Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS)

 - Class of 1947

Page 1 of 184

 

Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1947 Edition, Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collectionPage 7, 1947 Edition, Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1947 volume:

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M K M u - L 4 J I Lv ., 4 1 S 4 W,-N I' ll L A L x v 1 ' 1 1 - V , - 1 M. A' ' Q ' 'Nw' -can L ,cr L f L, X g . A L X, , A ,qv L. 5 M 'YQ' 'V ,f 'iz xxm LL X. .. .L Q L, ,, , . m '- X A'-L . ,km F, .,,f.- H, , A a.. A L A w - ,L, L .SMU -M-M , ,V 0-Qwk .. qLg4feegLg -va x W -' A- ' . L - ' -. -' f,f,L ff' M. -- 'mzl 'EA' vw Wi' 5 A if-WL -1-f'4Pk12 Kr- L Lf? ' .1L iw: L 1 'ml' 1 ' N' ' -V Jw K . 1 L K ' ' L 9' L L 414-N '5 f L Q an K . LL,k 5 I L Lk I K A Q ,af K sd gfafjwiigsri-'F In 1856 N. W Q sf E' 4 X 'nfl ' V I iffy, ' 5 'fi 'ff .fyt ' X S 1 x iflgq ,Lv ,M , A 2 Liw . ' ML A Av , W' K Q L 1 , Y YK '+ -- A M 'V' fglii 'f :Lg 'DX L L L.. .W , .iff L 535 ig?-L ,KW A - L W ealfgigfqffm ' LE A , ,HW ,V I I , .4 LLL, n -2' mx ' 4554 W Q 3 ,p AL 5 Lo, A UUAHTEH CENTURY U F P H U G 5 S TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO there stood on Shawnee-Mission's campus only the East Building -the high school of yesterday. Classes were small, few social or athletic organi- zations existed, and the variety of subjects and classroom equipment was very limited. The first faculty numbered only eleven and the student' body only 156-that was twenty-five years ago. Today We have a modern school-a well equipped and ably-staffed institu- tion of learning with a large student body. Over 1,100 pupilstake part in all phases of school life. Thus-to compare our school activities of today, 1947, with those of yester- day, 1922, we have chosen as the theme of our book-the.Silver Anniversary of our School of Yesterday. ncfured faLen Lam imf annua! ns 07 s. Punnlliimilciaw THF-SWAN 0111 HI-Y UNDER Mn. ALLEMAN IIEIIIII TIU fo me Cfaaa o I 923 In appreciation of the glory which their accomplishments have brought to Shawnee Mission the Indian Staff dedicates this Silver Anniversary yearbook to the members of the first graduating class. CLASS IlllI.l. RALPH SUIWMERFIELD EDWARD M. BOWMAN CATHINCA CORDES FLORENCE CORDES KEITH FRASER MAURINE HODGE MILDRED HODCE DOROTHY JONES Vrv1AN JONES ALDEN WILLIAM FOSTER KISER MARY LOWNEY GERTRUDE CATHERINE LOY GLADYS MEYER ELEANOR NOFSINCER LUCILLE ROMPF GLADYS ROUTH CYRIL SCOTT MAUDE TAYLOR NAOMI VANCE KX- e. . , s Q ,nv Upper left-Miss Glanrnuola LoY, '23 Upper left-THD FRASERS-LUANNE, '50, BA:- DARA, '47, AND PARENTS, '23 Upper left--Mn. KEITH Fusnn, '23 Upper right-SHIRLEY PALEI, '48, AND HER Mon-nan, Mas. FALlzn, '23 Upper right-Miss MAUluNn Honca, '25 Lower left-Mn. EDWARD M. BOWMAN, '23 Lower left-KATHRYN, '49, AND FATHER, '23, COMPARE Tun '23 AND '46 INDIANS FUHMEH IIHIEF5 .xdclminiafrafora 0 ?!zAferolay Through twenty-five years of progress Shawnee-Mis- sion has fortunately had administrators with long- range visions. Their dreams of a greater Shawnee- Mission caused the school to grow. These principals and vice-principals served as buffers and go-betweens for teacher and board, for parent and teacher, and for teacher and student. D. A. Morgan, Shawnee-Mission's first principal, served from the fall of 1922 to the spring of 1933. Mr. Morgan had dreams of expansion and fostered public relations which encouraged the school's rapid growth. Before leaving Shawnee-Mission, Mr. Morgan began plans for the West Building and an enlarged school plant. Albert L. Cross entered Shawnee-Mission as vice- principal in 1932 and succeeded Mr. Morgan as prin- cipal in 1933-'34. During the twelve years which Mr. Cross guided Shawnee-Mission, the school plant grew to three buildings-East, West, and South. In 1944, Mr. Cross handed the reins of leadership to Howard D. McEachen, our present principal. O. K. Wolfenbarger joined the Shawnee-Mission staff in 1933 and for twelve years served faithfully as vice-principal. In 1945, Mr. Wolfenbarger was succeeded by Carl D. Gum, our present vice-principal. With such past leaders who helped Shawnee-Mis- sion achieve its present high standing and with two such able administrators as Shawnee-Mission now enjoys, the future of Shawnee-Mission looks bright indeed. P I , .l.-li I IN if F DMI ISTH TIIJX x . ' I M ' W- eww cum-Y, X urlmjw 5 w W. 1' rg W 1' Q I w Q V 4 O y, ' H - . WHERE ME FIND 1-fl 1 ' ' 0 f ' . TOMMY HAWK F M , 4 I 4 LIL SUNSHINE? W m-ll PMHIV I f'f' 1 3 I J 5' ll 4 O lx K X55 v I X A I L, I wi. wiv l ' Vbfg ,N Sw' X N I num N W W 'IIL J 1 N N ,f' 4 NNN n ,mv .., H Q ' N , ff U 5 I Zim 'I 1' i w T f KW? X. 1 P X N 4 f ' j bw I 'N-X I bww X , N fr M au, Q WW - 2 Jw V 4- 6763 . f --H ' --I 'Q - 9 - Ur. ..ff. W mia 1' - 4 ::5:g'1'9y. ' W f - f!!sf.:2:fagf5x 124:21 ,--3 4 sky N X f-Q'---aw' is-,211 um--:.. 7 V 'Zia M ' 1 .' , I H . 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A 9LU2 i,Ll:.: ,I wE?f'::1!2N. ezrfu'-2-. .f !u, gg: ---.::::5fE:!-,E5:E: JT:-lQ253::: ':::::':::::!gFi 'W .L 11553: v'- W , 1 '-fb-1' -' ' A 'ge.11::r::::g5!S...-- :::2::::: if 1 51 fig f'ffy,:f,, f , s:a'4'f::::5seS1Haie5s955555551 -'IQ - ,,,...---mm-.W bf ,,, , .b W V- --vl , Iuliiiiilillg :H 5 . 'W gfi.fsafiiigssg5:::,51ggsggsssas I X, - ::ss53s:::2f+.1:ef:f MH: X 1 ' y?::::Q:,r:':L:2Zf?-I' Cl , '1Z2i..::::::1fi55!f:H 2f' H J ', - v gg .i::3gE !Q1puu:vlx A .2-H 4 10' ewfzq w-Mus.. In Q Q 1. I ,l mp ' mu- 5 - S 1 d'1 .gn xg: 'p' ,. PRINCIPAL Ladies and gentlemen. Mr. McEachen has stepped to che microphone. A tall tale or Scotch joke might follow but something worth hearing was sure to come. In his three years in Shawnee-Mission, Mr. McEachen has proved himself to be fair and understanding in deal- ing with school problems. His efficient secre- taries, Mrs. Alberta Gallagher and Mrs. Bettye Hall, helped to keep office routine moving smoothly. Special honor came to Shawnee-Mission last fall at the Kansas State Teachers' Association when Mr. McEachen was elected vice-presi- dent of the Topeka section for 1947. Through contacts with civic clubs and larger legislative groups, Mr. McEachen had opportunities to hear outstanding speakers of national and international repute. Shawnee-Mission stu- dents benefited from those contacts. Many eminent speakers came as guests to the high school platform. Building plans, legislative procedures, and all kinds of local administrative problems filled Mr. McEachen's working day. Serving as a kind of buffer between teacher and stu- dent as well as teacher and parent, Mr. Mc- Eachen found time to iron out many indi- vidual differences. .1 CHIEF Coox . . . JEANN VIIIE-PRINCIPAL September school days and the first week of the secolnd semester found Mr. Gum the bus- iest. Enrollment, schedule conflicts, over- crowded classes, insufficient rooms for the number of teachers, and worry over seniors' credits were among his perplexing problems. Mr. Gum's office assistants, Mrs. Glen Soellner and Jeannine Caudill, were never idle. With each semester underway, Mr. Gum turned his attention to scores of other duties. Checking attendance and counseling students were daily tasks. As head of all activity funds and class treasuries, Mr. Gum devote time to balancing school accounts. In assign- ing the year's gate duties from fall football games to spring music events, Mr. Gum made an earnest effort to adjust his assignments to the teachers' convenien d much ce. In Mr. Gum's two years here, Shawnee-Mission students and teachers learned to appreciate his sincere desire for fairness and cooperation. Serving as chairman of the guidance com- mittee, Mr. Gum planned informative bulle- tins for home-room projects on parliamentary procedure, holiday costumes, hobbies, and such themes. 'F AK. Vice-Principal CARL D. GUM ew' MR s GLENN SQL-L AND BOTTLE WASHER. E ITHE L SEH IEE THHU EH THE YE H5 X . QL?-Vx . wmv- xitslod 105 WCW MEN WITH A VISIUN M. E. ALLEMAN enC0ufa8CS typists. ,Q HOWARD PATTERSON ,,s . . eyes his machine. IS9i oie'P6eS. 5. e5 FROM SHAWNEE-MlSSION,S FIRST STAFF of eleven teachers, 6655 I ,gl Mr. M. E. Alleman remains on the present faculty. Three other present staff members who have given long years of suc- cessful service are Mrs. Adelle Fast, who came in 19233 Mr. Howard V. Patterson, 19275 and Miss Emma Lyman, 1928. Shawnee-Mission's first Board of Education numbered only three. Pictured below are those who helped to give Shawnee-Mission its start twenty-five years ago. Mr. A. M. Meyers was president of the Boardg Mr. D. M. Alden fdeceasedj was treasurerg and Mr. F. M. Plake was secretary. BALANCING THE BUDGET, getting needed equipment to operate the school, supporting all activities, and filling vacancies on the teaching staff were some of the tedious duties performed by the Board of Education. Members of the board were R. L. Fish, directorg W. H. Helmers, clerkg J. A. Hall, treasurer, J. B. Hann, and C. Morris Watkins. These men, who had businesses of their own, took time to meet regularly on the last Monday of each month to formulate policies of school administration, Humans W H HANN I B Blflflllll UF EDUEATIU WATKINS C. Momus FISH R L 2 l HALL I A .S Luifohng ufure id in fAeir an A We Are Lucky To Have Such a Pleasant Board PARENT - TEACHERS' ASSUEIATIUN LET's GET ACQUAINTEIY' was chosen as the Parent - Teacher Association theme for the year. From the Septem- ber back-to-school night at which parents met teachers to the April fash- ions a la Shawnee-Missionl' style show and departmental exhibits, every meet- ing offered worthwhile material. Officers were Mrs. E. M. Wharton, president, Mrs. H. N. Howe, first vice- presidentg Mrs. J. Lester Brown, re- cording secretaryg Mrs. James Agnew, corresponding secretary, Mr. A. P. Snodgrass, treasurer, Mrs. E. R. Kitchen, historian, Mr. I-I. D. Mc- Eachen, consultant, and Mrs. john Irwin, parliamentarian. Meetings were held on the third Mon- day of each month. One of they main projects of the P.T.A. was to support the sidewalk fund. Parent education classes, which met in homes during the month of October, had as their theme Where Peace Begins. II .gav- aude M FQJAQ5 Front row--L. ro R.-BROWN, BRANDON, Wi-uun'oN, fPnEs.J, Hows Back row-L. ro R.-MCEACHEN, KITCHEN, SNODGRASS ST HE T llll BHESS gG AMW was Grads and former students register on Alumni Day. TIME MARCHES ON! Twenty-five years ago student government was unknown, but the Shawnee-Mission Student Congress has come to stay. Led by J. C. Hawkins, head sponsor, and G. Murlin Welch, assistant, this year's Student Congress supervised public relations, organization charters, honors, and social activities of the student body. Officers of the Student Congress were president, John Ambergg vice-president, Don Stickrodg secretary, Martha Fraser, and treasurer, Jeanene Trego. Besides these officers this year's forty-four members included presidents and vice-presidents of the junior and senior classes and one representative from each home room. The social committee, headed by jerry Maloney, planned and carried out some of the most successful mixers in the history of Shawnee-Mission. The Tacky Dance, Formal Mixer, and Sweater Dance were outstanding examples. Blue jeans and blazers are favorites at Tacky Dance. Cupid Couples are chosen at Valentine Dance. 1, 2, 3, Kick! 11 Spfckr It's music by jimmy Lenge MISS ELIZABETH BOYS, B.S., M.S. M. E. ALLEMAN, A.B., A.M. 71 rib' .PX 6-r--we OSCAR BARNETT, B.S. Miss ANNA MARIE EDWARDS, B.S. PMI LTY TEACHERS' DUTIES con- sisted of more than class work. Those extra duties, extra-curricular activities, sometimes meant more work and worry than daily instruc- tion. Grouped by depart- ments, teachers had these extra assignments: Commercial instructors were M. E. Alleman, who led Inner Circle and Lighthouse: O. O. Barnett, who helped with Hi-Y and coached IOHN L. ALLISON, A.B. Mns. MAIIGUEIIITII CHAIN, M.A Miss RUTH BIIOWNII, B.S. WILLIAM O. A'I'wnI.I., B.S. Mns. SOPHIA Honsl-uns, B.S. HAROLD E. GEORGE, B.S., B.M.Ed., M.M. Miss EDNA L. HETZEL, A.M. JOSEPH FINNERTY, B.S, HAROLD D. GARVER, B.S., MS freshman football and basketball: Felix Shular who was Steno-ettc sponsorg and A. P. Snodgrass, who was head track coach, co-sponsored B. A. A., and assisted with football. Science instructors were J. L. Allison, who sponsored the fresh- man science clubg Elizabeth Boys, who eo-sponsored the Biologs and was head sponsor of Travel Clubg J. C. Hawkins, who was sponsor of Student Congress and co-sponsor of Retortsg Velma Seaton, who assisted with Camera Club and was head sponsor of National Honor Society and Biologsg and W. W. Strong, who assisted with Hi-Y and co- sponsored the Retorts. Mas. Annu.: FAST, B.S ?Q 'Q Q CHAUNCEY I. GORSAGE, B.S. Miss MARGARET HOGAN, A B CARL W. ISON, B.S. Q. . Mlss EMMA LYMAN, A.B. ,aw MRS. HILDA M. IRWIN, A.B. Mlss VERA LAWELLIN, A.B., M.S. English instructors were Ruth Browne, who directed both the jun- ior and senior plays, sponsored the Drama Club, and supervised the Thespiansg Adelle Fast, who spon- sored the Book Clubg Vera Lawellin, who assisted with Y-Teensg Virginia Magnuson, who assisted with Y- Teens and sponsored the Pen and History Clubsg Viola McFarland, who supervised the editorial staff of the Indiang F. W. Starkey, who was adviser of The Misxiong Wilma White, who served as chairman of the honors Committeeg and Mardellc McMichael, who supervised Horizon Club and assisted with Y-Teens. J. C. HAWKINS, B.S., M.S. 'A-'Rx S ,A usa W MRs. GRACE LAWRENCE, A.B MISS VIRGINIA MAGNUSON, B.S. MISS VIOLA MCFARLAND, A.B., M.A. Mas. MILDRED NOEL, R.N. Howuzn V. PATTERSON, B.S., B.S., M.A. A. PALMER SNODGRASS, B.S., M.S. CLYDE A. REDPATH, A.B., M.A. Mathematics instructors were Margaret Hogan, who assisted with Y-Teens and was head sponsor of junior Red Crossg Hilda Irwin, who co-sponsored Math Club and assisted with Y-Teensg Carl Ison, who was assistant track coachg Wil- bur Unruh, who assisted with foot- ball and co-sponsored B.A.A. and Math Clubg and Gertrude Welch, who sponsored Girls' Pep Club and co-sponsored Camera Club. Social science instructors were Anna Marie Edwards, who spon- sored World Affairs Clubg Emma Lyman, who assisted with National Honor Societyg Harold Reade, who co-sponsored B.A.A. and was head i MAURICE E. SWANSON1 A-3- L. DALE PIGG, A.B., M.A. Mas. Man Simms, B.M.Ed M.M. HAROLD L. READE, B.S., M.E. FELIX SHULER, B.S., M.S. is Sf, if-rf Mlss VELMA SEATON, B.S., M.S. WILBUR V. UNRUH, A.B., M.S. F. W. STARKEY, B.S. coach of football, basketball, and golfg Clyde Redpath, who assisted with Travel Club and was head Hi-Y sponsorg Maurice Swanson, who coached debateg and Murlin Welch, who assisted with football and basketball. Foreign language instructors were Marguerite Crain, who co- sponsored Spanish Club and assisted with Y-Teensg L. Finnerty, who sponsored the Boys' Pep Club and Latin Clubg Edna Hetzel, who had charge of the Spelling Club and was head' sponsor of Y-Teensg and L. Dale Pigg, who co-sponsored Span- ish Club and was head sponsor of the Imlian. Miss Gxsnnums WELCH, A.B. W. W. STRONG, B.S., M.E. 466.- f -E. Miss NELLIE JEAN SUTTON, B.S 'UN' Mus. WILMA WHITE, A.B., M.A. f'-ix x. 'Qi-. G MURLIN WELCH, A.B., M.A. Mas. MAKDELLE MCMICHAEL, Miss DORA CATHERYN WILSON Industrial arts instructors were Harold Garver, who co-sponsored the Camera Club and sponsored the F.F.A.g Chauncey Gorsage, who supervised the Aviation and Arch- ery Clubs, Grace Lawrence, who assisted with junior Red Cross and co-sponsored the F.H.A.g Howard Patterson, who was responsible for Stamp Club and assisted with jun- ior Red Crossg and Nellie Jean Sut- ton, who assisted with Y-Teens and co-sponsored F.H.A. and Health and Happiness Club. Physical education directors were William Atwell, who supervised freshman basketball, and Sophia B.S., M.S. Hodshire, who sponsored G.A.A. and Girls Archery Club. Instructors in music and art were Harold George, who directed instru- mental music, dance band and solo club, Mary Spring, who had charge of vocal ensemblesg and Dora Cath- eryn Wilson, who sponsored Art Club and assisted with Junior Red Cross. School nurse was Mildred Noel, who was co-sponsor of the Health and Happiness Club. Office secretaries were Alberta Gallagher, Bettye Hall, Mrs. Glen Soellner, and Jeannine Caudill. Teachers relax after semester exams. m '4'5 VL emoriam ALTA MAE BHINK Miss Brink was everyone's friend. To know her was to love her. In the three short years she served as Shawnee-Mission's librarian, her cheerful smile and kindly word helped students and teachers alike. During the months of intense suffering, Miss Brink's concern was for her unfinished work at school. Her conscientious loyalty to a task once started drove her to completion of the task. She loved life and Wanted to live. Her indom- itable courage and zeal will forever be an in- spiration to us, her friends, whom she has left behind. ALTA MAE BRINK Died December 18, 1946 THE HUMAN TIIUIIH 'Tis the human touch in this world that counts, The touch of your hand and mine, Which means far more to the fainting heart Than shelter and bread and wine 5 For shelter is gone when the night is o'er, And bread lasts only a day, But the touch of the ham! and the sound of the voice Sing on in the soul alway. SPENCER Mlcnuu. Fmas. FESTIVAL UE YESTERDAY IN THE GOOD OLE DAYS -NOVEMBER, 1923 REMEMBER THE FALL FESTIVALS that Shawnee-Mission used to sponsor? People came from far and wide to see displays of every imaginable nature. Attendance grew to number 7,000 before the Festivals were finally discontinued in 1936. The first Fall Festival was held at the high school in 1923. The fair, which lasted for three days-November 1, 2, 3-was considered a huge success. The Indian published by Shawnee-Mission's first graduating class stated that the first festival's success was due to the untiring efforts of Professor Berry, Manager of the Festival, and Mr. D. A. Morgan, Super- intendent of the School. Companies which exhibited at that first fair were Kansas City Power and Light, Byrne Lumber Co., Holland Furnace, Wyandotte Feed Co., Ford Motor Co., johnson County Gas Co., Cunningham Heating Co., Kansas Evergreen Nursery, R. O. Larson, and Frisbie Coal Co. ' em orieri Memories . . . classes . . . as haunting as the lilting strains of an old song . . . faces and names that will forever linger in memory as seniors, juniors, sopho- mores, and freshmen. Auld Lang Sync . . . the climax . . . seniors . . . baccalaureate, commencement, and farewells. One More Tomorrowv . . . juniors . . . the top of the ladder now in sight . . . the Prom, candle-lighting procession, caps and gowns enviously viewed from afar. Sooner or Later . . . sophomores . . . the goal seems so far off . . . carefree fun and frolic . . . who cares about gradu- ation yet? Those Endearing Young Charms . . . freshmen . . . with never a worry but many a smile. So memory turns the pages of timeg and, like long- remembered strains of music, melodies live again in faces and names. ZA. D i. TONWE So you CAN ME GOSH cous1N,wE'LL HAVE TO GO TO THE DANCE ,..f OF HAWNEE ISSIO HMM YOU cfm GO DRESSED THAT WAYQ coma ow g,..J THE Guys AND cams S A w fv ... GET SO NEW CLC Fon you 'HENRU ,mnxus - LETS oo! A M HHV La L SUNSH EE 13' T o you DANCE N I HAT yo Ne,,,f DIVINE!