Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI)

 - Class of 1936

Page 1 of 108

 

Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) online collection, 1936 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 108 of the 1936 volume:

4 ly ,V ,,,-- ,um , 1. ,, Q :,A.w1,e:ff.f 7 1 .Jf:.1m,, fl ' xz ,Q KIPIKAWI 1936 i Firsf Row: Dorofhy Sandberg, Rulh DeGroo'r, Anna Podluclcy, Edward Warner, Rulh Jensen, Mary Vanko. Second Row: Mr. Ho+chlciss, Roberl Oldham, Alexander Temmer, Nalalie Kubalh, Josephine Podlucky, Helen Margarel Jacobsen, THE PRODUCERS ANNA PODLUCKY .............. ..... E difor-in-chief EDWARD WARNER ..... ..... A ssociaie Edifor DOROTHY SANDBERG .... .......... C opy Edilor DOLORES KOWALES .... ..... S enior Scene Edifor EDWARD MAYLAND ALEX TEMMER ..... H P. H. voRNHoLT ...... H. c. Horcmclss A... . H. SAWYER ........ CHAIRMEN MARY VANKO .,....... RUTH JENSEN ........... HELEN M. JACOBSEN .... NATALIE KUBATH .,.... ..........Arf Ediior . . . .Managing Edifor . . . . .Lirerary Adviser .. . . .Business Adviser ..... . .Ari Adviser . . . .School Life ......Facul+y ........Seniors .........Classes ROBERT OLDHAM .........................., Boys' Afhlelics RUTH DEG ROOT ...................... Girls' Afhlefics JOSEPHINE PODLUCKY, NATAUE KuBAiH'f.'.' ......... Clubs COMMITTEE MEN ROSE MARIE BAUERNFIEND .... GEORGE JANECKY .......... FRED MILLER ....... .... ESTHER POTTORF ..... RALPH SAPP ............... ANNETTE TALLMAN ......... TYPISTS AND HELPERS Marie Alberlini Carol Ausfin Rulh Danielsen Louise Dukshus PHOTOGRAPHERS Edwin Rygasewicz CONTRIBUTORS Virginia Anderson Kay Bafenburg Lesley Beck Marlin Clancy John Corr Sieve Czebofar Alice Deschler June Dvoralc Charles Finn Roberi' Freres Marion Hislop ....Faculfy .......Clubs .. . .School Life .. . . . .Faculiy .... .Clubs .. . .Faculfy Ida Sellcy Elizabeih Sewall Margery Sorenson Jaclc Lockwood John Nero Irving Oneson Mary June Parmenfer Margaref Schneider William Sell Nancy Smader Granl' Sfueber Helen Swanson Lucille Tarro Alex Temmer Clarence Zens The produciion of an annual involves all 'lhe people in school. We, 'lhe Kipi Council, feel indebled 'lo ihose sludenfs, Teachers, and adminislrafors who have so cheerfully lighlened our work. 9 AGR? F L 3 470 TABLE OF CQ l Gpening Seclion Curricular. Facully .... Seniors ....... Underclassmen . Sludenl Council Quill ancl Scroll. Commercial l-lon Music . ..... . lll Alhlelics ..., IV Exlra Curricular NTENTS or Club Y DEDICATICDN To Miss Berlha Cape in apprecia'rion of all lhosedramas of 'rhe pas? which she has so ably direcfed and which have been enioyed by all, we, +he annual sfaff. dedica're our drama, +he '36 Kipilcawi. ! To W. he H1 W WW is X DIRECTORS Among 'rhe direc+ors of Park, Waller F. Hood, prin- cipal, heads lhe lis'r. He is compleling his 'rhird year here. Our vice-principal, A. B. Close, is lcnown To +he many s+uclen+s who sfraggle in'ro school lale. The personnel of Jrhe ou+er office includes Miss Rodigan, home visi- +or: Miss LaMaclc, slenographerg and Jrhe Misses Bomier and Gill, office girls. Tgiflafzfvdnrv if nam Erma Sorensen, Language alluring Richard Hallisy, Commercial iudicious Ida E. Howe, Ma+hema+ics benign Margarei' Knudsen, Language funeloving Margarei' Teuscher, Household Arfs compe+en+ Harriei A. Harvey, Social Science human Elizabefh Fal+en, English-Debale VIVGCIOUS Paul Vornholf, English poeric C. J. Haumersen, lnduslrial Arls lrusfy Olive Adams, Household Aris pracfical Qnapvnaaf' 77lA-444.1 Thomas F. Hearden, Physical Educalion rugged Berfha M. Cape, English crisp F. F. Rogers, Science congenial H. C. Hofchlciss, lnduslrial Arls garrulous Gerfrude Hunfer, Social Science dignified T. D. Rowe, Speech dynamic Helen Sawyer, Ari laleniecl Audrey Bealer, English urbane Margarei' Moore, Mafhemalrics adiuvanl' G. H. Weaver, Commercial sfaunch 10 Q9-u.p4,efA.n-vw., JWMOQM Jfwgmv - .7-.ff-v I 7--V' -v--- if Doroihy A. Roof, Maihemaiics indusirious Elizabefh Walker, English loleranl' Rufh Ruggles, English conscienlious Frederick Schulfe, Music good-naiured M. Esfher Shaw, Physical Educaiion agile Anne L. Neihel, Language-Mafhemaiics versaiile Frances Enrighf, Malhemafics refined Efhel M. Holi, English exacfing Harold R. Johnson, lndusirial Arls quiel Helen Rodefer, English--Language modesl 11 , 1 , Mary A. PoHer, Malhemaiics perspicacious Theodore E. Beach, lnduslrial Arls serious Rose W. Bruins, Language-Maihemaiics acuie Dorofhy Perham, Social Science ihorough Elisabelh Hood, Household Aris obliging Nellie Mohr, English puncfilious Alma Wiechers, Language resilienf Nora Edmands, English-Social Science concenirafed E. F. Sanders, Science paiernal R. P. Hawker, Commercial willy .. . gg MV A, Mary E. Pugh, Social Science considerafe Olivia Baker, Commercial impressive J. E. LaBonde, lnclusirial Aris earnesl' Alia E. Laub. Language amicable L. G. Berven. Music-Science paiieni Gerirude R. Simmons, English fluenf Louise M. Collier, English energeiic Laura DuFour, Social Science cordial A. A. Worun, Science sysiemafic , Lillian Case, English-Journalism clever Florence Pennefeaiher, Commercial sagacious Willard J. Iselin, Social Science loquacious Lillian Tomelc, Language demure Lillian J. Jones, Librarian deliberaie Erwin Wall, Commercial iolly PRGLGG IT was The besT OT Times: iT was The worsT OT Times. STudenTs empTied The biTTer dregs OT liTe and kepT on smiling smiles ThaT kepT Their sorrowed hearTs alive-sorrowed because OT Their inabiliTy To TighT againsT The demons OT magniTudinous hardships. . STudenTs were Torced To carry heavy loads OT books home. NighTs meanT Tor dancing, daTes, and Tun were spenT mulling over a geomeTry Theorem, a gerund, a book reporT, a hisTory Topic, a shorThand TranscripTion. The suspense each Tive weeks when They prayed They'd caTch The mailman and The delinguenT beTore Their parenTs did: The shocks and disappOinTmenTs received each Ten weeks aTTer a fearful glance aT The reporT card: seeing an F insTead OT The G or G+ hoped Tor: The cramming and wor- rying Tor The semesTer exams, deTrimenTal To The fingernails and saniTy OT The sTudenTs: The checking and rechecking OT crediTs when iT seemed as if graduaTion would be posTponed Tor The lack OT a lone crediT-These were gen- uine hardships. djs 1 W , STill iT was The besT OT Times. EnrollmenT in The Tall and The meeTing OT old Triends aTTer a Ten weeks' period OT absence: club meeTings and programs To be aTTended To: elecTion OT oTTicers and leaders: assemblies, varying Trom local TalenT To Alaskan mailmen: TooTball and baskeTball games wiTh The glorious Teeling ThaT comes aTTer a vicTory: The Park-l-lorlick Teuds where Teeling runs high and may The besT man win: club parTies and school dances where one meeTs his lor herl laTesT S. P.: candy sales where a club puTs TorTh iTs greaTesT eTTorT To raise money: elecTion OT class oTTicers and plans Tor graduaTion: Tinally The greaT day-graduaTion -when sTudenTs sToOd on The Threshold OT LiTe Trying To raise The misTy curTain OT FuTure To see whaT lay beyond-These were hearTening loys. ThaT was I936. Now in i966 we have liTTed ThaT curTain ThirTy years. lT is noT The FuTure ThaT appeals To us mosT now-iT is The PasT ThaT sTirs The emoTions in our being. So, as we head Tor The greaTesT l-lomecoming Day OT all, The Park-l-lorlick Game OT l966, Ie+ us noT blame our silly senTimenTaliTy Tor The Teelings aroused in us. LeT us blame The PasT and The game, buT enioy iT and our reminiscences To The brim-now and Torever. SENIORS' PLAY Back Row: Clair Glines, James Poulson, Jolmn Medzis, Marion l-lislop, LeRoy l-linze, William l-lall, Harrison Wurz. Fronl Row: Alex Temmer, Clarence Zenz, Dorollwy Kroulik, Palricia Townsend, Nancy Smader, James Russel. LeRoy l-linze, l-larrison Wurz, Pairicia Town- send, Marion l-lislop, Clarence Zens, Alex Temmer. Marion l-lislop, LeRoy l-linze, Palricia Townsend, James Russel. orncmas 523 Genevieve Dedericlm. lreasurerg LeRoy May, f J' fx, vice president Marlin Clancy, secrelary, Ed- X if win Roloerfs, president X 'fix QW SCENE I Place: CaTe Lounge on The sTeamer Good Ship Lollypop on re- Turn voyage Trom Paris. Time: BeTore dinner hour a November evening, I966. VicTor OsimiTz, The ship's orchesTra leader, is speaking To his wiTe, The Tormer Mary Hein. VicTor: You know Mary, I Teel as Though I knew several people on board This ship. Their Taces seem so Tamiliar. Mary: I've ThaT Teeling, Too. I seem To associaTe Them wiTh our old Park High School. Remember? VicTor: I cerTainIy do. Say, lisTen. I'Il go and ask The operaTor To Tune in on all The sTaTerooms. MosT everyone is dressing Tor dinner now and They'II hear us play and Then-well, you waiT and see, or raTher IisTen. IHe dashes ouT and reTurns a minuTe IaTer and speaks To his orchesTra.l Boys, remember ThaT school song I TaughT you? All righT, Try iT. ISTrains oT Hail To Thee, Park High are heard. PresenTly a Tew 'laces appear in The lounge. Then more and more, and aT The song's Tinish abouT TwenTy-Tive persons have gaThered. They all join in: Yeah, Parkll Glen PeTerson: AvasT There! WhaT's going on here? I'm The capTain oT This ship! Oh, Park maTTers, hm? r-Well, ThaT's all righT. Go righT ahead my hearTies. Ronald Sorenson: Well, well, IeT's geT inTo a huddle abouT This. Lorraine Anderson: No! I, as presidenT oT The AssociaTion Tor The ReTormaTion oT CondiTions oT Farm Wives, Think This gaTher- ing should be held in a more business-like manner: I believe iT would be besT Tor me To Take charge oT This meeTing. Don'T you Think so, Miss FeichTer? IShe's my secreTary, you know, and a very Tine one aT ThaT.l RuTh Feichfer: Yes, Miss Anderson, I will Take The minuTes. Lorraine: Good idea. Now, I believe each one should have his chance To explain his presence on board. Therefore, each one shall rise singly, proceed wiTh inTormaTion as To who he is now, who he was Then, and oTher biTs oT news. Any obiecTions? No? Very well, IeT us sTarT wiTh This young orchesTra leader who summoned us. VicTor: I'm VicTor OsimiTz. We are reTurning Trom Germany aTTer brushing up on our German and landed a iob on board. We are heading Tor dear old Park and one oT The TooTbaIl games. Chorus: So are we! Mary: I used To be Mary Hein. I always wanTed To marry an orchesTra leader, so now I'm Mary OsimiTz. DoroThy Larke: And To Think we didn'T suspecT iT in German Club. Well, I'm known as DoroThy Larke officially, buT To The Sorenson Twins, I'm Dodo. I suppose you suspecTed Ronnie and Marion Corsie would geT married. Well, one Thing, she couldn'T say To him: This is so sudden. As a governess, I'm pracficing my own Theories oT child psychology on The Twins. How am. I doing, Marion? Marion Corsie: Fine. Leave everyThing To DoT. She's even Teaching Them German. IT's quiTe sTyIish. Ronnie and I are The dance Team here on The ship. Yau'II see us do our dance TonighT. We've a new one called The Big EighT Conference. Eugenia Levin Calvelliz I'II Talk now. IJuIdo Calvelli rises as iT To sTop her. STernIy.l I'II Talk now, I said. Juldo, and you won'T sTop me. This is one Time l'II speak Tor myself and drop my accenT, Too. Juldo Calvelliz Yes, yes, yes, dear. BuT please don'T geT so exciTed and screech so. You know iT hurTs your voice. Eugenia: I'm noT screeching, buT I will if I choose. Hang my voice This once. Iln a calmer Tonel, Juldo is always worrying abouT my voice. You see, I've been in opera Tor 22 years. We've been in Europe Tor Two years, and now are going-where are we going, Juldo? Juldo: To America, dear. You see. I'm Jennie's manager, and I suppose you've heard abouT us. We were married I8 years ago Today, so iT's sorT of an anniversary To be here. Marie Fogsgaard: Perhaps you've heard of The chain oT beauTy parlors of Fogsgaard and Johansen? Well, I own haIT oT The company. We've goT a shop on board as parT oT a special adverTising campaign. Be sure To come and see us. We've made a special price on our new Championship Tinger wave. EdiTh Johansen: Now Marie, TorgeT business Tor an hour. Marie goes in Tor The business end and I Tor The more arTisTic, so we geT along well. Janice Johnson: And I'm proud To reIaTe owning a dress shop oT noTe. You've heard oT The Johnson Trocks? They're really, as one college girl said, knock ouTs. The designers puT boTh names TogeTher. Herman Pancher: Knock-ouTs, eh? Well, did you hear oT how I knocked Epsom SaITs ouT in da ToisT round oT daT championship TighT in Boilin IasT Toisdav? WhaT goT me good and mad was daT he was wearing red and gray Trunks and me wid orange and blue. MuTiny I calls iT, so I ups and knocks him cold. I Tink he's sTiII ouT, Too. By da way, here's a Tip on keeping in condiTion- drive and work on an old Ford. IT's colossal, iT's giganTic, and odder woids oT inTeresT. HoT-cha-cha! LaVerne Groenke: I Think swimming keeps you in beTTer Trim. buT I suppose ThaT's prejudiced opinion, seeing as I afn a .swim- ming insTrucTor here on board, despiTe my age. Swimming, I Think, is The besT sporT There is. Helen Swanson: I Think horseback riding is beTTer Than swim- ming or Tooling wiTh Fords, buT I guess ThaT's my own opinion, Too. I always wanTed To be a movie acTress, buT I became a bare- back rider in a circus. The circus was iusT aT The London Expo- siTion, buT I slipped away To see This TooTbaII game. I'm Tlying back on The new Ukranian blimp. Theodora Nielsen: I was aT The ExposiTion, Too, Probably you didn'T see me Though. I was in The Hall oT ArT, Trying To sell Canadian scenes I had painTed. I made enough money There, so aTTer The game I'm going To realize my greaTesT ambiTion-To live in Canada. Mary Horak: I also enioyed The ExposiTion, especially The Educa- Tional ExhibiTs. I am a Teacher in one oT The 'schools in Chicago. I'm on a vacaTion now, buT when I heard abouT The game. I IeTT The resT oT The Tour and came here Tor iT. HenrieTTa Olk: I'm wriTing a book which is To be a means .oT making oThers like To read and Travel. Those are my TavoriTe inTeresTs, and so I combined The Two and decided To wriTe Travel books. I iusT came Trom Siberia Imy book is To be abouT ThaT counTry.l Believe me, iT's cold up There! I Richard WesTrick: I iusT came Trom a place oT opposiTe cIimaTe. In The jungles oT ATrica, big game hunTing. When I was Tlying over The worsT oT The iungles, I heard a radio flash abouT The game and Turned righT back. I wrecked my plane, and noT having Time To waiT Tor iT To be Tixed, I grabbed This boaT. Mary Jane Knorr: You were inTerrupTed in The middle oT a hunT and I was aImosT inTerrupTed in The middle oT a song. I'm a nighT club hosTess in a Paris caTe. IT was in The middle oT a song ThaT I happened To hear an American newspaper phoTog- rapher Talk abouT The game. I couIdn'T sTop The song, buT aTTer I was Through I obTained a Three-weeks' vacaTion. I Sophie Wasilewiczz And I'm The phoTographer. I've been in Europe Trying To geT some good shoTs. I couIdn'T seem To Tind much oT anyThing, so I came home Tor The game. Now look aT The Tine group oi ceIebriTies herel Don'T TorgeT, I geT a shoT aT each oT you beiore you leave. ElizabeTh Lawler: I remember you now. You snapped me once when I was dancing aT The Trocadero in London. Years ago I made my IiTe work Tap dancing. I've mainTained a Parisian resi- dence where I spend mosT oi my Time, buT in The summer I go To my ITaIian villa. VioIeT Renpaul: I was ElizabeTh's manager when she danced,'and she wanTs me To sTay wiTh her now. We have enioyable TImeS Traveling. Lorraine Anderson: Everyone has had his chance now excepT RuTh FeichTer. . l RuTh: Oh, They all know I've realized my greaTesT ambiTion, be- ing a sacreTary. OT course I have The pIeasanT memory oT having The IargesT coIIecTion oT ice skaTing Trophies won when I WGS G young, nimble skaTer. Lorraine: All righT. Now leT's adiourn unTiI IaTer. We can have a Tew geT IogeThers yeT before we land and Then have one grand reunion aT The game. CurTain SCENE ll Place: Male BroThers HospiTal, RockTord, Illinois. Ward No. I. Time: A week beTore The Park-Horlick '66 Homecoming Game. Nurse, Alice Deschler: Good moaning, sir. Are you ready Tor your breakTasT? Lovely morning, isn'T iT, sir? The birds are sing- ing brighTIy and The sun is shining. I hope you had a good nighT's resT. Say. aren'T you awake yeT? Frank Falkos No. noT quiTe, buT you seem To wake me every blooming morning before The auTomaTic-radio-eIecTric-clock calls ouT 6 o'clock. WhaT's The idea? I'm paying Tor This bed and I inTend To sleep in iT. Oh, Alice, when you are oTT duTy Today come in and enioy my Television seT. Alice: Here is your auTomaTic TooTh brusher wiTh a Tresh supply oT TooTh pasTe in The holder. Now while iT's in your mouTh and inTerTering wiTh your speech, I'm going To Tell you someThing. You Think you're preTTy good since you Took over The largesT wine hoTeI in Chicago, don'T you? Frank: Blub! Blub! Is ThaT so? LeT me Tell you somefhing, carroT-Top. I goT Tour box-seaT TickeTs Tor The homecoming TooT- ball game aT Racine, and I'm Taking Three oT The nicesT nurses I know, buT your name is noT included on my IisT, l'll have you know. Alice: Are you Trying To make me iealous? IT you are, you're a compleTe Tailure. I'm a welcome guesT Tor The game. I re- ceived an honorary TickeT from The school. Frank:'WeII, I'm sending a case oT chemically prepared wine To The coach. Think ThaT one over as you close The door behind you. lShe enTers The nexT ward.l Alice: Good morning, sir. How is your mouTh This morning? Russell Gilmore: IT's geTTing beTTer, carroT-Top, buT if I ever caTch The lug ThaT pushed ThaT baseball in my mouTh while I was singing aT The DuBarry NighT Club, you'lI have anoTher paTienT, and maybe a Tuneral. I'lI knock him so TlaT ThaT he'II have To lie here Tor monThs recuperaTing. ThaT's The TirsT Time ThaT I can recall ThaT someone didn'T enioy my singing. IT he hadn'T disap- peared so quickly, I would have Thrown The ball righT Through ThaT Thick head oT his. Alice: The DocTor opened your mouTh six inches To geT iT ouT. How in The world did your mouTh geT so big? Russell: IT goT ThaT way while I was in high school. I was The besT cheerer ThaT ever saT on The Parkside of The sTands. I cheered so loud ThaT The resT oT The cheerers couldn'T be heard over my voice, so I used To go on The opposiTe side oT The Tield and They senT a cheer leader over To lead me alone while anoTher cheer leader led The resT oT The Park rooTers. The Two secTions TogeTher, me and The school, were The besT in The counTry. Alice: Have you ever heard oT The Liars Club in BurIingTon, RusTy? You're noT presidenT by any chance, are you? See To iT ThaT you are in condiTion To cheer aT The homecoming game in Racine. Russell: I have ThaT all Tixed. I've gone inTo Training Tor The big game. We don'T wanT Horlick To beaT Park aTTer all The win- ning games by Park, do we? lWard No. lVl Dr. John GerTenbach: Hello There, J. P. How are you, Mr. Heder, and all The liTTle Hadefs, wiTh Their Lincoln cars? Charles Hader: All righT, buT They cosT me Too much money. Do you Think I would be The richesT man in Dope CounTy if I Threw away money like ThaT? Did you geT ThaT Television seT repaired yeT? John: I don'T know anyone who could Tix iT in so shorl' a Time. You know I'm only The second rank docTor here. Hader: Then geT Vavouleas. John: CenTral W920X sTaTion. Hello, Vavouleas? GerTenbach Talking. GeT in your speedcycle and come over To The hospiTaI in a second. Vavouleass Howdy, Doc, how's your CQ's? Hader: GeT ThaT seT Tixed, in a hurry! You're The only one in This viciniTy ThaT knows enough abouT iT To Tix The seT. Vavouleasz I'Il do my besT. John: Carl Vavouleas is The Tellow you wenT To school wiTh. Hader: So iT is. Pleased To meeT you, Carl. I didn'T remember you aT TirsT. You've changed a IoT. Vavouleas: Yes, I have. I'm geTTing seT To go To Racine To see The big game. Hader: If my arTiTicial sTomach works by nexT week, I'II go my- self. And The Doc wiTh me. Still anoTher ward Francis Held: Hi, Hank! ThoughT I'd drop in and see how you're coming along. Frank Hay: GreeTings, CounTI How's The wresTIing rackeT? I'm pulling ouT oT The nose dive I made aT PorTsmouTh all righT. GoT busTed up as you can see by The Triple casTs. Held: I losT all my TighTs lasT week in Racine, my old home Town, Too. Back home They're geTTing ready To beaT Horlick aT The homecoming game. Frank: I'II have To see This year's game by Television or else go looking like a man who has iusT come ouT oT a wind sTorm. Held: I'll be There. Who is ThaT Tellow in The nexT bed? Frank: ThaT's Henry Kupellio. He broke his leg and hip in his machine shop. He's a good mechanic Though. He was Trying To perTecT his auTomaTic back scraTcher when he goT TwisTed up. And anoTher Bob Oldham, LT.: Well, how is my sTandby, LT. Ludwig? The nurse Tells me you're recovering Trom a nervous breakdown. Those are mean Things To have. Probably you've been consorTing wiT'h The wrong companions. Be careTuI. be careTull You'II soon be back bossing The boys again, I hope. OTTo: I hope so, LT. I miss Those boys a loT. Bob: And They miss you. They're always asking when you'Il be back. They goT TogeTher and senT This baskeT oT TruiT. OTTo: Now I am surprised, and pleased. Will you Take a noTe back To Them? ' Bob: I. cerTainly will, OTTo. OTTo: Say, hand me ThaT nice red apple on Top, There. There's noThing like keeping docTors away. In anoTher parT of The llospiTaI EnTer Clyde PeTersen: Oh, nurse. could I go in and see some of my old pals? I'd like To visiT Them Tor a while, and see whaT They have To say abouT nexT week's game. Nurse: We never refuse a visiTor. lShe Takes him To a room.l Clyde: You're Harvey Olson, aren'T you? I'm glad To see you. You remember me. We wenT To high school TogeTher. WhaT happened To you? Broken bones? Harvey Olson: No, noThing like ThaT. I'm recovering from spike wounds I received in The World Series. The Cubs losT The pen- nanT again, and I losT a haIT pound oT Tlesh. Clyde: I'm Terribly sorry. I'II give you a break. I've goT an insurance policy here ThaT will insure your legs Tor SI0,000. Now a ballplayer like you will cerTainly see The advanTage oT such a policy. Every Time you receive a leg iniury, you will be reim- bursed by my company. IT is a sound and-- ' Harvey: You musT be preTTy hard up To come To a hospiTal Tor business. Clyde: When I was in high school Miss HunTer once Told me noT To expecT business To come To you. Harvey: ThaT's righT, you were an experT aT hisTory in school. Clyde: RighT, and I was a wizard aT pep meeTings, Too. I did my biT aT helping Park win. Ward WXYZ EnTer George Tigges: Did you call Tor an airplane. sir? Why, aren'T you Paul Tiles? Paul: And you're George Tigges, The piloT, and my old class- maTe. Well, I'm powerful pleased To meeT you again, buT There musT be some misTake abouT The plane. Don'T hurry away: reporT TirsT as To how Things are going. George: JusT Tine wiTh me, buT apparenTIy noT Too well wiTh you. By The way, you were an S.C.A. cashier and played in The school orchesTra in high school, isn'T ThaT righT? WhaT do you do now, Paul? Paul: I'm a violin player in The Chicago Symphony OrchesTra. BuT say, Nurse, iT's abouT Time you came wiTh our aTTernoon MaITed Milk. LeT's drink To our TuTure heaITh, George! CurTain r ,l ff! l 'K U- 3 ws if -he , f 1 . ,, , fm , ,,, I LH T 3 may 1 5 i v ' 1,l f.Q1' .iaiur ffm e , ' 'i Q Row I: Eclward Bishop-8, Lois Barr-4, Mariorie Allerl- 3, Norma Bergesen-3, Elmer Andersen-6. Row 2: Gladys Anderson-5, Roberf Borman-6, Marion Anderson-7, Violef Anderson-I7, Slella Anderson-I4. Row 3: Bernice Arcuri--3, Lola Ashley-I6, James Tree- I7, Violel' Barkowslci-l5, Roy Balwnson-I2. Row 4: Carol Ausfin-4, Lazar Benrubi-I7, Kay Baren- burg-l5, Lesley Beck-4, Marie Alberfini-I6. Row 5: Doro+l1y Anderson--4, Alice Acefo-IO, Lorraine Anderson-l,Jol1n Bramow-l5, Helen Brill-4. lScene number follows name.l l is T Row I: Gerfrude Brix-I6, John Dvorsky-I4, MargareT Cowley-4, Virginia DeSmidf-9, Frances Burczylc-B. Row 2: Angel Carelli-ll, Leonard Carrier-6, Myrlle Chrisfenson-3, Belly Chrisiiansen-4, Grace Chrisfenson -3. Row 3: Marlin Clancy-l2, Charles Cape-6, John Corr -3, Lois Wyman-I3, Tom Clark-6. Row 4: Phillip Dahlberg-I2, Peler Dallas-ll, Mable Davies-8, Lucille Davis-9, Gladys Day-I. Row 5: Virginya Day-I, Genevieve Dedericlc-IO, Flefcher Browne-ll, Alice Deschler-2, Margery Burgess -3. Scene number follows name.l SCENE III Place: Preview of a movie. Time: ThirTy years henceforward. Gerda Monefeldh Aren'T you excifed, Grace, whenever you see your sisTer in a movie? Grace ChrisTenson: Am I?! I do so hope everyone enioys The picTure. Gerda: You know how inTeresTed MyrTIe was in dramaTics in school. Grace: I wish she could be here, Too. I wrofe, asking her To come, buT she is Too busy having Gerfrude FiTzgibbons modeling cIoThes for her. No oTher model seems To do. Oh, There's Snappy STibgen wiTh his efernal news reel camera. Aubrey's never wiTh- ouT iT. Gerda: Say, who is ThaT sfanding over There? She looks so familiar. l'm quiTe cerTain l've seen her- Grace: Why, ThaT's Rose Recupero. She used To be The famous woman acrobaT wiTh The Dinzly BroThers Circus. You know ThaT was always her dream. She is now a parfner in The circus firm. IThey walk over To Rose, who is chaTTing.l Rose: Grace Chrisfenson of all people! WhaT are you doing now? Grace: Oh, l've been married These 24 years and have Two grown children. My oldesf daughfer is an inTerior decoraTor. AT presenf she is doing an aparTmenT in New York. l'm happy, for ThaT had always been my ambiTion. Rose: You remember Margaref Scoon, don'T you? She has been a privaTe secreTary for quiTe a number of years. MargareT: Isn'T iT fun meefing all your old friends? Gerda: Oh, Peggy, didn'T I read ThaT you and your husband are going To Travel The world To celebrafe your 25 years of married life? Your husband is an archiTecT, isn'T he. I Think archiTecTs are iusf wonderful. MargareT: Yes, he is: and we have planned This Trip for years. He was a Horlick graduaTe, you know. Grace: Yes, when he was There he had The iob of cheer leader, I remember. Oh, Bob, Tell us The news. WhaT can you- Bob Andersen: l've iusf refurned from Europe. I pilofed a Trans- oceanic plane over and whaT a job. By The way, does eifher oT you know Gordon Ince? Herschel Jones: No, I don'T believe I do. ' Bob: He was one of my passengers. He owns a large coffee pIanTaTion in SouTh America, and from whaT I hear is doing ex- cepTionaIly well. OuiTe a change, one mighT say, from his former repuTaTion. Herschel: l'm glad To hear iT. You said you piIoTed ThaT Trans- oceanic plane. ThaT's The laTesT one I designed. IT cerTainly is big, isn'T iT? Bob: Yes, iT's The TirsT large plane l've pilofed, buT I hope iT's by no means The lasT. Herschel: Think I'lI go over and speak To RoberT Larson. I iusT noTiced him sTanding over There wiTh Gladys Day and Dolores Mueller. lHe makes his way To Them.l Herschel: Hello everybody! Roberf. Why hello, Herschel: I noTiced you sTanding over There, buT I didn'T wanT To inTerrupT your conversafion. l'm glad To see you're noT quife as faT as some of our fellow cIassmaTes. They are surely going places! Herschel: IT's good To see you, Roberf. IT's been a long Time, hasn'T iT? You're The lawyer abouT whom l've been hearing so much oT laTe. RoberT: Well, I am a lawyer. You know These ladies, don'T you, Herschel? Herschel: Yes, I do. They were boTh in my home rc-om aT Park. WhaT are you doing, Dolores? Dolores: l'm a busy person now. I resT 24 hours per day, and iT is so wearying--so wearying- Herschel: And you Gladys, whaT are you doing? Gladys: l'm an orchesfra leader, believe iT or noT. My sisTer Virginia and I have a double orchesTra. You oughT To see land hearl us when we boTh sTarT direcTing. IT's a scream! Our orchesTra is aT The Ballroom TonighT. Herschel: WhaT made you inTeresTed in ThaT profession, Gladys? Gladys: I'Il Tell you IaTer. RighT now I am going over To see Margery Burgess, Norma Bergeson, Bernice Arcuri, and Marjorie AlIerT. lGIadys goes over To see The girIs.l Bernice: If iT isn'T Gladys Day herself. I haven'T seen you since we were in Reno TogeTher. Gladys: ThaT was five years ago. I am an orchesfra direcfor now. Are you sfill aT The Mefropolifan? Bernice: Yes, and I am very busy. I was lucky ThaT I could even make The Trip for The preview Today. Norma: I heard one of your operas The oTher day. I wenT wiTh Margery Burgess. You know Marge, don'T you? Bernice: NoT very well, buT I do remember her from high school. Are you married, or have you a profession, Margery? I Margery Burgess: BoTh. I am married and I own a beaufy salon on EifTh Avenue in New York. Norma: I have a preTTy good iob myself. Bernice: I'II say you have. Secrefary To The PresidenT of The UniTed STaTes. Norma: Oh, I don'T know wheTher l'm glad or noT. IT's a wonder- ful iob, and iT pays well, buT I don'T even geT Time To IisTen To Gladys. I do enioy music. By The way, Marge, whaT's The sfory of your life afTer you graduaTed from Park? Marge AIlerT: Affer I lefT school I Took a course in nursing. AfTer compIeTing The course I couIdn'T find any work To do. I wanTed To work for a privaTe docTor, buT There weren'T any open- ings. A couple monThs IaTer one of my disTanT reIaTives died and lefT me five Thousand dollars. I had always