Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN)

 - Class of 1947

Page 1 of 72

 

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 72 of the 1947 volume:

Q A is 5 - J 1 , U tl , it ' I. . . . . -A 1, Atl fl. 1 1 . . Il 'r 5 .5 I I ' Y 2 , 4 , , 1 4 1 A . . vl F 1 fr Y 1 J 5 5 av. - 4 .I 5 if . Q . 'W I. Q ' , ' g- Y , ,, Q 'F T 5+ . x A 50 li .1 g . i . - iv , I 'A 9 , - V f ' rv . U 4 if 1 g 5 V . x Q , y Q . . s 1 1' 1' . ' . '4 I Q I ,W V bi-1 ,AQ 3 V 'AS Y. 'Tl H f ' g. , x , fy- j 1 nv: I . 5 n Published by the SENIOR CLASS or' VALPARAISO HIGH SCHOOL VALPARAISO, INDIANA Sturdy oak or lofty pine, the tree that today commands admiring attention was once a mere seed. Proper nurture gave that seed its glorious maturity. Without Nature's loving care it could not have ful- filled its inherent splendor. Not unlike the growth of a tree is the un- folding of human personality. As a tender shoot, the young American needs the watchful guidance of that good forester, the public school. lt promotes sturdy and uniform growth of mind and of body. With unfailing devotion it trains students, deep- rooted in the ways of democratic educa- tion, to a full and strong citizenship. 7aLle af Ganlenld As the Twig ls Bent - - - Page 4 Faculty and Classes Supple as a Sapling ---- Page 28 Boys' and Girls' Athletics Friendship . . a Sheltering Tree - Page 40 Activities and Clubs -IW 'Qu M y EZ Adel .Ewa We si P' 'fv Hs... vb .-ni' 1 . - -w 4.6 . ' - f ' f 1 --4. .' - I . I tf ,A N . :t o , f 71' ., , -Z, -5 V ' .. Q ,. . -,f . f ff- 4 ' . Lffilf Y W KWQ, .- -V -, 1-,W I' if i ' -. .XA I 2.0, ,- f' 45? ' ' '- ' 'Y nf . - ,I . ' T ' 'S - .-f N--'Fg ,gf 1,7-M' J 'J , , , v -W 3 Q A' - 11 3 4 up swf' .wg ' ,Q 5 - , .L A -.-15. . Q x f gl' K ff 2 . . .A ' . A 5-ffffffv U ' ' 'rf r .. f .Gr ,-.. -if , V Q fir- if , If ,L , i 4: 1 ic- A -' 1 2' .A if -H1 ' , . f - V 1. 1 If a.-'W .5 1 3 M , ff ' A 7 533 0' 1 ' . H' 1 ' . K. ff. .. .K D Y , 9 ,fw 5 'K ,v g . W ,. 35 N. ll . V. 13. 6 , . , , 1 4, 3 IV, 1 . 225, : IA '?3:g yan., iz, 5 4 'JEEP 'E . -' 4' Q - ' A 2' f -Wt' 2' fu f 3.7- - .4 , , ,Y t , y.f,,,l- Ae 5 lv .N v,.,' ',, 7, K 1. 1,1 I I : A, .. 'yluyl-A ,V Q ,l 3 A -5 .1 f V if ff ' ---1 ' ' . gf- -' -.' -f. 1' '-5 .6 - 'Vw '.- . J ' Q x ' A '-5' ,, ul f 2, N I Q. ,J , I R QQ ' I K V2 , A 'P N 5? F .1 . . 4, f S? , iff . fx' ! Q ' , ' I 3. 7.3.-4. I J , . , t f 34, N3 I . 'sf t it K ff' A - , 1 1 K V wt: fs- 1 :E I fi I ' . f a.g,53'gtJ5Z ',f- tt' it y i:,,i -. , V' if fwwf . 4,g4eqf .:4,3:j ' f 1. , 'if' NVQ- . . A-5't 'v: , . lm 1 ON - - -- 1- mi ' it ff. - V f Q- 4 Top. South front entrance, patio . . . V. ,xg-A ' if WZ- W i' Middle right. Air View of north causeway Y- vpqifldfg between the high school and the gym- A ' +,1,:f nasium . . L ating '45 '. .' V ' 4 - - T' Bottom: Dedication plaque near south ' entrance. f' 1-:v5 'T?F-v -.'- 19:...-F I 3 1 14 Zwig Aww: 'Q 49 rw Miss We-ems directs Ruth Bote in child Care. l4l so grows the tree. Given the heredi- ty to become strong and tall, the young plantlet still requires proper environment. To guide and to cor- rect is the lot of the administration and the faculty. They stand ever ready, not as guards but as friends, to help students achieve their fullest promise. As in Nature it is some- times necessary to prune and to graft rather severely to produce the best growth, so it is in school life. The end justifies the means. In the selfsreliant maturity of the student body lies the integrity of the teach- ing staff. The teachers can be proud of their students, and the students can be proud to have been a part of Valparaiso High School. ,Lg HEAD RANGERS Mr. King Telle Clettl, princi- pal, and Mr. G. Warren Phil- lips, superintendent, are the top men ot our organization. Mr. Telle, the newer of the two, came to us only last year from Remington, where he had served twelve years as princi- pal. Mr. Phillips has been with us three years. As a pair they seem to work well together. Perhaps one reason for this is their mutual interest in coach- ing and athletics, another may be the fact that both attended the same school and hence ab- sorbed similar philosophies ot education. In any case, they are two comparatively young men with a great deal of en- thusiasm which not even re- sponsibility appears to damp- en. Their duties, of course, differ widely. Mr. Telle is concerned chiefly with the making and adjusting of programs and schedules and with the uphold- ing ot our particular discipline and traditions. Mr. Phillips, on the other hand, watches over the finances of the entire sys- tem, oversees all buildings and grounds, and acts as a con- necting link between the School City and the community. To- gether, they keep our high school at its etticient best, tif J Q 1' it.-it ,- .im iw. fi ,Q-W3 if lil ff ' ,f Q 1 ,il-1, .11 is -1. Af ,, it ,ii ,W ,,, if f t i1 it li ' 2 A A tj 0-0- J., Mr, Telle received his A. B. degree from Hanover College and his M. S. from Indiana University. Mr. Phillips received his A.B. from DePauw University and his M. S. from lndiana Univer- sity. I5l EXPERT CONSULTING SERVICE HOMER M. IESSEE LYNNET M. CASBON ROBERT L. MILLER President Treasurer Secretary BUREAU OF RESEARCH AND STA'I'ISTICAL DATA PHYLLIS SEDERBERG GRACE RICKARD Secretary to Principal Secretary to Superintendent fbefzaallmenll of QOQQJLZQ The directors and assistants shown on this page have proved themselves positively indispensable. The three men who constitute the Board ot Educa- tion, officially speaking, have been chosen by the City Council in the best interest of the community. The appointments, made lor a period of three years, are generally renewed, with the result that a Board member seldom serves less than six full years. Furthermore, appointments are so staggered that there are always at least two members with previous experience. The routine work ol the school falls to the lot of two secretaries without whom there would be no end ot confusion. Theirs are the tiles to keep, the telephones to answer, and the correspondence to manage. Let one be abs sent a single day, and everyone around the school is doubly ready to swear to her worth. l7l 3 bf,- 41. fl W M ,N Bae Ralph Bibler Ruth Bicknell Elizabeth Borders Burton Conkling Dorothy Everly Glen Fisher Alfred Henkel Martha Lee Hogue Iohn Koch Clare McGi1licuddy . : l8l Cecil Bigelow Lillian Elmore Emma I-'oor Dessa Hudson Mary Myers BIBLER, RALPH Physical Education, Industrial Arts - Ball State Teachers' College, B.S. BICKNELL, RUTH Art - Western Michigan College of Education, Kalamazoo, Mich., A.B. BIGELOW, CECII. Vocational Director, Industrial Coordi- nator - Ball State Teachers' College, B.S., University ol Chicago, M.A. BORDERS, ELIZABETH Librarian - Ball State Teachers' Col- lege, AB., University of Minnesota. CONKLING, BURTON English, Public Speaking, Dramatic Art -State University oi Iowa, A.B., M.A. ELMORE, LILLIAN Spanish, French. English - Ball State Teachers' College, A.B. EVERLY. DOROTHY Home Economics - Indiana University, B.S. FISHER, GLEN Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics - Illi- nois State Normal, University of Illinois, A.B., Graduate work, University ot Illi- nois, Purdue University, Indiana Uni- versity. FOOR, EMMA R. English, Ioumalism - Earlham College, AB., Graduate work, University ol Chi- cago, University oi Minnesota. HENKEL, ALFRED L. History, Sociology, German-Valparai- so University, B.A., Graduate work, Val- paraiso University. HOGUE, MARTHA LEE Mathematics - Purdue University, B.S., Graduate work, Purdue University. HUDSON, DESSA Commerce - Valparaiso University, B. C.S., University of Chicago, Ph.B., Uni- versity ot Illinois, Gregg College. xocu. lox-m ' Debate, Social Studies - Indiana State Teachers' College, AB., University ot Michigan, A.M. McGILLICUDDY, CLARE Mathematics - Valparaiso University, A.B., Graduate work, University ot Chi- cago, Columbia University. MYERS, MARY Music - Indiana State Teachers' Col- lege, B.S., Metropolitan Conservatory of Music, Indianapolis Conservatory, Co- lumbia University, Chicago University. NIMRO'I'I'I. WILLIAM Biology-Ball State Teachers' College, BA., Graduate work, University of Ber- lin, University of Stockholm. PIPER. KENNETH Industrial Arts-Manchester College,B. S., Ball State Teachers' College, Ohio State University, Indiana University. RATHBURN. CURTIS Physical Education-Valparaiso Univer- sity, Ball State Teachers' College, B.S. ROGERS. HAROLD Music-Illinois Wesleyan, B.M,E,,Grad- uate work, Syracuse University, Univer- sity of Michigan, Indiana State Teach- ers' College, M.S. ROGERS. MARY IO Physical Education - Indiana State Teachers' College, B.S., Graduate work, University of Wisconsin. SCHENCK. RALPH Commerce. History - Valparaiso Uni- versity, B,Acct., Indiana State Teachers' College, B.A., University of Chicago, MJ-X. SI-IAUER, AUDREY English. History-Valparaiso University, A.B., University of Colorado, MJ-X. SIEB. VERA L. English-University of Wisconsin, A.B., Graduate work, Valparaiso University, University of California, Columbia Uni- versity, University oi Chicago. SMITH. DOROTHY Public Health-University of Michigan, Indiana University, University oi Iowa, Indiana State Teachers' College, George Peabody College, B.S. STONER. MARY EDNA Latin. English-Valparaiso University, University of Chicago, A.B., MA., Uni- versity oi Colorado. WEEMS. EDITH Home Economics-Valparaiso Univer- sity, B.S., University of Chicago, Ball State Teachers' College, Purdue Univer- sity. WIRTH. EARL Commerce--Lawrence College, North- western University, Valparaiso Univer- sity, A.B., University of Chicago, Indi- ana University, MA. William Nimroth Kenneth Piter Harold Rogers Mary Io Rogers Audrey Shcxuer Vera Sieb Mary Edna Stoner Edith Weems RANGERS ALL Curtis Rathburn Ralph Schenck Dorothy Smith Earl Wirth Of every one oi the twenty-seven teachers shown on this and the preced- ing page we are intensely proud. No school can boast a better trained or more experienced faculty. Hard-Working and helpful, they set us a fine ex- ample. No student has ever found any of them unwilling to give lavishly of his time, either before school or after school or between classes. curricular activities, too, are their co schedule. We have the feeling that they are really interested in Youth. l9l Extra- ncern, as well as those on the regular f Y 1 1 4 w Q H 4 Q4 Jim: , 3 z K 5 S , . fa if Y. Q M ' Q Qc Bb . ,, 2 R win Q vi . ' '. ,.. .wx -fe '-:fa-'W -: '1- 9 D A M .1 P YU' 'N Y 1' M gg 53? R Q NJ J 5 35.5 , f Aix ,,, .gkpsw AQ as 5 Q L Q me i QV we ,, 4 W 4 , H- .L - 'W' rg-W --,,A,..--ww ' , i,3,.,, 3 f . My ' wif? . HE: f 'A ' 'Q In-355 ' xgbhivigwf N- 'Q .Qin . f V Q f , ' f, - -,' 5 A 35 if - ' k'.A3,'3 f x -fffiw ww A f 155' Q a t MQPEQJAZQQ X ' W' xi 2SW 'i:33Zi, ' , , X ' ' Q k W , ,I U - ' ? ' Wei' ' .Aww fat , 2 ki f f ? 2 V vi ,. f ig, - 5 if A 5 A54 L W S S Q,-12' , z f! 4: if sm, ' J 4 gififgizgwh ' fin' A 7 1 'X 2 qi' rw-r if 'W ggi' Q 2 I 5 9f:,Q,.. , ,VflIAy,wQ 7 , ,M ,A W, ,Z H ,, , , , 'Q if . f may K 4 'sgisgiii . W r , . 4fw,wf-nie? He' , ' 1,554 mbemw ,wg j S53 H if Lf .fizifu . M X Q' E A Wi If Q , W. WM ' f N X wg, :5 , ,fx N' 'WEA 4 k hfiw' f 1:95 4- ' 5 iQfff359? 'V ' P WH La Kfljfiv K -an -,g H , M :r.jQ H -559,3 .. 1 vw A A Q wi 1 N M... fli W ., M , ' 0 , 5 '- Y , fffiljygiggjy,-3a,g,,:xQfff V, W 1,55 1 . M - ,1 grwfjagwfm. , W 'w:.: 5?i?4?2m K 9 fa, i L Q52 ' ff 'fi X -f:5,21I4.1 My rm, Q -gg? sg? V I M ' 1 1355? ' an ' , if , N ig- we vii , 3 ' Q A 4 : ...:,,: i Y 6 Anhui, Q K ,M MMWM ?2f'fi:fg f, Pin f ' Q -' ,f 4,6 ,M 2 lgzgfw-5325 ,, 3 , 577' f , ' qv , 'N My ' w wfSQ45Q7 'Ily..,5??Al1w5zf4S-swsfsifzX K ' X-A-ASSE 7 lg My V W Q . , . .z . : :iv:.. mf,,5gV: , . ,xx Mi X' '- ,.