- jf X X .2 JERRY MALONEY LYN SMITH . 1 s 2 Q, . I JOHN Euucu- DON KAI-IAN Class rings arrived in early November, and commencement invitations were se- lected soon thereafter. Most important of all fall activities for the seniors was their class play, junior Miss, which was given with dual casts on two evenings. Miss Ruth Browne, Thespian sponsor, directed Iunior Miss. Head senior sponsor was Mr. Strong. Other senior sponsors were Miss Anna Marie Edwards, Miss Emma Lyman, Mr. Shular, Mrs. Spring, Mr. Starkey, Mr. Swanson, and Mrs. White, Martha Fraser was crowned Home-com- ing Queen at the Olathe game. Dottie Jones and Helen Kittle attended her. Athletic seniors earned their share of letters in foot- ball, basketball, and track. Honors also went to senior debaters, musicians, members of the National Honor Society, and Thespians. As a climax to social events, the Junior- Senior Reception was held in the spring. iixdufcl Jang gne 7' SENIUBS GRADUATES or SHAWNEE-MISSION on its Silver Anniversary! The class of '47 deemed it a high privilege to climax this milestone of progress with commencement exercises. Fall senior activities got underway with a warm election campaign. When the seniors went to the polls, they chose an all-male quartet of officers - Jerry Maloney for president, Lyn Smith, vice-president, John Eulich, secretary, and Don Kahan, treasurer. Co mme 11 Celllellt is I' I1 th e . air. Relaxing before the processional. Thesbians 'UIQJQRSALI'iialibfsbciefy C Pepbiub Pep Club- National Honor Soriety Pep Club Home-room Pres. I Treas. Latin Club junior Play Adv. Camera Y-Teens Hi-Y Y.TegQn5 F,I-LA, V mum- ' W HWY Aviation Club Travel Club 8 Football Capt. IV Hi-Y Athletic Club V 1-we N- 'V' X, A 4 I I . ' il' Q i if 5 ,Q 5. BISHOP, BILL Pres. Student Con ress Editor of The Mission Senior Ppigf YI I Vice-pres. Of C1855 I Sec. of Pep Club Pep Club Annual Staff National Honor Society Thespians Basketball I, II Basketball Capt. IV r' .Y 9 - .,, 0-J . .. BROWN, ROBERT LEE Athletic Club Hi-Y Football I, II BARNARD, Thespians V-Pres. Retorts Football Junior Play V-Pres. Aviation Club Retorts Senior Play Aviation Club I 'ix Ml ' BISHOP, MELVIN BRINKMAN, BARBARA BLATTMAN, ALBERT BARDWELL, KATHLEEN Music Awards HOW?-f00m PICS- I, II Pres. Stamp, Club Book Club Thespians Aviation Club V-Pres. World Events Club Track Book Club Hi-Y BRANDMEYER, Bos BURCH, BEVERLY BREWSTER, PHIL BARKER, VIRGINIA Home-room Pres. I, II Spanish Club Football III, IV Y-Teens Aviation Club Pen Club Basketball III Drama Club Hi-Y Y-Teens Hi-Y F.H.A. BUKOWSKI, JOE Bukowski, JUNE BEELS, THOMAS BROWNAMARU-YN Annual Staff Steno-ettes Wentworth M. A. ThQ5Plan5 Retorrs Book Club Archery Club SCIHO1' Play National Honor Society Latin Club Hi-Y' Y-TGCHS BRCIBVN, SHIRLEY COKELEY, DELTA CHASTAIN JACK CALLAFHAN' ANNA . National Honor Society Girls' Trio Athletic Club Nauonal Honor Society 30 pep Club U Choir Math Club National Forensic League Student Congress III Orchestra Hi'Y Y'Teen5 av: ---. vt' CARTER, GERALD CAMPBELL, NELLIE MAE COLE, LEWIS CRAVENS. SHIRLEY Pep Club Steno-ettes Pres. F.F.A. Steno-ettes Sec. Math Club Red Cross Athletic Club Red Cross Hi-Y Y-Teens Hi-Y Y-Teens any 'R XI? COOPER. JEAN COOPER, DON COINER, ZOE CALLAGHAN, BILL Steno-ettes Pep Club Steno-ettes Y-Teens Athletic Club National Honor Society F.H.A. Track F.H.A. 1- .5 'Q' 'Is i CRUMMETT, MARJORIE CUNNINGHAM, DELORES COL-I-ON, THERESA CORDES, BARBARA Mission Staff Camera Club Gil-15' Trio Annual Staff Pres-, Y'Teen5 N3IlOl'lHl Honor Pfegw Spanish Drama Club G.A.A. Senior Play Travel Club 'tv'- ,-vmv' pg, - CLARK, DORIS CURRAN, HAZEL CRAWFORD, ROGER DIXON' JENNET-I-A Band Football Sec., G.A'A. Y-Teens Track Ygreens Orchestra Hi-Y Pres. IV 4-gm , DYKSTRA, EDWARD DYER, DORIS DYER, IRIS DENNI, MARTHA Athletic Club Home Economics Home Economics PICS-, PCP Club Football, Hi-Y Home Nursing Home Nursing Annual Staff Red Cross Red Cross Mission Staff '0nrf' K' EDGERTON, JADINE EULICH, JOHN EDM1ssoN, VIRGINIA ERNST, ELINOR Drama Club Class Secretary IV Steno-ettes Pep Club Y-Teens Football Y.Teen5 V-Pres. Home Room Book Club Track Aviation Club Drama Club vga 469 arse 4' wr-.gf FRISBIE, DEAN FENN,1 DOROTHY FOSTER, ROBERT FRASER, MARTHA Retorts South Dakota H. S. Athletic Club National Honor Society Golf Class Treas. I Aviation Club Sec. Annual Staff National Honor Student Council I Hi-Y Treas. Pep Club FRASER, BARBARA F11-ZWATER, ROBERT FISHER, JAMES FRIEZE, CLARENCE V-Pres. Travel Club Ret0ffS Pep Club Thesplans Girls' Ensemble Debate Math Club Hi-Y f'L..:.. 11 .1 r'l,,L Tuna- Ili.-fn.--. f'l..L Qnninr Dlnv , . .sill ' we FJ 1 WJ' ,A IR, I, K I X ,LA 1. fl, FLEET, JOYCE FELDER, ELIZABETH GORMAN, ROBERT FRISBIE, MAUR1TzA Annual Staff Pres. Inner Circle National Honor Society Pep Club National Honor Society National Forensic League Drama Club Pep Club Y-Teens 10' Q--'J' GRAYBILL, ALICE GATES, JOHN GLENN. PAT GRIMES. DONNELL Steno-ettes Pep Club Pep Club Football Aviation Club Mission Staff I-Hflll Club Basketball Latin Club B.A.A. National Honor Society Aviation Club on 'r 1'-MT' '1 ' Gmcos, JERRY GOODARD, MADGE HERBERT GREEN Gll.PEN. PHYLLIS Golf Band Drama Club Hi-Y Orchestra Chorus Cabinet Athletic Club Y-Teens Mixed Chorus T HARTFORD, CLARA BELLE .HAND, MARGARET HOWE, CHARLES HARRIS, CAROL V-Pres. Band Steno-ettes Thespians Music Contest Orchestra Drama Club Pep Club Double Trio National Honor Society Y-Teens Senior Play Spanish Club HARNDEN, MARY HOLMBERG, ROSE LEE HARNIJEN, ANNA MAE HOLMES, ROGER Red Cross Pep Club Y-Teens Band Y-Teens Mission Staff Red Cross Pep Band V-Pres. Home Room Book Club Orchestra ,344 .N ,Q bv- y, .5 HUG:-ms, CLARENCE HANSEN, ELLEN HAEENER, NANCY HEIDER, JEAN FO0Iball F.H.A. Thespians Band Track Y-Teens Senior Play Rerorts Hi-Y Book Club Spanish Club Orchestra 111 HALEY, FRANCIE HARRIS, ALMA SUE HARE, GEORGE JAMIESON, HARRIET Aviation Club V-Pres. Lighthouse V-Pres. Inner Circle Drama Club Y-Teens State Music Contest V-Pres. F.F.A. Latin Club Fashion Show National Honor Society Hi-Y Y-Teens YTD' JOYCE, ELOISE JOHNSTON, Curr JONES, JOANNE JAMES, KENNETH 34 Sec. Book Club Mission Staff Y-Teens Athletic Club Spanish Club Camera Club Steno-ettes Sec., Gun Club Y-Teens Archery Club Math Club Travel Club JACKSON, ARNOLD JOHNSON, PATRICIA JOHNSON, WANDA JENNENS, WILLIAM Athletic Property Manager History Club Steno-ettes Stamp Club Athletic Club Book Club Spanish Club Gun Club Hi-Y Y-Teens Y-Teens 2- 5 Q ICQ A J I JACK, DON JONES, DOTTIE JANKUS, HENRY , . Senior Play National Honor Society Annual Staff N2f10n21H0H0f Society' Retorts Make-up Editor Annual Mission Staff Treas- Pep Club Cheerleader Il, III, IV World Affairs Club Efinof of Annual Vlce-Pres. Thesplans KAHAN, DON KELLER, KATHLEEN KYLE. SHIRLEY KLAPKA, BOB Football Senior Play Cheerleader Pep Club Track Pep Club Thespians Thespians Athletic Club National Honor Society National Honor Society Mission Staff lx A 2 s ,ig 1 , Hi TS gk 2 'I 3 K Afif- X if--.M 8 Q I at fl 54. LA BAR, TOM LADEW, CAROL LARBERG, Bon LEADER, EDNA Pep Club Drama Club Class Pres. III Steno-ettes Drama Club Latin Club Thespians Travel Club Athletic Club Book Club Cheerleader Y-Teens LEIBACK MARY LAND, BETTY Low,RosAL1E LAND DAVID Archery Club Thespians Mission Staff Mission Staff G.A.A. Pep Club Drama Club Pep Club F.H.A. Y-Teens Camera Club Tennis LUSCHEN, Bon LORD, JAMES MCCARTNEY, KITTY MALONEY JERRY Westport High School Football Annual Staff Class Pres IV Football Basketball Pep Club Football Basketball National Honor Society Mission Staff Basketball Qi ,l,1V Vkt. , - 5 - A ,fi setoas D' , H Y ' I K if K, J A' .sf . 1 1 af Y s ' 101 '-2 , X W ,Sami z R x vvk ,,qZi5I. Y M . 35 .R 1 W 1 tl X gal: rr .I.v MAYHEW, ROBERT Athletic Club Math Club Gun Club MADDOX, MAXINE MISSAR, STAN MELCHING, Jo ANN Pres. Steno-ettes G0lf Drama Club Annual Staff Pen Club Travel Club National Honor Society AIl1l2f1C Club Y-Teens W' z, in af K u gf ' .. as ig N 4, Xa. Allin.. MARIN, MIKE MACKEY, JOE MCCANNON, BILLIEJEAN MHLER, DEAN Aviation Club F.F.A. Home Makers Aviation Club Spanish Club Drama Club G,A,A, Gun Club F.F.A. Hi-Y Y-Teens Hi-Y 3 A, .Q si QV F' I I SRS MGMICI-IAEL, CRAIG MILLER, LOLA MOORE, JAMES MAXWELL, GLORIA Football Treas. Annual Staff Basketball Spanish Club Basketball Sec. F.H.A. Pres. History Club Sec. Art Club Student Congress National Honor Society Athletic Club Chorus X X 1 if F MASON, ERNEST MOCK, DORIS MART, TOM MYERS, FLOYD F.F.A., Sentinel Steno-ettes Mission Staff AIh1CIiC Club Camera Club Camera Club Camera Club Hi-Y Pow-Wow Drama Club Retorts DeSoto High School .,,--f ee' T MAEDER, ALBERT MARX, JOE MACK, BILL NELSON, PEGGY Gun Club Athletic Club Track Travel Club Hi-Y Gun Club Football Archery Club Athletic Club Y-Teens we VFW? NELSON, EVA LEE NELSON, GORDON OBERIIOLTZ, ZADA OWSLEY, CHARLES Debate Camera Club Spanish Club Junior Play F.F.A. Drama Club Y-Teens Hi-Y Art Club PIRNIE, CARL PLAPP, ELMER- PHIPPS, PRESTON RAITT, JERELDINE Football Football Pep Club Austin High School Athletic Club Track Travel Club Orchestra Hi-Y Athletic Club Hi-Y National Honor Society PA-INTER, PAT PHILLIPS, ROBERT PFLUMM, CLARINE PREWITT, VERNON Student Congress Camera Club Mission Staff Aviation Club PCP Club Hi-Y Steno-ettes Retorts Sec. Home Room Athletic Club Travel Club Hi-Y PECKI BQB RICE, JOANNE RUSSELL, CHARLES ROBERTSON, ROBERTA The5Pl30S Steno-ettes Retorts Chorus National Honor Society Camera Club F.F.A. Steno-ettes PCP Club Y-Teens Camera Club Y-Teens f - man., -0 ' ,, A M? x.,,..,.f ROBINSON, LUCY RUSHER, PAULINE ROWLAND, BLAINE RUPARD, ARLENE 38 Pep Club Steno-ettes Camera Club Sfen0-ette5 Thespians Red Cross F.F.A. Travel Club Aflfll-131 Slflff Y-Teens Southeast High School Y-Teens 1' 'Q' 4, T ' -. , Wt- K ,. . . . s-, ig. . ,Q .455 ROBERTSON, BOB RANKIN, LORRAINE RENNER, Jo ANNE ROUTON, RUTH Treas. Pep Club Home-room Pres. IV F.H.A. Annual Staff Pres. Home Room Steno-ettes Y-Teens Mission Staff junior Play Band Drama Club Sec. Pen Club A 41..- REIN. Bos SPRINGER, Doms SIMS, JOE SEYMOUR, B05 Football Spanish Club F,F,A, F,F,A, Bmkefbflll Y-TCCHS Office Reporter Athletic Club V-Pres. Athletic Club Drama Club Travel Club fs fx d -' Q ,Q r? SowERs, HAROLD SLAGLE, DICK STEWART, PAT STEELE. JERRY Golf Physics Club Annual Staff F.F.A. Athletic Club Dance Band Thespians Aviation Club Math Club Hi-Y Pep Club, Sec. Hi-Y SMITH. LYN STANDIFORD, JASON SCHWEIGER, FLORENCE Spupnugn, HARRY Football Fovrball .lUUi0f Red Cross National Honor Society, Pres Bvkeiball Basketball Travel Club Football National Honor Society Tl-ack Camera Club Basketball 39 V' 'W' !5 SNYDER, EDDIE STACK, KARIN STICKROD, DoN SLAYTON, WELSH National Honor Society National Honor Society Paseo High School Horizon Club, Pres. Football Basketball Chemistry Club Basketball 'I' rack STAGNER, DALE SHERFEY, MARVIN STOKER, FRANKIE SNYDEW BILL Camera Club Hi-Y V-Pres., G.A.A. Science Club Camera Club Home Economics Hi-Y Physics Club Y-Teens SHORE, BILL STEWART' WANDA SULLIVAN' PAT ' STEWART, ROSEMARY Steno-ettes Hi-Y Sfenofffes Archery Club Athletic Club Travel Club GAA. Travel Club Y-Teens L SAND, MAETEENA SWAIM, Lois Scorr, JACK SAGMOEN, Tom G.A.A. Steno-ettes Pep Club Hi-Y Y-Teens Chorus Thespians Athletic Club Archery Club Y-Teens Hi-Y.' V-Pres. Basketball HMV' ii? QQ TOWNSEND, LEON TAYLOR, CAROLINE TRUE, STERLING TRIMBLE, JAMES Senior Play Glee Club Aviation Club Athletic Club Track Southwest High School Camera Club Camera Club Central Union High Sfhogl A cappella Chorus Gun Club Debate C3 If TREGO, JEANENE TESCHE, RICHARD TOLSON, DOROTHY TRUDELL, PAT Business Mgr. Annual Pep Club Assoc. Editor Mission Chorus National Honor Society Track Student Congress Westport High School Pep Club V-Pres. Home Room Pep Club Y-Teens -QT? T-D127 TO0.LEY, MERLYN TAF-i-, ELIZABETH TOOLEY, MARJORIE TAYLOR, NORMA HI-Y . National Hongi- Sgciefy Steno-ettes Steno-ettes Afhlerlf Club Pres, Rerorts Glee Club Y-Teens Travel Club Pres, Book Club DeSoto High School F.H.A. .JNJ 'KN A , VIARD, VICTOR VETTER' BOB VAN MEERHAEGHE, VIRGINIA WASSER, ROGER Math Club Aviation Club sfen0'eff'-55 Annual Staff Retoi-15 Y-Teens Aviation Club my F.H.A. I WILLIAMS' MARGIE WAY, WALTER WATSON, LORES WHARTON, MICHAEL 510004385 Football Band Thespians, Pres. PCP Club Basketball Orchestra Senior Play Yfreens Track Y-Teens Boys' Quartette WOLFE, JOE Yosr, GALE WALTER, CHARLEEN Sl-IANAHAN, JIM Athletic Club National Honor Society Drama Club Football Drama Club Spanish Club Senior Play Baseball Hi-Y Y-Teens Y-Teens Athletic Club eniom gvfraor inary STERLING, CLYDE BROOKS. JOHN KoEI-IN, BILL Football Pep Club Southeast High Track Sec. Soph. Class All-State Team Orchestra Q dent Cole speaks. All State Sterling Record breaker Crawford -Y ' XE I W ,L v. X M N Q UA Sflholarly Callaghan Down X ' 1 Bill Reddig Bob Cumley Selection of the class rings in the fall, a successful junior play in late winter, and the Junior-Senior Re- ception in the spring were events which interested all juniors. Five per cent of the junior class was elected to the National Honor Society. Eight juniors were chosen to assist with the 1947 Indian. juniors with athletic ability were on the job collecting letters in football, basketball, track and golf. These athletes were loyally supported by the thirty juniors who were elected to the Pep Clubs. Judy Johnson and Bob Brown rep- resented the juniors as cheerleaders. Head sponsor of the junior class was Miss Viola McFarland. Other junior sponsors were Mr. Alleman, Mrs. Fast, Mr. George, Mr. Hawkins, Mrs. Irwin, Mrs. Magnuson, Mr. Pigg, Mr. Reade, and Mr. Snodgrass. With the completion of such a successful school 66 77 He 7I e 0I'l'l 0l'l'0l,U .IUNIIJBS , two hundred and seventy-three jun- iors who arrived in September took over their new role as upper classmen. A heated election campaign resulted in the choice of Bill Reddig for junior presi- dent, Bob Cumley, vice-presidentg Marilyn Hardin, secretary, and George Slough, treasurer. LIKE VETERANS Marilyn Hardin George Slough year, the class of '48 has shown itself capable of assum- ing responsibility as seniors next year. We want a part in the junior play. Wh en shall We have the It S -- r. prom? Akright, Jim Allen, Mary Lou Allison, John Allsup, Carl Amos, Eugene Back, Connie Banks, Earl Banks, Joanne I Barnard, Nancy ff an Bauer, Rudolph Sv- I t Q'- C? Barnes, M317 Ann Barron, Randall Bauer, Frank B6aCl1, Delores Beatty, Richard Bell, David dir Bennett, Darrell Benninghoven, Richard Berwick, john Blake, Bernice S- Bogard, Donald Bowden, Betty Boyd, Jerry Bradley, Anita Bratten. Leroy ....,-.-, .... ...U-, -. -.W Y V , ,, 1? if' I Brewster, Arthur WE? Br0Wn. Jeanette Brown, Lora Brown, Robert Burwell, Don 'Qu Campbell, Jane Capper, Robert Carlson, Yvonne Carr, Mary wif X ' . Carrier, Clinton Cessna, Phyllis Chesser, Jerre Chappell, Naomi 'fx Jn Childers, Kclleam Clark, Ila Mae 3, 4' Cohn, Don Clawson, jack bf T' COIHIIS, R0bCl'! Cox, Kathleen Cox, Martha Cornell, Ed Cooke, A- C- Collum, Pat C x , ,J , , ,A k 3 ' Crr,i t Ji Crebbs, Pat C0ff1iSh, John ffl? Cox, Shirley Crank, Joyce .fy Q .: . olrllr C t xr, ,'---i, iw , C 1 2 if qi W , .. f K ' , ,Q 1 gg 'C -Qs' f K A ' 'R -. 1:: w if' ha, i 5' ,f - . Davis, Laura Davies, Donald fc- . ,. - 4 K., if C Wi Cottrell, Barbara Cumley, Robert Davidson, Medora Dahnke, W'illiam - - - --, ---,,-- I.. -.. ....... 5-v-., --......-.. Dodger, Mary Lee Dunham, Jackson DeGrande. Ella i H-f DeN00n, Zoe Ann h Y MG' .ST ...-si 5 -f X E .I el A 'gl N. 332.3 - .- n rs., .A 'fisifsfl Dutcher, Monte ., , Eutsler, Darrel Eaton, Janet Evans Eubank, Elfrreda Etherrngton, Richard England, Lenofe England, Betty Eidson, Jane Darlene N . Qu., Freely, Faler, Shirley Farris, George Feldef, -,-- ..... ,.,,,,r ,,,,, , off - - ---f- uf- ---v---- 1 436. in 'HEE- Fisher, David Fehn, Doris Finley, Richard Figler, jean I 4 r e f, Q: T ,,,, in si. re-' xg-rf 3 'ix M 1 . 5, ,fi ff f ? . l .sa A i Ffombefg, Fielding Goodrich, Mafgaret Gaddis, Don Gill, Betty Giffin, Donald s , ,N ,Q ,L,i 4 L V W ,. . . . - K i w b ,,. Jw V A .i Q . :X had w J - V- 1' - X 'k ',:625?e1,f-l 2 'fl ' Q F. 5 H V ,, X ,' ,x2iSq53 ,N ? i , - ee, L. NA rf? , , A Y G0dfl'CY, Duane Glauser. Bonnie Gilman 50 S YM? ,U ll Gower, Frank Griffith 1 EVCIYU Grosshart, Claudine Y Harlow, Paulnne wb 2- A Q x H Q, fi 'P -- 2. . -V 4 1- E . Hampton, Wa e Harvey, Evelyn I r .Q , n M -f .qg,,i?l:'Nv, ,W ,.,.,. Q . . X., ,, m , , ., ,,, ,v,.,v,, ,Av :,,M, . X :Serge-z15,iEf'2 ' i x .W f Jr, .. , , rl K ' -. T ? ' x Harrison, Ronzlld -q its 5 if Hall, Dora Harper, Sue Henderson, Jo Anne . f ' - V H Q kr K i ' Hicks, Van Hartley, Francke Hodges, Ralph Holland, jackie Holmberg, Arthur Hill, William Hopkins, Dona Lee Hunter, Gene Howard, jean Holmes, Willian1 Q, 4,k I W ',. Q 40 + .w . Q-f . 1 3. Hardin Marilyn Irwig Tripper jones Donald Johnson Barbara johnson, Shirley ,lOhf1SIOfl. 5l'1il'leY johnson, Judy Kortier, Dona -...gr I F . K f ia K , , V' , -mr wh' X xy' iii Knoth, Martha Kosr, StePhen Kyle. Grew Klein, Raymond USR'- Nha-yu ,wx 535 Larson, Paul Lamb' Jerry Leger, Robert Lintner, Charlotte ?V' Gi 43 Letcher, john Lindquist, Nat T.. Lilley, Neil Q .,,. S K I . I is Litas A VM ' l ,M -- fl rf: f ' Q J. - 'QW t k - I 'az 'X Liverett, Herbert fu? 1.-:' Louk, Gail Lindwall, Hubert 16 Land,John La xx .Q i Luebbert, Kathryn fbi NL Logan, Merlin Lundgren, Ed Mace, Patricia Mann, Margy '77-' 1-FN ,G f r- Marcum, Donna Maeder, Elva June Mallinson, Martha Maqkingggh, Dick 1' Martm, Nancy Matthews, Katherine McGinnis, Ed L Earlene joan ne McKee, Beverly McQuillen, Jean 45' Darlene 'E-',' Muldaugh, Jeannine fs: 'vzrr Mills, Mary e 455 .f L, Z 1'- Oh Morton, Janet Murison, Josephine Myers, LeRoy Neff, Sue 31 , X, Y we gi Q -::'A. vf ' if if A.Mv. ff A Y. 39? elJ ' :ws-. 