wanTed a Trip around The world, so I spenT my money on ThaT. I meT a Tall red-haired man. He Turned ouT To be a Tamous docfor, and I now am chief nurse in his hospiTaI. Norma: My, you cerfainly have been lucky. lln anoTher parT of The lobbyl Geraldine Wade: You asked whaT I was doing, Ida. Well, be- lieve IT or noT, I have The iob of Librarian aT Park High School. Ida Selky: I can'T say ThaT I envy you, Geraldine. You remember how ofTen we were senT or raTher chased ouT of The library? Geraldine: O yes, and The Troup aT Park now are almosf as bad. I Try To be a IiTTIe Ienienf Though. Say, Ida, isn'T ThaT John Corr over There Talking To Irma Lassen? He's a bariTone singer wiTh a Tamous chorus ThaT has iusT compIeTed an European Tour. Ida: I remember him from Park aIrighT. He used To smile aT every girl, or was iT every oTher girl? June Myer lcoming up To Theml: l'm inTeresTed in your con- versafion, girls. You looked so inTeresTed in someThing. Ida: Gee, June, I haven'T seen you since graduaTion. Whc'e have you been? Jufne: You mean where have you been, Ida? Ida: Oh, l'm a nurse aT ST. Luke's HospiTaI. You know I always wanTed To be one. June: I always liked To dance, and afTer graduaTion boughT a Ten CenTs-a-Dance Hall. l've builf up a preTTy good business, Too. Ida: How'exciTing! Do you remember Irma Lassen? She used To be in my home room. MyrTIe: Oh yes, I remember her. WhaT did she become? Isn'T she here? Ida: She married a wealThy lumber man. He died a few years back and lefT her a couplg of millions. She's using some oT if in Traveling. Now she's in A'rgenTina. IHerberT Jacobsen enTers.l Herberfz Well, well, you girls look as well as ever. Myrfle: You always have a line, don'T you, Herberf? Wish we could believe ThaT. WhaT are you doing now? Your greafesf ambiTion, if I remember correcTIy, was To be a greaT man. HerberT: Yes, iT was. I never became a very greaT man, buf l'm safisfied wiTh being a paffernmaker, as I always was inTeresTed in ThaT work. Say, I haven'T seen Nancy Smader here yeT, have ou? iGerda Icoming Toward The groupl: Did I hear someThing abouT Nancy Smader? I hardly Think she'Il be here. Irma Lassen .was aT her home, and Nancy and her husband were leaving for New York. Business, I guess. Now I Think we had beTTer go To our seaTs: The picTure will sTarT in Ten minufes. BuT before we go Yin, leT's all agree To meef again nexT week, aT The old Homecoming Game. How's abouT iT? All: ThaT's O.K. Gerda: IT's a daTe. Now, on wiTh The show. CurTain SCENE IV Place: Giganlic seaplane headed lor Racine lrom Europe. Time: Belore lhe slruggle. Slewardess: Pardon me, my name is Lois Barr. Haven'l I seen you somewhere before? , Passenger: Undoubledly-I used lo go lo lhe same school you did. My name is Belly Chrisliansen. Remember me? Lois: Of course, where in lhe world are you headed lor? Selly: Well, when you're a minisler's spouse, you lravel a greal ea . Lois: You a minisler's wilel Belly: Yes, and lhe lraining I had working in lhe caleleria al Park cerlainly comes in handy, lhal is, meeling lhe people- ,Here's lhanks lo Mrs. Hall. Lois: I'm sure you'd be inleresled in knowing we have several more ol our old lriends on lhis lrip. There's Dorolhy Kroulik and Lesley Beck up ahead. I'II gel lhem. lThey come back and occupy nearby seals.l Belly: Sil down and lalk! Il's cerlainly nice lo see you again. Tell me, where are you lwo coming from? Dorolhy: I was in France sludying inlerior decoraling. Lesley: And I was in Germany sludying music. German was my lavorile subiecl, so I lhoughl I'd make some use ol il. Lois: I always wanled lo visil Europe, and lhis was my only way ol gelling lhere, so here I am! lPerson slumped under newspaper in seal ahead ol lhem sud- genlyi jerks around. He's 'wearing dark glasses and long black ear . Lesley: Well, who are you, slranger? lSlranger removes beard and gIasses.l Dorolhy: Kilo Janes! Henry Janes: Yes, il's I, bul sh-h-hl Don'l lell anyone. I'm sludying criminology and I'm lrailing a desperale criminal. Belly: A criminal? Well, I hope he isn'l on lhis plane! Henry: No, he's on lhe one lhal Iell a day ahead ol us. Lois: I have anolher surprise lor you. Do you know who's pilol- ing lhis plane? . Henry: Don'l lell me-Iel me guess. Lois: Well, I'm laking no chances: I'lI lell you. Il's Ken Angvick wilh Willard Phelps assisling. Lesley: I lhoughl Ken always wanled lo be an underlaker. Lois: He slill does. Henry: Hey, slop lhis lhing and lel me oul ol here! Belly: Say, do any ol you know 'iwhal became ol Doris Wil- Iiamson? Dorolhy: I know one lhing. She's leading a slricl Iilel Lois: Whal do you mean? Dorolhy: Well, she lives by rules and regulalions. Bul lhal's whal she gels lrom choosing a husband lrom a mililary school! Belly: Has she conlinued sludying music? Dorolhy: Yes, she plays lor lhe choir al Sl. John's Mililary Academy. Henry: I see! Lesley: Say, have you girls ever seen any Wichaka Club mem- bers? Thal used lo be a real galhering place al Park. Lel's see, lhere was Helen Brill. Whalever became ol her? Belly: Haven'l you heard? She is lhe lirsl woman lo be elecled as a dislricl allorney. Henry: I saw Doris Jones on Broadway. She was slarring in lhe piclure Monolony on lhe Counly. Doris always liked Dramalics and her lavorile sludy was English. Reading was her paslime. She would sil lor hours wilh a good book. Lois: When I came on lhis iob I lound mysell compeling wilh anolher lrained nurse, Dorolhy Anderson. She was one girl oul ol many whose lavorile subiecl was bookkeeping. Horlick High donaled Dorolhy lo Park, and she cerlainly was an all-round sporlswoman. Anolher one, Carol Auslin, always disliked Miss Jones' library rules. CaroI's male public seemed lo gel her inlo lrouble in lhe library. Dorolhy: Carol seemed lo like prinling once--probably because of a side allraclion. Bul she raled a place on lhe honor roll. Henry: Say, did you know Marie Fornary is running a lraveling secrelarial school in lhe deplhs ol Africa? She slops al dillerenl places each day lo salisly lhe wanderlusl in her soul, bul lhey say il's a prelly good school anyway. Belly: My ambilion was lo be a leacher, bul lhe nearesl I've come lo lhal is leaching Sunday School. Lesley: Whal became ol Margarel Cowley? Henry: She's leaching algebra which was her lavorile sludy al school. She's sponsoring a movemenl which will lake lo lhe nalives ol lhe Fiii Islands lhe deep, dark mysleries ol algebra. According lo her, a person who does nol know algebra may iusl as well nol be living. Dorolhy: By lhe way, Laylon Dixon is really gelling somewhere wilh his lree lance wriling. I happened lo read a lew ol his arlicles in some weekly magazines. Belly: He is lhe one who look parl in lhe Taming ol lhe Shrew while al Park. Henry: I happened lo be on a lour Iasl summer and I slopped in lhe U. S. Congressional Library. and who do you lhink was chiel librarian? Belly: Could il have been Jeanne Fordice? Henry: You're righll I know she always worked in lhe library al Park. Thal's some improvemenl lrom lhe Washinglon Park High School library lo lhe U. S. Congressional. I heard lhal she has donaled quile a lew books lo lhe Park library. I guess her old alleclions lor il slill holds. Dorolhy: She used lo dole on dramalics. I lhoughl she'd lake lhal as a vocalional goal. Lesley: This Iasl winler I wenl ice-skaling a lew limes, and say, I saw Iols ol lhe old Park gang. I saw Elhel Goldbeck, one ol lhe chiel homework halers ol Park. Lois: Well, I don'l care much lor ice skaling, bul I saw Harrison Wurz, lhe famous millionaire bachelor, skale in lhe world races in Chicago Iasl lall, and walk oll wilh lirsl prize. I imagine lhal's where he makes his living, and lhal's nol so bad, is il? They say he always did wanl lo be a millionaire. Bul I slill can'l ligure how he has remained a bachelor! Belly: When I was in Tunis, I mel Mary Alice Johnson. I s'pose you remember her beller as Mary Alice Foxwell. She slarled lo lravel when she was al Park, and she's slill al il. Some perse- verance, I'II say. We have anolher in our sel ol graduales, loo. Remember Monica Wagner? Well, she iusl won lhe U. S. swim- ming lille. I know Monica always spenl mosl ol her lime al lhe beach when I knew her. I guess in her spare lime she wriles lor lhe newspapers, as her vocalional inleresl used lo be iournalism. Dorolhy: Say, speaking ol wriling, did you know lhal Andy Pendl is managing a newspaper ollice? His love lor iournalism did him much good, he claims. Lesley: Did you know lhal we once had a greal arlisl in our midsl al Park? Gladys Haller has made hersell lamous in lhal line. She is a well-known inlerior decoralor al presenl in New York. Her lavorile sludy was arl, you know. Ol course, lhere was I-Iowie lo lake up some ol her lime, bul she slill gol along. She also has achieved her grealesl ambilion-lo play lhe piano. You should hear her! Lois: Did any ol you know lhal Kay Harbridge is leaching? I guess her sludenls will be prelly lucky il only she remembers lhal she hersell haled home work, bul mosl leachers forgel lhal. Belly: I know a lamous goller who wenl lo Park. So do you, no doubl. Il's LeRoy May, beller known as Prelly Legs. LeRoy cerlainly has been pullin' 'em in! His lavorile sporl and paslime always has been goll-and he slill slicks lo ill LeRoy had a bad weakness lhough, liking lo hear lhe 4:00 o'clock bell ring. Dorolhy: Well, I knew a girl who disliked lhe slams lhrown around al Park. She had a lerrible lime lrying lo gel used lo lhem, bul she never did. Thal was Kalhryn Koehler. Kay's vocalional inleresl was lo be a leacher, which I guess she is now. Lois: I'm sorry lo see lhis lrip end. Il's been so inleresling, bul I guess we are iusl aboul al our deslinalion. Be sure lo lake everylhing wilh you. So long, lriends. A Curlain Row I: Esllwer Fisher-I4, Frank Fallco-2, Jack Fennell- ll, Rulh Feichler-I, Gerlrude Fllzgibbons-3. Row 2: Charles Finn-l7, June Dvorak-lO, lngrld Gall- l3, Marie Fogsgaard-I, Bob Freres-l7. Row 3: Richard Gaiser--6, John Verne?-l5, Arabelle Gelsner-9, John Gerlenbaclw-2, Doris Gilmore-I6. Row 4: Kallwryn Drowsen-I6, Clair Gllnes-8, Ellwel Goldbeclc-4, Gladys l-laller-4, LaVerne Groenlce-l. Row 5: Russell Gilmore--2, Roberl Fergus-I l, Roy Hag- gard-l4, Carma Hansen-9, Bob l-lansen-l3. lScene number follows name.l 44 i 5 M A-v 'fff .,,..wal Row I: Kennelh Hansen-l4, Karhryn Harbridge-4, Marlon Hislop-I4, Franlc Hay-2, Claribel Howarcl-IO. Row 2: Mary Horalc-l, Mary Hein-I, Francis Held-2, Belly Jayne Hinrz-I5, Helen Jenisra-I4. Row 3: Harry Hinclrlifle-I7, Doro+l1y Hellman-IO, Ar- lhur Holmes-9, Helen Jacobsen-I5, Rulh Jensen-lb. Row 4: Rose Hoyer-I7, Rulh Heary-9, Lucille Hughes -IO, Clara Jensen-I5, Henry Janes-4. Row 5: Orland Hare-6, Helen Heclc-IO, Floyd Jensen -5, Harold Jensen-8, Jean Huber-5. lScene number 'follows narne.l -3' SCENE V Place: Beacon Room. Time: I966. Verna Nelson II: We'll have lo work like a couple ol luries in order lo gel lhis Beacon oul on lime. We're 'sposed lo gel il oul lhe day belore lhe homecoming game. Joe Yurkievich, Jr.: Who saw lhal lisl lasl? Grela Hansen II: Whal Iisl are you lalking aboul? Joe Jr.: The lisl conlaining all lhe names ol lhe I936 class. Silly Sophomore: I'm so sorry. lGiggIe, giggIe.l I've had il in my lheme book lor a week. Do you wanl il? Joe lin very sweel lonesl: Oh, no. Only my Aunl Emma wanled lo know il il was in sale hands. I guess she had a righl lo worry. Grela: Here, Silly, give me lhal lisl. Lel's see, now. We'll have lo make a lisl ol lhose who are coming. and lhose who aren'l. ls lhal all righl? Verna: Yes. Grela: The lirsl name on lhe Iisl is Gladys Anderson. Has any- one any news aboul her? Joe: All I know is lhal she is coming lor lhe big game. Silly Sophomore: I heard my lalher say lhal when she wenl here she gol a prelly pink slip lor skipping school. lGiggles.l And Iusl lhink, she and my dad used lo be on lhe same loolball leam. Joe: You and your dad. Ugh. Does anyone know whal she's doing now? Grela: Yes, she gives lhese prelly pink slips oul lo Park Slu- denls now. She's chiel olilice girl. Verna: The nexl name is Bill Beyer. He's married now, I guess. Grela: My molher said lhal when he wenl lo Park he had a blue and orange car. His pel ambilion was lo coax il lo do 50. Yes. he's married now. He married lhe blonde in roll call l3I. Joe: I bel he's having a swell lime running his lamily: or maybe his lamily runs him. Thal's lhe way il goes. Grela: Slick an i belween lhe u and n in run and you'II be righl. Verna: The nexl one is Barbara Cobb. She wenl oul wesl lo gel some resl from lhe Music Goes Round and Round and so lhal she could have wide open spaces in which lo do her lhinking. Guess whal she's doing now? All: Whal? Verna: She ioined a wild wesl show. I don'l lhink she'll be able lo gel here lor homecoming. Pal Townsend is wilh lhal show, loo, as Bullalo Billy. Can she ridel She was good when she was al Park, bul now she's so good people have lorgollen lhere ever was anolher rider in wild wesl shows. I don'l suppose she'd be able lo come eilher. Joe: We'd beller pul lheir name on lhe doubllul Iisl. Who's nexl? Grela: Jean Huber. She's a nurse now al some hospilal in Chicago. Silly Soph: She's an unusual nurse. I heard she pacilisls er-ah- pac-. Joe: Pacilies, you know, like pacilier. Al Ieasl you oughla know whal a pacilier is. Srilly Soph: Well, anyhow, she pacilies her palienls by singing lo l em. Joe: Any olher dope on her? Grela: According lo lhis old Beacon arlicle sne used lo lrighlen leachers wilh her 'lils ol giggling. Verna: Floyd Jensen is nexl on lhe lisl. From whal I heard. he caused his leachers lo add a lew more gray hairs lo lheir collec- lion. I wonder whal he's doing now. Joe: He's an iceman in Hollywood. Grela: Marcella Johnson is nexl. All I know aboul her was lhal she could beal Waller Winchell al his game. Silly Soph: Here's a Ieller saying lhal she won'l be able lo come lo our homecoming game. Grela: Whal does she do now? Verna: She's a snake charmer in lhe Barn and Bail Circus. Silly Soph: The nexl name is Jeanne LaTour. I wonder whal she's doing now? Verna: Don'l you ever read lhe papers? She's a well-known iournalisl lor lhe New York Tribune and has plenly ol work. Joe: So, who's lhe nexl viclim? Verna: Belh Marrion. Her name has been in lhe paper quile ollen. Silly Soph: Why? Verna: Haven'l you heard over lhe radio, Molher Belh and Her Bedlime Slories? Well, lhal's Belh Marrion. Verna: Harriel Rasmussen is lhe nexl person. Does anyone know anylhing aboul her? Silly Soph: Oh, yes, I do. She painls signs lor bill-boards. Verna: She seems lo be a spIashy sorl ol person. Grela: Why? Verna: Well, her lavorile sporl is swimming. lGroans lrom lhe olher lhree.l Grela: The nexl name is Margarel Nelsen. AII:hWhy, sure, and she was lhe one whose lavorile subiecl was mal . . Joe: Bel she culs some neal ligures now. IMore groans.l Verna: Who's nexl on lhe Iisl? Silly Soph: Dorolhy Jane Nelsen is lhe nexl one, and she is Oalmelia Earharl's lower er-ah undersludy, and did she used lo moan aboul her physics assignmenls. Joe: You're improving, Silly. Grela: Helen Skewes is lhe nexl one. She's been compiling reading lisls lor high school sludenls. She liked lo read, and English was her lavorile subiecl. Joe: Edward Qualheim's nexl. He's lhe one who used lo work so hard in hislory class-work lo gel oul ol work. Who's nexl? Grefla: Aldo Ricchio. He's lhe member ol lhe school board who is campaigning lo have chemislry subsliluled lor English. Joe: My pal. Verna: Helen Page is anolher campaigner. Silly Soph: Wasn'l she lhal sweel lillle French girl whom every- one adored? Joe: Yes, lhal's her. Donald Richardson's nexl. He slill has'lhal vaqabond spiril in him. They say lhey see as lillle ol him in lhe ollice as lhey used lo in school. I wonder il he ever gels any business done? ' Grela: The nexl one is John Krewal. He poses lor loolh pasle ads. His lavorile hobby is collecling rare obiecls. Silly Soph: I wish I was a rare obiecl. Verna: Theda Taylor is lhe nexl name. She's an English leacher al McKinley Jr. High. Joe: The nexl name is William Sell. His grealesl ambilion was lo do lwo lhings al once. He has accomplished il. He 'can rock a cradle and read al lhe same lime. Silly Soph: Whal is he, a prolessional baby lender? Verna: The nexl one is Harlow Zebell. When he was in high school his vocalional inleresl was loreslry. The closesl he ever gol lo il is when he looks in lhe Washinglon Park woods lor slray goll balls. Joe: The nexl viclim is Jerome Roberls. He's presidenl ol lhe Tramp Club. His grealesl ambilion was lo see lhe world, and he accomplished lhis wilh his chums. Silly Soph: Mary Emma Wyman is lhe nexl one. She enlered a diving conlesl and won a prize-by mislake. However, al lhe presenl she is a greal woman pholographer and is employed by a large newspaper syndicale. . Verna: Well, I guess lhis linishes our lisl. Silly Soph: Hey. you lorgol your parenls. Joe: Gosh, lhal's righl. Well, Silly, you lix lhal up lor us. Silly Soph: O-kay. Aheml Joe Yurkievich, lhe Firsl, is now coach al Washinglon Park High, where he was a lrack slar when a sludenl. How's lhal? Joe: Swell! Thal's my pop! I Silly Soph: Grela Hansen I is lhe person who inlroduced lhe now lamous Madame Greling Cosmelicsf' Grela II: Don'l lorgel lo say lhal she's a swell molher. Silly Soph: Lasl, bul nol Ieasl, is Verna Nelson, whose niece allends our school. Verna I is in Paris crealing new coillure sl les. Jdle: Well, I guess lhal's all. Gee. I'm hungry. Lel's go down lo Cozy Inn lor lunch. How aboul il? Grela: Swell! Lasl one lhere fools lhe bill. Curlain SCENE VI Place: New York landing field. Transconlinenlal plane charlered for Racine by Park graduales of I936. Time: '66. Slewardess: All aboard! Visilors off please. Plane leaves in I minule. ISeveral visilors file off: lhe gangway is lowered, lhe idling molors of fhe plane pick up, when a halless genlleman rushes up ralher brealhlessly, and nol loo nimbly iumps on board iusl as lhe plane slarls.l Slewardess: Well. you iusl made il. A lillle laler and you wouldn'l have gone on lhis plane. Charles Cape: Whew! I guess lhe old wind isn'l whal il used lo be. Can'l run lhirly yards wilhoul feeling bushed. Why, hello Bob! Roberl Borman: Hello. Welly! How are you? Haven'l seen you in a long lime. Nearly live years I guess. How's lhe law business and why so red-faced? Cape: Why, I'm fine and so is lhe law business, bul my wind is lerrible. How is your business? Who do you lhink will win lhe game? Borman: The business is booming: sold my firsl design, wilh or- ders for more, lo lhe governmenl. Oh, lhe game is in Park's lap righl now. , Cape: I fhink so, loo: lel's go over and see lhe olhers. IThe lwo walk lo a group iovially engaged in laIk.l Tall Fellow: Hello lhere, Welly. How are you? Cape: Ray Kayon! Why I haven'l seen you in several years. How are you? Say, lhal cerlainly was a line leam you lurned oul al N. Y. U. I never saw a beller baskelball leam. Kayon: Thanks, Charles, I had some wonderful malerial. lhal's all. lncidenlallypdo you see lhal shorl, heavy fellow? His name is Ish Kabibel lhe Russian Bear, lhe wresller. I was cerlainly sur- prised lo find oul he is Leonard Carrier, lhe Russian Bear from Racine. IEnler a man wilh a bollle in his hand. He addresses one of lhe passeng'ers.I Man: Say fellow, I'd be willing lo bel lhal you'd like a glass of lhis beer: lake some. Passenger: Go away, my son, do nol lempl me. I can see you are an man of lhe devil. Belling, and drinking beer! I fear for you. Beer-drinker: Whaaal? Lel me look al you. I lhoughl so. Tom Morrissey. Talking aboul lhe evils of drinking and lighl belling. Morrissey: Yes, I remember you, Tom-Ahh, she's gone. lHis wife leaves lhe plane car for anolher parl.l Now give me lhal beer. Oh! you beauliful bollle. Whal do you do now anyway? De Luca: Well, I represenl lhe largesl brewery in America. And whal a shameful speclacle: Morrissey a henpeckecl hus- band. Whal do you do? Enler Richard Gaiser: I would like lo know who lhe pilols of lhis plane are. Can'l lhey gel more speed oul of lhis plane? Slewardess: Lislen, iusl because you're a chief pilol on a vaca- lion you don'l have lo lhink you're so wonderful. The pilols here don'l come any beller. Gaiser: Well, I'm nol so old bul whal I could show lhem a few lhings. Who are lhey, anyway? Slewardess: They're Eddy Aiello and Dick Wilson, and il you can do any beller, you musl be Houdini. You sound like lhe bus-man on a holiday. Gaiser: Well, I suppose I'll have lo keep quiel. You look good for hours of il. De Luca: Aiello? Say, I'll have lo see him. lGoes forward.I Slewardess: We're slopping al Cleveland lo pick up more of your graduales going lo lhis game. Crowd: I wonder who'll come aboard: we probably won'l even know lhem. lThe plane lands, lhe door opens, and folks slarl filing in.l Kayon: Well, well, Radewilz. Slan, how are you? Whal are you doing now? Radewih: Hello, Ray. I'm a leacher now, a professor. Kayon: You a leacher? Whal do you feach, Slan? Why- Radewilz: I'm a leacher of mechanical drafling. I slarled a drafling school len years ago. Kayon: Hmmm! Fine, Slan. lTwo genllemen enler arm in arm singing a familiar lune, bul lhe words are nol underslandable.l Voice: Whal are lhey singing? I never heard such language. Cape llaughinglz Eddy Roberls and Llewellyn Williams, whal are lhose hideous noises? Williams: Say, lhal's real singing: wasn'l I in lhe glee club? I can sing. Eddy's nol bad eilher. Cape: Those words. I don'l quile- Roberls: My friend, lhose are line Welsh words. I, as presidenl of lhe Welsh Revival Organizalion and speaking in behalf of my assislanl whom I saved from lhe devil, deplore your levily al lhe grandesl air and words in lhe world. We have a powerful organizalion and may make you regrel lhose words. Cape: Whal do you do? Roberls: We are saving Wales from exlinclion in lhe arls and lellers, and my friend- A big powerful voice: Say- Williamsz Clark, old fellow. h Borman: Tom Clark! Say, lhal coal looks a bil old. Clark: Yes, I saved il for an evenl like lhis. Williams: How's business wilh lhe Inlernalional Super-Super Chemical Company, Tom? Clark: ll couldn'l be- IA man walks in: he has a sign hung on him, and he doesn'l say a word.I Voice: lReading from lhe sign.I I am Paul Lowry. I feel fine, am in lhe law business and doing well. I have losl my voice from greeling so many old graduales, bul I hope lo find il soon. Well, hello, Lawryl Slewardess: We're off for Racine. Radio-Operalor, James Risiner: Here's a lelegram from Lewis Belh, lhe chief foresl ranger of lhe Ohio secfion: he wishes lhe leam luck bul can'l come because of lhe foresl fire menace al lhis lime. He asked lhal il be read. Crowd: Too bad. Risiner: Anolher one has iusl come in and il reads- From Racine. A welcoming commillee consisling of George Ver- haeghe, Fred Kohlman, Alfred Shovers, Arlhur Simonsen, John Skellon, and Orland Hare awails lhe plane. Voices in lhe Crowd: Orland Hare, my old chum. Verhaeghe- lhal musl be lhal millionaire eleclrician who lhoughl so much of lhe girls al Park. Wonder il any have hooked him yel? Say. Kohlman owns lhe largesl holel on Lake Michigan and inviled us lo slay lhere. Prelly nice. Shovers and Skellon bolh are lawyers. Arlhur Simonsen, known as Archie, is Uniled Slales Senalor from Wisconsin. Why, he iusl made lhe longest speech in lhe hislory of Congress. IThe plane swings over Racine and slarls lo Iand.l Morrissey: Who is lhal running around wilh lhe megaphone in his hand? Why il's- All: Rookie! Morrissey: Can you imagine lhis? He is supposed lo have wril- len a couple of books on cheerleading and now leaches il. Wow! IAS lhe door opens a voice is yelling-I Rookie: I push a lillle valve. Everyone: You push a Iiflle valve- Rookie: The music goes roun' an' a- whal goes roun'? Crowd: The music! Rookie: Whal! lhe music! Crowd: Wilh a who-o-o-oeo-. Rookie: No! Wilh a la-ra-ra- Crowd: Boom! De Ay! We're oul lo win loday. Lel nolhing slop lhe way! Fred Schulle, Jr., lraises lhe balon and lhe old school song, unchanged, rings oul afler lhe new yeIl.l Clark: There's Ed Kale, he happens lo be my rival in lhe Chemi- cal Manufacluring business. lArchie Simonsen slands up in a derby and slriped business suil and slarls lalking.l Simonsen: My friends: I am a represenlalive of lhe common people- Crowd: Ouiel! Archie: All righl, all righl! On lo lhe holel and don'l forgel fo cheer and- . Curlain Row I: Edifh Johansen-l, Mary Jane Knorr-l, Dorofhy Kroulil:-4, Doris Jones-4, Dorofhy Kobal-IO. Row 2: Charles Jurgailis-IZ, Irene Juriclc-IO, Mary A. Johnson-4, Edward Kale-6, Raymond Kayon-6. Row 3: Janice Johnson--I, Magdalen Kreul-I4, l.aVerne Kobal-IO, Kalhryn Koehler-4, Frederic Kohlman-6. Row 4: Paul Tiles-2, Dolores Kowales-I6, John Krewal -5, John Kropp-l7, Henry Jorgenson-I l. Row 5: Nafalie Kubafh-IO, Dorolhy Larke-I, Niels Lar- sen-I7, Mabel Larson-I4, Harrison Wurz-4. lScene number follows name.l 25 NB' Ji' A3 is M 3 l zo S 8 K Row I: Eleanor Lindquisl-IO, Gordon Lisby-l5, Pal McDonald-I4. Roy Malcholm-l I, Bill Loeweclce-8. Row 2: Lydia Madsen-I3, Offo Ludwig-2, Arfhur Lu- careli-I7, Don Yena-I I, Ruby Madsen-I7. Row 3: George Mauger-9, Dorofhy Malmsladf-I4, Sleve Lipovslcy-9, Grace Mandernach-I6, Belly Mann- I5. Row 4: Maxine Lingsweiler-I7. Edward Maresh-I2, Harrison Levin-I4, Paul Lowry-6. Leland McElroy-IO. Row 5: Dorolliy Marlin-I5, Eunice McNaugl1+on-fI7, John Medzis-I3, LeRoy May-4, Ray Michalalc-ll. Scene number follows name.l SCENE VII Place: The home ol Mrs. Gordon Torno, lormer Mariorie Han- sen, who al lhe lime ol lhe play is married lo prominenl meal packer ol Racine. She is giving a lea lor some ol her high school lriends who have come lo lown lo see lhe Park-Horlick loolball game. Alumni are galhering lrom all over lhe world. Time: Tea lime, lhe day belore lhe game. Eulah Triggs: We did have enioyable limes in school lhough, didn'l we? I've losl lrack ol some ol my old schoolmales. I'd like lo check up on some ol lhem. Whalever became ol Margarel Schneider? Marjorie Hansen: I hoped she would come lo Racine lor lhe game, bul she said she was lerribly sorry she couldn'l. I-Ier daughler, Julie, is making her debul nexl week. She is in a whirl lrying lo meel social obligalions and plan her daughler's parly al lhe same lime. Of course, you know she is married lo W. R. D. Vanderbill. Eulah: No, I didn'l. Does she live in New York? Mariorie: Yes, somelimes. She spends her winlers in Florida, and resides al her New York Penlhouse or her home on lhe Hudson in lhe summer. Belly Hidll: Whal are you doing now, Eulah? Eulah: Don'l you know? I suppose you have so many women working under you lhal you don'l gel lo know lhem all. I am lhe head ol lhe Red Cross in Milwaukee. Belly: You are? Il's odd lhal I don'l remember yourname. Eulah: Well, being head ol lhe Red Cross in lhe Uniled Slales, you have many lhings lo do olher lhan looking over names ol your employees. Belly: I am kepl quile busy. Were you across seas in lhe Iasl war? Eulah: No, were you? I Belly: Yes, I was. My, Marge, whal adorable cakes. Did you make lhem? If you did, your cooking cerlainly hasn'l sullered by your work wilh Junior. Marjorie: Yes, I made lhem. Junior loves lhis special kind. June Chrislianson: I wanled lo be a nurse when I wenl lo high school, and inslead I became an avialrix. There isn'l much con- neclion is lhere? Now, lhough, I'm married lo Max Rening, Presidenl ol lhe Skyward College, Belly: There cerlainly is no conneclion, slill you seem very happy. lEnler Junior Torno, son ol Mariorie Hansen. He is iusl relurn- ing lrom schooI.I Junior: Hello, Molher. May I have one ol lhose cakes? Are lhere many lell? Mariorie: Hello, Junior. I wanl you lo meel some ol my pasl school-day lriends. Mrs. Jensen, Miss Hiall, Mrs, Curlis, Miss Richards, Miss Simonsen, Miss Triggs, and Miss Chrislensen. This is my son Gordon Junior. IThey all acknowledge lhe inlroduc- lion. Belly: Do you go lo Park High now, Junior? Junior: Yes, M'am. Belly: I'-low is everylhing? Junior: Jusl line, allhough lhere is quile a discussion going on in lhe science deparlmenl. The science leachers say lhey need a balloon in which lo do experimenling. bul lhe school board won'l give lhem lhe money wilh which lo buy il. Belly: Thal's loo bad. We used lo have lhe same lrouble over an assembly. Maybe you will make enough money on lhe game lomorrow lo pay lor il. Junior: We can'l use lhe money lor lhal, because we boughl new suils lor lhe leams and have lo pay lor lhem. Eulahz Oh, Lorella, where did you and Russell Anderson dance some years ago in Chicago? Lorella Richards: Al lhe Gold Room ol lhe Casino. Belly: I didn'l know dancing had been your prolession, Rela. Eulahz Didnxl you ever hear ol lhe Rela and Russell dancing parlners? Now lheir daughler is dancing prolessionally, loo. Lorella: Yes, we were parlners once. Now our daughler Lindy is making personal appearances in England and France. Oh, did you read aboul Jack Barnard in lhe paper yeslerday? June: No. Lorella: He made an allilude record. I can'l remember lhe ligures. I never could. June: Oh! I knew he was an avialor. He and I are going lo do some slunl llying over lhe loolball lield belween halves lomorrow. Lorella: I lhoughl you were