io'rive: Boys' Club Com- miliee. DOROTHY BLANCHARD n' r Glee: Recor Commiiiee: Roll Represeniofive: Hesperion Club: Ccslume Force. jf Row 7. GEORGE BLANC D-Fopib : Trocla: Hi-Y: Rough Riders: Afhleiic Commifiee Choi:-mon: Roll Represeniolive: Torch. ANOR BL Senior Orchesiro: Concerl: Opero: Music Club. MURIEL BOIES-Hesp i : H Th Co il e: Aihlelics. LA VERN K. BORIGHT-Opero: Concerl: Senior Glee: I sen'IoIive' clq: Germon Club. ELEANOR BOWEN-EnIei'ed from Boihell, Wczshinoion. L R AINE BO hoirmon Alumni Commiilee: Rosemoiden: Germon Club: Torch: Roll Recresenfo e. MARGA E OYTER-Torch: Senior Orchesiro: Troubodours: Sociol Service Aux- iliory. GLADY BREDENBER -Enlered from Soil Loke Cily, Ufoh. Row 8. KATHLEEN BRENNAN-Junior Represenloiive: Torch: Senior Mczlse-up Corps: Roll Represen- Iolive: Opero Boller: Librory: Girls' Club Commiiiees. ROBERT BRIFFET-Deboie: Senior Play: Science Club Ccuncil: Science Club. PATRICIA BROVVN-Girls' Club Cobinel: Choirmon Alumni Commiilee: Choirmon Four o'Clocl4 Teo Commiilee: Losf ond Found. RUSS BROWN-Wx'esIling: Boseboll: Foolboll. ROBERT JAMES BROWNING-News Sloif: Science Club: Sludenl Ticlaef: Roll Represeniolive. HARRY BRUTON--Secrefory Forensic Club: Sociol Science Club: Senior Glee: Allendonce Commifiee: Pub! licify Ccmmillee: French Club: Science Club. MARGARET BUCEY-Ari ond Culiure Commilfee: French Club. VIRGINIA BUCK--Bonl-Qing Represen'l'o'rive. II9 zesiful seniors Ialce high -school daze as byword 1 Row I. HELEN BURKHEIMER-Torch: Roll Represeniaiive: Girls' Club Commillees: Forensic Club: French Club: Senior Represeniaiive. BARBARA BURKLAND-Torch: A. S. R. Dance Commiilee: Girls' Club Commiliees: French Club: Music Club. DOROTHY BURTON-Rho Club: Music Club: Revue: Opera: Senior Glee: Concert BOYDEN BUSSARD-Torch: Rough Riders. HAZEL BUTTS-Coslume Force: Hesperian Club. JANE BYERS-Forensic Club: Senior Represenlalive: Ari Club. EUNICE CAHEN-Girls' Club Cabiner: Girls' Club Commiiiees: Roll Represeniaiive: Office Slaff: Girls' Ad- visor's S+aIf. ANN CALDWELL-Sludenl Ticker Represenfalive. Row 2. MARION CALL-Social Service Commillee: Library: Science Club: Four o'CIocIq Tea Com- mirlee. LESLIE CAMPBELL-Foolball: Track: Baslselball. MARY CAMPBELL-Senior Glee: Concerl: Healih Commillee: Social Science Club: Tumbling. POLLY CAMPBELL-Revue. LOUISE CAPURRO- Teacher's Secrelary: Cosiume Force. ELEANOR CARPENTER-Opera: Revue: Senior Orchesfra: Fresh- man Frolic: Senior Represenlaiive: Music Club. BILL CARTER-Tumbling Club: Lealher Medal Club: German Club: Revue. VERNON CARTER-Tumbling: Torch. 'Row 3. JUNE R. CARTWRIGHT-Library: Roll Represenlaiive: Revue: Tumbling. ARTHUR CHAL- FANT-Chess Club: Forensic Club: Torch. CHARLES CHAMBERS-Senior Glee: Science Club: Band. FOSTER CHAPIN-Track: Foofball: Golf. RICHARD CHAPMAN--Senior Glee: Opera: A Cappella Choir. EMERY CLARK-Torch: German Club: Forensic Club. GEORGE CLARK-Baslneiball. GLAI- DETH CLARK-Edilor of The Annual: Torch: Girls' Club Commiiiees: A. S. R. Commiliees: Quill and Scroll. Row 4. LYNN CLARKE-Baskelboll: Baseball: Inlramural Baslaeiball: Science Club. RUTH CLINTON- Glee Club: Roll Represenialive: Siage Force. MAXINE IONA CLITHERO-me.-ed from Broadway High School, Seaffle, Washinglon. HARRIET CLOUGH-Torch: Roll Represenialive: Thrifr Commiiiee: Forensic Club. ELEEN CLYDE-Aurora Guards: Ai Tacoma: Thela Rho: Good Templars. ORMA COCHRAN-Social Service Auxiliary: Aurora Guards: Social Science Club: Arr Club: Music Club. DAN CODY-Sludenl Ticlsel: Tumbling Club: Fooiball: Opera: Concerl: Revue. BILL COEY-Torch: Science Club: Geman Club: Chairman Boys' Club Dance Commiilee: Roll Represenlaiive. Row 5. JEANNETTE COLLIER--Senior Glee: O era: Concerfg A Cappella Choir. JIM CONNERS- Roll Represenlalive: Junior Glee: Concerl: Ne aff: Science Club. LENORA COOGAN-Girls' Club Commilrlees: A Cappella Choi Ope' ' once : enior Glee. HILDA COOK-Revue: Concerl: A Cappella Choir. JACK CO P olb : all: Swimming. JESSIE MAE COOPER-Archery: Social Science Clu : S iefax lub. MK L A COOPE STEIN-Revue: Torch. MARTIN CORDES- Enfered f1'o h ll, ejl'6fWashing'lon. fl a O N ef 7 Row 6. CHARLOTTE CORDINER--Alhlek: Gel' CI eMusic Club: Science CIub.'JUNE COR- MIER-Girl Reserves: Arl and CLQIUQQ Commi e e Club: French Club: Hesperion Club: Ari Club. NUNA CORNWALL : l ou: Concerl: Girls' Club Employmenl Commiliee. GERALDINE COSTELLO- ir ' Club miH I' me Fo'ce: Music Club. MARJORIE COURT- RIGHT-Scien CIubaR6Wu : Tu N amaow Girls. HELEN CRAWFORD- Torch: Opera CQnciQ Revue: GidsxrCl Tgbinel: Roll Represenialive: Ari Club. BETTY ANN VEL -llall P O. 05' S 5 400 C0 Row 7. JOYCE CROSBY-Senior Represeniaiive: Sludeni Ticlsel: Girls' Club Commiliees. DORIS CROSS-Torch: Forensic Club: Senior Play: Girls' Club Commillees: A. S. R. Commiliees. ROY CUL- BERT-A Cappella Choir: Concerf: Public Safely Cammilfee. JAMES CURNEW-Opera: Orcheslra: A Cappella Choir: Senior Glee. BARBARA JANE CU RRAN-Torch: Annual Slaff: News S'ra'lI: Revue: Girls' Club Cabinel: A. S. R. Assembly Commiffee: Ouill and Scroll: Roll Represenlalive. BETTY CURRIER-Chairman ol A. S. R. Assembly Commilfee: Girls' Club Cobinel: Roll Represenialive: French Club: Decoralion Commiilee. MARJORIE DALY-Chairman Losl and Found Commiliee: Torch: Music Club. DALMER DANIELS-News Slaif: Science Club. Row 8. KATIE DANIELS-Enlered from Sullan, Washingion. CASE DAVIDSON-lniramural Baslseiball: Inlromurol Baseball. LAWRENCE DAVIS-Frosh-Soph Foolball: Golf Manager: lniramural Golf. PAUL DAVIS-Chess Club. VIRGINIA LEE DAVIS-Enierecl from Slevens School, Seaiile, Washingfon. LAURA DEDERICK-Orchesira: Conceri. JAY DE FRIEL-Treasurer ol Boys' Club: Rough Riders: Torch: Chair- man Boys' Club Program Commi+lee: Roll Represenlalive: Debale: Tri-Y. VIRGINIA DENNISTON- Torch: Los? and Found: Social Service Auxiliary. I2l 71 fledgling frosh become amazons or aspiring siars 1 'Wm VV Y 1 J . 4 mr, .6 W, . W., T ROW I. BETTY DES CAMP-A. S. R. Secretary: Torch: Girls' Club Secrelary: Chairman Refreshment Commillee: lnlerschaol Commilree. MARGARET DEVER-Roll Represenlaliveg Opera: Concerl: Senior Glee. ROBERT DICKERSON-Enlered from Tacoma, Woshinglon. TOM DICKERSON-Band. MARY LOUISE DISTAD-Torch: Chairman A. S. R. Library Commilfee: Dramalic Commillee: Ad Club: Roll Represenlarive: Forensic Club. DOROTHY DONLEY-Decoralion Commillee: Social Service Commil- lee: Junior Orcheslra. HARRIETTE DORE-Assislanl Edilor of The Annual: Concerl: Chairman Com- mencemenl Commilfee: Chairman A. S. R. Commilree: Torch: Girls' Club Cabinel: Ouill and Scroll. LEWIS DOUGHTY-Boys' Club Cabinef: Roll Represenlafive: A. S. R. Lunchroom Commillee: Forensic Club: Debale: Science Club Council: Ad Slaff: Boys' Club Dance Commillee. Row 2. DEAN DOWNING-News Srafl: Torch: Radio Club: Science Club: Chess Club: Point Com- mission: Boys' Club Commillees. VERA DRAKE-Junior Glee. DICK DUNDIN-Golf: Swimming. DORIS ANN DUNHAM-Science Club Council: Decorolion Commillee: Music Club. DOROTHY DUPAR-Torch: Girls' Club Commillees: Swimming Team. BOB DVORAK-Foolball: Baslselball: Track: Hi-Y: Publicily Commillee. DICK EASTER-Baslselball: I-Ii-Y: Rough Riders. CARSON ECKMANN- Torch: Chess Club. Row 3. ANITA EGGERSGLUESS-Presidenl French Club: Torch: Chairman Acliviry Recording Com- miflee: Teacher's Secrelary: Girls' Club Commillees: Opera: Concerl: Senior Glee. WINIFRED EGGLESTON-Enlered from Son Francisco, California, JANE EILERTSEN-Senior Class Treasurer: Chairman A. S. R. Improvemenl Commillee: Head of Social Deparlmenl, Girls' Club: Torch: Opera: Concerl: Revue. LINNEA EKBLOM-Senior Glee: Losl' and Found: Hall Palrol. NANCY ELLIS-Library: Social Service Auxiliary: Heallh Commillee: Decorafion Commillee: Knilfing Club. MARY ELAINE ELLSWORTH-Social Service Auxiliary: Torch. VIRGINIA ELZEY-Debale: Forensic Club: Revue. ANITA EMANUEL-Sludenl Ticl-nel' Represenlalive: Alhlerics. Row 4. MARY JANE ENTROP-Revue: Concerl: Junior Glee: Girls' Club Commillees. ELDON ERICKSON-Baseball. ROBERT EVANS-Alhlelics. GEORGE EWING-Senior Glee: Science Club: Science Club Council: Social Science Club. HENRY FAIRBANK-Rough Riders: Track: Ad Sralf: Torch: Revue. ARDENE FAIRBROOK-Debale: Torch: Four o'CIocIs Tea Commiliee: Forensic Club. GEORGE FARWELL-Torch Vice-Presidenl: Annual Slalf: Rough Riders: Advisory Council: Tri-Y: Hi-Y. JOHN E. FELTIS-Torch: Foolball: Torch Library Commillee: Revue: Inlramural Sporls. Row 5. CHARLOTTE FIELD-Teacher's Secrelary: Nurse's Ollice. JIM FITZGERALD-Roll Represene lalive. FRANCIS FLETCHER-Roll Represenlafive: Orcheslra. LELAND FLOWER-Revue: Baslselball: Tracls. JOSEPHINE FORD-Opera: Concerl: Music Commillee Chairman: Senior Orcheslra: Senior Glee. JANE FORDE-Torch: News Srall: A. S. R. Scholarship Commillee: Forensic Club: Girls' Club Cornrnillees. RALPH FORSBERG-Senior Glee: Junior Glee. GOLD FOSTER-Aurora Guards: Cos- 'lume Force. ' I . rg Jw A ' Row 6. JOHN OUNTAIN-Baseball: Inlramural Sporls: Roll Represenlalive. ARMAN FREDERICK- SON--Foolball: Horseshoes: Handball. IRENE FREEMAN-Enlered 'from Bryanl' School, Seallle, Wash- inglon. DORIS FREEPARTNER-Music Club: Orcheslra. JUANITA FRITZ-A+ Wesl Sealllec Spanish Club: Spanish Fiesla: Senior Represenl'al'ive: Music Club. TOD FUJI--Head Fooiball Manager: Rough Riders: Lealher Medal Club: Head Baseball Manager: Public Safely Commillee. RUTH FULLER- Torch: Science Club Represenlalive: Social Service Auxiliary: General Welfare Cornmilree: German Club. MARY NAN GALLAGI'-IER-Torch: Senior Glee: Teacher's Secrelary: Opera: Concerl. Row 7. JACK GALLANT-Minule Service: Roll Represenlalive. EDWARD GARDINER-Tennis Team: Sludenl Ticlsel: Torch. DOROTHY BERNICE GARDNER-Music Club. DOROTHY JUNE GARDNER- A Cappella Choir: Senior Glee: Music Club: Lunchroom: Losl' and Found. DENA GEBAROFF-Four o'CIocls Tea Commirlee: Alhlelics. VIRGINIA GEBO-Torch: Girls' Club Cabinel: Roll Represenlalive: A. S. R. lmprovemenl Commillee: French Club. DUDLEY GEHRKE-lnlramural Sporlrs: Senior Repres senlalive. GILBERT GEISER-News Slalil: Ad Club: Lunchroom: Senior Glee: Inlramural Sporls. Row 8. KEITH GEORGE--Senior Glee: Tumbling. HELEN GILKEY-A+ Anacorles: G. A, C.: Home Economics Club: Forensic League: Girls' Club. RAY GILLESPIE-Tumbling Club: Frosh Foolball: Soph Boslselball. EVELYN GJERTSEN-Enlered from Ravenna School, Searlle, Washinglon. EILEEN GILLON -Opera: Revue: Ad Slalif: Make-up Corps. ARNOLD GLASER-Annual Slalli: Presidenl Social Science Club: Srudenl Ticlsel: Torch: German Club: Radio Club: Sophomore Play. GLORIA GOFF-Losl and Found. MARGARET GRANGER+Al'hIelics. I23 dancers, skiers, execulives rise from soph rank 1 Row I. JAMES GRANT-Torch: Lunchroom Force: School Messenger: Roll Represenialive: Sludenl' Tickei: Radio Club: Employmenl' Commiilee. DOUGLAS GRAVES-Siudeni Tickei: Torch: Track: Inlra- mural Baskelball. CONNER GRAY-Tri-Y: Swimming Team: Frosh-Soph Baskelball. MASON GRAY- Band: Science Club. NANCY GRAY--Chairman Lookoul Commillee: Revue Commillee: Ad Slaif: Make-up Corps: Roll Represenlalive. SPENCER GREAVES-Rough Riclers: Torch: Senior Represen- lalive: Concerl: Opera. JOHN GREENWALD-Roll Represenlalive: Junior Dance Commiilee: Improve- menl Commillee: Ju ior Glee: Iniramural Baskelball. DON GREGORY-Traffic Comrniliee: Lunch- 1'oom7Sen n' Glee. Row 2. R N EGORY-Enlered from Seallle Preparalory School, Seaille, Washinglon. MAR- GARET GRIMES-Alhleiics. PHYLLIS GRINDALL-Revue: Senior Glee: Teacher's Secreiary: Office Force: Social Service. KATHERINE GRISWOLD-Senior Represenlalive: Reireshmenl' Commiliee: Make-up Corps. EDWARD GROSS-Sludenr Ticker. DAVE GROUT-Science Club. BETH GROVE- Girls' Club Commiliees: Revue: Senior Represenfalive: Assembly Comrnillee. ROBERT N. GRUNBOCK --Foolball: Baskelball: Track: News Slaii. Row 3. EDGAR F. GRUNBOCK-Track: Baskelball: Revue: German Club: Foolball: Band. LEWIN F. GUBERLET-Band: Senior Orchesira. RUSSELL GUPPY-Torch: Rough Riders: Hi-Y: Opera: Golf: Revue. ROD GWINN-Revue: Boskefball: Inlramural Sporls: Roll Represenlalive: Al Lincoln: Class Treasurer. DOROTHY HOPE HALL-Cosiurne Consiruciion: German Club. ART HAMBEAU-Foot ball: Baskelball. EVELYN MAY HANDY--Opera: Senior Play: Concerf: Glee Club: Ad Slafli. EINAR HANSEN-Enlered from John Marshall, Sealile. Washingion. Row 4. PERRY HANSEN-Foolball: Track. RUTH HANSON-Torch: Baskelball: Hockey: French Club. JACKSON M. HARBY, JR.-R Book Commillee: Thrifl' Commillee: Glee Club: Torch: Annual Slaii. MARY HARDT-Opera: Revue: Concerl Ballel: Forensic Club: Girls' Club Office: Roll Represenialive. TOM HARGISS--Torch Honor Award: Tumbling Club: Science Club Council: Secrefary French Club. ESTELLE HUGHES-Secreiary: Music Club: Enferlainmenl Commiilee. MARGUERITE HARRIS- A Cappella Choir: Revue: Concert: Science Club: Music Club. MAY BETH HARRIS-Senior Or- chesira: Opera: Revue: Rooseveli Ensemble: Torch: Conceri. Row 5. PHOEBE HARRIS--Torch: Roll Represenfaiive: French Club: Arl and Cullure Comrniilee: Library. STAN HARRIS-Foolball: Rough Riders: Hi-Y: Yell King: Lealher Medal Club: Revue: Dramarics. VICTOR HARRIS-Presidenl of Torch: Opera: Rough Riders. VIRGINIA HARVEY-Social Service Commillee: Four o'CIock Tea Commillee: Science Club: Library. MARY ANN HASEMEIER- Torch: Senior Make-up Corps: Girls' Club Commiiiees: Alhlelics: Library: Concerl. ROBERT E. HAZEL- BROOK-Inlramural Manager: Inlramural Sporls: Lunchroom. DEL HAYES-Roll Represenlalive: Senior Glee: Social Science Club. PATRICIA ANN HEALY-Enlered from Ravenna School, Sealile, Washinglon. Row 6. PHYLISS HEATON-Torch Banquei Commiflee: Opera: Revue: Concerl: Senior Pin Commillee: Senior Play. ANNABELLE HEDSTROM-Torch: Rho Club. HELEN HEINSCH-Rho Club: A. S. R. Commiliees: Moiher-Daughter Banquel Commillee. RUTH HICKS-Senior Represenlalive: Glee Club: Tennis. STANLEY HILL-Enlered from Greai Falls, Monlana. KENNETH HILTON-Revue: Sludeni Tickel Messenger: Science Club. VIVIAN HINKSTON-A. S. R. Cornmillees: Girls' Club Commillees. LEWIS M. HITCHCOCK-Baskelball: Tennis: Foolball: Revue. Row 7. WILLIAM E. HOARD-Radio Club: Band: Revue: Senior and Junior Glee: Torch: Sludenl Irn- provemenl Commillee. HAROLD B. HOBBS, JR.