1 N S .LQ W 1 ,:. f ' my ' 1 fd xxxwzl -...,.., f . , K . 4 L ir. l Q., K ., E KM br sv 'R-f Z 'N' ' 2 494551415 4515 JW Red lg Bull Renner Betty GF ff . W., Zz., 'A i X 1 PL , V -,L 1 Richar s, ack s N , . Wi 1 X X eeves, Teddy ?.. - '27 ,i J 1 v .,,.f Richardson, Joyce -' Ricenbaw, Joyce ' 'So 1 i .. , . Myrna dim -ch' - Fi ' 3 ky! Ng 1 d 1 QM. Rourke, G R . ,K 'tif f--I' ' 5--v, Scoville, Lucille X L----r 3 x NX X 'hmmm' ww' Simpson, Lenore Smiley, Richard ,,-.. S do an i Ni iii A A Q S S J !' Smith, Dolores Stephenson, Don Standiford, Mary Stonebraker, Jolene Slason, Martha l Smith, Mary r i '. Wi vl' 1 ... g, L 'if I Y,L'f gg g. ,S ar ir' . ikr , fel' 5? 1 ,.. , ,Ziff I g Kr., 7. X Ky. li .A , ,V ., wr fu, V ,-6. Slough, George ie' ' , R . M x I QT ,fi ,A :fb 4 x 5. is L 'lixxt 4 1? S as 'X' ? Ae , 1' , x .1 4 .. Q Q I ,rw f 135 .5 Q, ' iff! f., Stoll, John Stoke, David Sullivan, Jane nv le we-wr f f- C' , i gl 4 -.,. 1' xl af W . V Q 4? Stump, Richard ,.,,,,fv. V , P1 1 i We www ffl Stokes, Stuart Smith, Virginia Sffongi Glenn ww! mm , W' W 'gg-I '1 w Q lk 3 Q , Q ' A ,..y teaa aawaaa S - A fa if ry' ae atri N 1 1 Townsend, Shirley Trego, Bob Tomlinson, Iohn Travis. Raymond Tyler, Juanita Turley, Genevieve if Vanderwerf Ray Walmer JOYCE ' , 'Q 1 l..fg'5'f'5i5flf5i:f J f Way, Beniamin Webb, Jerry If Wiyninger, Donald Vance, Charlene Q A as A ,- -.fz-vix, fi KW, 1, B ,M gf r I ,xi any if K Vanwallegham, Victor Viafd. R059 Mafie 1 -, -' ' -5 9-1 , ,T J- ' I 'P X X . 'xy , White, Jean Weaver, Bob fr ,f life Wilber, Fred Williams, Dee Lores 9 6 A 2 X Wright, Joyce Wilson, Thomas 47. Wing, Shirley Willhelmy, John WlYni0gCF, AUD Winklepleck, Tracy Werby, Gerald ,xx x Wells, Tom 5 Young, Jo Ann Medora, skillful and graceful. Su :5,,.l,, K . . MM- f Q Q wffizlrgs 1 .- ' H 3, X , 5, -fig . A -C5 l Young, Ruth johns, Conrad Wg fAeir Jmb . . 4 3 l L at heart. Mary xs dependable. Scout Slough serves for the best Prospective talent for junior play. mode .7aLnfecl yuniord Dottye masters , Teddy knows that hef 11005 practice pays. You tell 'em, Paul. jumping Joe Hem Steady, Carl. ESX K6 ! 79 00l'lel' Ol' ale? SIJPHIIMUHES Mark Rivard Bild MCCBMI WELL BEGUN is HALF DONEH goes the old proverb. Assenlblypl Having made a good beginning, the Class of '49 anslfl the reached the half-way mark with few casualties along the way. Rivalry was keen as campaign managers waged their contest over election of class officers. A spirit of fairness and good fun prevailed, and the campaign closed with satisfactory results. For their leaders the sophomores chose Mark Rivard as presidentg Lewis McCann, vice-presidentg Diane Brewster, secretaryg and Jack Luschen, treasurer. Head sponsor for the sophomores was Mr. Ison. Assisting sponsors were Miss Elizabeth Boys, Miss Ruth Browne, Mrs. Crain, Mr. Finnerty, Mr. Gorsage, ma ns Mrs. Hodshire, Miss Margaret Hogan, Mr. Patterson, Mr. Redpath, Miss Velma Seaton, and Mr. Welch. No school activity progressed without the sopho- mores' active participation. Many stalwart sopho- mores found their places on football, basketball, and track squads. Thirteen sophomores were Pep Club members. Sophomore debaters held their own with more advanced debaters. Music groups had several members of this class enrolled. At a sophomore assem- bly dramatic talent was discovered as the story of Little Red Riding Hood entertains audience WANTED Little Red Riding Hood came to life on the stage. With the completion of two successful years as underclassmen, the sophomores look forward to be- coming upper-classmen next year. Diane Brewster Jack Luschen BOYS' H. R. FIRST ROW' flefl ro rigblb--Oswald, J.: Leger, G.: Meyer, M.: McCann, L.: Maddux, B.: Bayne. A.: Brown, L. SFC- OND ROW-Pierce. E.: Park. P.: Sperry. S.: Srumpff. J.: Wilson. J.: Dotson. C.: LaBerg, A. THIRD ROW4Ols0n. M.: Snyder. J.: Middleton. N.: Trent, C.: Welsh, D.: Bowman, K.: Holloway. V. FOURTH ROW-Luschen, J.: Bel. lamy. H.: Hunt. G.: W'arkins. J.: Brinkoener, B.: Hire. E.: Hilton. E. BROWNE'S H. R. C FRONT ROW Hel! In right!-Campbell, T.: King, C.: Neer, P.: Horner. L.: Taylor, D.: Copple. B. SECOND ROW- Beasley. K.: Walter. B.: Glazer. F.: Buckley. J.: Purger. N.: Burris. N. THIRD ROW-Wilson, R.: Gibson, R.: Sty nerr. B.: Bgham. K.: Nelson, H.: Jones. R. TOP ROW-Roe. P.: Noel, J.: Neuman, R.: Beck, W.: Parker, G.: Neel F.: Lewis. . CRAIN'S H. R. FIRST ROW Hell to rigbll-Amos, R.: Hahn. A.: Houston, M.: Hilliard. B.: Sieleman, S.: Wagner, M. SECOND ROW -Cokeley, T.: Leonard, S.: McGee. G.: Gage-I. J.: Stewart, L.: Miller. D. THIRD ROW-Lida. C.: Hewitt, V.: Goetz, P.: Thayer, B.: Mueller. J.: Pope, J.: Henson, C. FOURTH ROW-Koenig, C.: Webb, D.: Cramer, D.: Howell, B.: Galloway, C.: Hopmann, V.: Hayman. C. FINNERTY'S H. R. FIRST ROW fleft to right!-Wilbur, I.: Hann, D.: Veatch, V.: Kunz, L. SECOND ROW-Ashner, F.: Crane, G.: Patch, E.: Sharp, R.: Brewster, D.: Wolf, M.: Stutz, F. THIRD ROW-Schmidt, J.: Lawrence, R.: Paup, R.: Willson, D.: Kent, M.: Ross, B.: Grassberger, S. FOURTH ROW-Powell, D.: Grether, K.: Risiord, N.: Brandon, J.: Brown, J.: Vander Dussen, N.: Puckett, B. FIRST ROW Hell lo rigbtl-Reynolds, L., Davis, R., Stiles, J., Francis, D., Klassen, W.: Nelson, G. SECOND ROW -DeGrande. ,l-1 Cummins, N., Smart, D., Hoffman. J., Cox. G., Gadow, M. THIRD ROW4Tripplerr, K., Ryckert, J., Beilharz, R.: Swan. D., Dodge, D., Carlson. K. FOURTH ROW-Adams, G., Welch, B., Moore, J., Grimes, C., Nick- son. E.: Procrnr, R. FIRST ROW Ile!! to rigbtl-Hickman, V., Bruce, M. SECOND ROW-Cathey, M., Reynolds. E., Lundy, B., Armi- tage, D., Scoville, V., Flint, B., McCarty. D. THIRD ROW-Ryckcrx, M., Ross, F., Bates, L., Brown, N., Peachey, E.: Dyer, I..,JHart, M. FOURTH ROW-Wilwn, B., Thies, B., Schnierle, A., Mahan, J., Rowland, D., Burkhart. S.: Koehler, . HOGAN'S H. R. FIRST ROW flelt to righlj--Black, S.: Peircy, M.: Scott, B.: Fitzpatrick. S.: Travis, E.: Brown, E.: Reeder, J.: SECOND ROW-Needham, W.: Jackson, A.: Wasser, K.: Keech, N.: Sanford, J.: Conlon, J.: Waddell, J.: Acree. B. THIRD ROW-Wood, R.: Zahner, M.: Wilmn, F.: Reed. J.: Whanon, B.: Rivard. M.: Brown, R. ISON'S H. R. FIRST ROW Nell I0 P58511-Wade. D-9 F01-IIS. S-5 Glenn, N.: McKee, C.: Gamber, D.: Brinnan, S. SECOND ROW- Joseph, J.: Bolt, J.: Minnich, M.: Linder, G.: Stark. J.: Brown, R.: Cole, D. THIRD ROW-Gabler, J.: McCoy, J.: McFarland, R.: Miller, J.: Shrewsbury, C.: Kliver, J. FOURTH ROW-McVey, W.: Woodson, D.: Spivey, E.: Kast- man, J.: Renfrow, F.: Parkhurst, W. PATTERSON'S H. R. FIRST ROW fleft to right!-Totton, J.: Helmreich. L.: McGinnis. R.: Thomas, G.: Blackwell, C.: Kelso, R. SECOND ROW-Tennis. J.: Berry, J.: Thomas, J.: Cordry, B.: Hunter, F.: Chapman. D.: Hartman, J. THIRD ROW-Walmer, K.: Ross, F.: Boss, E.: Cutirta. J.: Brown, L.: Nelson. H.: Sterling. W.: Parmley, B. REDPATI-PS H. R. FIRST ROW UG!! 10 Yiibfl-W0lf9, D-5 Kiffhfll- E-1 Webk. L.: Noble. J.: Cunningham, A.: Cunningham. D. SECOND ROW-Gatton. S.: Hill, R.: Naylor, L.: Peters, S.: Pyle, M.: White, V. THIRD ROV'-Peterson, B.: Heinricks, B.: Harris, D.: Lindquist, D.: Crummett, M.: Munroe. R. FOURTH ROW--Womack, L.: Berry, E.: Staples, L.: Pasmore. B.: Grill, R.: Cardwell. J. SEATON'S H. R. FIRST ROW Ilefl to rigbtj-Lawing, J.: Ellis, D.: Beeker, D.: Walters, R.: Wlilson, J.: True. P.: Blattman. A. SEC OND ROW-Richerson, N.: Helm, V.: Stover, M.: Allison. J.: Yates. J.: Bell. B. THIRD ROW-Green. C.: Little, J. VanDenabeele. L.: Stewart. H.: Colin, S.: Holm, K.: Cundiff, V. FOURTH ROW--4Pierce, M.: VanDeBerghe, P. Evans. P.: Burkhart, B.: Freeman, J.: Maddox, L.: Kill, D.: Holl, M. WELCH'S H. R. FIRST ROW Hel! lo right!-Campbell, R.: Vanderwerf, J.: Heider, A.: Van Meter, C.: Terry, A. SECOND ROW- I-lenricks, K.: Moulson, R.: jones, D.: Lindwall, A.: Tibbetts, M. THIRD ROW'-Stonebraker. D.: Vanderwerf, B.: Dennis, F.: jones, B.: Staples, H.: England, J.: Hagar, D. FOURTH ROW-Jankowski, M.: Swisher, B.: Zipp, G.: Morrison, F.: Riley, D.: Gildner, A.: Dunham, B. l Bah Cfpm-593' Norma jean Miller IW ESHNIAN CLASS Tl-llfY GET SNlALLER EVERY YEAR,,' say the upper-classmen as they look over the new crop of freshmen in the fall of the chool year. Diminutive of stature though hey may be and green as traditional fresh- lmen, green things usually grow. l The class of 1950 has been no exception. ylts members have grown in wisdom, prom- inence, and active participation in all phases of school life. They have taken their places in the Pep Clubs, athletic squads, music groups, clubs, and Student Congress. No more loyal group could be found. Cl jf ode 61 earning ?!0lU'l g CACLPHQJ M PHESHMEN Talking mer freshman problems Because the freshmen were busy getting acquainted with the school and each other, excitement was less evident in their election campaign than in those of the upper classes. The campaign was a successful one, how- ever, and four capable leaders were selected. For class president the freshmen chose W Bexerlv Brent jack Armstrong Comedy in freshman assembly Bob Coursey: for vice-president, Norma .lean Miller, secretary, Beverly Brent, and treasurer, .lack Armstrong. Mr. Barnett was freshman head sponsor. His assisting sponsors were Mr. Allison, Mr. Garver, Miss Edna Hetzel, Miss Vera Lawel- lin, Mrs. Lawrence, Miss Nellie -lean Sutton, Miss Dora W'ilson, Mr. Unruh, and Miss Gertrude Wfelch. ALLISON'S H. R. FIRST ROW Clel! to rigblj-Gilman, M.: Lane. N.. Smith, E.: Newman, S.: McGavran. T.: Flatt, M. SECOND ROW i56Hl'I5. K.: Fleet. B.: Gum. C.: Jewell, B.: Clark, T.: Jenks, B.: Hare. V. THIRD ROW-Breyfogle, L.: Barr, J.: Mxelsen, E.: Snlker, G.: Polhemus. C.: Ramirez, A.: Peterson. D. FOURTH ROW--Bannon, D.: Schu,-le, D4 Rainey' Q.: gov:farkT.: Mack. S.: Porter. A. FIFTH ROW-Clark, F.: Hooker, J.: Mcliachen, W.: Badeker. R.: Bingham, D.: ar y, . BARNETT'S H. R. FIRST ROW flelt to right!-Bosley. S.: Tooley, I.: Burge, B.: Frick, B.: Wolf. G.: Stocks. J, SECOND ROW - Mooney. J.: Reeves, K.: Miller, N.: Denni. J.: Amer, R.: Firzwater. J.: Vandeberghe. C. THIRD ROW-Szrasser. B.: Pierce, M.: Eckerberg, C.: Laquet, R.: Neves. B.: Brent, B.: Puhr, T. FOURTH ROW-Thomas, C.: Chappell. D.: Srrerrher, J.: Thompson. D.: Grauberger. S-3 Williams. R-5 Carey, C. FIFTH ROW'-Fail, J.: Bell, V.: Orrison, J.: Vanhorn, H.: Chaney, R.: Miller, D.: Wells, D. GARVER'S H. R. FIRST ROW He!! to rigbti-Malay, C.: Perkins. D.: Ogg, B.: Verstraete. R SECOND ROW!--Wfrighr. R.: Perkins D.: Flaherty, R.: Hurt. S.: Meisner, R.: Hughes, E.: Bardwell, R. THIRD ROW-Ryckert, C.: Palmer, J.: Gordon. R.: Townsend, W.: York, N.: Beatty. R.: Hoehn, A. HETZEL'S H. R. FIRST ROW Hell to rigblb-O'Brien, C.: Brakebill. S.: Weaver. L.: Tait. D.: Church, C.: Chambers. D.: Fisher. J. SECOND ROXV-Clawson. B.: Drake, J.: True. .I-: Davis, M.: Stewart. S.: Lewis, L.: Scharfenherg. J. THIRD ROVU -Smith. J-I Ritchert, D.: Koenig, C.: Gastl, E.: Landree, B.: Hunter, L.: Burt, R. FOURTH ROW-Cramer. G.: Wilkin- son. J.: Eckes, D.: Childers, T.: McFerren, K.: Trotter, B.: Mittenfelner. M.: Bair, B. McMICHAEL'S H. R. FIRST ROW Hel! to rightj-Wrightsman, L.: Halbert. G.: Briar. J. SECOND ROW-Parkhurst. B.: Lawrence. R.: Rein. J.: Settles. T.: Neuer. R.: Guy. D.: Briar. J.: Hoge. R. THIRD ROW-Maxwell. V.: Coleman. B.: Chapman. W.: Edwards. J.: Gale. T.: Armstrong, J.: Fox, R. FOURTH ROW-Kirk. J.: Tompson. B.: lrwm, B.: Spangler. J.: Mitchell. B.: Richardson, R.: Greer. R. LAWRENCE'S H. R. FIRST ROW flelf to righlj-Meyer, B.: Joseph, C.: Webb, K.: Gorup. R.: Randall. G.: lVlcPheeters. J. SECOND ROW -Sherfy, E.: Puhr. D.: Rabuse. M.: Hand. B.: Vogt, J.: McNarr. J.: Brown. M.: Guinee, J. THIRD ROW-Wallace. D.: Fromholz. J.: Henderson. J.: Haynie. L.: Reynolds, B.: Dugger. L.: Oser. M.: Harrison. D. FOURTH ROW-PhiL lips. N.: Hastings, D.: Bleyenberg, A.: Frazer, L.: Yotz. N.: Swan. G.: Park, N.: Myers, D. SUTTON'S H. R. FIRST ROW Uef! to right?-DeLeersnyder, F.: Bradley, B.: Eubank, M.: Speaks, D.: Simms, B.: Owsley, N.: Gill. N. SFCOND ROW-Smith, L.: Orlick, B.: Phillebaum. J.: Meyers, M.: Heidenreich. E.: Barnes, B.: Edwards. S. THIRD ROW-Strong, A.: Hook, B.: Childers, B.: Feig, B.: Hare. L.: Holmberg, V.: Hendrickson, L.: Hampton, N. UNRUI-PS H. R. FIRST ROW Hel! lo right!-Donnigan, J.: Lichte, B.: Hise. H.: Dobson. M.: Coursey. B.: CMIISIB. B.: Swift, D.: Alagna, N. SECOND ROW-Cantrall, R.: Rusil. J-1 Viard. R.: Meade, R.: Goodwin. L.: Alexander. J.: Flanagan. K. THIRD ROW--Driver, J.: Watkins, C.: Edgar, T.: Langworthy. G.: Stanley, B.: Keir, B.: Johnson, D. FOURTH ROW-Ynunp berg, J.: Smith. S.: McCue, D.: Dorsch, B.: Mitchell, B.: Hill. D.: Rathsack. H. MISS WELCH'S H. R. FIRST ROXV Heli lo rigbtbfStoker. B.: Foster, W.: Davis, M.: Lundgred. B.: Todd. W.: Free, H.: Swaim. C. SFC OND ROW--Renfer. I.: Cohler. B.: Young, B.: Phillips, M.: Dennis, E.: Harkness. J.: Colin. C. THIRD ROW--Stan ford, B.: Hauser. J.: Srcck. N.: Tormoen. T.: Workman, C.: Moulson. R.: Ruddy. J, FOURTH ROW-Roberts, J. Tramposh, F.: Skcens. B.: Edmonds. H.: Smart, D.: DeGrande. M.: Matthvv. B. WILSON'S H. R. FIRST ROW Hel! In right!-Claunch, G.: Manning. P.: Callaghan. J.: Swift: M. SECOND ROWAfBal0s. Ohqrv holtz. M.: Campbell, F.: Ewell. C.: Trotter. B.: Mtllcnry, Y.: Ackurson. B, THIRD ROW--fDaw'is, M.: Wilson. L.: Stoeltzing. N.: Langworrhy. C.: Bates, Z.: Patterson. A.: Stanton. FOIIRTII ROW' Slough. B.: Wagner. G.: HCSICL N.: Qmith, R.: Smith, B,g Ycamans. D.: Eastland. D. UOWI9 How many A's for you? jaknf rum e foorb -'ill - Check those names twice um C Q S15 Pnl 0 . ne' uoweyx, Wm Outstanding athletes Wefoaba MUSIC . . . choral clubs . . . orchestra . . . bands . . . entertainment . . . cultural development . . . music at its best has echoed through Shawnee-Mission halls for twenty-five years. Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes' . . . Smilin' Through . . . Sweetest Little Fellow . . . music from a program twenty-five years ago. There Are Such Things . . . Night and Day . . . Stardust . . . music from recent programs. The Mesxialo . . . Battle Hymn' '...' 'Desert Song . . . dateless tunes that have always been popular. Sacred melodies . . . dance tunes . . . exchange as- semblies . . . the Cavalcade . . . Christmas programs . . . holiday parades . . . marching bands on football fields . . . All in the day by day . . . year by year. . . work of the music department. A IX D F 1- MUSIC ii- FRONT ROW Hell lo rigbll--Hawkins. M.: Lawrence, R.: Giffin, D.: Xwnxson. l..: Crnvcns. S: Hoffman, J.: Meeker, G.: Jack. D.: Amos. R.: Hedges. M. SECOND ROXV4Ferguson. XV.: Hooker. J.: Edmonds. H.: Russell, C.: Skeens. R.: Kliwer. J.: Clark. D.: McCue, D.: Bellamy, H. THIRD ROWflirhuring1on. R.: Dodge. D.: Simpson. L.: Goddard. M.: Brinkoener. W.: Smith, S.: Weakley. J-2 Harrison, R.: Langdon. R. LAST ROW-Kost, S.: Holmes. R.: Mackintosh, R.: Myers. L.: Cox, G.: Single. R. Yendrek, R. 6i.!4l'lC! 342 On v BAND YES, THE BAND HAS PLAYED ON. This year, under the direction of Harold George. the seventy-one members of the band played a very full, interesting pro- gram. The officers were Don Jack, president: Clara Belle Hartford, senior vice- presidentg Robert Brown, junior vice-president: David Hann, sophomore vice-presi- dent: Sam Smith, freshman vice-president: Eugene Amos, secretary: and Jerry Webb, treasurer. Mary swings it out with the clarinet trio The drum quartet carries the rhythm of the band FRONT ROW-Cleft to right!-Hunter, L.: Strong, A.: Burt. R.: Stewart. L.: Hartford. C.: Koehler, J: MacGavran. T.: Gum, C.: Joyce. E.: Townsend, S. SECOND ROW-Van Meter. C.: Trent, C.: Heidet. J.: Rankin, L.: Sullivan, J.: Hann, D.: Brown, R.: Collins, R. THIRD ROW-Gilman, D.: Childers, K.: Amos, E.: Sandburg, M.: Spivey, E.: Jones, R.: Webb, R. Francis, D. LAST ROW-Holmes, W.: Marcum, D.: Fisher, D.: Klewien, W.: Teeves, T.: Webb, J. To start off the year the marching band played at most of the football games, and participated in two festive parades. Next came the Pep Band which played at all pep rallies and basketball games. Our concert Band, after much sweat and practice, played for two successful student assemblies and presented one Winter Concert. Believing that the band is an important asset to the school and that through it many people form opinions of the school, the band played two exchange concerts at other high schools, and partici- pated in a band day at K. U. They also competed in the annual music festival at K. U., at which they took first rating. As a reward for months of work, band mem- bers rounded out the year with a well-deserved picnic. X . X 1 - The officers of band and orchestra plan the year's program The sax quartet adds a mellow touch be 95 we 2090 e, 191 565 5 we ofa wo' YS 0 Q5 do 'O ya e K5 ifgeg ook, 09 aww 5 . Q0 X sf' 'vgogxf-9 ge a Ogelhel' v High-stepping drum maiorettes at K. U. stadium The clarinet trio plays in front of the footlights FRONT ROW Hel! to right!--Renfer, D.: Johns, C.: Stiles,J.: Srolte. D.: Goodwen. L.: Middaugh, J.: Raitt, J.: Harris, D.: Harris, A. SECOND ROW-Simpson, L.: Fitzwater. R.: Seligson, T.: Nelson, G.: Clark, T.: Neumann, R.: Proctor, R.: Gum. C. THIRD ROW-Goddard, M.: Hartford, C.: Brinkoetter, XV.: Hoffman, J.: Jack, D.: Heider, J.: Rankin, G.: MacGavran, T. FOURTH ROW-Collins. R.: Jones, R.: Clark, D.: Koehler, J.: Marcum, D.: Etherington. R.: Giffin, D.: Swanson, M. I.AST ROW-Yendrek. R.: Gilman, D.: Webb, J.: Reeves. T.: Mackintonsh, R.: Smith. S.: Holmes. R.: Kost, S. 6 ymlakon v IIHIIHESTHI-l UNDER MR. HAROLD GEORGE'S DIRECTION, the orchestra enjoyed a successful year. Officers were Dave Gilman, president: Teddy Seligson, vice-presi- dent: Mary Swanson, secretary: and Teddy Reeves, treasurer. School assembly programs were presented in Octo- ber, February, and May. For the It Pays to be Smart radio show in November, the orchestra fur- nished several numbers including 'I'schaikovsky's Piano Concerto in B-flat Minor . An Indian Caval- , I .I . I I . I I I the band and orchestra in order to purchase new equipment. At class plays and for National Honor Society initiation the orchestra furnished music. An exchange assembly at Argentine and some grade school concerts to encourage potential S-M musicians all gave the orchestra publicity. At the end of the first semester the orchestra was enlarged by the addition of Delores Renfer and Con- rad Johns, string bass: Jereldine Raitt, cello: Bob Yendrck, tympani: Bob Collins, alto saxophone: Don jack and Lenore Simpson, clarinet: Carl Gum, jr., and Tad McGavran, flute: and Sam Smith, oboe. On April 12 the orchestra traveled to Lawrence for the Music Festival at Kansas University, at which they xeceived second rating. The Formal Concert was given on Apiil 29, and the orchestra played for the Com- -ed by The brass ensemble liven up the orchestra mencement Week exercises May 25 to 27. The mellow string quartet gzgocly ww! .S'.,.J IJAVALEAHE Kitty doing the St. Louis Blues COMEDY, drama, politics, boogie, and oddities were the features of the 1947 Indian Cavalcade, the all-school variety show. Harold George, instrumental music director, supervised the produc- tion. The script committee was Dottie Jones, Bob Larberg, Shirley Kyle, and Tom LaBar. Vote for Wintergreen , a political farce, portrayed Clarence Hughes as Wintcrgreen, and Dottie Poindexter as his flighty wife. Bob Robertson, the loud political boss, Don Cohn and Art Brewster, his henchmen, and Charles Howe, talkative publicity manager, helped to make thc show entertaining and amusing. The Sacred Cow Children must play And Janie ain't whispering! Gaity Gals of S-M g s ,lk 'i W 1 r . .2 Z uf l . 