wilh your husband in Alrica, Laura? Laura Freeman: I was, bul I gol lired ol walching him dig up bones, so I llew home lor lhe game. Marge, didn'l you say Verna Erdman was coming? Mariorie: I inviled her, bul she is a Melropolilan Opera slar now. You know how lemperamenlal sopranos are. Laura: Did you see lhe carloon on lhe lirsl page ol lhe Tribune loday? Il was lhe cleveresl one I've seen in a long lime. June: Il was clever, wasn'l il? Remember Herberl Crane from Park and how inleresled he was in carlooning? I-le slill draws. In lacl il was his carloon you saw. Laura: I had no idea lhal he lollowed up lhal line ol work or worked lor lhe Tribune. He musl work side by side wilh Bill Schroder, who has charge ol lhe sporls. Janice Moree: I had lunch wilh Bill Iasl week. He wanled some malerial on lhe Derby nexl year. I lhink I'lI have a couple ol horses run. My slables are gelling larger and larger. Il any ol you wish lo make some money, pul yours on Thunder Baby nexl year. He's bound lo win. Mariorie: I was always inleresled in horses. I lhink l'II allend lhe' Derby nexl year. Janice: Il you do, be sure lo drop in. And Iel me know if you're coming, I'lI gel you some seals. Won'l you all come? Marion Simonsen: I'd like lo, bul I never have lime. Janice: Whal are you doing now? Marion: I'm cashier al lhe bank. Thal's whal I wanled lo be when I wenl lo Park, and lhal's whal I lurned oul lo be, I re- member lhal's whal lhey predicled lor me in lhe Kipi. Laura: I'm laking up golling lo reduce. Edward Morlensen is leaching me now. He is lhe pro al lhe counlry club. Lasl year he won lhe slale championship. I can make nine holes in lilly- eighl. Mariorie: I like lo play goll, bul lhe doclor won'l lel me because I have a weak hearl. Marion: Who do you have as your doclor, Marge? Mariorie: Doclor Hansen, Richard Hansen. Marion: I have him, loo. He operaled on me lasl year. I was lerribly sick. Did I ever lell you aboul il? Mariorie: Yes, I know all aboul il. You've lold me loads ol limes. Did you read Marion Anderson's Ialesl book? Laura: The Purple Nag? Yes, I did. Isn'l il good? Mariorie: The philosophy in il is wonderlul. Marion: Did you hear Rev. Du Domaine's sermon lasl Sunday? He had some wonderlul philosophy, loo. Eulah: Whalever became ol Gerald Hansen? Mariorie: I haven'l heard ol or seen him since gradualion. Have any ol you? Janice: I heard lhal he is an eleclrical engineer in Elhiopia. Eulahz Erna Kirkegaard is over lhere. loo. She is lrying lo im- prove lheir condilions. IEnler Carol Morlensen.I All: Hello. Janice: Hello, Carol. How are you? Carol: I'm so lired, I leel like dropping in my lracks. Janice: Why, aren'l you gelling enough sleep? Carol: Yes, bul you'd be lired, loo. I have iusl had a long drawn oul meeling wilh lhe school board aboul lhal balloon ,lhal lhe science deparlmenl wanls. June: Are you a science leacher al Park, Carol? I Carol: No, I am lhe principal. IEnler Mildred Barla.I Mildred: Hello, Marge. Everybody: Hello. Mildred: ls Carol Morlensen here? Carol: Yes, I'm here. Mildred: As privale secrelary lo Jane Hood, Presidenl ol lhe Hoodly Gum Corporalion, I presenl lhe Park High School wilh fI5l.OO0.00 wilh which lo buy a balloon lor ils science deparlmenl. Curlain SCENE VIII Place: InTerior oT conTinenTaI plane enrouTe Trom Los Angeles To Chicago. SeaTed in one corner is Alex Temmer, busily engaged in conversaTion wiTh an old Triend wiTh a bushy black beard. A keen observer would recognize him as Nick ZabiT. Time: '66-day beTore The game. Alex: Well, Nick, There cerTainIy are a prize IoT OT alumni gaTh- ered here. JusT To pass The Time away suppose we compare noTes and see whaT we know abouT Them. Nick: We could sTarT wiTh The crew. The veTeran piIoT is Windy Urbush. Good old Zane! AT his age he sTilI has a Iarge Teminine Tollowing ThaT keeps him iumping across The counTry. Alex: Yes, and isn'T The co-piIoT Bill Loewecke? AT Park he seemed To like baskeTball. While There, Bill was a sTrong advo- caTe oT Tree speech and gum chewing aT all Times-especially The Tormer Tor roll call period and The IaTTer all day long. Now he's a widower wiTh eighT children To caTer To. Nick: See ThaT shorT, pompous IiTTIe Tellow sTruTTing down The aisle? ThaT's Joel BarreTT, our chieT radio operaTor. In school Joel had his Tinger in The sTudenT council. He's someThing oT an eIecTrical wizard now. Alex: And here's anoTher member oT The crew. ThaT smiling lady in The whiTe iackeT is our hosTess. Her name is Mildred Killips. AT Park she coIlecTed snapshoTs, and since Then her coIIecTion has grown considerably. You musT see iT some Time. She's The sorT OT a person who has many Triends and likes To have picTures oT Them all. Nick: Well, I Think we've handled The crew now. ThaT's a coinci- dence ThaT so many alumni were in iT. Alex: IT wasn'T by mere chance. When The crew learned ThaT all The alumni on The WesT CoasT had charTered This plane. They managed To geT aboard iusT Tor old Times sake. BuT now IeT us Take This TirsT row oT passengers. In The TirsT seaT is a disTin- guished looking genTIeman. I -can'T seem To place him, however. Nick: Why, ThaT is Sidney Aronin. RighT now he is a big corpora- Tion lawyer. He liked To sing in The glee club and play indoor baseball. He is The richesT person aboard The plane if ThaT means anyThing. Alex: I'm glad To hear ThaT, buT The unmarried women aboard will be more inTeresTed. SiTTing beside him is a more romanTic- looking characTer. Nick: Who, ThaT queer looking Tellow? Alex: Yes, ThaT's Colonel LeRoy I-Iinze. AT Park he was a mem- ber oT The STudenT Council, and he liked phoTography. A regular soldier oT TorTune wiTh a hearT oT gold. Nick: I recognize ThaT shorT. aThIeTic-looking Tellow behind him. Edward Bishop, and he's holding down The presidency oT a Iarge insilrance company. He has many Trophies oT his marksmanship in riTIe shooTing. Alex: ThaT woman To whom he is dicTaTing is his capable privaTe secreTary, Frances Burczyk. Fran liked volleyball as a sporT, French as a sTudy, and reading as a hobby. She-has hardly Time Tor ThaT now wiTh her responsible posiTion which she's held Tor some TwenTy years, and will probably hold Tor TwenTy more. Ed doesn'T Think There's anoTher secreTary ThaT will Take her place. Nick: Behind Them I see a raTher roTund genTIeman-Carl Niel- sen. I undersTand ThaT he is running an auTomobiIe agency ThaT Takes him all over The counTry. Besides ThaT he is The invenTor oT many oT Those eIecTricaI gadgeTs you see on The new cars, his besT being The eIecTricaIIy conTroIIed sTeering wheel ThaT is in every car nowadays. Alex: Beside him is The sad case oT a sTudenT who became a Teacher. lT's Carol OsTIund. AT college she received The Phi BeTa Kappa and many oTher honors. Her Park record included The NaTionaI Honor SocieTy, and The honor roll among oTher clubs. Carol is The misTress oT an exclusive school Tor movie children in Hollywood. Nick: SiTTing in The IasT seaT I see Marion Thogerson. She had an impressive record aT Park also, The honor roll being one oT her accompIishmenTs. She began her career as sTenographer and ended up by marrying her boss. Now she's a weaIThy widow abouT New York and Paris and spends a good deal oT her Time aT Palm Beach and The Riviera. Alex: Why didn'T you Tell me? For some sTrange reason I Think I'd like To become reacquainTed wiTh her. Nick: SiT down, my Triend. We've goT To Tinish This census, or whaTever you wish To call iT. Alex: Well, I will sTarT wiTh ArThur Pederson in The nexT aisle. His TavoriTe indoor sporT is parTaking oT coTTee and kringle. For several years ArT was The Tellow ThaT you saw slinking ouT oT dark alleys in wild wesT movies. However, ArT has ceased haunT- ing The ParamounT seT and has become a prominenT cabineT- maker, Turnishing and reTurnishing The homes oT TemperamenTaI movie queens. He's kepT busy by Their abuse oT The ladies' privi- lege. AT Park ArT liked baskefball and equally disliked English. Nick: NexT comes Helen Marudas. She's realized her greaTesT ambiTion. She is a iournaIisT, and her syndicaTed column is read all over The counTry. She seems To carry her age well, Too. Alex: Now we come To a pair oT ToresTry experTs. ThaT long, lanky Tellow is RoberT PanTridge, a ToresT supervisor. He devoTed mosT oT his Time ouT oT school To The girl Triends. I have oTTen wondered whaT Beverly would have said iT she had Tound ouT abouT Merloe. Nick: To help him Take care oT The vasT ToresT land under his supervision is Edward Niesen, who is over There eaTing peanuTs, and playing soIiTaire. He's The head ToresT ranger. PrinTing and Valerie occupied his Time aT Park. There is someThing woodsey abouT The way he eaTs all Those nuTs. I know whaT iT is-he re- minds me oT a squirrel! Alex: There is a happily married couple ahead oT us ceIebraTing Their silver wedding anniversary. Mekala Ress became secreTary To The big cemenT conTracTor, Harold Jensen. Beans, as he was called, sTarTed upon an eIecTricaI engineering career, buT The call oT The cemenT soon goT him. He and Iviekala were ioined in The holy bonds oT maTrimony in The Tall oT I94-I. There seems To have been an epidemic oT She married her boss around here. Nick: ThaT is very nice, buT do you see The Tellow in The gray suiT keeping a waTchTuI eye on Colonel Hinze? ThaT is Warren Larson, balIisTic experT Tor The G-men. AT Park flipping pennies was his TavoriTe sporT when he wasn'T flipping nickels. Alex: There's Mable Davis. She's The Tamale combinaTion oT Eddie Duchin and VincenT Lopez. She Teaches swimming beTween broadcasTs, buT I've yeT To hear anybody say her playing is all weT. Nick: Here is a queer case. ThaT benign old genTIeman in The TirsT chair is Dr. Clair Glines. AT Park he had a parT in Romeo and JuIieT. Now he is chieT of The sTaTT aT The ST. Joseph HospiTaI in Chicago. Alex: There is only one more passenger IeTT--RoberT Spika. He is now an airplane designer OT noTe. DespiTe The biT oT gray aT his Temples, is sTilI quiTe a man abouT Town. Smokes noThing buT 35c cigars and he and his spaTs are abouT as well known as Don BesTor and his were way back when. Nick: I Think ThaT concludes our IisT. Well, Alex, old boy, whaT can you say Tor yourseIT? Alex: Oh, I've IosT my youThTuI Tigure and mosT oT my hair: and when I Take a cold shower my TeeTh sTarT chaTTering on The dresser. I guess you know The resT. AT presenT I'm a chemical engineer, buT I sTiII like To Tind ouT whaT oTher people are doing now and Then. I'm doing ThaT righT now. Yes, I was on The honor roll back aT school. Nick: And I was in The NaTionaI Honor SocieTy among oTher Things. Now I'm employed in The engineering line. Well, I guess I will say good-bye now and seek my cabin, IT The curling oT my beard means anyThing. There's a sTorm coming up soon. Give me a lighT, will you, Alex? CurTain Rowl: Margarel Olson-IO, Mervln Molgaard-I7, James Millin-I5, Belly Minsnall--I5, Rober+Oldl1arn-2. Row 2: l-lenriella Olk-I, G,-erda Monefeldl-3, Tom Morrissey-6, Franny Moslconas-IO, Edward Morlensen -7. Row 3: Dolores Mueller-3, Carl Nielson-8, Roloerl Sor- enson, George Verlwaeqhe-6, l.aVerne Mueller-l5. Row 4: Warren Nelson-I2, Theodore Nielsen-I, Eva Nielsen-IO, Rullw Oakley-9, Bob Newman-IZ. Row 5: Lucille Nelson--IO, Edifh Nelson-I3, Bob Mil- ler-I6, Lewis Molnar-I2, Gilberl' Miller-9. lScene number follows name. l l .44-L... ll 'f .2 L 51' wwf-1. fri A f 3 in 3 5 3 or M 'EL DK faixam X a , W K K 'ff Q 2 l ,rr Sf if ' iff , W ' r L Q 7 I -r' , A x W ' iii ..:.::'fG E FZZVL ft, KM, ' 4. A d .Q -AJ Row I: Violel Renpaul-I, Mary J. Parmenler-I7, Clyde Pelersen--2, Vicfor Osimilz-I, Jimmie Paulson-I3. Row 2: lrying Onesone-I7, Esllwer Pollorl-IO, Anne Pode lucky-l7, Merina Pomeroy-9, Bob Panlridge-8. Row 3: Sylvia Reder-Ib, Carl Pelras-I I, Roberi Toeppe -ll, Don Riddle-I2, Sian Raclewilz-6. Row 4: Bob Rasmussen-I7, l-lelen Page-5, Allen Por- ler-I3, Edward Quallweim-5, Marion Tliorgersen-8. Row 5: Carol Osllund-8, Bill Pellibone-I2, Muriel Pefersen-I5 Herman Panclwer-I, James Pease-l I, lScene numbe follows name.l nr. SCENE IX Place: Parfy. Time: November 9, I96b. lWriflen confessions are dropped info a box. Each guesf draws one fo read. Ofhers guess fhe owner of fhe confession.l Harold Andersen: Now fhaf everyone has a slip we'Il sfarf wifh Bob and go around fhe circle. Bob Shufelf: Her favorife sport baseball: favorife sfudy, shorf- hand. Greafesf ambifion was fo unnoficeably chew gum in dra- mafics class. . Fred Kobal: Thaf musl be Helen Anderson. Bob: Righf you are. Lloyd Wheeler: Honor Roll claimed fhis young lady. She likes swimming. She sfill collecfs screen slar pholographs, and is now a very successful secrelary. Rufh Oakley: Lucille Davis. Lloyd: No. Carma Hansen: Merina Pomeroy! Lloyd: We're geffing good! Read on. Herberf Nifschke: He liked foofball and swimming, and every- fhing al Park. He feaches now, and foured fhe U.S.A. fhis summer. Paul Gluck: Bef its Sfeve Kiporsky. Huberh Guess again. Eleanora Seeger: Couldn'f be Bill Senham? Merina Pomeroy: Sounds like Fred Kobal. Herberf: Fred il' is. Next Rufh Oakley: Her hobby is collecfing bufferflies and eafing candy. She's a privafe secrefary and realized her greafesf ambi- fion in an European voyage lasf year. Bob Shufelf: Hahg Bufferflies give Eleanora Seeger away. Rufh Oakley: Bob, you're a genius. Arfhur Holmes: He likes all afhlelics, especially foofball. His favorife sfudy was geomefry and favorile pasfime is doing nofh- mg. Sieve Lipovsky: Bill Denham? Arfhur: ll's Bill all righfl Nexf vicfim. Anna Hein: She liked baseball. Favorife course was glee club. buf vocafional ambifion cooking. She's now head chef af fhe Waldorf Asforia. Vernon Lenoch: ls she really an unmarried cook? Anna: Alright Vernon: don'f live lo eat Vernon: Musl' be Rulh Oakley. ' Anna: Yes, professor, yes sir, yes sir, you're a good guesser. ' Gilberl' Miller: He was a member of fhe Nalional Honor'Sociefy, and is now edifor of fhe Morning Glory Senfinel. Lucille Davis: I'Il bel fhe brighf lad is George Mauger. ' Anna: Well, Lucy's right Lets hear The nexl' one. Arabelle Geissner: Her favorife pasfime was dancing. She liked Teachers fo forgef assignmenls. She wanfed fo own an exclusive dress shop on Main Sfreet This ambifion was fulfilled. George Mauger: I wonder who likes rifzy clofhes. Clarence Sorensen: I would say Carma Hansen. Arabelle: Righf! Next Ru'l'h Heary: He enioyed baskefball and mechanical drawing. Gilberh l've a feeling il s Lloyd Wheeler. Rufh Heary: Yes, he's draffsman for an Easfern company now. George Manger: He wanled To be president buf is now feach- ing. Skafing, his favorife sport He liked English and American hisfory. Sieve Lipovsky: He iusf wanfed fo be presidenf-huh? Arfhur Holmes? Arfhur: l'll have fo plead guilfy, your honor. Paul Gluck: She was on 'I'he honor roll, buf never liked hisfory. Piano playing is her favorife paslirne. Now she's a privafe secre- fary. Margery Baldwin: I fhink Rufh Heary ills fhe bill. Chorus: Oh. its warm in here! Paul: Do you like your iob, Rufh? Rufh Heary: Yes, my boss is fat bald-headed, and smokes cigars. Vernon Lenoch: He liked baskefball. solid geomefry, and me- chanical drawing. He's now a docfor. Vernon: There's only one Dr. Shufelt so if looks like a masfer' piece of defecfion. Rul'h: Here is one fhal says, l liked baskefball and dancing. My hobby was an adding machine. Vernon: Thaf is easy. None ofher fhan Miss Efhyl Cook. Efhyl Cook: You're right This one's favorife sfudy was chemis- fry: sport baseball: pasfime, reading: and is af presenf a fheologisf. Bob: The name of one Sfeve Lipovsky seems correct Efhyl: Looks fhal' way. V Bill Denham: This girI's favorile sporf is swimming, had no favor- ife sfudy. She liked lhe 4 o'clock bell besf and home work least Lloyd: I wonder who fhe broad-minded girl is. Maybe she's a conservafive. Conserves her gray maffer. El'hyl: None ofher fhan Lucille Davis. Harold: Lucy gels fhe scalp. Fred: She liked dancing and dramafics. Her pef aversions were hisfory and young men. She claimed fhaf more ice cream was sold in fhe cafeleria when she was fhe disher-upper. Bill: Lef's see. I remember one ice-cream clerk, Virginia De- Smidf. Virginia: Talent 'my boy, falent Merina: This Ii'I boy liked foofball. Pasfime was playing a guifar. He now owns a machine shop, and whaf a shop. Arfhur: We shouldn'f have lisfed so much informafion. Anyone knows Herb Nifschke is fhe only one who runs a shop. Margery: Here's a clue. Favorile sport .basebaII. Favorife sfudy office pracfice and il's signed Arabella Geissner. Eleanora: He liked and lives baseball. If was his favorife sport and pasfime and hobby. Atschool he liked- S'l'eve: Clarence Sorensen. We've gof only one baseball player here. How are fhe Cubs going lo come oul' nexf year, Clarence? Clarence: Same as always. Through fhe gafe. Bob: Joke-one, fwo, fhree, laugh! Now who's next Carma: He liked baskelball and believe if or not favorife pas- fime was schoolwork. He's now a chemist Lucille: A boy fhaf liked school. I'd say Gilberl' Miller. Carma: Gilberf all right There are iusf five left If should be easy lo pick fhem. George: Jusl' a process of eliminafion. Why nol' give fhe names wifh fhe confession, affer which we can commenf? Harold: All right Georgie boy! We'Il do 'rhat Clarence: Marjorie Baldwin liked baskefball, walking, shorlhand. and assemblies. She now runs a beauly parlor, and she wanfed fo be mag-mag-mag-er-er- Merina: Take fhal buffer ouf of your moulh, lhe word is slipping. Clarence: I can'f read fhis big word. Merina: Lel's see it The word is magnanimous. Mariorie: Clarence, magnanimous is a sfafe of greafness of mind, Elevafed in soul or feeling, courageous, Go on now. Sieve: He was on fhe foolball squad. Favorile sfudy, chemislry. Arabelle: Vernon Lenoch is fhe only one here who was on fhe foofball squad. Sfeve: Ya-vol, he's Verrrnie. Nexf on derrr prrrogrrramm. Paul GIuch's favorrife shporrf vass golf, favorrife hobby, shcrrrappp boooks, und favorrife shfoody physics. Und he iss now a virrsf violinisf in derr symphony. Lucille: My! Sfeve, where'd you gef fhaf German dialecf? Sieve: Vell, I vass in Deufschland forr f'ree veeks Iasf zummer und I picked up der Iankvage on derr vay bac-k. Fred: Paul played nofes dof veren'f wrrriffen. lSay, Sfeve, you've gof us all doing itl Well, one day a fly lif on his score and he played an E flaf fhal wasn'f fhere. No wonder fhe music deparfmenf had nervous breakdowns. n Lucille: Anna Hein liked baskefball and bookkeeping. She wanfed fo be a beauly expert Arfhur: And now she's a librarian. Well, if would be a queer world if everyone realized his childhood ambifion. All fhe boys would be firemen, policemen, or avialors, andfhegirls would be school feachers, loving wives, or old maids. Bob: Well spoken, Art Oh, Harold, when do we eaf? Harold: I Ihoughf lhal would come, and l'm hungry myself. Now lets all drink a foasf fo Park's vicfory fomorrowl Chorus: Hooray for Park! Harold: Hey, wail' a minufe-nobody has read mine and l've gof one in my hand. Whoaaa-its my own. I like everyfhing from fennis fo fhealers and prinling fo bowling and girls. l'm af presenf a voice feacher. Now lel's drink anofher 'loast Chorus: Yeah, Park! Park, Yeahl Curfain SCENE X Place: Whife House Recepfion Hall. Time: Eve of The game, '66. A Herald: Ladies and genflemen. The Presidenf has arrived, and will,now address you a few momenTs. InTroducing The PresidenT. Roberf STraTman and his wife, The former Irene Jurick. RoberT: My friends! We are gaThered here Tonighf To pay Tri- buTe To The greaTesT foofball players of The age-Those of Wash- ingfon Park High School of Racine, Wisconsin. Tomorrow every one of you will be on your way To This greaT game, as my wife and I will. Now I will infroduce our famous guesTs of The eve- ning-or raTher my wife will do iT for me. Before she does ThaT, however, I wanT you To hear some of The inTeresTing Things Donald Bezucha has To say abouT his favorife Topic, Indians. He is The head of our Indian deparTmenT here in WashingTon. All righT, Don. No, waiT a minuTe! I'II change ThaT. You iusT show Them some of your exhibifs. If you gef sTarTed Talking abouT Indians, you'll never finish. lDon shows his exhibifs and explains some of Them.l Irene: Thank you, Don. Now Ie+ me infroduce Mrs. Leland McElroy, The former Genevieve Dederich, one of The mosT suc- cessful acfresses in The world. Her role of Lady Capulef in The Park High producfion of Romeo and JulieT gave her The chance for fame. Genevieve: My deah people, I really cawn'T Tell you how good iT seems To be heah awffer my vacaTion in England. IT was ripping, posifively ripping. Yahs! You know ah've recenTIy fin- ished a picfure called Deberry STrand's GhosT. Oh, iT's quiTe mysferious and all ThaT sorT of Thing. Ah musT admif Though ah'm American aT 'eahT. Well, ah'd beTTah finish, so ah'Il iusf say cherrio. Irene: And here is The greaTesT acfor of all Times. His re- semblance To an acTor of I935, George RafT, won him public acclaim a few years back. May I presenf To you Mr. Leland McElroy. Leland: Good evening, friends! Look, I've gaThered a few people who will enTerTain you here' Tonighf. Are They good? Oh! WaiT'II you see Them. They're all here, Ladies and Genflemen, here They come. Take iT, VicTor! lVicTor Bunge's performers enfer. Dorofhy and LaVerne Kobal, garbed as yodeling cowgirls, sing. Dorofhy carries a guiTar.l Dorofhy and LaVerne: Oh, we are The Log Cabin Sisfers We come from The Wild WesT you know We'II Tell you of cowboys and horses And life as iT's on a Rancho. lEnTer Alice AceTo wearing horn-rimmed specfacles. She has a dreamy look in her eyesl. Alice: I'm poefess of England and have a iob riming for The Eayoy of London. I have a rime enTiTled My Hero! Ready? ume. I'cl like To be like MoTher Goose And wriTe a poem Today, FirsT hand me ThaT Tomahfo iuice And Iisfen while I say: My hero musf be a Spaniard A dashing sorT of male A guiTar and sombrero as his arf For wooing her won'T Tail. lExiT in a dazel. lEnTer one Dorofhy Hoffman carrying a brief case of sheeT music: she seaTs herself aT The piano-forTel. DoroThy: TonighT, I shall be exceedingly pleased To execufe for your special benefif an exfremely delighfful rendiTion of The WashingTon Park High VicTory March. I feel ThaT iT is in accordance wiTh your advanced and exalfed opinions concern- ing whaT is TiTTing and proper for This program. lShe plays and exiTs. OTher enferfainers submif Their arTisTry and overheard is a conversaTion befween former graduaTes of Park. They are now sweeT mafrons of 45 or 5O.l Violef Hoffman: lT's so nice To be here TogeTher. You know some years ago I was a maTh Teacher, buf I'm now married To a banker in Bosfon. Frances Gere: I'm an arTisT, my husband is a scuIpTor, and our son is an auTo designer. Lucille Hughes: Well, I have a shop or raTher whaf has grown To be a chain of Tea shops. Our hoT breads are delicious. There's Bernice Pefers coming ouT now. Bernice: Hello, soaks, I mean folks. I'm noT much of a skwalker -I mean bawk-oh me-Talker buT I'II have a resT, er-be a iesT-hee hoo hee-do my besT. I've become a nuT buyer, or I mean buTTer and egg, no, bufferfly correcfor, er colIecTor of The moTh eaTen-cIoTh eaTen-fool, pool-oh gosh, school. I'm a biT Tongue blisfered-er sisTer--of ah Twisfed because I once fried-uh Tried To memoriTe, um rize The dicfionary and couIdn'T bounce, ah, pronounce The gird, word sisTaTa, Tickfack, sTaTisT- oh IeT iT go-IeT iT go! lAs she leaves a crash is heard backsfage and Eva Nielsen walks ouT . Eval I suppose you all wonder whaT ThaT claTTer was. IT was my Ii++Ie dog, Fu-fi's harness ThaT fell as The maid Tried To puT iT on. I am more Than pleased To be here on a shorf vacafion from my engagemenf aT The MeTropoIiTan. I will sing for you a song, many years my favorife, Hymn of Praise. lAs Eva finishes her song, various guesTs again converse quieTIy.l EsTher PoTTorf: This may sound a IiTTIe conceifed buT I'm so proud of The facT ThaT I simply have To Tell you abouT iT. Ahem -prepare yourselves for a shock--I've iusf been elecfed by The Infernafional Board of Candy Sellers as The champion candy seller of our Time. Frances Moskonas: You deserve if! You seemed as if you were always selling candy aT baskefball and Toofball games. My hus- band, Verne, is proud of me as I have been adjudged The besT phofographer in America. Vicforia Rifkeviczz Speaking of soap boxes, I am now an orafor. And speaking of oraTions, we musT have a cheer for Park. BuT my ThroaT is so hoarse from speaking IasT nighf aT Thar banquef ThaT I couIdn'T yell if I wanTed To. Will someone else lead a cheer? Anna Jansen: Well, I mighT Try. I won The IasT I5 medals in The husband calling conTesTs, bu+ I can'T guaranTee The sTabiIiTy of The ceiling. I'm also official hog caller clown Texas way, so my lungs are preTTy good. Here goes! WhaT's The maTTer wiTh The Team? All: They're all righT! Anna: Who's all righf? All: The Team! They are, They are, They are all righT! Anna: La Ia la Ia Ia Ia lee. All: La Ia la Ia Ia Ia lee. Anna: La la Ia Ia Ia Ia low. All: La la la Ia Ia Ia low. Anna: La Ia Ia la Ia la la. All: La Ia Ia Ia Ia Ia la. Anna: Come on gang, who are we?-Oh well, we all know and heaven knows. Helen Heck: If we were a liTTIe younger Claribel Howard and I would make an efforf aT a rhumba as we were voTed The besT in I940. Claribel: Go on, Helen, you're Too modesT. lLaughs.l Eleanor LindquisT: Say you'd beTTer be quieT. Maybe someone's wrifirig all This down, and I wouIdn'T wanf This To geT inTo The papers. MargareT Olsen: Too IaTe, Eleanor, I work for one of The biggesf newspaper syndicaTes in The world, Herald and Exam- iner, and as you remember I used To be raTher good aT shorf- hand. Don'T forgeT To read Tomorrow's news. June Dvorak: Don'T worry, Eleanor, The oTher day MargareT wroTe me a Iovelorn IeTTer asking advice. I run a LoveIorn column in The same paper Margaref works for. IT she says any- Thing abouT you, I'II prinT ThaT Ieffer and sign her name To iT. MargareT: lSrniIing feebIy.l I was only Tooling. lHasTiIy chang- ing The subiecT.l Oh, here comes NaTalie Kubafh. The famous inTerior decorafor. She decoraTed This hall.. NaTaIie: Hello everybody, I've goT a big surprise for you. I've iusT found a beTTer inTerior decoraTor Than myself, and her doughnufs are excellenf. Here she is, Lucille Nelson in person. Lucille: I wouldn'T say ThaT, NaTaIie. OT course, The King of England once compIimenTed me on Them. Well, anyway, every- body come on over To my house and have coffee and doughnuTs. You'lI need somefhing To pep you up for The greaT homecoming game Tomorrow. All: A grand idea. Good nighT, everyone. Curfain Aww, Slam Row I: Don Rieve++-l7, Vicforia Rifkevicz-IO, Edwin Roberls-6, Alice Slirle-I3, Sianley Samalon-Il. Row 2: Margaref Scoon-3, Frank Rudin-I l, Jack Smillw -I7, Elenora Seeger-9, G-ranl Siueber-II. Row 3: Carl Sabee-12, William Sell-5, Ida Selky-3, Marie Shimlcus--I6, Roberi' Shufell-9. Row 4: Margarei Schneider-7, Bob Smifh-I4, Dimmoclc Sleeves-I7, Helen Rives?