-DeMoIay: Roll Represenlalive: Tumbling Club. MAYNARD C. HOFFMAN-Foolball: Swimming: Boxing. BETTYANN HOLLANDER-Opera: Trou- badours: Girls' Club Cabinel: Girls' Club Commiiiees: News Slaii: Torch: Roll Represenlalives: Junior Dance Commillee. TOM HONG-Baskelball: Foolball: Tennis: Baseball. WILMA HOOVER-Ad Siaii: Four o'CIock Tea Commilfee: Resl Room Cornmiliee: Revue. ALBERT HORSWILL-Employmenl Com- millee: Baseball. TOM H. I'-IORSWILL-Lunchroom. Row 8. PAULA HORTON-Opera: Revue: German Club. WALLACE HOSKYN-Senior Orcheslra: Band: Torch: Concerl: Opera. CAROL HOUGH-A Cappella Choir. KARMAN HOUGHTON-Social Service: Music Club. ELIZABETH HOUSTON-Girls' Club Comrnilfees: Torch: News Siaili: A. S. R. Publicily Commillee: Edilor Girls' Club Wheel. HARRIET HOWELL-Freshman Play: Girls' Club Com- millees: Roll Represenlalive: Chairman Girls' Club Assembly Commiiiee. EMILY HULL--A Cappella Choir: Revue: Senior Play: Girls' Club Cabinel: Opera Ballel. GERTRUDE HUMLING-Losl and Found: Junior Glee: Concerlz I25 camera calches iunioriiddling as pal swings if 3 - f is Row l. RUTH HWANG-A Cappella Choir: Senior and Junior Glee: Conceri: Opera: Music Club: Ushers: Torch. DAVlD JACKSON-Frosh Foolball: German Club: Injrgmural Sporls, WALTER JACOBS -Enrered from Spokane, Washinglon. LOLA MAY JACOBSON-Rho Club: Hall Palrol: Science Club Council: Girls' Club Commillees, MARGARET JACOBSON-Torch: Roll Represenlalive: Srudenf Ticker: P. T. A. Dance Commillee: Relreshmenr Commillee. STEPHEN JAMES-Enlered from Bryan? School, Sealrle, Washinglon. MILDRED JEFFERSON-Senior Glee: Teacher's Secrelary: Opera: Revue: Concerl: Roll Represenlalive. FRANK JENKINS--Enfered from Bryanr School, Seollle, Washinglon. Row 2. DOROTHY JENSEN-Social Service Auxiliary. AUGUSTA JOHNSON-Revue: Dramalics. CLEONE JOHNSON-Torch: Senior Represenlalive: Forensic Club: Revue. EDNA MARIE JOHNSON -Hall Palrol: Science Club: Archery: Tumbling. VERNITA MAE JOHNSON--Eniered from John Marshall, Seallle, Washinglon. IRMA A, JONES-Glee Club: Torch: Music Club. KENNETH JONES- Baseball: Foofball. MARY BELLE JONES-Music Club: Concerl: Junior Glee: Senior Glee. Row 3. THOMAS A. JONES-Boys' Club Presideni: Tri-Y: Advisory Board: A. S. R. Vice-Presidenl: Roll Represenlarive: Forensic Club: Deloole: Foorball. EDITH JOY-Library: German Club: Social Service Commirfee. PEARL JUSTUS-Secrefary Science Club: Junior Make-up Corps. MONTE KAISER -Apparalus: Tennis. KIYOKO KAITA-Enfered from Pacific School, Sealfle, Washinglon. MARGUER- ITE KASTNER-Employmeni Commiflee: Four o'Clock Tea Commiliee. EDYTHE KEEBLE-Troubadours: Los? and Found: Hesperian Club. BOB KEENEY-Roll Represenlaiive: Baskelball: lnlramural Basker- ball: Welfare Commillee: Frosh-Soph Foolball. Row 4. BETTY KElLHOLTZ-Senior Play: Revue: Troubadours: Torch: Scholarship Commillee: Girls' Club Commiilees: Senior Glee: Conceri. KATHRYN KELLY-Torch: Girl Reserves: Girls' Club Com- millees: Fl'ench Club. ELLA JANE KELSEY-Senior A. S. R. Represenlalive: Torch: Opera: Concerl: A Cappella Choir: Senior Glee. CLIFFORD KELSO-Torch: Revue: Junior Dance Commiliee: Roll Represenlalive. DON KENDALL-Enlered from Missoula, Morrlana. MARJORIE KENT-Arl' Club: Hesperian Club: Music Club. JEAN HELEN KlDWlLER-Girl Reserves: A, S. R. Thrill Cornrnillee: Girls' Club Commifiees: Ari' Club. DESTEL KING-Opera: Conceri: Senior Orcheslra: Music Club. Row 5. ROBERTA MAE KITTLE-Concerl: Orchesira: Sophomore Play: Senior Glee: Spring Malinee: Girls' Club Con-nrni'H'ees. JACK KLAMM-Opera: Radio Club: Science Club: Concerr: A Cappella Choir. CHARLES B. KLEl - skefball: Foofboll: Track: Roll Represenialive. MARGARET KLEIN- Torch: Opel'a: Senior Orc slra: Revue: French Club: Music Club: Enlerlainmenl Comrnillee. KARL KROGSTAD4Hi-Y: Ad rlising anager: Rough Riders: Quill and Scroll: Opera: Track: Senior Glee. TAKAKO KUMAGAI inule s: lelics. DON KURTZER--Forensic Club: Track. FRANCES J. KWAPIL-Torch er: Social r i Commillee: Hall Conlrol Cornmiliee. Row 6. GINIA LAMB vue' Handy Andys. MARTHA LANE-Enlered from Albuquerque, New xico. OIS A SEN eni Represenlaiive: Senior Glee: Concerl: Opera. EVA MARIE LARSON- To c ' 4C ' T kel Force' Teacher's Secrelary: Tulor: Roll Represenlalive. GENEVIEVE LAR- T el F 1 e eachel s Secrelary. FRED LA VIGNE-Hi-Y: Opera: Revue: Concerl: A Cappella or ELE L LAWRENCE Enfered from Cheyenne, Wyoming, JIM LAWRENCE-Enlered 'from . 3 ' 0, ln n'l O , S 1 ' '. : .' i w i . 1 John sh I, ea'H'le, Washinglon. Row 7. LOIS LEBECK-Girls' Club Cabinel: Girls' Club Comrnillees: Senior Represenlaiive: Senior Glee: Concerf. ANDREE LEE-Girls' Club Decoralion Cornmirlee. DORRIS LEWIS--Torch: Ticker Force: Music Club: Drarnalic Club: Assembly Commillee. LOREN LIBBY-Foorball: Baseball: Revue: Senior Play: Opera. CLIFF LIBERMAN-Track: Baseball. DOROTHY LIENARD-A Cappella Choir: Social Service Auxiliary: Science Club: Aurora Guards. LILLIAN LlLE-Heal'l'h Commillee: Social Science Club: Senior Glee. MlRlAM LUCILLE LILYGREN-Siudeni Ticker Board of Conlrol: Torch: Opera: Revue: Concerl. Row 8, VERA LINCOLN--Torch: Usher: Social Service Auxiliary: General Welfare Commillee. RUTH LINDGREN-Torch: Roll Represenialive: Revue Commiilee. ROY LlNTOTT-Yell Leader: Tumbling. DICK LITTLE-Sludenl Ticker Clerk: Rough Riders: Boys' Club Secrelary: Advisory Board: Hi-Y: Tri-Y: Fooiball. GORDON LITTLE-Make-up Corps: lnlramural Manager: A. S. R. Cornmiliees: Science Club. PAUL D. LITTLE-Eniered from McMinnville, Oregon. DAVE LOGG-Fooiball: Torch: lnlramural Sporls. FLOYD LOOMlS-Baseball: Baskerball: Swimming Team. 6 If I27 ,V Y J , , a.s.r.gavelraps iororderwhde seniorsgarnbol L -vu. an-m.,,,4 'Wm me .www- .RW 'ww '7Uf uw 'Q' wifi- 'QWW' pk... Aw ws, Yu... fu. ,q...