--YM-. - U .... 1 t- A ' k 2 TOWERING TREES Finally after four years of steady growth, we have attained full stat- ure. The time was when we were mere seedlings or just two-year and three-year stands. Now we may presume to call ourselves towering trees. While at first glance our growth may seem to be largely physical-ee most of us certainly are taller and larger than when we first entered high school-it is a mental and spir- itual maturing, too, How timid and bewildered we were as freshmen, as seniors, how confident we are, and school-wisel We have learned muchein the hard way-for as un- derclassmen, we could not be told these things, we had to learn them ourselves. Now we know-and we pass our knowledge on to the under- Senior officers: Betty Shufflebotham, secretary, Mr. Koch, sponsor, Marilyn Miller, treasurer, fcmice Will, president, Roy Cochran, vice presi- dent, Miss McGillicuddy, sponsor, Mrs. Poor, sponsor. classmen in the hope that they may listen-that facts come only with plodding, persistent study, that self-discipline enhances selferespect, and that fair play and understanding form the foundations of last- ing friendship. Not always but occasionally it has taken an elemental storm to instill these truths, which having mastered, we will not forget. There have been less serious moments, of course-many of them-and more exciting ones, too. We have joined clubs, attended dances, and participated in sports, Being seniors this last year, We have set the pace for the other classes, and this in itself we have found to be a stimulating experi- ence. We have helped in the actual administration of affairs by lending various students to the book-- store, the candy and the ice cream counters, and the office. We have published and financed this yearbook. Now we are looking forward to graduation and beyond that to worthy citizenship. The parallel between good citizens and towering trees is so obvious that we need not repeat it here. As we have been good citizens in high school, so may we be good citizens in the world of tomorrow. L Beginning at top, reading from left to right: Color Committee: Dorothy Balcom, Ioseph Smith, Anne Wilson. Homecoming Committee: Betty Shuf- flebotham, Ioyce Ywanow, Roger Lines, Dolores Schroeder, PaulVietz- ke, Stephen Thompson. Project Committee: Richard Iohnson, Marvin Reed, Ollie Stringham, Mari- lyn Carichoff. Flower Committee: Rita Bote, Ken- neth Lowenstine, Donavon Waskom. Motto Committee: Raymond Griffin, Doris Fleenor, lack Carichoff. Marilyn Adams lack Andresen Dorothy Balcom Beverly Beck 7a ' BLACK. LYNN South Whitley High School, South Whitley, Indiana, l, 2, Basketball reserve 3, Basket- ball varsity 4. BLACK. ROBERT Student Council 1, 2, Hi-Y 1, 2, Football var- sity 2, 3, 4, reserve 1, Basketball reserve 1, 2, Track varsity 1, 2, 3, Noonday League 3, 4, Iunior Class president. BOTE. RITE Y-Teens l, 2, Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Operetta 1, 2, G.A.A. l, 2, VALENIAN 4, Spring Festival 1, Stamp Secretary 3. BOTE, RUTH Y-Teens 1, 2, Dramatics 4, Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4, vice-president 4, G.A.A. 1, 2, Spring Fes- tival 1. BRAUN, GRETFL Y-Teens l, 2, 3, 4, Drarnatics l, 2, G.A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Board 4, Noonday League l, 3, 4, chair- man of sports 4, VALPOST 4, Stamp Chair- man 3, Spring Festival 1. BRIGGS. VIVIAN Pcartage High School, Portage, Indiana, 1, 2, 31 2. 1121 ADAMS. MARILYN Glee Club 1, 2, 3, Operetta 1, 2. ANDRESEN, IACK BALCOM, DOROTHY Booster Club 3, 4, Y-Teens 1, 2, 3, 4, Draina- tics 2, 4, Glee Club 1, 4, Operetta 1, G.A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Stamp Secretary 2, 3, Spring Fes- tival 2. , BECK. BEVERLY I I-Yrln Black Robert Black Rita Bote Ruth Bote Greta Braun Vivian Briggs BROBECK, DONALD Hi-Y 3, 4, secretary 4, Debating 3, 4, treas- urer 3, VALPOST 3, VALENIAN 4. BROWN. IAMES Football varsity 4, reserves 2, 3. BROWN, KENDRICK Projection Club 3, 4, Aviation 1, Dramatics 2, Manual Arts 1, VALPOST 4. BROWN. IVIARILYN Home Economics 1, GAA. 2. Robert Brown Iack Carichotf Donald Casbon LaVonne Bucher Marilyn Carichoff Howard Clfxumley at ! f A 1 1 Donald Brobeck Iames Brown Kendrick Brown Marilyn Brown Magma! BROWN. ROBERT Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Football reserve 1, Noonday League 2, 3, 4. BUCHER, LAVONNE Y-Teens 1, Z, Dramatics 2, GAA. 1, VAL- POST 4, Spring Festival 1, 2. CARICHOFF. IACK Football varsity 3, 4, reserve 1, Z, Basketball varsity 3, 4, reserve 2, Noonday League l. CARICHOFF, MARILYN Booster Club 4, Student Council 3, treasurer 3, Y-Teens 1, 2, 3, 4, Dramatics 1, 4, G.A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Board 3. CASBON. DONALD Kemper Military Academy, Boonville, Miss- ouri, 2, 3. CHUMLEY. HOWARD Hi-Y 3, 4, Football varsity 4, reserve 1, 2, Track varsity 3, 4, reserve 2, Noonday League 3, 4. 1131 ' CLAUDON, ROGER Debating 3, 4, Band l, 2, 3, 4, Noonday League 3, 4. COCHRAN, ROY Student Council 4, vice-president 4, Hi-Y 2, i 3, 4, Football reserve l, 2, 3, Basketball var- sity 3, 4, reserve I, 2, Track reserve l, 2, 3, Noonday League l, Senior Class vice-presi- l dent. COLLINS, PHYLLIS Drarnatics l, Z, 4, Glee Club 1, 4, Operetta 1, 4. CURTIS, DELORES Booster Club 4, Y-Teens 4, G.A.A. l, 2, 3, 4, Board 3, 4, Noonday League 2, 3, 4, chair- rnan of sports 3, president 4, VALPOST 4. Roger Claudon Delores Curtis Phyllis Collins Roy Cochran I ' 7q7zevL, Carwin Dalke Cecil Downing Leonard Domke Doris Fleenor Gloria Fry Clyde Gast DALKE, CARWYN Hi-Y 3, 4, Band l, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra l, 2. DOWNING, CECIL Prescott Senior High School, Prescott, Ari- zona, l , Student Council 3, Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Foot- ball reserve 2, Noonday League 2, 3, 4. DOMKE, LEONARD Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Band l, 2, 3, 4, Track varsity 3, Noonday League 2, 3. FLEENOR. DORIS Booster Club 4, Y-Teens 2, 3, 4, Band l, 2, 3, 4, secretary 4, G.A.A. l, 2, 3, VALPOST 4, VALENIAN 4, Stamp Secretary 2, Spring Festival 2, 3. FRY, GLORIA Glee Club l, 2, 3, 4, Operetta l, 2, G.A.A. 3. GAST, CLYDE Hi-Y 3, 4, Band l, 2, 3, 4, Track varsity 3, re- serve 2, Noonday League l, 2, 3, 4. l14l GIOVANETTO. IOHN Noonday League 2, Bowling League 1, sec- retary 1. GOBLE. WILLIAM Manual Arts Club l. GREENE. GRACIA Y-Teens 1, 2, Dramatics 2, G.A.A. 1, VAL- POST 4, Stamp Chairman 3, Spring Festival 1, 2. GRIFFIN, RAYMOND Liberty High School, Liberty Township, Inf diana, 1, 2, 3, Hi-Y 4, Debating 4, Football reserve 4. Iohn Giovanetto William Goble Gracie Greene Raymond Griffin Wwlhmk ' Iack Gustafson Ianice Gustafson Bemard Gvirtzman Ruth Elaine Haley Wilma Hill Lou Ellen Hofferth GUSTAFSON. IACK Manual Arts Club 1, Band 1. GUSTAFSON. IANICE Liberty Center School, Liberty Township, In- diana, 1, G.A.A. 2, 3. GVIRTZMAN. BERNARD Bloom Township High School, Chicago Heights, Illinois 1, 2, Hi-Y 4, Football varsity 3, 4, Track varsity 3, 4. HALEY, RUTH ELAINE Y-Teens 1, 2, 4, Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Choir 2, 3, 4, Operetta 1, 2, G.A.A. l, 2, 3. HILL. WILMA Y-Teens 3, G.A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Noonday League 3, chairman of sports 4, Spring Festival 2. HOFFERTH LOU ELLEN Booster Club 4, Student Council 3, Y-Teens 2, 3, 4, scribe 2, program chairman 3, presi- dent 4, Drarnatics 4, Glee Club 2, vice-presi- dent 2, Band 1, 2, Operetta 2, G.A.A. 2, 3, 4, Board 3, 4, Noonday League 3, 4, Youth Cen- ter Board 3, 4, secretary 3, president 4. 1151 I OHNSON, RICHARD Richard Horner Gerald Howard Richard Isenberg Phyllis Iohnson Raalixi' HORNER. RICHARD Band 1, 2, 3, Football reserve 3, Basketball reserve Z, 3. HOWARD. GERALD Hi-Y 3, 4, Science Club 1, Debating 2, 3, 4, Band drum major 4, Track varsity 3, 4, re- serve 1, 3, Cross Country 2, Noonday League 3, 4, VALENIAN 4, Student Recreational Council 1, Stamp Secretary 3, Youth Center Board 3, 4. ISENBERG. RICHARD Hi-Y 3, 4, Football varsity 2, 3, 4, reserve 1, Basketball reserve l, 2, 3, Track varsity 2, 3, 4, reserve 1, Noonday League 3. IOHNSON, PHYLLIS Y-Teens 4, G.A.A. 2. I Richard Iohnson Harriet Iung1ohan Charlotte Klemz Roger Klusmeyer Charles Kotzan Theresa Krysa Student Council 3, Hi-Y 1, 2, 3, 4, secretary 3, Football varsity 3, 4, reserve 1, 2, Basket- ball varsity 3, 4, reserve 1, 2, Track varsity 3, 4, reserve l, 2, Acting lunior Class presi- dent, Student Recreational Council 1. IUNGIOHN. HARRIET Y-Teens 1, Z, 3, 4, G.A.A. l, 2, 3, 4, VAL- POST 4, Spring Festival 2. v KI.EMZ, CHARLOTTE Y-Teens l, 2. KLUSMEYER, ROGER Band 1, Noonday League 3. KOTZAN. CHARLES Washington High School, East Chicago, ln- diana, 3, Booster Club 4, Hi-Y 4, Choir 1, 2, Band 1, 2, Operetta 1, 2, Track varsity 2, reserve 1, Football reserve 1, Basketball re- serve 1, Golf 4. KRYSA, THERESA - Dramatics 4, Glee Club 1, Choir 2, 3, Oper- etta 1, 2, Spring Festival 2, 3. . ll61 KUHN, RICHARD 1 Student Council 2, Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club l, Band l, Football reserve l, 2, Bas- ketball reserve l, 2, Track varsity 2, 3, re- serve 1, Noonday League l, 2, 3, 4, Student Recreational Council 2, Stamp Secretary 2. KUHRTS. DOLLIE Portage High School, Crisrnan, Indiana, l, 2, Glee Club 3, 4, secretary 4, GAA. 3, 4, chairman of sports 4. LANHAM. DORIS Booster Club 4, Y-Teens 2, 3, 4, secretary 4, G.A.A. 3, 4, Board 45 VALENIAN 4. LEMBKE. MAX Hi-Y 3, 4, Band l, 2, 3, 4, Football varsity 3, 4, reserve 1, 2, Track varsity Z, 3, 4, Noon- day League 2, 3, 4. Richard Kuhn Dollie Kuhrts Doris Lanham Max Lembke Barbara Lemster Roger Lines Kenneth Lowenstine Arlene Marine Ruth Ann Marshall Lawrence Mcllvain V LEMSTER, BARBARA Y-Teens l, 2, Dramatics l, 2, G.A.A. l, Stamp Secretary 3, Spring Festival l, 2. LINESQROGER Booster Club 4, Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Band l, 2, 3, vice-president 3, Football manager 3, Bas- ketball varsity 3, 4, reserve l, 2, Track var- sity 2, 3, 4, reserve l, Noonday League 2, VALPOST 4. LOWENSTINE. KENNETH Student Council 4, l-li-Y 3, 4, Aviation l, 2, Football reserve l, Basketball reserve 3, Track varsity 2, 3, 4, reserve l, Noonday League l, 2, 3, Golf 3, 4, Stamp chairman 2. MARINE. ARLENE Y-Teens l, 2, G.A.A. Z, 3, Noonday League 2. MARSHALL, RUTH ANN Y-Teens l, 2, 3, 4, G.A.A. l, 2, 3, 4. MCILVAIN, LAWRENCE Booster Club 4, Student Council 3, treas- urer 3, Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Choir 3, 4, vice-president 4, Band Z, 3, 4, vice-president 3, president 4, Basketball reserve 2, Track varsity 2. l17l Marilyn Miller John Nye Clare Olinger Edwin Olson OSLAN, ROBERT Hyde Park High School, Chicago, Illinois, 1, Aviation l, Bowling League l. PEACE, BETTY JEAN Y-Teens 4, G.A.A. 4. PIERCE, DOROTHY Y-Teens l, 2, 3, 4. PIERCE, IOAN Y-Teens l, Z, 3, 4, Dramatics 4, Band l, Z, 3, 4, treasurer 4, Orchestra 1, G.A.A. l, 2, 3, -VALPOST 4, Spring Festival 2, 3. QUERY, GENEVIEVE Danville High School, Danville, Illinois, l, 2. REED, MARVIN Basketball manager 3, Noonday League l, 2, 3, 4, Golf 2, 3, 4. MILLER, MARILYN Y-Teens l, 2, 4, Glee Club 4, G.A.A. l, 2, 3, Board 4, vice-president 4, Spring Festival 2, Senior Class Treasurer. NYE, IOHN Albion High School, Albion, Indiana, l, Stu- dent Council 3, Hi-Y 3, 4, reporter 4, Debat- ing l, 2, 3, 4, secretary 3, Band l, 2, 3, 4, li- brarian 4, Noonday League 3, 4. OLINGER. CLARE Y-Teens l, 2, Dramatics l, Glee Club l, 2, 3, 4, Operetta l, 2, G.A.A. l, 2, Spring Festival 2. OLSON, EDWIN Manual Arts l, Noonday League 4. Reacfziin Robert Oslan Betty lean Peace Dorothy Pierce Iohn Pierce Genevieve Query Marvin Reed l13l SCHNEIDER. OWEN Band 1, 2, 3, 4, librarian 4, Football reserve 3, Track reserve 2, 3, Noonday League 2, 3. SCHOENB OHM, RICHARD Aviation 1, Choir 3, 4, Bowling League 1. SCHROEDER. DOLORES Booster Club 4, Y-Teens l, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 1, 2, Choir 1, 2, 3, Operetta 1, 2, G.A.A. 1, VALPOST 4, Spring Festival 2, 3. SCHUMACKER, RICHARD Owen Schneider Richard Schoenbohm Dolores Schroeder Richard Schumacker vwweuw Sun Norma Shoup Betty Shuttlebotham David Siddall Arthur Smith Ioseph Smith Donald Soliday SHOUP, NORMA Y-Teens 1, 2, 3, 4, Dramatics 1, 2, 3, 4, De- bating 3, Band 1, Z, G.A.A. 1, 2, Noonday League 2, Stamp Chairman 3. SHUFFLEBOTHAM. BETTY Y-Teens 2, 3, 4, scribe 2, 3, Dramatics 3, 4, vice-president 4, G.A.A. 1, 2, 3, VALPOST 4, Spring Festival 2, Senior Class secretary. SIDDALL. DAVID 4 Science Club 1, Choir 2, 3, 4, VALPOST 3. SMITH. ARTHUR I-li-Y 1, 2, 3, Football varsity 2, 3, 4, reserve 1. SMITH. IOSEPH Choir 1, Noonday League 3, 4. SOLIDAY, DONALD Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Football varsity l, 2, 3, 4, Bas- ketball varsity 2, 3, 4, reserve 1, Track var- sity 1, 2, 3, 4. 