-I6, Roberi' Spika-8. Row 5: Reidar Siensvaag-l7, Helen Swanson-I, Ed- ward Warner-I7, Aubrey S+ibgen-3, Roberf Sfrafman --IO. lScene number 'follows name., Row I: Llewelyn Williams-6, Mary E. .Wyman-5, Lucille Tarro--I3, George Tigges--2, Dick Weslriclc-I. Row 2: Doris Williamson-4. Carl Vavouleas-2, Alex Temmer--8, Paul Will-I2, Eulah Triggs-7. Row 3: Zane Urbush-8, Nick Zabil-8, Harlow Zebell-5, Clarence Zens-I2, Helen Marudasf8. Row 4: Ed. Aiello-6, Dorolhy Alford-l6. Roberl Ander- sen-3, Thomas Afkins-I3, Harold Andersen-9. Row 5: Mariorie Baldwin-9, Eclifln Andersen-I6, Ken- nefh Angviclc-4, Ellen Andersen-16, Milfon Andersen -l l. 34 lScene number follows name.l SCENE XI Place: The Bachelor Club Rooms. Time: I966. The nighl belore lhe big Homecoming Game. Donald Yena: Will lhe meeling please come lo order? Jack Fennell: Well, whal's lhe big idea? Don'l go loo uppish iusl because you're in lhe Big League now. Lel's gel our own spiels over wilh. Seeing as l'm an underlaker now, l'll make a special rale on you boys. Il any ol you wanl a nice, cheerful luneral, I can- Don: Jusl a minule buddy: we're nol inleresled in lhal--al presenl anyway. Yes. I've allained my ambilion-slar pilcher lor lhe New Zealand Pole Cals. Al Park I oblained a lol ol lraining in loolball, lrack, and olher alhlelics. Oh, yes. l also enjoyed my semeslers in lhe Chorislers. Henry Jorgensen: And how aboul your daily praclicing in 3l2 during roll call periods? We should have received a medal lor our perseverance. Did you linally decide you couldn'l mix gum wilh singing? Well, as lor me, l'm old al lhe game ol managing loolball leams. Been al Yale lor some eighleen years. Peler Dallas: Yes, and you do a line iob, Henry. Well, I may as well gel lhis over wilh. You all know my lavorile sludy was chemislry. Hence, a chemical engineer is my posilion. By lhe way, l've iusl received some new slamps lrom lhe planel Venus. You'll have lo see lhem somelime. Now lel's delve inlo lhe privale lives ol our members nol presenl. Jack: Righl. I happened lo read lhe gossip column lasl evening and I saw Ray Michalak's name Iisled as one ol lhose who is going lo allend lhe game lomorrow. He was a loolball liend al Park, wasn'l he? Peler: I should say he was, Now he's a very slaid, relined pro- fessor al Norlhweslern Universily. He leaches zoology, or physi- ology: or some such lhing. Enler Harry Milchellz Good evening, genllemen. I regrel my Iale arrival, bul as you know, a business man has very Iillle lime lor anylhing besides business. May I ask whal is being discussed al lhis galhering? , Dora: We were lalking aboul some ol our lormer classmales al Par . Henry: Whal's lhal movie aclor, John Czilo, doing here? Don'l lell me he's slill a bachelor? Back al Park he was lhe cause 'lor many feminine hearls lurning in rapid revolulions. Jack: Well, he's slill a bachelor. Maybe il's because he never gol over lhal disappoinlmenl he had in school. Harry, weren'l you on lhe lrack leam lhal year lhal lrack was reorganized as an aclive sporl aller a lwo-year lapse? Harry: Yes, I was, Jack. Thal was quile a leam considering il was lhe lirsl allempl al a comeback in lhe sporl. Has anyone heard lhe lalesl news aboul Rudolph Naslicky? Peler: No, lell us aboul il. We're curious, as usual. Harry: He is lhe new scoul ol lhe New York Yankees, and is always on lhe Iookoul lor new malerial: I believe he is well salis- lied. Al Ieasl he should be. Don: Talking aboul Rudy makes me lhink ol Carl Pelras. He's lhe lrack coach al some big high school in Michigan. He used lo be lhe lrack manager al Park. I heard he was planning lo wrile a book called From Manager lo Coach in One Lap, or Why I Walk in Circles. Peler: Say, whalever became af Millon Anderson? Henry: Oh, he's one ol lhe lrailors lo our club. He leaches economics al a high school in Illinois. He married some dizzy blonde. Bul, boys, she's some cookl Jack: Well, a good cook isn'l so bad, bul lo lhink ol one ol our besl members lurning his back on us. Peler: Thal reminds me, Bob Toeppe is anolher benedicl. I always did lhink he liked lhe Park girls loo well. In lacl, he used lo say lhey were lhe besl lhings in Park. Don: Have any ol you ever heard ol lhe shop Roberl Fergus and Frank Rudin own? Well, l'm felling you, il's somelhing lo make you raise your eyebrows. Bob makes a colleclion ol girls' souvenirs, and Frank gels piclures ol lovely dames. Then lhe bovs sell lheir valuables, and are lhey doing a rushing business! You have lo make an appoinlmenl len days in advance iusl lo gel in lhe place. Harry: I remember Bob never believed in doing loo much home-work, il any. Peler: Rudy was on lhe loolball leam, wasn'l he? He could play loolball, l'm lelling you. Harry: Say, lalking aboul add vocalions-lislen lo lhis. Ray Slewarl has an easy iob. He adverlises Simmon's beds in Chi- ca o. Hgnry: Whal's so easy aboul lhal? I lhoughl adverlising was a hard iob. Harry: His enlire duly is lying down, prelending he's sleeping. only il usually isn'l prelending. In lhis way he displays lhe soll- ness and lhe sleep-inducing qualilies ol lhe beds. Don: Thal's nolhing. Granl Slueber enlered a knilling conlesl and won lirsl prize. He's considering buying a knilling laclory. Jack: You know, I always lhoughl Granl would be our lirsl lrailor, bul he's slayed lrue, slrange as il may seem. Peler: Don'l worry. .Granl won'l lake unlo himself a wile lor a good many years. Henry: Slanley Samalon is anolher one who will never lurn againsl us. Remember how lhe women look advanlage ol lhe lacl lhal lhe year we gradualed was Leap Year? One almosl caplured him. Harry: ll's a good lhing he had us lo come lo his rescue. We've done lhis presenl generalion a big lavor by il. Look al lhe line chemislry leacher helis now. Peler: Someone lold me he's leaching up in lhal norlhernmosl college in Alaska. Is lhal righl. Harry. Yes, il is. They say lhe Eskimos are gelling very edu- caled in lhe subiecl ol chemislry now. Don: Talking aboul science, Roy Makholm has been lranslerred lo Horlick as a leacher ol physics, Jack: Yes, he always received high grades in science, loo. I lhink il was his lavorile subiecl al school. Don: Well, while lalking aboul lhe good sludenls, we can'l lorgel Flelcher Browne. He used lo gel a line reporl card. He's radio lechnician al WRJN, lhe biggesl slalion in lhe middle wesl. Henry: And lhen lhere's Edwin Nielson, lhe singing wresller. Harry: Don'l you mean singing wailer ? I Henry: No, I know whal l'm saying-singing wresller. He sings when he isn'l wreslling, and wreslles when he isn'l singing, bul usually combines lhe lwo. He has such a genlle, soolhing voice lhal he iusl lulls his opponenls lo sleep. The relerees lhink he's oul and call Edwin lhe winnah. He's done well by himsell. Harry: Well, I lhink all in all, our whole class have done well by lhemselves, haven'l lhey? Henry: You bel lhey have, Harry. We had a lol ol lun, loo. Peler: Talking aboul good limes, aren'l we going lo Bob Can- lor's nighl club lhis evening? Quile a lew ol lhe old class will be lhere. Thal place seems lo be a regular rendezvous lor Park alumni. Jack: Thal's righl. We promised Bob we'd come. He's slill lhe same old cul-up, isn'l-he? Don: l'll say he is. Also Angelo Carelli and his orcheslra will be lhere as usual. Then James Pease will be lhere, loo. They've billed him under lhe lille ol Peewee and Pianio, Parlners. Harry: Remember, loo, lhal Edward Fliss, lormer R man, is AngeIo's slar crooner, and some crooner is Edward. By lhe way, we're lo have our piclure laken lomorrow by Edwin Rygasewlcz. lamous Chicago pholographer. Henry: Al Park he cerlainly was good al lhe game. Peler: Yes, he look some ol lhe piclures lor lhe '36 KIPI. Don: Say. boys, are you going lo 'Hnish your reminiscences and go over lo Bob's nighl club or nol? Henry: We'II be wilh you righl away. In lacl, we're on our way now. Jack: We've gol a couple ol cabs wailing down in lronl. Lel's go. Curlain SCENE XII Place: Lobby of Grealer La Rilz Holel. Silling in lhe corner diagonally opposile lhis one lour geomelry's prelly goodl we see Bob Newman, Marlin Clancy, and Charles Jurgailis, lhose lhree Park sons of lhe upper hall. Recall lo mind? lNol lo life, you lillle Dickens.l Shh-Iislen! Time: Eve before Park-Horlick feud, I966. Bob: Well, Marlin lmay I call you Marlin ?l, you seem lo have managed exceedingly well lhis far in lile, being U, S. senalor of Wisconsin and whal nol. I remember how you used lo lalk, away back when. Do you slill engage in lhis arl of discourse? Clancy: Yes, Bob, I guess il will always be my nalure lo lalk, if lhal's whal you meanl by lhal Iasl flow of words. You look Induslrious and sludious, Bob, behind lhose horn-rimmed glasses. You leach al some college, don'l you? Bob: Being professor of lechnology necessilales good eyesighl lhese days, Marlin. Who is lhal chap approaching us? I-le ap- pears familiar, despile lhe slighlly gray hair and speclacles. Charles: May I loin you? Maybe you don'l remember a former cheerleader of Park, bul- Marlin: Why, of course we know you. Bob, lhis is none olher lhan Charles Jurgailis, successful cheerleader and depression curer while al Park. You're a sporls announcer for some news- paper syndicale aren'l you, Chuck? Charles: Yes, Marlin, I am under conlracl for lhe Philadelphia Press, every evening al 6:45. During lhe day I have lo galher up all lhe news in lhe sporl world lhal I can. Now how aboul going over lo lhe Silver Spoon across lhe way for a bil of lunch? lScene shifls lo lhe reslauranl where al fables well-known groups are lalking. This reslauranl, as praclically all lhe olher reslau- ranls in lhe Uniled Slales, is owned by lhal aspiranl lo greal- ness, lhal lover of Gym Xa Glee Club, Klem Vakos. Philip Dahlberg: Hand me lhe sall, Roy. Have you had many iuvenile courl lrials lhe pasl few years? Thaf was sure a fine promolion you Qol aller serving Uncle Sam as a Cv-man for so long. Roy Bahnson: No, our laws are working oul prelly well, now, and lhere don'l seem lo be so many young folks breaking lhem. Al Washinglon now I handle mosl of lhe difficull cases broughl before me. Whal are you doing, Philip? Slill a musician? Philip: No, I haven'l played since drumming al lhe school dances. I followed lhe wriling profession, you know, iournalisl for lhe New York Tribune. Leo Nemer, here, beller known al Park as Pop, has really followed lhe work his shining honors al basketball gave him. Al whal school are you coaching Pop ? Leo: In Sl. Louis, Philip, lhe Sl. Louis High School. l've been lhere for almosl lwenly-four years, now, Llewellyn Jones Iyou haven'l forgollen him? Who could?l is managing my managers. I wonder if he ever will gel over being a manager of some sorl or olher? I doubl Il. Beyond us are lwo olher Park alhleles. Phil: Lel's go over and lalk. Roy: Well, look who's here. Lewis Molnar, aren'l you? And you? Why Jimmie Russell, of course. You lwo R men of years gone by, whal are you doing wilh yourselves now? James: Oh, I inheriled my falher's drug company, a few years back. The business has been going good, and I seem lo have lime now and lhen lo enioy seeing good foofball and baskefball games. I slill can'l seem lo choose of lhe lwo, which I like besl. Louis, here, also played loolball for Park. Louis: Yes, bul lhal didn'l influence my presenl career. I'm now a criminologisl, al Boslon. Well, Iislen lo lhe noise. Sounds familiar, loo. A lillle of lhe old spiril I'd say. When you finish Hail lo rhee Park High come over and lell us aboul yourselves. Earl Ellingham: We've finished. Guess you know us, so I'll lell you whal's become of me. Remember how I used lo day-dream? Well, I boughl a book on How lo Apply Day-Dreaming from a forlune leller and have become an invenlor. Al Selky, by my side, has an office nexl lo mine as a lawyer and is rapidly rising in lhis field, aren'l you? AI: You've pul me in a spol, Earl, bul I'm lrying as hard as I can lo mainlain for myself a name and I'm beginning lo see Iighll. Warren, don'l be so limid, or is il your years showing on you. Warren Nelson: I suppose.you all know lhal I wanled lo be a baseball player. I didn'l become one, bul now I'm building a new winler sladium for Indoor baseball champions. ll's lhe resull of my civil engineering career. Bill Pellibonez Now, Carl, suppose we slarl our lalk wilh your lelling me whal you have been doing wilh yourself. Didn'l you recenlly invenl some new process lhal enabled you lo relire? Carl Sabee: Yes, I did Bill. I received my lraining al a school of chemical engineering. Afler I gradualed I did a large amounl of research and analylical work for a number of companies. How aboul yourself, Bill? Bill: My office is in New York, bull do a bil of lraveling now and lhen, and as you know my hobby has always been golfing. I'm a broker now, so I spend mosl of my spare lime al lhe golf links. Oh say, lhere's a banquel we're supposed lo go lo. Sorl of a gel logelher, Lel's go and see if we can find some more ol our old pals and maybe we can gel somelhing good lo eal. I'm slarved. Carl: Well, you're nol lhe only one. I'm going, going, gone. lThe scene shifls lo lhe banquel. again al lhe Grealer La Rilz I-IoleI.l Toaslmasler, Clarence Zens: Genllemen, we haven'l much lime for our shorl speeches, so lel each one, as he is called upon, rise and briefly lell somelhing aboul himself. All: Toaslmasler Zens firsl. Clarence: All righl, all righl. Back in lhose good old high school days I admired Waller Winchell and chose newspaper work. Being a syndicale reporler, I have lo gel all of your slories for lhe morning's papers. Nexl, Senor Don Riddle. Lel's hurry a lillle. I have lo meel lhe deadline. Don: When I was in high school, I wanled lo follow in one greal fighler's foolsleps. The fighler was Joe Louis, and when I al- lained lhal goal, I wenl inlo lhe Olympics. Fighling is greal sporl, bul now managing my new prolege is even grealer sporl. Thal's all, brolhers. Bob Calkins: Well, seeing as I'm alongside you, Don, l'll con- linue. Al Park I was whal you'd call a draflsman and have used lhe lille lo advanlage in finally becoming a civil engineer. The pasl few years l've been busy al designing bridges, bul my paslime is slill dancing, old as I may seem. Oh, I'm nol so oldl Alyerd Luelloff: You bel you're nol, Bob. I liked chemislry mosl of all in school and have a posilion as a chemical engineer in a Louisiana planl. I can'l lhink of anolher lhing al lhe momenl. Arnold Carlson: Geomelry was my brighl slar, for a reason I can'l explain, and I enioyed playing baskefball immensely. My job is righl here in Racine as fire inspeclor. Edward Charewicz: I suppose I look a lillle fanned for lhis lime of year.,I iusl relurned from Soulhweslern Africa, where I did some game hunling. I lravel Africa lwice a year, and a few years back I was a dancer of lhe lype of a fellow famous in our school days-Fred Aslaire. Edward Maresh: Yes, and you made some mighly fine appear- ances in musical comedy, loo, Ed. As for me, I'm champion pinochle player and a civil engineer. I had so much exlra lime al my engineering iobs lhal I iusl nalurally maiored in pinochle. l'll challenge anyone lo a game afler lhis banquel. Does anyone wanl lo lake me up? Paul Will: We don'l dare lry bealing you. I iusl broke my Iasl record here. I ddin'l hear aboul lhe game unlil Iasl nighl when I had reached lhe half way mark of my fiflielh lrip around lhe world. Then did I show speedl I guess in Tokio lhey're slill wondering whal il was lhal came and wenl al lhe same second. Bul I iusl had lo gel here. Clarence: Now, I guess, our round lable discussion has been concluded, so lel's proceed wilh lhe nexl imporlanl phase in a banquel, lhis lime saved for lhe Iasl. Bring on lhe food. Curlain Row I: Jack Barnard-7, Joel Barre-H-8, Phyllis Brown- I6, Donald Bezuclwa-IO, Bill Beyer-5, Row 2: Mardell Cnrislensen-I4, Bill Denlnarn-9, Mar- garel Caynalc-I6, Roberl Calkins-IZ, Arnold Carlson --l2. ' Row 3: Harold Nelson, June Clwrislenson-7, John du Domaine-7, Barbara Cobb-5, l-lerberf Crane-7. Row 4: Edward Fliss-II, Tommy Del.uca-6, Lucille Dreyer-I6, Fosfer Diley-I3, Verna M. Erdmann-7. Row 5: John Czifo-II, Earl Ellinglnam-I2, Mildred Barla-7, Sieve Duzi-I4, Marion Corsie-I. lScene number follows name.l :'.'Lf 'Th Row I: Dorolliea Gere-l5, Donald l-larnmes-I3, Belle l-liaH-7, Riclward l-larisen--7, Sally Gales-I3. Row 2: Laura Freeman-7, Harold Gibbs-I6, Francis Gere-IO, Paul Gluclw-9, Lucy Gulowslci-I6. . Row 3: Charles l-lader-2, Jeanne Forclice-4, Gerald l-lansen-7, Grela l-lansen-5, Marie Fornary-4. Row 4: Gordon lnce-3, Anna l-lein-9, Mariorie Han- sen-7, Rullw l-lerms-I4, LeRoy l-linze-8. Row 5: Anna Jansen-IO, Jane l-lood-7, Charles Floyd -I7, Violel Hoffman-IO, Belly Jensen-I4. lscene number follows name.l x' an ,AEM i i l M8 V' Q SCENE XIII I Place: Main dining room oT Bob's Brick Bungalow, popular rendezvous Tor Racine's older seT. Time: November, I966, on eve oT Park-Horlick game. Bob Han- son, owner oT nighT-club in cenTer oi a cleared space surrounded on Three sides by guesT Tables. Bob: Ladies and genTIemen, I'm deIighTed To see so many oT my old classmaTes here in my nighT-club This evening. IT brings back many Tond memories. I am going To Take This opporTuniTy To have some of These Tormer sTudenTs oT Park say hello To you TonighT. buT beTore I do so, I will call upon The New MaesTro and his I7-piece orchesTra, none oTher Than FosTer Diley. FosTer, won'T you inTroduce some of The oTher members oT your or- chesTra? FosTer:, I sure will, Bob. Ladies and genflemen, iT gives me greaT pleasure To be in Racine again aTTer a Tour' oT The SouTh American counTries and Mexico. Nowhere have I received such a warm recepTion as in The IiTTle old home Town. One member of my orchesTra once played in The Park High band-The boy who seems To have Tound The FounTain oT YouTh is none oTher Than Jack Thompson. Since leaving Park, he has Traveled wiTh' many orchesTras, and I am glad To have secured him aT lasT Tor my orchesTra. We will now play Park I'-ligh's land Tex ReynoId'sl Theme song, TweITTh STreeT Rag. lOrchesTra pIays.I Bob: Thank you! And now may I inTroduce The greaT TooTbalI coach, Tom Kennedy. He is aT presenT coaching Racine's Racing Racers. Mr. Kennedy! Tom: Howdy, Tolks. I cerTainIy am exciTed To be here on The eve oT anoTher big game beTween Park and I-Iorlick. I can re- member The Thrill I used To geT when The crowd yelled as I ran ouT on The field-wiTh The waTer pail. OT course, our old Alma MaTer will win. , Bob: Thanks, Tom. And I hope Park does winl When we were diIigenT seniors back in '36, who would have ThoughT ThaT any OT our cIassmaTes would be running up To Mars in I966? BuT ThaT's iusT whaT is happening. We have wiTh us TonighT Two men who have iusT reTurned Trom This paradise. Ladies and genTIemen, Tom ATkins and Andy Pociusl IVigorous appIause.I Tom: Hello, everyone. As Bob Told you, Andy and I iusT came down from Mars. When we were yeT in school, we were very much inTeresTed in airplanes. Now we own an airplane TacTory in Mars. And, say, business is Tine. Andy: You are righT, Tom. And business isn'T The only Tning ThaT is Tine in Mars. You should see The dancer aT our TavoriTe caTe. She's a Racine girl, niece oT Jessie Nelson, one oT our way-back-when school chums. Jessie wanTed Maybelle To become a sTenographer, buT IiTTIe Maybelle wanTed To dance. Now her name is high in IighTs, so go up and see her some Time. lExiT.I Bob. We seem To be hiTTing The high spoTs here. We have an- oTher aviaTor wiTh us also. He is William PeTkus. He now Teaches his TavoriTe hobby-To Tly. Yes, I said hobby. PssTT. This is a secreT-his TavoriTe hobby is girls. Well, William, have you anyThing To say? William: I regreT ThaT I have buT one IiTe To devoTe To flying- and The gals. Bob: And now I wanT To read a Telegram I iusT received Trom Louisiana: DEAR BOB. SORRY I COULDN'T GET BACK TO RACINE TONIGHT STOP JUST DEFEATED DICTATOR DONALD HAMMES STOP AM NOW DICTATOR MYSELF STOP HAMMES IN HOS- PITAL STOP IN LOVE WITH NURSE ALICE STIRLE STOP WILL MARRY SOON STOP NO HARD FEELINGS BETWEEN US STOP AM LEAVING BATON ROUGE TOMORROW A. M. 8:30 STOP WILL ARRIVE RACINE TIME FOR GAME STOP AM USING NEW CAR JORGENSON VIZ RICHARD JORGENSON Bob: I am especially proud To have as my guesTs TonighT Two IighTs oT Broadway. I now presenT The greaT Swedish sTar oT ThaT once Tamous show, Queen Pianinaf' Miss IngreTa Gallbo. We all used To know her as Ingrid Gall. Take The spoT-IighT. Ingrid lwiTh sophisTicaTed, Swedish airlz Ay used To be so popular ven ay vas young buT ay sTiIl haf my aksenT. Ja. Ay'm so Tir'd. Ay Tank ay go To an old maid's home. Vell, gooT luck To Park. Bob: Thank you, Miss Gallbo. And The oTher sTar, my Triends, is ThaT sTupendous lion Tamer, Louis Bogan. He goT his sTarT Trying To Tame The rushing lions in The halls aT Park. Now he's in This vaudeville acT, and making, The ladies' hearTs go piT-paT. Some Tamer, I'II say. Won'T you say someThing To The Tolks, Louis? Louis: Thank you: I'm glad To be here This evening. Bob: Thank you, Louis. ThaT was brieT and To The poinT. BuT you were always one oT The sTrong, siIenT Type. AnoTher ceIebriTy is The noTed Torch singer, Lois Wyman. She used To sing in The Park ChorisTers and has sTudied in Paris and ITaIy. Come, nighT- ingalel Won'T you sing a song Tor us, Lois? Lois: Why, I'd love To, Bob, buT The voice isn'T whaT iT used To be. BuT l'II Try The verse and everyone can loin in The chorus of The Man on The Flying Trapeze. Bob: IATTer The singing.I Thank you, Lois. One of Miss Wyman's besT Triends is also wiTh us TonighT. This person has considerable IiTerary abiIiTy, which was apparenT even in her school-days. She has become well known as a poeTess now. May I presenT Miss Lucille Tarro? ILucille briefly rises aT her TabIe.I Miss Tarro's laTesT achievemenT is a book enTiTIed Pie-Eyed Piper PeTe, which you will surely enioy. Now everyone who aTTended TooT- ball games will remember The boy who could answer To The call sf ls There a docTor in The crowd? I speak oT none oTher Than James SaTch Paulson. WhaT are you doing now, Jimmy? Jimmy: Well, while aT school I was associaTed wiTh a liTTIe black box. Now I deal in big boxes as an underTaker. I goT my sTarT by helping my uncle during high school days. Bob: WhaT do you Think of The game Tomorrow? Jimmy: Oh, Park is sure To win. Bob: Thank you, Jimmy. We have a noTed banker and Tinancier here, Too. Will you come up here, sir? IA Tall porTIy genTIeman sTeps To Bob's side.l This is Mr. Allen PorTer! He has become a greaT figure in The Tinancial world. Mr. PorTer, whaT is your opinion in regard To The ouTcome of The game? Allen: I have Two sons playing in Tomorrow's game. They are The PorTer Twins, Raymond and James R. WiTh Them in The game Park will win wiThouT any Trouble. Bob: And now, I presenT a Tigure who is well-known To mosT women in The audience. She is Sally of Radiolandf' a proTege of Sylvia of Hollywood. Do you remember Sarah GaTes? Sarah, Tell us abouT your rise To success. Sarah: Why, during high-school days, I was deTermined To bee come a beauTy operaTor. One oT my hobbies was coIlecTing pic- Tures of radio sTars. I noTiced ThaT Too many oT The Teminine sTars were quiTe porTIy, so I deTermined To Tell Them how To reduce. ThaT's how I became SalIy oT RadioIand. Bob: Thank you, Sally. And now, here come Two young ladies who iusT arrived from Paris, DoroThy MaImsTadT and Eleanor Malko. DoroThy: We're very glad To be in Racine in order To aTTend The Park-Horlick game. Eleanor and I were always inTeresTed in spprTs. We were bofh R girls. OT course, we know ThaT Park wi win. Bob: Did you see anyone you knew in Europe? Eleanor: We Tound none oTher Than Lydia Madsen operaTing a chain of Missions. She's converTed many. Who would have ThoughT ThaT Lydia would have Turned inTo a missionary when all her ambiTions seemed To be Toward a secreTarial posiTion? DoroThy: And while in England we meT an American on The English police Torce. The bobbie's name was Jimmy LuTTer. Bob: We're very graTeTul Tor your news, girls. We have only Two more celebriTies wiTh us. One is an arTisT. She has won Tame in Paris Tor her many painjings. I speak of Miss EdiTh Nelson. IEdiTh rises aT her Table.l Bob: The lasT celebriTy did noT wander Trom The home Town, buT became business manager oT our leading newspaper, Racine's RiTzy WriTs. He also had a parT in The dramaTic producTion, Romeo and JuIieT. Mr. John Medzisl IJohn, his Tace The color oT The sunseT, sTeps inTo The limeIighT and Then back inTo The shadows.I ' Bob: Well, everybody, I hope you have enioyed This evening. I'Il see you aT The game Tomorrow. LeT us all hope Tor The besT. Play, John, I mean FosTer. CurTain SCENE XIV Place: HoTeI MeTropoIiTan, Racine. Time: I966. He: Yes, I remember you very well. You were in so many dra- maTic producfions. I suppose you're on The sTage? She: Oh dear me, no. lA sigh.l I someTimes wish I had, buT raising a family leaves no Time for ThaT. There is always sewing or cleaning To do. He: I suppose you're righT. She: And whaT are you doing. Mr. Duzi? Your firsT name is STeve, isn'T iT? STeve Duzi: I'm connecTed wiTh a magazine, PicToriaI Review, a paTTernmaker, you know. And whaT is your name now, Mrs.- She: SmiTh. Mrs. Marion Hislop SmiTh. Duzi: NoT PeTer SmiThl Mrs. SmiTh: No. Aloysius Alexander SmiTh. Duzi: Ah yes, he's The Tamous BiologisT, isn'T he? Mrs. SmiTh: Yes, ThaT's righT. IAT a Table nearby are Three women who, True To repuTaTion, haven'T forgoTTen how To TaIk.l CenTer Woman: Girls, doesn'T iT make you feel young To be called girls? IT's been so long since we've all been TogeTher ThaT I know mosT of us have probably forgoTTen each oTher. Suppose I ask each oT you a few quesTions and you'II all promise To answer Them. Are you willing? lGeneraI chorus of assenT.l Then we'II begin wiTh The one on my righT. WhaT is your name and whaT have you been doing wiTh yourself? Sfella Anderson: All righT, honey pie, I'Il Talk. Well, you see, I've really become an English Teacher. My home has been in Florida for The pasT 30 years. I iusT love baThing in The ATIanTic and Gulf of Mexico. IT keeps my schoolhouse figure. CenTer Woman: Are you married, S+eIIa? Stella: No, I've been single Tor so long ThaT I'm Too happy having my own way, To wanT To change. Voice from door: When do we eaT? STella: Oh look aT ThaT lovely red hairl WhaT's your name, if I may ask? Red Top: My cognomen is MerTins. Edward MerTins. The vulgar call me Red May I enTer and replenish my weakening spiriTs wiTh assorfed Types of yon delicious ToodsTuTTs? CenTer Woman: No! Please leave unTil The bell is rung. Ah me-. lRed hair reTreaTs around The corner of The door.I CenTer Woman: I'm Mabel Larson, The chief dieTiTian aT a hos- piTaI. I goT, or raTher Took, The day off Today so I wouIdn'T be IefT ouT of This grand reunion. I said To myself, Mibbs, you leT The people worry abouT 'hlling Their energy meTaboIism or Their iodine inTake Themselves. This is going To be your vacaTion. So here I am. Third Person: My dear, you did righT. I was Mardell Chrisfensen and had an exceIlenT iob as privaTe secreTary To Sol Ginsberg, of AmalgamaTed Chain LeTTers. BuT I always had aspiraTions To- ward being a millionaire, so I married my boss. lThe scene shiTTs To The fronT room where we find Two prosperous looking genTIemen. Looks like Kenny Poulson and Ralph Karlson. Jognny lDvorsky approaches, radiaTing personalify like a gram of ra num. Johnny: How do you do, genflemen, how do you do! Everybody happy I hope? Why, I remember you. You're Ralph Karlson. Skinny, we used To call you. BuT I musT confess ThaT The oTher genTleman is aImosT a sTranger To me. Ralph: Johnny Dvorsky, This genTIeman lAhemll in whose com- pany l'm noT so proud To be is Kenny Poulson. Kenny: Don'T mind him, Mr. Dvorsky. He's somewhaT peeved because I'm doing much beTTer Than he is. You see, we run rival Theafers, and business wasn'T so good a while back. Then I re- membered how, when we were boys, The manager used To pack The folks in wiTh The counTry sTore one nighT, give away dishes anoTher. So I decided To combine The Two and give away hus- bands To The holders of The lucky numbers. You should see The women Tlock in! WhaT are you doing now? Johnny: The shingle hanging in fronT of my house reads Dr. John Dvorsky. Ralph: ThaT cerfainly is a noble vocaTion, Johnny. You know, I've been having pains IaTely and- Johnny: BuT I'm noT ThaT kind oT a docTor, Skinny. I'm a Eefeznlarian. lSkinny leTs ouT a horse laugh. EnTer Maior RoberT miT . RoberT: WhaT's The maTTer in here, is everybody dead? Roy Haggard: You need a class pin To enTer This suiTe. RoberT: Class pin? I need no Class pin. I am Major RoberT SmiTh of The UniTed STaTes Army. If necessary I shall call ouT a plaToon of reserves To obTain my obiecfive. Roy: Oh, don'T geT so exciTed, SmiTh. You weren'T quiTe so exalTed The lasT Time I saw you. I believe iT was aT WesT PoinT, and you were being braced by an upper classman. And don'T forgef a cerTain Hi-Y iniTiaTion, raw oysTers and- RoberT: Yes, yes, Haggard, ThaT's quiTe enough. Didn'T They call you DoroThy Haggard because every girl you had was named DoroThy? Roy: I married one, DoroThy Murphy. I'm sorry she isn'T here TonighT, buT she had To give a cooking lesson To some fighTers, How To Make Punch. Oh yes, she has a large posiTion in her own cooking Iaborafory, and does she make The Tine meals. She aImosT became an invalid Though, in her near accidenT wiTh a Tire engine lasT monTh. RoberT: WhaT are you doing now, Haggard? Roy: I'm driving a rockeT Truck beTween here and The moon for The Imperial Space Truck Lines. Say, who is ThaT family over There? The baby's been howling all nighT. RoberT: I don'T know. LeT's ask. lThe woman is a sIighT IiTTle Thing, and The uncomforTabIe faTher is holding The child, which seems reminiscenT of a DemocraTic campaign issue. His crooning To assuage The feelings of The infanT seem To be having an un- desired efTecT. He is singing, Buy low, buy low. I Husband: Please, Lovey, will you Take The baby? He- Wife: Harrison Levin, don'T you have any respecT for woman- hood? I'm on my feeT all day supporTing a family, and you wanTing To run around all nighT To silly reunions. IT's iusT pure selfishness. Goodness knows iT's noT easy for me wiTh my I85 pounds. Hubby: How much, dear? Wifey: Well, cerTainly noT more Than 200. And whaT's more, I don'T wanT To hear anoTher word from you. When you sold Mr. Hood a suiT of cloThes and he wore iT where iT could be seen, iT ruined your business. Adoring Husband: Please Magdalen, how can you be so cruel? lThe scene shiffs To The dining room.l Helen JenisTa: I'm going To ask you one aT a Time for your names. We've arranged wiTh The local radio sTaTion To broadcasT your ansmers To all The fans. OT course, you know who l am- Helen JenisTa-clever designer, very clever. You, please. Your name? FirsT Person: I? I am EIberT Rexilius-poliTician. You know-I am a cabineTmaker. Ha-ha-hal lNo one else laughs.l Well, someTimes I iusf Tell jokes for my own amusemenT, anyway. Do you know This girl? No? Tell 'em who you are girlie. Girl: I'm Miss EsTher Fisher. And don'T call me girlie. I'm a Teacher. Elberh A Teacher? How nice. WhaT subiecT do you Teach? EsTl1er: Well. I'm noT exacTly a Teacher. I am one of The mem- bers of The punishmenT deparTmenT. I have charge of The deparT- menT for TaIkaTive boys and girls whom we punish by wrisT- slapping. Five wrisT-slaps apiece generally