Wauwatosa High School - Cardinal Pennant Yearbook (Wauwatosa, WI)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 110
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 110 of the 1936 volume:
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UMUW -qi Q-o -62 gui----In XNXI' -N X ' Q X 5 Eg 515 X' N X NX Em ,Q QQ5 1 9'9- o BANQUET Dal' PQ ff f as af XS mf? is Milf? MQ L W Q7 xg is ik MQ, M K . ess, M111 WW ,coo-L '0l73C Q fix Q42 5-, 7 ' I f ,TYN2 ' I w .f N 35 if H sjii Vs? QR IN The CAIQDIIXIAI. PENNAIXIT Publis 1936 FQREWQRD O wad some Poufr the giftie gie us To see oursels as ithers see us! '-'TO SGS OUI'SG'VGS GS OHWGFS SSG us'-that is the thought behind the intormality of this 1936 Cardinal pennant. We heheve we have pre- sented a true picture of school lite. F ft 4 ' at iii I 2 DEDICATICDIXIH The slall of The l936 Cardinal Pennanl, acling in behalf ol an apprecialive sludenl body, dedicales The yearbook lo Mr. Marlin Jackson, successful loolball and baskelball coach. Ulmporlanl as is +he winning ol alhlelic conlesls, lhal is insignilicanl when compared lo implanling ideals ol sporlsmanship which will scorn a viclory won al The cosl of honesly. l am glad lo pay lribule lo lvlr. Jackson's line and 'lailhlul service lo lhe cause ol honesl sport WM. T. DARUNG , Superinlendenl l'll always be able lo look back wilh pleasure on loolball days in high school under The friendly bur capable direclion ol Coach Jackson. JIMMY MARTIN Foolball co-caplain, i935 l-le cerlainly knows his loolball and baskelball- l-le's a line coach. GORDON WOLF Foolball co-caplain, l934 A coach, bul noi given lo loud shoulings and bawlings oul. A quiel man who moves among his players, counseling, direcling, encouraging. Whal he feels he keeps wilhin himself mosl largely. And slill he is a greal success. A nolable improvemenl he seems lo have made upon +he lradi- lional in coaching. l. L. SWANCUTT Principal CCDNTENTS Instruction . 7 Seniors , . . 19 Home Rooms . . 37 Qrganizations . . -45 Snapshots . . , 69 Sports . . .77 MINISTRATI Up these steps and through that tower door, Beyond the ken of students sit the men And women who shall guide and lead our way, Shall turn wrong steps, and set them right again PAGE 5 X Jggygwyf . A, ? sf 5? a W' 4 uw: . Mm' K 4 I M Y f'I-cw in i f :fx INSTIQUCTI There are smiles and greetings and hurried plans To be made before the bell Qings out a warning for loitering Feet And sends tnem CH pell-rnell. D 5 'ff li 5 I , 1 5 'ls Q if K., f, H ' s - :r Eff H1 M 5-1 AGE 7 .:, ,::,- 41314: as ' , ' .... '- af- pw Q, 1 1' K 4 m v ' ,, 5, li ,Q k,Ak,, ww - .t,1,,,,,. -f , f:Efi?3:'+5g,', , fl if i A 'V .Z f - bf--n L-: wi fi :::fQv:::-:w!?'fkm.. -e.::?Zs!saEl: 5 AM H, 1 . . 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Gwen and Joyce, friendly rivals on lhe lennis Court Do you see whal Miss Vescolani means? lvlr. Greenwill enjoys his champions. Up and over Jrhal hurdle, fellows! RUTH ALBERTSON, Nimble fingers on all Iceys. IQTHEODORE ANGEL. Alfliough slworl, I1e's a rniqlnly Iall runner. BETTY JEAN ADAMS, Peoria sen+ us Jrlwis ve enled young lady. MARY JANE ANGLE, Brains plus beaulyg wlwai more Coulcl one wanl? VIRGINIA ALLISON, Red-headed, a dynamic pe sonaIi+y. I-- ROBERT ARNDT. Our slrullinq drum nna HOWARD ANDERSON, Our prize-winning arnaleur singer and wI1is+Ier. GEORGE As a pole BAHLER, vauller I'1e's Iops. DOROTHY BABICH. Her yersa+iIiIy is beyo pression. PAGE 20 ry Ia ior. nd ex- JANUARV OFFICERS HAMILTON HAYNE, Rresiclenl ALBERT DORSCI-I, Vice Presidenl BETTY KLEIN, Secrelary 'DenoIes January Gracluales JUNE QFFICEIQS CARL SCHMIDT, Presidenl CARL MATTHIES, Vice Presidenl VIVIAN UNDERHILL, Secrelary ,fi xx I .0 75-9 - ,vfvyfa ff .f' ,- f lv. ,LLC 'f JG! 'i I fi illenoles January Graduales V NCAMILLE BANTIN. Cm' lillle blonde socialile. ERANCES BARKOW, l-ler slalure is a slrenge conlrasl +0 llwe lweiglwls of lwer personalily. MARGARET BALL, She has a dazzling smile! ROBERT BARRIE, A flash a+ minialure +ennis. MARIE BECKER, Amiable Marie has many friends. WDCDRIS BAUMGARTEN, An oulsfrending service worker in A. C. C. MILDRED BEIL. Happy-go-lucky Mildred. LOIS BAUMGARTNER, Slield run a mile for Ernie. ALAN BEAUMONT. Pyramus willwoul lragedy. PAGE 2l ELEANOR BLOHM, Nice as lhey come. DAVID BOYCE, Jusl one swell lellow. ARCHIE BRAY, A loyal Journal deliverer NORMAN BORGMAN, A goll liend. MARGARET BOURBONNAIS, A cardinal cheerfleader. BETTY BUCHANAN, Charming and beaulilully dressed. JOAN BELTON. The induslrious wardrobe mis- lress in Slagecrall. ANSQN BENNETT. He lives way oul lherel EERN BELLMAN, A mild manner has she. JAERANCES BIRSCHEL. A very capable chaulleur. KENNETH BERNER, A small man lor so much wil. DGNALD BIEI-lN. CHRISTINE BERRY, Meel Mrs. Haggill ol lhe class play. Whal is lhe lalal allraclion ol lhal name Belly? QGJOYCE BLEUEL, Michigan Slale claimed her loo soon lo suil us. PAGE 22 LORENE BROWN, Music, bolh inslrumenlal and vocal. WALTER COOK. Le+'s see you do +he+ somersaulf. douI:nIe MARIE CARROLL. No+ a care in Ihe worId. DONALD COENEN. Much of his Iime is spen+ on Ihe fairways. VIRGINIA CARROLL. Our versaIiIe EdiIor-in-Chief OI Ihe News ROBERT COTANCI-I. The gOod'I ooking soIoisI. DORIS CROLIUS. This popular miss came from WhiIeIish Bay. ARTI-IUR COUTURE. Six Ieef +aII and a m wizard. echanical 'TEDNA CAVINESS, Reserved and conscienhous. RUSSELL DEEENBAUGI-I, A dashfy man. PAGE 23 IEMARGARET BRADY. As a sporfswoman and singer she's ou+s+ancIing. JANE BRECKI-IEIMER, She is wise ALICE BRANT. AI and AIice are syn ELEANOR who +aIIcs buf IiIIIe. PAUL CANTWELL. The girls are aIways bo+hering him. onymous. BUNYVATZ. The girl who sporIs The FTIGVIY CBVS. I-IARLEY CODY. Oh, I-Iack, E++'s a score CATHERINE DUCEY, Her friendship is valued. IIRICHARD EENNO, He's a whiz on The sax and The Clarinel. LOIS JEANNE DOUGHERTY, Dear Sanlaz Do bring me a Hudson. P. S. He did. JOHN EAHRINGER. A prince of a fellow who's already named his queen. ISABEL ELDRED, Her Ioyally Io A. C. C. is unsurpassed. CLARENCE ELIAS, Always in Ihe swim. ALICE EIGEL. Laughing and gay. DONALD FERGUSON. The way l'ha'r man drivesl XGRACE ERION, Wishes Io be a musical mis- SIOFIGFY. ROBERT CUMMINGS, He's always cumming and going. JUNE COLVER. Our youngesl girl graduale. JULIA DENNISTON, A bonnie lass is she. FRANK DIERINGER. Head cheer-leader of '36. RUTH DODD, A Icnaclq of varying her coil- lure. IQALBERT DORSCH, PAGE 24 L'iI Abner, ever our loolball hero. FREDERICK GERHARDT, Our amaTeur landscape gar- dener. GWENDOLYN ERISKE, The sparkling wiT OT ChrisTo- pher Bean. ARTHUR GEIGER, Here comes Tiger Geiger! DOROTHY EURNNER, She wields a mean racqueT. CHARLES ERODERMANN, NooIcy, The handy man. TTGLORIA GAISELMANN, Our TooTball heroine. PAGE 25 COLLINS EERRIS. Young man abouT Town. GEORGE FORGE, His Thumb poinTs WesT. HARRIET EOY, Cardinal PennanT's capable OrganizaTion EdiTor. DOROTHY