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Page 13 text:
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Twenty-three A L K I hi+, mi'fi5fANi'f ALKI STAFF
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Page 12 text:
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Page Eight Q A L K I i -FF ,Twenty-three QBIII' ihigh Svrhnnl, llbur Alki, GD111' Alumni It may be interesting to our readers to know that our V. H. S. is thirty-six years old today, that it had its beginning in a single base- ment room in the old Central School 5 that thirty-two years ago last Fri- day our first graduating exercises were commemorated in the old Stan- dard Theatre which burned to the ground last winterg that for the first twenty years of our history the average enrollment was only sixty-eight and that the highest enrollment in any one of these twenty years was ninety-four. At the close of the war in 1918 we had reached a total of 379. But during the past five years our enrollment has more than dou- bled and for the present year 845 names appear on the register. Who will venture a guess for 1930? It may be interesting fu1'ther to recall that fourteen years ago this Commencement Week our Alki made its initial bow to the students and faculty of the Vancouver High School and to the public who have so generously supported our efforts and our ambitions and provided for our growth. With this number the Alki makes its fifteenth annual appearance. It is a storehouse of information on high school life and activities. Its value will increase as the years go by. When those of us who today are struggling for honors side by side on the athletic field and in the gym and shops and classrooms are widely scattered, what a pleas- ure it will be to pick up our Alki and con its pages for familiar faces, for school-day jokes and pranks, for all sorts of happy experiences- football victories, and defeats, midnight oil burned over Caesar's bierg tardy room joys and sorrows, and a thousand other conquests in chemis- try, mathematics, gymnasium and kitchen. All these and more the pages of the Alki will bring back to memory after years have separated us from these care-free days and moonlight strolls. And our Alumni-704 of them-to whose ranks the class now pub- lishing this Alki will add eighty-th1'ee more-what shall we say of them? It would be difficult to find anywhere a more splendid or representative group of young men and young women than these 704, and the class of 1923 will be p1'oud to join them in their duties and responsibilities to the communities they serve. Natu1'ally they are widely scattered since the first class was graduated thirty-two years ago but a hurried glance over the field of their activities in our own community reveals their connec- tion with almost every worthy occupation. They are our doctors, law- yers, dentists, teachers, bankers, farmers, manufacturers, machinists, engineers, editors, publishers, county officials, army officers, dairymen, railroad builders, bookkeepers, stenographers, clerks, draftsmen, lumber- men, merchants, etc. We find them associated with the churches, the booster clubs, the Kiwanis, the Rotary, the Prunarians, and the fraternal orders. And best of all they have made good-good mothers, good fathers, good citizens.
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Page 14 text:
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Page Ten A L K I 'Twenty-three Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Pictures - - Music and Dramatics Society - - School Departments Organizations - Sports - Jokes - Class Prophecy Junior Editor - Uhr Staff Fred K. Ross Addie McEnany - Lynn Palmer Maurice Collings - Roland Richter Velma Harrington Martha Schimelpfenig - Lydia Rehfeld - Doris Eager - Paul Goebel - Guy Gill Martha Swager Leonard Moss Junior Business Manager ---- - Jack Blair Faculty Advisors - Miss Wintler, Mrs. Newhouse, Miss Guernsey .i-ii Editor's Note In the fall of '22 the present Alki staff took up their positions and started to work on the book which you now hold. We little realized at that time the work that was ahead of us, but as the months went by our duties became more arduous and the amount of work seemed to increase instead of lessen. Fortunately because our class and the student body stood loyally behind us in all our financial enterprises the work of fin- ancing the book Was solved. The staff believes that To err is human, but we have attempted to leave as few errors as possible. We hope that you like this annual, for it has meant hours of labor which we have cheerfull given in order to do a service for the school that We now leave. If it may serve as a record that you will be glad to look back upon in future years, we feel that it is a work Well compensated. -THE STAFF.
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