-A 53. 1' gh Q., 1 vo- 36 -NN Sm...- 19'-1-ug. MY. 'E' 'Di G4 'Whir- Mm? 'my 'li Row I. ROBERTA LOUNSBURY-Senior Class Secrelary: Senior Play. ECHO LUDLOW-Concerl: Opera: A Cappella Choir: Junior Glee: Senior Glee. KENNETH LUNDOUIST-Science Club. CLIN- TON LUNDY-Baseball: Baslselball: Tri-Y. ELEANOR LUNGHARD-German Club Secrelary: Roll Represenlalive: Good Cheer Commillee. FRANK LUSCHEN-Foolball: Golf. BRUCE McCLELLAN- Minule Service: Radio Club: Torch: Ad Club. FRANCES McDONALD-Four o'Clocl-4 Tea Cornmillee: Publicily Commillee. X I ,A V if ffxs-4 fy 'ff IXJ, 1 i , fl' 1 L0 4 L MLW!!! ,JL K , C9 ...Jw I Row 2. MAXINE MCGRAIL-Senior Orcheslra: Senior Play: Opera. BERYL McHANEY-Ollice Force: Good Cheer Comrnillee. BLANCHE McHANEY-Girls' Club Commillees: Junior Glee: Concerl: Ad Club: Music Club. WIL IAM MCILRAITH-Revue. CLARA MCMILLAN-Girls' Club Commillees: Junior Glee. MARY'ELL McNElL-Alhlelics. JOHN N. MCDONALD-Revue: Concerl: Junior Glee. MARY MACGREG -Enler 'lrom John Marsh II, Seallle, Washinglon. M' Row 3. R! ERT MA KAY d Slalf: Re ue. KENNETH MADDEN-Foolball: 'Senior Rgipreiylreriveg Hi-Y: Alhlelic C mill aslselb iylr Roll Represenlalive. 'MARY KATHRYNE MALTDOK-Opera: once4: Socia ervic ' xiliary' Reclreshmenl Commillee. MARJORIE MALLETT4Junior Glee. ETHEL RIER- Rese : Revue: Girls' Club Cc1mmiHee:f,AlhIelics. EVELYN ISABELLE MARSHALL- pelfgg cel-I-: o and Fo : Music Comrl'ri'll:ee: Glee Club. MARGARET MARSHALL-A Cappella hoir enior G ei Revue' usic Clu : Opera. JUNE ANN MARTI -Hesperian Club. . -f A' ' if I . f .fs U fyll KL .bg fyuxy, , . I , ff, Row . OBERT MA ON-Track: eyue: Hi-Y: lnlersbhool Council: Rough Riders. MARY MASSEYH- Chciirm n Allendarn ye!.CommiH'ee:'A. S.' R.LCommi'rIees: Forensic Club: Science Club: Torch: French Club, BETTY MATTERN-OPSFO: Concerl: German Club: A Cappella Choir: Senior Glee: Junior Glee. ERNESTINE MATTHEWS-Ai-I Clu : Music Club. EVELYN MATTSON-Concerl: Revue: Junior Glee. JULIUS MATTSON-A. SYvRS enl: Foolball: Rough Riders. MARY-AGNES MAYER-Revue: Opera: Senior Play: Seniol'l,Glee: Concerl: Roll Represenlalive. REBECCA MERRICK-Senior Play: OPGVGI Concerlz Senior Glee: Troubadours: Make-up Corps: News Slall: Revue: Roll Represenlalive. Row 5, DOROTHY E Represenlalive. LOIS MIDDLEBROOK-Alhlelics. ANITA JEAN MILLE irls' ommillees: Aflendance Commillee: Dramalics: Office Force. JAMES R. Ml L rogjpp Foolball: Frosh+Soph Baslnelball. MARJORIE MARILYN MILLER-Sludenl Ticl-wel' rd ol: nlrol: Roll Represenlalive: Girls' Club Cabinel: Girls' Club Commilfees: Revue. IL LLIGAN, JR.--lnlramural Baslselball: Boys' Club Dance Commillee: Revue. BEULAH SH L Girls' Gym. DON MITCHELL-Enlered from John Marshall, Sealfle, Washinglon. Row 6. HENRY MOLITOR-Frosh Foolball: Sophomore Foolball: Senior Glee: German Club. PAUL MONESMITH-Rough Riders: Chairman A. S. R. Lunchroorn Commillee: Revue: A. S. R. Dance Cam+ millee: Ad Slall: Ouill and Scroll. FLORENCE MONTAN-Torch: Mal-se-up Corps: Revue: Senior Glee: Opera: Concerl: Girls' Club Comrnillees. GORDON MONTGOMERY-A Cappella Choir: Opera: Concerl: Senior Glee: Revue: Hi-Y. BEVERLY ANNE MOORE-Enlered from Medford, Oregon. JOHN MOORE-Torch: Tennis Team. MARIE ELIZABETH MOORE-Torch: Annual Slall: A. S. R. Commil- lees: Girls' Club Commillees: French Club. MAXINE A. MORFORD-Al' Wesl Seallle: Roll Represene lalive: Dramalic Club: Chairman of Needlighls: Opera: Sophomore Revue. Q23 66 acc, Acta MLJJAJ Row 7. SCOTT MORRIS-Tennis: Revue: Chess Club: Track. SAM MORSE-lgrschoo ibommillee: Advisory Council: Rough Riders: Tri-Y: Hi-Y: Roll Represenlalive. EVELYN MOSS-Ticlsel Force: Torch. RICHARD MOUNSEY-Boolsroom: Chess Club: Golf: Torch. JACK MOYS-Revue: Sophomore Play: Senior Play. ALEENE MURRAY-Mal-ie-up Corps: A+ Milwaulsee, Oregon: Make-up Corps: Drarnalic Sociely: Music Commiflee. DICK MYERS--Baseball Manager: Hi-Y. GRANT B. MYERS, JR.-Torch: Roll Represenlalive. Row 8. TOM MYERS-Slage Force: Inlramural Manager: Roll Represenlalive. LOA-JEAN MYHRE- Music Club: Girls' Club Office Slalf: Girls' Club Commillees: Science Club. DELORES NELSON- Vice-Presiclenl of Girls' Club: Rho Club: Girls' Club Cabinel: Torch: Roll Represenlalive: Banking RepresenlaIive:lOlfice Force. IRENE NELSON-Torch: Improvement Commilfee: Girls' Club Commil- lees: Teacher's Secrelary. RUTH MARIE NELSON-Library: Music Club: Employmenl Commillee. RICHARD NESSMAN-Junior Glee: Senior Glee: Concerl: Opera. BILL NEWBERN-Baslselball: Fool- ball: Baseball. CHARLOTTE NICKSON--Banking: Music Club. IZ9 dremalic minded beginners slrul lor pholographs r ' v P p Row I. FRANCES NICOLAY-Office Force: Maine-up Corps: Girls' Club Commillees. ELEANOR NILSEN-Torch: Revue: Concerl: Girls' Club Cabinel: ln'Ierschool Commillee: Roll Repl'esenIa'live. PETER NISSEN-Siage Force: Senior Torch Honor Award. GROVER NOBLES-In'lramuraI Sporls: Foren' sic Club: Science