1191 SPRATLEY, IAMES Basketball manager 3, 4, Noonday League 4, Golf 4, Stamp Chairman l, 2, 3. SPRATLEY. IACKSON Football reserve l, 2, 3. STURDY, BOUCHER Band l, 2, 3, 4, Noonday League 3. TAUCK, HENNING Football reserve 3, Basketball varsity 3, 4, Track varsity 3, 4, Noonday League l, 2. Iames Spratley Iackson Spratley Boucher Sturdy Henning Tauck THOMPSON, STEPHEN Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Band l, Football reserve l, 2, manager 3, Basketball varsity 3, 4, reserve l, 2, Track reserve l, 2, Noonday League 2. THRUN, CAROLINE Cnot picturedl Northampton School for Girls, Northampton, Massachusetts, 3, 4, Dramatics l, 2, Y-Teens l, 2. TRUMP. IAMES Oxnard Union High School, Oxnard, Califor- nia, llfzz Noonday League 3. VIETKZE, PAUL Booster Club 4, Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Board 3, presi- dent 4- Debatin l 2 3 4 vice- resident 3 I g I 1 I 1 p I Band l, 2, 3, 4, Noonday League 2, 4, VA- LENIAN 4, Stamp Chairman 3. WALL, IAMES Choir 3, 4, vice president 3, president 4, Football varsity 3, 4, reserve l, 2, Track re- serve 2, Noonday League l, 2, 3, 4. Stephen Thompson Iames Trump Paul Vietzke lames Wall XJ? iw' ,jx .Qi '.,. 333: f i' R . f 'fb-lg? . ,F,LH 1' ---4: ?r5 eff -v'?n0'Il' ,43 5 1, 4. life 4 ' f7 ,-i.,,,'J, ' Q 1-'??fs+ Wzglf' -... .- 1 20 1 ..-... WASKOM, DONAVON Hi-Y 3, 4, sergeant-at-arms 4, Aviation l, Dramatics 3, Debating 1, 2, 3, 4, treasurer 2, 3, Noonday League 3, 4, Stamp Chairman 3, WILL, EUGENE Basketball varsity 3, 4, Noonday League 2. WILL, IANICE Booster Club 4, Student Council 4, secretary 4, Y-Teens 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 1, Choir 1, 2, Operetta l, 2, G.A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Board 3, 45 Chairman of Sports 3, 4, Spring Festival 2, Senior Class president. WILSON, ANNE Student Council 2, Y-Teens l, 2, 3, 4, Pro- gram Chairman 4, G.A.A. 1, Z, 3, 4, Board 3, 4, treasurer 4, Noonday League l, 2, 3, 4, Student Recreational Council 2, VALENIAN 4, Spring Festival 2. Donavon Waskom Eugene Will Ioinice Will Anne Wilson 7a eajofz Me .figfzl Waldo Woods Ioyce Ywanow Esther Zell Robert Zimmerman Clarence Dick WOODS, WALDO Football reserve 2, 4, Basketball reserve 3, 4, Noonday League 3. YWANOW. IOYCE Y-Teens 2, 3, 4, vice president 4, Dramatics 2, 3, 4, secretary 3, president 4, G.A.A. l, VALPOST 4. ZELL, ESTHER Star City High School, Star City, indiana, l, 2. ZIMMERMAN, ROBERT Booster Club 4, Student Council 2, 3, 4, presi- dent 4, l-li-Y 2, 3, 4, treasurer 4, Dramatics 4, Debating l, 2, 3, 4, president 3, Noonday League 2, 3, 4. DICK, CLARENCE Football manager 3, reserve l, 2, Basketball varsity 3, 4, reserve l, 2, Tumblin 1, Track reserve 1, Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Hi-Y 3, 4, Commer- cial Club l. 1211 THREE-YEAR IUNIOR OFFICERS Richard Black ,, ........,.... President Iohanna Bauer . . . . .Treasurer Miss Sieb ..... ,.... S ponsor Mr. Nirnroth ..,.....,, ..... S ponsor Row 1: Charles Able. Row 2: Leila Adams, Marian Ander- son. Row 3: Betty Barndollanlohn Barring- ton, lohanna Bauer, lanet Bay, Pauline Becker, Grace Beehler. Row 4: Allen Berndt, Theodore Biggs, Beverly Black, Lois Black, Richard Black, Betty Bond. Row 5: Catherine Brennan, Florence Brown, Richard Brown, Walter Buck, lacquelyn Buckles, William Buffington. Row 6: lames Carr, Clarence Cheney, Ioseph Clifford, Frances Clifford, Arthur Court, Betty Dalke. Row 7: Marjorie Danielson, Patricia Dawson, Marilyn Deu, Byron Dick, Da- vid Dierking, Florence Dillingham. Row 8: Eloise Dowd, Patricia Eavey, Kenneth Edwards, Betty Eichelberg, Ar- lene Evans, Robert Fabing, Row 9: Ioyce Findling, leanette Fins ney, Carl Finstad, Lois Gardiner, lean- nine Gilliland, -Stanley Green. Row 10: Norma Griffin, Mary Groezin- ger, Wanda Gutt, Norman Halus, Ron- ald Halus, Carolyn Hartman. l22l STAND Row 1: Arlene Hermance, Kay Her- rick, Richard Hildreth, Florence Hos- kins, Patricia Hinkle, Arlene Huelat. Row 2: David Iordan, Mary Ann Keen, Edward Kolner, Robert Lanham, Mary Lawler, Henry Looft. Row 3: Harold McCarron, Ioyce McDaniel, loyce Miles, Dorothy Miller, Thomas Morris, Robert Murvihill. Row 4: lack O'Barr, Edward O'Brien, luanita Orange, Gloria Otto, Lucille Pearson, Wanda Peck. Row 5: Dawn Pappas, Iames Peda- voli, Helen Perrson, Robert Pillard, lohn Poncher, Edward Poweska. Row 6: Eugene Price, Kenneth Prin- cipe, Roseleah Rogers, Beverly Schau, Richard Schroeder, Robert Shinabarger, Row 7: Rita Sievers, Charles Snyder, Ruth Sommer, Frank Squire, Ernest Steinhilber, Paul Sutton. Row 8: Arthur Thoma, Carmella To- teno, lack Trump, Nellie Van Loon, James Wheeler, Sally Wiebe. Row 9: Ruth Williams, Anne Willing, Row 10: Paul Zulick. Iunior Ring Committee: Iohn Poncher, Mary Lawler, Miss Sieb, sponsor, Flor- ence Brown, Arthur Thoma. Not pictured: lewel Finn Betty Forbes William Gilbert, Betty Greenlee, Richl ard Gregory, Gloria Hann, loan H Pierce, Evelyn Sallee, Daniel Stoltz Ioyce Weichert, Lois Wilson. i221 1 TWO-YEAR SOPHOMORE OFFICERS Mr. Conklin .,.........,...... Sponsor Margaret Zimmerman ..Sec'y-Treasurer Charles Stevens ......... Vice president Daniel Walsh .....4.......... President Mr. Fisher ...,. .....,.. S ponsor Row l: Warren Able, Betty Aigner, lack Bailey. Row 2: William Baker, Harold Bark- ley. Row 3: Bernard Barnes, Harold Bar- tholomew, Iames Bauer, George Becker, lames Bennett, Catherine Bennett. Row 4: Barbara Benson, Emeline Biggs, Mary Biggs, William Birming- ham, lean Black, Patricia Blaney. Row 5: Lois Bond, William Boyle, Ioyce Bozarth, Eugene Braun, Vergene Brobeck, Virginia Brown. Row 6: Russell Bryant, Rex Bucher, Ioan Bundy, Shirley Burns, Byron But- terfield, Betty Buzalski. Row 7: Robert Cain, Eva Chester, Barbara Claudon, Ioanne Cochran, Iohn Cometord, Robert Copas. Row 8: lean Crisman, Marilyn Crowe, Donald Curtis, Robert Daniels, Patricia Dick, Ruth Dick. Row 9: Kenneth Dobbins, Robert Dol- son, Arlene Domke, William Dowd, Ber- nita Ellis, Glen Ellis. Row 10: Ioseph Ellis, Marian Ehrhardt, William Fitzgerald, Iaclyn Flynn, Betty Mae Gessler, Mary Griffin. Row ll: Edward Hansen, Charlotte Hardesty, Mary lane Hendrickson, Lloyd Hermance, Arthur Hershman, Genevieve Horan. Row 12: Donna Hutt, Richard Iohnsen Mary lane Iontz, Paul Ketchxnark, Hazen Kinne, Norman Klahn. t24l STAND Row 1: Geraldine Klemm, William Lansdowne, loseph Leasure, Betty Lite, Betty Luckenbill, David MacGillivray. Row 2: Iames Manago, Merlyn Mar- tens, Thomas Mayer, William McClel- lan, Ruth Mcllvain, Patricia Melka. Row 3: Loretta Meyer, Leslie Milby, Marilyn Miller, Lorraine Mohler, Owen Moneypenny, Delight Mull. Row 4: Wanda Naillieux, Susan Nich- olas, Richard Nielsen, Ianet Oliver, Carol Olson, Virginia Olson. Row 5: Geneva Owens, Antonia Pap- pas, Ioseph Pedavoli, Ianet Peters, Lil- lian Ptlug, Ronald Pollack, Row 6: Iustus Price, Cecil Query, Eu- gene Ransom, Nancy Reason, Richard Reed, Phyllis Robinson. Row 7: Iarnes Ryan, William St. Clair, Theresa Sandberg, Clarence Schroeder, Lois Schroeder, Martha Schroeder. Row 8: Howard Scott, Theresa Sid- dall, Vernon Smith, Catharine Specht Margaret Spratley, Raymond Steele. I Row 9: Charles Stevens, BruCe Stew- art, George Stoner, Grace Stringham, Eugene Sullivan, lean Swenson. Row 10: Betty Tilton, Io Ann Town- send, Kenneth Trulock, David Turner, Ruth Underwood, Ioseph Van Ness. Row ll: loyce Vietzke, Arlene Walsh, Daniel Walsh, Alice Mae Weckerle, Mary Ann Weiss, William West. Row 12: Richard Wheeler, Arthur Whitton, David Whitcorrib, Charles Wil- son, Charles Wolfe, Margaret Zimmer- HIGH. Not pictured: Richard Christman, Dorothie Clark, Ruth Clifford, LaMana Cytia, Ioseph DeMack, Edwin Gutt, Frank Highly, William Pool, Dorothy Shoup, David Thomas, William Ware- ham, Ioan Whitton, Delores Wolie, Vic- tor Zell. l25l SEED FRESHMAN OFFICERS Philip' Findling . . . ...,. Vice president Mr. Blbler .,.... ..,,..... S ponsor Miss Shauer .... ...,... S ponsor Thomas Oliver . , , .......... President Mr. Rathburn , . ..,,.....,.... Sponsor Richard Bond ..... SecretaryfTreasurer Row l: Fred Abelseth, Harley Atfeld. Row 2: Roger Ashbaugh, Ralph Bach. Row 3: lean Bademan, Opal Bair, Betty Ballinger, Betty Barboul, Io Anne Bauer, Iohn Beck. Row 4: Bonnie Biggs, ,Barbara Black, Eugene Blake, Ianet Bond, Richard Bond, Iuanita Borg, Row 5: Marguerite Brown, Bernard Buck, Laurence Burch, Ioseph Burke, Idamae Burrus, Belva Butterfield, Row 6: Roy Carlson, Chester Carpen- ter, Beverly Carr, Dorothy Clark, Io Ann Clark, Patricia Clark. Row 7: Kenneth Coulter, Ellen Covert, Rosa Lee Craig, Evelyn Dahl, William Delcourt, Robert Dillingham. Row 8: Thomas Dobbins, Sharon Don- ley, Marie Dunlap, Roger Evans, Mary Fehrman, Philip Findling. Row 9: Mary Lee Fischer, Leslie Flee- nor, Wilbur Fleenor, Iack Flick, Ioan Foreman, Darlene Frazier. Row 10: Edward Gannon, Lynn Gast, Dora Giitos, Robert Goodrich, Dolores Gram ps, Mary Gray. Row ll: Ross Greene, Gordon Greg- ory, Loretta Groezinger, Richard Hall, Rex Harrison, Iames Hartmann. Row 12: Edwin Hendricks, Patricia Hepner, Donald Hermance, William Hibbets, Iacqueline Hinkle, Iohn Hod- shire. Row 13: Patricia Horan, Robert Hou- ser, Iames Hudgins, Shirley Hue:-lat, Dorothy Hundt, George Iacobs. I25l LINGS Row 1: Philip lohnson, Barbara Cleve- land, William Iohnston, Lois Iones,Iohn Kilavos, Daniel Kleehammer. Row 2: Carrie Mae Klein, Beverly Klukas, Ioyce Knoblock, Wallace Kotef- ka, Marian Kraft, Gerald Krueger. Row 3: Phyllis Lawler, Charles Lemb- ke, Iohn LePell, William Masters, Cath- erine Mayer, Dorothy McColley. Row 4: Marvlene McDaniels, Darrell McDowell, Nancy McKibben, William McNeil, Ioan Meyer, Donald Miller. Row S: Eva Lou Miller, Helen Miller, Lou Ella Miller, Robert Morand, Robert Myers, Marguerite Nicholson. Row 6: Robert Odle, Thomas Oliver, Shirley Olsborg, Beverly Otto, Iohn Parks, Dorothy Pennington. Row 7: Einar Petersen, Ann Petralias, losepliirie Polarek, Anganetha Popp, Dorothy Poweska, Betty Prentiss. Row 8: Ianet Richardson, Dick Sand- berg, Charles Schau, Emily Schoen- bohm, Ianet Scribner, Lillian Sherrick. Row 9: Marilee Shinabarger, Carole Sievers, Donald Siemion, Ernest Soli- day, Dorothy Spratley, Marvin Stoner. Row 10: Iohn Sullivan, Carolyn Sun- din, Virginia Swanton, Harlan Swift, Mary Tarnow, Ernest Tauck. Row ll: Donald Thomas, Io Ann Thune, Harold Tucker, Fred Tuthill, Thomas Underiner, Dona Upton. Row 12: Betty lane Wakeman, Cloyd Walker, Harold Waymire, Wilford Webb, Melville Weller, Elizabeth West, Row 13: Onnalee Williams, Marylin Williamson, Randall Wilson, Martha Winchell, Bernice Wright, Ioyce Zell. Not pictured: lohn Beach, Robert Born- holt, lames Brennan, Iohn Downing, Margaret Eigelsbach, William Martin, Marilyn Niequist, Richard Nighswan- der, Robert Peace, Robert Pierce, Ralph Polite, Maurice Reynolds, Carole Sal- berg, Harlan Snyder, Iohn Tuthill, War- ren Wright, l27l Henning Tauck clea rs the hurdles at home track I 29 1 meet. is a simile Well chosen to describe the boys and girls of Valparaiso High School who participate in the various phases of the athletic pro- gram throughout the year. Who: ever knew a sapling to be broken by storms? It is bent to the ground only to spring upright to begin anew its battle with the elements. It is lithe and pliable. Mental and physical resiliency is a trait which the school strives to inculcate. It is no disgrace to be defeated, but it is a disgrace to accept defeat without a struggle. With cooperation and sportsmanship and good morale al- most any defeat can be turned into victory. Resiliency, cooperation, sportsmanship-these are the goals of our athletic department. I , mx fi aims' mvwkz. ,A 4 LU fx ' V' Y EL :,ix if , 3, .wif HI, 55? , 'i I E? , V ' Q N 3 X X .s W , -41 f x , W ,X A fi A 1 A Q QM fiaffgfff ,jg 39 11 KW H A ,Q 'xxiifgf Ty ff. 4x 1 -cfm gin... fp, W 11 I fi 5 A ' 'M K ' '43 S 5334 A -.R -if 'vw n i . Q rx' P 'I 4 A a , an M 5 A ' . Sw K s K WL . QQ 1 . ,xx , a is Q I X LB , W tygf My ' X 1 L 2 V -. -Q '9- . '.1.5 33 1i'zi'ia2-5QB'n'?'