suffice. Has anyone ever heard oT Bob Johnson? ElberT: Yes, he's on Tour playing MacbeTh. EsTher: Oh-on The piano? ElberT: Speaking of music, whaTever happened To KenneTh Han- sen who used To play The violin? I hear he married a girl who was in his class. EsTher: Yes, he married BeTTy Marie lVIondiel Jensen. He's making a concerT Tour in Europe, aT presenT. EIberT: I suppose his wife accompanies him on The piano. EsTher: ThaT's enough ouT of you. Now we have only Three IefT. Begin from IefT To righT. FirsT Person: I'm RuTh Herms. I recenTIy received a pension from Park High School because I was gassed. My roll call was on The Third Tloor righT across The hall Trom The base of opera- Tions. So I haven'T been doing much of anyThing excepT looking for The ParTy responsible. I undersTand he wenT To CaIiTornia for his heaITh. Second Person: And I'm PaTricia McDonald. My friends call me PaT. I'm a Traveling saleslady. In case any of you wanT TO pur- chase some cosmeTics, l'Il be glad To give you a facial. Third Person: And I'm Alfred Knudson. I sTarTed ouT as a paT- Ternmaker buT found myselT Thinking aviaTion, Talking aviaTion, dreaming, eaTing, and sleeping avial-ion. So I ended up a ianiTor aT The flying field. Helen JenisTa: Oh myl Don'T people have more fun Than any- body? CurTain Row I: Mary Jensen-l5, Harry Milchell-ll, Eleanor Mallco-I3, Jimmie Luller-I3, Eugenia Levin-I. Row 2: Llewellyn Jones-I2. Marcella Johnson-5, Rob- erf Johnson-I4, Mildred Killips-8, Erna Kirkegaard-7. Row 3: Elhel Jensen--5, Torn Kennedy-I3, Mary J. Krause-I5, Frederick Kobal-9, Warren Larson-8. Row 4: Richard Jorgensen-I3, Jeanne l.aTour-5, Lucille Lehman-I6, Roberl Larson-3, Elizabelh Lawler-I, Row 5: June Meyer-3. Herschel Jones-3, Edward Charewicz-I2, Irma Lassen--3, Alyerd Luellolil-l2. lScene number follows name.l if 55 X2 will Row I: Leo Nemer-I2, Bernice Pefers-IO, Andrew Po- cius-I3, Don Richardson-5, LoreHa Richards-7. Row 2: Margarei' Nelsen-5. Carol Morfensen-7,Jerome Roberfs-5, Dorofhy Murphy-I3, Tlneda Taylor-5. Row 3: Doro'H1y Nelsen-5, Andy Pendl-4, Jessie Nei- son-I3, Kenne+h Poulsen-I4, I-larrie+ Rasmussen-5. Row 4: Harvey Olson--2, Verna Nelson-5, Dorofhy E. Nelson-I6, Elberf Rexilius-I4, Helen Puchinsky-I6. Row 5: Margaref Peferson-I5, Wiilard Phelps-4, Janice Moree-7, Ar+ Pedersen-8, Mekala Ress-8. IScene number follows name., SCENE XV Place: Home ol Mr. and Mrs. James Millin. Time: I966. James: Possibly you are wondering why I assembled you all here logelher. Well, since loday Park plays Horlick, I lhoughl il would be nice if we could all go lo lhe game en masse. Belly Mann Millin: Splendid, dear. Bul, you know Miss Minshall wanls an inlerview? Belly Minshallz Yes, I do, bul lhal can wail. Besides, lalking over old limes, and seeing lhe game mighl give me an inleresling slory. Whal do you lhink? Jimmie: Well, il lhal's whal you wanl, l'll begin by revealing lhal John Bramow is lhe decoralor ol lhis house. Kay Balenburg: And lolks, Bunny swore nol lo gel married unlil he was over lhirly years old! I-le is lorly-eighl loday and slill single. I-low's lhal lor delerminalion? John Bramow: lBlushing, il possibIe.l Oh, why Well, seeing everybody is lelling secrels aboul lell a lew. Take our hosl. I can remember in served on all lhe clubs he had lime lor when Belly. bring lhal up? each olher, l'll high school he he wasn'l wilh Kay: Those sure were lhe good old days. Well, l've gol Iols lo be lhanklul lor. I always had one ambilion besides my vocalion, lhal ol being able lo lravel around lhe world, and Iasl year my dream came lrue. Belly Minshallz I guess il's my lurn now. I came lrom a high school in Dixon, Illinois. I always did like newspaper work, so I guess I iusl nalurally became an edilor. I'm planning lo gel a scoop lrom lhese revelalions. Belly Millin: In lhal case l'll add a lew lhings. I didn'l belong lo many clubs because I liked knilling and swimming loo well. I planned lo be an inlerior decoralor like John, bul lhen Jimmie proposed and I--well, we won'l go inlo lhal. Dorolhy, whal aboul you? Dorolhy Marlin: As a girl I wanled lo be a slenographer and managed lo gel a iob as Mrs. MiIIin's secrelary. Thal's all I have lo say, excepl lhal I did have a nice nickname. They called me Dody. Well, Minnie, you're nexl. Minnie Schafer: Thal is nol all. l'll lell you a secrel. Can you imagine Dody wanling lo lump oll lhe Woolworlh Building wilh a Iighled cigarelle in her moulh and playing Comel? Well, she did! I guess you all know I'm Mr. MiIIin's slenographer. Danc- ing and swimming are my lavorile paslimes, and I always was crazy aboul gym work. ll's a wonder I'm nol a gym leacher, bul I suppose lhal's Iile. Mary Jane Krause: I s'pose il is. I lhoughl I'd gel married young, and here I am an old maid. I-lo Hum! Swimming and goll were my lavoriles wilh a louch ol reading and French sandwiched in lor diversion. My nickname is Krause. Mary Jane: l'll lell you aboul Violel Barkowski, used lo be on lhe honor roll: lavorile sporl, lennis: paslime, sewing mixed in wilh walching beskelball and loolball games and collecling movie slars' piclures. I know lhal she wanled lo be a secrelary, so maybe lhal's why she's privale secrelary lo lhe presidenl ol lhe Iargesl movie corporalion in lhe world. Belly Minshall: Do you remember John Rooney, lhe baseball liend? Everylhing he did seemed lo concern baseball. Why even now he owns lhe conslruclion company lhal is building all lhese new baseball parks. Kay: By lhe way, does anyone remember Dol Gere? John: Ido. Why? , Kay: She is in Europe gelling inlormalion lor a movie company. Dorolhea always liked dramalics, besides secrelarial work, so she combined lhe lwo and is a special secrelary lor one ol lhe Iargesl lilm companies, lhe same one 'lor which Violel works, loo. John: Lucky person! She came over lo Park lrom l-lorlick, didn'l she? . Kay: Yes, she did. Say, does anyone know anylhing aboul Belly Jane l-linlz? Minnie: I do. She is clerlcing in some slore downlown. I used lo see her al lhe Uplown Village quile a lol, bul she doesn'l go lhere much anymore. I guess her clerking requires loo much loolwork. John: Whal happened lo Dick Neumann? Minnie: He's a machinisl, bul l've heard he was going lo quil lhal iob and make carlooning his work. I-le's done some as an amaleur, and his carloons allracl a lol ol allenlion. James: lTurning lo Kay and Belly Minshall.I Say, whal are you lwo lalking aboul? No secrels here, y'know. Kay: Oh, we were lalking aboul Gordon Lisby. You musl re- member him? I-le never said much aboul il, bul his secrel ambilion was lo be a crooner. Now he is known all over lhe U.S.A. James: Thal's lunny. l've never heard him. Kay: I-le goes by lhe name ol Gordon Crosenby. Now don'l lell me you've never heard ol him. James: Oh, sure! Who hasn'l? To lhink lhal Gordon Crosenby and Gordon Lisby are lhe same! Mary Jane: I remember reading in lhe paper Iasl year ol how Clara Jensen finally relired lrom her midgel car racing career. She was quile a whiz al il-America's laslesl, I guess. She slarled oul driving a Packard and look where she ended up-in a midgel car. Belly Minshall: Yes, and I heard she cleared up a couple ol million in lhe races, loo. Mary Jane: Well, she always did wanl lo be a millionaire. Kay: See lhis ducky hanky l've gol? I gol il lrom Flash Jensen's handkerchief slore. John: Flash Jensen? Who's lhal? Kay: Mary Jane Jensen, silly. She runs lhis unique shop in New York and sells imporled handkerchiels ol all shapes, sizes, and descriplions. Belly Millin: Why haven'l I heard ol il? Jimmie, when we go lo New York nexl week, I'm going lo buy loads ol lhem. James: lGroaning.l Ooooooooh! Belly Minshall: Ann Krucas, BA., M.A., PhD., LlD. H John: Whal's lhal? You sound like a second F. D. R. Belly: Oh, lhal's iusl Ann Krucas wilh her degrees. John: She's head ol lhe English Deparlmenl al lhe Universily ol Wisconsin now, isn'l she? Belly: Yes, and l-l. M. is- John: Whal, more inilials? Did lhe alphabel soup you had lor lunch allecl you lhal badly? Belly. Thank goodness I'm palienl. My dear Mr. Bramow, H. M. is lhe universily's illuslrious glee club leader, Miss Helen Mar- garel Jacobsen. Kay: Park seems lo be very well represenled al lhe U. Re' member when Margarel Pelerson was lhe girl's alhlelic inslruclor lhere? She's relired now and wriling a book on I-low lo Teach Gymnaslics. Dorolhy: La Verne Mueller had designs on a secrelarial posi- lion, bul she changed lhem lo dress designs, She owns lhe De Luxe Dresse Shoppe downlown. James: Do you know lhe blonde who didn'l even wanl lo die in old age-Muriel Pelersen? She claims lhal she'II live forever, or almosl lorever because ol one lhing-she doesn'l like boys. Now isn'l lhal iusl like a blonde? Mary Jane: I suppose you've all heard aboul lhe Losl and Found Pel Deparlmenl Melba Skellon has al Park? She haled all lhe cals and dogs lhal wandered lhrough lhose now anceslral halls. so she lounded lhis deparlmenl lo lake care ol lhem unlil called lor: now every high school in lhe counlry has one, and she is general manager ol lhem all. Kay: Anolher person who has a iob al Park is lhal John Vernel who came here lrom Oak Park. I-Ie can now be lound in lhe Kipi Room helping lhose lloundering seniors ol loday lill oul lheir blanks. John: Bud Slewarl was champion professional wresller lor a long lime, unlil age slarled lo show his work up. Now he's lhe coach ol Park's slale champion wreslling leam. James: Then lhere's Marie Shoop, loo. She has a beauly parlor downlown, and lrom whal l've heard, il's an especially good one. Dorolhy: Whal do you know aboul beauly parlors? James: Say, have you ever seen some ol lhe bills Belly runs lhere? Bul we can'l gel slarled on lhal or we'll miss lhe game. Which reminds me, lel's gel hobblin' along. Curlain SCENE XVI Place: The W.P.H.S. Museum. Time: l966, beTore The Big Game. Guide: lApproaching visiTors.l May l help you? lim chieT guide here, and iT may be more inTeresTing iT The subiecTs were ex- plained. , . VisiTors: ThaT's a good idea. We're wiTh you. n . 1 Guide: To The righT you have Lorne lHiTlerl Hilliers world- Tamous spoon collecTions. Several years ago he made. an eTTorT To become a second HiTler, buT his spoon collecTing inTerTered. A VisiTor: Who had The ambiTion To collecT all These picTures? Guide: MargareT Caynak-Park's mosT ambiTious person. AnoTher VisiTor: BuT why all The nurses among The picTureS? Guide: She wanTed To be a nurse, buT The Tield was Too crowded. Since she can'T sTay Trom The career enTirely, she Tulhlls her earnin s b collecTin These picTures. y lTisiTor:g Ohll Tor heav3n's sake, look aT King Edward Vlll doing a rhumbal And There's WashingTon's version oT The Virginia Reel! , Guide: Those ingenious charcoals are by Ellen Anderson. ArenT They gay? Over There is our exhibiT oT many Things Tromlmany lands, donaTed by The Park Travel Bureau, headed by Harold Gibbs when he isn'T eaTing or sleeping. Grace Mandernach is vice-presidenT and does research reading. Helen Puchinsky, The chief publiciTy agenT, may have been quieT aT school., buT never geT her To Talk abouT The Bureau. Helen RivesT is The chieT secreTary. VisiTor: Ye liTTle pink Toad sToolsl WhaT is This woman doing wiTh all These books and papers scaTTered around? Guide: Shhh-you musTn'T disTurb her. She's Phyllis Brown, sTill Trying To Tinish her homework in one evening: only now iTs cor- recTing papers, she being a Teacher now. A VisiTor: Where did all These old law books come Trorn-The Garden oT Eden? AnoTher VisiTor: Don'T be silly-you never heard oT Eve suing Adam Tor anyThing, did you? Guide: OT course noT. These were donaTed by ThaT asTounding accumulaTor of ancienT law books, Elsie Sorenson. This nexT room conTains whaT everybody will be inTeresTed in-dress designing. DoroThy Nelson made These ducky Tennis and ice skaTing models. She specializes in cosTumes Tor Those Two sporTs because she wanTed a yeareround iob. Y'know, Tennis in summer and skaTing in winTer. Male VisiTor: Oh, my precious aunT, whaT are Those? Guide: Oh, Those? Dippy Droysen-excuse me, I mean KaThryn Droysen-made Them. Here are some surprises Tor you men- The newesT American creaTions in men's wear. Her TavoriTe is ThaT one wiTh The baby blue Tuxedo and The rose pink cape. To The rescue of designers, who design cloThes Tor everyone excepT Themselves, came Frances WalquisT. They call her D.D.D. lDress Designers' DelighT.l VisiTor: Yeah, l've goT some of her sTreamlined overalls. JusT To make The work glide along, y'know. lOrchesTra music is heard.l VisiTor: ThaT sounds like EdiTh Anderson and her Dandy Andy's. Guide: CorrecTl EdiTh is direcTor, arranger, and manager. VisiTor: l scarcely recognized The music wiTh ThaT singing guiTar. Guide: They musT have kepT Willey ouT of The woods Today. Willey lRoberT WilTong To youl is supposed To be in The band regularly, buT he's noT To be Tound when There's a Tree around. He wanTed To be a ToresT ranger once, and he never goT over The noTion. iWoman's voice heard singing currenT hiT.l VisiTor: ThaT musT be Lola Ashley. She's sTill beauTiTul, isn'T she? Remember how she won The Tifle of Miss America'in i940 by going inTo a song and dance Tor The iudges. AnoTher VisiTor: ThaT song is Sylvia Reder's laTesT. She's a well-known composer now. Guide: Too bad Marie AlberTini, The comedienne, won'T do her acT beTore a sTudio audience, buT she's afraid people will laugh aT The wrong Time or noT aT all. VisiTor: Why such a common Thing as a parachuTe in a museum? Guide: ThaT is an exTraordinary parachuTe, The one RuTh Jen- sen usqed when she made her TirsT iump. YesTerday she made her IOOOT . VisiTor: l ThoughT she always haTed Talling. Guide: ThaT's iusT why she sTarTed iumping. Why, even The 'lirsT Time she wenT up in a plane she had To bail ouT. She ThoughT :T was so much Tun To be quiTe sure oT how you were going To geT back To Terra Tirma ThaT she's sTill bailing ouT. ' A VisiTor: They say she Takes her nurse, STella Yannish, wiTh her iusT in case. She's sTill noT cerTain she'll land saTely. I VisiTor l: l've heard ThaT Mike Bosz, her engineer and mechanic, is Trying To Tind a subsTance ThaT will inTlaTe a person so as To allow him To descend saTely wiThouT a parachuTe. Guide: Over here we have our exhibiTs Trom Doris Gilmore's Home Tor The Unmarried Girl GraduaTes oT WashingTon Park High School. V VisiTor: l've heard iT called The House of ElevaTors. Why? Guide: She never did like The sTairs aT Park, so There isn'T a sTep in her house. She employs quiTe a Tew nurses, secreTaries, and hairdressers Tor The inmaTes also. VisiTor: She would! Who ever heard of an old maid who wasn'T Tussy abouT her hair? Second VisiTor: By The way, who is The one who gives advice To girls iilTed by TooTball heroes? Guide: Lucille Lehman, who's also one of The hairdressers. Re- member Lu and J. C.? DoroThy Alford, besides acTing as head nurse, keeps everybody up To daTe wiTh The laTesT dance sTeps. They dance on SaTurday nighT even if They have To dance alone. VisiTor: l've also heard They have some champion chess players. Guide: Yes, EThel Jensen, anoTher nurse, is The Top chess player in The Home. The oThers have been Trying To beaT her Tor The lasT Ten years, buT nobody has succeeded. VisiTor: My goodness, where do you geT all The inTormaTion abouT Those people? Guide: Marie Shimkus, nurse aT Times, buT usually a sTenog There, Tells iT all To me. l'll beT she could blackmail anyone There. VisiTor: Someone Told me RoberT Lee Miller is Their legal ad- viser and aTTorney, buT oTTen I see him aT baseball games wiTh his wiTe'secreTary, Lucy GuTowski. Guide: He's'goT anoTher secreTary, Lucille Dreyer, who does mosT oT The work. BuT when he wanTs To see a ballgame and work aT The same Time, he Takes Lucy wiTh him. VisiTor: ThaT reminds me-have you any more sporT collecTions? Guide: Oh, yes! Look aT all These. VisiTor: Whewl l didn'T Think There were so many auTographed pallsb baTs, and Trophies in exisTence. Where did They come rom. VisiTor ll: You don'T Tollow baseball, l can see. Why, whom gsedwopti These belong To Than Dolores Kowales' ST. Louis ar ina s. Guide: She donaTed These To us. As you know, she was always a Cardinal Tan. Now she owns The Team, and all These souvenirs came Trom World Series games They've won. VisiTor: Oh, whaT clever miniaTure bikes! Guide: These came Trom GerTrude Brix. Remember when she was The champion six-day bike rider? VisiTor: Have you heard abouT Elinor STorms and her sTring oT winning race horses? She's goT one she calls WPHS, and he's a honey. She always did like horses. Guide: RuTh Zunke donaTed These bowling Trophies. She was wgmmeps champion Tor a long Time. Now she conducTs a bowling sc oo . VisiTor: Have you any exhibiTs by ElizabeTh Ticknor, The greaT social service worker? Guide: CerTainly, righT over here. They say her greaTesT social service is arranging inTroducTions beTween girls and Their cur- renT crushes. Remember how she wanTed To meeT RoberT Tay- lor? ThaT's how iT all sTarTed. VisiTor: l wanT To show Junior ThaT picTure oT Lorayne Simonsen who did. does and always will go To bed every nighT aT 8:30. I Guide: To The leTT, madam. Lorayne has seT an example To all The world as To whaT good sleep does Tor you. She's ruining her record TonighT,'T.hough, To be on hand Tor our vicTory. How's gilpfyyfsrgsacrlgiool spiriT? Any more quesTions? lT's almosT Time e. VisiTor: M-hm. Why is This whole exhibiT being shown? Guide: Jus.T as parT oT The celebraTion of The big game. Anv oTher quesT1ons? VisiTor: Yes, who are you? lgrrndBlerTIjyN.Shores, graduaTe oT Park, '36. l like odd col- ' 'ng S0 ma 1Y of The grads, I goT This iob BuT le'f'S hurry: The Teams are o T Th T' ld 'A miss iT aT any cosT. U on e le now' and IH noi CurTain Row I. Jimmie Russell-I2, Bob Canler-I l, Belly Shores -lb, AI Sellcy-12, Alfred Shovers-6. Row 2: Richard Wilson-6, Marion Simonsen-7, Melba Skellon-l5, Helen Skewes-5, Nancy Smader--3. Row 3: Mike Bosz-16, Ronald Sorenson-I, Edwin Ry- gasewicz-I lg Lorayne Simonsen-I6, Arihur Simonsen-6. Row 4: Geraldine Wade-3, Lloyd Wheeler-9, Frances Walquisf-I6, Joe Yurkievich-5, Ruin Zunlce-16. Row 5: Slella Yannislw-lb, Clarence Sorensen-9, Sophie Wasilewicz-I, Ray Siewarl-I I, Jack Thompson-I3. lScene number follows name.l R Si . ,gf 5 1 f Q e l Q Row lzk Edward Niesen-8, Roberf Wilfong--16, Elsie Sorensen-I6, Edwin Nielsen-I I, Lorne Hillier-I6. Row 2: Myrfle Sherwood, Elizabbfh Ticknor-Ib, Juldo Calvelli-l, Ann Krucas-I5. Elinor Sforms-Ib. E Q47 ff A f 'figs 3 -if an VER? Q95 EX kgs SCENE XVII Place: Announcer's booTh aT TooTbaII Tield. Announcers: Reidar STensvaag and ArThur Lucareli, Time: November, I966. Reidar: STaTion KIPI broadcasTing Tor The WBC neTwork Trom Racine, Wisconsin. We shall bring To you The I36 homecoming TooTbalI game beTween Park and Horlick, which comes To you Through The courTesy oT Fooie Young's WeT Wash Laundry. As you have probably noTiced, judging Trom The pubIiciTy given Them, a greaT maioriTy oT I936 graduaTes have Turned ouT To be leaders in Their various Tields. ArThur Lucareli, general manager oT The WBC neTwork, was one oT Them. Today he and I will aITernaTe in Telling you oT some oT The graduaTes many oT whom are presenT already. Take iT, ArT. ArThur Lucareli: I've goT iT. Hello, audience! Forgive me Tolks, if I reminisce Too much Today, Tor in every direcTion I see Tive or six old acquainTances Trom my graduaTing class. I have as my assisTanT Reidar STensvaag, sporTs announcer, who will describe The game play by play here Today. Hello Chuck! ThaT was Charles lDynamiTel Floyd, ex-middIeweighT champion oT The world. I remember he used To cause The Park Teachers pIenTy oT Trouble in his day. AT ThaT Time his ambiTion was To work on Diesel engines. Well, life is whaT you make iT. Reidar: Folks, here comes Jasper Benny, The Tamous orchesTra leader oT The sTage, screen, and radio. He was called Lazar Benrubi when he wenT To Park. Say someThing To The audience, Jasper. J. Benny: Hello Tolks. Seeing ArT here reminds me oT The Time he was a big shoT aT Park. He was in everyThing and in neck deep Too. He wanTed To be a poIiTician. Ha! Ha! ThaT reminds me, ArT, l've a new program on The air. My Jelloians IA guy by The name oT Wilson named iT ThaT.l Play every Friday nighT. Tune in. ArThur: Always The same likable guy. Thanks, Jasper. I re- member when you supplied a Tew laughs yourself. Yes, we'II Tune in. Reidar: Say, Lucareli, isn'T ThaT RoberT Rasmussen, The Tamous bacTerioIogisT, who discovered a cure Tor cancer? He was always inTeresTed in science and maTh aT Park, and a genial Tellow Too. ArThur: Maxine Lingsweiler, Tamous aviaTrix, iusT waved aT us. She's now owner oT The RaxmaTax Flying Field in New York. Mickey always wanTed To be a boy, and I believe she was The only girl in our graduaTing class who Took prinTing. Reidar: Hi There, Nick! JusT spoke To Bob Freres, a real poli- Tician. One would have suspecTecl iT The way he held down an oTlice in pracTicaIIy every club he ioined. Was presidenT oT sTudenT council, acTuaIIy having a iob as member 'oT sTudenT council in boTh Horlick and Park aT one Time due To some TasT changing. He could cerTainIy wield a wicked Tennis rackeT and Talk you ouT oT all The poinTs aT The same Time. ArThur: Well, well, Anna! Miss Podlucky sTarTed as a mere Teacher in Park, Tolks and ended up as EducaTionaI Advisor To The DeparTmenT oT EducaTion. She was in NaTional Honor So- cieTy and on The honor roll. Did you know ThaT she has The largesT collecTion oT dogs in The whole sTaTe? Reidar: Lucareli, isn'T ThaT Jack SmiTh oT The screen and radio? Sure is. Way back in Park, Jack was inTeresTed in dramaTics, and Tolks, he played very romanTicaIly in Romeo and JulieT. Yes, he was also on The honor roll. ArThur: Over There siTs John Kropp, owner oT Those dollar chain sTores. Red liked his Tishing when he wenT To Park, and Tor his size was a corker aT baskeTbaIl and Toolball. Red was on The honor. roll Too, Tolks. I Tell you I can'T Turn around wiThouT knocking over a celebriTy. Reidar: JusT behind me siTs Irving Oneson, scienTisT, Irving has lusT published anoTher paper on The cosmic ray. Becky goT in plenfy of Things aT Park. He was one of Those people ThaT goT in The NaTionaI Honor SocieTy, and on The honor roll every semesTer. I wonder if ThaT eIecTric rifle he invenTed isn'T an guTgrowTh of his being a riTle Tan and excellenT shoT while aT ar . . - ' Tor z F lk, usT IocaTed ThaT Tamous carToonisT TT1:hll-l'ursTON2wsvpZpl3rsI Ed Warner. Ed was an arTisT aT Park T . He drew plans Tdr The I936 Kip: as well has mounTing The sziiior picTures. He claimed his greaTesT ambiTion was To be a man. Well, if aT TirsT you don'T succeed, Try again. Reidar: Hello, Mrs. Anderson, ThaT was The Tormer Rose Hoyer. Tolks. Rose, if I may call her ThaT, leads The 4QOs in her ciTy. Her daughTer is wiTh her and will be a charming debuTanT in abouT Two monThs. I mean charming-Takes aTTer her moTheI'. ArThur: ThaT's Mervin Molgaard, Reidar. He's The worlds lead- ing daredevil on The moTorcycIe. A raTher quleT Tellow aT Park. and had a hobby oT building model airplanes 'aT ThaT Time- His ambiTion once was To Travel NorTh America via moTorcycIe. He manuTacTures The Mervin machine now. you know. Reidar: There's Jerome Derks who made.The paTTerns Tor ThaT new Clipper plane. He was inTeresTed in paTTern making.aT Park Too, and now heads one OT The IargesT paTTern making indusTries in America. ' ArThur: Audience. here's Miss VioIeT Anderson, nurse To The Tamous Brown sepTupIeTs. Peg always said she wanTed To be. a nurse, and a good one she is, be gorry! Maybe when I finish describing These old acquainTances, I'II give you The reST Oi The dope abouT The game. I'm glad To see you, Chuck. I hear you have some sorT oT conTrapTion To Take eIecTriciTy ouT oT TI'ie.air. ThaT was Charles Finn, elecTricaI genius whom everybody llkecl aT Park. He also was on The old honor roll. Reidar: Look, There's Mary June ParmenTer. Boy, she used To make many hearTs beaT TasTer in her day. You know ThaT old saying, beauTiTuI buT dumb: noT her, she was one oT The honor roll. A good dancer Too, and she loved To hear The Tour oclock whisTIe, 'Tis claimed. ArThur: AnoTher ceIebriTy, Tolks, The new Tarzan oT The screen. Niels Larsen. Even back in Park The girls liked him, buT he was Too shy Tor Them. He liked goIT and chemisTry in Those days. He used To Take care oT Things as S. C. A. cashier, I guess. Reidar: And Mr. Donald RiveTT, general manager oT WesTern PrinTing, who used To wresTIe wiTh TooTbaIl and oTher Things while aT Park. ArThur: Hi, Harry. ThaT was Backbone HinchIiTTe, comedian on The Forward Shoe Program. Everybody wondered whaT Harry would use his queer humor Tor. Did he play ball as a kid? He did so. Reidar: Here's Dimmock STeves. He developed some oT Those Tlashy picTures Tor our own graduaTing Kipi ThirTy years ago. He's now whaT is known as a naTure scienTisT, buT is sfill The same quieT, serious chap he always was. ArThur: How's everyThing, Miss Madsen? Reidar, she's The same old Ruby, and is a missionary To Swifzerland. Ruby always loved The aTTernoons, she wenT To school in The morning. She was brighT, always on The go, an aThIeTic girl who TrequenTed The ice-skaTing rinks and The beaches, and she was an honor sTudenT. Reidar: Good aTTernoon, Miss McNaughTon. Miss McNaughTon is a successTul business woman now. She liked To Tease The peo- ple Then and didn'T like The sophomores running Through The halls. She enioyed all The sporTs, and I'II Tell you a secreT, even now she goes To wresTIing maTches. ArThur: Oh, There's Pauline Gibson. She musT have iusT reTurned Trom Germany. She's an Olympic skaTing Trainer There Tor The American Team ThaT was The champion This year. Say, my Time is pracTicalIy up. Reidar: Hello, There Jimmie. Mr. Tree, who manuTacTures his recenTIy designed rockeT ships. Back aT Park his TavoriTe pasTime lbesides herl was mechanical drawing. He liked To work around in chemisTry Too as well as aT baskeTbaII in gym. Al'l'l'lUf! Ilve been reminiscing Too much-iusT ThoughT I would- buT here is Finnigan, ThaT smiling Irishman, To Tinish up wiTh a Thrilling accounT of The game. CurTain SENIOR A's ACETO, ALICE G.A.A. R Girl ALBERTINI, MARIE Wichaka ALLERT, MARJORI E R Girl, G.A.A. Tri Alpha, German ANDERSEN, DOROTHY R Girl, G.A.A. ANDERSEN, MILTON S.C.A. cashier Debale, Chess, Rifle ANDERSON, GLADYS R Girl, G.A.A. Commercial Honor AN DERSON, LORRAI NE Student Council Wesf Lane Players S.C.A. cashier ANDERSON, MARION Tri Alpha ANDERSON, STELLA French ASHLEY, LOLA Sludeni Council Beacon, Wichaka AUSTIN, CAROL Sfudenl Council Beacon, G.A.A. BAHNSON, LEROY Esperanlo, German BARKOWSKI, VIOLET Beacon S.C.A. cashier Commercial Honor BARR, LOIS Sfudeni Council Commercial Honor R Girl, G.A.A. BATENBURG, KAY Sludenf Council Beacon, Tri Alpha Wichaka, Library French BECK. LESLEY Beacon, German Park High Chronicle BEN RUBI, LAZAR Commercial Honor BERGESON, NORMA S.C.A. cashier BISHOP, EDWARD Chess, Rifle SENIOR ACTIVITIES BORMAN, ROBERT Hi-Y BRAM OW, JOH N Sludenf Council BRILL, HELEN Beacon, Wichaka Chess, French BRIX, GERTRUDE German BROWN E, FLETCHER Einsteiniles BU RCZYK, FRANCES Wichaka BURGESS, MARGERY Tri Alpha, German CAPE, WELLINGTON Hi-Y CARRIER, LEONARD Rifle CHRISTENSON, GRACE Tri Alpha, G.A.A. CH RISTENSON, MYRTLE Tri Alpha, Wichaka CH RISTIANSEN, BETTY Beacon, Wichaka CLANCY, MARTIN Sfudenr Council Debafe, Hi-Y Jr. Ciiizens Forum COOK, ETHYL Wichaka Wes? Lane Players CORR, JOHN Rifle COWLEY, MARGARET Beacon, G.A.A. Wichaka Jr. Cilizens Forum DAHLBERG, PHIL Cheer Leader, Beacon Srudenl Council, HiAY Park Snappers, Chess DALLAS, PETER Sludenl Council Carfoon, Einsieinifes DAVI ES, MABLE Wicha ka, French DAVIS, LUCILLE G.A.A. DAY, GLADYS R em, G.A.A. Wichaka DAY, VIRGINIA R Girl, G.A.A. Wicha ka DEDERICH, GENEVIEVE Sfuden? Council S.C.A. cashier DESCHLER, ALICE Sfudenl Council Commercial Honor German DESMIDT, VIRGINIA R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka, French DROYSEN, KATHRYN Wichaka, G.A.A. DVORAK, JUNE Beacon, Wichaka Commercial Honor FEICHTER, RUTH Tri Alpha, German FENNELL, JACK Kipi, Rifle FERGUS, ROBERT Sludenf Council Commercial Honor FINN, CHARLES French, Einsfeiniles Jr. Cifizens Forum FRERES, BOB Sfudenl Council Kipi, Hi-Y, Debafe Chess, Science GAISER, RICHARD Hi-Y, French GERTEN BACH, JOHN German GIBSON, PAULINE wichsks, G.A.A. GILMORE, DORIS Sfudenf Council R Girl, G.A.A. Commercial Honor Wichaka GILMORE, RUSSELL Rifle GOLDBECK, ETHEL S.C.A. cashier Wichaka, G.A.A. GROENKE, LAVERNE R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka HANSEN, BOB Sfudenl Council French HANSEN, CARMA Commercial Honor HARBRI DGE, KATH RYN Wichaka, German HARE, ORLAND Cheer Leader Jr. Cifizens Forum 48 HAY, FRANK Rifle HEARY, Run-I Commercial Honor Wichaka HECK, HELEN Audubon, G.A.A. HEIN, MARY Commercial Honor Library, German R Girl, G.A.A. HELD, FRANCIS Wrong Fonl' HINCHLI FFE, HARRY S.C.A. cashier HINTZ, BETTY JAYNE S.C.A. cashier Wichaka HISLOP, MARION Nafional Honor Sludenf Council Tri Alpha, Audubon Table Tennis Wesi Lane Players HOFFMAN, DOROTHY German HOLMER, ARTHUR Sludenl' Council Science HORAK, MARY Commercial Honor Tri Alpha, French HOWARD, CLARIBEI. Sfudenl Council Commercial Honor