EINCI4, A cheerful naTure is one oT her many virTues. LOUIS FREY, The boy wonder-he always wears a suiT. HOWARD PINK, Always rarin' To go. ANDREW ERIEDRICH, His car is pracTicaIIy a limou- sine. WELDON ERASE, I'Ie cuTs The waTer Iilce a Irniie. JOYCE ERANCKE. A dandy pal, a peachy gal ELIZABETH GREENMAN, She makes friends easily. BETTY GRIMSRUD. Wauwalosa gains, bul Wash- inglon loses. JOY GROSS. Miss Vescolani's righl-hand girl. IIROBERT GREGORY, We'II bring our Troubles lo him when he's a doclor. QQMARGUERITE GROSS. Dark eyed, dark haired: a sparkling personalily. PHILIP GROSSMAN, An oralorical wizard. MARCELLA GUENTNER. Few people really know her well. PAGE 26 QIJUNE I-IABERT. A piano leacher al sevenleen. ALBERT I-IABERMAN, Oli high scholaslic slanding. TANNETTE GIBANS. A deslined painler in our midsl. VERNICE GILLMEISTER, A bicycle enlhusiasl. WILLIAM GODFREY, All lhis pun-ishrnenll TRICI-IARD GODFREY. Ouiel, reserved, bul lols ol IUFI. MARIE GOETZ. Shy and unassuming is Marie. QIROBERT GRAETZ, A Capella claimed Bob one of ils besl. GEORGE HOADLEY. How he spins Those yarns! ERANKLIN HOLEHOUSE, A genial ping-pong player. WALTER HOEEMANN, Has genuine sinceriTy. KENNETH JACOBS, Sprechen Sie DeuTsch? Elv1lL HOUSE. As a criminologisT he may be able To solve The cleTenTion problem. JOHN HOLCOMB, A giTT of gab. TJANICE HAGEMAN, An able oTTice assisTanT. DONALD HARGADON, A bike and slcaTe clevoTee. ALCOLETTA HARMS, Believe iT or noT, she was born in Spain. THAMILTON HAYNE, Ham reached The Top in every Tielcl. CAROLYN HAY, A True girl aThleTe. WILLIAM HART, A gleeTul Tenor in A Capella. RUTH HELD, A diligenT sTuclenT. GERTRUDE HERTTING, All who lcnow her lilce her. MARIE HERTE, One can always depencl on her. PAGE 27 RUTH KLEINSCHMIDT. She's known for her un- allecled ways. JABETTY KLEIN, A valediclorian, bul nol a loookworm. BERNICE KNIPPEL. LENWILL KOCH, Four years of lailhful service in The band. Her special diversion is alhlelics. LORETTA KLETTI, She made lhe all-slar hockey and baseball leams. PAGE 28 JEANNE KROENING, She's all righll ALICE HESSLER. Skelching is her paslime. EDMUND JEWASINSKI, The masked loolloall player! DOROTHY JAMBOR. Her personalily Iighls up lhe hall. ANNA JACKLE. The wise know The value of few words. DOROTHE JOHNSON. A very willing co-worker in school. FREDERICK JAHNKE, Truly a fisherman. DOROTHY KILLIAN, An experl in alhlelics. THOMAS KELLY, A handsome Romeo. BETTIE JUNKER. A newcomer, bul already one of lhe gang. RALPH LOCKETT, A renowned carroonisi. PHYLLIS LIEBNER, A shy, relirinq spiril. TROBERT LOUTHAI N, DOROTHY LUEDKE, Our sublly humorous hilch- hiker. Oh, if l could only growf' AWARREN LU EDERS. Mechanics and avielion are his hobbies. CARL MATTHIES, Good a+ everyrhinq. BETTE MACHELL, Our chic arrisl. MARLYS LINDSLEY, Fun-loving Marlys. 'TKENNETH LOEPER, Helpful and willing is he. FLORENCE KUHL. The girl wi'rh 'rhe beauliful auburn hair. TBERTHA KUMMER, Well informed on The merils ol movie slars. FREDERICK KUPHALL, Of a lilerary disposilion. KENNETH LEITGABEL. Some day he will Fly in an air plane of his own design. RUTH LEUCH, Alluned lo lhe liner arls. LUClLLE LARSON, A lulure boolc reviewer. PAGE JAMES NEWTON. An unoluenchable good humor. DOROTHY OCONNOR, Many are Ihe words she Iyped for Pennanl. GERTRUDE OTTO, A sincere worlqer. JAMES NICHOLS. Our smiling Prom King of '34. ALFRED OERDINO, Never a peep oul of him! RUTH OHLY. Blessed wilh common sense IRENE MIX. Don is Ihe olher name. BETTY MEANS. Poise and Iacl, a rare combi- nalion in a high school girl. JAMES MARTIN, He's crashed his way +o slarclom. ANNE NEWTON. An accomplished oboe soloisl. LOUISE MEDVED, Do Iell, a cools in our midsll LIONEL MEDD. Blazing inlerference on Ihe gridiron. TTRUTH MUELLER. A very dependable secrelary. PAGE 30 FREDERICK MUELLER, Those roguish dimples. STEWART MILLER, The drummer-man in The band DANIEL POLLOCI4, Ouiclq-willed. RUTH PHILLIPS. Blue is her Tavorile Color, bul nol her mood. MARY ANN PRIPPS, She has The velvely violel eyes one reads aboul in slories. BEVERLY PREUSS, One of Jrhe s+udious. XADAH PIETSCH, She's inleresled in sporls and hobbies. JOHN PELAUM, One of The big Iilile men around school. RUTH RADEIVIACHER, An air of quiel independence JADOROTHY PUCHTA, Tennis is her delight WINIERED PROPP, Sleady-going and reliable. PAGE 3I RICHARD O'BRIEN, I+'s Jrhe Irish in him. JEAN PALMER, Sweelness is her asset RALPH PAULSON, He has Jrhal somelhinq callecl charm IIJACQUELYN PETERSON, Jim should be Complimenled on his choice of Oueen. ROBERT OEELEIN, Turn on Ihal' loersonalily smilel RUTH CAROL OTTEN. Chic is Ihe word Tor her. HELEN SCHILDT. An ic:hThyoIogisT-she raises Tish. JULIA ROBERTS, When you see an apple, JuIia musT be near. LESTER RUDOLPH. ELEANOR REUSS. One oT Those people who can survive Tour years OT LaTin. Reserved and composed. CORINNE REISS. An accomplished pianisT who Iceeps her TaIenTs hidden. CARL SCHIVIIDT. The weII-liked presidenT oT The graduaTes. MARGARET SCT-IIVIITT, An ardenT inTeresT Tor sIcaTing. IVIELVIN ROIVIEIS, A Tip-Top aviaTor IosT in The clouds. PAYE SCHOLZ, Twinklinq Toes go inTo Their dance. . X06 HUD nm FREDERICK RENNER, IvIodesT indeed! JOHN REINKE. STaTion J O HN signing OTTI RICHARD RADTKE, They call him Spider JOHN RENNER, TropicaI Tish enThusiasT. PAGE 32 JANE REDLIN. Vivacious Jane and Tun iusT come TogeTher. JACK REBHOLZ, A gaIIanT paper boy ARTI-IUR STECK, A good hurnored chap. VIRGINIA SPALDING, The hell-and-hall girl, high school and Marquelle all al once. WILLIAM STEINBERG. I-le's a billiard shark. BERNICE STIPPICI-l, A discrirninaling young girl. KEINIINIETI-I STORMA, Rides The radio waves. DOROTHY SPLITT, Our dramalic lillle Abby. PAGE 33 JAMES SI-IANAI-IAN, One of lhe slage carpenlers. HAROLD SCI-IMIDT, Rhylhm is his business. PAUL SINGER, An ever-ready grin. MILDRED SIMPSON, Millie and Ereddie and a lillle brown car. ROSE SMITI-I, A Trained nurse comes lo our aid. ROBERT SCI-IROEDER, I-le excels al carloons. JAMES SONNENBER6. The second edilion of Gus Sonnenberg. FREDERICK SMITI-I, I-le cross-counlriesl' lo bring home champion-ships. 