1. .. kv? . . Piano. Mary Swanson, Shirley Brown. FIRST ROW tie!! lo rigbtl-Katie Reeves. Barbara Smith, Zerma Bates, Nancy Gill. Luanne Fraser, lmn- gene Tooley, Betty Orlick, Frances Neel, Dotty Beekcr, Betty jones, Rosalie Yeuhanks, Colleen Yeubanks, Betty Shiverderker, Jo Young, Barhafa Flint, Marilyn Davis. Mary Alice Pyle, lla Mae Clark, Joanne Banks, Shirley Sieleman. Helen Allen, Betty Young, Lou jean Weaver. Bernice Styzlurt, Jo Ann Phillebaum, Barbara Hook, Joan Allison, Mrs. Spring. SECOND ROW-Phyllis Cessna, Dona Kortier, Patsy Mace, Karolyn Holm, Barham Acree, Rosemary Wilson, Diane Parker, Martha Cox, Phyllis Griffith, Joanne Jones, Martha Mallinson, Lores Watson. Myrna Seeley, Martha Knnth. Joanne Henderson, Anita Pfeutze. Ruth Young. Marteena Sand, Doris Oliver, jean Gurnee, Margy Mann. THIRD ROW-Jackie Holland. Rohcrta Robertson, Harriet Koehn, Barbara Cottrell. Darlene Metcalf, Donna Johnson, Barbara Fraser, Mary Helen Carr, Conrad Johns, Howard Dunningmrl. Mickey Wharton, Bob Bodine, Francis Applegate, Larry Marsh. Mary Carol Smith, Eloise Joyce. Claudine Grosshart, Betty Schulteis, Carol llarris, TCH? C0l!0fl. Jane! MOHOIL JOYCC Fail, FOURTH ROW-JEFW Fisher. Lois Swaim, Nadine Richerson, Virginia Edmisson, Edith Patch. Delta Cokely. Wanda Johnson, David Stolte, Richard Smiley, Richard Finley, Robert Brown, Bill Ross. Don Burwell, Merlin Logan, Bill Hill, Jim Akright, Carolyn Taylor, Lois Rosenbauer, Barbara Cottrell, Merilyn Olsen, Florence Ross, Shirley Wing, Betty Pyle. cc REMEMBER the Christmas ..M?sSi?h,,, 5 7 ere 3 a Ong Rotary Club, Kansas City Safety Council, the Winter Concert, and that hilarious H and various other organizations. musical comedy, Good News ? These in e .fair Mary Swanson, junior, and Shirley were presentations of the vocal music de- Brown, senior, were the accomplished ac- partment, which included the Girls' Glee companists for the vocal music depart- Club, Choir, Mixed Chorus, Boys' Quar- ment. tct, and Girls' double trio. All these were At the K. U. Festival, choir received the under the direction of Mrs. Mary R. rating one, the double trio, rating one, Spring. five vocal groups, rating one, and two Music for churches, the vocal groups, rating two. fflhovei The Christmas story ' fBelow7 Chorus sings The Messiah T 1 Y 'lj lr if . 2 g 2 1.5 :i,f'R,wfj,' - Z ' .ilftif ff ,,., .Q .i i ' il N ,t 5 4 Vg .2 jg . a -If r ,t'VI-T 74-:Tiff i 1 5 1 f51i. K3, L l ' ffdilw tg 2 Q , Z- 5.-2: rf, -1 fa , Sf : X ,, if Q. L A 'x Q r 5:g :',L-..'fQf-,vi .-i3iL.',,, es? 'x iii 1 ' Q l ,7 'iff L ' ' ' v 1 ' 1 'fe qt fi- ,. 44' 1 Y . 199 ' '5 'M A . - ill -, -, r '- -- if -we -v -www--A fav- -X -M--vs-1-, . f --. ...at mfaxafion 'ALL WORK AND NO PLAY . . . students a quar- ter century ago knew the truth of the old maxim . . . time devoted to recreation-was time well spent . . . organizations . . . leadership . . . guest speakers . . . entertainment . . . service to the community and the school . . . leaders in community life of today . . . Remember those old clubs? . . . the Pepper Club- forerunner of today's cheering sections and Girls' Pep Squad . . . the Aggie Club-foster father of today's Future Farmers of America . . . The Live Wires-the Journalism Club-Ten Clubs of twenty-five years ago have grown to thirty-five chartered clubs of today. Modern school life centers around organizations and their varied activities . . . South of the Border -Spanish Club caroling at Christmas time . . . Star- dust . . . Thespians putting finishing touches on their latest stage production . . . American Patrol -F.F.A. boys bringing honors to their chapter and our school. Melodies link the past with the present as good times and extra duties recall memories of organizations. .I '1 m u I1 in ELSE 'U ' ' Y HI-WK AN u UHEANIZATIUN5 SSUNSHINE! I X' WAS TALKING AQOUTTHE OTHER 4 F? W! .1 If W W X KIND OF CLUB? 6211 f' 0119 90 ana! Jai' ..!4lfUay HISTUHY IILUH I !,.g:1.fC'5 Listen to this! D010 res asks the questions 00a K eq gvi Q0 ki 600 Clflf l H'!lUl'Ul'1 ig? OZZIIUJ HIIIJH CLUB Users of the Reader's Guide 650 6l1fA ,Mi Ollln H STAMP CLUB The group identifies stamps s fi J ...ng Mr. Patterson shows collection 6' .19 KZX4 jLOU56LflJ QPQCLHQJ H PEN'ELUB Hill' Shall we enter the poetry contest? THAT WRITING can be fun and sometimes pays financially has been discovered by Pen Club members during the three years of the club's life. Mrs. Virginia Magnuson was spon- sor. Officers were George Slough, Bob Weaver, Ruth Routon, and -Ierre Chesser. we' whats gi K uerydocly Jcaew, Bur 740.9 SPELLINE CLUB HR'E'S'U'S'C'I'T'A'T'I'V'E',l Words like that challenged the most versatile Spelling Club members. Weekly meetings, under Miss Edna Hetzel's leadership, created interest in correct 14 96954 Now, how do that word? spelling. Officers were Arlene Cunningham, president, Mayre Lou Davis, vice-president, and Norma Stoeltzing, secretary-treasurer. you spell W J 85 sign tofxloos WHAT DOES the business world expect of its employees? With Felix Shular as sponsor, the Steno- cttes had a membership of forty- five business-minded girls. Max- ine Maddox as president and .Io- anne Rice as treasurer served both semesters. Other first semester of- ficers were Zoe Coiner and Kath- leen Keller. Second semester offi- cers were Lorraine Rankin and Clarine Pflumm. K5 05' wha 79 T746 olzffer STENU-ETTE5 it . f his sz ,V-1 , 5 -if damn... Stenciling is an an Typical typists ,,,.- 5 -ft A 1 Taking dictation Working with stencils Any junior or senior commercial student was eligible for Sgeno-ette membership. Meetings consisted of discussion about business prin- ciples and talks by office workers. A spring trip included a tour of several business firms. Gifts were exchanged at a Christmas party. STENU-ETTES Practice makes perfect ' ' 'lflf f ll feat Ol' Jn l h'S ngt S0 far! Jerry lead xniiixix' ii s the discussiim- WUHLIJ AFFAIRS IILUB px. l V.: Now I've been there! TO DISCUSS international affairs and their historical background, history lovers organized the Wtvrld Affairs Club, which Miss Anna Marie Edwards sponsored. 87 FIRST ROW llefl to rigblj Verstrar mour B - e, R.: Zahner M- Gordo R I , . SECOND ROW-Cam b ll ix l . ., n. .1 McCoy, J.: Watkins, J: St p e . T.: Perkins. Dean: Tort - ' 'e . R.: Nelson, G.: Wright. R. T T ,. , eele, J.: Cole, L.: Sey- en. J., Meisner, R.: Needham, W.: Ryckerr. C.: Bard HIRD ROW-Mason, E.: Rhondes, E.: Hare. G.: Alliso ' ' nwnsend. W.: kill. D.: Dunham. J. 1 - team Poultn' ludgmg Champion iii FIRST ROW fleft lo rigbll-Davis, L.: Malay, C.: Be H.: Mizzell, H. SECOND R - ' ' MICH. D.: Horner L' Evans P OW Wiyninger D' Cha Flaherty. R. THIRD ROW n, J., Riley, D.: Sanford. El K!! I'l'lel LCClJ'l Cl,ll'0 l1'.F.!-l. LEARNING TO DO: doing to learn: earning to live: living to serve -this motto guided the Shawnee- Mission chapter of the Future Farmers of America during their eighteenth year of organization. Spon- sored by Harold Garver, the F.F.A. elected the follow- ing officers: Lewis Cole, president: George Hare vicclpresident: Jerry Steele, secretary: John Allison, treasurer: and Joe Sims, reporter. 1 On stu ents who received a majority vote could become F.F.A. members. Fifty- two belonged this ycar. A Christmas party and the eighteenth annual Parent S b - on anquct were thc club's most eniovable social activities durin ly vocational agriculture d g the school year. . .. D . .: Yates, J.: Rowland, B.: Stewart, , ., pman, D.: Hurt. S.: Marin. M.: Palmer, J.: 0 B ' -Garver, H. D.: Orlick, F.: Ryckert. J.: Walm - J.: Light, D.: Perkins. Don. gg, ., Hughes, E.: er, K., York, N.: Sims, J.: Hoehn, A.: Berry, Frisbie helps with demonstration MILD EXPLOSIONS and strange odors were not uncommon in Retorts meetings. Spon- sored by AI. C. Hawkins, the club elected these officers: Elizabeth Taft, presidentg Bob Fitz- wnter, Paul Larson, and Medora Davidson as other officers. Retorts members have promoted interest in science by demonstrations on vacuums, Geissler tubes, fluorescence, :ind the nrt of playing chess. -One of them can m eginning fo .Sie fig .ligkf HETUHTS 1f':'Y'4.8 NSEILRU 6i7Le jbngd in e GENERAL SEIENEE CLUB SClliNTll5lC l7lfMONS'l'RATlONS stimulated research work of fourteen members of the General Science Club. AI. l.. Alli- son sponsored the group. Officers were Roy Burt, Tom Gale. and Bill Mclfachen. Anyone taking general science was eligible for membership. Learning how to measure work Hgw dogg ig work, boys? ofk an . wie W omeefs tom K s lasief form ' Officers lean' from P ITOVVFRS, beetles, and animal life were all explored by Biology Club members. Miss Velma Seaton and Miss Elizabeth Boys sponsored the club. Officers were David Hagar, Gale Yost, and Karolyn Holm. 90 ccenfuafe fAe fgodifiue PHYSICS ELUB W. W. Strong watches members perform Cghree Jiri ef, HIULUGY CLUB careful, he might bite! 50 Officers view fine pieces of art ANY ONE taking nn art course or anyone interested in .irt was welcome to join the Aft Club. ln their meetings this year the twenty-three men1bers, spon- sored by Miss Dorn Wilson, increased their knowledge of art by drawing, painting, sculpturing, and study- ing reproductions of the great artists. These young artists, who entered their best pieces of nrt in contests and exhibitions, often won top honors. Students who were interested in art ns ai career gained valuable experience through member- ship in the Art Club. 1 'fi ' 1 ' Q' ,E sin 3 -FS-f l Members compare notes on artistic technique H Czep fhe .Home .alfred gurningn HUME EEUNUMIE5 SBKVC HONORED by having Mauritza Fris- bie elected Kansas District President, the Home Economics Club enjoyed a profitable year. Mrs. Grace Lawrence and Miss Nellie Jean Sutton were spon- sors for the sixty-one members. Offi- cers were Marjorie Crummett, Mauritza Frisbie, Lola Miller, and Doris Brecken- ridge. A useful project of the members was cleaning the trophy cases in the front halls. They took time from their meetings to help the appearance of the school. 'hge Dt I, 0 ll-Fekeepe 1- s toor I be Teacher a glee Must be a serious speech Y bed tables Makknil- Ass m A LJ055 me gc we 3' wfffk W , sh' X . flick 004 -- def? 2, laciahzza Ffwbw Cnivknlz' Nlaun lSlfT'l'lill llliAl.TH, good grooming, nutri- tion, .ind correct behaviour were all stressed in the new llealth and Happiness Club. Sponsors were Mrs. Mildred Noel and Miss Nellie ,lean Sutton. Officers were Anna Ciallaglian, Mauritla lfrislvie, and Verla l lolmlverg. cc 1 as o5e 0 WO' lJfl 5 BED IIHU55 Reading about other Red Cross chapters VETERANS' and.children's hospitals were recipients of many useful articles made by this year's -Iunior Red Cross. Miss Margaret Hogan, head sponsor, was assisted hy Mrs. Lawrence, Miss Wilson, and Mr. Patterson. Officers were Beverly Hand, presidentg Don- ald Smart, vice-presidentg and Dorothy Ellis. secretary-treasurer. wang, ruling, aug ing v H E A LT H A N H HAPPINESS CLUB DC General knowledge of medicine is reviewed 93 af S W' 5191 iexcef' O Graphs and charts are studied 66 nedg, worig v MATH IILUB 'tr Q? nf 9' But, can they get it back together? l lCiUlllfS, planes, and solitls intrigued Mzitli Club unrliusiists who were interested in .ul- vanced math. Mrs. Hilda lrwin .tml W. Unruli sponsored the MllIl1 Club. . c1,,,,d th B 5 a rchers 6 Cu - P . V KY S ma 1. ksn V. If-n Wogin eilooclv BUYS' ABEHEBY CLUB All aim for the target THESE FUTURE woodsmen, led by Mr, Gor- sage, improved their skill by shooting together on sunny days and studying the technical points of archery on rainy days. Officers were Tom Mart, Robert Brown, Bob Thayer, and George Parkhurst. evwlam Awe' 1 mini- sl fm! Ml'1l'Bll Wlllllf im-I Ilfllll. 0 ll'0l'lIllS Conremplaring entries the wing ds for me of . X-WIATIIIN CLUB Lets hope it flies Rules and WE DESIGN-EM, build-em, and fly-em! said Aviation Club members, who were spon- sored by C. l. Gorsage. Officers were Bob Klapkn, Paul Bryant, Bill Howell, and Donell Grimes. Members spent the year in learning about flying by designing and constructing their own model airplanes. , .Q ,.,. Aw., M f .. . M 4,4 . - f l Lyifatik- ' ff 11,-' 4 wg . ,gr M12 2 -1 1 'f .YHM wif: ffal- 1 ,, fibwk, X ,Kgs . .Wm L , , wg. W ,W , X. .W .., ' K Q45 1,Wgx, f A yigkif' N wb? ' + ' if , fig. 5' .. Ji f TL . P1 if flF5'I'wgg-f' V 2 'F .3 -vu ,fa X .ff L I X435 1391 1: F 1 ' ww if gr W fs , A ---, AV eaufifufv Y-TEENS t joint Hi-Y-Y-Teen meetings the entire student body en- yed films and special round-table discussions. Some of the outstanding speakers of the year were Rev. arge from the Countryside Christian Churchg Rev. terling from the Shawnee Methodist Churchg and Mrs. ddy. a very outstanding speaker from the National 'onference of Christians and Jews in Kansas City. rs. liddy told many of her experiences as a world aveler and many things she had seen in the Urient. In cooperation with the Hi-Y organi- tion the Y-Teens brought special speakers r the National Brotherhood Week. The free speakers represented three different diths-Catholic, Jew, and Protestant. hese speakers were well received by ae student body and did much to ster a feeling of brotherhood wng all classes of people. K C 6,76 C' fs-6,06 ao f . 606, .1-,- de '71- J' O 1' Eos '70 6 14,00 e or 416+ -9,103 Freshman officers find this fun me A HEQ W kcecs E oii coop ous -a g DSU wi. uoog x VX.- Nk. Ysedpaskis heshmao o -.. nfezlofs 3 i fl 5 plans Whlle iikcecs Kaos Larson SCC make Q Y 'T eeos ith: ohixes TWO HUNDRED Hi-Y members were di- vided by classes into chapters. Clyde Red- path supervised freshmcng Carl Ison, sopho- morcsg O. O. Barnett, juniorsg W. W. Strong, seniors. Head officers were Bob Gorman, Roger Crawford, Merlin Logan and Bob Trego. 0,6 00 ser rea I' was an 191, lat' 0',, . IJ-Orr ee, fo ee, 46 :oe 'bg W eat? 1-,QI 'J 001 Po J' o,oy ao def Sd 6? 659 'lv lo o ll 6 6,74 'f,zz..aJc,.,,1f, oagfw THE LIBHTHUUSE TO PROMOTE the principles of Christianity through hymns, Bible study, prayer, testi- mony and messages by members and guest speakers was the purpose of the Inner Circle and Lighthouse Club. M. E. Alleman was faculty sponsor for both organizations. Lighthouse officers were Larry Marsh, presidentg Alma Sue I-Iarris, vice-presidentg and Delores Renfer, secretary-treasurer. Inner Circle officers were Bob Gorman, president, George I-Iare and Alma Sue Harris, vice- presidentsg John Allison, treasurerg and Irene Renfer, secretary. Inner Circle meetings were conducted be- fore school each morning. The Lighthouse Club met on Tuesday during activity period. The Inner Circle was affiliated with the city-Wide Youth on the Beam Clubs . The city council of the Y.O.B. was made up of one representative from each Inner Circle Group in Kansas City. Each Inner Circle .president was a member. Alma Sue Harris was the local representative who, once each Morning worship in the Lighthouse month, attended council meeting at Grand Avenue Temple. Speakers especially enjoyed by the Inner Circle and Lighthouse groups were graduates who had formerly been members of the re- ligious organizations. 100 D00 tes PIM s wha 5315 when e we QHPS cigznfimenfaf Journey v TRAVEL CLUB an the e Om Cegs PX 'fb 6 Ime our for a little music WE TRAVEL to learn by learn- ing to travel , was the slogan of the Travel Club under the spon- sorship of Miss Elizabeth Boys and Clyde Redpath. The club took several trips through Kansas City industries. Officers were Pat Crebbs, Jean Fisler, Anita Pfuetze, and Rosemary Amos. - XY X 56? is 56 bers QB em Scum md .. A . QV' A, .. exif' Sign ,.-M T' 4--+ ,M-eff, A A ff:suif?3f?o'l'T bggdiel Resting on the steps of Thayer Museum e fog me at Lawrence iflLmk.5ZQQL4v LATIN ELUB R0me WHS the t . o . Pic of this dwcusslon ROMAN CUSTOMS, dress, songs, and legends interested twenty lan- guage students who enrolled in the Latin Club. J. L. Finnerty was sponsor. Officers were Bill Puck- ett, jean Waddell, Emma Nielsen, and Dave Anderson. Programs consisted of plays, myths, and songs of Roman lore. ff' Pictures attract attention of officers A----W 9101 ROYO, 21 Latin game A Roman calendar is surveyed Officers like to sing and play Ogoom vom . S 5 aceelld' 'D- Ckoflsdo Senores and Senoritas sing 1 'QS2uf!. 0 me g0l 6!Ql',, SPANISH CLUB SONGS, plays, games, and movies, enlivened Spanish Club meetings and gave the thirty- eight members additional oppor- tunity to hear and speak Span- ish. Mrs. Margot Crain and L. Dale Pigg were sponsors. Offi- cers werc George Parkhurst, David Land, Diane Wade, and Barbara Acrce. In April the Club gave an entertaining pro- gram in assembly. xg S . 'H Q 9 ..- l l -. of N - ' - - f 4 - '1 1.1 ..f' l fe y 1 Performing for the P.T.A, 103 owe' GUEST SPEAKERS and films on photography fostered interest for one hundred Camera Club members. Spon- sors were Harold Garver, Miss Gertrude Welch, and Miss Velma Seaton. Officers were Joe Hein, Jerry Boyd, and Louis Helmreich. The club was divided into four groups. - J-Y Y . 'I04 In their meetings they learned the fundamentals of photography. Outside of meetings they practiced tak- ing pictures. They held n con- test for the best pictures. The members enjoyed comparing and criticizing pictures. 