.1'!iA skis I' is, L K BASKETBALL STOCK: Wliile the football season was still in full swing, basketball began to claim its share of attention, A call :ent out by the coach brought a good turnout of both inexperienced and experienced boys. Several of last years B teamers were pro- moted to the varsity, wliosestrengtli, however, was not sufficient to win more than two of the eighteen games that were scheduled under the N.I.H.S.C. Had the entire sea- son gone like their first game against Crown Point, 49-39, or their eighth game against Tolleston, 36- 34, all would have been well. Per- haps it was their small size that militated against them. Certainly their practise was not neglected, for almost every night after school found them pounding the hard wood. Nevertheless, a good nucleus will remain, even after this year's graduation, to fight on in the l947- 48 season. Top picture - Varsity in action, row 1. bottom: Stephen Thompson, Donald Soliday, Eugene Will, Richv ard lohnson. Row 2: Paul Zulich, Thomas Mor- ris, Iack O'Barr, Roger Lines. Row 3: Lynn Black, Clarence Dick, Roy Cochran, lack Carichoif. Below - Varsity in repose. row 1, bottom: Stephen Thompson, Roger Lines, Roy Cochran, Richard lohn- son, Donald Soliday, lack Carichoff, Eugene Will, Lynn Black, lack O'Barr. Row 2: Richard Horner, Raymond Griffin, Richard Hildreth, Clarence Dick, Byron Dick, Thomas Morris, Paul Zulich, Mr. Rathburn, coach. 1946-47 Basketball Schedule Crown Point ,,... ..... H ere V-49 Portage ..... ,... , ..... H ere V-13 Michigan City ........ There V-30 Washington . . ....... There V-24 Hammond Tech ......, Here V-31 Froebel ......,,....... There V-19 Hammond ....,, ..... T here V-3l Tolleston .,... ,...... T here V-36 Whiting ...,.......,.., Here V-21 George Rogers Clark Here V-37 Horace Mann ..,....., Here V-34 Emerson ...,,.,.,..... Here V-40 Garfield ,.,,.. .,... H ere V-35 Hobart. ..,,. , .... Here V-19 Lew Wallace ......... There V-41 LaPorte ,...,.,..,.,,,. Here V-48 Roosevelt ..,.....,..., Here V-37 Fort Wayne Catholic. ,There - V-31 l32I Ma 1' f f 5 N WWE .- . 1, , . I Q M5 in XX vgg sw , . ,QE 2: 1 2 W - 3 +1 if, M 9 -aa.: ..:.::. A WA b 3? Q ..: Lg , ' JL Sai., 3 S, . ,wa 2: x my 1 9 1 N, 4 E J sf iv-1?n . WW 2 551553 W M I Q , Z7 fx , :B , , v as --f- 1 4 - QV, Q 4 4 2 WK? 3' f - 75 A,,.M.g gg N W ' W gin a: V, Wfsrfq vi? U 1 'W 55 1155 'V .,. ffggi ,A qu ' . ,FE I K Qi fifiil , ' ' ' ., f 2,4 .A . , I ,5 03 Q54 .hm A M Swv WW 4 ,.::,': 5, fi -7 'U ' ' N Q' A fy? ,Pfam FW MM' 3: A ,w ml 3 .W Q 'W g 1 I if M M fu i gg Z5 gap Qwag wi? MW 421 Q' r 'N is f vizyx QW W 5 'fwfn-fi f W' Q 1 iam. Q, Q ,jf X QW Q - M3233 K' W -W J x. ,, mi W: A wggly , ,V is, f' I 7 , A .WW A W ,.. ..m,,,f .Wm W M 5 Mm - MW. rg 2 - Q 55, WG f ' , L1 2 may is 4 Ti 5, 'W 5 ,W +1 I iff? , ,HWY , .gif X 1 W J ga ,, f my 1 w sdwzw ,,5. . V , . 51, Wig , ,. . W? ff' 335 .f My sp Q .61 M' iii gg: W 9 9+ , . 'Y 6 Lggggiggg , ,V ff 4 ' 'ies 3551 f , WY 5 :is f W s 1,:.. Q fa -WX 14 ' 2' Z4 2 4 V. aqw 'f F 2 2 ' -. +1 ' if qi: fi 'T 4 32323232 355 4 if Q Q :E 'Sis w. .vp ' 411125 P ' 1 . as , W we ' 1 A 5 H54 2, if L 3 E 4 1 , N We ff Z f W 4 ag . g ' ' J:-2 4 - f ,Avi lg z V V RM Mi A -1 Z3 E M s.,:.:,:5::,,. avg xx mv '-ace-5555: ff H W 4 5 , A -f f'fw'?ZS' , XX W 1: 2,53 Q L 1 3,43 ,. It H Y 'Y , xi az 'Q 9 T W A V 'QW ,N W, ' . g 4 iff- 5 :il Q ' if-2 5252 W ET f l 522:55 Y M if -I 9 BRANCHES ACTIVE IN TRACK AND FIELD The boys participate enthusiastically in such activities as the 1140-yard dash, the high jump, and the pole vault, all shown in the top row, left to right. Hurdling, row 2, left, they tind to their liking. Golf never fails to attract its share of attention. The members of this year's team appear in row 2, middle, seated: William Dowd, Kenneth Lowenstine, Harold Bartholo- mew, Robert Cain, standing: Bernard Gvirtzman, Charles Kotzan, lames Trump, Ioseph Van Ness, and Marvin Reed. Among the outstanding members of the track team are those we see in row 3, left, bottom: Howard Scott, Raymond Steel, George Becker, middle: Charles Wile son, Warren Able, William Delcourt, top: Eugene Price, William Martin, Harold McCarron. The entire line-up is shown in row 4, left. All other pictures portray similar activities. l34l 7. ,ff It 1 x W , l ,,- 4, .wx A , 5 Drlnffff f f . 7 ' , , Q ' 5- , 1 , tv . W 715 W .zg,'I,la,g -4 V ,A ..,w X'-uv 031 ! f PLANTED FOR VIGOR The Girls' Athletic Association has made a real contribution toward improving the health of each girl, developing her ability to co- operate with others, increasing her skill and knowledge in each sport, and offering a suit- able recreation. All this it has accomplished through the many activities that it sponsors, Most of these are held after school, except those conducted through Noonday League. Formal meetings of the group are held on Thursdays of the even numbered weeks of the school year. Such major sports as speedball, volleyball, basketball, and soccer, played in the order mentioned, and such minor sports as archery, track, tumbling, healthball, horse shoes, bad- minton, ping pong, shuftleboard, and deck tennis claim the group's earnest attention from September to May. It is the fond dream of every member to win enough points to own a G.A.A. sweater. Fifteen hundred points are required. The sweater is either a green or a white cardigan with a monogram on the side. Half its cost is borne by the association and half by the earner. To it, for the price of five hundred points each, may be sewn a chevron. To wear a sweater so decorated is to be proud indeed. Points are obtained by coming out regular- ly, making A teams and class teams, being captain, winner, or runner-up of round robin teams, and winning class tournaments. Fail- ure of a girl to appear when expected causes a deduction of points. Unorganized activity throughout the year, both in winter and sum- mer, may lend promising score. Golf, tennis, riding, tobogganing, swimming, and skating are all eligible for credit under the point system, Reading from top: G.A.A. Board, row 1, bottom: Dollie Kuhrt:-s, softball, Wilma Hill, speedball, Lois Black, track and field, Iuanita Orange, program com- mittee, Delores Curtis, president. Row 2: Carolyn Hartmann, equipment, Greta Braun, basketball, Marilyn Miller, vice-presi- dent, Ianet Bay, program committee, Wanda Peck, arts chairman. Row 3: Mary Lawler, miscellaneous points, Florence Dillingham, Noonday League, lo- liarina Bauer, scrap book, Miss Borders, co- sponsor, Anne Willing, Noonday League, Ioyce McDaniel, secretary. Row 4: Rita Sievers, volleyball, Pauline Bec- ker, tumbling, Ianice Will, archery, Anne Wil- son, treasurer. Initiation stunt: Dolores Schroeder, officiat- ing. Badminton quartet: Rita Sievers, Ioycn McDaniel, Florence Dillingham, Lillian Pflug. Pigtcxils: Official party coiffure. I 35 I WINDBREAK, STAUNCH AND STURDY IUNIOR-SENIOR G.A.A. - Row 1, bottom: Anne Willing, Arlene Evans, Nellie Van Loon, Eloise Dowd, Lois Black, Dorothy Balcom, Marilyn Carichott, Dolores Schroeder. Row 2: Arlene Marine, Arlene l-luelat, Dollie Kuhrts, Dawn Pap- pas, Wilma Hill, Marian Anderson, Iuanita Orange, Lucille Pierson, Ruth Ann Marshall. Row 3: loyce McDaniel:s, Pau- line Becker, Rita Sievers, Catherine Brennan, Patricia Sullivan, Gloria l-lann, leannine Gilliland, Betty Greenlee, Wanda Peck. Row 4: Betty lean Peace, Greta Braun, Marilyn Miller, Kay Herrick, Marilyn Deu, Ruth Sornner, Betty Forbes, Doris Lanham, Norrna Grittin. Row 5: Mary Lawler, Florence Hoskins, Carolyn Hartmann, Lou Ellen Hotterth, Florence Brown, Iohanna Bauer, Dolores Curtis, Miss Borders, sponsor, Row 6: Harriet Iungjohan, Anne Wilson, lanice Will, Dorothy Miller, Florence Dillingham, Beverly Schau. FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE G.A.A. - Row l. bottom: Lois Bond, Delores Wolf, Shirley Huelat, Io Anne Bauer, Ann Petralias, Sharon Donley, Margaret Eigelsbach, Betty Luckenbill, Io Ann Clark, Patricia Clark, Io Ann Thune. Row 2: Ioyce Vietzke, Patricia Melka, Loretta Meyers, Ioan Meyers, Helen Elliott, Lillian Ptlug, Nancy Mcliibben, Iuanila Borg, lean Bademan, Dorothie Clark, Donna Upton. Row 3: loan VVhitton, lean Crisrnan, Geneva Owens, Susan Nicholas, Ar- lene Walsh, Patricia Hepner, Mary Biggs, Helen Miller, Dolores Grarnps, Betty Ballinger, Zathoe Monroe. Row 4: Mare guerite Brown, Antonia Pappas, ldamae Burrus, Theresa Siddall, Patricia Blaney, Nancy Reason, Theresa Sandberg, Catharine Mayer, Marilee Shinabarger, Marilyn Niequist, Arlene Domke, Row 5: Genevieve Horan, Margaret Zimmerman, Barbara Benson, Mary lanelontz, Iaclyn Flynn, Dora Gittos, Betty Mae Aigner, Barbara Claudon, Io Ann Townsend, Shir- ley Burns. Row 6: Betty Eichelberg, Melville Weller, Phyllis Lawler, Darlene Frazier, Carrie Mae Klein, Mary Gray, Ruth Mcllvain, Ianet Scribner, Carole Salberg, Beverly Carr, Miss Borders, sponsor, Marie Dunlap. l37l The Seniors all look forward to the annual G.A.A.fFreshman lnitiation. At this time all those girls who desire to join the association are initiaf ted in the shower room. The rites are fairly standardized. The initiates, having removed their shoes, are blindfolded, turned around a couple of times, led through cats' eyes and blood, over high boards, and through tunnels, smeared with lipstick, and finally given a paddling before becoming full-fledged members. They are then adopted for their first year by the older girls, who are known as their big sisters. Refresh- ments and a snake dance about a bonfire gen- erally conclude the evening. Starting at top. left to right: Yell Leaders Miller, Greenlee Bauer, l-lofferth, Willing, and McDaniel . . . speedball GRAFTING HEALTH AND HAPPINESS This year's Sadie Hawkins Dance proved a novel affair. Both girls and boys came dressed in typical hillbilly style, with not a few couples wearing matching plaids. As each girl and her date entered the gymnasium door, they were given a ballot upon which to vote for the evenf ings Daisy Mae and Li'l Abner. This honor went to Rita Sievers and Roger Lines, who were called to the stage and awarded with a vegetable bou- quet and aiplug of tobacco, respectively. Part- ners were girls' choice, sometimes assisted by circle or group dancing. The money collected from the sale of tickets financed the banquet, The Spring Banquet is an annual affair at . . . on the ropes . . . wheres my shoe? . . . torture in the shower . . . Sadie Hawkins Dance . . . limbering up on the rings . . . G.A.A. Ban- quet , . . snake dance . . 