Club: Torch. CONSTANCE NORDAHL-Torch: Forensic Club: Girl Reserves: Social Service: Minule Girls. DORRIS NOREM--Enlered from Conrad, Nevada. RAY NORMAN-Hi-Y: Baslseiball: Roll Represenlalive: Iniramural Sporls. EVELYN NYSTEDT-Torch. Row 2. JACK O'BRIEN-News Edilor: Advisory Council: Junior Class Presidenl: Rough Riders: Hi-Y: Debafe: Siudenl' Ticlael' Board of Conlrol: A. S. R. Cabinel: Tennis Tearn. ROBERT OHAIL-Roll Rep- resenlalive: Falher-Son Banque? Commiilee: A. S. R. Clearing House Commillee. VERNON OLSEN- Baseball: Fooiball. DORIS MAY OLSON-Roll Represenlalive: Minule Girls: Senior Roll Represen- Iaiive: Assembly Commillee. DOROTHY O'NEIL-Torch: Girls' Club Cabinei: Dramalic Commiilee: Social Service Auxiliary: Forensic Club. BODIL ONGSTAD-Four o'CIocI4 Tea Commillee: Junior Glee. LORRAINE OTTO-Eniered from Ravenna School, Sealile, Washinglon. JIM PACK--Ad Slaff: Rough Riders. Row 3. GEORGE PARANT-Opera: Band: Senior Orchesirag Concerf: A Cappella Chair: Senior Glee. DOROTHY PARKS-Girls' Club Presideni: A. S. R. Vice-Presiclenl: Girls' Club Recording Secreiary: Sophomore Class Treasurer: Revue: Advisory Council. JOHN PARROTT-Sludeni Tickel Board ol Conrrolz Rough Riders: Hi-Y: Ad Slali: Revue: Torch: A. S. R. Dance Commiilee: Chairman Faiher-Son Banque? Cornmillee. FRED A. PARSONS-Lunchroom Force. MABEL LUCILE PARTRIDGE--Girl Reserves: Rho Club: Afhlelics: Revue: Senior Glee: Junior Glee. JACK PEARCE-Torch: Rough Riders: Sophomore Class Secrelary: Annual Sicrlf: Roll Represenlaiive: German Club. BERNARD PEARSON- Radio Club: Science Club. DON PEARSON--Senior Orcheslra: All-Cily Orcheslra: Senior Glee: Science Club Represenlafive: Music Club. Row 4. JEANNE CAROL PECKENPAUGH-Torch: Girls' Club Cabinef: Girls' Club Commiliees: Sophomore Play: Revue: Ushers: Senior Play. ARTHUR PERRY-German Club. DON PETERS-Foot ball Manager: Acl Siaff: A. S. R. Commillee. JACK PHILLIPS-Torch: Forensic Club: Rough Riders. ALTON PICKENS-Presidenl Forensic Club: German Club: Ari Club: Minule Service: DeMoloy. LYLE PIGORT-Opera: Senior Play: Revue: Roll Represenialive: Forensic Club. JEANNE PLATH-Torch. ETHEL POLLOCK-Science Club: lmprovernenl Commillee. Row 5. MARSHALL PONKO-Enlered from Lincoln High School, Seallle, Washinglon. BETTIE POOSER -Make-up Corps: Roll Represenialive: Decorolion Comrniliee: Swimming Team. PAULINE PRATER- Enlered from Ellensburg, Washinglon. FRANK PRESTON--Science Club Council: Science Club: Chess Club: Inlramurol Horseshoes. DOROTHY PRICE-Glee Club: Concerf. CLIFTON PROUTY-Enlered from Ravenna School, Seaflle, Washinglon. KATHRYN PURYEAR-Roll Represenlaiive: Concerl: A Cappella Choir: Four o'ClocI4 Tea Commillee: Opera. RUTH OUIGLEY-Advisory Council: Senior and Junior Co-Chairrnan Revue: Girls' Club Corresponding Secrelary: Roll Represenlalive: A. S. R. Com- rniilees: Torch. Row 6. JACK RAMELS-Golf Team: Revue: Roll Represenlaiive: Science Club. WENONAH MAY RAMSDELL-Rho Club: Girls' Club Commiliees: Poinl Manager: Torch. HARRIETT RANDLES-Torch: Concerl: Foolball Dance Commiiiee: A Cappella Choir: Music Commiilee: Music Club: Revue: Cas- Iume Force. MARTHA MAE RANDOLPH--Opera: Concerl: Music Club. WYLLIS RANDOLPH-Four o'CIocI4 Tea Commillee: Senior Glee: Torch. CATHERINE RATTI-Roll Represenlalive: Allendance Commiiiee: Music Club: Resl Room Commillee. MARGARET READING-Enlered from Porlland, Ore- gon. WILLIAM REDLIN-Senior Glee: Senior Play. Row 7. JEANNE REDLIN-Torch: Ollice Force: Troubadours. ELINOR REID-Opera: Concerl: Girls' Club Cabinel: Sludenl' Ticl-zel Board of Conlrol: French Club: A. S. R. Cornmillees: Girls' Club Com- millees. DON RENNIE-Science Club: Inlramural Sporls. LLOYD V. REPMAN--Tracl-4: Concerl. DOR- OTHY L. RHODES-Rho Club: Girls' Club Cabinel: Senior Malee-up Corps: Dramalics. RICHARD ARTHUR RIEBOW-German Club: Senior Represenlalive: Senior Glee. LEWIS ROBER-Baslqelball: Foolball: Golf: Swimming. FRANKLIN ROBERTS-Enlered from Ravenna School, Seallle, Washinglon. Row 8. JACK RODEWALD-A Cappella Choir: Senior Glee: Junior Glee: Opera: Concerl. JACK ROOT-Roll RepresenIa'I'ive. JOE ROSS-Srludenl' Ticlsel: Band. CAROLINE ROTH-Enlered from Walla Walla, Washinglon. PEARL ROTHWELL-Enfered from John Marshall, Seallle, Washinglon. BILL RUETER-German Club. EILEEN RUTHERFORD-Music Club: Office Force. PAUL RUTLEDGE -Senior Orcheslra: Band: Tracls: Tumbling. I3I manual labors, slrenuous loaf Iceep sophs busy .ww ,pr-Q. .mf Av '45 ax QF 'Sb- ive abr Row I. RUTH RUTLEDGE-Girls' Club Cabinel: Four o'Clock Tea: Senior Glee: Opera: Concerl. MERLE RYAN-Enlered from John Marshall, Seallle, Washinglon. JOHN LEONARD SAFSTROM- Foofball: Concerl: Roll Represenlaiive: German Club, MURIEL SANDERS-Senior Dance Commillee: Scrapbook Commiilee: Reireshmenl Commillee. NAIDA SANDERS-Revue: Chairman Nurse's Siaili. RANDY SASNETT-Opera: Concerl: Music Club: A Cappella Choir: Senior Glee. REBECCA SASNETT -Slage Force: Revue Commiliee. BETTY