5. S i 1 ' S 105 :GS christmas Ca .5 . W Membefs exam! ledge am know MembefS S 'M n . es vital inimmano V Wekfh gl Mf- 106 '1fM,l,J0 Hnulznw CLUB Exchanging greetings PERSONALITY quizzes and interesting speakers afforded entertainment for the eighteen Camp Fire girls of the Horizon Club, sponsored by Mrs. Mardelle Mc- Michaels. Officers were Karin Stack, Nancy Haffner, Jereldinc Riatt, and Charlene Ewell. TO KEEP ABREAST with the times, Shawnee- Mission was the first school in Kansas to offer Driver Education courses thc second semester. G. Murlin Welch, the instructor, taught careful driv- ing, knowledge of traffic regulations, and auto- mobile mechanism. Waiting for the driver to make mistakes Mrs. Hodshire, G.A.A. sponsor Square dancing is fun Q ...a..l. l -,,r,Y-Y, -,,,,,Y. -,W- 66 meffican 97 E . A. H. Winning team of basketball pose President john talks with other officers LURFD BY l5OOTl.lGHTS and grease paint, Drama Club members mastered many phases of play pro- duction. Miss Ruth Browne was sponsor. Officers were John Will- helmy, president: Harry Spuehler, vice-president: John Eulich, secre- taryg and lilinor Ernst, treasurer. The major dramatic offerings of the year were given as joint produc- tions of classes and the Dramaties gmefening U 5. A. A. Must be a good program Department. On November 22 and 23 seniors presented Junior Missf, which was well received both eve- nings. New casts for each evening brought full houses for both per- formances. Members pose between acts 108 wwf ....-...I Backstagers listen to the broadcast junior dramatists presented Life of the Party on March 23, 1947. The story centered around a family who moved to a new location. The difficulties that encountered the family furnished an evening full of interest and excitement. 60 ma Af' Xie C99 .5 is owe' ACT WELL YOUR PART, there all the honor lies was the motto of Thespian Troupe No. 413 of Shawnee-Mission. Mem- bership in the society was based on partici- pation in several play productions. On a basis of points attained candidates were elected to membership. Not only acting qualified Members learn parts and actions iisiarafualv THEEPIANS students for membership, but also prompting, make-up, property work, advertising, or any other production duties that contributed to the life of the organization. Since this organi- zation is nationally acknowledged, the membership is for life. Miss Ruth Browne has been Thes- pian director during the eight years of the troupeis existence. Her en- thusiasm and loyalty have been re- sponsible for the success of the or- ganization. Officers of Troupe 413 were Mickey Wharton, president, Helen Kittle, vice-president, Shirley Kyle, secretary, and Betty Land, treasurer. XVorking hand-in-hand with the Drama Club, the Thespians helped to make class plays highlights of the school year. The two dramatic or- ganizations represented Shawnee- Mission at the K. U. Speech and Drama Festival in March. The Valiant, a one act play, The Importance of Being Earnest, a radio play, and a reading by Joan Barnard were all presented at the fes- tival. Each presentation was iudged by critics appointed from K. U. speech departments. Formal initiation ceremonies were held in March. At this time many seniors were welcomed as Thespian members. Formal initiation ll C te we sic otilcefs a Ewen Aebate Class 00 5 swans Mf- tional Forensic League and debate members journeyed to speech tour- naments and worked overtime on practice speeches at home. Offi- cers were Anna Callaghan, Mau- ritza Frisbie, and Bill Howell. ated lo' 7 99 giallarif jhafri my Opinion FUHENSIE AND DEBATE L 4, .. National Forensic Society members MY FOURTH POINT IS -' and again the debaters took the floor to maintain their conten- tions. Under the supervision of Mr. Maurice Swanson, the Na- arsen, Callaghan, Frisbie, and Howell 111 66 xv' W 1 ' 9Lv N 4 ,J 'jf 1 12 Business staff has varied duties '19fa Alf! OW Wow OLD ALBUMS bring back memories. As a tribute to Shawnee-Mission's twenty-fifth anniversary, this year's Indian was designed to recall memories of long ago as well as of the current year. Head sponsor of the yearbook was L. Dale Pigg. Miss Viola McFarland supervised the editorial staff. Helen Kittle was editor-in-chief. Her co-workers were Dottie Jones, make-up editor, Martha Fraser, secretaryg Lola Miller, treas- urerg Jeanene Trego, business manager, Roger Wasser, art editor, Ralph Hodges, pho- tographerg and Maxine Mad- dox, typist. Art staff assistants who spent long hours on page lay- outs were Henry jankus, Bar- bara Cordes, Kathleen Keller, Kitty McCartney, Phyllis Cessna, and jo Gayle Evans. 6360 fa ll XSS. 6726 95 11,- 65 C091 kg QX5 Galle assay Business staff members who secured organization cod! tracts and advertising were Bill Beilharz, Martha Denni, Pat Stewart, Shirley Kyle, Jerry Boyd, and Joe Bukowski. Sal 6 Bak 0 Wskl. Ola 41 BINQIHN End Y ao? fl 6666, of 'AA ne' 5 ciSJAdlUlle2 .S7ALif!2l'6ll,g5 v ANNUAL PHUTUGHAPHEHS A bird's eye view ww TQ 33 E A -- .1 ni --.. ..- X1 ij aid A double exposure! All happy 00 ' dbi ea? we ol Bobs ew Candidates march in for initiation with the active members of the National Honor Society. C6 77 you 6601 QIQQHJ OI7, 0 Initiates light torch of knowledge NATIUNAL HUNUH SUEIETY ORGANIZED IN 1932, thc Shawnee-Mission National Honor Society again honored this year's students who excelled in scholar- ship, leadership, character, and service. The formal initiation was held April 1. Miss Velma Seaton and Miss Emma Lyman supervised the organization. Officers were Harry Spuehler, Anna Callaghan. Shirley Brown, and Helen Kittle. l l Cty U MISSIIJN STAFF Missinn, lst Semester FROM MORNING TO NIGHT, day in and day out, Mis- pl sion staff workers kept vigilant eyes open for news. F. W. Starkey was Mission advisor. Editors for the first and second semesters were Bill Beilharz and Martha Fraser. The Mission was published every two weeks. Cliff overlooks activities of staff 00' gndh h Y 9 Misswn da 54 ,Q 'Q 'i-1'4 Y Mlfl!Aen my .mrecuno i 01712 P118 UUILI. ANU SIIHULL Missinn, End Semester Members of Quill and Scroll Xa Staff members see their work in print M . th. u-,. nr. ,Vile 1 .. .f 11,1 ,r lk f A o 590950 edll0'5 l ii passes buck from Sm FUR SUPERIOR WORK in Writ- ing, editing, and business manage- ment, Quill and Scroll recognition went to sixteen seniors. fff' . pf ,, llll' ay SPORTS . . . victories . . . defeats . . . that fighting spirit that every school loves . . . lettermen . . . cheer- leaders . . . pep clubs . . . N. E. K. league champion- ships . . . Athletic apparel may change with the years, but fair play and teamwork live on. Stout-hearted men . . . the football eleven . . . touchdowns . . . cheers . . . hard-hitting men. On- ward to Our Indians . . . the basketball five . . . goals . . . tournaments . . . trophies . . . Down the Road Apiecel' . . . the track squad. . . hurdles. . . field events . . . individual accomplishments woven into a team . . . Golf . . . tee-offs . . . club swingers . . . Tennis . . . nice return . . . good serve . . . Bowling . . . sports im- portant in their own right. Memories of winning teams and loyal school spirit will forever linger as vital associations of school life. R .P XXX f Xi Q- 9 5 S HM ff' k W Vw mm! Z T X I X . .,.. -1. ' i KJ' 9 Q DX Um I, I ..-. f: X I X U Imp X gg xx H ZW Nm x X V W - iz J 'QA - nfs? 'IRI . K A h - - ' is g wwf CQ 9 F' F' Hu, ' fa S f M W xlmnnw X Y ,-,. S lo Ki 9 1014 'gf-13,5 of X- eteCY ...L Bask -BULLETIN INDIANS..- so A6 'W iiffflla Take 4 e 0 . 1600 Sr ,all e 0' I0 ' t .Pd 0971.9 ,Il 'fsblb '- up 3 I8 IJ 15 DOWN 1 . 1 . .mpgs mmm:-.sue ima De'ieal'ii:.?19Y0p'30 ' - llf qs, . Lau. '-'Sf N -T, 5' Q M, A WS.: C54 SSS 'gave ye, asatwi U wx: Shawnee- Shawnee- Shawnee-Mission ...... Shawnee-Mission .,,... Shawnee-Mission ...... Mission ...... Mission ....,. Shawnee-Mission , ,.., , Shawnee-Mission .,.... Shawnee-Mission .. Shawnee-Mission .. Lawrence ...... Shawnee-Mission Leavenworth ..... Shawnee- Mission .A..., Shawnee-Mission .. Shawnee-Mission ...... Shawnee-Mission .. Shawn Shawn Shawn Shawn ' Shawn Shawn Shawn Shawn Shawn Shawn Shawn Shawn ' Shawn O Shawn Shawnee-Mission ,. Shawnee-Mission ...... ee-Mission ,..,., ee-Mission ...... ee-Mission ...... ee-Mission ...... ee-Mission ee-Mission Shawnee-Mission ,,.i ee-Mission ,....i Shawnee-Mission ...,.. Shawnee-Mission ....., ee-Mission ....., ee-Mission ...... ee-Mission ee-Mission ...... ee-Mission ....,. ee-Mission ee-Mission .,.... FOOTBALL Football W Rosedale i......,. Wyandotte .,...A Argentine ,... Lawrence ...... Olathe .,,....,,r ,, Atchison ,,,,.r.,,..., Leavenworth Ward ........... Rockhurst ....... N.E.K. Standings I. Argentine ..,r Atchison .. Olathe .,,... BASKETBALL ...,,...36 Southwest Northeast ,,..,r. Westport .,.... Wyandotte ,.,... Rosedale .......... Olathe ......, . Ward ............ Newton ........ Winfield ........., Argentine ....... Lawrence ....,,.,,. Atchison .,.... Leavenworth Olathe .......,...... Ward ............ Argentine .... Lawrence .... Wyandotte ...... flff o Atchison ........,.... Leavenworth Wyandotte ., Ward ...,.......,.... Wichita East Shawnee-Mission ...... ,,,,..., S aline ,,,,,,,,,,,,,t Shawnee-M'ss' ......,. W ll' O 'xooa 9 Shawnee-Missicdh ..,... .......,............. , Nefwiiignjri ..,., Q Basketball N.E.K. Standings ' .5 W L W X, xgefx Y Shawnee-Mission ...... ....... 9 1 Leavenworth .,..t.. ,,,.,,, 6 age CBC Lawrence .............,. ........,..,.. 8 2 Atchison .......,.....,... ,,,.,,,,,,,,,, 1 ' 65- QA A Q v Argentine ..,...,..,,.............,..,.... 7 5 Olathe ,,A,,,4,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.A.,,,,,,,,,,. 1 ,.9Sf5!-'M' I X I XII - F N 6 1 ........14 0 6 0 L 3 3 5 32 31 29 21 14 23 14 20 25 22 18 22 5 22 25 Z3 24 23 31 20 31 28 25 31 36 L 4 9 9 if Th , QQ 15 i A wiiia' this o-We. 07 5,394 39-N ala :Berg X Earns Berth On Second Five gigouf cilearfea! Wenv FUUTB!-ILL PRE-SEASON INDICATIONS that Shawnee-Mission would have an exceptionally good team proved true. Fif- teen lettermen who returned formed an excellent nucleus around which the team was built. The remainder of the squad was composed of graduates of the previous second team. They were drilled in fundamentals but lacked league competition. Toward mid-season this group clicked with mechanical precision. The wonderful support given to the backfield and fine spirit of cooperation among the eleven were out- standing factors in many victories. The Indians made their grid debut against a strong Rosedale team which had never previously beaten the local gang on their own field. This game was no exception as the red and black men completely over- whelmed Rosedale 20 to 0. The second tussle found the Indians pitted opposite their staunch rivals from XVyan- dotte. Although on the short end of a 14 to 6 score, the statistical record gave the local team an advantage in everything except the 'QAJS pay-off. The game was highlighted by the Amberg-to-Smith pass combination which clicked for our touchdowns. After warming up for two games, the Shawnee-Mission grid-machine romped over the Argentine Mustangs and administered them a sound beating, 31 to 0. Amberg, Rein, and Smith were the big guns in the Indian attack, each contributing a touch- down, the latter counting twice. Clyde Sterling, hard-charging Indian tackle, and -lack Luschen, guard, led the team in hold- ing the high scoring Mustangs to a total of 12 yards in rushing. The game which decided the champion- ship of the N.E.K. was played at Lawrence the following week. It was in this game that our clean-fighting boys, outweighed many pounds to the man, displayed a brand of football that would make any All-American sit up and take notice. During the entire game they showed a spirit that could not be questioned anywhere. Though the game was lost 21 to 18, we were proud of our players, for they fought a determined game, an in- spired game, and, with a little luck, could easily have emerged victorious. Trailing 21 to 6 at the half, the Indians staged a brilliant comeback and all but dethroned the cham- pions in a rousing finish that netted two touchdowns in the closing minutes. Again it was Amberg leading the attack, with Smith, Sterling, Way, and Eulich starring in the line. Olathe was unfortunate in meeting an Indian team which was rebounding from the defeat of the previous week. The Eagles put up a good fight but were outplayed from the start. The final score was 24 to 0. The Olathe game proved just a tune-up as the Reade-men anihilated Atchison S2 to 7. With the stalwart Indian line opening holes in great style and with Maloney, Reade, Smith, Cumley, Amberg, and Crawford contributing touchdowns, the Redmen proved no competition for the high-geared S-M outfit as they chalked up their third league victory and moved into second place in the standings. ,r .V-4 '. .,.a,A,f!. 'B Ti'-iff Q.-f The final league engagement found the Indians maintaining their winning ways by crushing Leavenworth 37 to 13. As an added attraction for the many loyal football patrons, a benefit game was ar- ranged with Rockhurst, champions of the Catholic League. For many of the seniors. this would be the last time that they would be wearing that old red and black. They decided to close their season in glory, both for themselves and their school. This game will long remain in the memories of many of the players for not only did they scalp Rockhurst 48 to 0, but they also put on an exhibition of football such has never been seen on this gridiron before. This was a crowning climax to a very successful season. Although we did not win the crown this year, we may look back with satisfaction at the square, clean, never-say-die play that those thirty-three boys used throughout the year. Once again Shawnee-Mission has, by being runner-up in the league standings, shown that she is reliable when each season rolls around. This is due not only to the teamwork and whole-hearted support of the squad but also to head-coach Harold Reade and his assistants. Wer'e proud of our team: we're proud of their spirit and courage, we're proud of the way they come back fighting. W, sam HUME-IIUMINI3 IIIUEEN Queen Martha Fraser reigns with a smile Bob crowns Martha in front of cheering spectators GOWNED in white lace, Martha Fraser, a petite and pretty senior, was crowned Home-Coming Queen at the Olathe foot- ball game on October 18. With splendor befitting royalty, Martha was escoz ted to her throne, crowned with a golden coro- net, and presented an arm bouquet of red roses. Attending her royal majesty were the seniors, Helen Kittle and Dottie jones, who were prevented arm bouquets of white chrysanthemums. Mr. Mclfachen, principal, made the flower presentations. Male escorts to the queen and her attend- ants were Bob Larberg, Bob Brown, and john Brooks. Color for the gala occasion was furnished by the Pep Clubs, and the band furnished the fan-fare. wi Attendant QUEEN Attendant DOTTIE MARTHA HELEN JONES FRASER KITTLE Magik ...,,,.r U IIMICCPC! 30 OUP SQHACLHJ v BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS! As the curtain fell bringing to a close a very colorful and successful basketball season, the red and black floated supreme over all. Months of practice led to the N.E.K. league championship and fourth place in the state tournament. At the start of the season the boys were faced with rather trying situations. Sports writers had predicted that Shawnee-Mission would be the team to beat. Successful showings in five pre-season games with Southwest, Northeast, Westport, Wyandotte, and Rosedale respectively gave S-M a reputation to meet. Thoroughly experienced by these successes, the Indians started their league schedule by toppling the Olathe Eagles. Then the great machine broke and gave way to Ward, temporarily recov- ffl ff' 1 iz- yvt The 1946-47 A-Team basketball squad gum ered by downing Newton, defending state clumps, and then relinquished to Winfieltl. Once more finding the victory trail, the Reade- men in rapid succession romped over Argentine, Leavenworth, Olathe, Ward, and Argentine. The Indians were resting undisturbed atop the league standings. However the big game for which the basketeers had been priming since the start of the season was here. That game was with the defend- ing champions from Lawrence. Having previously beaten the Lions in an earlier engagement, the cagers were determined to duplicate that perform- ance and bring back the championship to Shawnee- Mission. However brilliant the Indians might have been, the opposition was just a little sharper. The game ended with the local boys on the short end of a 24-22 score. This threw the league race into a deadlock between the Lions and the Reade-men. Apparently discouraged by this defeat, the bas- keteers were again beaten the following game by a much improved Wyandotte five. The final league games with Atchison nd Leavenworth found the fLj?,'7'flf 4 I f ,JMU if Indians once again hitting their stride. Both teams were downed by considerable margin. In the meantime the Lions had been knocked from the top position by the unpredictable Argentine five who upset the champions by a point margin. The Indians now claimed undisputed leadership as the season closed and were presented with a well-deserved championship trophy. Their regular schedule having been completed, the S-M quintet was invited to participate in the Wyandotte Regionals a week later. Not only did our cagers enter this tournament, but they gained added laurels for themselves and their school by completely outclassing all opposition in winning the first place honors in decisive fashion. Their two victims were Wyandotte and Ward, whom they defeated on suc- cessive nights. 