4 bonfire . . . l.i'l Abner and Daisy Mae. 4'.Tv'lQV'1r1Q 59. Wh,-L'g',,fl,'h 'l ff' b r :X :if -- 'K L I N' We ,, 5? is R W. ,wi Egg , 1 awaits all alike at Valparaiso High School. There are clubs for every- body - social and service groups wherein one's personality may un- fold to the fullest. Like trees, human beings tend to cluster together. Thus joined, they find mutual security and happiness. The lonesome pine may be an important landmark in song, but it is hardly to be counted among the nation's natural re- sources. Lonesome people do not make the best citizens. Those made happy through ties of friendship are the best candidates for a democratic World of Tomorrow. From their ranks will come leaders who have learned their trade well while yet students in such halls as those of OUT OW1'1 QIITICI II1GteI'. ,,,,. ff fini Hopf, The Stall: Rita Bcte, art editorg Donald Brobeck, boys' editorg Miss Stoner, sponsor, Doris Lanham, busi- ness managerg D01-is Fleenor, activities editor: Anne Wilson, girls' sports editor, Paul Vietzke editor-in- chief, Gerald Howard, acting editor. Second lleill: Subscrip- tion takers receiving their quotas in the storeroom. WORDS, LIKE THE Cur activities are clothed in many words written by the publica- tions department, which em- braces both the VALLNIAN, sponsored by Miss Mary Ed' na Stoner, and the VAL POST, sponsored by Mrs. Emma R. Poor. Upperf classmen man the staffs and work hard to cove er the news that con- cerns both the faciil ty and the students. All but the actual printing is done within the conf fines of the school. xt X 590 4, gt, XXL - 1, Second lrighll: Mrs. Poor , my signing a book lor one oi last CQ3 ' V7 year's seniors. Hia t ' Third: Photostatic copy of last BQ 7 I , year's All-American Award. . K iw Fourth: Last year's seniors ea- 1 3 ffgijfg. gerly examining their copies ot 50894452 the VALENIAN. 83X x , RQ . pk 6 JE ,mit A A6 hm K ,X Q? ,gy iff A i , 'tt fi 'gg s X 2ffQ f1f'fff' ,ff Af' , gf. A ,A .K. V. Wait' X X in f L tv ,:i1,,xELf' , ' 5 L K S' it Q Q 'A ,,,,fii'f ' Kbxxvi , - .. ' A RIS ' My N.: x ywwi ' A r i T I ' i .' VALENIAN Qi-i ' .5 . ii. X ti A' ply 1 5 Sip gk yu The VALENIAN contains within its cavern a complete record ot school hte, 1946-47. The photographer and the statf members have been busy since almost the opening day obtaining material for its pages. No maior activity has been omitted, lt has long been the custom for the senior class to publish the VALENIAN. Expenses are met in :several different ways, the most out- standing of which is the :selling oi candy and ice cream in the halls and at the games, This: year a new feature has been added. The fresh men, the sophomores, and the Juniors, who used to be photographed in groups, are pictured mdividuullv. Special mention also should be made of the l9-'16 All-American Award which we have won trom the Nu tional Scholastic Press Association. This: is: a coveted honor granted to comparatively few yearboolcs, The VALENIAN has won this: award three time: X-i Q69 , A- , - iw' it C-fou if wi 4 'ii' , , Q9 ,Q tt' H si A ,Y T Y 1 N nixulvx U1xis'fl vi -Xi in 7 vw hi' G i Ae , 1,- , ,- if in LEAVES OF A TREE Students look forward to the ap- pearance of these publications with the greatest enthusiasm. Because of their popularity, neither the VALENIAN nor the VALPOSTever lacks for sub- scribers. in the case of both, production costs are kept to a minimum in order that everyone can afford his own copy. There is no profit to the school other than that of giving enjoyment to the reader and ex- perience to those on the staffs First ltopl, lournalism 1 and Il. row l: Dolores Schroe- der, Doris Flee- nor, Marilyn Cari- choff, Ioan Pierce, Greta Braun. Mrs. Foor, sponsor. Row 2: Harriet Iungiohcm. Dorothy Balcom, Betty Lou Snyder, Marilyn Deu, Lois Gardiner, Bet- ty Shufflebotham. Row 3: Anne Willing. Ioyce McDaniel, Ioyce Findling, Delores Curtis, Ioyce Ywo- now, Ollie Stringhum. Row 4: Roger Lines, Robert Zim- merman, Roy Cochran, Roger Clcxudon, Iohn Spagna, Ken- drick Brown. U. Second: Anne Willing and Ioyce ' McDaniel doing ct bit of proof- reading. Third: Greta Braun and Delores Curtis to the rescue. room activities. VALPOST All the news in and around the school finds its way into the VALPOST, the bi- weekly publication of Iournalism II. Here the theory of journalism I is put into real practise. With the occasional exception of a Scholastic rotogravure section everything about the paper is the students' personal re- sponsibility, The very first VALPOST appeared in 1929 as a part of what was then English V. Within a short time it became clear that the baby was growing too rapidly to be handled in such ct casual fashion. To meet this crisis, the administra- tion introduced a special journalism course whose project was to be an enlarged and improved VALPOST. Present editions generally cover four pages. While news items may vary from week to week, such tea tures as the editorials, Suds and Sprinklings, the gossip column, and the sports write-ups remain fairly constant. First Class Honor Ratings testify to the fact that the paper is a good one. Fourth: An expose of ordinary class- Row 1, bottom: Mr. Schenck, sponsor, George Becker, Iustus Price, Russell Bryant, Robert Zirnrnerinan, Charles Kotzan, Roy Cochran, fohn Poncher, Paul Vietzke, Mr. Henkel, sponsor. Row 2: Richard Schroeder, Charles Stevens, Eugene Braun, George Stoner, William Buffington, lack O'Barr, Max Lembke, Donald Brobeck, Richard lohnson. Row 3: Bernard Gvirtzman, Daniel Walsh, Paul Sutton, Arthur Thoma, Harold Bartholomew, David lor- dan, Kenneth Lowenstine, Roger Lines, Stephen Thompson, Gerald Howard. Row 4: Thomas Morris, Byron Dick, Kenneth Principe, Richard Hildreth, Donavon Waskorn, Lawrence Mcllvain, loseph Van Ness, Richard Kuhn. Row 5: Norman Halus, Raymond Griffin, Robert Shinabarger, Howard Chumley, Joseph Smith, lohn Nye, Richard lsenberg. HI-Y: A TREE KNOWN BY ITS FRUIT To create, maintain, and extend throughout the school and community high standards of Christian characterue this is the purpose to which the Hi-Y, the high school branch of the Y.M,C.A., is dedicated. Our particular chapter is one of the oldest in the State. In the beginning it embraced a membership of approximately thirty-five boys joining by invitation only. However, within the last two years the membership has been not only enlarged but so altered in character that boys now join by request. The organization is governed by a board composed of the officers, the sponsors, and two other members elected especially for this purpose. They meet for one-halt hour every week to discuss cur- rent problems. Service is the keynote. At the beginning of every semester the club operates the used book store for the convenience of the student body. Books are bought and sold in Room lU6 on a non-profit basis. Many books which might otherwise be discarded are thus kept in cir- culation. The facilities of the Hi-Y checkroom are avail- able at basketball games and other school functions. The Hi-Y promotes basketball, too, by selling pencils on which has been printed the seasons schedule. Much em- phasis is laid on courtesy. Each year the Hi-Y presents to the student whom the faculty deems the most courte- ous an award of merit. Church attendance is encours aged. Local ministers talk to the club twice a year, the members attend church in a body three times a year, and the church committee does its best to see that in- dividual members attend their own church services, Of the social events, one of the most interesting is the annual Freshman-Newcomer Party held in conjunction with the Y-Teens. The Father-Son Banquet and the Best Girl Party are also traditional. Once a year the club holds initiation, at which new members take the oath of service in an impressive candlelight ceremony. The rec- ord of the organization indicates that such pledges have always been observed with serious intent. Wadi' 'Inf 'w,f-riff! bglgla luis QQ? f Weigh 1 sf ,W 4 'Fri gf fc. :BUSY 7' rfvw, ist W stqglf' ' .. , gtg.,- ',... L . , ' 1 1 , . ' rl V. .-.- ' ..,fwef, : . 5, 5 1 ., - w . 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Af, . - . ff -. -.493 .1 If J ' ' 1 T.. -' 1.3: R4 . 1, vi...- P, -, gif , 591 ' 3511 its .N . ,x . .. . 1 wt. LM V' -- fit -,.f ' -7- ' J QF-T' 'Hg 1 'Ri ' im ,,,la5 ' .' '-ifi' . l ' ' '. f, 1 33355 T751 wa. Z, 5. K 4 1 gm 4,4 -.ji EW: C., l i 5 R ' A T .-fi ,622 1 .4 -4'. ' A., 'Q- fflfifl .. ' S,1:. Q H --.B b ,xii M ',- sign. We 'ef ff' is RN W s- gg., -,- fl' - nf ,ff as. ,Q i in ..- -ff? . i I TN 0 'X x ! ., P .df-Z 57 Ap- fda' t, , . f 13,1 :la GM' c as Fawn V 'W Yr J N Q Ju ,fi I 5. 1 ' 43-Jn i'4 .ghf IUNIOR-SENIOR Y-TEENS-Row 1, bottom: Arlene I-Iuelat, Betty lean Peace, loan Pierce, Doris Fleenor, Ioyce Weich- ert, Dorothy Balcom, Marilyn Caricholf, Dolores: Schroeder. Row 2: loyce Ywanow, Betty Shuttlebotham, Wanda Peck, Anne Willing, Rita Sievers, Pauline Becker, Doris Lanham, Ruth Ann Marshall, Dolores Curtis, Lou Ellen Hotterth, Miss Hogue, sponsor. Row 3: Marilyn Miller, Greta Braun, Patricia Sullivan, leannine Gilliland, Gloria Harm, Betty Bond, Ruth Elaine Haley, Marian Anderson, luanita Orange. Row 4: Miss Sliauer, sponsor, Marilyn Deu, Florence Hoskins, Florence Brown, Norma Grittin, Lucille Pearson, Catherine Brennan, Dawn Pappas. Row 5: Norma Shoup, Beverly Black, lanice Will, Mary Lawler, lanet Bay, loyce McDaniels, Betty Greenlee, Kay Herrick. Row 6: Dorothy Pierce, Anne Wil- son, Beverly Schau, lohanna Bauer, Florence Dillingham, Carolyn Hartmann. FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE Y-TEENS-Row 1, bottom: Anganetha Popp, Carolyn Sundin, Martha Winchell, Mary Lee Fischer, Shirley Huelat, loan Bundy, Dorothie Clark, luanita Borg, Emily Schoenbaum, Carrie Mae Klein, lo Ann Thune, Onnalee Williams. Row 2: Miss Shauei, sponsor, Ruth Dick, loan Wliittori, Antonia Pappas, Kathryn Bennett, Lois Scliroe der, Arlene Domke, Lillian Pflug, lean Crisrnan, lo Anne Bauer, Ann Petralias, Nancy McKibben, lean Bademan, Nancy Reason, lo Ann Clark. Row 3: Mary Griffin, Geneva Owens, Belva Butterfield, Dorothy McColley, ldamae Burrus, Mari- lyn Niequist, Marilee Shinabarger, Arlene Walsh, Susan Nicholas, Sharon Donley, Patricia Hepner, Row 4: Patricia Dick, Ioyce Vietzke, Margaret Zimmerman, Barbara Benson, Iaclyn Flynn, Barbara Claudon, Mary lane Iontz, Io Ann Townsend, Shirley Burns, Betty Mae Aigner, Helen Miller, Margaret Eigelbach, Zathoe Monroe, Miss Hogue, sponsor. Row 5: Catherine Specht, Betty Tilton, Marylin Williamson, loanne Cochran, lanet Oliver, Mary Ann Weiss, loyce Bo- zarth, Ruth Mcllvain, Marian Ehrhardt, Dolores Gramps, Row 6: Dora Giltos, Evelyn Dahl, Elizabeth West, Darlene Frazier, Phyllis Lawler, Carole Salberg, janet Scribner, Shirley Olsborg, Barbara Black, Betty lane Wakeman. Y-TEENS: TREES BY ANY OTHER NAME . . Always in previous yearbooks the YTeens have ap- peared as the Girl Reserves. The name ol their organiza- tion was otticially changed last summer at the national con- vention. The new name shows that the club is the junior branch of the world-wide Y. W. C. A. Organized to serve 15 the school and the community, it has been an integral part of our high school since l929. Like its counterpart, the Hi-Y, 9- it is rooted in Christian ideals. ln the Y-Teens Follow the ,Q-L Gleamn becomes more than just a mere song. lt iz: a creed lf' by which to live. V. -: Gr, ., 1 . yi. 55:15 1 : if 1 T . if: lm -. I girai 'ff':.v7sflg'ff?ff' 'f FZ :fe '+ f' ,ffi7,J '?2i 21, -gig. if 'ii gf? , i,fQl7. 'fL' fx A 1 'V -.4 l?-'.