HOYER, ROSE Wes? Lane Players Wichaka HUBER, JEAN Tri Alpha, Carloon Wicha ka HUGHES, LUCILLE Sfudenf Council Beacon, Wichaka JACOBSEN, HELEN M. Beacon, Kipi Einsteiniies JANES, HENRY Sfudenl Council S.C.A. cashier Hi4Y, R Boy JENSEN, HAROLD S.C,A. cashier JENSEN, RUTH Kipi, Park Snappers R Girl, G.A.A. Commercial Honor French, Wichaka JOHANSEN, EDITH Wichaka JOHNSON, JAN ICE Wichaka, G.A.A. JOHNSON, MARY A. Wichaka, G.A.A. Audubon JONES, DORIS Wichaka JORGENSON, HENRY R Boy, Hi-Y JURGAITIS, CHARLES Cheer Leader Jr. Cilizens Forum KATE, EDWARD S.C.A. cashier, Hi-Y KAYON, RAYMOND Sfudenf Council R Boy, Hi-Y KOBAL, DOROTHE Wichaka KOBAL, LAVERNE Wichaka KOH LMAN, FRED RIC Hi-Y KOWALES, DOLORES Commercial Honor Sfudenf Council, Kipi G.A.A., R Girl German, Audubon KROPP, JOHN S.C.A. cashier KROULIK, DOROTHY Quill Xi Scroll Sfudenl' Council Beacon, French Wesf Lane Players Tri Alpha KUBATH, NATALIE Kipi, Tri Alpha LARKE, DOROTHY G.A.A., German LARSEN, NIELS Sfudenf Council S.C.A. cashier German LARSON, MABEL R Girl, G.A.A. LEVIN, HARRISON Debafe, Chess, French LOEWECKE, WILLIAM Science LOWRY, PAUL Debate LUCARELI, ARTHUR Beacon, Hi-Y S.C.A. cashier French, Debate MADSEN, LYDIA Beacon, Wichaka Commercial Honor R Girl, G.A.A. MADSEN, RU BY Student Council MAKHOLM, ROY Commercial Honor MALMSTADT, DOROTHY Commercial Honor S.C.A. cashier G.A.A., R Wichaka Girl MANDERNACH, GRACE Beacon, Wichaka Commercial Honor R Girl, G.A.A. MAN N, BETTY Wicha ka, Audubon MAUGER, GEORGE National Honor Quill X1 Scroll Beacon, French Einsteinites, Chess Jr. Citizens Forum Commercial Honor MAY, LEROY Student Council S.C.A. cashier UR.. BOY McDONALD, PATRICIA Wichaka McELROY, LELAND Beacon MCNAUGHTON, EUNICE Wichaka MERTINS, EDWARD German MICHALAK, RAYMOND Hi-Y MILLER, ROBERT Student Council Jr. Citizens Forum MILLIN, JAMES National Honor Kipi, Hi-Y, Rifle Esperanto, Science Audubon MINSHALL, BETTY Tri Alpha, Audubon Table Tennis MOLNAR, Lewis R soy, Hi-Y MONEFELDT, GERDA Student Council Tri Alpha, Wichaka MORRISSEY, TOM Beacon West Lane Players SENOIR ACTIVITIES MORTENSEN, EDWARD S.C.A. cashier Beacon, Chess, German MOSKONOS, FRANCES Kipi, Esperanto Park Snappers, G.A.A. Jr. Citizens Forum MUELLER, DOLORES Commercial Honor Library, German G.A.A. MU ELLER, LAVERNE Commercial Honor NELSON, EDITH G.A.A. NELSON, WARREN Hi-Y NEWMAN, ROBERT R Boy, Hi-Y Table Tennis NIELSEN, EVA G.A.A. NIELSEN, THEODORA R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka NIELSON, CARL Commercial Honor Chess, Rifle OLDHAM, ROBERT Student Council Kipi, German OLK, HENRIETTA Commercial Honor Beacon ONESON, IRVING National Honor S.C.A. cashier Rifle, Audubon OSIMITZ, VICTOR Student Council German OSTLUND, CAROL National Honor R Girl, G.A.A. Commercial Honor Library, Tri Alpha PAGE, HELEN Student Council R Girl, G.A.A. PANCH ER, H ERMAN Student Council German PARMENTER, MARY JUNE Wichaka, Beacon R Girl, G.A.A. PEASE, JAM ES Debate, Audubon PET RAS, CARL Student Council PETTIBONE, BILL Hi-Y PODLUCKY, ANNA National Honor Student Council Quill 81 Scroll, Kipi Tri Alpha, French PORTER, ALLEN Student Council, Hi-Y Beacon, German Debate POTTORF, ESTHER Jr. Citizens Forum French, Tri Alpha Kipi RADEWITZ, STANLEY R Boy RASMUSSEN, ROBERT Science, Einsteinites RECUPERO, ROSE R Girl, G.A.A. REDER, SYLVIA Kipi, Wichaka RENPAUL, VIOLET R Girl, G.A.A. RITKEVICZ, VICTORIA Beacon, Wichaka R Girl, G.A.A. RIVEST, H ELEN Wichaka ROBERTS, EDWIN National Honor Student Council Debate, Chess RUDIN, FRANK IIRII Boy ' SABEE, CARL Science Einsteinites Park Snappers SAMALON, STAN LEY Rifle SCHN El DER, MARGARET Student Council S.C.A. cashier Tri Alpha, German SCOON, MARGARET Student Council S.C.A. cashier Wichaka, Library G.A.A. SEEGER, ELENORA R Girl, G.A.A. SELKY, IDA G.A.A., German SELL, WILLIAM Jr. Citizens Forum SHIMKUS, MARIE G.A.A., Wichalca 49 SHUFELT, ROBERT Beacon, German S.C.A. cashier Library, Hi-Y SMITH, JACK Rifle SMITH, ROBERT Student Council, Hi-Y SPIKA, ROBERT Audubon STEEVES, DI MMOCK Parlc Snappers Audubon STENSVAAG, REIDAR Einsteinites STIBGEN, AU BREY Park Snappers STIRLE, ALICE Wichaka, G.A.A. STRATMAN, ROBERT S.C.A. cashier STU EBER, GRANT German, Einsteinites SWANSON, HELEN Beacon, Tri Alpha Esperanto TARRO, LUCILLE Wichaka, G.A.A. TEMMER, ALEX Student Council, Kipi Chess, Hi-Y, German THOGERSEN, MARION Quill 81 Scroll Beacon, Wichaka R Girl, G.A.A. TILES, PAUL S.C.A. cashier German TOEPPE, ROBERT Jr. Citizens Forum Library, Hi-Y TREE, JAMES German TIGGES, GEORGE Hi-Y TRIGGS, EU LAH Wichalca, Library URBUSH, ZANE Rifle WARNER, EDWARD Cartoon, Kipi WESTRICK, RICHARD Audubon WILLIAMS, LLEWELYN Hi-Y, French WILLIAMSON, DORIS Wichaka, Library WITT, PAUL Student Council German WURZ, HARRISON Beacon, Wrong Font S.C.A. cashier, Hi-Y WYMAN, LOIS Wichaka, G.A.A. WYMAN, MARY EM MA R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka YENA, DON Hi-Y ZABIT, NICK National Honor Student Council Commercial Honor Beacon, Rifle Einsteinites ZENS, CLARENCE Quill 81 Scroll Beacon, German Student Council SENIOR B's ALFORD, DOROTHY G.A.A. AN DERSON, ELLEN Library ANDERSON, HAROLD S.C.A. cashier Jr. Citizen Forum Table Tennis ANDERSON, ROBERT S.C.A. cashier Debate ANDERSON, HELEN R Girl, G.A.A. ANGVICK, KEN N ETH Rifle, French ATKINS, THOMAS Student Council Beacon, Debate BALDWIN, MARJORIE Beacon, G.A.A. S.C.A. cashier BA RNARD, JACK Hi-Y. BARRETT, JOEL Student Council Beacon, Debate, Rifle Jr, Citizens Forum BARTA, MILDRED Commercial Honor Wichaka, G.A.A. Library, French BETH, LEWIS German BEYER, BILL Debate, Chess BEZUCHA, DONALD Debate, Library Audubon BOSZ, MIKE Student Council Hi-Y, German BROWN, PHYLLIS Beacon, Library Wichaka, G.A.A. CAYNAK, MARGARET Student Council CH RISTENSEN, MARDELL Wichaka, G.A.A. CHRISTENSON, JUNE S.C.A. cashier R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka CORSIE, MARION Jr. Citizens Forum S.C.A. cashier, G.A.A. French, Wichaka CRANE, HERBERT Hi-Y, Cartoon DELUCA, TOM HR.. Boy DILEY, FOSTER S.C.A. cashier French DREYER, LUCILLE Wichaka, Library Audubon, German DU DOMAINE, JOHN S.C.A. cashier, HIVY Einsteinites, Debate DVORSKY, JOHN S.C.A. cashier ELLINGHAM, EARL S.C.A. cashier ERDMANN, VERNA M. Audubon FLISS, EDWARD Hi-Y FLOYD, CHARLES German ' FORDICE, JEANNE Tri Alpha, French Wichaka, Library SENIOR ACTIVITIES FORNAY, MARIE Commercial Honor FREEMAN, LAU RA Tri Alpha GATES, SARAH G.A.A., German GERE, DOROTHEA Tri Alpha GERE, FRANCES R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka, Debate GLUCH. PAUL Park Snappers GUTOWSKI, LUCY Beacon S.C.A. cashier Commercial Honor HADER, CHARLES Wrong Font HANSEN, GERALD S.C.A. cashier Debate, Audubon HANSEN, GRETA Wichaka HANSEN, MARJORIE Tri Alpha, French HANSEN, RICHARD Student Council S.C.A. cashier Audubon, German HEIN, ANNA R Girl, G.A.A. Library, German H IATT, BETTE Wichaka HINZE, LEROY Student Council S.C.A. cashier Audubon, German West Lane Players HOFFMAN, VIOLET Wichaka, Debate G.A.A. HOOD, JANE Student Council Tri Alpha, French Jr. Citizens Forum Commercial Honor Audubon JANSEN, AN NA Wicha Ira JENSEN, BETTY Wichalra JENSEN,' ETHEL Chess, G.A.A. JOHNSON, MARCELLA R Girl, G.A.A. JOHNSON, ROBERT West Lane Players JO N ES, HERSCH EL Rifle, German JONES, LLEWELYN R Boy, Hi-Y Table Tennis JORGENSEN, RICHARD Beacon, Kipi West Lane Players KENN EDY, TOM Beacon, Debate KIRKEGAARD, ERNA West Lane Players KNUDSON, ALFRED Jr. Citizens Forum Table Tennis KOBAL, FREDERICK Cartoon KRAUSE, MARY JANE Commercial Honor French, G.A.A. KRUCAS, ANN Student Council S.C.A. cashier R Girl, G.A.A. LARSON, WARREN Chess LASSEN, IRMA R Girl, G.A.A. LENocH,vERNoN Hw'Bm LEVIN, EUGENIA Jr. Citizens Forum West Lane Players Tri Alpha LUELLOFF, ALYERD S.C.A. cashier Debate, Ritle LUTTER, JAMES Rifle, French MALKO, ELEANOR Student Council R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka, Audu bon MARU DAS, HELEN Wichaka, G.A.A. MOREE, JANICE Tri Alpha, G.A.A. MORTENSEN, CAROL Wichaka MU RPHY, DOROTHY R Girl, G.A.A. Wichaka SO NELSEN, DOROTHY J. R Girl, G.A.A. Wicha ka NELSEN,' MARGARET Tri Alpha Library, G.A.A. N ELSON, DOROTHY E. Wichaka NELSON, JESSIE Hw'em,eAA. NELSON, VERNA Wichaka NEUMANN, RICHARD Cartoon, Rifle NIELSEN, EDWIN Audubon OLSON, HARVEY Student Council PENDL, ANDREW Beacon, Audubon Park High'Cronicle Jr. Citizens Forum PETERS, BERNICE S.C.A. cashier Jr. Citizen Forum Wichaka PETERSEN, MURIEL R Girl, G.A.A. Tri Alpha, Wlchalca German PETERSON, MARGARET R. Beacon, French Wichaka, G.A.A. Commercial Honor PETKUS, WILLIAM Wrong Font PHELPS, WILLARD S.C.A. cashier Einsteinites POCIUS, ANDREW German PUCHINSKY, HELEN Commercial Honor Kipi RASMUSSEN, HARRIET E. Commercial Honor Library, G.A.A. Tri Alpha RESS, MEKALA Wichaka, French G.A.A. RICCHIO, ALDO Science RICHARDS, LORETTA S.C.A. cashier Tri Alpha ROBERTS, JEROM E Beacon, Debate RUSSELL, JIMMIE Student Council, Hi-Y S.C.A. cashier, French West Lane Players Table Tennis, Beacon Jr. Citizens Forum RYGASEWICZ, EDWIN Park Snappers SCHAFER, MINNIE German, Tri Alpha SHORES, BETTY Student Council Wichaka, Library SIMONSEN, MARION Commercial Honor SKELTON, MELBA S.C.A. cashier Tri Alpha, Debate SKEWES, HELEN Wichaka SMADER, NANCY Jr. Citizens Forum Beacon, Tri Alpha SORENSEN, CLARENCE Beacon, Rifle SORENSEN, ELSI E Wichaka Debate, G.A.A. SORENSEN, RONALD Einstei nites STORMS, ELINOR Wichaka, Audubon West Lane Players THOMPSON, JACK Hi-Y TICKNOR, ELIZABETH West Lane Players Tri Alpha, French Audubon WADE, GERALDI NE Student Council WAGNER, MONICA Wichaka, G.A.A. WALOUIST, FRANCES Wichaka, G.A.A. WASILEWICZ, SOPHIE Student Council, G.A.A. German, R Girl WILFONG, ROBERT Chess WILSON, RICHARD Chess YANNISH, STELLA Student Council zuNKs,RuTH GJNA. Roll Call ll5 Adviser: MISS LAUB Row I: Kennefh Fouglwf, Kennefh Maxled, Emil Oravifz. Row 2: Chesfer Clark, Howard Odders, Norberf Lochowifz, Wilbur Tan- gersfrom. Row 3: Francis Washburn, Lars Wanggaard, Carl Bnadzons. Row 4: Peier Vakos, Elmer Abben, Leroy Clark. Row 5: Edifh Engslrom, Margarel Klein, lrene Pavlik, Bernice Tomczak, Dorofhy Bufman, Evelyn Jensen, Elizabelh Kauffeld. Sfanding: Clifford Qualler, Miss Alfa Laub, Winifred Wal+z, Doris Downey, Lisbefh Smifh, Dorollwy Dziekan, Evelyn Brzedzons, Ruilw Wheary, HenrieHa Prinsen, Rose Pefraclm, Marie Lanzon. Roll Call I32 Adviser: MISS HARVEY Row I: Anker Chrisfensen, Roberl' Chrisfensen, June Clwrisiensen, Cafhrine Colman, Roberf Chrisfofferson. Row 2: Maryl Coonley, Dick Coonley. Janice Carnell, Roberi Coulure, Miizi Csipkes. Row 3: Elizabeih Ticknor, Evelyn Czarnowski, Mary Jane Dalll, Howard Dalwnerf, Hilda DeGroo+, Kennelh Hansen, Myron Chris- liansen. Row 4: Ernesi Ricchio, Gomer Jones, Chrisline Karas, Agnes Chrisiensen. Row 5: Glen Nelson, Edward Kovacik, Elmer Lemesln, Gorden Marlin. Raymond Merrill. Sfanding: Alberf Kacs, Marlin Kenna, Joe Talek, Miss Harvey, Ciel Walek, Jean Kif . Roll Call 2I2 Adviser: MISS ADAMS Row I: Marion Jensen, Joyce Alcoff, Anna Krucas, Lorraine Kwiecinsky, Helen Kucinski, Beify Marilclw. Jeanefle Anderson, Norma Anderson. Row 2: Earl Aber, Lucille A. Walek, Joyce Hansen, Edilh Andersen, Margaref Anderson, Dorolhy Andersen, Virginia Anderson, Ida Puzzo, Mary Grno. Row 3: Alfred Knud- son, Donald Bezucha, Bill Hall. Oland Henderson, Kennefh Lange, Edwin Grodowski, Jerome Maison, Edward Mayland, Manella J. Masfos, Roberf Backus, Henry Adamoviiz, Kennefh Alslad. UNDERCLASSMEN Rall Call 2l9 Adviser: MISS HOLT Row I: Roberl Gibbs, John Gluclc. Row 2: Millard Edmonds, Gordon Greer, Alda Posie, Viola Sinslcy, Mildred Domslny. Row 3: Grace Thomsen, Edgar Haslie, Harry Wenlz, June Evenson, James Derlcs, JoAnne Feczlco. Row 4: Lorne Hillier. Rulh De- Grool, Genevieve Kime, Bernice Hansche, Lowell Eberl, Regina Draminslri. Row 5: Edward Due, Belly Remerl, Edward Follc, Sylvia Dibble, Joseph Fieschlco, Fern Hansen. Row 6: Melba Slcellon, Emery Ellingham, Chesler Feczlco, Heber Brouilelle, Rulh Hollman. Slancling: Edwin Olesen, Joyce Shuford, Raymond Gruhn, Miss Holl, LaVerne Feichler. Rall Call 229 Adviser: MISS RODEFER Row I: Kalhryn Cymbolulr, John Galeclcas, Gladys Finn, Marion Wedego, Roberl Galloway, Remore Nielsen. Row 2: Zorabelle Dick, Alma Frilz, Helen Gorlon, Gilberl Gedemer, Harvey Ko- vara, Eslher Nelson, Charles Marlochlco. Row 3: Harry Zimdors, Edwin Pierson, Earl Parker, Donald E. Oliver, Irma Neubauer, Belly Nielsen, Leonard Zischewsky, Roscoe Pease. Row 4: Miss Rodeler, Mary Podkammenslcy, John Vande Bunl, Donald Lasley, Lemuel Pelerson, Marion Paulsen, Joyce Pelerson, Richard Win- green, Peler Ziclcus, Anloinelle Polcin, Janel Woischo, Mildred Pezanoslci, Marie Pocious, Edward Prins, Roberl Willonq, Alvin Rasmussen. Roll Call 23I Adviser: MISS SORENSEN Row I: Charles Chudovslcy, Alberl Cairo, Paul Meier, Carroll Melzner. Row 2: Waller Smolenski, Bernard Solcolowslci, Richard Sorensen, William Sorenson, Marlin Smilh, James Slropes, Reed Syler. Row 3: Tom Taylor, Dennis Talman, Leila Cooke. Muriel Kroschell, Alice L. Nelson. Row 4: Olive Schlilz, Margarel Smilh, Virginia Somers, Beverly Sorenson, Edna D. Sorenson, Elsie J. Sorenson. Row 5: Dorolhy Swarloul, Marlha Swenclci. Fern Toll- son, Palricia Townsend. Slanding: James Connolly, Shirley Nel- son, Elinor Slorms, Beverly Nelson, Jean Sorenson, Miss Sorensen, Allen Richards, Frederick Munroe. Roll Call 232 Adviser: MISS KNUDSEN Row I: William Johnson, Paul Riebe. Row 2: Anfon Krakis, John Hari, Erhel Jensen, Ervin Janoi. Row 3: Slewarl Hifzeberger, Alyce Johnson, John Hofheimer, Sranley Syslaclc, Frieda Breheim. Row 4: Virginia Holi, Leonard Jensen, Marjorie Higgins, Mildred Harris, Edward Muzenslri. Row 5: Joyce Davis, Marion Jarosh, George Billows, George Horlman. Row 6: Lydia Larsen, June Meyer, Donald Jensen, John Heise. Sianding: Sfella Janiszewslci. Miss Knudsen, Erhardl Swan, John Haslco. Roll Call 233 Adviser: MISS BAKER Row I: Lee Bolfon, Sianley Bialeclri, Richard Beyer, Donald Knudsen, George Alslad. Row 2: Joe Carelli, Roberl Campbell, Ed Campbell, Everelfe Bunclc, Paul Bruslro. Row 3: Glen W. Nelson, Paul Bodi, William Lange, James Anderson, Harvey Jen- sen. Row 4: lone Berquisf. Jeanne Berhens, Joyce Bassindale, Ellen Andersen, Evald Rasmussen. Row 5: Florence Rider, Doro- Ihy E. Nelson, Doris Carlson. S+-ending: Miss Baker, Mike Bosz, Emma Myholm, Rose Viiacco, Lorraine Anderson, Muriel Wehrle, Clarice H. Nelson, Edna Mae Brauer. Roll Call 328 Adviser: MISS ROOT Row I: Eddie Janoslro, Milfon Jensen, Lloyd Johnson, Elmer Hanson. Row 2: Helen Lane, Alyce Larson, Rodney Due, Roberl Laub, Wallace Kaiz. Row 3: Jane Leniz, Richard Lewis, Eliza- befh Linse, Jack Marry, John Prifchard, Dave Chevalier. Row 4: Mable Rannow, Virginia Recupero, Beulah Lee, Richard Rifz, Alberf Radwill, Roy Roman. Row 5: Doroihy Sandberg, Helen Savides, Rose Schaff, Frederick Schroeder, Lillian Schmidt Fay Lamparlr. Row 6: Dorolhy Mifelr. Jack Schulrz, Charloife Square. Myra Shilling, Leslie Larson. Sfandingz Marcia Ruben, Miss Roof, Elmer Shovers. Roll Call I09 Adviser: MR. BEACH Row I: John Belden, Harvey Alford. Row 2: Elaine Arndl, Rosella Adams, Leo Aller, Roberl Bengen. Row 3: Elsie Brown, Befle Allen, Earl Andrews, Dorolhy G. Driver. Row 4: Rose Marie Bauernleind, Bernice Aiello, Helene Brocdorf, Doris Am- burb. Row 5: Berry Anderson. Julius Fishbein, Roberl Anderson. Row 6: Lois Ashby, Doris Anderson, James Rheinschmidl, Karl Brown. Row 7: Erma Neubauer, Agnes Andrews, Carl Bullra, Arihur Bohr. Row 8: James Brewer. Row 9: Arne Anderson, Dorofhy Fick, Agnes Arcidiacono, Louis Franlc, Mr. Beach, Gilberl Anderson, George Backus, Joseph Balog. Roll Call llb Adviser: MR. lSELlN Row I: Lawrence Den l-larligh, Leon Feesl, James Goding, Arnold Goodman, Richard Gregory. Row 2: Marshall Helland, Earnesf Huellner, Roy Jensen, Tilden Kaup, Norman Levin, Ed- ward Maieslci. Row 3: Bob McCall, Frederic Rapps, John Ry- barilc, George Aclclam, Shirley Allen, Eslher Berg, Edifh Aiello. Row 4: Jeannelie Fuhrman, Eileen Georgeson, Marjorie Hamann, Edith Hansen, Ellen Hansen. Row 5: Hazel Holmdohl, Dorolhy Holi, Marion Hood, Myrlle Lisby, Lily Plocar. Sfanding: Mr. lselin. Donald Hansen, Jean Hisey, Henriella Feller, Slella Vezabslcie. Roll Call II9 Adviser: MR. ROWE Row I: Waller Palinslci, Emily Paluch, Elizabelh Palriclc, Madeline Pafriclc. Row 2: Harvey Pease, Margarel Pedersen, Charles Per- lcins, Dorolhy Pefersen, Myron Payne. Row 3: Margarel Mills, lrene Pelralcis, Jane Pelralcis, Eslher Pulra, Edward Pelriclr, Henry Peolralc, Eva Poiash. Row 4: Lloyd Rigley, Lloyd Rabbill, Eugene Nelson, Helen Reilmier, Virginia Rhode, Henry Nielsen, Irving Rannow. Row 5: Winilred Roesl, Vernon Roberlson, Rose Pellcus, Courl' Rowlands, Thorviclc Nelson. Sfanding: June Pelerson, Mr. Rowe. Roll Call l2O Adviser: MISS HUNTER Row I: Cleo Moran, Rulh Melander, Helen Michelson, Margarel Miller, Dorolhy Moebius. Row 2: Luna Levin, Bernice Lenz, Doris Luellofl, Mary Ann Madson, Evelyn Marlcisen, Evalyn Masilc. Row 3: 'Thomas Mescall, Roger Mills, Kennefh Mullifen, Verland Marlin, Howard Marlin. Row 4: Thomas Marlindale, Arnold Marlinson, Joseph Masiewicz, Oliver Maison, Wallace Mallerer, William Luelce. Row 5: Reginald Fry, Glenn Larsen, William Larsen, Waller La Tour, Alberl Levin. Sfanding: Kalherine Mc- Donald, Joyce Maison, Gerlrude Gaufhier, Raydell Larrabee, Viclor Maynard, Donald Mauger, Julius Marfy. Roll Call l30 Adviser: MISS DuFOUR Row I: LeRoy Beres, Louis Bellovarey, Roberl Behl. Row 2: Bruce Kranick, Frank Komislra, Roberl Gericke, Richard Bowman. Row 3: Jack Lockwood, Donald Lange, Loui Krewal, Frank Krepe- Ian, Foresl Wells. Row 4: Margarel Back, Mary Louise Ander- son, Edna Mae LaFournier, Belle Jane Anderson, Mary Simapulos, Arlhur Zierlc. Row 5: Dorolhy Harding, Marion Dibble, Rulh Bidslrup. Frances Ball. Row 6: Florence Seidel, Florence Lee, Merloe Larsen, Arline Larson. Row 7: William Ahlschlager, Keilh Anderson, John Bobeck, Harold Langner, Jack Balman, Frances Anderson, Miss DuFour, Madelyn Bock, Jane Wyman. Roll Call l3l Adviser: MISS SHAW Row I: Calhryn Smilh, Dorolhy Sommerlield, Elaine Sondergaard, Belly Jane Sorensen. Row 2: Lucille Sleineke, Elsie Skovsled, Rulh Thomson, Grace Thuriol, Millon Vakos. Row 3: Viola Timer, Lorraine Tomczak, Evelyn Tullle, Poppy Vakos, Charlolle Van Bussum, Belly Van Hauler. Row 4: Mary Vanko, Helen Veale, Gladys Sorensen, Jeanelle Vincenl, Arlene Volz, Harrielle Vries- man, Miss Shaw. Row 5: Casmir Burczyk, Pal Downey, Rex Glines, Charles Sell, Kennelh Snyder, Charles Slacey, Harold Slrand, Wesley Tarwid, Donald Trudeau. Row 6: Roberl Thomas, Paul Tolle, Slanley Tomaloll, Frank Vavrin, Wayne Veale. Rall Call I33 Adviser: MISS PUGH Row I: Harry Gdoisis, Jimmy Clemons, Arlhur Sleele, Joe Les- kowicz. Row 2: Jean Tail, Annelle Tallman, Elizabelh Sewall. George Janecky, Rodney Erhardl, John LaBlanc. Row 3: Frances Bischoll. Marion Liakos, Pearl Farmer, Marcella Solheim, Marion Smilh, Clillord Brown, William Obry. Row 4: Rulh Schlaller, Nancy Slibgen, Marlha Sell, Russell Sorenson. Leonard Treviranus, Ming Lem. Row 5: Howard Gabbey, Gordie Freres, Eric Sokol, Douglas Larsen, Ralph Sapp. Slanding: Margarel Schimanski, Frank Gessay, Miss Pugh, Carolyn Gibson, Helen Kwas, Tommie Mayfield, Herberl Kammerer, Roll Call 2l8 Adviser: MISS MOHR Row I: Eugene Carlson, Joe Ciboci. John Coville. Row 2: Glen Jensen, Earl Iverson, George lniasaulian, Charles Hillier. Row.3: Harold Owens, Charles,Palalino, Josephine Clemens, Angeline Vilacco, Gordon Weichers, Joseph Zyzniewski. Row 4: Georgia Chrislensen, Nellie Chevis. Jean Carlson, Elaine Carey, Eileen Buresh, Marvin Hienlz. Row 5: Marion Chrislensen, Lucille Tie- len. Rulh Danielson, Mary Jane Davis, Virginia Davis. Row 6: LaVerne Palrick, Olga Lisy, Helen Harvey, Dorolhy Derber. Slanding: Elmer Nelson, Roberl Dermody, Vernon Shaller, Gul- berl Bell, Anlhony Pizalowski, Grace Chrislensen. Rall Call 223 Adviser: MISS BEALER Row I: Valerie Donahue. Row 2: Dagmar Dvorak, Mary I-Ialpin, Beulah Hulson, Chrisline Kieler, Bellie Jane Mayers. Row 3: William Crossell, Paul Davis, George DePelecyn, Richard Deho- polcik, Earl Dillionaire, Simmie Doss. Row 4: Gilberl Dyboad, Clarence Jensen, Frank Krislan, Alberl Lucareli, Slanley Raskow- ski, Miss Bealer, Glenn Fommerup. Row 5: Elsie Chrislensen, Eslher Chrislensen, Dorolhy Coryell, Hazel Darlinglon, Paul Kirkegaard. Slanding: Minnie Derksen, Virginia Dernody, Louise Dukshus, Peggy Draeger, Jeanne DeLonge, Carol Crouch. Roll Call 227 Adviser: MR. HALLISY Row I: Emil Pavlik, Paul Jensen, Slanley Jensen, William Jen- sen, Waller Jensen, Richard Howard. Row 2: Carl Johnson, Floyd Johnson, Richard Johnson, William Olson, Joe Ondercin, Eivind Pelerson. Row 3: Raymond Hroschikoski, Paul Poulson, Kennelh Rocksled, John I-Iemkes, Bobby Prilchard, Joyce Wagand, Marcella Johnson. Row 4: Mariorie Johnson, Elsie Jackland, Juanila Jarosh, Belly Jenkins, Carol Jensen. Slanding: Mr. Hallisy, Leo Janialc, Allen I-laese, Belly Palluck, Lois Pelerson, Margarel Pelerson, June Handrich, Elenor Zalecki. Roll Call 228 Adviser: MISS PENNEFEATHER Row I: Richard Mueller, Harold Munroe. Harold Nelson, War- ren Nelson. Row 2: Bernard Obry, Roberl Olive, Julius Micha- lek, Lucien Osborne, Frederic Miller. Row 3: Sam Brisko, Irene Michalek, Slella Nimec, Rebecca Milner, Belly Nehoda. Row 4: LaVerne Neilzel, Margarel Nelson, Eslher Nielson, Gladys Niel- son, Rulh Nielson. Row 5: Edna Nordenloll, Frances Nordslrom, Phyllis Olson, Mary Odom. Slanding: Donald Miner, Miss Penne- lealher, Mike Milal. Roll Call 230 Adviser: MR. WEAVER Row I: Roberl Wright, Anna Thompson, Evelyn Winlher, Pauline Weslerlield, Olga Sachen, Dave Tradewell. Row 2: I-Ierberl Wagner, Cecelia Ondercin, Rulh Wilson, Jane Weisserl, Ade- laide Lackner, Tobie Weiss. Row 3: Vincenl Konloul, Eleanor Zore, Bernice Vlfilczyonski, Dorolhy Weck, Kalhryn Krayes, Bob Zigas. Row 4: Kennelh Leissner, Mr. Weaver, Dorolhy Whilney, Mary Zabil, Ellwood Krekling, Edward Zens. Row 5: Philip Waisman, Grover Warner, Mary Wherry, Marolyn Waller, Gerlrude Nielsen. Slanding: Grover Weyland, Roberl Weeks, Leo Wagner. Roll Call 234 Adviser: MRS. FELTEN Row I: Rulh Bullmore. Row 2: Flora George, Floyd George, Elmer Gewall. Row 3: Rila Gordon, Mary Graves, Harold Gray, Millon Greene, Ralph Gregory. Row 4: Eleanor Grenier, Rulh Habermas, Harriel Hader, Viola Chrisliansen, LaVerne Hannon, Gerlrude Hansen. Row 5: John Hansen, Beverly Harms, Dorolhy Hay, Marcella Healon, Romayne Hegeman, Georgia Henning- sen. Row 6: Frances Heusdens, Kennelh Hillburg, Margarel Hodges, Carol Hoyer, Bernice Lauzon, LaVerne Vrooman. Sland- ing: Billy Baldukas, Sidney Vaillancourl, John Geissner, James Chadwich, Florence Herms, Mrs. Fellen. Harvey Bell. Roll Call 3IO Adviser: MISS WALKER Row I: Bernice Andersen, Sleve Czebolar. Norberl Biesach, Ed- ward Bushman, Raymond Bergman., Marlin Brill, George Bayer. Angeline Chrisliano, Ellsworlh Barringlon, James Barr. Row 2: Edna Pelersen, Doris Newman, Glenn Crane, Harvey Cook, Gur- nee Cape, Bernard Collier, Dick Calkins, Joseph Buller, Eliza- be+h Clausen, LaVerne Bawers, Kalie Bosz. Row 3: Carmelia Frazzello, Mary Gemenl, Vera Bonini, Claudia Bomier, Adelle Blank, Vivienne Barlon, Belly Croyle, Roberl Colley, Cecil Haskins, James Berger, Rose Sipkes, Gail Bridgeman. Back Row: Miss Walker. Roll Call 3I3 Adviser: MISS RUGGLES Row I: Waller Schulz, John Sachel. Bernard Sanders, George Sanders. Row 2: Roberl Shellberg, John Spiglanin. Row 3: Harry Swanson. Adoll Schuberl, Gail Harvey, Slanley Roszkow- ski, Kennelh Schuberl, Lawrence Ruszczyk. Row 4: Vicloria Rul- kowski, Berlha Sabee, June Scheckler, Carol Schneider, Kalh- erine Schulh, Louise Seidel. George Slempe. Row 5: Kalherine Sheriff, Eloise Shumaker, June Simonsen, Maxine Skellon, Virgene Slick. Row 6: Genevieve Szymczak, Edna Smilh, Fausleen Smilh, Caryl Sheen. Slanding: Miss Ruggles. William Runge, Roberl Sealer, Grace Sli cos. Roll Call 3I9 Adviser: MISS CASE Row I: Geraldine Goedy, Carl Fliss, Mary French, Norma Greer, Viclor Grabowski. Row 2: Mary Fallico, Anna Filandrinos, Kalh- ryn Foxwell, Marion Sleele, William Slralman, Rosella Farmer, Anlhony Turkowski. Row 3: Virginia Eckman, Warren Skellon, Anna Fole Roma ne Freres Arlhur Easlman Row 4 Waller Y- Y I . I Supiano, Barbara Jean Grillilh, Maxine Funk. Myrlle Eggerl, Anna Frandsen, Eleanor Szymanski, Alex Sachen. Row 5: Ann Supki, Marie Grimisey, Malhilda Fischer, Kennelh Eckman, Irvin Gra- bowski, Myrnell Erickson. Slanding: Emma Gedrailis, Doris Rooney, Miss Case. Roll Call 329 Adviser: MISS HOWE Row I: Roberl Kimpel, Marie Jensen, George Karas. Row 2: Harrison Kasller, Harry Kassel, Dick Kidder. Row 3: Slanley Kowbel, Glenn Kragh, Alvin Kremkoski, Ray Kurlz, Eddie Kwelc- sus. Row 4: Roberl Lang, Josephine Milak, Russel Kelchum. Joan Geiss, Jane Hermis. Row 5: Bessie Kanelos, Virginia Kele- ski, Irene Kemper, Kalharyne Knauer, Mary Knors, Clare Koran. Row 6: Bernice Kovar, Anlonia Krescanki, Amelia Kules, Doris Larson. Slanding: Priscilla Jensen, Miss Howe, Harold Knope, Scoll Hallel, Carolyn Huberl. Roll Call 334 Adviser: MRS. BRUINS Row I: Mary Valvouleas, Mrs. Bruins. Row 2: Janel Olson, Geraldine Kowales, Alice Paulson, Olwen Thomas. Row 3: Renee Francher, Virginia Frilz, Lucille Garrell, Dorolhy Jacobson. Row 4: Mabel Brown, Edna Buehler, Elhel Draves, Dorolhy A. Driver, Margarel Dudish. Row 5: Alberl Sugenl, Dean Warner, John Warner, Roberl Whisman, William Freres. Row 6: Ed- ward Duralny, Ralph Elsmo. Slanding: Rulh Vaughan, Alice Thorkelson, Louise Kemp, Rose Duzi, Dorolhy Anderson, Clyde Poulsen, Bell Doclor, Charles Erickson. Roll Call 335 Adviser: MISS MOORE Row I: Julia Nygaard, Mary Shovers, Lois Sorenson, Hazel Niel- son. Row 2: Grace Jorgensen, Florence Kinsley, Jean Main- land, Lois Nelson. Row 3: Donald Olsen, Evelyn Toulanl, Palsy Johnson, Valerie Jacobs, Elvera DeLuca, Mary Jones. Row 4: Edward Myslicki, Ernesl Nelson, Norman Nelson, John Nero, Frank Nescak, Helen Krislopeil. Row 5: Eugene McCarlhy, Bill McCoy, Harry Mielcarek, Reynold Mielke, Gilberl Morlenson. George Murphy. Row 6: Francis Berard, Joseph Bodnar, Clar- ence Kowalski, Donald LaFave. Slanding: Anna Nielson, Ella Jorgenson, Miss Moore, Doris Nielson. Edmund Krogh, Elmer Johnson. Roll Call 336 Adviser: MISS ENRIGHT Row I: James King, Edward Czebolar, Lorella Davis, Orbel Johnson, Elvira Kahlerl. Row 2: Ellen Chrislensen, Kennelh Niel- sen, Frank Luka, Dorolhy Makholm, Dorolhy Malko, Arvilla Mar- quardl, Rulh Marlin. Row 3: Belly Mills, Francis Mullikin, Emily Naslicky, Pearl Oslergard, Evelyn Parenl, Naome Palrick, Mary- belle Pearson. Row 4: Jeanelle Pelerson, Lesler Pelerson, Ella Poulson, James Reesnes, Ora Riggs, Gordon Pelerson. Row 5: Raymond Thomsen, Joe Tolero, Roberl Vilman, Huberl Wade, Kalhryn Sleiner. Slanding: Glenn Wagand, Miss Enrighl, Jean Pelerson, Auslin Miller. STUDENT COUNCIL l l FirsT Row: MarTin SrniTh, Jaclc Jersfad, Ray Kayon, RoberT Sorensen, Doris Gilmore, Delores Kowales, l-larold Nelson, LeRoy May, Edwin Rob- l erTs, Marian SmiTh. Second Row: Allen PorTer, Barbara GrilTiTh, Anna Podlucliy, l-lelen ReiTmeier, Edward Due, Jane l-larris, MargareT Scoon, T DoroThy MarTin, MargareT Caynak, Joyce MaTson, Fred Miller. Third Row: VicTor OzmiTz, RoberT Shellberg, Lois Nelson, MarTin Kenna, Bill DocTer, Frances Ball, Elaine Carey, DoroThy Mallco, Marion Richardson, Milce Bosz, A. B. Close. Fourfh Row: Jean Hisey, Helen Savides, Jaclc Gray, BeTTy'Jane Sorensen, Richard l-lanson, Marion Jarosh, Helen Page, Frances Washburn, RoberT Anderson, Philip Waisman. Fiffh Row: T MarTin Clancy, Thomas ATlcins, PeTer Dallas, Russel Wagner, LeRoy Hinze, Paul Davis, John VandeBunTe, RoberT Freres, Clarence Zens. l Fall SemesTer RoberT Freres. Jack JersTed. . OTTicers Spring SemesTer . . .PresidenT ....... RoberT Freres Vice PresidenT ..... Edwin RoberTs DoroThy MarTin .,.... SecreTary ....... MarTin Clancy MarTin SmiTh. A. B. Close. . . AssT. SecreTary .... Thomas ATl4ins .,...Adviser.....,...,A. B. Close The STudenT Council ranks very high in The minds OT boTh The Teachers and The sTudenTs. lT Tries To seT a sTandarol oT characTer and achievemenT Tor The whole sTudenT body. IT makes laws and copes wiTh school problems. lT serves as a iudge Tor The acTions oT The pupils. lT also puTs ouT a handbook Tor incoming sopho- rnores. This year iT chrisTened The TurTle Kipikawi ll sold TiclceTs Tor The Park-l-lorliclc Too+ball game and sponsored an assembly and a dance. F T Row: George Mauger, Anna Podlucky, DoroThy Kroulik, Clarence Zens, Marion Thogersen. Second Row: Helen M. bsen. Nick ZabiT, Maryl Coonley, NaTalie KubaTh, Joel BarreTT, Virginia HolT. Back Row: Dolores Kowales, RuTh rooT, Thomas ATkins, Julie Nygaard. Miss Case. CDUILL AND SCROLL OFFICERS Quill and Scroll is The inTernaTional honorary socieTy Tor high school iournalisTs. lT was or- ganized by a group oT high school supervisors To recognize and To reward ouTsTanding high school iournalisTs. In order To become a member oT This socieTy, one musT be scholasTically in The upper Third oT his class: he musT have done superior work in some phase oT his high school journalism: he musT be recommended by his iournalisTic ad- viser as being worThy oT membership: and a compleTe record oT his work musT be submi+Ted To a naTional oTTicer Tor approval. Quill and Scroll endeavors