661' Q-. . ,, Ofe Ol' U12 lined GULF WITH FIVE CONSECUTIVE N. E. K. League Championships as past attainments Coach Reade and the Golf team began the season hoping to duplicate past records. Shawnee-Mission won their first three meets with Leavenworth, April 4, Rosedale, April 9, and the Emporia invitational April ll. As the Indian goes to press the team is looking forward to the N. E. K. Tournament, the State Tournament and the Greater Kansas City Tournament. .:1i,' -Q 1-, , Golf squad poses for picture THAIIK SUPPQRTED by returning lettermen and by many newcomers to the cinder path, Shawnee-Mission developed one of the strongest track teams of many seasons. Coach Pop Snodgrass had eight lettermen as a nucleus for this year's team. Although Captain Lyn Smith was still participating in basketball at the time of the opening meet, a squad of approximately six boys carried off top honors at the Bix Six Indoor Track Meet held in the Municipal Auditorium, March 1, and Shawnee-Mission completely out-classed Wyandotte and Argentine. In the first scheduled meets, the Indian tracksters exhibited excellent form as they defeated Lawrence 96 to 45, and North Kansas City 88 to 53. As the Annual goes to press April 14, Shawnee-Mission has won a meet against Argentine, 82 to 53, and placed second in the All-City Meet with Wyan- dotte and Argentine. Our first track meet held at night under the lights was a triangular event with 0l,UIl fke WUC!!! Cl, LQCQ Olathe and Atchison April 15. Uther scheduled events were with Leavenworth April 25 in addition to the K. U. Relays at Lawrence April 18, and the Baker Relays run off at Baldwin April 26. The N. E. K. Meet was held at Leavenworth May 3, the Regional was May 10 at Lawrence and the State Meet was held at Emporia May 16. Racking up the majority of the points for S-M were Roger Crawford, ace Indian hurdler, Beck, Walters, and Cooke, dash men, Renfrow, Amberg, and Walth Way, weight men, and Capt. Lyn Smith, all- around team man. Also playing a prominent part in the success of the squad were the underclassmen, who through their strong desire to earn a berth on the team, showed ri-f1 Ne wc-0 'FI ers this se a surprising skill and ability in competing with the more experienced lettermen. Through hard work and many hours of practice, Coach Snodgrass developed the '47 squad into another first-class team and maintained the high standards of athletics for which Shawnee-Mission has always been noted. Assisting Pop,' Snodgrass were Carl Ison and William Atwell. Mr. Ison coached the broadjumpers, high jumpers, and pole vaulters. Mr. Atwell tutored the weight men, and Pop', handled all runners and relay teams. Adverse weather conditions caused sev- eral meets to be postponed, but the S-M Thinclads took such events in their stride. Practice went on through all kinds of weather. Even S-M stairways and corridors were used for sprinting when a wet track prohibited outdoor workouts. The A squad to be, Ison's B team S On, fre 0l'l'lI'CL Q5 H BJLA. V - B. A. A. Officers: I.yn Smith. Bob Rein, jerry Maloney, and - Carl Reade. Sponsored by coaches. All wait eagerly for their turn 66 YM, lZ5,,,.'f 'MA Q50 SAL, Whip Ohm BHY5'EYM if The object is over the net Try ig ghq other way Calisthenic work-outs for gym class 6i7aLe We Ou! fo BUYS' AND LOYAI. SUPPORT at games was furnished by the Girls' Pep Club which boosted school spirit. Miss Gertrude Wfelch was the sponsor. The officers chosen to preside for this school year were Martha Denni, president, Helen Kittle, vice-president, Pat Stewart, secretary, and Martha Fraser, treasurer. To be eligible to hold office, a girl must be a senior and must have been in the club for one year. The girls boasted the fact that they had five out of the seven cheerleaders. They were: Shirley Kyle, Dottie Jones, Sue Sperry, Judy johnson, and Sharon Fitzpatrick, who was an alternate. An annual dinner was given for the senior girls by the under classmen. Dome Bob and Shirley give a last cheer v Q 3 y.f Fifteen cheers from the Boys' Pep Club fAe QGLIWLQH GIRLS' PEP CLUBS Yea team, we're with you! Meaning the Boys' Pep Club, of course. These little lads in bright red jackets were always at games and track meets to give their lusty support to the teams. lfifty in number, the Boys' Pep Club received five new members elected by popular vote from each class each year. Mr. -Ioseph lfinnerty sponsored the organization this last year. .lointly the Boys' and Girls' Pep Clubs gave the ever popular Athletic Ban- quet on March 29th at Gar- rett Hall. This yearly event is long remembered by those who attend. Officers for the Pep Club were Bob Larberg, presidentg John Brooks, vice-presidentg Bill Beil- liarz, secretaryg and Bob Robertson, treasurer. Judy, Bob, and Sue smile as they work 'Za 6,3 093 cbs 'o ooh 137 'iv .' W X Aug! Y 00 fv. FQ Scala, .ww K 'Qs o L J, M--ff if was n the at ilhoueiies 0 Oh! that's where the bell is TWO 5 Looking northeast from the south building in f n 1 x Visitors arrive at the west building I l 2:3--A Shadows across the east building PUCUYS Pafi9mlY Wallin!! A Old Glory waves on il 153. 'S Looking through the trees ff Y..L ' '1 . lf? 'ig 66 el'l'l2l'l'lL0l 2n U SENIUH nlnlanrnnr Adams, Shirley: COLLEGE PREP., Pres. Home Room, I, II, Debate, I, Y-Teens, II, IV, Treas. Home Room, III, Pep Club, III, IV, Book Club, III, Vice-pres. Home Room, IV, Spanish Club, IV. Alton, Joanne: COLLEGE PREP., Pres. Girl Scouts, I, Art Club, II, Pen Club, II, Y-Teens, II, III, IV, junior Play, Thespians, III, IV, Aviation Club, III, Dramatics Club, III, Student Congress, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Nacional Honor Society, IV, Quill and Scroll. Amberg, John: COLLEGE PREP., Student Congress, I, II, IV, Football, I, II, III, IV, Basketball, I, II, III, IV, Track, I, II, III, IV, Pres. class, I, II, Pres. Student Congress, IV, National Honor Society, III, IV, B.A.A., III, IV. Anderson, David: GENERAL, Treas. Home Room, I, II, Hi-Y, I, II, III, Basketball, I, Track, III, IV, Latin Club, Treas., IV. Anderson, Keith: GENERAL, Aviation Club, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Athletics, IV. Anderson, Lavinia: COMMERCIAL, F.H.A., IV. Applegate, Francis: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, II, Track, II, Football, III, Hi-Y, III, IV, Retorts, III, Cam- era Club, III, IV, Pep Club, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Ashner, Anna Mae: GENERAL. Ashner, Dorothy: GENERAL, Y-Teens, IV, Travel Club, IV. Bardwell, Kathleen: GENERAL, Moran High School, I, Play, I. Barker, Virginia: GENERAL. Barnard, Joan: COLLEGE PREP., Debate, I, Campfire Girls, I, G.A.A., II, III, Pen Club, II, Girl Scouts, II, Y- Teens, III, IV, Thespians, III, IV, junior Play, Senior Play. Bee, Richard: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, Retorts, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, II, Track, III, Aviation Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV. Beels, Thomas: GENERAL, Wentworth Military Academy, I, II, Southwest, II, III, Hi-Y, II, Basketball, III, Archery Club, IV. Beilharz, Bill: COLLEGE PREP., Hi-Y, II, III, Math Club, II, Pep Club, III, IV, Vice-pres. Home Room, III, Editor, Mission Staff, IV, Annual Staff, Pres. Home Room, IV, National Honor Society, IV, Quill and Scroll. Bishop, Bill: COLLEGE PREP., Vice-pres. class, I, Basket- ball, I, II, Football, II, Vice-pres. Home Room, II, Pem- Day, III, Football, III, Basketball, III, Vice-pres. class, III, Student Council, III, Sports Editor, Hiltop, III, An- nual Staff, IV, Athletic Club, IV, Pres. Home Room, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Bishop, Melvin: COLLEGE PREP., Treas. Home Room, I, H.M.S. Pinafore, I, Spanish Club, I, II, Pow Wow, II, T.N.T. Show, II, Pres. Home Room, III, Athletic Club, III, Cavalcade, III, Senior Play, IV, Thespians, III, IV, Hi-Y, IV, Messiah, I, II, III, IV, Mid-term graduate. Blattman, Albert: COLLEGE PREP., Stamp Club, II, III. IV, Vice-pres. Stamp Club, III, Pres. Stamp Club, IV, Gun Club, III, World Events Club, IV, I-Ii-Y, IV. Brandmeyer, Bob: COLLEGE PREP., Pres. Home Room, I, II, Hi-Y, III, IV, Gun Club, III, Aviation Club, III, World Events Club, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Brewster, Phil: GENERAL, Athletic Club, I, II, III, IV, Football, III, IV, Basketball, III, Track, III, IV, Hi-Y, IV, Drama Club, IV. Brinkman, Barbara: COLLEGE PREP., Pres. Home Room, I, II, Aviation Club, II, Book Club, III, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Brown, Betty Lou: COLLEGE PREP., G.R., I, II, III, IV, Drama Club, III, IV, Art Club, III, Junior Play, Senior Play, Pep Club, IV. Brown, Marilyn: GENERAL, Rosedale High School, I, ll, III, Pep Club, I. II, III, Y-Teens, II, III, IV, G.A.A., II, III, Glee Club, III, junior Play, Festival Play, III, Thespian Play, III, Thespians, III, IV, Operetta, III, Sen- ior Play, Mission Staff, IV. Brown, Robert Lee: GENERAL, Football, I, II, Athletic Club, I, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, I, IV, Gun Club, III, World Affairs Club, IV. Brown, Shirley: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Caval- cade, I, Orchestra, I, Mixed Chorus, II, Drama Club, II, Thespians, Ill, IV, National Honor Society, III, IV, Pep Club, III, IV, junior Play, Student Congress, III, Senior Play. Bryant, Paul: COLLEGE PREP., Aviation Club, III, IV, Retorts Club, IV. Bukowski, joe: COLLEGE PREP., Annual Staff, IV, Re- torts, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Bukowski, june: COMMERCIAL, Latin Club, I, II, III, Math Club, II, Y-Teens, III, Book Club, III, Steno-ettes, IV. Burch, Beverly: COLLEGE PREP., Red Cross, II, Girls' Choir, II, Spanish Club, III, IV, Pen Club, III, Y-Teens, III, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Callaghan, Anna: COLLEGE PREP., Debate Club, I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, National Forensics, II, III, IV, Y-Teens, II, III, IV, junior Red Cross, III, National Honor Society, III, IV, Health Club, IV, Valedictorian. Cole, Lewis: AGRICULTURAL, Hi-Y, I, II, III, Athletic Club, I, II, III, F.F.A., I, II, III, IV, Pres. F.F.A., IV, Home Room Pres. III, Football, II. Callaghan, Bill: GENERAL. Campbell, Nellie Mae: COMMERCIAL, Red Cross, II, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Y-Teens, III. Carter, Gerald: GENERAL, Math Club, II, IV, Pep Club, III, IV, Aviation Club, III, I-Ii-Y, IV. Chastain, Jack: GENERAL, Southwest, I, Stamp Club, II, B.A.A., III, IV, Math Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV. Clark, Doris: COLLEGE PREP., Band, I, II, III, IV, Y- Teens, II, III, IV, Orchestra, III, IV, Latin Club, III, G.A.A., III, Home Nursing, IV. Coiner, Zoe: COMMERCIAL, G.R., I, II, II, IV, Junior Red Cross, I, II, III, G.A.A., II, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Vice-Pres. Steno-ettes, IV, F.H.A., IV, National Honor Society, IV. Cokeley, Delta: GENERAL, Orchestra, I, G.R., I, IV, Girls' Trio, III, Mixed Chorus, III, Travel Club, III, F.H.A., IV. Colton, Theresa: COLLEGE PREP., Webster Groves High School, I, II, Vesper Service, II, Girls' Trio, III, IV, Mes- siah, III, IV, Choir, III, IV, Senior Play, 'National Honor Society, IV. Cooper, Donald: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, II, Ath- letic Club, III, Football, III, Track, III, History Club, III, Pep Club, IV. Cooper, Jean: COMMERCIAL, G.R., II, III, IV, Travel Club, III, Steno-ettes, III, IV, F.H.A., IV. Cordes, Barbara: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, II, III, G.R., III, Travel Club, III, Drama Club, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Quill and Scroll. Cravens, Shirley: COMMERCIAL, Junior Red Cross, II, Travel Club, III, G.R., III, IV, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Band, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Crawford, Roger: COLLEGE PREP., Track, I, II, III, IV, Football, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, II, III, Spanish Club, II, Retorts, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Student Congress, IV. Crummett, Marjorie: GENERAL, G.R., II, III, Camera Club, III, F.H.A., IV, Drama Club, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Cunningham, Delores: GENERAL, G.R., I, II, III, Camera Club, III, IV, G.A.A., III. Curren, Hazel. Denni, Martha: COLLEGE PREP., Chorus, I, Math Club, II, Drama Club, II, IV, Spanish Club, II, Pep Club, III, IV, Mission Staff, III, Annual Staff, IV, Pres. Pep Club, IV, Thespians. Dixon, Jeanette: GENERAL, G.R., I, II, III, G.A.A., II, III, IV. Dyer, Doris: GENERAL, junior Red Cross, III, Home Eco- nomics, III, IV, Home Nursing, IV. Dyer, Iris: GENERAL, Junior Red Cross, III, Home Eco- nomics, III, IV, Home Nursing, IV. Dykstra, Edward: GENERAL, Football, II, Athletic Club, II, III, IV, Gun Club, III, Travel Club, IV, Hi-Y, IV. Edgerton. Jadene: COLLEGE PREP., Drama Club, III, IV, G.R., III. IV, Book Club, III. Eclmisson, Virginia: COMMERCIAL, G.R., I, II, Steno- ettes, III, IV, Aviation Club, III, Girls' Glee Club, IV. Ernst, Elinor: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, II, Vice- pres. Home Room, III, Drama Club, III, G.R., III, IV, Camera Club, III, Pep Club, IV, Junior Play. Eulich, John: GENERAL, Football, I, II, III, IV, Treas. Home Room, I, Track, I, II, III, Pow Wow, II, III, Hi-Y, III, IV, Student Congress, III, Pres. Gun Club, III, Ser. Class, IV, Drama Club, IV, Sec. Home Room, IV. Euritt, Joe. Fenn, Dorothy: COLLEGE PREP., Brookings, South Da- kota, H. S., I, Treas. Class, I, Student Council, I, G.A.A., I, II, III, Spanish Club, III, IV. Felder, Elizabeth. Fisher, James: COLLEGE PREP., Math Club, II, History Club, II, III, Camera Club, III, Pep Club, IV, Current Events Club, IV. Fitzwater, Donald Robert: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, II, Retorts, ll, III, IV, Stamp Club. III, Math Club, IV, Orchestra, IV. Fleet, Joyce: COLLEGE PREP., G.R., Il, III, Spanish Club, II, Drama Club, III, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Pep Club, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Quill and Scroll. Foster, Robert: COLLEGE PREP., Aviation Club, II, IV, Athletic Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, IV. Fraser, Barbara: GENERAL, G.A.A., I, Glee Club, II, III, IV, Travel Club, III, Drama Club, III, G.R., II, Chorus, III, IV. Fraser, Martha: COLLEGE PREP., Pres. Home Room, I, II, Spanish Club, I, II, Pep Club, II, III, IV, National Honor Society, III, IV, Annual Staff, III, IV, Junior Play, Treas. Home Room, III, Student Congress, IV, Home Coming Queen, IV, Senior Play, Thespians, IV, Editor, Mission Staff, IV, Quill and Scroll. Frieze, Clarence: GENERAL, Thespians, III, Hi-Y, III, IV. Frisbie, Dean: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, Retorts, II, IV, Golf, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, III, National Honor Society, IV. Frisbie, Mauritza: COLLEGE PREP., Debate Club, I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, National Forensic League, II. III, IV, G.R., II, III, IV, Junior Red Cross, III, IV, F.H.A., III, IV, National Honor Society, III, IV, Health Club, IV. Gates, John: COLLEGE PREP., Track, I, II, III, Retorts, Il, B.A.A., II, III, Football, II, Annual Staff, III, Mission Staff, IV, Pen Club, IV. Gilpin, Phyllis: GENERAL, Taunton, Mass., High School, I, Glee Club, I, Rolla, Mo., High School, II, III, Student Council, II, III, Basketball, II, III, Mixed Choir, III, Mixed Chorus, IV, Drama Club, IV. Glenn, Pat: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Sunset Hill, III, Hockey, III, Basketball, III, Acappella Choir, III, Photography, III, Pep Club, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Goddard, Madge: COMMERCIAL, Stanley High School, I, II, III, Pep Club, I, Il, III, Annual Staff, II, III, Sopho- more Play, Band, II, III, IV, Glee Club, II, III, Girls' Ensemble, II, III, Junior Play, Junior Sextet, One-act Play, III, G.R., IV, Orchestra, IV. Gorman, Robert: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Inner Circle, I, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, II, III, IV, Math Club, II, Pres. Inner Circle, III, IV, Pres. Lighthouse Club, III, Retorts, III, Pres. Hi-Y, IV, Mixed Choir, IV, Student Congress, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Graybill, Alice: COMMERCIAL, G.A.A., II, G.R., II, Avi- ation Club, III, Latin Club, II, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Treas. Home Room, IV. E Griggs, Jerry: GENERAL, Central High School, I, II, Foot- ball, I, II, Basketball, I, II, Pres. Home Room, I, II, Vice- Pres. of Class, II, Golf, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Athletic Club, III, IV. Grimes, Donnell: COLLEGE PREP., Basketball, I, II, III, Football, II, III, Track, II, III, Football, II, III, Track, II, III, Athletic Club, I, Hi-Y, II, III, IV, Gun Club, III, Aviation Club, III, IV, Retorts, IV. 66 77 elllelllgel' Len SENIIIH IIIIIEIITIIIIY Haffner, Nancy: COLLEGE PREP., Southwest, I, Red Cross, I, G.R., II, IV, Spanish Club, II, III, Drama Club, II, III, IV, Girls' Glee Club, II, Camera Club, III, Senior Play, Thespians, IV. Hand, Margaret: COMMERCIAL, G.R., I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, Drama Club, III, Steno-ettes, III, IV. Haley, Francie: GENERAL, G.R., I, II, III, Aviation Club, III, IV, Fashion Show, III. Hansen, Ellen: GENERAL, G.R., I, II, III, IV, Aviation Club, III, F.H.A., III, Style Show, III, Book Club, III, Spelling Club, IV, Red Cross, IV. Hare, George: GENERAL, F.F.A., III, Hi-Y, III, IV, Vice- pres. F.F.A., IV, Vice-Pres. Inner Circle, IV. Harnden, Anna Mae: COMMERCIAL, St. Joseph High School, I, Book Club, III, G.R., III, Junior Red Cross, IV. Harnden, Mary: GENERAL, St. Joseph High School, I, G.R., III, Red Cross, IV. Harris, Alma Sue: COLLEGE PREP., Lighthouse, I, II, III, IV, Orchestra, I, II, III, IV, State Music Contest, I, II, III, IV, G.R., II, III, IV. Harris, Carol: GENERAL, Messiah, I, II, III, IV, Operetta, I, Spanish Club, II, Spring Concert, Il, Music Contest, III, Double Trio, IV. Hartford, Clara Belle: COLLEGE PREP., Band I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, II, III, Math Club, II, Orchestra, III, IV, G.R., III, Sec.