-rt' tx Ag. nr:-ir!!! it 1:22.91 A fm! JI, .,:.ry . L, . J 1' 1 , fill? r 'gain'-I l46j ' g ' THRIVING. UPWARD STRIVING Fundamentally, the Y-Teen girls form a service club, When the lunch room was unable to procure other help, it found a true friend in this organization. All year in teams of six the girls have assisted the cooks in serving the food and in collecting, washing, and wiping the dishes. The schedule is so arranged that each team works two shifts a year. Beyond this, the Y-Teens share with the HifY the re- sponsibility ol the Freshman-Newcomer Party, sell T.B. seals at Christmas time, and distribute baskets to needy families suggested by the county welfare board. To raise the money lor such projects as the last mentioned, they stage an cin- nual Vflllooin Dance. The Turn-About Trot is fun, but it nets the treasury nothing. lt merely gives the girls a chance to be 'tboys for the evening. Induction into the Y-Teens is marked by an impressive candlelight ceremony, during which six senior members re- state the qualities for which the club stands. At the last induction over sixty girls touched their candles to the light . The chief speaker for the occasion was Mrs. Paul Vietzke, Sr., president of the local chapter of the American Associa- tion of University Women. This was particularly fitting in view of the fact that the ,A.A.U.W. serves the Y-Teens in the capacity of an advisory board in the absence of a Val- paraiso Y.W,C.A. She spoke on the Good Samaritan, a subject most appropriate to the occasion. Officers. row 1. seated: Rita Sie-vers, treasurer, Do' lores Schroeder, social chairman, Lou Ellen Hofferth, president. Standing: Miss Shauer, sponsor, Betty Shufflebotham, scribe, Ioyce Ywanow, vice president, Anne Wilson, program chairman, Miss Hogue, spon- sor, Doris Lanham, secretary. Left to right, row 1, bottom: Y-Teens selling T.B. seals, Freshman-Newcomer Party, induction prelimie naries, Row 2: Induction preliminaries, induction cere- mony, Freshman-Newcomer Party. Row 3: Another sale of TB. seals, Freshman-Newcomer Party, induce tion ceremony. -f ll f1,1'?Q, ' . ' BOOSTER CLUB Row l, bottom: Dolores Schroeder, Marilyn Carichoff, loyce Vietzke, Doris Fleenor, Pauline Becker, Anne Willing, Betty Eichelberg, Wanda Gutt. Row 2: loan Bundy, Ianice Will, Martha Schroeder, Lillian Pflug, Lois Schroeder, Ar- lene Domke, Gloria Hann, Ioyce Weichert, Florence Brown. Row 3: Mr. Fisher, sponsor, Florence Hoskins, Mary Lawler, Dorothy Balcom, leannine Gilliland, Betty Greenlee, Dolores Curtis, Miss Hogue, sponsor. Row 4: Doris Lanham, Rita Sievers, Carolyn Hartmann, Catherine Brennan, Ioanne Coch- ran, Lou Ellen Hofferthjloyce McDaniels, Ruth Mcllvain. , Row 5: Margaret Zimmerman, Florence Dillingham, Catherine Specht, Lucille Pearson, son, Norma Griffin, George Becker, Harold Barkley. Row 6: Iohanna Bauer, lanet Bay, Barbara Benson, Betty Aigner, laclyn Flynn, Bar- bara Claudon, Mary lane Iontz, Richard lohnson, Ioseph Pedavoli. Row 7: Roger Lines, Paul Vietzke, William Pool, Shirley Burns, Io Ann Townsend, Henry Looft, Harold Bartholomew, Arthur Thoma. Row 8: Iames Carr, Paul Sutton, George Stoner, lames Pedavoli, Ronald Halus, lose-ph Van Ness, Robert Cain, David lordan, Kenneth Edwards. Officers: George Becker, vice-president, Mr. Fisher, sponsor, Carolyn Hartmann, secre- tary-treasurer, Miss Hague, sponsor, Pauline Becker, president. . . . THEIR GIANT BRANCHES TOSSED In victory or defeat, these loyal enthusiasts are present to cheer X 't,. ,' on the team. Their concerted yelling boosts morale and adds zest .f ' i to the games. ,fglvi 'ff' The idea for such a club was first suggested by Coach Curtis , ',,5 tltgj gig?-'S . Rathburn back in the spring of 1946. At that time a list of candi- ' ' dates was submitted, and the most likely chosen as charter mem- :YQ L, vii- V bers. The second year has seen the membership grow to include ,,,, Qin, all sophomores, juniors, and seniors who care to belong-a total of F, pf! IZ? sixty-seven. Attending home games is no difficult matter, but at- i ' 'S jg tending out-of-town games is quite a different problem. This year ,ft ' - ' the club is meeting the situation by hiring busses whenever trans- portation is necessary. In return for the good comradeship of the evening each member gladly pays his own expenses. For such a trip the group generally meet at the high school and disperse at some convenient spot down town, The only out-of-town game which they have failed to attend was that with Froebel, which oc- curred during the Christmas holidays. For their spirit of co-opera- - - tion and good will these boys and girls have no equal. l48l SENATORS OF MIGHTY WOODS The Valparaiso lligh School Debate Club, sponsored by Mr. lohn M. Koch, this year again participated in interschool debates in the Calu- met Division of the lndiana Debating League. Much time and effort were expended by the members to prepare arguments, do research work, and build up rebuttal files for use in the debates. The effective speech and the keen thinking developed were ample rewards for the work done. The club, though small in number, made ite self felt throughout the area by winning twenty- tive of its fortyffour debates in the regular sea- son. ln addition, trips were made to LaPorte and South Bend for several practice sessions. Attend- ance at the Purdue University Speech Meet was the highlight of the season. Representatives from all the high schools belonging to the lndiana League gathered to conduct the lndiana Iunior Legislature. Bills were drawn up and acted up- on in the same manner as they are in the naf tional Congress. The question debated this year was of nation- wide interest: Resolved, That the Federal Gov- ernment should provide for a system of complete medical care available to all citizens at public expense. ln February the club participated in the tour- nament debates in the Calumet League to deterf mine which school should represent that area in the state finals. 1491 DEBATE CLUB Upper left. seated: Norman Halma, ltfii old McCarran, Gerald Howard, Mary Ann Weirss, Lois Black, Paul Vietzke, William llulfirigtoii. Standing: Raymond Griffin, Donavon Waskom, Donald Brobeck, Iohn Nye, Ron' ald I-lalus, Roger Claudon, Mr. Koch, sponsor. Lower left. directors: Ronald Halus, Don- ald Waskom, Mr. Koch, sponsor, Donald Brobeck, Iohn Nye. Below: Three scenes showing a debate in progress before Convocation. ' wi . 1.11 ' Y?iiL BUDDING DRAMATISTS More than twenty years' effort, most of it expended by Mr. Burton L. Conkling, has evoked among our students a genue ine interest in dramatics. When the call comes in September for boys and girls to join the Footlight Masqueraders, the response is generally strong Mr. Conkling himself likesito speak of his project as an advanced speech course. A knowledge of the theatre, he says, is incidental to the main purpose of dramatics, namely, the development of the ability to talk before people with poise and with grace. VVork in the varie ous allied phases of make-up, stage-craft I scenery, lighting, characterization, panto- Officers: loyce Ywanow, president, Mr, Conkling, sponsor, Ollie mime, and Criticism SOOI1 i1'CtI'1SfOT1'HS CITI Stringham, secretary-treasurer, Betty Shulllebotharn, vice-president. awkward, self-conscientious subject into a tolerable, if not perfect, actor. In addition to presenting at Convocation an aver f f age o our plays a year, the Masqueraders, with the help of some outside talent ive th S , g V e enior Play. There were a few years when the Senior Play was omitted, but for the past three years it has be en res d h ume wit satisfying results, artistic as well as financial. For several people, at least, these plays have effected a real interest in the stage. From Valparaiso have gone Helen L ' ouise McKay to the Boston School of Dramatics, Virginia Lee lohnson to the Goodman Theatre and Pauline Manalato to l U ' , owa n1versity's department of dramatics and from there to New York, where she is acting at present. Presenting a pla re ' y quires a great deal of ingenuity, since our facilities for dramatic production are so very limited. Much time is required for tr t you s, more for the actors to learn their lines and even still more for rehearsal this last o t 'd h , u si e t e school day. As the ratio of girls to boys is quite dis- proportionate, the very choice of a play involves considerable thought. Many plays good in them- selves, are not suited to high school castin N h g. evert eless, the Masqueraders surrnonf these obstacles and provide their fellow students many an amusing interlude. Row l. bottom: Marilyn Carichoff, Betty Shuttlebotha Oll' W . . , . . . m, ie Stringham, Phyllis Collins, Betty Luckenbill, loyce eichert, Wanda Naillieux, Virginia Olson. Row 2: Dorothy Balcom, Betty Bond, Ieannine Gilliland, Betty Lou Snyder, Gloria Hann, loyce Ywanow, Betty Green lee, Lou Ellen Hofferth. h Row 3: Ruth Underwood, Ruth Bote, Ioyce Findling, Robert Zimmerman, Sally Wiebe, Catherine Mayer, lohn Hod- s ire. Row 4: Opal Bair, Theresa Krysa, loan Pierce, lohn Spagna, Mr. Conkl ing, sponsor, Edward Kolner, Carol Olson. Qf ' lf l 7 C , 1 y i . X we A ww Q, y 1 ff 4 ' 'iw it ,,. it , F M 1 fr? A gb Qi? , Mfg ' .. , Kiki W, Q 5 3 w fi 4 E 2325? f Q WGOGISV , ' W at . 555 x 2 2 Q' , yy , ,W 55531 A , HW ffi QQ' Wa 5 gg . :mi 2 V' am . 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A- V Q Haifa fi U L j ' 'V , f rd! .-'f if izz Z' A fi Q T' Q, - ,I ' Y- - . .egg Qgmv .L 2,1 ,,,, f: !:,-Qui. X VV ... ,P -f, , m -, ggi ,, QQ ,gjn T1 it my N ' S ,S ,ps ff' , 45 CHOIR, row I. bottom: Alice Mae Weckerle, lean Crisman, Ioan Whitton, Antonia Pappas, lean Black, Margaret Spratley, lean Bond, Geneva Owens, Ioseph Pedavoli, Iohn Beach, Iames Wall, Richard Hall. Row 2: Ioyce Vietzke, Carrie Mae Klein, Marylin Williamson, Evelyn Dahl, Emily Schoenbohm, Catherine Specht, laclyn Flynn, Barbara Ben- son, Philip Findling, lack O'Barr, Robert Daniels, Iohn Kilavos. Row 3: Shirley f-luelat, Geraldine Klemm, Lois Schroe- der, Martha Schroeder, Betty Lite, Betty Barboul, Vergene Brobeck, Margaret Eigelsbach, David Thomas, Roy Carlson, Charles Wolfe, Warren Wright. Row 4: Lillian Pflug, Ioan Foreman, Arlene Domke, Patricia Hepner, Dorothy Poweska, Sharon Donley, Beverly Black, Betty Tilton, Marian Ehrhardt, Lois Wilson, Richard Schoenbohm, lohn Cometord, Iames Manago. Row 5: Mary Lee Fischer, Patricia Melka, Ibeien Miller, Dorothy McColley, Marie Dunlap, Gloria Otto, Dolores Gramps, Nancy Reason, Patricia Sullivan, Ieannine Gilliland, Ianet Richardson, Helen Elliott, Richard Bond, William Birmingham, Lawrence Mcllvain, David MacGillivray. Row 6: Ianet Bond, Marvlene McDaniels, Beverly Otto, Marilyn Niequist, Marguerite Brown, Eva Lou Miller, Marian Kraft, William lohnston, Iohn Sullivan, William Dowd, David Siddall. . . . . . AND THE WOODS WITH MUSIC RING By the time most of the students are merely arriving, the music groups have already tinished their practise under the direction of Mrs. Mary Myers. The glee club and the choir each meet twice a week at 8:15. ln their classes the students learn to appreciate not only the finer types of music but also the intricacies ot vocal art, such as shading and pitch and timbre. Many of these students have volun- tarily enrolled in harmony, a new course well-designed to enrich their singing experience. Whenever they are called upon to entertain, they respond with cheerful enthusiasm. Several times every year they perform before Convocation, and occasionally they visit civic groups, such as the Chamber of Commerce. Christmas is probably their busiest season, tor it is then that they are rehears- ing toi the annual concert which tliey give in conjunction with the band. Besides, certain of their members go about carolling and thus add to the holiday spirit. The final week of school sees them still giving generously of their time. They are almost as much a part of the graduating exercises as the seniors themselves. Glee Club officers: lanet Oliver, treasurer, Dollie Choir officers: Arlene Benson, robe chairman, lean- Kuhrts, secretary, Arlene Domke, president, Marilyn nine Gilliland, treasurer, Patricia Sullivan, secretary, Niequist, robe chairman, Ruth Bote, vice president. Lawrence Mcllvain, vice president, Iames Wall, presi- dent. vi , W? f . 