To promoTe The highesT Type oT high school iournalism. Among The members who have belonged To Quill and Scroll Tor a year and a halT, or more, are Clarence Zens and DoroThy Kroulik, repre- senTing The Beacon: and Anna Podlucky Trom The Kipi. Virginia HolT, Marion Thogersen, and George Mauger are Beacon ediTors who have been elecTed To Quill and Scroll almosT a year ago. The newly elecTed members are Jose- phine Podlucky, Dolores Kowales, NaTalie Ku- baTh, and RuTh DeGrooT, Kipi sTaTT chairmen: and Julia Nygaard, Thomas ATkins, Joel Bar- reTT, Helen M. Jacobsen, Maryl Coonley, and Nick ZabiT Tor The Beacon. DOROTHY KROULIK ,.....,..... PresidenT CLARENCE ZENS ....,.T... Vice-PresidenT ANNA PQDLUCKY. . .SecreTary 8: Treasurer L. CASE .........,.........,.... Adviser FirsT Row: Dorofhy MalmsTadT, Grace Mandernach, Doris Gilmore, Mary Podkamenslcy, June Dvorak, Marie Fornary Mildred BarTa. Dolores Mueller, Alice Deschler. Second Row: Helen Puchinsky, Dolores Kowales. KaTherine Kelly, RuTh Karlsen, Jane Harris, Mary Jane Krause, Alice PaTer, Claribel l-loward, RuTh Heary, Alice Nelson. Mr. Wall. Third Row Lydia Madsen, Evelyn Miller, Sophie Puchinsky, Mary Horak, Marion Simonsen. Sylvia Dibble, Louise Lassen, Carol OsTlund, l-larrieT Rasmussen, Marion Thogersen. FourTh Row: Nick ZabiT, MarTin Kenna. ErnesT Temmer, Lazar Benrubl George Mauger, l-lenrieTTa Olk, VicToria RiTkevicz, VioleT M. Barkowski, Lucy Gufowski. Fall SemesTer OTTicers Spring SemesTer June Dvorak .....,. PresidenT ..... Doris Gilmore Lily Harris ....,,.. Vice-PresidenT ..,.. Lydia Madsen Marie Fornary ..... SecreTary . ,Marion Thogerson Mary Podkamenski. . . Treasurer. , .Grace Mandernack E. Wall ....,... ,.,., A dvlser ............. E. Wall COMMERCIAL HONOR SOCIETY To promoTe leadership and scholarship among commercial sTudenTs, The Commercial l-lonor Club was organized in l93O. Membership To The club is limiTed To TiTTy, and scholasTic re- quiremenTs oT a G+ in a commercial subiecT. a general average oT G. and no mark lower Than F-l- are essenTial Tor membership. Among iTs acTiviTies during The pasT semes- Ter, The club sponsored a dance, published an annual, held a l-lallowe'en and a ChrisTmas parTy. There are no club dues. The Book Exchange is operaTed by club mem- bers. The proceeds realized Trom This proiecT are spenT on equipmenT Tor The commercial deparTmenT. A spelling conTesT is sponsored each semes- Ter by The club. A silver loving cup is awarded To The winner. QEJ I 4.5 ,lic Cl-IORISTERS FIRST ROW-Gladys Haller, Maxine Lingsweiler, Mar- iorie I-Iansen, Sarah Gales, Silvia Salerno, Edilh Nelson, Irene Juriclc, Mary Emma Wyman, Edilh Johansen, Belrly I-Iinlz, Violel Barlcowslci, Margarel Olson. Eugenia Levin. SECOND ROW-Mr. Schulle, Ingrid Gall, Lydia Mad- sen. Mabel Larson, Belly Mann, James Millin, Roloerl Calkins, I-Ierberl Jacobsen, Viola Shinslcy, Dorolhy Al- lord, Virginia DeSmidl, June Chrislensen, Norma Bergeson, Dorolhy Sandberg. THIRD ROW-Margarel Schneider, Nalalie Kubalh, Belly I-Iiall, Alice Acelo, I-lerman Pancher, Francis Berard, Joe I-laluslca, LaVerne Mueller, Violelr Ander- son, Marie Shoop, Theda Taylor, Emma Nyhlom, Shir- ley Allen, Edward Krogh. FOURTH ROW-Gordon Lisby, LeRoy May, Paul Gluck, Carl Nielson, Llewellyn Williams, Raymond Michalalc, Edward Czebolar, John Slcellon, Edward Oualheim, Lesley Beclc, Louis Molnar, Edward Fliss, Edward Charewicz. FIRST ROW-Margarel' Scoon, Marion Thogerson, Rulh Heary, Anna Jansen, Lois Wyman, Helen Swan- son-, Dorolhy Hoffman, Lucille Lehmann, Eleanor Mallco, Marion Simonsen, Janice Moree, Shirley Nel- son, Alyce Bung. SECOND ROW-Calhryn Smiih, Jean Huber, Helen Margarel Jacobsen, Phyllis Brown, Be'Hy Minshall, Bernice Arcuri, Sfella Yannish, Mary Grno, LaVerne Kobal, Eva Nielsen, Dorolhy Kobal, Dorofhy Nelson, Carol Osllund, Frank Fallco, Donald Hammes, Mr. Schulle. THIRD ROW-Sieve Lipovslcy, Edwin Nielsen, Andrew Pendl, Gilberf Miller, OHO Ludwig, Margery Allerf, Efhel Goldbeclc, June Meyer, Rufh Hoffman, Mary Jane Dahl, Alice Slirle, Harold Anderson, William Sell. FOURTH ROW-Gene Prideau, Sfanley Syslalc, Richard Neumann, Richard Wesfriclc, Bill Denham, Ernesr Ricchio, Don Yena, Roberl' Shufelf, John Corr, Ralph Karlson, Raymond Kayon, Francis Held, Clyde Pelras, Sfanley Samalon, Zane Urbush. BAND F sf Row: Lowell EberT, Raymond Goodsell, STuarT HiTzelberger, Frank Hay, Angelo Carelli, RoberT Thomas, Edifh Anderson, CaTherine Col- Marie,Fornary, James STropes, Jack Thompson, James RheinsmidT. Second Row: John Heise. Alex Sachen, DoroThy MalmsTadT, Dean W er, Bob Johnson, Ralph Carlson, Bob l-lanse, Priscella Jense, DoroThy HolT. Clara Hemkes, Reidar STensvaag. Russel Anderson, Leland M El oy, FosTer Diley, Bernice Acuri. Third Row: Joe Carelli, RuTh Thompson, Charles MarTocho, Noberi' LockowiTz, ErnesT Ricchio, VicTor O Tz, Allan Haese, John Hemkes, James Berger, Leonard Carrier, Aldo Ricchio, Edwin RoberTs, Mr. SchulTe. Four'I'h Row: Kenneth Anvick, R lph Elsmo. Roy Jensen, Red Syler, Lorne Hillier, Bill Obry, DoroThy Driver, KenneTh MaxsTead, Philip Dahlberg, Mervin HeinTz, Donald J , Zane Urbash, George Murphy. WiTh an enrollmenT oT approximaTely 900 sTu- denTs, more Than halT ThaT oT The enTire school, The music deparTmenT inTluences The naTure oT The spiriT oT The insTiTuTion in a marked degree. Seven choral groups, Two bands, and Two orchesTras occupy The aTTenTion oT The Two able direcTors, Mr. Frederick SchulTe and Mr. L. G. Berven. During The pasT season The band has been working aT The Tollowing ouTsTanding selecTions: SelecTions Trom Rose Marie, Frimlg Ariane, OverTure, Bayer: Orpheus in der UnTerweld, OTTenbach: and a corneT Trio, Bolero. SmiTh. The FirsT MovemenT oT BeeThoven's FiTTh Symphonyni New Moon selecTions, Rom- berg: SouThern Rhapsody, l-losmer: and Schauspiel OverTure, Bach, commanded The eTTorTs oT The orchesTra. The chorisTers enioyed working aT such selec- Tions as ShorTnin' Bread. a negro spiriTualg CelTic Hymn, Roderick: Song oT The March- ing Men, Hadley: Come To The Fair, Mar- Ting Pomp and CircumsTance, Elgar: A MighTy ForTress is Our God, LuTher: Bells oT Aberdovey, Adams: and Mah Lindy Lou, STrickland. The highlighT oT The season, as always. was The May FesTival on May 8. This program included The old LuTher hymn, A MighTy ForTress is Our God and Come To The Fair, MarTin, by The combined choral groups and The band and orchesTra. The chorisTers presenTed CelTic l-lymn by Roderick, and ShorTnin' Bread. Ariane OverTure and The FirsT MovemenT oT BeeThoven's FiTTh Symphony were played by The band and orchesTra respecTively. Bolero was given as a corneT Trio. As The greaT Tinale, Tor The enTire ensemble. Pomp and Circum- sTance, Elgar, compleTed The music deparT- menT work Tor The year wiTh The grand gesTure. GRC!-IESTRA First Row: Kenneth Hansen, Paul Tiles, Phyllis Brown, Tom Clarlc, Richard Ritz, Georgiana Christensen, Arnold Goodman. Second Row: June Dvoralc, Dorothy Malmsfadt. Third Row: Walter Smolinslci, John Coville, Earl Aber, June Christensen, Eugene Carlson, Richard Lewis, Edith Anderson, Catherine Colman, Joseph Fieschlco, Lucille Hughes, Charles Erickson, Robert Gericlce. Fourth Row: Edith Engstrom, Vernon Han- sen, Lazar Benrubi, Foster Diley, Raymond Goodsell, Angelo Carelli, Frank Hay, Reidar Stensvaag, Keith Anderson, Paul Gluclc, Norberf Lock- owitz, Tom Taylor. Firth Row: Bernice Arcuri, George Murphy, Evelyn Czarnowski, Mary Podlcamenslcy, Alyce Bung, Sylvia Reder, Lorne Hillier, Edward Kale, Zane Urbush, Kenneth Angvicli, Victor Osimitz, Allan Haese, John Hemlces Virginia Day Ellen Christensen James Ber er Leon- I I I Q I ard Carriere, James Clemons, Roy Jensen, Aldo Ricchio, Frederick Schulte. 1 lla Sing, Singl Q4 Childhood chants its earnest song, . hy Youth carols-has its fling- X Then finally we totter on, A Yet all the way, let's sing! X 65' AMATEUR WINNERS Assembly program sponsored by Srucleni' Council, January IO. 66 lmbxetits TRACK Firsi' Row: Jacko, Molnar, Neuman, Kolman, ,F. Karls, Smiih, Moriarify, Nelson, Brusko, Duzi lMgr.1. Second Row: Pe'rras lMgr.1, Wilfang, Wangaarcl. Mifchel, Gabby, A. Karls, Connoly, Sorenson. Fry, Larson, Freres, Coach Hearden. Third Row: Nordenfoff, Venfurelii, Komisfra, Verhaeghe, Beyar, Jensen, Po+'rorf, Ondersen, Miller lMgr.l, Sabee lMgr.l. fi, T 1 5' 'V X 0 GOLF SQUAD '35 KX? yifjfyg 0 T TH, Qvfil' T, ' 97-f a-1 -rffl' Jorgensen, May fCap'r.T, Janes, Hiorfness. Treviranus, Smifh, Brandi, Gofflieb, Sfueber, Thorkelson, Merrill, Mr. Weaver 68 TENNIS 553 C. ? 2 TS mfef Qu 6 0 Under The TuTelage oT Guy Weaver, coach oT The WashingTon Park High WresTling squad, Park was represenTed This year by a sTrong wresTling Team. The Training schedule is exTremely rigorous and sTrenuous. IT consisTs oT regular seTTing-up ex- ercises, aTTer which The candidaTes Tor The dif- TerenT weighT divisions wresTle each oTher, pracTicing and developing new holds and grips. The squad had Two inTer-school meeTs This year, The TirsT in,January in which They Toolc Tour ouT oT six maTches againsT WesT Allis, and The second in February in which They Tared raTher badly againsT Wisconsin High, recog- nized as champions oT Class A Wisconsin high schools. a John ChrisTiano has been raTed for Two years as one of The ouTsTanding players of The Big EighT, and one of The greaTesT players ever produced by Park High. In his lasT season in school ChrisTy played offensive fullback and defensive Tackle, a greaT Task for any player. E B . Al To our fighTing lrish coach, Thomas Hearden, who. in his shorT Two years among us, has won a firm and lasTing posiTion of affecTion and regard in The hearTs and minds of all boys and oTher people wiTh whom he has had To work, we hearTily dedicaTe This record of The achieve- menTs of his aThleTes. AfTer playing on The NoTre Dame elevens of I924-25-The greaT Teams of The Four Horse- men -his fooTball TalenTs were signally recog- nized by his fellow players who elecTed him capTain of The l926 eleven. AfTer graduaTing from college, Coach Hear- den played professional fooTball wiTh The Green Bay Packers, Wisconsin's pride of The NaTional Professional FooTball League. Before coming To Park, in l935, he coached aT ST. CaTherine's High School, where he esTab- lished a fine record. One of his greaTesT services To Park High was The promoTion of inTramural sporTs To enable boys To enioy aThleTics who oTherwise were un able To make The varsiTy Teams. We are sure ThaT he will like his new posiTion aT The Green Bay High School, and we sin- cerely hope ThaT his fuTure efforTs may be crowned wiTh success. Richard Hallisy, line coach of Parl4's FooTball squads and menTor of The B squad during baslceTball seasons, maTriculaTed aT WhiTewaTer STaTe Teachers' College. where he played Tackle and guard on The fooTball elevens. ln l928 he was elecTed capTain of his Team. Be- fore coming To Park High, Coach Hallisy also TaughT school and helped coach The fooTball ancll baslceTball Teams aT Ambray High School in I inois. r XTX A .so C Y C A 4- v aims-L .fs ,. l'Y' N fgfl V 41 9 Av, GJ ,i 1:9157 I 70 . C0 . FirsT Row: Paulson, Oliver, Labonde, AIsTead, Carriere, KirsTan, Rudin, Fliss, De Luca, Morissey, JersTed Se nd Row' Coach I-learden, Nel- son. Jensen, Mayer, Jacko, ChrisTiano, Molnar, VenTurelIi, PaTrick, Hoffman, RadewiTz, Tradewell, Lenoch, Karls. Third Row: Nelson, Jensen. i halak, Coach Hallisy Back Row' Kayon, Billows, Brusko, Karls, Turkowski, y Clancy, MerTins, Russel, EberT, Haggard, PeTers, Riddle, Nelson, M EI N K T S Ad T smo, emer, omis ra, orenson, omowiz. BIG EIGI-IT CONFERENCE W. L. T. PCT. Madison EasT .... .,.. 7 0 0 l.000 BelOiT ........ .... 6 I 0 .857 Kenosha ........ .... 4 3 0 .57I WashingTon Park ....... 3 3 I .500 Madison CenTral ....... 3 3 I .500 Madison WesT .,...,.,. 3 4 I .429 William I-Iorlick ,....... I 6 0 .I43 Janesville ....,........ 0 7 0 .000 On SepTember I4 Park journeyed away Trom home To play a non-conTerence TilT wiTh Wau- kegan. Park Tumbled behind The goal on The TirsT play and a saTeTy was scored againsT Them. Waukegan scored a Touchdown soon aTTer, and The game ended wiTh The score 8-0 againsT Park. Park's nexT game, The season's opener, was played againsT CenTral aT home. Park scored on a long run by Jacko, aTTer which VenTurelIi kicked The exTra poinT. I-lowever, Madison came back sTrong, scoring on a Torward pass, and Then adding The exTra poinT To Tie The score aT 7-7. On SepTember 28, Park baTTled The sTrong Madison EasT Team on even Terms ThroughouT The game. IT looked Tor a while as Though a Park vicTory mighT resulT, buT a Touchdown play wiTh Billy Jacko carrying The ball over was called back. The game ended wiTh Park on The shorT end oT a 7-2 score. 'c In iTs nexT Toe, Janesville, Park had an easy op- ponenT. WiTh John ChrisTiano in The role oT a baTTering ram Tullback, Park swepT over Their rivals To The Tune oT 38-0. Nelson, Jacko, and Rudin scored Touchdowns, and Turk Turkow- ski added seven poinTs. WiTh an open daTe on OcTober I2, Coach I-learden spenT The nexT Two weeks in drilling his boys Tor The Kenosha Tussle, buT The TasT- charging Red. Devils' line supplied Ed I-IarTnek wiTh some good blocking wiTh The resulT ThaT he scored eighT poinTs. Gogola added Touch- down. Park sTrove hard To counT during The remainder OT The game, buT The game ended wiTh The score sTiII I4-0. Park iourneyed To Madison Tor iTs nexT game againsT Madison WesT. Park sTarTed The scor- ing early in The game. ChrisTiano made I8 poinTs wiTh Three Touchdowns, and Tommy De- Luca snaTched a WesT pass and sped 45 yards To anoTher Touchdown. The Tinal score was 28-0. Led by Their colored ace oT greaT renown, Jack Gilmore, BeloiT Triumphed over Park by scoring more poinTs againsT Them Than any oTher Team during The season. The score was I9-0. As a climax To a Tairly successTul TooTball sea- son Park's gridders won whaT To many Tans was probably The mosT imporTanT game OT The year by deTeaTing Their old enemy and arch rival- I-lorlick. , Grim battiefieid of footbaii You lure our fighting boys, Ano' teach them weii to cherish Sweet victory's hard earnea' joys, Vi it-fig Q X x fa.-'Xa 6 Q57 72 ATTer Ten minuTes oT cauTious play by boTh Teams, Billy Jacko carried The ball around his own righT end Tor 84 yards Tor The TirsT Touch- down oT The game. VenTurelli Then broke a long-sTanding record when he booTed over The crossbars The TirsT exTra poinT ever scored in a Park-l-lorlick TooTball conTesT. l-lorlick Then came back To score Two Touchdowns in quick succession, buT ChrisTiano. who had been in- iured in pracTice, came inTo The game and Park again wenT ahead I3-I2. Park never leT down Trom Then on To The end oT The garne, ringing up Two more Touchdowns by Jacko and Fliss. When The lasT gun wenT oTT aT The end oT a misTy, rainy day, Park was ahead by 25-l2. il W ,. , .cc 4 sviyjyg ly 'i mma , -- T ' f 'J 'li i'r ' lb ilu'-ll ' N l X ' Q! suse if TQ INTRAMURAL CHAMPS SENIORS Froni Row: Aronin, Nelson, Osimifz. Back Row: Ar+hur Pedersen. JUNIORS Billows. Hoffman. Hanson. SOPHOMORES Froni' Row: LaToure, H. Mar'rin, Cafchup Back Row: J. Lee, V. Marfin. 74 Back Row: Coach Tom Heard M 9 Mg Ll lly J F T R Edwin Pierson, Heber BrouilleTTe, Henr When The '35-'36 baslceTball season opened, Coach Hearden was Taced wiTh The Task OT building up a Team ouT oT a group oT young. inexperienced players, wiTh only one veTeran, Kayon, leTT. AlThough Park won only Three games and losT Ten in conTerence play, and losT Their second game in The disTricT TournamenT, The season should noT be viewed as being ToTally unsuccessTul, Tor There will be seven players reTurning nexT year, and Park may ex- pecT a much beTTer Team by reason oT This year's pracTical experience gained in The Tire OT baTTle. Though The Team los+ enough games To have uTTerly Taken The hearT ouT oT many a player. anyone who waTched Parlc's boys baTTling, more oTTen Than noT, Teams much bigger and more experienced Than Themselves, could never doubT Tor an insTanT ThaT They gave Their uT- mosT Tor Their Team and school. No one could ask more oT any Team. Thus. Though They did noT win many oT Their conTesTs, we saluTe Them as one OT The gamesT bunch oT boys ever To represenT Park High School. r. ewe n ones. ron Llewelyn Williams, Roy Roman. r. Edwin Grodowslcy, MulTon Jensen, Richard Kidder, Frank Nescalc, William C TT y AdamoviTz, Ray Kayon, WellingT Firs'f Row: Grace Mandernaclc, Eleanor Mallco, Jessie Nelson, Irma Lassen, Jo Ann Feczlco, Mary Jones, Bernice Tomczalc, Lorraine Kwiecinslci, Lois Barr, Eleanora Seeger. Second Row: RuTh SlaTTer, RuTh Jensen, DoroThy MalmsTeadT, Mary June ParrnenTer, Lydia M d D ' G'l re. Third Row: Theodora Neilsen, RuTh DeGrooT, Helen Kwas, Marcella Johnson, PaTsy Johnson, Hazel Holrn- a sen, oris :mo dahl, Edi+h Hansen, Gladys Day, June K. ChrisTenson, Virginia Day, Mabel Larson. FourTh Row: Marlorie AllerT, Carol OsTlund, MargareT Nelson, Lois Johnson, Virginia DeSmidT. l' Af Q, X T 5' ' nf li f x X XXX v, G .ff Z ,fs Z N fem PP! R GIRLS This spring a group OT girls wanTed some Tun, exciTemenT, and some new Triends. So They organized a club, The only requiremenT Tor membership la very Trivial onel is To be The proud possessor oT an R la girl's leTTerl. The club is a branch oT The G.A.A. ParTies, hikes, and games were organized by various members oT The club. However, The sole purpose OT The club is noT amusemenT, Tor one oT The ToremosT aims is To develop leadership. DoroThy Jane Nelsen had The honor OT being The TirsT presidenT oT This organizaTion. Lor- raine Kwiecinslci was elecTed secreTary. The charTer members oT The club are DoroThy Jane Nelson, Bernice Tomczalc, RuTh Jensen, DoroThy MalmsTeadT, Lorraine Kwiecinslci, RuTh DeGrooT, Lois Johnson, Marcella Johnson, Carol OsTlund, Ann Krucas, DoroThy Malko Mabel Brown, Helen Anderson, Lydia Lassen, Mary June ParmenTer, Grace Mandernack, and Elenora Seeger. NaTurally, The girls have many good Times TogeTher. T33 il T V R.- J ' D57 rg f Qlfs 7 R. 1 G. A. A. Every year, many girls work land do They workll Tor a preTTy liTTle orange leTTer. You've guessed iTl An R is The goal oT each girl. To acquire The leTTer, a girl musT make a class Team. BuT ThaT isn'T all. She musT have aT leasT one hundred hours oT various sporTs, such as skaTing, baseball, hockey, bowling, baskelrball, and hiking. She musT be in good healTh and sTay in Training Two monThs each semesTer. A WP is given To anyone meeTing all The re- quiremenTs excepT making a class Team. Any girl who is The proud possessor oT an R has cerTainly earned iT. The Girls' AThIeTic AssociaTion lG.A.A. To youl promoTes friendships among iTs members. plans and organizes The aThleTic acTiviTies Tor all Park girls, develops leadership and good sporTsmanship, sTimulaTes a keen inTeresT in aThleTic acTiviTies, and each spring They sponsor a Play Day Tor iunior high school girls coming To Park The Tollowing year. ln order To hold oTTice, The girl musT have earned aT leasT one leTTer. The oTlicers Tor The Tall semesTer were: PresidenT, Evelyn SkovsTedg Vice-PresidenT, Carol OsTlundq SecreTary, DoroThy Jane Nel- seng Treasurer, Mary June ParmenTer. Spring semesTer oTFicers were: PresidenT, Carol OST- lundg Vice-PresidenT, DoroThy Jane Nelseng SecreTary, Marjorie AllerTg Treasurer, Bernice Tomczak. Miss Shaw is Triend and adviser oT This group as well as oT all The oTher girls in our school. Firsi' Row: Theodora Nielsen, Beverly Harms, DoroThy R. Anderson, Mary Hein, Mary June ParmenTer, Carol OsTlund, Miss Shaw, Evelyn Skov- sTed, DoroThy J. Nelson, Mary Jones, Doris Gilmore, Grace Manclernack, Beverly Sorenson, Alyce Johnson. Second Row: Helen Reifmeier, Sarah GaTes, Helen Savides, Marion Wedego, Helen Page, LoRayne Tomczak, Bernice Aiello, Cleo Moran, Rose Marie Bauernfeind, Elsie Brown, BeTTy Gail Bridgman, Lois PeTerson, Bernice Tomczak. Third Row: Cecelia Ondercin, Viola Timer, Edna Weber, Mary Graves, Lois Barr, DoroThy Murphy, Mabel Brown, Anna Hein, DoroThy Coryell, Barbara Jean GriTHTh, Lucille STeineke, CaThryn SmiTh, Lorraine Kwiecinski. Fourfh Row: Grace Sficos, MargareT R. PeTerson, DoroThy Malko, RuTh Danielson, Dolores Kowales, RuTh SchlaTTer, DoroThy Harding, Bernice Nelson, RuTh Zunke, June Evenson, Elenora Seeger, MargareT Scoon, Irene Pavlik, Sylvia Dibble. Fifth Row: Edna Sorenson, KaThryn Jansen, DoroThy Larke, Mary Jane Davis, Olga Lisy, MargareT Nelsen, HarrieT Rasmussen, Dolores Mueller, Mary Jane Dahl, Mariorie Allerf, LoreTTa Davis, MarqareT Back, Lucille Walek. T p El ra Seeger. Carol Osflund, Mary Hein. Cenferz Doris GI H len Page. FronT: Lois Barr, Marjorie AllerT, Anna H s 52,73 WV -Millwall Lg HOCKEY This year The sophomores were very good- naTured abouT The socks and bumps They re- ceived Trom The hockey sTicks and balls. Of course, such baTTerings were all-all uninTen- Tional. Miss Shaw TaughT The in's and ouT's OT hock- ey To all girls during Thehgym periods, while Mrs. McCall Took charge oT The girls who played aTTer school. lnsTrucTion in badminTon was given by Miss Shaw during hockey season. TournamenTs were held. This game is gaining populariTy Through- ouT The counTry. IT is played indoors and is similar To Tennis, buT insTead oT a ball a shuT- Tlelock is used. Their love OT hockey kepT The sophomores, iuniors, and seniors ouT in The cold unTil The snow drove Them inside. However. before They wenT in, The annual hockey TournamenT was played, and The seniors were vicTorious. The girls on The winning Team were Carol OsTlund lCapT.l, Alice PaTer, Doris Gilmore, Elenora Seeger, Mariorie AllerT, Gladys Anderson, Mary Hein, Anna Hein, Helen Page, Lois Barr, and DoroThy Anderson. CongraTulaTions. VOLLEV BALL The girls couldn'T Take iT any more, playing hockey in The snow lcould you?l, so They sTayed inside and enioyed Themselves playing vol- ley ball. Teams were Tormed in gym classes, and even The seniors learned someThing abouT The game. ATTer ChrisTmas Miss Shaw TaughT The girls The ToundaTion sTunTs Tor pyramid building. The resulTs oT The TesTs, given by Mrs. McCall. deTermined The sophomore. iunior, and senior Teams, and Then The Tun began! The sophs Tried hard To beaT The seniors, buT couldn'T. So-o-o. The seniors played harder To beaT The iuniors, buT how could blase seniors expecT To win over baTTlers who had To uphold a volley ball cham- pionship Trom lasT year. The girls who made The iunior Team were, Mar- gareT Back lCapT.l, Ciel Walelc, Remore Niel- son, Alyce Larson, BeTTy Nielson, Jo Ann Feczlco. l-lelen Anderson, Beverly June Soren- son, and Lucille Walelc. ' Good luck, iuniors Tor nexT year. 79 Fronf: Remore Nielsen. Beverly June Sore J A F lc Top: BeTTy Nielsen, MargareT Back, Helen A d FN 2 5 Q Tiiiffif ll fs 5 . N7 . a SPRING SEMESTER WiTh The beginning oT The new semesTer, bas- keTball was sTarTed in gym classes and aTTer school. The girls Tollowed The oTTicial rules Tor women's baslceTball. When Mrs. McCall moved Trom The ciTy dur- ing The TirsT parT oT The spring semesTer, The girls losT a grand Triend. However. They Tound a new one in Miss Lillian Tomelc, who conTinued Mrs. McCall's work. WiTh The warm weaTher land spring Teverl came The baseball season. While mosT oT The girls played baseball, Miss Shaw gave Tennis insTrucTions To Those wishing To learn The Tun- damenTals OT The game. A Tennis and golT TournamenT was also held aTTer school. OT course, The girls couldn'T sTand To see our won- derTul Track going To wasTe. so They spenT some oT Their gym periods using iT To iTs besT advan- Tage. The sTars oT The diTTerenT classes com- peTed Tor highesT honors in The Field Day evenTs, which closed The season's sporTs in a grand way. Froni' Row: De Lorenzo, Miehel, Hanson. Coach RiTT, MinTon. Robf. Mueclrler, FirTko. Second Row: Manager, Murray, Scieno, Mrvlclca, Rich, Mueckler, M g We, The sTudenTs oT Park l-ligh School, Teeling Thaf sporTsmanship demands a cheer Tor The opposing Team when iT demonsTraTes a good play, hereby give The besT cheer we know how To give as a whole school To our biTTeresT ene- my. To The l-lorliclc baslceTball Team. champions oT The Big EighT Comcerence, in recogniTion oT Their sporTsmanship. courage in adversiTy, and TighTing spiriT we dedicaTe This page oT our KIPI. AlThough iTs chances Tor The Big EighT cham- pionship were regarded by some as slim Trom The beginning oT The year, and even desperaTe aTTer They had been beaTen in Their second game wiTh Kenosha, These l-lorliclc players were only spurred To greaTer heighTs oT endeavor in The Tace oT almosT insurmounTable diTFiculTies. Parlc High Teels ThaT such qualiTies in any Team are deserving of The highesT honor and emolu- menTs ThaT can be comcerred upon The aThleTes oT any school. fi El 12361111 C011'iCl1l41l' FirsT Row: PeTer Dallas, Willard Phelps, Harry SchulTz, Miss PoTTer, Franklyn Glassow. Howard C-oTTlieb. Seco d Row: John du Domaine, Donald Lasley, Carl Sabee, Reider, STensvaag, Nick ZabiT, Helen MargareT Jacobsen MargareT Cowley. Third Row: George Mauger, Charles ChrisTenson, G-ranT STueber, Jim Connelly, Bob Ra mussen, Charles Finn, Paul Tiles. EINSTEINITES Place: A sTudenT gaThering. Time: SepTember x x-l- I8:43. CharacTers: Mr. Hood and James Connolly. Mr. Hood: WiThouT any TurTher preliminaries l should like To presenT To you a sTudenT who will mage an announcemenT concerning a school clu . James Connolly: Don'T long compuTaTions geT you down? OT course They do, buT all This men- Tal exerTion can be eliminaTed by a knowledge OT The slide rule. Each semesTer, if iT is pos- sible, Miss PoTTer, The adviser, gives an inTeresT- ing and inTormaTive discussion oT The rule and you begin To wonder why you weren'T informed oT The shorT cuT long beTore. The club also provides brain Teasers Tor some meeTings and iT is oTTen proved ThaT numbers do lie when zero is proved To be 6. or 3. ln This, geomeTry, wiTh iTs logical reasoning, is exTremely useTul. We learn Tar beyond whaT could be accomplished in The class periods. Fall SemesTer OTTicers Spring SemesTer Harry SchulTz ..,.... PresidenT .... GranT STueber Howard GoTTlieb. . Vice-PresidenT. . Jim Connelly Franklyn Glassow .... SecreTary Charles Finn M. A. PoTTer ........ Adviser .. M A PoTTer B A fr M W iii Eall SemesTer Edwin RoberTs. . FirsT Row: Edwin RoberTs, Allen PorTer, BurT Tradewell, RuTh Wheary, Lucille Tarro, Mrs. FelTen. Second Row: Joel Barre-TT, John du' Domaine, Viole'T HoTfman, EsTher Nelson, James Pease, Helen Savides, Lorraine Kwiecinski. Third Row: Jerome RoberTs, Gerald Hansen, Tom Kennedy, Elsie Sorensen, Harry Sfarke, Fern TolTson. FourTh Row: Tomas ATkins, James LuTTer, Alyerd LuelloTT, Jack Lockwood, Millard Edmonds. OTTicers Spring SemesTer . . . . , . PresidenT. . . . . .BurT Tradewell Helen Savides ..... Vice-PresidenT ...... Harry STarke Allen PorTer. . E. FelTen .... . . . . . . .SecreTary. . .Leonard Treviranus ....Advnser............E. FelTen aj l X, 5? x DEBATE CLUB Place: An assembly program. Time: SepTember x Q: 5 CharacTers: Edwin RoberTs and Mr. Hood. Mr. Hood: --any TurTher preliminaries I should like To presenT To you a speaker who will make an announcemenT concerning a school club. Edwin RoberTs: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Thank you. FaculTy and sTudenT body oT Park High, iT is indeed a pleasure To adverTise The splendid possibiliTies and opporTuniTies which The DebaTe Club has To oTTer you. The insTruc- Tiveness OT The DebaTe Club is ThreeTold. FirsT, There is oTTered pracTice in public speaking, second, debaTe develops a person's reasoning TaculTies, Third, debaTe gives a knowledge oT currenT problems. Sign up Tor debaTe class and belong To a club by so doing. For example, some oT our de- baTable Topics Tor inTer-school debaTes wiTh Horlick, Kenosha and ST. CaTherines are Tree TexTbooks, The lTalo-EThiopian War, arms and ammuniTions, and ciTy governmenT by manager Torm. Firsl' Row: Maryl Coonley, Mariorie Hansen, Elizabelh Ticknor, Margarel' Smiih, Jane Hood, Belly Minshall, Elsie Miruch. Second Row: Elmer Shovers, Waller Smolenski, Mildred Barra, Rulh Jensen, Helen Brill, Mildred Harris, Jane Harris. Third Row: Marlin Smiih, George Mauger, Caiherine Colman. lone Berquisl, Jeanne Fordice, Margarel' Pelerson, Miss Knudsen. Fourfh Row: Roberi Coulure, Harrison Levin, Marion Paulson, Doris Carlson, Mary Jane Krause. Fall Semesler Officers Spring Se-mesler Margarel Smilh ..... Presidenl, ......... Jane Hood Bob Hansen ....... Vice-Presideni ,..... Doris Carlson Myron Millar .,...... Secreiary ...,.. Mildred Harris Jane Hood .... .,.. T reasurer . .. .... Carol Ausiin M. Knudsen. .. ... Adviser ... ....M. Knudsen X15 4 ,J x..J f Eg J 326-A-. Pierre X Lv I , 1 , , LE CIRCLE-FRANCAIS Place: A school leciure. Time: Seplemberx 4x:lOO. Characfersz Mr. Hood and Myron Millar. Mr. Hood: - --lurlher preliminaries l should like lo presenl Jro you a sludenl who will make an announcemenl concerning a school club. Myron Millar: Am I or am l noi eligible lo ioin lhe French club? is a queslion being asked by sludenls enlering Park. I should lice lo answer Thai' queslion. To be- come a member, one musl have ai' leasl one year of French. A+ lhe meelings we siudy French cusloms, arf, lileralure, and music by means of plays and slides. We ofien have con- lesls and award prizes. If il would be an induce- menl lo you, we also serve refreshmenls. Any visilors are always welcome on allernale Tuesdays. Firsl Row: Zane Urbush, Earl Parker, Edward Bishop, J. E. LaBonde, Oscar Joyner, William Lange, Nick Zabil, Sluarl Hilzelberger. Second Row: Edward Duralny. Harold Langner, Harold Slrand, Laverne Vrooman. Joel Barrell, Roberl Galloway, Jack Smilh. Third Row: Richard Newmann, Ernsl G. LaBonde, Carl Nielson, Paul Tolle, Adoll Schuberl. Irving Oneson. Leonard Carrier. RIFLE Place: A large plallorm. Time: Seplember x 75-l-I8:x-I-68. Characlers: Oscar Joyner and Mr. l-lood. Mr. Hood: -1 - --preliminaries I should like lo presenl lo you a sludenl who will make an announcemenl concerning a school club. Oscar Joyner: Sluolenls ol Park I-Iigh, do you wish lo learn how lo gel shol? Excuse me. I mean, do you wanl lo learn how lo shool? ll so, lhen ioinl lhe Rille Club! There is no olher club lhal can help you lo develop sell-conlrol and accuracy as lhe Rille Club can and will if you ioin. I This club was organized in I929 and became allilialed wilh lhe Nalional Rille Associalion. Since lhen il has laken greal slrides in leaching sporlsmanship and shooling lor accuracy. Shooling is done al Case's ouldoor range and members have lhe wonderlul opporlunily lo develop lheir marksmanship by laking parl in nalional, mid-weslern. inler-scholaslic, and in- dividual compelilive conlesls. Fall Semesler Oscar Joyner. Carl Nielson.. Ollicers Spring Semesler ...... Presidenl , Oscar Joyner Vice-Presidenl ........ Jack Smilh Irving Oneson ....... Secrelary. . Edward Bishop ..... J. E. La Bonde. .......Aclviser.. . .Treasurer .... . .. ........Earl Parker .Carl Nielson J. E. LaBonde Q-iN f 5' 'K ZX -Q azfe Air. 1 '-X' i, 6 ..,1 5x . Sfwsifw Reign 4 li N32 Firsi' Row: Mr. lselin, Roberf Freres, Charles Thielen, Edwin Slarke, Bob Smirh, William Ballanlyne, Gordon Marlin. Second Row: Llewlyn Jones, Lars Wangaard, Marlin Smilh, Bill Pelfibone, Alex Temmer, Arlhur Lucarel, John Chrisfiano. Third Row: Mike Bosz, Richard Gaiser, Richard Rilz, Marlin Clancy, Roberl Borman, Heclor Mayer. Fourfh Row: James Millin, Roberl Newman, Henry Janes, Llewlyn Williams, Henry Jorgenson, Ted Masfos. SENIGR HI-Y Place: A place of some learning. Time: Seplemberx 4x-l-28:2x-l-78. Characlers: lvlr. Hood and Bob Smilh. Mr. Hood: -- - -1 -il should like lo presenl 'ro you a sludenl who will make an announcemenl concerning a school club. Bob Smifh: The Senior Hi-Y is a semi-high school and Y. lvl. C. A. club. The members are sludenls of Park. They sponsor lhe alhlelic banquel, Go-'ro-college day, and The Park'-Hor- lick Foolball assembly. This year 'rhey were hosls lo lhe Older Boys' Conference. They have swimming and 'rwo baskelloall reams in leagues, and olher aclivilies. They have parries and informalive lalks by knowing indi- viduals. There are lhree groups lo lhe Hi-Y: Sopho- more, Junior and Senior. A boy wilh grades loo low is nol allowed as a member. Fall Semesler Edwin Slarke. . Charles Thielen .... Roberl Smilh. Roberl Freres. W. J. lselin, .. Officers Spring Semes'l'er . . Presideni .,...... Roloerl Smilh Vice-Presidenl ...... Roberl Freres . Secrelary .... Llewelyn Williams .. . . . . .Treasurer. . . . . .,Llewelyn Jones ,. .Adviser .......... W. J. lselin 7 ia s f -Q QQ Firsi' Row: Edwin Sfarlce, Francis Held, Mike Krepelan, Maxine Lingsweiler, Peler Ziclrus, Mr. Johnson. Second Row: Melvin Hurfienne, Donald Rievell Edward Campbell, Edward Muzenslci, Kennelh Poulsen, Alberl Radwill, Alvin Brunnelson. Third Row: Slanley Bialeclci, Edward Niesen, Richard Weslrich, Edward Davis, Leonard Zischeslcy, Anfhony Turlcowslci, Anlhony Pizalowski. Fall Semesler Officers Spring Semesler Milce Krepelan ...... Presidenl ...., Kennelh Poulsen Francis Held ...... Vice-Presidenl ....... Francis Held Maxine Lingsweiler.. Secrelary ...... Harrison Wurz H. R. Johnson ....... Adviser ....... H. R. Johnson YJ my Z fu 4 1 1, FL WRCDNG FONT Place: Behind a speaker's lable. Time: Seplember x 4lx-I-7l--22x-l-78. Characfersz Milce Krepelan and Mr. Hood. Mr. Hood: should like 'ro presenl lo you a sludenl' who will malce an announcemenl concerning a school club. Milre Krepelan: The Wrong Fonl Club is a club for all sludenls who have lalcen prinling and would be inleresled in learning more aboul lhe subiecl lhan Jrhe regular lime permils. ll is lo help improve our school shop and prinling course, lo sludy prinling problems, and, in gen- eral. lo help lhose who wanl' 'ro have a grealer underslanding of lhe prinling field. The club is limiled lo all sludenls who have compleled prinling 2 and have a grade ol G or above. A+ our meelings we have oulside speakers, 'rallcs by members, club proiecls, and somelimes a social program wilh relreshmenls. SiTTing: Richard Coonley, Gerald Hansen, Bruce,Kranick, ErnesT HeuTTner, Theodora Nielsen, Verna Erdman, Helen Heck, Jean Mainland, Maryl Coonley. Second Row: Marion Richardson, DoroThy MarTin, Grace ChrisTenson, BeTTe Jane Anderson, HarrieT Vriesman, Mable Rannow, ElizabeTh Ticknor, Jane Hood, BeTTy Minshall, Marion Hislop, Frances Ball, Miss DuFour. Third Row: Edward Prince, Frederick Schroeder, VyanT Gausche, Russell Wagner, Leonard Treviranus, , LeRoy Hinze. Fall SemesTer Russell Wagner ..... RoberT Spike ..... Jane Hood ..... ElizabeTh Ticknor .... L. DuFour .,... ... OTTicers Spring SemesTer . PresidenT ........ RoberT Spika . Vice-PresidenT ..... Edward Prince SecreTary ........ LeRoy Hinze .Treasurer . . . ,... Jane Hood Adviser . . .... L. DuFour cwilwc milk x lMi414Qfd:wM ,J AUDUBON CLUB Place: The Home oT Kipikawi. x-I-3 Time: SepTemberx 1- I4. 2 CharacTers: Mr. Hood and LeRoy Hinze. Mr. Hood: like To presenT To you a sTudenT who will make an announcemenT concerning a school club. LeRoy Hinze: Our Audubon Club is an organ- izaTion oT Park sTudenTs who TosTer an inTeresT in birds and proTecT all bird liTe. During The cold monThs, we hold our meeTings inside and discuss all phases in bird liTe. OTTen we have ouTside speakers who have a large background OT naTure and birds. In The warm monThs, we have hikes every oTher week and have a big Time. We know if you join The Audubon Club oT Park High ThaT you will have a good Time and also gain a wide knowledge oT birds and ouT- door liTe. ' FirsT Row: ElizabeTh Tickner, Ruth Wheary, Jack SmiTh, RoberT SchuTelT, Richard Jorgenson. Marion Hislop, LeRoy Hinze, Tom Morrissey, Mr. Rowe. Second Row: Joyce Bassindale, MargareT SmiTh, Nancy Smader, DoroThy SwarTouT, Elmer Nelson, RoberT Campbell, Arlyss MelTon, Virginia Anderson. OTmar VolkerT. Third Row: EIizabeTh KauTTeld, Helen Swanson, Genevieve Dederich, Jeanne Fordice, Rose Hoyer, Lorraine Anderson, Verna Erdmann, DoroThy Kroulik. Fourfh Row: lone BerquisT, Mildred Harris, Alma FriTz, Marion Wedego, Marion Richardson, MargareT PeTerson, EThyl Cook. WEST LANE PLAYERS Place: LargesT school in Racine. Time: SepTember x 3l4-xl:x-88. CharacTers: Tom Morrissey and Mr. l-lood. Mr. Hood: -To presenT To you a sTudenT who will make an announcemenT concerning a school club. Tom Morrissey: We are here This morning To discuss a very pleasanT subiecT. lT is a subiecT in which The whole school is inTeresTed. This subiecT which is so imporTanT To The school as a whole is The dramaTic club, The WesT Lane Players. The club aims To make The school more dra- maTic-minded by producing plays in which The members alTernaTe in acTing. There are TiTTy members in The club and we wanT each To have a chance To acT. We hope you will all Take an inTeresT in This club and if you are aT all inTeresTed in dra- maTics, we would like To have you as a member. Fall SemesTer OTTicers Spring Semesfer M ron Millar ....... PresidenT ......., LeRo Hinze EThlyl Cook. .: ..... Vice-PresidenT ,.... Nancy igmader DoroThy MarTi-n ,..... SecreTary .... Lorraine Sorenson Arlyss MelTon ....... Treasurer .,.... DoroThy Kroulik DoroThy SwarTouT SergeanT-aT-Arms DoroThy SwarTouT T. D. Rowe .......... Adviser .......- . . .T. D. Rowe :T I gh, C cb 5-S! N O T sf 2 X rg l Q his W Qc? '59 TX. Firsf Row: H. A. Harvey, Geraldine Gaedy, Carmelia FrazzeTTo, Evelyn TuTTle, Carol Schneider, BeTTy Jane Sorenson, BeTTy Jane Jenkins. Second Row: June WeisserT, Bernice Lenz, Elaine ArndT, Mary French, JeaneTTe VincenT, Alice Paul- son, ElizabeTh Lerise. Third Row: Eleanor Zalecki, Elsie Jaclcland, Elsie ChrisTensen, Edward Due, Dagmar Dvorak, Virginia Eclcman, Josephine MiTek, Doris Rooney. FourTh Row: EvereTTe Bunck, Jack Lockwood, Raymond PeTersen, Earl Andrews, Wilbur TangersTrom, Luciene Osborne, Elmer Lemesh. ESPERANTO CLUB Place: On The rosTrum. Time: SepTemberx x:5VfE. CharacTers: Mr. Hood and Earl Andrews. Mr. Hood: -- -presenT To you a sTudenT who will rrialge an announcemenT concerning a school cu . Earl Andrews: The EsperanTo Club really has someThing imporTanT To oTTer you. Through iT, you can easily learn a new language ThaT has possibiliTies oT inTernaTional use. Dr. Ludwig L. ZamenhoT, a Polish philanThropisT who believed ThaT The one greaT obsTacle To world peace was The lack oT a common Tongue, invenTed iT. The language is based on all The oTher lan- guages, especially LaTin. lT is very regular and has none oT The variaTions oT spelling and pro- nunciaTion which The languages OT oTher coun- Tries have. IT is used a liTTle in commercial cor- respondence in SouTh America, The UniTed STaTes, and Europe. In some counTries iT is used by The Red Cross. Fall SemesTer Lucien Osborne. , . Earl Andrews ...... BeTTy Sorenson. H. Harvey. . . . few T OTTicers Spring SemesTer .. PresidenT. ........ Edward Due Vice-PresidenT Sec. and Treas.. . .... Adviser. . . Q if J fi f -1 Ei . . . . . .Earl Andrews .Hazel DarlingTon Harvey FirsT Row: Mary Fallico, Evelyn TuTTle, Mary Ann Madsen, John Heise, Ed Mayland, Ed Warner. Second Row: John Nero, RoberT Gibbs, Donald Jensen, Jack Lockwood, Miss Sawyer. Third Row: Lloyd RabbiTT, KenneTh Snyder, STeve CzeboTar, Alfred Evans, Jerome Mafson, Herberl' Crane. Fall SemesTer Officers Spring SemesTer Edward Mayland .... PresidenT ,... Edward Mayland STeve CzeboTar .... Vice-PresidenT ...Edward Warner John Nero .......... SecreTary ......... John Heise H. Sawyer .... .... A dviser ..... H. Sawyer ll,-5 '22 .I 7 nd . M ,-1 5 fA. ' , W? :law ' Z6 ft-4' Q VIC? EQ... CARTCDON CLUB Place: A school meeTing. Time: SepTemberx 9x:225. CharacTers: Edward Mayland and Mr. Hood. Mr. Hood: -- -- --To you a sTudenT who will rrraklie an announcemenT concerning a school c u . Edward Mayland: The CarToon Club is The voice of The people oT Park High. ls There a liTTle sTaring sophomore siTTing beside you in sTudy hall? Or maybe a TalkaTive girl who geTs on your nerves? Have you a peT peeve? IT There is anyThing of any naTure boThering you, leT The CarToon Club know oT iT. Members will draw The idea in a carToon and puT iT on The bulleTin-board, guaranTeeing you immediaTe relieT. This is noT by any means The only service oT The CarToon Club. AT various doings oT The school, iT draws silhoueTTes and puTs on exhibiTions. Be- sides This The club oTTers opporTuniTy OT con- sTrucTive enioymenT To The people oT Park High. i i FirsT Row: Grace Mandernach, Mary June ParmenTer, BeTTy Minshall, Dagmar Dvorak, June Dvorak, Marian Wedego, Doris Carlson, Bernice Tomczak, Lorraine Kwiecinski. Second Row: Marian Richardson, MargareT Cowley, Helen MargareT Jacobsen, Grace STicas, Barbara GriTTiTh, Maryl Coonley, Mary MaTavka, Helen LeviT, Miss Lillian Case. Third Row: Mr. H. R. Johnson, Joel BarreTT, Edward Campbell, Marian Thogersen, BeTTy Nielsen, Marian J. SmiTh, DoroThy PeTerson, Virginia HolT, DOroThy Kroulik. FourTh Row: Leland McElroy, Thomas ATkins, Dick Calkins, Thomas Kennedy, Elmer Anderson, George Mauger, Nick ZabiT, Raymond Gruhn, Jack Lockwood. BEACON Place: A nOTed school OT Wisconsin. x-7 Time: SepTember x -- : 6. 3 CharacTers: Mr. Hood and Clarence Zens: Mr. Hood: 1 - l -- you a sTudenT who will nfaklie an annOuncemenT concerning a school c u . Clarence Zens: SeT up and prinTed in The Park prinT shop, The Beacon is published every Fri- day by a sTudenT sTaTT. The Beacon sTrives TO aid and encourage wOrTh- while school mOvemenTs, TO serve as an OuTleT Tor sTudenT Opinion, and TO build up and keep alive a sTrOng school spiriT. Humorous inci- denTs, cOlOrTul acTiviTies, and The exciTing aTh- leTic cOnTesTs Tha+ have filled The eighT years OT Park's exisTence, can be revealed by The Bea- con Tiles. The business sTaTT OT The Beacon is engaged in sOliciTing and planning adverTisemenTs. lT is The money Trom merchanTs' adverTisemenTs. TOgeTher wiTh a percenTage OT S. C. A. collec- Tions, which suppOrTs The paper. IT is a mem- ber OT The NaTiOnal SchOlasTic Press Associa- Tion. OFFICERS DOrOThy Kroulik ................... ExecuTive EdiTOr Clarence Zens ..... ..., E diTOr-in-ChieT George Mauger .... .. .Managing Edifor Joel.BarreTT ................. ..... S pOrTs Edifor Marion Thogersen .................. Makeup Edii-or Meryl-Coonley, Thomas ATkins ......... News EdiTOrs Virginia HolT ,................ AdverTising Manager fX 'li Sf 33 iz- i ' X - 4. fe- g f Tl W 1. lm FirsT Row: June ChrisTensen, Marian Jarosh, Mabel Rannow, RoberT Oldham, Lorraine Anderson, Muriel PeTersen, Alice Deschler, Marilla MuskaT. Second Row: John Prifchard, John Heise, Dolores Mueller, Anna Hein, LaVerne FeichTer, June Evenson, Frances BischaTT, Margery Burgess, Virginia ShaTTuck. Third Row: Ofmar VolkerT, Erma Newbauer, Alice Paulsen. Lillian Schmidt ElizabeTh Linse, Mildred Peznoski, Doris Neumann, DoroThy Andersen. Fourfh Row: Oscar Joyner, Richard Hansen, Niels Larsen, Howard DahnerT, Mike Bosz, William Schroeder, Allen PorTer, Paul Mier, Paul Tiles. FiTTh Row: STanley Bialecki, LeRoy Hinze, STuarT HiTzelberger, Reed Syler, Jack Weber, Andrew Pocius, Lesley Beck. DEUTSCHER VEREIN Place: A room wiTh bad acousTics. Time: SepTemberx X2-l-82-I-2l3x+2I.5l:3O2. CharacTers: Mr. Hood and Alice Deschler. Mr. Hood: V sTudenT who wi'l make an announcemenT concerning a school club. Alice Deschler: Surely you have all heard oT The German club. Every German 3 and 4 sTudenT should come To The meeTings, Tor we have The iolliesT oT Times. ln February our German Club was enTerTained aT The Y. W. C. A. by The Hor- lick High School German Club. Our club in Turn enTerTainecl Them aT Park in April.aT an evening program. Our programs consisT OT singing German songs. Travel Talks, dramaTizaTions, and playing games. OT course we have our business meeTing. EveryThing is in German, buT don'T leT ThaT keep you away. Our purpose is To aid you in The speaking oT German. Fall SemesTer RoberT Oldham. . 'Edward MorTenson. Alice Deschler., Margery Burgess. . A.'Wiechers ..... OTTicers Spring SemesTer PresldenT .......... Mike Bosz Vice-PresidenT .... Richard Hanson . . . SecreTary ...... ElizabeTh Linse . . Treasurer ....... Marion Jarosh . . . .Adviser . . .. . . . .A. Wiechers c. of X T I l L fig l i Firsf Row: Miss Rodefer, Charloffe Van Bussum, Kafhryn Foxwell, Mary Jones, Dorofhy Peferson, Barbara Griffifh, Beffy Croyle, Lorraine Tomczak, Grace Sficos. Margaref Dudish. Second Row: Belfie Jayne Meyer, Rufh Melander, Peggy Draeger, Mary l-lalpin. Jane Goeble, Eleanor Zore, Eva Pofash, Winifred Roesf, Beffy G. Bridgman. Third Row: Doris Amburf, Joyce Madsen. Beffy Nehoda. Mary Zabif, Ann Filandrinos. Irene Pefrakis, Poppy Vakos, Janis Taylor. Fourfh Row: Dagmar Dvorak, Cecelia Ondercin. June Handrich, Belfy Jenkins, Jean DeLong, Juanifa Jaiosh, Rose Marie Bauernfiend. Bessie Kanelos, Dorofhy Driver. Fiflh Row: Evelyn Winfher, Maralyn Walfer, Beffy J. Sorensen, Harrief l-lader, Lois Asby, Beffy Jane Anderson. Alyce Bung, Viola Timer. SOPI-lOIvlOl2E WICI-IAKA Place: The boys' gym. Time: Sepfemloerx V922-I-8l3l2:3x. Characfers: Dagmar Dvorak and Mr. l-loool. Mr. Hood: - who will make an announcemenf concerning a school clulo. Dagmar Dvorak: One of our obiecfs in fhe Sophomore Wichaka is fo fake delighf in help- ing ofhers. Girls who wish'fo loin are given a recepfion and a few weeks afer a formal inifiafion, a candle lighfing ceremony, and sfill lafer an informal in- ifiafion. Af Thanksgiving we give baskefs fo needy fam- ilies and af Easfer fime baskefs fo fhe children af fhe Taylor Orphanage. Our purpose is fo honor God, our Counfry, and our Communify, fo help ofher girls and fo be af all fimes loyal, frue members of fhe Girl Re- serves. Fall Semesfer Officers Spring Semesfer Emma Geclraifis ..... Presidenf ...... Dagmar Dvorak Margaref Dudish. . .Vice-Presiclenf .... Beffy Engsfrom Beffy Sorenson ...... Secrefary ........ Beffy. Barreff Cecelia Ondercin .... Treasurer .,... Evangeline Alder l-l. Rodefer ......,.. Adviser .......... l-l. Rodefer xx S Z! r f K W X 2 J f Firsi' Row: Caihryn Jansen, June Evenson, Phyllis Brown, Joyce Alcoii, Mildred Barla, Carol Morfenson. Bernice Tornczalc. Second Row: Joyce Bassindale, Marian Wedego, Mary Shovers, Mildred Harris, Shirley Nelson, Lola Ashley. Caralyn Gibson. Third Row: Peggy Scoon, Frances Gere, June Chrislensen, Jeanne Fordice, Bernice Pelers, Gladys Day, Miss Sorensen. Fourfh Row: Lois Sorenson, Elsie Sorensen, Gladys Finn, Eulah Triggs, Marion Corsie, LaVerne Feighfer, Sylvia Dibble. Fall Semesier Officers Spring Semesrer Caryl Morfenson .... Presidenr ..,... Marion Jarosh Joyce AlcoH ...... Vice-Presideni ...... Elinor Srorms Phyllis Brown. . Secrelary and Treasurer. .June Evensen E. Sorensen .......... Adviser .......... E. Sorensen Q x Rig f g' JQJ 'I sf V il i Ha mm' J fl Q .,-'Q .c JUNIOR WIC!-IAKA Place: Norlheasl corner of building. Time: Sepiember x Hfpl UO-l-25l:4Ox. Charaders: Mr. Hood and Marion Jarosh. Mr. Hood: will make an announcemeni concerning a school club. Marion Jarosh: Junior Wichalca is The middle branch of ihe 'rhree Wichilcas. lls purposes are 'rhe same as 'rhe oiher iwo. Among our aciivi- lies are The annual school dance, l-lallowe'en pariy, and ihe faculiy and alumni Teas. The Junior branch does needlecrafi, and lasl semesler we made Girl Reserve Hes. Poiluclc suppers are regular occurrences. A general spiril oi good fellowship presides in ihis club. You may be sure all new members will be cordially received. l Firsl Row: Lucille Hughes, Gerda Moneleldl, Mable Davies, Rulh Karlson, Doris Gilmore, Grace Mandernach, Day Balen- burg, Elsie Miruch. Second Row: Marion Thogerson, Rulh Heary, Elhel Goldbeclc, Kalheryn Harbridge, Dorolhy Koskey, Jane Harris. Third Row: Doris Williamson, Myrl-le Chrislensen, Belly Mann, Dorolhy Murphy, Belly Jayne Hinlz, Mary June Parmenler, Olivia Balmer. Fourlh Row: Rebecca Gellman, Muriel Pelersen, June Dvorak, Dorolhy Marlin, Kalheryn Droysen. Fall Semesler Oliicers Spring Semesler Doris Gilmore ....... Presidenl ..i.... Doris Gilmore Rulh Karlson ...... Vice-Presidenl ....... Joyce Davis Grace Mandernach. . Secrelary ..... Carol Morlensen June Chrislensen ..... Treasurer ........ Mildred Barla O. Baker. .. . ..... Adviser .,.......... O. Balcer GENERAL WICHAKA Fall Semesler Oliicers Spring Semesler Jane Harris ......... Presidenl. . .Mary J. Parmenler Doris Williamson. . .Vice-Presidenl . . .Margarel Scoon June Dvoralc .....,.. Secrelary . .Grace Mandernach Mildred Barla ....... Treasurer .,.. Marion Thogerson E. Sorensen. .. ..., Adviser ......... E. Sorensen H. Rodeler .... ...., A dviser . . .... H. Rodeler O. Baker .... ..... A dviser ..... O. Balcer SENIOR WICHAKA Place: I9Ol Twelllh Slreel. Time: Seplember x x-l I 5-l-30-xl : vi Characlers: Mary June Parmenler and Mr. Hood. Mr. Hood: lmalce an announcemenl concerning a school club. Mary June Parmenler: To lace lile squarely, lo lind and give lhe loesl, is lhe aim ol Wichalca girls. They give lo lhe poor al various limes ol lhe year. Worlhwhile lallcs are presenled al lhe general meelings which are held ever so ollen. There is also a cabinel which meels once a monlh and decides whal lhe clulo will do dur- ing lhe semesler. Wichalca has lhe use ol lhe Y. W. C. A. swim- ming pool., ll has Hallowe'en parlies, April Fool's parlies, a lea lor lhe lacully in lhe Park High library, and one lor lhe molhers al lhe Y. W. C. A. FirsT Row: Caryl Sheen, AnneTTe Tallman, Rebecca Milner, Nancy Smader, RuTh Wheary, MargareT SmiTh, Marion Hislop, Jane Hood, BeTTy Minshall, ElizabeTh Ticlcnor, Carol AusTin. Second Row: Marjorie Hansen, lone BerquisT, RuTh DeGrooT, RiTa Mae Gordon, Virginia Eclcman, NaTalie KubaTh, Marion Hood, MargareT Nelson, Marjorie Higgins, Helen LeviT, DoroThy Ann Driver. Third Row: DoroT-hy Hay, Doris Luelloiji, Jean TaiT, Maryl Coonley, AnToineTTe Polcin, DoroThy SwarTouT, Muriel Kroeschell, Elaine Carey, EsTher PoTTorT, WiniTred WalTz, Miss HunTer. FourTh Row: Frances Anderson, CaTherine Colman, Margarei' Schneider, Minnie Derlcsen, ElizabeTh Sewell, Carol Schneider, Frances Ball, Renee Fancher, JeaneTTe VincenT, Laura Davis, Jean Huber. FiTTh Row: Carol OsTlund, June ChrisTenson, Eleanor STorms, Elsie Shilling. l.areTTa Richards, Madeline PaTriclc, Margery Burgess, DoroThea Gere, ElizabeTh PaTriclc, Virgene Slick. Fall SernesTer OTiicers Spring SemesTer : ' ' j. n Marion Hislop .....,. PresidenT ....... Marion Hislop Place In a building near 6 deser Oil: dusil RuTh Wheary ,.... Vice-PresidenT ...... RuTh Wheary 5 30 MargareT SmiTh ...., SecreTary .... .,.. J ane Hood Jane Hood .....,... Treasurer... .... Jean TaiT Time: Seplembe' X X Z T5 G. HunTer. .. .. Adviser .... .. .G. HunTer CharacTers: Mr. Hood and Marion Hislop. Mr. Hood: T -an announcemenT concerning a school club. . P Marion Hislop: Tri Alpha sTands Tor develop- menT oT characTer, Triendship, and service. X Some oT The major evenTs are The 'Formal iniTia- , - 3 55537 Tion aT The opening oT each semesTer, a Dads' ' - NighT, presenTaTion oT a ChrisTmas assembly, -5 fi a ST. PaTriclc's parTy, The MoThers' Day and , B FaculTy Teas, The Senior Farewell aT The close X oT each semesTer, and The publicaTion oT a club f 0 paper Twice a year. A 6 Every girl in Tri Alpha is a member OT one oT ' j y VQ , The six commiTTees which have a chairman aT The head OT each. Every commiTTee has a spe- ci'Tic meeTing To plan besides iTs regular duTies Tor The semesTer. Tri Alpha's moTTo is Every member an acTive member, and Toward This goal iT conTinually sTrives. 99 FirsT Row: Mr. lselin, Helen Swanson, Ellen Anderson, Bob Toeppe, Marion Corsie, EsTher PoTTorT, MarTin Clancy, Frances Moskonas, Eugenia Levin, DoroThy Fick, Bob Miller. Second Row: Joel BarreTT, Marion Jensen, Orland Hare, Bernice PeTers, Elsie Sorensen, Helen Savides, MargareT Nelson, ElizabeTh Ticknor, Nancy Smader, Jane Hood, RiTa Gordon, BeTTy Jane Sorensen. Third Row: Bob SmiTh, Thomas ATkins, Elmer Nelson, MargareT Scoon, Donald Lasley. MargareT Schneider, Tom Taylor, Millard Edmonds, RoberT Campbell, Jimmy Russell. FourTh Row: Ronald Sorenson, Charles Finn, William Sell, Edwin RoberTs, ErhardT Swan, Leonard Treviranus, Richard Jorgenson, Milfon Jensen, Jim Connelly. OFFICERS EsTher PoTTorT. .. ..................... PresidenT . . . . MarTin Clancy ..., .......... V ice-PresidenT Place: In a room ln The home OT Klplkawl- Marion Corsie ..,. .... S ecreTary and Treasurer W. J. lselin ..... ......,......... A dviser Time: SepTember x 2x-IOVTQ-:O. CharacTers: EsTher PoTTorT and Mr. Hood. Mr. Hood: --- -- --announcemenT concerning a school club. EsTher PoTTorT: The Junior CiTizen's Forum was sTarTed a while ago by a group in one oT The Economics classes, buT They goT no TurTher Than .7 seTTing down The obiecTives and Traming a 'xf f' xr ConsTiTuTion. Now iT is a large club oT over 611 TiTTy members. The obiecT oT The club is To geT more sTudenTs inTeresTed in modern problems, ' 4: and To geT Them To discuss The problems wiTh N.,- open-mindedness. We have Three kinds oT D 6 fi meeTings in addiTion To The special supper K X62-1 meeTing, an assembly program, and a picnic. There are meeTings wiTh speakers who Talk on currenT Topics, and discussion groups carried on by The members Themselves. We have an advisory board oT nine members. We inviTe you To visiT any oT our meeTings and learn To Talk inTelligenTly wiTh your parenT when he waxes wise aT The Table. Q1- 100 Firsl' Row: Mary Jane Jones, Ella Poulsen, Clarice Nelson, Harriel Rasmussen, Dorofhy Koskey, Miss Jones. Second Row: Jean Fordice. Helen Lane, Joyce Alcoll, Anloinefle Polcin, Kalherine Kelly. Third Row: Donald Bezucha, Margarel Nelsen, Edi+h Hansen, Carol Osllund, Phyllis Brown. Fall Semesler Officers Spring Semesler Phyllis Brown ........ Presidenl .,...,.. Edilh Hansen Carol Osllund ..... Vice-Presidenl , . . .Clarice Nelson Joyce Alcolni. .Secrelary and Treasurer. .Joyce Alcolrl L. Jones ............ Adviser ..,......... L. Jones LIBRARY CLUB Place: ln a slruclure overlooking a valley. Time: Seplemberx xl-x-l-5xl:l2xl2. Characfers: lvlr. Hood and Joyce Alcoll. Mr. Hood: 1 -- concerning a school club. Joyce Alco'H': The Library Club, organized al' Park in I925, promoles in'reres'r in library work. Programs are of a lilerary nalure followed by games and refresh- menls. Among Jrhe aclivilies are Hallowe'en, Thanks- giving, Chrislmas, Washinglon's Birlhday, and Easier Parlies. A marshmallow roasl closes lhe school year. Requiremenl for membership in rhe club is a general average of G. PARK SNARPERS Place: ln a liHlel?l red school house. Time: Seplember x l22-l-x-39:6x. Characfersz Jack Lockwood and lvlr. Hood. Mr. Hood: -- 1- -a school club. Jack Lockwood: Phorography is inleresling noi only from +he piclure raking angle bul also in developing lhe piclures and sludying lhe mulliludinous olher phases of lhe rapidly developing arf. This hobby may be lurned info a gainful occupalion for The simple reason Thai good phorographers and good piclures are in demand. Already as an amaleur you may win prizes lor your piclures. Fall Semesler Officers Spring Semesler Richard Coonley .... Presidenl .... Dimmock Sleeves Frances Moskonas. .Vice-Presidenl Reider Srensvaag Dimmock Sleeves ..., Secrelary ..... Richard Coonley Jack Lockwood ,...,.. Treasurer ....,.. Jack Lockwood L. G. Berven ......... Adviser .,....... L. G. Berven Firsi' Row: Ernesf Huellner, Bob Colley, Leonard Treviranus, Reider Slensvaag, Bruce Kranick. Second Row: Mr. Bervens, Richard Coonley, Josephine Podlucky, Dimmock Sleeves, Jack Lockwood. lOl Firsl Row: Hazel Darlinglon, Marcia Ruben, Anloinelle Polcin, Miss Perham, l-lerberl Kammerer, Elsie Brown. Second Row: Elmer Shovers, Edward Bishop, Lucien Osborne, Ming Lem, Jim Reesnes. Third Row: John Harl, Roberl Willong, Carl Nielson, Don Hansen. TABLE TENNIS CLUB Fall Semesler Ollicers Spring Semesler Marion Hislop ,...... Presidenl ....... Marion Hislop Myron Millar ...... Vice-Presidenl .... Dorolhy Driver Nancy Smader ...... Secrelary ..,..... Elaine Carey Belly' Minshall ....... Treasurer ....... Belly Minshall F. Pennelealher ..... :Adviser ...... F. Pennelealher Place: Al a school program. Time: Seplember x x:3Vl5,625. Characlers: Elaine Carey and Mr. Hood. Mr. Hood: club. Elaine Carey: We ol lhe Table Tennis Club have per- leclly splendid limes. Ol course mosl ol our lime is devoled lo ping-pong, and we have many perleclly splendid games. During lhe year we hold many candy sales lo raise money, which is used parlly on social evenls and parlly is conlribuled lo lhe Thanksgiving and Chrislmas lunds. We have perleclly splendid lournamenls lwo or lhree limes a year in which all members parlicipale. CHESS CLUB Place: Undernealh lwo olher lloors in lhis building. Time: Seplember x x+752:2xl388.5l. Characlers: Mr. Hood and Ming Lem. Mr. Hood: - - - Z-school club. Ming Lem: Chess is a very alluring paslime, and once you gel inleresled, you'll never be able lo slop playing. Chess is also a highly inslruclive game. ll develops lhe mind lo lhe aculesl degree ol accuracy and elliciency. The game is ol exceeding ancienl origin and lhe En- cyclopedia Brillanica calls il lhe mosl inlelleclual ol all games, so do nol ioin us unless you are eager lor and capable ol real menlal worlcouls. Fall Semesler Ollicers Spring Semesler Carl Nielson ........ Presidenl .... Roberl Campbell Edward Bishop ..... Vice-Presidenl ........ Ming Lem Anloinelle Polcin .... Secrelary ....... Marcia Rubin D. Perham .......... Adviser .... D. Perham Eirsl Row: Bob Newman, Nancy Smader, Marion l-lislop, Belly Minshall, Miss Pennelealher. Second Row: Dorolhy Ann Driver, Margarel Nelson, Laura Freeman, Dorolhy Swarloul, Virgene Slick. Third Row: Tom Taylor, Bob Smilh, Henry Janes, Gerald Hansen. 102 sf? 3? it 1 W Q? 0 gli QW' T Hun .f-GUESS twsuom werq N TRI-ILPHA DANCE NUTS- F, IWANTy'SUl'T Q f , Q1 X155 I gg? s H f f f - , I . Q mf A S TEACHER! I'M QFRND J' LOST YO'-19. PQVEQS lmll xo Q 3 B ,f 765 OMAT EARL ., .Xml 2 Lfflj H15 QU N-2. If Qi . WW N m13ff'l!lE1lllmm1l .T S 1' I aor romAmw , I! wvgL'f1E.El?wEgf'ER 1 ' ' ' UMA-N 'MEM K' 1 v A M f fr A , HW ' ' KU' + 1 - , A ' 1 HERES WHERE THE SU-NQL suuuua BE! FLQS: Pow.: , lr X- rrf5 7f f '9 Q .5 ,K T, FH, 447 1. .gf ,lg -'Z-T x THC MORNING AFTER THE NIGHT BEFORE! WELCH


Suggestions in the Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) collection:

Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Washington Park High School - Kipikawi Yearbook (Racine, WI) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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