'TJAN ET SCI-IUERER, Among lhe lriendliesl ol 'rhe friendly. M472 7574 JW ' 1 N f J-f J 1 1 -of' , Sf' Tj, -' .clfffybz pf' 'fi T T ' .xl4'f 'Tf 1 ALBERT UITZ, He has scienlific ambifions. VIVIAN UNDERHILL, Abilily finds ils own place. TH ELEN VAN KOOY. An exl'ra-curricular ARMIN VAN DALE. Brown eyes +l1a+ spell mis- chief. young lady. MARJORIE VICKERMAN, Released from quaranline in Time To be Jol1n's queen. MARGARET VICK, LOIS TAYLOR. Pleasing 'ro lcnow. A very proficienl member of A Capella and Band JOHN UMBS, The miracle man. PAGE 34 RUTH TRESTER. Swimming is her hobby. RUSSELL TOEPFER. EH as a fiddler. DONALD TINGLEY. Earnesl in every endeavor TERED STRENG, He's bugs abouf golf. ROBERT TRAU PMANN, A philalelisf-slamp-colleclror +o you. OSCAR TRACZEWITZ, ll is dilllicull 'ro pay lwim loo nigh a compliment WILLIAM THESSIN, Praclicing lo be a speed demon. FREDDIE WELCH, A mermaid if ever Ihere was one GEGRGE WEIBEL, AnoIher Beau BrummeI. SHIRLEY WEIMAR. A poefic genius. PATRICIA WELCH, Her own swee+ self. JANE WEISS, Our idea OI The all-around girI TRICHARD WETZEL Well Icnown 'Io aII. JANET VOLLAND. She had quiIe a hike Io gain her educaIion. WILLIAM WAGLEY, The spirif OI Major I-IoopIe. ADELINE TURTENWALD. A wee miss is she. RALPH WANDEL. A red-headed cycling ace. GEORGE He IIings dancing. VIVI VON MEHREN. She hangs around paper-hang ers, aI IeasI in Ihe Senior pIay. IGERED VOLZ. Jus? a jack of all Iradesf' WEBER, fhose Iong Iegs in PETER WARREN, The musical mafhemahcian. IVIERLE WARNES, AI home on a riIIe range. PAGE 35 BEVERLY WILTERDING. Pep is her middle name. HERBERT ZARTNER. A scienfific grid fiend. IIGENE WILLIAMS. I+'s Ihe beaulilul hair Ihaf gels Them. VIVIAN ZIMIVIERMANN, A marvelous pianisl and Cor- nelisl. , WALTER ZINNIEL, A slaunch supporler of The de+en+ion room. ELEANOR WOLLER, She wishes 'ro become a librarian. DELORES BEYER, IRWIN KROENING, JANETTE TUCKWELL. ALFRED GRUENWALD, LEON SCHNEIDER, AIMURIEL TUCKWELL. DONALD HUEFER, AIWALTER STIMPLE, ARTHUR VAN DE ERVE. i DONNA ZINNIEL, An up-and-coming slenographer. JOI-IN MUNDY, I-Iere's one who knows how Io mind his own business. WINIERED I-IALL, Many dialecis are on The lip ol her Iongue. JO!-IN I-IANSEN. A superb baseball player. PAGE 36 hw ,, , fa. - me - ftiq, 393 f A ,-,Y-asfffafszsaf Sf Q2w5 f5 , . Qsigiinm H BA , ,... A.. .. . M, . H, . A- -- V. , ' g '- ' H gf ,. . ,... W MQ., was Igiixljgk an Q 1 Q A 4 .... ' . ' i P 7 5' 'ws ' . 1 .S If ' W , T? 'ff' ' H Q R a fl' ,. 3? 'W KM .5 'X sg, ia fi .1 5: K x Q -L. 'Of- 'wx iw 5 5 Q if idx X' X. ,.. ra-...aw HOME ROOM 23 MARTWN-IZB Row I: Mr. Marfrr' Tnzwa Sfanord Heuer, Swcndsor' Serde-nsd'rwar'Tz. Row2: Soar-- reder. Sceefs, Rord, Tadczwald, Tfgsclnr Oppcrmann, Row 3: Sdnenic Schroeder, Scnrrrz Sliver Voss Srobefs, Scrruswr Serzer. Row4: PnrHrps,TnornpY son, Swan, Tnern, Undcrborqr Dumser, Jorrmorr Seeqezrr, HOME ROOM 5 GWBSONWI IA Row I: Bradrey Arbezrhnn Jcnngon, Mfs. Orbson, Beiver MQCa'Hnr, Arbr'ed'r+, Krug-2, Row 2: Bierman, Basrrng, Brock' noimer, Adams, Bisnop, Ben' nerr, JM Baumann, E., Bronnr Berne-Tr D., Barfrern. Row 3: parenfeau Skate Bmnen Bmerrcnef Bwrcuqrrs Bra-,b Baumann, H., Bofznord, Brodd, Brouwer. PAGE 38 HOME ROOM 34 KIECKHEEER -12B Row I: Racakovrcrr G. Ren dock, Hwnmer Mermrfr, J. Henderson, Kurscn. Row 2 Krrwirsdx, lversorr, Mrss Kieck Refer Moenrrq, Jona. Row 3 Kerry, Hocfs, Kaufmann, Zrska Gefse Krueger' Meyer Rada icovrcn J. Row 4: Lanqnolff Merrirr, N., Hirsf, Haascn Rosenbzfrq Mrdraelaen, Kam efrrro, HOME ROOM 306 OLSON f-NZB Row I: Haalc Harnafofd Din'-berpg Mrss Orson, Harden Guy, Dc Anqerrs. Row 2 Erscherr, Braun, Fark Farnham Basins- Errgworm Barn, Dodge AL,QMe'. Row 3: Eecrrck Dre' ze-r, Cgarnecke Gramm Ewa: Hern, Arrman, Wrr1f2r. Row 4 Dunlap, Bennefr' Preis, DHT mann Cnesfera Crrrrsrransen Dfcfsnaiwr Evans Bwefond. .nn .lk E - ...L A HOME ROOM 205 HOEEMANAI IA Row I: Hyde, KIIberI, KIinlcer, MISS Hoffman, KupIwaII, KVIII, Howard. Row 2: Laabs Koch KIOWII, Lent KIJIIQ, I'4ulonICIc Iockerbie. Row3: Knack,l.as sanske, Kmdweva KIeIn,JuneaL, IVI. H., Jann Ha'I'nfIn. Row 4: Huck Kerr, Kluq, LIppoId, Juneau, M. L., LIIIIQ, Kressin. HOME ROOM 205 JOHNSON' -I IA Row I: Gfossenbacn Goener, Haeuser, Miss Jonnszn GroII, Pafzwald. Row 2: GoeIIer, Kron, HGCIQQII, Grueff, NIC? HIII, Hayne. Row 3: Haffzlce Godfrey, Us-ckev Ewarf Haf- IQII, Hauser, G-eIpeI, Hennscn. Row 4: Haberrnan Hake, Gumm Hcward, HoIr'ves HII- denandf Hoden Haug. ,W ., lg HOME ROOM 37 LEHMANN-I IA Row I: Cl'IrIsIer, DanIeI5en, Miss Lehmann, WinIcIey Cooke, Eorqe. Row 2: Efaser, Dennen, LGVWIII, RubeI, Duffus, Row 3: Evans, GalIenbeCIc, CarroIl, Connsmck, Einlder, EdIer, Uu- man. Row 4: Conqer, CIarI:e. Enarosne, CauIey, Davis Bud: Cafn, DIIIn1af. HOME ROOM 3I5 SPEARS-f IIA Row I: Treis, IIIIeIe, TornIIr: wn Ronan WaIccaIIeId, Teach E., Ifebngock. Row 2: Zm' Van Gevwaf SVQIVICII SMI' IIIII, Wfafzel, Teaque, UVIICV' ffeqer. Row 3: Iesdv, R. Ianneff SIIQV VfaII1,Qn'aQ:gC' WIIIIQ Vv'alIacIc S'ocPI'wausen Moore, IIQIenInaer', Row 4: Trapp Zavsico Wffvd, Kuiscnene ff-uIef UIa4ov-JSIK7 Z.vFcI1e War' Izwfn SIeIr'ke. RAGE 39 HOME ROOM 225 HAMPTON4I IA Row I: Serwc, I-IoIden, Pvesch- er, Miss Harnpmn, Randow, Sieverf. Row 2: Ruenzel, See- Iurfh, Lernay, ReIsner, Schmidt SIager,ReIchman,RaasQh. Row 3: Saewerf, Younger. Schowal- fer, Rom, Shanahan, KasIern, Schuenqeh. Row 4: MacNeiII, Schrimpf, Rasmussen, RandaII, SIoqr'en Roehl, RLACI4 Pnfo. HOME ROOM 307 WHITE-I IA Row I: Laos, Mccrory, I.or enz, Mr, WIIIIQ, Orlow, PeIIer, I3reIs. Row 2: Qerdinq, PIuc1Ic- hahn, Oderrnann. Row 3: Pafzke, PILIQK Murphy Manor MIIIEV, Pinslcy. Pam Mayen Row 4: Pahner, Mann, PMI2- IaII, Nehnnq, MacRae, Mundy PcIefrnan, PaaeI. N u I .pw ba ' .... 4 Q HOMP ROOM 24 HEIDTKE -IIB Row I: Rianw-er' Sfeph-ers, Spraguo Mr. Heidrko STS-rn Schhlnd Websv'. Row 2: Zif- wes, Iurnp, SIauIZI, SeweII, Schrocdrw A. Vorhes, RIQIZ, Row 3: Yalz Scnnqhorr Shefch Wa W:'7'1h1 Maya Sparfey, Srhfnib E. Row 4: SIo.un Richaros Schowaher, SchmITI, M. Wfuovdernan Schrvwh H., Sthnidh HOME ROOM ZIO MAIZKE--I IB Row I: Finfrge' Vms Fu 5' Mr, MATZIQ, Dvahw Dachen bach,DryIuu :gh. Row2: I-Iess, I-Iensfen Lucas Benwrn, Esch- hach. Row 3: Hefffinq, Gel- :Jef 5-QI gif'-? Fm Hana Feifina Ewfii, Row 43 I-Iaf' Cowen, Gf3IsIer SrhmeeIinq, G,-erhav-QI' I-IanIv3v.MII DahIIce. ?AGE 40 Kwv HOME ROOM 22 URBANfN IB w I: Ram, Lawvr Rees Mx Urban, Pe-aaa, Jacob-, K GQ, Row 2: Lawfgworfhy ?V'b'3ClC9V, Pfftcr' VH Ne,-. mr' Reddori Leucw Lawn ow 3: Mdrfln, Wing, Park, 5 Qirmm, KLHYH Large Krx' 51. Row4: Ke-Ulm Liecicv some Mfzrmcn, Pw-,f Ken wrwdf, Kfrdwen. HOME ROOM 305 HENNINGER--NOA I: KufaQHervreuM3v', Kurw KLQTN Shiv M1-Lx, HQ:- f Ufrxw Mal, MQCA Row 2: MENU, Lsegbw 'away Lwhvq Mcindw r Livvfw Mf3 Tf2'1 Len' U , Row 3: NfHD:'w ,ek Mierffg, Mewf Mail: 2,MYU'1'w K'kfC'7'?'SEJ'E'1:'3!d 4: Lxr Uecw Mim' Maif am Mafga Kru-Lx,-r Lffrvw Sghfww -..FS kg, . I u HOME ROOM 204 KIMBALLWIOA Row I: Ccnanl, Clirisliansen Boeclc Miss Kimball Arrnslrcnq Bafnelcow, Crolius, Row 2 Berry, Conger, Moore, Bauer, Allman Winlclernan, Bruclcer Boldl, Brown, Row 3: Bender Aaron, Binl, Bally Breidenbacln Berger, Brose, PxrndI,E,, Bulzin Roll 4: Broclr, Condron Bow ers Andevson Delwnlce Bruner Flanagan Arndo Fred, Bice, HOME ROOM IO7 KNOELL-IOA Row I: Keclinq, Kissinqer, Held, Mr, Knoell, Hueqin, Hilrlernan, Jolwn. Row 2: Urnbs, Herlfinq Helz Jonnson Hoppe, M. Hall, Knowllon, Row 3: Hub bard, Larnason, Siegel, Kernen, Hoppe, E. Row 4: Killian, Hahn Hillerbriclc, Hauefer, Heln House Hein Harlel. PAGE 42 HOME ROOM 38 KREBS f-IOA Row I: Slorma, Wilson, J, Warner, Miss Krebs, Iliornas Wandl, Voil. Row 2: Sl cclce weld, WOW, Ziegler, 