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My 1 ' 4 W ,, ' W ., fgmfuxfgwsm'3.Q,w,:.,vw-?fsffgUM'?w5512-F? fi ' ifwfwg , ww 4-Q?5:gggy3,QshiG'f,e2gfw' l ,LZ 5 gwziwf. wif W 2':sf li!iis iP '5 ' sig ,.,,., . 2 Qi5,f:,K'fM wb mwf Q W A995345 -'M ' 'E 'M :.-,:,: :- ' ' Maw, mars - -,-- 2, f 1' ww- ' ' few , A S '-f i, UQ 55v5,g5f'ffWf' 12.1 ' ww' , W2?Y55Y5' fL ' W L Q , f M- W V H A N gf - 5 ,M wi, Q ' 1 i fwnlmsifsg-kifm? U Q4 i'12Vf'3f3i, 7vW DV If ' , 1 ,..,,,V25-3534555 ,W5299yggg3'ggfg3'gj?Q?,?wv.Wi x ,S , 5 X I Ifilifyfwiikfwffff W ,f ' - ' -M W .,:m1g,.rW , 2' sf Nf f ' X 'Y R 5? z . 4 A M -'P sf' ' 1 Y' 2 f f 'f' ' ' x. , - Hgimti - I A A 5 ai ' W 'f gr ,L 4 vwuw...-1 f 3 9 - , ' lm We 5 ' 'WE 4 MQ,-Q ' I 5 Q ' bf 2? 1 . X , . 3 7 WZ ' ' fy f 1 kj , Q , . X72 ' f,..i f- 9 , Q5 gf? I : ' 3 5 QQ Km I V'J w43 2 ' f I gig Slit .L 1 A za. STUDENT CCUNCIL CASTS SHADOW The Council is a group composed ot repref sentatives, one from each home room, and of the junior and the senior class presidents. Meetings are held regularly every Monday morning under parliamentary procedure. lt is in these meetings that the voice of the student body speaks. As a governing board the Council conf ducts the election ot the Homecoming Queen and ot the cheer leaders, publishes the Stu- dent Handbook, and provides tor paid as- semblies. The character ot its undertakings is limited only by what is ol interest and ad' vantage to the students in general. Thus, it does not sponsor parties or dances, as these may be handled better by specific organizaf tions. lt merely acts as a clearing house lox their calendar and chaperon troubles. Should the llramatics Club, tor instance, want to hold a dance, it must decide upon a date satisfactory to the Council, one that will not interfere with any other activities: that might be scheduled. lt chaperons tor the occasion are wanting, it is up to the Council to supply them. The tasks ot the group are not easy. All members and their sponsors, Miss Martha Hogue and Mr. Glen Fisher, deserve much credit for maintaining in our school many democratic and recreational features which otherwise would be lacking. THE COUNCIL, top, seatedi Betty Shutllebothamg lamce Will, secretary, lean Bademan, lanet Scrib ner, Margaret Zimmerman, Betty Greenlee, Florence Hoskins, Betty Barndollar. Standing: Kenneth Lowenstine, Mr. Fisher,spon- sor, Frank lliglily, lack Uljarr, Charles Stevens, Philip Findling, Thomas Oliver, Glen Ellis, Robert Zimmerman, president, Miss llogue, sponsor, Hoy Cochran, vice president. Row 2, left and right: Max Lembke drops vole into ballot box, hungry voter pauses to buy candy Row 3, left cmd right: Installation of otticers: be lore Convocation Row 4, left cmd right: Election votes. QUEEN OF THE FOREST Although the Homecoming parade and game both had to be postponed on account of rain, the crowning of the queen and the dance that fol- lowed proceeded as planned. Until she walked on to the floor escorted by her train-bearer, no one had any idea who the queen was to be, for according to the rules of the election identity of the queen remained see cret. Announced by the president of the senior class, the court attendants walked across the floor toward the stage. These girls were Anne Wilf son, Doris l-'lee-nor, Lou Ellen Hof- ferth, Betty Shutflehotham, Rita Bote, Dolores Schroeder, Marilyn Miller, and Doris Lanham, There followed the queen herself, Ioyce Ywanow, wearing the satin cape which our past queens have worn. At the foot of the stage loyce was met by the football captain, lames Wall, who escorted her up the steps and placed the crown upon tier head. wry' yay: LJ! 'Q Left: Ioyce Ywanow, 1946 Homecoming Queen, surround- ed by Doris Fleenor, lamess Wall, und young ltubert Fifa her. Above. reading from top. left to right: Roger Lines and his Melody Makers . . . train- beraer and her father, Coach Rathburn . . . coronationscene . , . approaching the throne . . staqe setting . every body dances. W ,mists .flfglcl if - 221322 ., . 5 ,,,' 4'v,g, - r .,.3'. 1agf.,,Q1y,q2g: . , wr: 12h .'f.E- F74 '-A, 'I fgzit. uri. L' ' Q-' .K '. if ,atm gbklg, ',.f-gq:L-,x- Row 1, bottom: Leslie Mil- by, Robert Houser, Robert Pillard, Edward Poweska, George Becker, Paul Ketch- mark. Row 2: William Pool, Paul Sutton, Arthur Thoma, Kenneth Edwards, Richard l-lildreth, David jordan. Row 3: William Lans- downe, George Stoner, Raymond Steele, Harold McCarran, Paul Zulick, Eu- gene Price. Row 4: Mr. Nimroth, spon- sor, Kendrick Brown, David Thomas, Harold Barkley, Robert Fabing, Charles Wilson. Officers, seated: Paul Sut- ton, vice-president, David Iordan, president. Standing: Richard Hil- dreth, sergeant-at-arms, Mr. Nimroth, sponsor, Harold McCarran, secretary PROIECTION CLUB The purpose of the Projection Club is to teach boys to operate the various projectors. The club is open to last-half freshmen, sophomores, and juniors. lt follows the old apprentice system, A master operator trains newcomers, who, in turn, learn to set up and to operate, without a mistake, a motion picture machine. In all, it is necessary to run four films and to pass a written and an oral test. The club shows movies and strip films in the various class- rooms and in other club meetings, in lodges, and in church groups. Mr. William Nimroth is in charge. SPANISH CLUB The Spanish Club takes over where the old Latin Club left off. For several years we were without a language club of any kind. Under the sponsorship of Miss Lillian Elmore and Miss Elizabeth Borders interest in people of other lands has been revived. This is in accordance with the present world movement toward understanding and appreciating our neighbors. The boys and girls of the Spanish classes comprise the members . Since the ordinary class period does not suffice for assimilating fully the customs and speech of the Spanish people, the club with its activities fulfills a real need. low l. bottom: Patricia Dick, Margaret Zimmerman, George Bec- ker, Ianet Scribner, Carole Sal- berg, Elizabeth West, Eloise Dowd, Mary Fehrman, Patricia Clark. low 2: Ruth Dick, Dorothie Clark, Barbara Benson, Pauline Becker, Lillian Ptlug, Carrie Mae Klein, Virginia Brown, Mary Ann Weiss, Onnalee Williams, Betty Eichel- berg, Ion Ann Clark. low 3: Ran- dall Wilson, Catherine Mayer, Ioan Whitton, Wanda Peck, Dorothy McColley, Belva Butterfield, Patri- cia Hepner, Sharon Donley, Flor- Geneva Owens, Ioyce Bozarth, ence Brown, Wanda Gutt. low I: Chester Carpenter, Marian Kraft, Carmella Toteno, Marylin William- son, Doris Gittos, Evelyn Dahl, Phyllis Lawler, Daniel Kleeham- mer. Row 5: Nancy Reason, Ar- lene Domke, Antonia Pappas, Ioyce Findling, Dolores Gramps, Virginia Swanton, Beverly Schau, Phyllis Robinson, Robert Dolson, Shirley Olsborg, Miss Borders, sponsor. low 8: Miss Elmore, sponsor, Wil- liam Delcourt, Warren Able, Cecil Query, William Dowd, Philip Iohn- son, Warren Wright, lack Flick. low 1: Charles Kotzan, Thomas Morris, Vernon Smith, Glen Ellis, Harold Bartholomew, Charles Stev- ens, Edward Hansen, Eugene Braun, lack Bailey, Melville Wel- ler, Darlene Frazier. Officers: Miss Elmore, sponsor, Arlene Benson, presidentg Charles Stevens, treas- urerg Margaret Zimmerman, secre- tary: Miss Borders, sponsor: George Becker, vice president. PROMENADING IN AN ENCHANTED GROVE We have many dances, but none surpasses the Prom in detail and splendor. Strictly formal, it is the gift of the juniors to the departing seniorsf--the one dance of the year upon which more time and money are lavished than upon any other. An eight-piece orchestra is imported, programs printed, and the gymnasium turned into a ballroom by shutting out the rafters with a false ceiling. The stage of the gymnasium, ordinarily so bare, is glamorized by the art department, and chairs and lamps are placed about the floor, to which a special wax has been applied. The Grand March begins at ten o'clock. It is led by the junior class president and escort fole lowed by the senior class president and escort. This moment, which marks the actual beginning of the evenings festivities, is the moment for which everyone has been waiting. The music con tinues until one o'clock, when the doors of the improvised ballroom close lor another year. Reading from top. left to right: ln lieu of tables, a pretty girl uses her part- ner':: broad shoulder . smooth dancing . . . who would ever know that these boys and ties are ordinarie ly zplioiiigolzi? the punch bowl . . none happier than these two . . . the Grand March begins .... the faculty watches . . . again, the Grand March, girls in single file. I I59I fir 2 -sky .ll ' faf Q YY K :g'gJ'.'f-'14 , , fu' N gf f . si- ,A -f ., ' f S gf? J . ' 1,14 if-. T351 'L SGML. R f' 3 X '..p- I' lan lbw J an 2.155 J .3 '-f'g,?l,,K Q it fs: 'f-.5 .' , , M Q 1 -'WM -f-ww 'gi K! 43 T2?Sf.?!zsi . 5.4 ..-np. A-f 4.. .db A 45 'W is ff W .om . 4 ',,' ..- 1 WYMFW: '? 33 gs A I' . V 5 A , X31 K f fu 1.3 f - W 921 ..... Y X Abelseth, Fred 26 Able, Charles 22, 55, 58 Able, Warren 24, 34 Adams, Ioyce Adams, Leila 22 Adams, Marilyn 12 Affeld, Harley 26 Aignor, Betty 24, 37, 46 48 Allsup, Glen Anderson, Marian 22, 37, 46 Andresen, lack 12 Ashbaugh, Roger 26, 55 Bach, Ralph 26, 33 Bademan, lean 26, 37, 46, 56 Bailey, lack 24, 58 Bair, Opal 26, 50 Baker, William 24 Balcom, Dorothylll, 12, 37, 43, 46, 48, 50, 51 Ballinger, Betty 26 Barboul, Bettie 26, 52, 53 Barkley, Harold 24, 30, 34, 48, 58 Barndollar, Betty 22, 56 Barnes, Bernard 24 Barrington, Iohn 22, 56, 58 Bartholomew, Harold 24, 34, 44, 48, 55, 58 Bauer, Iames 24 Bauer, Io Anne 26, 37, 46 Bauer, lohanna 22, 36, 37, 38, 46, 48 BaY, lanet 22, 36, 46, 48 Beach, Iohn 53 Beck, Beverly 12 Beck, Iohn 12, 26 Becker, George 24, 30, 34, 44, 53 Huff, Donna 24 48, 55, 58 Becker, Pauline 22, 36, 37, 46, 48, 58 Beehler, Grace 22, 52 Bennett, Iames 24 Bennett, Kathryn 24, 46 Benson, 53, 58 Berndt, Allen 22, 30 Bieker, lane Biggs, Bonnie 26 Biggs, Emeline 24 Biggs, Mary 24, 37 Biggs, Theodore 22 Birmingham, William 24, 53 Black Barbara 26 46 Bieekj Beverly zz, '46, 52, 53 Black, Ieanne 24, 52, 53 Black, Lois 22, 36, 37, 49 Black, Lynn 12, 32 Black, Richard 22 Black, Robert 12 Blake, Eugene 26 - Barbara 24, 37, 46, 48, Blaney, Patricia 22, 37, 52 Blevins, Delores Bend, Betty 22, 46, so Bond, Richard 26, 30, 34, 55 Bond, Ianet 26, 52 Bond, lean 53 Bond, Lois 24, 37 Borg, lucxnita 26, 37, 46, 52 Bornholt, Robert 55 Bote, Rita 11, 12, 42, 47, 52 Bote, Ruth 4, 12, 50, 52, 53 Boyle, William 24, 31 Bozarth, loyce 24, 46, 58 Brgxgin, Eugene 24, 30, 34, 44, Braun, Greta 12, 36, 37, 43, 46 Brennan, Catherine 22, 37, 46, 48, 52 Brennan, Iames Briggs, Fred Briggs, Vivian 12 STUDENT INDEX Brobeck, Donald 13, 42, 44, 45, 49 Brobeck, Vergene 24, 52, 53 Brown, Florence 22, 23, 37, 46, 48, 58 Brown, Iarnes 13, 59 Brown, Kendrick 13, 43, 58 Brown, Marguerite 26, 37, 53 Brown, Marilyn 13 Brown, Richard 22, 30, 34, 55 Brown, Robert 13, 55 Brown, Virginia 24, 58 Bryant, Russell 24, 44, 55, 61 Bucher, LaVonne 13 Bucher, Rex 24, 33 Buck, Bernard 26 Buck, Walter 22 Buckles, Iacquelyn 22 Buffington, William 22, 44, 45, 49, 51 Bundy, Ioan 24, 46, 48, 61 Burch, Lawrence 26, 30, 34 Burke, Joseph 26 Burns, Shirley 24, 37, 46, 48 Burrus, ldamae 26, 37, 46, 55 Butterfield, Belva 