-Treas. Home Room, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Heider, Jean: COLLEGE PREP., Stanley High School, I, Band, I, II, III, IV, Glee Club, I, G.R., III, Art Club, III, Latin Club, III, Orchestra, III, IV, Retorts, IV. Holmberg, Rose Lee: COMMERCIAL, Student Council, I, II, G.R., I, II, III, Junior Red Cross, II, Vice-Pres. Home Room, III, Spanish Club, III, Camera Club, III, Mission Staff, IV, Pep Club, IV, Steno-ettes, IV, Quill and Scroll. Holmes, Roger: GENERAL, Band I, II, III, Hi-Y, III, Travel Club, IV, Orchestra, IV. Howe, Charles: COLLEGE PREP., Hi-Y, I, II, III, Junior Red Cross, I, II, Math Club, II, Junior Play, Senior Play, Thespians, III, IV, Pep Club, III, IV. Hughes, Clarence: COLLEGE PREP., Mo. Military Acad., I, Football, I, III, IV, Track, I, II, III, IV, Swimming, I, History Club, II, III, Latin Club, II, Athletic Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Drama Club, IV, Cavalcade, IV. Jack, Don: COLLEGE PREP., Math Club, II, Spanish Club, II, Retorts, III, Pep Band, III, IV, Pep Club, IV, Private Pilot, IV, Pres. Band, IV, Hi-Y, IV, Senior Play. Jackson, Arnold: COLLEGE PREP., Southwest H. S., II, Bonham H. S., I, Basketball, I, II, B.A.A., II, III, IV, Gun Club, II, III, Student Council, III, Property Manager, III, Hi-Y, IV. James, Kenneth: GENERAL, Basketball, I, Gun Club, III, Travel Club, IV, Hi-Y, IV, Athletic Club, IV. James, Phil: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, Travel Club, II, Stamp Club, III, Camera Club, III, Pep Club, IV, Avi- ation Club, IV. Jamieson, Harriet: COLLEGE PREP., G.R., II, III, Latin Club, II, Drama Club, III, G.A.A., Il. Jankus, Henry: COLLEGE PREP., Stamp Club, II, III, IV, Mission Staff, II, III, IV, History Club, III, Annual Staff, III, IV, World Affairs Club, IV. Jennens, William: INDUSTRIAL, Stamp Club, II, III, IV, Gun Club, III. I Johnson, Pat: COLLEGE PREP., G.R., I, II, Drama Club, III, Book Club, III, IV, History Club, IV. Johnson, Wanda: COMMERCIAL, Spanish Club, II, G.R., II, III, IV, Steno-ettes, III, IV. Johnston, Cliff: COLLEGE PREP., Pen Club, III, Gun Club, gl, Archery Club, IV, Camera Club, IV, Mission Staff, 66 elflflelflgel' 2n ,, SENIIJH nlnrcrnnr Jones, Dottie: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, I, Treas. Home Room, I, Cheerleader, Il, III, IV, Student Council, II, Sec. Home Room, II, III, Pep Club, II, III, IV, Na- tional Honor Society, III, IV, Junior Play, Vice-pres. Junior Class, Annual Staff, III, IV, Make-up Editor, An- nual Staff, IV, Homecoming Attendant, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Jones, Joanne: COMMERCIAL, Math Club, II, G.R., II, III, IV, Aviation Club, III, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Mixed Chorus, IV. Joyce, Eloise: COLLEGE PREP., Band, I, II, IV, G.R., II, Spanish Club. II, Book Club, IV, Instrumental Ensemble, IV. Kahan, Don: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, Bas- ketball, I, II, III, Track, I, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, II, Gun Club, III, Hi-Y, III, IV, Drama Club, IV. Keller, Kathleen: COMMERCIAL, Pen Club, II, III, Junior Red Cross, II, Drama Club, III, Mission Staff, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Senior Play, Pep Club, IV, Sec. Steno-ettes, IV, Sec. Home Room, IV, National Honor Society, Thes- pians, Feature Editor Mission , Quill and Scroll. Kittle, Helen: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, I, II, Sec. Home Room, I, Vice-Pres. Home Room, II, Math Club, II, Junior Play, Camera Club, III, National Honor So- ciety, III, IV, TreasfNI-IS, IV, Thespians, III, IV, Annual Staff, III, Editor, Annual Staff, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Sec. Junior Class, Pep Club, III, IV, Senior Play, Homecom- ing Attendant, IV, Vice-pres. Pep Club, IV, Vice-pres. Thespians, IV, Quill and Scroll. Klapka, Bob: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, Aviation Club, II, III, IV, Retorts, III, Pres. Aviation Club, IV, Pep Club, IV, Senior Play, Hi-Y, IV, Thespians, IV. Kyle, Shirley: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Thes- pians, II, III, IV, Thespian Play, II, Pep Club, III, IV, Vice-Pres. Home Room, II, Junior Play, Cheerleader, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Senior Play, National Honor Society, IV, Quill and Scroll. Koehn, Bill: Southeast, I, II, III, S-M, Aviation, Hi-Y. LaBar, Tom: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, Debate, I, II, History Club, III, Athletic Club, III, Drama Club, IV, Pep Club, IV, Director of Cavalcade. LaDew, Carol: COMMERCIAL, Latin Club, I, II, Book Club, III, Drama Club, III, IV. Land, David: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, III, Mission Staff, IV, Pep Club, IV, Spanish Club, IV, Hi-Y, IV, Ten- nis, IV, Northeast High School, I, II, Basketball, I, Stu- dent Council, I, II. Land, Elizabeth: COLLEGE PREP., G.R., I, II, IV, Chorus, I, Thespians, II, III, IV, Pep Club, III, IV, Messiah, II, III, IV, Treas. Home Room, II, III, Drama Club, II, Junior Red Cross, II. Larberg, Bob: COLLEGE PREP., Pres. Home Room, I, II, III, Football, I, Treas. Class, II, Junior Play, Student Con- gress, III, Thespians, III, IV, Cheerleader, III, IV, Pres. Boys' Pep Club, III, Senior Play, Mission Staff, IV. Leader, Edna: COMMERCAL, G.R., II, Travel Club, III, Steno-ettes, III, IV. Leibach, Mary: GENERAL, G.A.A., II, III, IV, F.H.A., III, Archery Club, IV. Lord, James: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, Bas- ketball, I, 11, III, xv, Track, I, 11, 111, IV, B.A.A., 11, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Pres. Home Room, III, Vice-Pres. Home Room, IV, Drama Club, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Low, Rosalie: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, G.R., I, II, III, Drama Club, III, IV: Camera Club, III, Mission Staff, IV. Luschen, Bob: COMMERCIAL, Freemont, Nebraska, H. S., I, Football, I, II, III, Basketball, I, II. III, Westport, II, III, Track, I, II, III. Mack, Bill: COLLEGE PREP., Athletic Club, II, III, IV, Football, II, III, Track, II, III, IV. Mackey, Joe: AGRICULTURAL, F.F.A., I, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, I, II, III, Drama Club, IV. Maddox, Maxine: COMMERCIAL, G.R., II, Spelling Club, II, IV, Drama Club, II, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Pres. Steno- ettes, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Mission Staff, IV, National Honor Society, IV, Quill and Scroll. Maeder, Albert: GENERAL, Gun Club, III, Hi-Y, IV. Maloney, Jerry: GENERAL, Football, I, II, III, IV, Basket- ball, I, II, III, IV, Golf, I, II, III, IV, Home 'Room Pres., I, II, Home Room Vice-Pres., III, IV, Vice-Pres. Class, II, Afhletic Club, III, Student Congress, III, Track, III, Pres. C ass, IV. Marin, Mike: GENERAL, Aviation Club, II, III, Spanish Club, III, F.F.A., IV. Mart, Tom: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Retorts, II, Camera Club, III, IV, Archery Club, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Marx, Joe: GENERAL, Gun Club, III, Athletic Club, IV. Mason, Ernest: GENERAL, F.F.A., I, II, III, IV, Camera Club, IV. Maxwell, Gloria: COLLEGE PREP., Chorus, I, Art Club, II, III, IV, Spanish Club, III, IV. Mayhew, Robert: COLLEGE PREP., Math Club, II, Gun Club, III, Athletic Club, IV. McCannon, Billiejean: GENERAL, Central High School, I, II, G.R., I, II, G.A.A., III, Fashion Show, III, Home Mak- ers, IV. - McCartney, Kitty: Twirling Corps, I, II, III, Girl Reserves, Drama Club, G.A.A., Art Club, Debate, III, Cavalcade, Mission Staff, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Pep Club, IV. McMichael, Craig: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, Basketball, I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, Athletic Club, I, II, III, IV, Stamp Club, II, Hi-Y, III, IV, Gun Club, III, Student Council, IV. Melching, JoAnn: COMMERCIAL, Spelling Club, II, G.R., II, IV, Drama Club, III, IV, Travel Club, III, Home Eco- nomics, IV. Miller, Dean: COLLEGE PREP., Cheyenne High School, Wyoming, I, II, Swimming Team, II, Gun Club, III, Avi- ation Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, IV, Civil Air Patrol, IV. Miller, Lola: COLLEGE PREP., Math Club, II, Travel Club, III, F.H.A., III, IV, Annual Staff Treas., IV, Sec. F.H.A., IV, National Honor Society, IV, Quill and Scroll. Missar, Stan: GENERAL, Riverside-Brookfield High School, I, II, Baseball, I, II, Football, I, Art Staff, Annual, II, Lef- terman Club, II, Aviation Club, III, Gun Club, III, Pen Club, IV, Golf, IV, Athletic Club, IV. Mock, Doris: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Math Club, II, G.R., II, III, IV, Camera Club, III, Steno-ettes, IV. Moore, James: COLLEGE PREP., Basketball, I, II, III, IV, Track, II, History Club, II, III, Pres. History Club, III, Athletic Club, III, IV, World Affairs Club, IV. Myers, J. Floyd: GENERAL, DeSoto High School, I, II, Baseball, I, II, Pep Club, I, II, B.A.A., IV, Hi-Y, IV. Nelson, Eva Lee: COMMERCIAL, Debate, I, II, Drama Club, III, IV, Junior Play, G.R., III, Archery Club, IV. Nelson, Gordon: AGRICULTURAL, F.F.A., I, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Camera Club, III. Nelson, Peggy: GENERAL, Westport, I, Junior Red Cross, II, History Club, III, G.R., II, III, Homemakers, III, Travel Club, IV, Archery Club, IV. Oberholtz, Zada: COLLEGE PREP., Northwest Jr. High School, I, Norwester Staff, I, Spanish Club, II, III, Art Club, III, Drama Club, IV. Owsley, Charles: GENERAL. Painter, Pat: COLLEGE PREP., H.M.S. Pinafore, I, Mes- siah, I, II, III, Drama Club, II, III, T.N.T., II, Sec.-Treas. Home Room, II, Camera Club, III, Student Congress, III, Mixed Chorus, III, Pep Club, IV, Thespians, IV, Caval- cade, IV. Peck, Bob: COLLEGE PREP., Retorts, II, Athletic Club, II, Thespians, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Pep Club, III, IV, Mis- sion Staff, IV, Quill and Scroll. Pflumm, Clarine: COMMERCIAL, St. Joseph High School, I, II, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Sec. Steno-ettes, IV, Travel Club, III, Mission Staff, IV, Sec. Home Room, IV. Phillips, Bill: GENERAL, Fontana H. S., I, Paola H. S., II, Basketball, I, II, III, School Play, I, II, Track, II. Phillips, Robert: COLLEGE PREP., Camera Club, III, IV, Athletic Club, IV, Hi-Y, IV. Phipps, Preston: COLLEGE PREP., Pep Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, IV, Travel Club, IV. Pirnie, Carl: GENERAL, Math Club, II, Football, III, IV, Athletic Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Gun Club, III. Plapp, Elmer: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, B.A.A., II, III, IV, Traclt, III. Prewitt, Vernon: COLLEGE PREP., Hi-Y, IV, Retorts, IV, Aviation Club, IV. Raitt, Jereldine: COLLEGE PREP., Austin, Texas, H. S., I, II, III, Orchestra, I, II, III, G.R., I, G.A.A., II, F.H.A., III, Book Club, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Rankin, Lorraine: COMMERCIAL, G.R., I, II, III, Band, I, II, III, IV, Pres. Spelling Club, I, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Pres. Home Room, IV, Vice-Pres. Steno-ettes, IV. Rein, Robert: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, Bas- ketball, I, II, III, Pres. Home Room, I, II, B.A.A., II, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Gun Club, III, Drama Club, IV, Treas. Home Room, IV, Athletic Club, IV. Renner, Jo Anne: GENERAL, DeSoto H. S., I, II, Pep Club, I, II, F.H.A., III, IV, Drama Club, III, Y-Teens, IV. Rice, Joanne: COMMERCIAL, G.R., III, IV, Camera Club, III, Drama Club, III, Treas. Steno-ettes, IV. Robertson, Bobby, GENERAL, Treas. Home Room, II, Pres. Home Room, III, Junior Play, Pep Club, III, IV, Caval- cade, IV. Robertson, Roberta: COMMERCIAL, G.R., I, II, III, IV, Glee Club, I, IV, Mixed Chorus, II, III, Drama Club, III, Travel Club, III, Steno-ettes, IV. Robinson, Lucy: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Caval- cade, I, H.M.S. Pinafore, I, Drama Club, II, Thespian Play, II, Thespians, II, III, IV, Girls' Glee Club, II, Mixed Chorus, II, Pep Club, III, IV, Sec. Home Room, III, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Quill and Scroll. Routon, Ruth: COLLEGE PREP., Central H. S., I, G.R., I, II, III, Latin Club, I, Pen Club, II, III, IV, Math Club, II, III, Annual Staff, IV, Mission Staff, IV, History Club, IV, Quill and Scroll. Rowland, Blaine: GENERAL, Southeast H. S., I, II, III, Red Cross, I, Rifle Team, II, III, Camera Club, IV, F.F.A., IV. Rupard, Arlene: GENERAL, Red Cross, II, G.R., II, III, IV, Travel Club, III, Home Economics, III, IV, Steno- ettes, IV. Rusher, Pauline: COMMERCIAL, Red Cross I, II, Latin Club, I, G.R., I, II, III, IV, Camera Club, III, Steno-ettes, III, IV. Russell, Charles: COLLEGE PREP., Luana, Iowa, H. S., I, F.F.A., III, Camera Club, III, Retorts, IV. Sagmoen, Thomas: COLLEGE PREP., Fayetteville, North Carolina, H. S., I, Washburn H. S., Minneapolis, Minne- sota, II, III, French Club, II, Hi-Y, III, IV, Student Coun- cil, III, Athletic Club, IV, Basketball, IV, Track, IV, Camera Club, IV. Sand, Marteena: GENERAL, East High School, I, II, Stu- dent Council, I, II, G.R.. I, II, III, IV, G.A.A., II, III, IV, Music Contest, II, III, Archery Club, IV. Schweiger, Florence: COMMERCIAL, junior Red Cross, II, Travel Club, III, Camera Club, III, G.R., III, IV, Steno- ettes, III, IV. Scott, Jack: COLLEGE PREP., Hi-Y, II, III, IV, Mixed En- semble, II, Boys' Quartet, III, IV, Junior Play, Thespians, III, IV, Pep Club, IV, Pres. Home Room, IV, Chorus Cabinet, IV. Seymour, Bob: GENERAL, F.F.A., I, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, III, Hi-Y, IV, Travel Club, IV, Inner Circle, IV. Shanahan, Jim: COLLEGE PREP., Kingswood H. S., I, Football, I, II, Basketball, I, Baseball, I, Athletic Club, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, Retorts, III, Camera Club, IV. Sherfey, Marvin: GENERAL, Hi-Y, III, IV, Gun Club, III, Retorts, IV, Camera Club, IV. Shore, Bill. Sims, joe: AGRICULTURAL, F.F.A., I, II, III, IV. Slagle, Dick: COLLEGE PREP., Wichita Falls H. S., I, II, Sports, I, Spanish Club, II, Math Club, II, Pep Band, III, IV, Retorts, IV, Hi-Y, IV. 66 elflelllgel' men H srmun IIIHEIITIIHY Slayton, Welsh: COLLEGE PREP., Ruskin H. S., I, II, Paseo H. S., III, Hi-Y, I, II, Football, II, Basketball, III, Track, III, Junior Play. Smith, Lyn: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, Bas- ketball, I, II, III, IV, Track, I, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, I, II, III, IV, Pres. Athletic Club, IV, Pres. Home Room, I, III, IV, Treas. Home Room, II, Retorts, III, Vice-Pres. Class, IV, Student Congress, IV, Hi-Y, IV, National Honor Society, IV. Snyder, Eddie. Snyder, Bill: COMMERCIAL, Carthage H. S., I, II, III. Sowers, Harold: GENERAL, Golf, I, II, III, IV, Math Club, II, III, Athletic Club, III, IV. Springer, Doris: COLLEGE PREP., G.R., I, II, III, Spanish Club, III, Drama Club, IV, Senior Play. Spuehler, Harry: GENERAL, Vice-Pres. Home Room, I, II, Football, I, II, III, IV, Basketball, I, II, III, IV, Track, I, II, III, IV, Latin Club, I, Stamp Club, II, B.A.A., II, III, IV, Retorts, III, Pres. National Honor Society, III, IV, Sec. Home Room, III, Hi-Y, IV. Stack, Karin: COLLEGE PREP., Spanish Club, I, II, G.R., I, II, IV, Pen Club, II, Drama Club, IV, Horizon Club, IV, National Honor Society, IV, Salutatorian. Stagner, N. Dale: COLLEGE PREP., Eugene Coyle H. S., I, II, McBride, III, Football, I, II, III, Sodality, I, II, III, Treas. Home Room, II, Hi-Y, IV, Science Club, IV, Cam- era Club, IV. Standiford, Jason: COLLEGE PREP., Basketball, I, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, I, II, III, Football, I, II, III, IV, Treas. Home Room, I, Track, II, III, IV, B.A.A., III, IV, Biology Club, III, Math Club, IV. Steele, Jerry: INDUSTRIAL, F.F.A., I, II, III, IV, Aviation Club, III, IV, I-Ii-Y, IV. Sterling, Clyde: GENERAL, Garnett H. S., I, Football, I, II, III, IV, Hi-Y, I, II. III, Track, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, II, III, IV. Stewart, Pat: COLLEGE PREP., Latin Club, I, II, Art Club, II, III, Pep Club, III, IV, Senior Play, Annual Staff, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Drama Club, IV, Thespians, IV. Stewart, Rosemary: COMMERCIAL, Junior Red Cross, II, G.R., III, Travel Club, III, Steno-ettes, III, IV. Stewart, Wanda: COMMERCIAL, G.A.A., II, III, G.R., II, Steno-ettes, III, IV, Archery Club, IV. Stickrod, Don: COLLEGE PREP., Football, I, II, III, IV, Basketball, I, II, III, IV, Golf, I, II, III, IV, Sec. Home Room, I, II, IV, Vice-Pres., III, National Honor Society, III, IV, Vice-Pres. Student Body, IV. Stoker, Frankie: COMMERCIAL, G.A.A., II, III, IV, Junior Red Cross, II, Drama Club, III, G.R., III, IV, Home Eco- nomics, IV. Sullivan, james: GENERAL, Litchfield H. S., I, Hi-Y, IV, Athletic Club, IV, Travel Club, IV, Junior Class Play. Swaim, Lois: COMMERCIAL, G.R., I, II, III, IV, Inner Circle, I, II, III, IV, Girls' Chorus, I, II, IV, Latin Club, II, History Club, II, Camera Club, III, Steno-ettes, III, IV, F.H.A., IV, Senior Play. Taft, Elizabeth: COLLEGE PREP., G.R., I, Retorts, II, III, IV, Pres. Retorts, IV, Book Club, III, IV, Pres. Book Club, IV, National Honor Society, III, IV. Taylor, Caroline: COMMERCIAL, Pen Club, II, Southwest H. S., III, Advanced Glee Club, III, A-Cappella Choir, III, Redskin Revels, III, Senior Red Cross, III, Advanced Glee Club, IV. Taylor, Norma: GENERAL, G.R., II, III, IV, F.H.A., III, IV, Steno-ettes, IV. Tesche, Richard: COLLEGE PREP., Boys' Chorus, I, Math Club, II, III, Mixed Chorus, II, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Track, III, IV, Pep Club, IV, World Affairs, IV, Vice-Pres. Home Room, IV. 66 enlelngel' 'Men N slamlnn UIHEUTUHY Tolson, Dorothy: COLLEGE PREP., Sec. Home Room, I, Latin Club, I, Pres. Home Room, II, Pres. History Club, II, G.R., II, III, Pep Club, III, IV, Camera Club, III, Student Congress, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Vice-Pres. Home Room, IV, Senior Play, Quill and Scroll. Tooley, Mariorie: COMMERCIAL, DeSoto H. S., I, II, Cen- tral H. S., III, Glee Club, I, IV, Band, I, II, Steno-ettes, IV. Tooley, Merlyn: GENERAL, Hi-Y, IV, Athletic Club, IV, Travel Club, IV. Townsend, Leon: COLLEGE PREP., Central Union H. S., I, II, III, Debate, III, Senior Play, IV, Cavalcade, IV. Trego, Jeanene: COLLEGE PREP., Band, I, II, III, Latin Club, I, II, Math Club, II, G.R., II, Pep Club, III, IV, Annual Staff, III, IV, Thespians, III, IV, Camera Club, III, Pow Wow, III, Student Congress, IV, Mission Staff, IV, Honor and Awards Committee, IV, National Honor Society, IV, Quill and Scroll. Trimble, james: COLLEGE PREP., Lyons H. S., I, II, Wrestling, I, II, Debate, II, III, IV, Gun Club, III, Cam- era Club, III, IV, Athletic Club, IV. Trudell, Pat: POST-GRADUATE, Westport H. S., I, II, G.R., I, Pep Club, II, A-Cappella Choir, II, Chorus, IV. True, Sterling: COLLEGE PREP., Westport I-I. S., I, Latin Club, I, Aviation Club, II, Camera Club, III, Gun Club, III. Van Meerhaeghe, Virginia: COMMERCIAL, G.R., I, II, III, IV, G.A.A., 111, IV, F.H.A., IV, sfeno-cues, 111. Vetter, Bob: COLLEGE PREP., Westport H.S., I, Aviation Club, III, IV, Hi-Y, III, IV, Remus, 111, lv. Viard, Victor: INDUSTRIAL, Math Club, II, III. Walter, Charleen: COLLEGE PREP., Band, I, II, III,' Latin Club, I, G.R., II, III, IV, Drama Club, III, IV, Camera Club, III, Senior Play, Mission Staff, IV. Wasser, Roger: COLLEGE PREP., Aviation Club, II, III, IV, Annual Staff, IV, Civil Air Patrol, IV. Watson, Lores: GENERAL, Band, I, II, IV, Orchestra, I, III, G.R., II, III, IV, Mixed Choir, III, IV, Dance Band, IV. Way, Walter: GENERAL, Football, I, II, III, IV, Basket- ball, I, II, III, IV, Track, I, II, III, IV, Athletic Club, III, IV, Student Congress, IV, Mission Staff, IV. Wharton, Ernest: COLLEGE PREP., Student Council, II, III, Junior Play, Thespians, III, IV, Boys' Quartet, IV, Senior Play. Williams, Margie: COMMERCIAL, G.R., II, III, Drama Club, IV, Steno-ettes, III, Pep Club, IV. Wolfe, joseph: GENERAL, Hoisington H. S., I, II, III, Foot- ball, I, II, III, Vice-Pres. Class, I, Treas. Class, II, Sec. Class, II, Treas. Home Room, I, Hi-Y, I, II, III, IV, Bas- ketball, I, II, III, Sec. Home Room, II, Athletic Club, IV, Drama Club, IV. Yost, Gale: COLLEGE PREP., Home Room Treas., I, G.R., II, III, IV, Spelling Club, II, Pres. Home Room, III, Span- ish Club, III, Biology Club, IV, Junior Red Cross, IV, National Honor Society, IV. if U: 551.7 fam W Studious vesera . Veac , Yhmips. W., 3 sen Bn d KWCKL Ueft to rigbtbfvlas . Wfinritt. 