'Iully Sfresau, Carroll, Tlwielrnann Pisclwor,SliIlrnan. Row3: Ueclce Wendorf, Williams Swancull Vlflefsclialr, Swan,Tir'gIey,'I'orn iinson, Wolf. Row 4: Veif Walsli, Urnbs, lrombley, War ren, Wilson, W,, Weqner Tliiel Trowbridge. HOME ROOM 25 WRIGHT -IOA Row I: Rose, Pllaurn, Reid Miss Wriglil PliiIiop, Price Operle, Roperlscn. Row 2: Nixon, Nellwercul Pollnow Mueller, B. J., Riese, Pelerseri M, Sirnerlein. Row 3: Props Osrnond, Parinoer, Moore Oi- T'enEaclwer, Powefl, MueIler,G. Oelloin. Row 4: Novolnv Mueller, RM O'Rourlce, PclescI'i Oldenburg. Riclwfe' Moriarily Pele-rsen, CU Niven O, -- v:,2'7I EAW. I-IOME ROOM ZI de JOANNIS-IOB Row I: Czavnecke, Kovnourg er, Nenring, Miss de Joannls Farqunurson, LoeIoeI, Iscne. Row 2: Josepnson Lonqeway Maufn NTQIIOILI Minn Erase Jonn5on,Eorrrronr, Row3: Ne'In ercur, MIIIer, KorII1, PMISQII KeI'1ros KoIwIoII, LIecIer Kroe- ger, Row 4: MueIrer Mfmer- neInne KIeIvnenI'aqen KeIn1 Conqer, I3aqeI, NeIson, GIIIan MIIIev. IIOME RQQIVI 3? POST -IOB Row I: DIrnrn, Jacobs, Mr Posr Grossenbfwfn, .Iona Ge'- IocI'I. Row 2: Edwards G. Brenr, BaIIey, Benz. UI-,yer Coon, Row 3: BoeII1Iinq Beerend Barndr CoIIIns Du Buque Eowards I-I, Enqsvcm Row4: Arndf DaInnIce, I-Iund' Jonnson R., Davis, CrawIord BLAII, DoeI ner. A Xxl- Lo E -' A-K - A 74 Lf, HOME ROOM 34 THOMPSON AIOB Row I: WIIson, Kropf, Kurrz Van Vecnren, D, RIng MIsb Inompson. Row 2: Zenrner, Sheldon, ReuIeIer,SI1arp RInqenoIdus, Scnoen, ScInoIz. Row 3: Sundry, Rooerfson DanIeII, Scn'nIdI, Majesky SILJ- ben, I3oweII, Perry. Row 4: I3eIz, WeyIand, Pencer, SIeIner, Van Vecnren, R. Romer, RoseIIen PIIQVWI. I-IOME ROOM 2 WILLIAMS -IOS Row I: Heun, RernrneI. I-IaII, G. Mr, WIIIIa'nH, Renner I-Iebbring I-Ievre, Row 2: Weber, WIeroI5nIe WebsIf:r, SyIeL, Dennns I-Iibbard Lees Kraus WensInIc, Row 3: S'raCIw Sfrenq, Kruse Dossof. Co!- 'ndn, I-IfaII K. Nfzonnan Pen- doclc. Row 4: Ofren, RobIn- Son We3SIpIIaI Jr1I'r1Le, WEPIY rerae Gfuewcn Ea eI Safes PAGE 43 RECENT HONOR AWARDS First Place in State Forensic Contests ORATORY SCHMIDT, HOWARD-l932 ZENTNER, AVIS-I934 AMERICAN LEGION MEDAL JOHNSON, RICHARD-I933 SMITH, KENNETH- I934 ALBRECHT, EDMUND-I935 ARNDT, ROBERT-I936 UMBS, JOHN H. KLEIN, BETTY EXTEMPORANEOUS READING ZENTNER, AVISaI933 ADAMS, MARY MARGARET-I936 AWARD SCHREMSER, CHARLES-1933 HAAK, ALBERT-I934 HANEL, ROBERT-I935 MARTIN, JAMESAI936 Seven Semester Average of 90 or JAMBOR, DOROTHY ANGLE, MARY JANE FRANCKE, JOYCE MILLER, STEWART UNDERHILL, VIVIAN ADAMS, BETTY JEAN 'BLEUEL, JOYCE HARVARD BOOK AWARD HOAR, JOHN--I933 KRASEMAN, THOMASiI934 BOYCE, DAVID-I935 TODD, HAROLD-I936 PAGE 44 VICKERMAN, MARJORIE CARROLL VIRGINIA KUPHALL, FREDERICK ALLISON, VIRGINIA SENIOR GIRL BOOK AWARD SPANGENBERG, CHARLOTTE-I933 THARINGER, JOAN-I934 HENKEL, JEANNE4I935 BABICH, DOROTHY-I'-736 DECLAMATION ZENTNER, AVIS-I932 STEPHENS, MARY JANE-I935 KEPLER, BETTY-I936 SQUAD LEADER GIRL VAN DER HOOGT, JANE-1935 IVERSON, CAROLINE-I935 BABICH, DOROTHY-I936 HAY, CAROLYN-I936 WEISS, JANE-I'-736 More GODFREY,WILLIAM LIEBNER, PHYLLIS LINDSLEY, MARLYS ARNDT, ROBERT MEANS, BETTY ZARTNER, HERBERT BAHLER, GEORGE WEISS,JANE BABICH, DOROTHY JUNIOR GIRL BOOK AWARD ZENTNER, AVIS-I933 ALDRICI-I, EMILY-1934 JAMBOR, DOROTHY-I935 ROEHL, JEANNE-I936 CARDINAL NEWS PINS-I936 MASQUE CLUB AWARD-I936 ALBERTSON, RUTH GROSSMAN, PHILIP ANGLE, MARY JANE SPLITT, DOROTHY BRADLEY, DONALD GROSSMAN, PHILIP HEIN, JOHN KILBERT, HOWARD LEUCH, RUTH SCHUSTER, DANIEL SEEGERT, NEAL STAFFORD, ROBERT CARDINAL FENNANT PINS-I936 FOY, HARRIET MEANS, BETTY SWIFT, DOROTHY TRACZEWITZ, OSCAR UNDERHILL, VIVIAN VICKERMAN, MARJORIE GANIZATICD Put on the spurs of youth and Fire, Leap to the saddle of fun. OH and away to the beat of your Hearts And the thrill of the Worlc thafs donel PAGE 5 NATICDNAI. I-IQIXIQI2 SOCIETY I-IE NaTionaI I-Ionor SocieTy numbered TiTTy-Three members IasT June, The highesT pealc reached since The WauwaTosa ChapTer was sTarTed. Excel- lenT schoIasTic sTanding, characTer, leadership, and service are essenTiaI in order To be eIecTed To This naTion-wide crganizaTion. Only a small parT oT The eligibles may be chosen Trom The Three upper classes: Tive per cenT oT The Junior A class, Ten per cenT OT The Senior B class, and TiTTeen per cenT oT The Senior A class. Under The guidance oT Miss Lind, The candidaTes Tor membership are chosen by mem' bers oT The socieTy and all oT The TacuITy. Then The Tinal voTe is given by oTTicers oT The club and se- Iecwked Teachers. The iniTiaTion ceremonies Talce place in The spring when a banqueT is held. AT This aTTair The presidenT presides as ToasT-masTer, and some prominenT per- sonage is inviTed To spealc as The evenings main enTerTainmenT. PAGE 46 Row I: Underhill, Miller, S., Viclierman, TracZewiTz, Dennis- Tcn. Row 2: Babich, Schuerer. Angle, Erancle, AIberTson, Weimar. Row3: Means, Umbs, Weiss Lindsley, Einclc, Jambor, Kuphall, Row 4: MarTin, J., Allison, SeegerT, I-lein, ArndT, I-Iolcomb. Row I: Underhill, Babich, See- qerT, Weiss, Mr. SwancuTT, Redlin, TraczewiTz, ArndT. Row 2: Kuchenbeckerlimmermann, KleTTi. PaTzIce, Basche, Murphy, STier, DiTTmer, I-Iayne. Row 3: Nichols, Grede, Conger, Span- Iey, Clarlfe, T-I., Welch, P., Gross, M., Buchanan, B., Urnbs, Vickerman. Row 4: KnowlTon, KoTwiTz Lucas, SchusTer, Pflaum, D., LiTTIe, G-aTes, Mar- Tin,J.,Karnerling. Row5: Erase, Biclcler. Dimm, Bahler, Scherr, Bradley, OeTIein, Rarnlow, SchmidT, I-I., Radalcovich, G. STUDENT CCUNCII. S every ciTy has iTs council represenTing diT- TerenT secTions, so musT our school, a IiTTIe ciTy in iTseIT, have a council where sTudenTs Trom The home rooms and The various acTiviTies are senT as represenTaTives. During The meeTings oT The council, problems ThaT concern The sTudenT body are broughT up and discussed, diTTiculTies are smooThed cuT, and suggesTions Tor The beTTermenT oT The school are proposed. Then Mr. SwancuTT, The adviser, relays These suggesTions To The Teachers and brings baclc Their views. In This way, co-opera- Tion, beTTer undersTanding, and greaTer sympaThy are esTabIished beTween The TacuITy and The sTu- denTs. A ncw experimenT, The STudenT CourT, was inauguraTed, whereby sTudenTs may discuss any diTTiculT problem beTore a group oT Council mem- oers. OuTside oT rouTine acTiviTies, The council spon- sored a banqueT Tor iTs members and held iTs an' nual ChrisTmas dance. Row I: Sonnenberg, Kamerling, Groll, OeTlein Jewasinslci I-lenderson. Row 2: MarTin,C.. WOITT, STeiner, Redden, Loessl, Pluckhahn. Row 3: Basche, Murphy, Carroll, J., Angle, Welch, P., Edler. Row 4: Cain, C., Dodd. Davis, Berry, I-IirsT, Bahler,Wangerin. Row 5: Erase, Bruhn, L., WilTerding, Linds- ley, Ball, TieTenThaler, Green- man, Bruhn, M, Row I: Traupmann ArndT, Chrisler, Mr. T'osT, Babich, Scherr. Row 2: Eraser, Ruenzel, Larson, Mayer, K., PaTzlce, Reid, WhiTe, C. Row 3: Dougheriry, Eranclse, Solverson, Loos, I-lau- ser, John, l-I., Siogren. Row 