SAYLES-Girls' Club Cabinel: News Slalf: Roll Represenia- live: Girls' Club Commillees: Torch: Advisory Council. Row 2. SALLY SAYLES-Girls' Club Treasurer: Torch: Rosernaiden: Opera: Revue. SANFORD SCHENK -Enlered from Ravenna School, Seallle, Washinglon. ROBERT STU BERG-Enlered from John Marshall, Seallle, Washinglon. WARREN IRVING SCHOLL-Tumbling: Science Club: Bookroom. PATTY SCHU- MACHER-A+ Sequim High School: News Correspondenlg Junior Prom: Class Programs. DICK SCHWENK--Yell Team: Hi-Y: Revue: Opera: Roll Represenlafive: Publicily Commillee: Troubadours: Concerl. TOM SCOONES--Baseball: Rough Riders: 'Y: Vice-Presidenl J ior Class: News Slaff: Frosh-Soph Baskelball. DOROTHY M. SCOTT-Senior rcheslra: Conceyffglpera. ' I I' 1' if fi Row 3. KATHERINE SEARS-Make-up o MCO rl: ul IAN SECHRIST-Girl Reserves Presidenl: Roll Represenlalive: Aihlel ' me E I Z-Torch: Science Club Council: Ger- man Club. BERNT SELLERITE-T : Seniofy pr sen ve: Roll Represenlalive: Boys' Club Dance Commiflee: Improvemenl Co ee:f 'man lub: lal Science Club. W. BOND SELTZER-Opera: Concerl: Senior Orcheslra: usic Cog: S enc fs lub: Tumbling, PATRICIA ANN SELVIN-News Sfaff: Social Servjf: I-lfclrfd A : Publi ' yagkgnmmillee: Senior Represenlalive. ISABEL SENIOR- General Chairmankgfllls' Cla vice Conn i fees: Girls' Club Cabinel: Torch. ART SENN, JR.-Frosh- . I ,y .,,. Soph Baskelball Row 4. DOUG SETTERBERG-Revue: Senior Play: Senior Glee: Sophomore Play: Opera. EVELYN SEWELL--Enlered from John Marshall. Seallle, Washinglon. DORIS SHIO-Girls' Club Advisor's Slalilf ' LOUISE SHIREMAN-A Cappella Choir: Concerl: Nurse's Slafli: Senior Glee: Roll Represenlalive. WARREN SIERER-Baseball: Baskefball: Torch: Hi'Y: Rough Riders: Roll Represenlalive. WILLIAM SIMMONS-Baskelball. BOB SKONE-Baskelball: Torch. JACK SMITH-Frosh-Soph Baskelball: Infra- rnural Sporls. li ' X fldfz Row 5. NANCY JANE SMITH-Revue: Foo ance Commillee. OUENTIN SMITH-Tennis: Germa Club: Science Club. BETTY JANE SNOW-A. S. R. Thrifl' Commilfee Chairman: Torch Banque+ Co- chairman: Sludenl' Tickel Board of Conlrol: Roll Represenlalive: Concerl: Opera: Employmenl Cam- miliee. NORMAN SODERBERG--Roll Represenlalive: Harmonica Club: Inframural Sporfs: Science Club. RICHARD SOLVASON-Frosh-Soph Foolball: lnlramural Sporls. PERSIS JEAN SOMMERVILLE Roll Represenlaiive: Library: Four o'Clock Tea Commillee: Science Club. PHYLLIS GAIL SOMMER- VILLE-Library: Four o'Clock Tea Commillee: Cus+ocIian's Assislanlg Science Club. FRANK SPOOR- Frosh Frolic: Senior Make-up Corps: Iniromural Sporls. Row 6. GIL SPRING-Enlered from John Marshall, Seallle, Washinglon. GORDON SPRING--Revue Commillee: Foolball: Baseball Manager. MAYE SPROWLS-Enlered from Touchel, Washinglon. DONNA FAYE SPURLING-Torch: Concerl: Opera: Falher-Daughler Banquel Commillee: Ad Siailig Roll Represenlalive: Arl' Club. HERBERT STANLEY-Roll Represenlalive. MARGUERITE STEDMAN- Enlered from Bryonl School, Seallle, Washinglon. HELEN STEPHENS-Roll Represenlalive: Losl and Found: Music Club. MARJORIE STEPHENS--Senior Roll Represenlalive. Row 7, HOWARD M. STEWART-Senior Class Presidenl: Foolball: Track Manager: Hi-Y: Tri-Y: A. S. R. Cabinel: Advisory Council: Rough Riders: Torch. BERNICE STIBINGER-Torch: German Club: Losl and Found. ETHEL KATHARYN STONE-Forensic Club: Alhlelics. BERNARD STOREY-Roll Represen- faiive: Tumbling Club: Junior Glee. MAY STOVER--Torch: Promelhean Club: Science Club: Trouba- dours. WILLIAM G. STRONG-Boys' Club Dance Commillee: Lunchroom Cashier. MAURICE STUDE- BAKER-Foolball: Baseball: Swimming. MARGUERITE STURGES-A Cappella Choir: Girls' Club Commillees: Junior Glee: Concerl: Music Club: Junior Make-up Corps. Row 8. FLORENCE ISABELLE SWANSON-Hesperian Club: Music Club: Losl and Found: Concerl: Junior Glee. IRENE SWAP-Baseball. JANE TARBILL-Forensic Club: A. S. R. Commiilees: French Club: Torch: Scrapbook Commillee. AGNES TAYLOR-Concerl: Junior Glee: Music Club: Coslume Force: Resl Room Commifleez Science Club. JIM TAYLOR-Senior Glee: Junior Glee: Opera: Concerl. DONNA TEETS-Torch: News Collecfion Manager: Quill and Scroll: Girls' Club Commillees: Office Slail: Music Club. FLORENCE TEICHROEW-Torch: Losl and Found: Usher. NANCY JEAN TEMPLE -Presidenl of Rho Club: Chairman Alhlelic Commiileeg Aurora Guards: Forensic Club. l33 musclemen form background for iunior aclivilies i , ! E i 1 1,54 31' 1 'uf s 'fl I . ,- . 