1.3 Wan e 05' FXRST ROV! h W. BACK RO - Snyder, W. Lnschen. B.. Ra Laffy R ay' of KCK N Presents award s ,lf R :rl 553 is A, K 5.5.35 Mkssion W DCC- ax Sha necasion cond ge Se First hom eroom to hav e 100721 in annu I H Pllrchas Cs Q Soph omores with all A,s as -Ll lf 1' HAROLD B. OSBORNE - GENERAL INSURANCE HE. 0324 Overland Park, Kansas 1 f M K I l wx!! KL i id- -h'--q!- ' o I G- Iohnson County Herald ,Y if .yfi ff ,viyrglzlfrlxrf , - L mmm ' , . -i ax? Z,.'T'.f 'r JOHN S. WATKINS AND SON YOUR FAMILY DRUGGISTS , 300 Ward Parkway 63rd and Country Club Plaza Brookside 'i-.ff ' -.,- L mfm xfw Bk 0 wif 3 15- T: N A ff! wb -1' nf ff REI N HARDT'S -EL FLOWERS L- 56th and Mission Rd. DElmar 1700 f Z, -f ZW' uf- ..: ' X . 'i q .. 4'4 ' xb' 9 1 - X . 0-i.!'f'e5'r'71 Zfa.f1'l9?l?f-Q l- C :'1A,'.:91x5hs,lTx.'N rv l,y, gn rf-11 QS?-Mfzqv 'N 1-Us 'ff' v- Tl sw '- ,ne XY My 4 fn N. I V, 'X X wwf I I - I, I I f 5- ALLEN'S DRIVE-IN QUICK SERVICE AND DELICIOUS FOOD 63rd and Paseo JA. 9534 ' ' '65 .. v J -A ff wfw X- E I il ' .fi :nt Thr,-,g Q- 'E TREGO INVESTMENT AND -935' T' REALTY COMPANY I , HE- 3364 2 sv Ma.sa..., :Til I 1- XE xg 3,3 C. MORRIS WATKINS FOR DRUGS ' Individually Owned - Personally Supervised 4700 Broadway70n the Plaza I Gu- ,-- IW, F7 Z.--U f, X ' V, :fa 11 -Qi I 'L fir f-4 -'F:' J suv Youn Home mom 'T START AND WILSON A 6lst and Mission Road - lg Hi. 9640 -.ik vl. 3993 W 71 Wifi! f MW 59'- v QQ. 5 xl I 5' lsr! ,G , 4' - K., , 6,-my N I,,gf.N 9,,9J.g2gJ,Q,j In ' I In 2 ' l?'l ll' ll l I 'I I N L ' I A - Z -.544 If W f' 'X l NM X rf: ix 'gi Bra ' NW. we MIM of .SJlzawnee- ififiion HISTUHY UP NEW BUILDING TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS AGO Citizens of northeast johnson County faced a per- plexing problem. How were their children to get an adequate high school education as conveniently and yet as inexpensively as possible? The year 1920 found northeast Johnson County the only community in the area without rural high school facilities. At Overland Park and Merriam there were two district grade D high schools, but parents were not satisfied with these. They wanted their children of high school age to receive such education as would admit them to a state university. A possible high school en- rollment of 150 needed a well-equipped school plant. Of this number more than forty per cent were compelled to go outside the county and even across the state line into Missouri for a first rate high school course. September 23, 1921, dawned bright and clear and the battle of the ballots was on. Those favoring the proposed rural high school district had prepared and mailed to 'Q D rv - The Chancellor from K. U. speaks to community each of the voters in the district a printed pamphlet, giving true facts about the high school. Unusual interest was manifested. A final count of the ballots showed a total of 1,049 votes for and 975 votes against the proposition to organize a rural high school district. There were 1,027 votes for and 925 votes against the proposition to authorize fBlS0,000 in bonds for the purchase of a site and the erection and furnishing of a build- ing. When the building was complete, it was considered the most up-to-date building in Kansas for the funds that had been used for it. It was an eventful day of proud attain- ment when Chancellor Lindley of Kansas University came to dedicate the new Shaw- nee-Mission Rural High School Building. Q x Y Q '50 PQ 1, 0 .5906 C t C 4506 SIX 4 fe 6' 41 6 ex O. D. MOFFETT 4169 ab AND SONS' MOTOR CO. DODGE ond PLYMOUTH Mo Par Parts HE. 2222 IS P319 'NXXZBPX Co' 'QOOX O 1 CDC' 05 QQXSXG 'P 01066 +095 vb 0 . . 00369 wefvdoweffxofo 19 Rio C5055 X Ps qebb we Yr we 115 sqw 1 Q. 1 GV? Sxgiiaaa' og W Wh .COMPAN Y H e 4242 TAYL ' SERVICE S2'g'?'l0N 47th and Rainbow Blvd' Konsos City 3, Kansas VAlentine 9603 QW 9 . W - QYOO so wisfg 95300000 p F 49 'A' if A0040 40 IN '95 - 1-19 99' ok Pg f 0 5' XQCJX X09 Q Q I. vb QOOOQQ, 'bxq' 0,40 QV W '05 6 one 0, 0 emo, I-of ,P ,N 660 SOQIA Oq N G NH '1'f7D!OqL la PL PFLUMM BROS. UMBING AND HARDWARE HE. 2000 Merriam, Kansas CAT 'wxiczrv gm s1Y'0Cao,,,v P-VN DALTON'S FLOWERS CORSAGES HE. 0212 Free Delivery 4 4 TH M fwjlffsf, 0 N by WS: rC 'g4sgy'CffS S P N 'Ye 3354 Afwagd mr ing nnw efsaw che a sg Obsew ean31-3606. Eagk SCEFQMC3' om .ce vlffkets x all Wyandotte Coach awards Indians first place trophy Our muff? mrLer5 UFFIEE ANI! CAFE WUHHEH5 1 aw' oi ei sw X1 OW' 152 The Cafeteria ladies that came to our rescue at noon CU:ff06bCLl'l6 1545? MH. MILLS FAITHFUL SERVICE Ti through twenty-tWO years . . . such was the record established by Mr. Bert Mills, head custo- dian of Shawnee-Mission for almost a quarter cen- tury. Well-liked by stu- dents and faculty, Mr. Mills gave dependable and c heerful assistance A familiar scene, never ro be forgotten to anyone who needed his help. His friends are pleased to know that Mr. Mills now lives in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, where he is taking a much-deserved rest. In this anniversary Illdillll, students and faculty wish to pay homage to Mr. Mills, whose loyalty to y Mr. Bert Mills, retired after 21 years Shawnee-Mission encouraged the school's s progress. Mya. si. X Janitors clean up the workshop after school The f urnace is ch Cfked tm .gnclian Sfaff . . jo f Q le to assist yo We are proud to have been ab truction oi your yearbook. We have done a in the cons ngr atuXations, you ext won end our co deriul 3ob. jo dw Stddentd co-operation ior your We express our thanks iuXiiH our duties as the photog- in helping us ' earbook. raphe rs for thrs y NNE WW'WmE,l-1 10 21112 G BAND I I I I WHILE THE PROCESSES UF PRUDIICING PRINTING HAVE CHANGED, THE FINAL PRODUCT IS STILL AN INIPRESSION IIIIIRITIHII LUILLIFIITIE CD PHONE HARRISON sun 1611-23 MAIN STREET KANSAS CITY 8, MISSOURI A Q I it f . - p XX Q- XS, f f, ,Rl f .. m N-1' ' 'WX in , X 2, f M Q A ,D M. V' ' wild -....v' ,,..m...,.. ..m........,... W NM A A - -- -V-. W., Q 'v .. -. . an we . -gat' '44 11. A ,1 W' l 1 W-M111 A 531 : .r I MH, s ix, s 'Wx . 1 'M , f Q W A x Wk -.-...,, J :V X wa... ,'i 1'-1--- Q W ' fx if 4, ,k'f -1+ 3 . ws., .Q I 'Ex we ,ri Y' T-.Sv-4 4 .,, '-nr, -W,,h 7 4... , ' . ' M-Z., I -.... ,-I--14 Vg lp, F HSP 4 3 g S ,fx -V, ,Z ., sY.....,,,,,,,WWM Q Wag: ' A doubting Thomas I' 'T Co 04 3' iff? 7' aah F, 'fl 'Ws 6041.0 D.-1,27 ter Or WG' -7 X'1'f4, i 7.1 .XAQX X l Cl' ' inspires listeners Vocationa UNC Gloves, scapel. incision! il Tis ,',1.: sI This is the army, Mr. jones 157 WILIKER SERVICE STATION ONE-STOP SERVICE Road Service Complete Line of New Tires 5525 Merriam Blvd. ME. 9819 GOODELLS' THE QUALITY CROCERY OF NORTHEAST JOHNSON COUNTY 7948 Santo Fe Trail Overland Park, Kansas HE. 0210 HE. 0211 One dawn TIA:-ec TB Soap ,ki I9 sa X 3 if Q Y fx , -4 XR F S f Lf I-fvvmean I' v-1581111 W2-'BCI IT? f 2 1,1-. . 'T' I, 1,54-I.'f9Qjf3,'w Ncmzvi :xrqlw 5e?1'1IM ff f QM-fe I g' I I f 3 X O I Q RT' believe ii'E1'r-we, Bail' 1' came 55111141 mfovh' ,,STELU ' GOOD LUCK, SENIORS HOGE FUNERAL HOME Overland Park, Kansas HEdrick 0120 MISSION COFFEE SHOP The Best Food Prepared Better 4505 West 59th Street FINE ART STUDIO MUSIC-EXPRESSION-DANCE Mission, Kansas 4500 W. 59th HE. 3110 MISSION NU-WAY SANDWICH SHOP Unusually Good Sandwiches HERALD CORNER WARNER DRUG STORES Prescription Druggist 5707 Merriam Blvd., Merriam, Kansas I7O0 S. W. Blvd., Kansas City, Kansas JENNINGS FEED 8. COAL 80th and Foster Overland Park, Kansas HEdrick 0300 l lu-alklnl on aff! wgve Prigielglglhe halfway . V grlcl naw Lus -Fee, IUC k010f4I ll I 'd V fhewfteng 77120-f1'YfJ me Uhrefareng Thai' make 27175 afJ5Ul100! 70' I L l 1 X WZ? ! X H I A L 7 M F Q NV! X I' M WM iff iw lZXA T R Ui ,.::1za4,u-- YOUR NEW FREEDOM KITCHEN Gas is just around the corner with latest de- signed Gas Range, Servel Refrigerator, and Water Heater. You are invited to see our display. THE GAS SERVICE CO. Merriam, Kansas ON'T BRAG ABOUT YOUR GRAY MATTER... CONCRETE IS THE SAME COLOR ,I Wise young folks, though, will talk more and more in the fu- ture about the permanence and fire safety concrete gives to their homes. vs 0rChCSIfa Lange T ky dance features J' ac W ou: me crowd 0 pwfvres we l dance brmgs F0 lrille The forma d e snap Dressed in their Sunday best for the semi-formal dance 160 ociaf 5 , 8 vc we bk he wen at 1 sl gentxe A 2,0 'UQ A goo d rurnou Between ,s xr r for the Semi-F V Offnal f X , courses at the Athle W 5. .fi 4, I tic Ba ik! 532 Mixer -,, nquer E. PAUL AMOS FUNERAL Home Professional Service of PIERCE'S TOWN 8- COUNTRY SHOP Distincfon H Womsniand ChiIdren's ' - ea y-to-Wear A b lance Serv'ce 4 9 1. Angxvhuere-Any1Iime 80 w 59th MISSION AS On EP Of me lclarfdop Home of so many W ' Outstanding F.F.A. Bo ,, ' ,1 H G F - se:1+m'::K 624 Main Street :Q-t.wxQ5:J ' Member SHAWNEE, KANSAS Q, X! ' ,J FEDERAL DEPOSI ME 9aos Mr 7322 ' A -' 'NSURANCE ' I ' CORPORATION AIVWX, N 1 4 A I X . 1 MI I MlssloN . BA'ffE2'Q' DONUT SHOP- .sal A 'K ' .I QUALITY MISSION DALE MART meg., 9,1 gud C me now, ls our Special, M' ' I ber,-,a use weve reac eJ The TOP K bud' LU re wise 6110 ff' 75 k40U U , f no ffm' 72 STOP' HE. 3179 Y .-STfflA.l ' W E. A. BUEHLER JONES' SUPER The REXALL Drug Store MISSIQNI KANSAS. Meats-Fruits-Vegetables MERRIAM, KANSAS MISSION STATE BANK 4901 W. 59th Street Capitol 81 Surplus S200,000 Member F. D. I. C. INSURANCE AUTOMOBILE-FIRE-TRUCKS E. W. WEDD MISSION HE. 4141 PHILCO Radios JOHN MORROW Pofiqbigs PHARMACY ' I ff izifiggfllgff S1'!iX2e53iESI2L FULLER WheireAYour -BEJSCSHGSS APPLIANCE Co' 5 PP eC'0 e 4639 W. 59th MISSION Mission HE. 4123 0 E1-Z, ESTA'S R-JEQVEQRY RECORD SHOP HE. 3502 5908 Woodson 4508 w. 59th Simi MISSION, KANSAS Fine Jewelry and Gift Items MU ELLER'S FOOD MARKET MERRIAM SHAWNEE Dickinson Theater- oround the corner MISSION, KANSAS HE. 3128 lgrnuf WATKINS Johnson County'S FOREMOST CLEANERS HE. 2200 MISSION 66 77 enlelngef 2 SENIUH INDEX Adams, Shirley-29 Alton, Joanne-29, 96 Amberg, john-29, 43, 115, 121, 128, 132, 134, 167, 168 Anderson, David-29, 102 Anderson, Keith-29, 95 Anderson, Lavinia-29 Applegate, Francis-29, 99, 104, 105 Ashner, Anna Mae-29 Ashner, Dorothy-29 Bardwell, Kathleen-30, 84 Barker, Virginia-30, 92 Barnard, joan-29, 99, 109, 110 Bee, Richard--29, 90, 95 Beels, Thomas-30, 85 Beilharz, Bill-29, 94, 112, 116, 117, 137 Bishop, Bill-29, 94, 109, 112, 117 Bishop, Melvin-30, 43, 109 Blattman, Albert-30, 84, 87 Brandmeyer, Bob-30, 87, 90, 99, 117 Brewster, Phil-30 Brinkman, Barbara--30, 84, 117 Brooks, john-42, 137 Brown, Betty Lou-29, 80, 109 Brown, Marilyn--30, 109, 110, 117 Brown, Robert Lee-29, 87 Brown, Shirley-30, 80, 99, 109, 110, 115, 167 Bryant, Paul-29, 90, 95 Bukowski, joe-30, 90, 94, 112, 113 Bukowski, June-30 Burch, Beverly-30, 117 Callaghan, Anna-30, 43, 93, 96, 97, 111, 115 Callaghan, Bill-31 Campbell, Nellie Mae-31 Carter, Gerald-31, 94, 106 Chastain, jack-30, 94, 99 Clark, Doris-31 Coiner, Zoe-31, 86, 96 Cokeley, Delta-30, 98, 99 Cole, Lewis-31, 42, 88 Colton, Theresa-31, 97, 167 Cooper, Don--31 Cooper, Jean-31, 87, 92 Cordes, Barbara-31, 108, 113 Cravens, Shirley-31, 174 Crawford, Roger-31, 42, 90, 97, 98, 99, 123, 134 Crummett, Marjorie-31, 92, 108, 117 Cunningham, Delores-31, 80 Curran, Hazel-31 Denni, Martha-32, 112, 136, 174 Dixon, jennetta-31, 107 Dyer, Doris-32 Dyer, Iris-32 Dykstra, Edward-32, 106 Edgerton, Jadene-32 Edmisson, Virginia-32, 87 Ernst, Elinor-32, 97, 108 Rupard, Arlene-38, 92 Eulich, john-32, 108, 123. 171 Felder, Elizabeth-33 Fenn, Dorothy-32 Fisher, James--32, 87 Fitzwater, Robert-32, 89, 94, 111 Fleet, Joyce-33, 108, 112, 117 Foster, Robert-32 Fraser, Barbara-32, 99, 167 Fraser, Martha-32, 109, 112, 115, 116, 126, 127, 136, 171 Frieze, Clarence-32, 109 Frisbie, Dean-32, 89, 131 Frisbie, Mauritza-33, 92, 93, 96, 97, 111, 115 Gates, john-33 Gilpen, Phyllis-33 Glenn, Pat-33, 80 Green, Herbert-33 Griggs, jerry-33 Goddard, Madge-33 Gorman, Robert-33, 43, 100, 109 Graybil1,AliCe-33, 86, 152 Grimes, Donnell-33, 90, 95 Haffner, Nancy-34, 106, 109, 117 Haley, Francie-34 Hand, Margaret-33, 86 Hansen, Ellen-34, 85 Harnden, Anna Mae-34 Harnden, Mary-34 Hare, George-34, 88, 100 Harris, Alma Sue-34, 100, 96 Harris, Carol--33, 167 Hartford, Clara Belle-33 Heider, jean-34 Holmberg, Rose Lee-34, 86, 117, 174 Holmes, Roger-34 Howe, Charles-33, 80, 109 Hughes, Clarence-34, 80, 109, 123, 132 jack, Don-35, 109 jackson, Arnold--35 james, Kenneth-34 Jamieson, Harriet-34 jankus, Henry-35, 43, 87, 113, 117 jennens, Willimn-35 johnson, Patricia-34, 84 johnson, Wanda-35 Johnston, Cliff-34, 94, 116, 117 jones, Dottie-35, 113, 115, 126, 127, 136, 171 jones, joanne-34, 87 Joyce, Eloise-34, 84 Kahan, Don-35, 98, 121, 171 Keller, Kathleen-35, 86, 113, 117 Kittle, Helen-35, 109, 110, 112, 115, 126, 127,, 136 169 Klapka, Bob-35, 95, 99, 109 Koehn, Bill-42 Kyle, Shirley-35, 109, 110, 112, 117, 136 LaBar, Tom-35, 109, 117 LaDew, Carol-35 Land, Betty-36, 96, 110 Land, David-35, 103, 117, 166 Larberg, Bob-35, 109, 117, 126, 136, 137, 166 Leader, Edna-35, 87 Leiback, Mary-36 Lord, james-36, 122, 171 Low, Rosalie-36, 117 Luschen, Bob-36 Mack, Bill-37 Mackey, joe-36, 108 Maddox, Maxine-36, 85, 86, 112, 117 Maeder, Albert-37 Maloney, Jerry-36, 117, 123, 135 Marin, Mike-36 Mart, Tom-37, 94 Marx, joe-37 Mason, Ernest-37, 88 Maxwell, Gloria-37, 91, 117 Mayhew, Robert-36 McCannon, Billiejean-36 Mocmooy, Kitty-36, so, 108, 113, 169 McMichael, Craig-37, 122, 166 Melching, jo Ann-36 Miller, Dean-36, 95 Miller, Lola-37, 92, 112, 113, Missar, Stan-36, 85 MoCk, Doris-37 Moore, james-37, 87 Myers, Floyd-37 Nelson, Eva Lee-37, 111, 108 Nelson, Gordon-37, 87, 88 Nelson, Peggy-37 Oberholtz, Zada-37 Owsley, Charles-37 Painter, Pat-38, 43, 152 Peck, Bob-38, 98, 117 Pflumm, Clarine-38, 86, 117 Phillips, Robert-38 Phipps, Preston-38, 98 Pirnie, Carl-38, 94 Plapp, Elmer-38 Prewitt, Vernon-38, 90, 98 Raitt, Jereldine-38, 106 Rankin, Lorrainw39, 86 Rein, Bob-39, 117, 121, 135, 171 Renner, jo Anne-39 Rice, Joanne-38, 86 Robertson, Bob-39, 80, 109, 137 Robertson, Roberta-38, 86 Robinson, Lucy-38, 110, 112, 117 Routon, Ruth-39, 84, 85, 112, 117 CC 77 enlenigef 2 SENIUH INDEX Rowland, Blaine-38 Rupard, Arlene-38, 92 Rusher, Pauline-38, 87 Russell, Charles-38 Sagmoen, Tom-40 Sand, Matteena-40 Schweiget, Florence-39 Scott, jack-40, 43, 98, 109, 166 Seymour, Bob-39, 88 Shanahan, jim-42 Sherfey, Marvin-40 Shore, Bill-40 Sims, Joe-39, 88 Slagle, Dick-39, 90, 98 Slayton, Welsh-40 Smith, Lyn-39, 109, 121, 128, 132, 135, 167 Snyder, Eddie-40 Sowers, Harold-39 Springer, Doris-39 Spuehler, Harry-30, 43, 98, 108, 109, 115, 128, 132, 167 Stack, Karen-40, 97, 106 Stagner, Dale-40 Standiford, jason-39, 94 Steele, jerry-39, 88 Sterling, Clyde-42, 121, 120 Stewart, Pat-39, 109, 112, 117, 136 Stewart, Rosemary-40 Stewart, Wanda-40, 86 Stickrod, Don-40, 43, 109, 115, 122, 128, 131, 167, 174 Stoker, Frankie-40, 92, 107 swoon, Lois-40, 86,98 Taft, Elizabeth-41, 84, 89, 115 Taylor, Caroline-41 Taylor, Norma-41, 92 Tesche, RichardA1, 87, 174 Tolson, Dorothy-41, 109, 117 Tooley, Marjorie-41 Tooley, Merlyn-41 Townsend, Leon-41, 109 Trego, jeanene-41, 110, 112, 117 Trimble, james-41 Trudell, Pat-41 True, Sterling-41 Van Meerhaeghe, Virginia-41 Vetter, Bob-41, 90 Viard, Victor-41 Walter, Charleen-42, 98, 99, 108, 109, 117 Wasser, Roger--41, 113 Watson, Lores-42, 98, 99 Way,Wo1fer-42, 109, 120, 122, 12s, 132, 134 Wharton, Ernest-42, 43, 98, 109, 110 Williams, Margie-42 Wolfe, Joe-42 Yost, Gale-42, 98 I1 Long Joe Seventh CIOOHS hour for Bob Brown. Which one? No stage high' here t s meet af me ne Tennis vict0f l'0llI'l Me CLITLIOUJ t Athletic Banquet brings prominence. McEachen, Sauer, Bradford. Turner, Larberg, and Amberg Shawnee's songbirds u. ,M 'S How do you rate, Harry? 1-1 X206 ,W All this for one locker Where's the tea, toast, and honey, stars? .4 ' Ll 5 ze Qi G bln Cl, N! F r 1 gf' x s -M. anvaaed bv f 'n'ba S l varga has an the bea eS' who SBYS K 'XXK WMA D Bewildered Baby! 'vb U f -1 A , , , Why The Klu Klux Klan comes back! , 101, 1 68 M -wmxmy ' U' .Vo llf SH P shows! . J u ,,,,x. cf 'i 1' A ,wif .1 SEQ 52 if L. if A-ff' i .5524 , A 9 wi 5 , ,mn 1 4, M I 45,5 Sh, C' E ur rien A, My jawn, al 51003 me Txme 00 for a '15 ' s S ' r yn ' x L.. . ' e xW' I tfxfa' Q K v .C Wonder what they re plannmg now7 d iarmw McE2Chen an Wives treat husbands -Iohnso -'1nH:M,.,WM A V- A X ' f W A 4' Y U Con m Q V Ury T63Chers, Ban , , qller c men e ore flue ,CLofAgAf4 a af' g' ad wie '90 GW S-M's Lauren Bacall ha lim begs on n55 an A wee 5 Charles Provost entertains fb , V 1 I 1 . fs :fs , f , 5 Q' ' 4 , N ,,. A, .1 3 . A ,caan .Qi all wma pb.- 'l'urner's choir presents program Explaining nursing as a career -... WXQAZAZMQWW 1fffF m2 +T?x Viyy 'fa f f WW WM !qflZ,fff,W J WMV ,,,,G 'awAwgML:P, rw My Q62g6JW fw ff fff qi I W ff? M5 W' W7 My ff? 1 Arai MWW ,,fi:3! L22 WW QS MM W 2 'ff .M QW sf W2 ff - 717. W If Adam. WJWZ-WM giiafl ww, WW Mfef Wf.fj A we lfifgiwifmjwfwf ' -2 3 J, Yi MMM J . Sf .A S , ,, V gs-F 2? U 2- J K Q .nf wif! kififf R V . ,ge 'J X ,. :- 'fgfff 4-Q LB V f, ' WW whim Q'-X x 452 3 fix LffJT'Lf1.e: , . X . fe V wk 11551 2 wig gy M . AA! Q f gig, M' x qwgfgg, ,QQ x AA I ,V -. if K al ! 1 2 E 4 f Q 555 M 33? 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Suggestions in the Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) collection:

Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Shawnee Mission High School - Indian Yearbook (Shawnee Mission, KS) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951


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