4: Bender, Liebner, PTIaum, J. Reus: Jambor, SpliTT. Biclcler. Row 5: PeTerman, I-lay, Dierin- ger, Miller, S., Schenlc, Mann, ZarTner, NewTon. - A F5 Tl-IE STUDENT PATRCL S There a policeman in The school? Yesl One hun- dred and TwenTy-six OT Them. Each sTudenT who belongs To The STudenT PaTrOl answers To This call. I-le cOnTrols The TraTTic OT The school and The con- ducT OT The sTudenTs in The corridors. The STudenT PaTrOl is The largesT governing body in The school. IT is made up OT girls and boys OT all classes Trom sophomore B's To senior Als. Mr. PosT manages This well organized Torce. The paTrOl serves on duTy in every parT OT The Two Senior I-ligh School buildings, including The library, during The enTire school day Trom 8:00 A. M. To 4:35 P. M. When a sTudenT sTeps OuT OT The class room, The caTeTeria, or The sTudy hall, he Tinds himselT under The guiding eye OT one OT his Tellow sTudenTs. WheTher he realizes iT or noT, he learns ThaT proper conducT in school is noT an obligaTion imposed upon him by a superior auThoriTy, buT ThaT iT is a privilege which, when used, promoTes The besT in- TeresTs OT The enTire school. IT This privilege is abused, The sTudenT is soon aware OT The paTrOlmen, ever alerT, who will show him how To conducT hime selT according To The sTandards demanded OT The school. A major TacTOr in The success OT school govern- menT is each sTudenT's aTTainmenT OT a Teeling OT personal sympaThy and responsibiliTy Tor The suc- cess OT his worlc. A paTrolman has a Tine OppOrTuniTy To develop This pOinT OT view. I-lis TirsT reacTiOn is lilrely To be a Teeling OT surprise aT The ObTuseness OT casual and chronic oTTenders. Then he may be- come sympaTheTic concerning The problems OT The Teachers, and ulTimaTely, iT is noT Too much To hope ThaT he and Those who share his problems may become pOsiTive TacTors in The building OT en- during democracy based upon hearTy and inTelli- genT co-OperaTion OT every ciTizen. PAGE 47 PING PONG CLUB fl INGTK' The liTTle, whiTe ball is baTTed back and TorTh. Thisis TheTascinaTing sporT called Ping Pong. The purpose oT The Ping Pong Club is To give The players oT This game an opporTuniTy To develop Their playing abiliTy. EnThusiasTs who lilce The game oT Ping Pong will appreciaTe The TacT ThaT They are able To malce Their game more slcillTul by compeTiTion wiTh Their Tellow sTudenTs. The club was organized lasT year under The direc- Tion oT lvlr. Walsh, buT upon his TransTer To Lan- casTer', Mr. ScoTT has assumed The sponsorship. A TournamenT deTermined The club's member- ship, as There were Too many ping pong addicTs who wished To enTer This organizaTion. The in- eligibles were eliminaTed in The TournamenT, and The club has now TwenTy members, which is The resTricTed number. Due To The laclc oT Time and playing room, no inTer-club compeTiTive maTches have been played ouTside oT The school. Row I: I-largadon, Ferguson, Fahringer,F., l.iTTle, Mr.lv1aTzlce, Guy, Fahringer, J., OeTlein, R. Row 2: STreckewald, Wood, J., KnowlTon, l-layne, l-lirsT, Siegel. Row 3: Siogren, Voss, Dimberg, DennisTon, O'Rourlce, ChesTer, Topp. Row4: C-odTrey, Schmidt C., Reid, W., Orlow, Joha, J., WalceTield Bradley. PAGE 48 tg gg Row I: l-lolehouse, Barrie, R., Mr. ScoTT, Biehn, D., SchmidT, C. Row 2: Paringer. Barrie,T., T-lirsT, Fahringer, F., Voss, A., Siogren, J. Row 3: Dimberg, Kressin Finlc. l-l.. Macl?ae, U.. l-largadon, Jacobs, B. l-ll-Y l-lEWauwaTosa High School T-Ti-Y Club is a school branch oT The naTional and inTernaTional Young Mens ChrisTian AssociaTion movemenT. The ThirTy boys oT The presenT club have realized The need Tor puTTing ChrisTian principles inTo pracTice and have worlced Towards This end. ThaT They have had a successTul year is evidenced by The many accom- plishmenTs. Some highlighTs oT The year's program were: The annual ValenTine Dance, The minsTrel show puT on by The WesT Allis Hi-Y Club buf sponsored by The WauwaTosa Club, The Anna Copeland-l-li-Y BangueT, and numerous chariTies To which The club gave over one hundred dollars during The lasT year. Thus The T-li-Y Club sTrives To live up To iTs pur- pose, To creaTe, mainTain, and exTend ThroughouT The school and communiTy high sTandards oT Chris- Tian CharacTer. lTs slogan is Clean Living, Clean Speech, Clean SporTs, and Clean Scholarship. Aa.. 4 4 - ln Row I: Underhill, MerriTT, Becker, Solverson, Eldred Babich, Francke, Friske, Schroe- der. Row 2: Miss WrighT Gross, M., Goeller. BenneTT,J., Johnson, E., Jorgensen, Adams, M., EllsworTh, Row 3: Dough- erTy, L., Adams, B., Demien, 6rueTT, Braun, Falk, De l-lond Dugan, Farnham. Angle. Row 4: l-larloTT, Cain, M. J., Vicker- man, Held, DiTTmer, Baumann Cain, C., BenneTT D., Grade Erwin. Row 5: Jambor, D. Dodd, Juneau, M. L., Juneau M. l-l., l-lein, J., Gillmeisfer Greenman, Grossenbach, Al- brechT, O'Connor. ANNA COPELAND ll EYS To growing up -This Theme oTTered a va- rieTy OT borh serious work and rollicking Tun To The members oT The Anna Copeland Club. WiTl1 each meeTing a characTer key was added To The ring represenTing a girl's personaliTy. Miss WrighT, who kepT The keys, mainTained her posiTion as guide To opening The more pleasanT doors oT characTer. The door OT neaTness was opened by a sTyle show presenTed by The KaTherine Lang shop and mod- eled by members oT The club. The key oT sociabiliTy Threw open iTs gaTes To all parTicipanTs in The an- nual l-li-Y-Anna Copeland banqueT held aT The BapTisT Church. Reverend Fahringer was The guesT speaker on This occasion. The key oT service un- barred a mulTiTude oT doors: The Toy Shop projecT, in which Toys were made Tor children aT The Chil- dren's l-lospiTal, ouT oT discarded cans, boTTles, corks, and oTher debris: The decoraTion and disTri- buTion oT ChrisTmas Trees To The veTerans oT Sol- diers' l-lomey The supplying oT a WesT Virginia girl wiTh college necessiTiesq The providing oT several needy Tamilies wiTh Thanksgiving dinners, each ar- Ticle oT which was donaTed by a member oT The club. The solemn door oT reverence was opened by The iniTiaTion service, The combined MoTher- DaughTer Tea, The insTallaTion oT oTTicers, and The annual memorial service Tor Mrs. Anna Copeland, held aT The MeThodisT Church and presided over by Joyce Francke, The chosen Anna Copeland Girl. The Threshold oT Tun was crossed aT various social meeTings, such as The roller skaTing parTy sponsored by The Milwaukee CounTy InTer-Club, and The car- nival, concessions and all, held in The caTeTeria. All cT These keys added To The ring helped The members in many ways To improve Their personali- Ties, and iT may be added ThaT enioymenT served as The lock on The ring. Row I: KrisTianson, Phillips, R., Spanley, Lippold, Oerdinq. LangholTT, SchliTz, Michaelsen, Kamerling. Row 2: Schoen. Zorr, STeiner, V., TiTTT. J., SwiTT, D., Pluckhahn, WebsTer, Lar- son, L., Riese, Soroski, Row 3: OTTen, B., Propp,W., Wallack, Propp, L.,Williams, L., Palmer, J., OTTen, R., Murphy, R., Weiss. Row 4: Moore, H., WhiTe, C., Skacel, Woller, Breckheimer, J., WilTerding, Taylor, L., Schewe, NovoTny, M., WleTschak, M. Row 5: RoberTson. Reiss,Tingley, Kerr, l-lall, Mayer, M., Yeko, Tom- linson, Reuss. , , meg 49 STAGECRAFT ERHAPS The one organizaTion which never re- ceives Tull crediT where much crediT is due is STagecraTT. The worlc cenTers around The iunior and senior high school lyceums and assemblies, concerTs, one-acT plays, parTies and special programs such as The l-li-Y lvlinsTrel Show and The AmaTeur Show. Annual maior producTions such as The Senior Class Play and The Masque Club Play provide The opporTuniTy Tor uniTied creaTive worlc. All oT The seTf Tings, cosTumes, and properTies are consTrucTed and assembled by STagecraTT members, whose aid in This respecT is valuable indeed. This springs perTormance, The lVlerchanT oT Venice, required Tour compleTely diTTerenT sTage seTTings+someThing noT oTTen Tound in high school producTions. The eTTecTs aTTained in The lasT scene, which was aT nighT, were achieved Through clever manipulaTion OT TooTlighTs and spoTs, and iusT The righT amounT oT scenery To suggesT a garden. The sTreeT oT Venice was more elaboraTe Than The resT. ElevaTions, which changed The heighT OT The perTormers, were employed Tor The TirsT Time. OTher miscellaneous Tasks which occupied The Time beTween plays were: posTer malcing, operaTing moTion-picTure machines, seTTing up displays, Tiling school news and period picTures, and arranging Tor loans oT cosTumes and scenery. The daily rouTine oT STagecraTT includes much hard worlc, buT The chance oT learning how To malce and painT TurniTure, apply malceeup correcTly, and operaTe The lighTs inTeresTs many sTudenTs in The STagecraTT club. This sTaTemenT is proven by The record number oT one hundred and Ten volunTeer- ing Their services. ln reTurn Tor These services all members who meeT The requiremenT oT TwenTy hours of worlc per semesTer receive a quarTer oT a crediT per semesTer. Row I: WakeTield, PorT, Miss Johnson, Reinlce, Jewasinslci, l-leuel. Row 2: SeeTurTh, Raasch, DieTzel, STeiner. OsTermann, Meyer, Loessl. Row 3: Sceefs, L,, Koch, Beclc, Redlin, Reid, Shanahan, M., Edler. Row 4: Shanahan, Frodermann, Dahnlce, Beil, BelTon, Mellon, SceeTs, N. Row 5: Van de Erve, PosT, Silver, Holehouse, Czarneclce, Brodd, GoeTTer, LoclceTT. Brodd, STeiner, PTlaum, Adams, iladewald, Erdmann, Wood. PAGE 50 ART CLUB RILLIANT chalk drawings, gay waTercolor painT- ings, and braceleTs oT eTched pewTer were made by The ArT Club during The pasT year. ivliss Spears guides The many proiecTs. Willingly she TransTers her knowledge oT all The TechnicaliTies and guirks in arT work. Thus are These sTudenTs able To produce Tin- ished works. These acTiviTies were only a Tew oT many. The ArT Club divided iTselT inTo various groups, each oT which chose The Tield iT wished To work in. The leaTher group made woven leaTher buTTons, purses, and Tooled walleTs oT dyed leaTher. AnoTher oT These groups worked on s+ill liTe, and The craTT group made braceleTs wiTh The medium menTioned above. One secTion did rapid Tigure skeTching and porTraiT work, using Their Tellow club- men as models. The members oT ArT Club, besides having enjoyable experiences, may keep Their ac- complishmenTs as pleasanT memenTos. S. O. S. GS. usually sTands Tor a signal oT disTress. ' BuT noT so in This case. l-lere The iniTials repre- senT The SocieTy oT Scribblers, a mosT successTul club in no need oT help. IT has TulTilled iTs purpose To The uTmosT3 namely, sTimulaTing a desire among sTu- denTs oT The high school To wriTe in any Tield in which They are mcsT inTeresTed. IT brings recogni- Tion Through iTs magazine, Parnassus in PrinT, To Those ThroughouT The school who have done espe- cially good wriTTen work. AlThough The members, consTiTuTing The sTaTT oT Parrrassus, are kepT busy wiTh The selecTing, arranging, and prinTing oT The magazine, each is amply paid when he sees one oT his own wriTings in prinT. Each year, in order To TerreT ouT more members and new liTerary enThusiasTs, The club sponsors a poeTry conTesT wiTh inTeresTing prizes To reward The auThors oT The besT enTries. This is The climax oT a scribbler's career! Row I: DieTzei, Pagel, Rose Oberle. Row 2: WeTzel, Dough erTy, L., Rom, Reid. Row 3 Koller, Schowaher, V., PosT GerhardT, BeTzhold. A - l Row I: Von Mehren, Pripps, Miss Lehmann, Ball, T-lolcomb, Gflonnor, D. Row 2: Larson, DieTzel, Weimar, Angle, Phil- lips. Dodd. Row 3: Colver, Gross, J., Doughedy, Gibans, Reuse, Jambor. Row 4: Mar- Tin, J., Volland, SpliTT, Kuphall, Dieringer, WilTerding. PAGE 51 HTarry Jevvln MASQUE CLUB PLAY IXTEW sTandard was seT in High School produce Tions when The MerchanT oT Venice was un- Tolded on The sTage. IT is wiThouT doubT The mosT ouTsTanding Thing The sTudenT body has ever done in any Tield, The proTessional qualiTy oT Phil Grossman as 'lShyloclc has never been reached beTore, and BeTTy Kepler porTrayed a beauTiTul PorTia. AlThough one oT The youngesT Thespians in The play, Edward ArmsTrong creaTed his characTer so successTully ThaT The audience TorgoT his True idenTiTy and ThoughT him a middle-aged man. The comparaTively un- desirable parT OT The blind, old man, Gobbo, was excellenTly done by Bob Heuel. The wisesT decision in The choice OT caslceTs was made by The successTul suiTor, Bassanio, characTerized by John Fahringer. The elaboraTe cosTumes and sTage seTTings and The superb acTing more Than TulTilled The anTicipa- Tions oT The delighTed audiences. MASQUE CLUB O MUCH has been said abouT The MerchanT oT Venice producTion ThaT we are apT To TorgeT The oTher accomplishmenTs of Masque Club in The pasT year. The AmaTeur Hour combined wiTh The double presenTaTion oT Pyramus and Thisbef' humorous scene Trom A Midsummer lNlighT's Dream, was one oT The mosT successTul shows ever sponsored by our dramaTic associaTion. The amaTeurs were selecTed by audiTions. The boy and girl casTs were winners in inTer-club compeTiTion, which had as iTs reward The perTormance oT Pyramuz and Thisbel' publicly. The requesT Tor an assembly program in com- memoraTion oT Lincoln's birThday was answered wiTh The shorT play enTiTled The Soul OT Anne RuTledge. The weekly programs, under The direcTion oT Philip Grossman and Jane Redlin, aTTempTed To in- clude all members eiTher in shorT plays, panTomimes, cr individual displays oT TalenT. Row l: Miss SchaeTTer Roehl Silver, Colver, Grossman, STaTY Tord, Finclc, D., Grede, E.. Radalcovich. Row 2: Goeller, DieTzel, Adams, M., Bemm, Reisner, STamm, NewTon, M. Wensink, Edwards, G,-rimsrud, PaTzlce, Adams, B. Row 3: Ells- worTh, Lamason, Redlin, Fiske, Weiss, Grede, J., Gross, M., Wilferding, Kepler, Dodge,W., Warren B,, KriwiTsch. Row 4: BenneTT, M. E., Hall, Splifr