26, 46, 52, 58 Butterfield, Byron 24 Buzalski, Betty 24 Cain, Robert 24, 34, 48 Carichoff, lack ll, 13, 32 Carichoff, Marilyn ll, 13, 37, 43, 46, 48, 50, 61 Carichoff, Philip Carlson, Roy 26, 53, 55 Carpenter, Chester 26, 30, 58 Carr, Beverly 26, 37 Carr, Iames 22, 34, 48 Casbon, Donald 13 Cheney, Clarence 22 Chester, Eva 24 Christman, Richard Chiigmley, Howard 13, 31, 44, Clark, Dorothie 37, 46, 58 Clark, Dorothy 26, 55 Clark, lo Ann 26, 37, 46, 58 Clark, Patricia 26, 37, 58 Clizgidon, Barbara 24, 37, 46, Claudon, Roger 14, 43, 49, 55 Cleveland, Barbara 27, 52 Clifford, Frances 22 Clifford, Ioseph 22, 30, 34 Clifford, Ruth Cochran, loanne 24, 46, 48 Cochran, Roy ll, 14, 30, 32, 34, 36, 43, 44 Collins, Phyllis 14, 50, 52 Comelord, Iohn 24, 53 Copas, Robert 24 Coulter, Kenneth 26 Court, Arthur 22 Court, Mary Covert, Ellen 26 Crisman, lean 24, 37, 53 Crowe, Marilyn 24 Curtis, Delores 14, 36, 37, 43, 46, 48 Curtis, Donald 24 Cytia, LaMana Dahl, Evelyn 26, 46, 53, 58 Dahlstrom, Vera Dalke, Betty 22 Dalke, Carwyn 14, 55 Daniels, Robert 24, 34, 53 Daniels, William Danielson, Marjorie 22, 52 Davis, Norma lean Dawson, Ioyce Dawson, Patricia 22 1 Delcourt, William 26, 58 . Del Mastro, Richard DeMack, Ioseph Deu, Marilyn 22, 37, 43, 46 Dick, Byron 22, 31, 44 Dick, Clarence 21, 32, 55 Dick, Patricia 24, 46, 58 Dick, Ruth 24, 46, 58 Dierking, David 22 Dillingham, Florence 22, 36, 37, 46, 48 Dillingham, Robert 26, 30 Dobbins, Kenneth 24, 30, 34 Dobbins, Thomas 26 Dolson, Robert 24, 58 Domke, Arlene 24, 37, 46, 48, 52, 53, 58 Domke, Leonard 14, 34 Donley, Sharon 26, 37, 46, 52, 53, 58 Dowd, William 24, 34, 53, 55, 58 Dowd, Eloise 22, 37, 58 Dowd, Lila Downing, Cecil 14 Downing, Iohn Dunlap, Marie 26, 47, 52, 53 Eavey, Patricia 22 Edwards, Kenneth 22, 48, 58 Ehrhardt, Marian 24, 46, 53 Eichelberg, Betty 22, 37, 48, 52, 58 Eichelberg, Richard Eigelsbach, Margaret 37, 46, 52, 53 Elliott, Helen 37, 52, 53 Ellis, Bernita 24 Ellis, Glen 24, 34, 55, 56, 58 Ellis, Ioseph 24 Evans, Arlene 22 . Evans, Roger 26 Fabing, Robert 22, 58 Fehrman, Mary 26, 55, 58 Findling, loyce 22, 43, 50, 58 Findling, Philip 26, 53, 56 Finney, leanette 22 Finstad, Carl 22 . Fischer, Marv Lee 26, 46, 52, 53 Fitzgerald, William 24 Fleenor, Doris ll, 14, 42, 43, 46, 48, 55, 57 Fleenor, Leslie 26, 30, 34 Fleenor, Wilbur 26, 30, 34 Flick, lack 26, 55, 58 Flick, lames Flynn, laclyn 24, 37, 46, 48,53 Forbes, Betty 37, 52 Formena, Ioan 26, 52 Frank, Phyllis Frazier, Darlene 26, 37, 46, 56 Fry, Gloria 14, 52 Gannon, Edward 26 Gardiner, Lois 22 Gast, Clyde 14, 34, 55 Gast, Lynn 26 Gessler, Bettymae 24 Giftos, Dora 26, 37, 46, 58 Gilbert, William Gilliland, Ieannine 22, 37, 46, 48, 50, 52, 53 Giovanetto, Iohn 15 Goble, William 15 Goodrich, Robert 26, 30 Gott, Harlan 30 Gramps, Dolores 26, 37, 46, 53, 58 Gray, Mary 26, 37 Greene, Gracia 15 Greenlee, Betty 37, 38, 46, 48, 50, 56 621 Gregory, Gordon 26 Gregory, Richard Griffin, Mary 24, 46 Griffin, Norma 22, 37, 46, 48 Griffin, Raymond 11, 15, 30, 44, 49 Groezinger, Loretta 26 Groezinger, Mary 22 Gustafson, lack 15 Gustafson, Ianice 15 Gutt, Edwin Gutt, Wanda 22, 48, 52, 58 Gvgtzman, Bernard 15, 30, 34 4 Haley, Ruth Elaine 15, 46, 52, 53 Hall, Earl Hall, Richard 26, 53 Halus, Norman 22, 30, 44, 49 Halus, Ronald 22, 48, 49 Hann, Gloria 37, 46, 48, 50 Hansen, Edward 34, 30, 59 Hardesty, Charlotte 24 Harrison, Richard Hartmann, Carolyn 22, 36, 37, 46, 48 Hartmann, Iames 26 Hendricks, Edwin 26 Hendrickson, Mary lane 24, 61 Hepner, Patricia 26, 37, 46, 52, 53, 58 Hermance, Arlene 23 Hermance, Donald 26 Hermance, Lloyd 24 Herrick, Kay 23, 37, 46 Hershman, Arthur 24, 55 1-libbetts, William 26, 55 Highly, Frank 30, 55, 56 Hildreth, Richard 23, 34, 44, 58 Hill, Wilma 15, 36, 37 Hinkle, Iacquelyn 26 Hinkle, Patricia 23 Hofferth, Lou Ellen 15, 37, 38, 46, 47, 48, 50, 61 Hodshire, lohn 26, 50, 51 Horan, Genevieve 24, 37, 55 Horan, Patricia 26 Horner, Richard 16 Hoskins, Florence 23, 35, 37, 48, 56 Houser, Robert 26, 58 Howard, Gerald 16, 34, 42, 44, 49, 61 Howell, Genevieve Hudgins, Iames Z6 Huelat, Arlene 23, 37, 46 Huelat, Shirley 26, 37, 46, 52 I-lundt, Dorothy 26 Isenberg, Richard 31, 44 lacobs, George 26 Richard 24, 30 lohnsen, lohnson, Richard ll, 16, 30, 32 34, 44, 48 lohnson, Philip 27, 58 lohnson, Phyllis 16, 51 lohnston, William 27, 30, 53 Iones, Lois 27 Iontz, Mary lane 24, 37, 46, 48, 61 lordon, David 23, 34, 44, 45, 48 58, 61 lungjohan, Harriet 16, 37, 43 Keen, Mary Ann 23 Ketchmark, Paul 24, 58 Kilavos, George Kilvavos, John 27, 53 Kinne, Hazen 24 Klahn, Norman 24, 30 Kleehammer, Daniel 27, 58 Klein, Carrie Mae 27, 37, 52, 53, 58 Klemm, Geraldine 25, 53 Klemz, Charlotte 16 Klusmeyer, Robert 16 Klukas, Beverly 27, 55 Knoblock, Joyce 27 Kolner, Edward 23, 50 Kotefka, Wallace 27 Kotzan, Charles 16, 44, 58 Kraft, Marian 10, 27, 52, 53, 58 Krueger, Gerald 27 Krysa, Theresa 16, 50 Kuhn, Richard 17, 44 Kuhrts, Dollie 17, 36, 37, 53 Lanham, Doris 1'7, 37, 42, 46, 48 Lanham, Robert 23 Lansdowne, William 25, 58 Lawler, Mary 23, 36, 37, 46, 47 Lawler, Phyllis 27, 37, 46, 58 Leasure, Joseph 25 Lembke, Charles 27, 30, 55 Lembke, Max 17, 31, 34, 44, 55, 56 Lemster, Barbara 17 LePe11, John 27, 30 Lines, Roger ll, 17, 32, 34, 43, 44, 48 Lite, Betty 25, 52 ,53 Looit, Henry 23, 48 Lowenstine, Kenneth ll, 17, 34, 44, 56 Luckenbill, Betty 25, 37, 50 MacGillivray, David 25, 53 Manago, James Z5, 30, 53 Marine, Arlene 17, 37 Marshall, Myron Marshall, Ruth Ann 17, 37, 46 Martens, Merlyn Martin, William 25, 30, 34 Massom, Shirley Masters, William 27 Maudlin, Eugene Mayer, Catherine 27, 37, 50, 58 Mayer, Thomas 25 McCarron, Harold 23, 31, 34, 49, 58 McClellan, William 25 McColley, Dorothy 27, 46, 52, 53 McDaniel, Joyce 23, 36, 37, 38, 43, 46, 48, 61 McDaniels, Marvlene 27, 52, 53 McDowell, Darrell 27 Mcllvain, Lawrence 17, 44, 45, 51, 53, 55 Mcllvain, Ruth 25, 37, 46, 48 McKibben, Nancy 27, 37, 46, 52 McNeil, William 27 Melka, Patricia 25, 37, 53 Meyer, Joan 27, 37, 52 Meyer, Loretta 25, 37, 52 Milby, Leslie 25, 30, 55, 58 Miles, Joyce 23 Miller, Donald 27 Miller, Dorothy 22, 37 Miller, Eva Lou 27, 37, 52 Miller, Helen 27, 38, 46, 52, 53 Miller, Lou Ella 27, 52 Miger, Marilyn 11, 18, 36, 37, Miller, Marilyn 25 Mohler, Loraine 25 Moneypenny, Owen 25, 30 Monroe, Zathoe 37, 46, 52 STUDENT INDEX Morand, Robert 27 Morris, Thomas 23, 31, 32, 34, 44, 58 Mull, Delight 25 Murvihill, Robert 23, 31, 34 Myer, Robert 27, 55 1 1 Naillieux, Wanda 25, 50, 52 Nelson, Donald Nicholas, Susan 25, 37, 46 Nicholson, Marguerite 27 Nielsen, Richard 25 Niequist, Marilyn 31, 46, 52, 53 Nighswander, Richard Nye, John 10, 18, 44, 45, 49, 55 O'Barr, Jack 23, 44, 53, 56 O'Brien, Edward 23 Odle, Robert 27, 30 Olinger, Clare 18, 52, 61 Oliver, Janet 25, 46, 52, 53 Oliver, Thomas 26, 27, 56 Olsborg, Shirley 27, 46, 58 Olson, Carol 25, 50, 52 Olson, Edwin 18 Olson, Virginia 25, 50, 53 Orange, Juanita 23, 36, 37, 46, 55 Oslan, Robert 18 Otto, Beverly 27, 52, 53 Otto, Gloria 23, 52, 53 OEIEDS, Geneva 25, 37, 46, 53, Pappas, Antonia 25, 37, 46, 53, 55, 58 Papas, Dawn 23, 37, 46 Parks, John 27 Peace, Betty Jean 18, 37, 46 Peace, Robert Pearson, Lucille 23, 37, 46, 48 Pegg, Wanda 23, 36, 37, 46, 52, Pedavoli, James 23, 31, 34, 48 Pedavoli, Joseph 25, 48, 53 Persson, Helen 23 Peters, Janet 25 Petersen, Einar 27 Petralias, Ann 27, 37, 46, 52,53 Pierce, Dorothy 18, 46, 61 Pflug, Lillian 25, 35, 36, 37, 46, 48, 52, 53, 58 Pierce, Joan 18, 43, 46, 50, 55, 56 Pierce, Joan H. Pierce, Robert Pillard, Robert 23 Polarek, Josephine 27 Polite, Ralph 30 Pollock, Ronald 25, 30, 34 Poncher, John 23, 44 Pool, William 48, 58 Popp, Anganetha 27, 46 Poweska, Dorothy 27 Poweska, Edward 23, 58 Prentiss, Betty Ann 27 Price, Eugene 23, 34, 58 Price, Justus 25, 44 Principe, Kenneth 23, 44 Query, Cecil 25, 55, 58 Query, Genevieve 18 Ransom, Eugene 25, 30 Reason, Nancy 25, 37, 46, 52, 53, 58 Reed, Richard 25 Reed, Marvin ll, 18, 34 Reynolds, Maurice Richardson, Janet 27, 52, 53 Robinson, Phyllis 25, 58 Rogers, Rosaleah 23, 52, 53 Ryan, James 25, 34 St. Clair, William 25, 34 Salberg, Carole 37, 46, 58 Sandberg, Dirk 27 Sandberg, Theresa 25, 37 Schau, Beverly 23, 37, 46, 58 Schau, Charles 27 Schneider, Owen 19, 34, 55 Schoenbohm, Emily 27, 46, 53 Schoenbaum, Richard 19, 53 Schroeder, Clarence 25 Schroeder, Dolores ll, 19, 36, 37, 42, 46, 47, 48 Schroeder, Lois 25, 46, 48, 53 Schroeder, Martha 25, 46, 48, 53 Schroeder, Richard 23, 44 Schumacker, Richard 19 Scott, Howard 25, 34 Scribner, Janet 27, 37, 41, 56, 58 Sherrick, Lillian 27 Shinabarger, Marilee 27, 37,46 Shinabarger, Robert 23, 31, 44 Shoup, Dorothy Shoup, Norma 19, 46 Shulflebotham, Betty 11, 19, 43, 46, 47, 50, 51 Siddall, Dave 19, 53 Siddall, Therese 25, 37, 52 Siemion, Donald 27 Sievers, Carole 27, 52 Sievers, Rita 23, 36, 37, 40, 46, 48 Smith, Arthur 19, 31 Smith, Joseph ll, 19, 44 Smith, Vernon 25, 58 Snyder, Charles 23 Snyder, Harley 30 Soliday, Don 19, 32 Soliday, Ernest 27, 55 Somner, Ruth 23, 37 Szeicht, Catharine 25, 46, 48, Spencer, Helen Spratley, Dorothy 27, 55 Spratley, Jackson 20 Spratley, James 20 Spratley, Margaret 25, 53 Squire, Frank 23 Standiford, Donna Steel, Raymond 25, 30, 34, 58 Steinhilber, Ernest 23 Stevens, Charles 25, 30, 34, 44, 56, 58 Stewart, Bruce 25 Stoltz, Daniel Stoner, George 25, 44, 48, 58, 61 Stoner, Marvin 27 Stringham, Grace 25 Stringham, Ollie ll, 13, 50 Sturdy, Boucher 20, 34, 55 Sullivan, Eugene 25, 53 Sullivan, John 27, 30 Sullivan, Patricia 37, 46, 52,53 Sundin, Carolyn 27, 46 Sutton, Paul 23, 34, 44, 48, 56, 58, 61 Swanton, Virginia 27, 52, 58 Swenson, Jean 25 Swift, Harlan 27 Tarnow, Mary 27, 52 Tauck, Ernest 27 Tauck, Henning 20, 28, 30, 32, 34 Thoma, Arthur 23, 34, 35, 44, 48, 58 Thomas, David 53, 55, 58 Thomas, Donald 27 Thomas, Jack 1531. Thompson, Stephen 11, 20, 32, 44 Thrun, Caroline Thune, Jo Ann 27, 37, 45 Tilton, Betty 25, 46, 53 Toteno, Carmella 23, 58 Townsend, Jo Ann 25, 46, 48, 61 Trulock, Kenneth 25, 31 Trump, Jack 23 Trump, James 20, 34 Tucker, Harold 27 Turner, David 10, 25, 34, 61 Tuthill, Fred 27 Tuthill, John Underiner, Thomas 27 Underwood, Ruth 25, 50 Upton, Dona 27, 37, 52 Van Loon, Nellie 23, 37 Van Ness, Joseph 25, 34, 44,48 56, 61 Vietzke, Joyce 25, 37, 46, 48, 53, 55, 61 Vietzke, Paul ll, 20, 42, 44, 45, 48, 49, 55 Vogt, Patricia Wakeman, Betty 27, 46 Walker, Cloyd 27, 55 Wall, James 20, 31, 53, 56, 57 Walsh, Arlene 25, 37, 46 Walsh, Daniel 25, 30, 34, 44 Wareham, William 31 Waskom, Donavon ll, 21, 44, 45, 49 Waymire, Harold Z7 Webb, Wilford 27, 30, 34 Weckerle, Alicemae 25, 52, 53 Weichert, Joyce 46, 48, 50, 53 Weiss, Mary Ann 25, 46, 49, 58 Weller, Melville 27, 37 West, Elizabeth 27, 46, 58 West, William 25 Wheeler, Richard 25 Wheeler, James 23 Whitcomb, David 25 Whitton, Arthur 25, 30 Whitton, Ioan 37, 46, 53, 55, 58 Wiebe, Sally 23, 50, 53 Will, Eugene 21, 32 Will, Janice ll, 21, 36, 37, 46, 8 Williams, Onnalee 27, 58 Williams, Ruth 23 Williamson, Marylin 27, 46,, 53, 58 Willing, Anne 23, 36, 37, 38, 43, 46 Wilson, Anne ll, 21, 36, 37, 42, 46, 47, 61 Wilson, Charles 25, 58 Wilson, Lois 52, 53 Wilson, Randall 27 Winchell, Martha 27 Wolfe, Charles 25, 53 Wolfe, Delores 37 Woods, Waldo 10, 21, 30 Woycik, Barney Wright, Bernice 27 Wright, Warren 58 Ywanow, Joyce ll, 21, 43, 46, 47, 50, 56, 57 Zell, Esther 21 Zell, Joyce 27, 52 Zimmerman, Margaret 25, 37, 46, 48, 56, 58, 59 Zimmerman, Robert 21, 43, 44, 45, 50, 56 Zulick, Paul 23, 58 Ai!BfnWK1EQl' 2? 1 Nur yi Q i 8 1 is 51 W-rf ,uf 1- . 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Suggestions in the Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) collection:

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Valparaiso High School - Valenian Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950


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