2 Row I. HELENE MAY TEMPLETON--Afhlefics. RUTH TEMPLETON-Afhleficsi Camp Fire. ROBIN TETTELBAUM-Enfered from Bryanf School, Seaffle, Washingfon. MADELEINE THAYER-Enfered from Oueen Arune, Seaffle, Washingfon. DAVID PI-IILLIP THOMAS-Sfudenf Ticlsef Board of Confrol: Base- ball: Foofball: Senior Represenfafive fo Boys' Club: Ad Sfaff. JIM THOMPSON-Enfered from Laurel- hursf School, Seaffle, Washingfon. MARIAN TI-IOMPSON--Tumbling. DOROTHY THORN-Girls' Club Con-in-iiffees: Gym Office: Usher. Row 2. BARBARA TI-IRAPP--Ad Club: Roll Represenfafive: Tufor. GENEVIEVE TILTON-Opera: Con- cerf: Arf Club. FRANCES TODNEM-Enfered from Shanghai, Chino. HOWARD TONNESEN-Senior Orchesfra: Band: Opera: Revue: Concerf: Senior Represenfafive. WILLIAM TOTTEN-Torch: Tufor: News Sfaff: Booleroom. NELLIE TWEEDY-A Cappella Choir: Troubadours: Concerl. VERN VAN ORNUM-Senior Orchesfra: Band: Torch: Revue: Opera: Foofball: Swimming: Baseball. SHIRLEY VAN PELT-Lunchroom Commiffee: Hall Pafrol: Losf and Found: Decorafion Commiffee. Row 3. MARY JANE VAN VLECK-Torch: Music Club: Senior Represenfafive. BOB VOELKER-Bas I-sefball: Torch: Hi-Y: Roll Represenlafive. MARTHA WAHL-News Sfaff: Girls' Club Cabinef: Girls' Club Commiffees: A. S. R. Publicify Commiffee: Ouill and Scroll. JANET WALDO-Revue: Senior Play: Girls' Club Cabinef: Spring Mafinee: Opera. JIM WASSON-Baseball. WILLETTE WASSON- News Sfaff: Girls' Club Comrniffees: A. S. R. Publicify Commiffee. BOB WATSON-Enfei'ed from Lacey, Washingfon, JANET WEEKS-Roll Represenfafive. ,iw - 1 . L, . 9 . - Row 4. MAE BELLE WELLMAN-Library: Torch: Senior Represenfafive: Good Cheer Commiffee. BETTY WELLS-Roll Represenfafive: Girls' Club Office: Senior Picnic Commiffee: Girls' Club Assembly Comrniffee. MARY JANE WERNER--Torch: Concerf: Opera: Four o'CIocI4 Tea Commiflee: Music Club. HARRIS WESNER-Roll Represenfafive: lnframural Afhlefics. EVA WEST-Girls' Club Com- milfees: Troubadours: Girl Reserves: Science Club. LESTER WESTLAND-Science Club: Arf Club. 'CHESTER WESTLING-Enfered from Bryanf School, Sealfle, Washingfon. LORRAINE WESTLUND- Rho Club: Resf Room Commiffee: Senior Glee. Row 5. FRANCES WESTPHAL--Acl Sfaff: Sfudenf Ticlsef: Af Wesf Seaffle: French Club: Dramafic Club: Opera. FRANCES WETTERLIND-Rho Club: Afhlefics. LULU WHEELOCK-Enfered from John Marshall, Seaffle, Washingfon. HELEN JO WHETSTONE-Roll Represenfafive: Dramalics. JEAN WHITE-Torch: Sfandards Comrniffee: Roll Represenfafive: Library, MASON WHITE-Tri-Y: Rough Riders: Boys' Club Vice-Presidenf: Revue: Junior Dance Commiffee: Roll Represenfafive: Traffic Squad. BETTY WICKLUND-I-Iesperian Club: Senior Glee: Roll Represenfafive. ENID VIVIEN WILKINSON- Senior Glee: Girls' Club Commiffees: Forensic Club: Music Club: Senior Play. Row 6. RALPH WILLIAMS-Opera: Revue: Foofboll: Senior Glee: Roll Represenfafive. ELEANOR WINGE-Revue: Slandards Commiffee: Afhlefics: Usher: Torch. RUSSELL WINSLOW-Rough Riders: Radio Club Presidenf: Torch: Revue: Concerf: Opera: A. S. R. Commiffees: German Club. HELEN JO WITZKE-Opera: Revue: Arf Club: Fafher-Daughfer Banquef: Publicify Comrniffee. HERBERT WOL- EVER-lnframural Baslnefball: Af Porflandz Traffic Squad, CATHERINE WOOD-Hospifalify Com- miffee: Resf Room Commiffee: Girls' Club Assembly Commiffee. PEARL A. WORKMAN-Teacher's Secrefary: Afhlefics. CLIFF WRANSTEDT-Enlered from John Marshall, Seaffle, Washingfon. Row 7. JUNE YENNY-Enferecl from Queen Anne, Seaffle, Washingfon. LARRY YOU NG-Senior Class Vice-Presidenf: Rough Riders: Tri-Y: Junior Class Treasurer: A. S. R. Commiffees: Senior Play, CHUCK ZENTNER-Enfered from John Marshall, Seaffle, Washingfon. BETH ZENTNER-Enfered from John Marshall, Seaffle, Washingfon. DON ZORN-Rough Riders: Tri-Y: Revue: Co-chairman Senior Picnic: Torch: A. S. R. Assembly Commiffee: Vocalional Commiffee. EILEENE ANDERSEN-Malqe-up Corps: Decorafion Commiffee: Opera: Torch: Ari' Club: Creafive Wrifing Club. RUSSELL CALKINS-Enfered from Lincoln High School, Porfland, Oregon. Row S. GEORGE FRYE-Baseball: lnframural Manager: Leafher Medal Club. DOROTHY JANE FULLER-Office: Thealer Make-up Corps. BERNICE JOHNSON--Concerf: Four o'CIocIq Tea Com- miffee: Decorafion Commiffee. GORDAN LELAND-Roll Represenfafive: Inframural Sporfs: Swimming Team. SHELDON MCCONNELL-Baseball: Baslsefball: Roll Represenfafive. BOB MESTON-Revue: Opera: Senior Glee: A Cappella Choir: Publicify Commiffee: Chrisfmas Play. GORDON MILLIMAN- Rough Riders: Tri-Y: Revue: Annual Slaff: Sfudenf Ticlaef: A. S. R. Treasurer: Forensic Club: Midwinfer Concerf. ALBERT MINKER-Enfered from Seoffle Preparafory School. Seaffle. Washingfon, - I3S f ,, sunshiny lawns spread epidemic ofspring fever I vw' ' Jign myannual ' ,Q f.,fMV,L 4 J f f' bg s f!' MW, G W OJ , MJ 5 W b IJ? y jf ' J jjj , X ,wg 1 j 1 . e y' ff. I y ,yu if ff We ,f , , rj' by fy! L fy, ff fff f Jf,f f J 'uf I Ffh J X FJ K jf J' U 'h 4 ,jf J , ff Q X ,ff 5-J .7 f K ,I J ' I va iff L 5.7 fj ff! 6 if - ' Y' y -L fb' fy y f' If I L, flu , if Ijff 9' ,ww ' A ff' ' V I . ,' V., ,, I f fy! . f Q 7 y , V1 bfi K y ,- fy X!! , X I CD f AL! x E xy V , Q by Qyflckfzozvledgmenlf 3? 3 The I936 Sfrenuaus Life con+ains pidures by Mr. Bradley 'From X , ' Jrhe Harf Sfualios, Mr. Thurber, anal The SuH'ell Sfudio. H was , 4 ' engraved a1'.Wes+er'n Engraving Company, and prinfecl and Y Q bounciuin..grheE31'in+ing plan+ of Lowman 84 Hanford Company. f , V ,y I , XX H -ffwsow' ww WVHMW K a9jV?V!iW,,!!?iwf! ,MW CDV
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