Ball, Dahllce, PeTersen, MarTin, J., Michaelsen, SchmiTT, V., TieTenThaler, Bickler, Treis, Row 5: LiTTle, Tholce, Fahringer, J., TraczewiTz, ArmsTrong, Hein BeaumonT, Holcomb Heuel Biehn. Jacobs, B. PAGE 52 SpIiTT, ArndT, Berry, C., Frislce, Grossman, MeITon, Wagley. SEIXIICDR CLASS PLAY PANDEMONIUM reigned bacI4sTage. The eTTicienT members oT STagecraTT puT on The acTors' IasT minuTe malce-up and encouraged The apprehensive amaTeurs. Damian MeITon played nervously wiTh his improvised mousTache, prayed desperaTeIy ThaT he wouIdn'T Iose his Jewish diaIecT. Bob ArndT ad- iusTed The apron sTrings oT his Temporary wiTe, Chris- Tine Berry, while I-Iam I-Iayne, Tosa's ZOO pound Taclcle, Iumbered around among unsTabIe scenery hunTing his overalls. As Vivi applied an overworked powder puTT To her sisTer's shiny counTenance, moTherIy Abby hovered over Them anxiously awaiT- ing The parTing oT The curTains. AT IasT The IighTs dimmed, The TooTIighTs Tlashed on, and The I.aTe ChrisTopher Bean began. The casT porTrayed Their roles To The deIighT oT audience and direcTor, especially when The leading lady came ouT, her mouTh sTuTTed wiTh minTs. The Senior Class play was heralded a success by everyone. TI-IE CHRISTMAS GOCSE IT IS noT oTTen ThaT a school can presenT a play ThaT is enTireIy a home-TaIenT producTion, buT ThaT opporTuniTy came To us IasT December wiTh a ChrisTmas presenTaTion by The Masque Club. Miss Olson oT The English deparTmenT wroTe a play, The ChrisTmas Goose, and sold iT To The Dr-amaTic Publishing Company oT Chicago. When The high school was requesTecI by The P. T. A. To presenT an evening oT high school dramaTics, Miss SchaeTTer decided To make iT an all-school play by using iT. She seIecTed a casT Trom The Masque Club To enacT iT. The sTage-craTT class, direcTed by Miss Johnson, consTrucTed The seT, a rnodei-nisTic sTudio designed by DoroThy Die+zeI. IT was proclaimed The mosT picTuresque seTTing oT The year wiTh iTs chromium TurniTure, sTyIized ChrisTmas Tree, and Two-Tone blue walls wiTh silver sTars. The enThusiasm oT The audiences proved The diligence OT each deparT- menT. Adams, B., Fahringer, J.,Schuen- gel, R. Kepler TraczewiTz PAGE 53 1. Row I: Klinker, Trebilcoclc, Peifer, BenneTT, A., Dachen- bach, Traupmann, Thiele, Row 2: Kling, Mueller, G-., Weibel, HirsT, HarT, Koch, Dieringer. RQW3: l.ichTe. Brouwer, Glamm Dundon, Schmalz, Hauge Danlke Cvrossenbach. Row 4: Wfandel, R., Mullen, Mealey, Finlc, H., TracZewiTz, Kuony, fXrrnsTrong, Holcomb. l. Row I: CoTanch, Grossman, Jacobs, B., Miss G. Garness, Wagley, OeFlein, Cvrede. Row 2: STreclcewald, Grimsrud, Shebel, Miller, T., Dubuque, Dodge, W., KnowlTon, Mac- Donald. Row 3: MacRae. Pe-Terman, Schmidt H., Klein- schmidT, Hyde, MerriTT, Sei! ger, MelTon. Row 4: Jacobs, K., Jacobs, F., Philipp, Ram- low. Dryburgh, Radalcovich, Bai'Tels Ferris. BUYS' GLEE CLUB HE deepAToned harmony issuing TorTh Trom Room 302 during The Third period on Tuesdays causes The passer-by in The corridor To pause a momenT in aTTenTion. The music is ThaT OT The sixTy-Tive mem- bers OT The Boys' Glee Club as They render, wiTh all The Tine qualiTies oT The besT choruses, one oT The selecTions which Their direcTor, Miss Gladys Garness, has chosen Tor Their reperToire. This year's collecTion included The Two conTesT numbers, l.vov- sky's Hospodi Pomiloim and Sylvia by Speaks. Besides iTs annual appearance aT The WauwaTosa Kiwanis Club, The Boys' Chorus Turnished enTerTain- menT aT assemblies and aT The McKinley Masonic Temple. This year They also accomplished a praise- worThy sTep in The Tield OT music by singing wiTh band accompanimenT when They sang ln a Monas- Tery Garden wiTh The High School Band aT a con- cerT given by The laTTer organizaTion. During lasT year, aT The DisTricT and STaTe conTesTs, Their TirsT PAGE 54 division raTing in Class A proved The exTenT oT boTh The abiliTy and qualiTy OT This group. Due To The ouTsTanding record oT The boys' quar- TeT, composed oT Cvlee Club members, iT has been much in demand Throughoul' This year. This quarTeT, anoTher group oT Twelve boys, and The soloisTs Tur- nished The special numbers Tor The annual spring concerT. Among Their selecTions were Del Riego's Homing, On The Sea by Buck, and The Mer- maid by Brahms. By parTicipaTing in glee club work sTudenTs acquire an eager inTeresT in parT singing. STress is placed upon The developmenT oT Tone gualiTy, enunciaTion, phrasing, breaTh conTrol, and, above all, The sheer ioy oT singing TogeTher in a group. Proper developmenT OT 'close harmony' has been accomplished by This organizaTion, and as a resulT Their singing has a sTrong appeal Tor perTormers and lisTeners alike. Row I: PriTchard, GroThe, SchmiTT, V., Thiel, Lippold, Kamerling, Michaelsen, Davis, S. Row 2: Ruenzel, Longeway, Schroeder, Redden, WolT, SchmicIT, M., Riese, Killian, l-l., SaewerT. Row 3: RoberTs, J., Frase. J., Scholz, Lamb, EIlsworTh, Falk, I-larT, NeTher- cuT, Lewis, I-lackeTT, H. Row 4: Vorhes, WhiTe, C., 6odTrey, DiTTmer, Baumann, I-lill, Soro- ski, Rom, Vick, LangholTT, Row 5: Uecke, I-lerTTing, G., Wil- Terding, Conger, B., Oedinq, Mayer, M., Schenk, Gillan, Mann, Tann-erT. Row I: Foy, Underhill, Welch. P., Miss Garness. Francke, Geiger, KleinschmidT. Row 2: I-lerTTing, D., Larsen,l:.,Dwyer, Nichols, Gil'igan, Gallenbeck, Grimsrud, STamm. Row 3: Reisner, Mann,J., Perry, Grede, Young, J., Miller, B., PaTe, SwancuTT, Arnell, WiTzel. Row 4: Weimar, UnTerweger, KleTTi, Vickerman, Krueger, Propp, W., Colver, Mallon, Reiss. Schroe- der, Zirwes. Row 5: I-lerTTing, L., NewTon, M., Friske, G., KrisTianson, Osmond, BenneTT, M., Reuss, Ball, Dodd, Allison, Chrisler. GIRLS' GLEE CLUB APPY indeed is The giri who sees her name included in The Tinal lisT oT Those who made The Glee Club aTTer The semesTer TryouTs. In order To keep The membership below one hundred, only Those who are musically ready as To piTch, reading abiliTy, and Tone gualiTy are enTered, buT every girl is given an opporTuniTy To develop These quali- Ties in secTional rehearsals held aT anoTher Time during The week. Regular rehearsals are held on Wednesdays, The Third period. I-lowever, This year several girls Took advanTage OT The Tuesday aTTer school rehearsals devoTed To singing solos and Trios. Two Trios and seven soloisTs Trom The Glee Club were chosen To enTer The DisTricT conTesT aTTer The preliminary conTesT held in The music room. A unique TeaTure oT The work done by The or- ganizaTion is The conTinued high sTandard oT aTTain- menT rnainTained year aTTer year. The club sTrives To uphold only The highesT sTandards OT perTorm- ance, sTressing beauTy of Tone, excellence oT in- TonaTion, enunciaTion, and inTerpreTaTion. Much OT The crediT Tor iTs success should be given To Miss Gladys Garness, The direcTress, upon whose managemenT The Glee Club wholly depends. A wide varieTy oT superior musical selecTions Turnish an exceIlenT medium Tor The masTery OT sTyle and inTerpreTaTion and are invaluable in The Torma- Tion oT musical TasTes. Among The selecTions sTud- ied This year were The conTesT numbers, The BUT- TerTly by Jenkins and 'IO Bone Jesu, a LaTin S8- lecTion by PalesTrina. OTher songs included Thanks be To God by Dickson, lNlighT Songl' by Clckey, and Thank God Tor a Gardenl' by Del Riego. Many cT The songs are sung a capella. ln TacT, The girls preTer unaccompanied selecTions. AlThough iusT a Tew public performances were given, The crganizaTion is well known Tor iTs Tine sTandards. PAGE 55 Row I: Miss Gladys Garness, I-Iolcomb, Trebilcock, Foy, Underhill, Barrels. Dachenbach, Radakovich, Oeflein, Ferris. Row 2' Schroeder, RoberTs, Shebel, Schroeder, A., I-IackeTT, I-I., Redden, Francke. Young, J., Reisner, DiTTmer. Row 3: ElIsworTh, Soroski, SaewerT, Uecke, SwancuTT, Grossman, Weibel, MacRae, WiITerding, I-IerTTing, G., Vick. Row 4: Ruenzel, Schenk, Mallon, BenneTT, M. E., KrisTianson, Gillan, Ball, Oercling, PeTerman, KIeinschrnidT, Chrisler, MacDonald, Thiel. Row 5: Rom, Vickerman, Allison, LichTe, Michaelsen, Hyde, Kuony, Geiger, Fink, H., Grossenbach, Jacobs, F,, Jacobs, B. FIRST TENOR FINK, HOWARD GEIGER, ARTHUR KLEINSCHMIDT, EUGENE LICHTE, GORDON RADAKOVICH, GEORGE SHEBEL, DANIEL SECOND TENOR DIERINGER, FRANK GLAMM, ROBERT HART, WILLIAM KLING, JOHN KLINKER, THOMAS KOCH, ROGER MacDONALD, BRUCE MELTON, DAMIAN A CAPELLA RAMLOW, ROBERT SEEGERT, NEAL UMBS,JOHN WANDEL, RALPH WAGLEY, WILLIAM FIRST BASS ARMSTRONG, EDWIN ARNDT, ROBERT BARTELS, MYRON DACHENBACH, WILBUR FERRIS, COLLINS GROSSENBACH, DICK GROSSMAN, PHILIP HAUGE, HARRY HOLCOMB, JACK HYDE, WILLIAM JACOBS, BURLEIGH JACOBS, FRANK KAPPELMAN, JAMES KUONY, FRANK MacRAE, DONALD OEFLEIN, ROBERT PETERMAN, WILLIAM TREBILCOCK, JAMES WEIBEL, GEORGE SECOND BASS BROUWER, ELLIS COTANCH, ROBERT JACOBS, KENNETH KNOWLTON, HAROLD MULLEN,GEORGE PHILIPP, ERNEST THIELE, HAROLD TRACZEWITZ, OSCAR FIRST SOPRANO ALLISON,VIRGINlA BALL, MARGARET BENNETT, MARY E. CHRISLER, MIRIAM CONGER, BETTY DITTMER, LOIS DUGGINS, DOREEN ELLSWORTH, VIRGINIA EOY, HARRIET HACKETT, HELEN HERTTING, GERTRUDE KELLY, JESSIE KRISTJANSON, BARBARA OULD iT be ThaT WauwaTosa High has reversed TradiTions? The TirsT Two years in The IiTe oT organizaTion Tend To be The mosT Trying and unsuccessful. BUT noT so oT our A Capella Choir. LasT year saw iT emerge in all iTs glory, capTuring TirsT raTing in The A division in boTh The DisTricT con- TesT aT Shorewood and The STaTe TournamenT aT Wausau. This year, wiTh The pride oT IasT year's Triumphs as an incenTive, The choir oT one hundred and eighTeen voices, under The direcTion oT The Misses Agnes and Gladys Garness, sTeadiIy mounTed To new heighTs and recogniTion. IT appeared, upon inviTaTion, aT many clubs and churches during The year. The WauwaTosa Kiwanis Club and The WauwaTosa Wornan's Club TeaTured The A Capella aT Their respecTive ChrisTmas parTies. In February The vocal concerT aTTracTed an unusually large audience aT The combined concerT OT PAGE 56 Row I: Wagley, Armslrong, Philipp, Klinker, Mellon, Mullen, Colanch, Ramlow, Thiele, Miss Agnes Garness. Row 2: Larsen, F., Weimar, Herlling, L., Newlon, M., Erase, J., Dwyer, Nelhercul, Perry, Nichols, Scholz, Lamb. Row 3: KeIIy,J., Slamm, Langholhf, Radakovich. J., Hill, J., While, C., Godfrey, S., Miller, B., Grede, Reiss, Koch, Knowllon, Hari. Row 4: I-lerlling, D., Falk, Kling, Reuss, Conger, Friske, Baumann, Pale, Zirwes, Welch, P., Kamerling, Brown. Row 5: Traczewilz, Jacobs, K., Arndl, Wan- del, Brouwer, Hauge, Glamm, Seegerl, Dieringer, Grolhe, Schmill, V., Umbs. MICHAELSEN, ELAINE OERDING, VIRGINIA REDDEN, MARGARET ROBERTS, JULIA ROM, MARJORIE RUENZEL, LOIS SCHROEDER, ARVELLA SWANCUTT, ELIZABETH UECKE, ALICE VICKERMAN, MARJORIE WILTERDING, BEVERLY YOUNG, JEAN SECOND SOPRANO BAUMANN, HAZEL BROWN, LORENE A CAPELLA DWYER. MARILYN FRASE,JEAN GREDE, JANET HAUSCH, LOIS HERTTING, LOUISE HILL, JEANNE KAMERLING, NELVIA LARSEN, FLORENCE LEUCH, DOROTHY LEUCH, RUTH NETHERCUT, LOIS NICHOLS, BERNICE PERRY, MARION SCHMITT, VIRGINIA SCHOLZ, GRACE STAMM, JUNE UNDERHILL, VIVIAN WELCH, PATRICIA ZIRWES, LUCILLE FIRST ALTO BENDER, JUNE FALK, JEANNE FRISKE, GWEN GILLAN, ALICE GODFREY, SUSAN GROTHE, MARJORIE HERTTING, DOROTHY LAMB, CATHARINE MILLER, BARBARA NEWTON, MARJORIE PATE, BETTY RADAKOVICHJANET REISS,CORINNE REUSS, ELEANOR SAEWERT, JOAN WEIMAR, SHIRLEY WHITE, CAROL SECOND ALTO FRANCKE, JOYCE LANGHOLFF, LOIS REISNER, BARBARA SCHENK, MARCELLA VICK, MARGARET SCHROEDER, HARRIET SOBEL,JUNE SOROSKI, ROSE THIEL, SUZANNE Ihe Longfellow and Senior High groups. Among olher places, Ihe Choir sang al Ihe Milwaukee Alhlelic Club, lhe Milwaukee Kiwanis, lhe Gyro Club, and lhe Schoolmaslens Club, and rounded oul ils season wilh Ihe annual May concerl' and I'he Suburban conlesl al Shorewood. The various numbers Ihal were sung al Ihe programs were: Now Thank We All Our God, by Cruger-Mueller and The Echo Song by de Lasso, Ihe Iwo conlesl numbers, The Music ol Life by Cain, Lord Bring Dal' Sinner I-lome by Clark, DedicaIion by Mueller, Song of Ihe PedIar by Williams, Go Down Moses by Cain, BeauIiiuI Savior by Chrisliansen, Lo, God is Here by Mueller, Glory Be Io God by Rachmaninofl, Hail Gladdening LighI by Woodard, and Alleluia, Chrisl Is Risen by Koployoil. Besides mainlaining a vocal organizalion oi high slandards, The main purposes of This club are lo en- courage musical abililies and Io promole an apprecialion of music. PAGE 57 ax., Row I: Adams M., I-lerTTing, B., Bailey, Dimm Thiel, Michaelsen. AlbrechT, STresau, Tully, NewTon, M., Pierner. Row 2: Longe- way, WOITT, Zimmermann, Redlin, Rom, Leuch, D,, PriTchard, NewTon, SceeTs, L,, JeTTrey, SwancuTT, B., SwancuTT, D. Row 3: Polloclc, Dodge, l'IarT, IVlaTiq, Todd, Umbs Miller, Schmalz, Kressin, BeaumonT, Brouwer. ORCHESTRA VIOLIN ADAMS, MARY M. BAlLEY,JANE BLISS FRANCES DIMM, HELEN PINK, HOWARD GRUNDL, BETTY HART, BILL HETH, BETTY HOUSEVIOLET IVERSON, DOROTHY JOHNVERDAYNE KOCH, ROGER LONGEWAY, ELIZABETH MALIG, HARVEY MILLER,STEWART NEWTON, MARJORIE PRITCHARDUOANNE RADAKOVICHGEORGE RADAKOVICH JANET SCEETS, LILA SCEETS, NATALIE SCHMALZ, HENRY SPRENGER, ROBERT SPRENGER, ROLAND STRESSAU,ANN SWANCUTT, DOROTHY TOEPEER, RUSSELL UMBSJOHN WOLEE, ILA YOUNG-,JEAN BASSOON ALBRECHT, HELEN CLARINET CHRISTIANSEN, DAN SIEVERT, MILTON THOKE, FRED TULLY, LENORE PIANO ALBERTSON, RUTH ZIMMERMAN, VIVIAN VIOLA HERTTIN6, LOUISE LEUCH, RUTH HE audiTorium lighTs dim, The silence oT anTicipaTion and expecTancy Talls upon The audience, Mr. Ross raises his baTon, and presenTly The TirsT pianissimo oT Bize-Tls AdagieTTo comes To our ears. This is Tol- lowed by 5eeThoven's EirsT Symphony, 'IA LITe Tor The Czar, and a piano concerTo, l'Hungarian EanTasie by Lis7T, which was climaxed by Thunderous applause noT only Tor The orchesTra's Tine perTormance, buT also Tor The masTerTul skill displayed by June I-laberT, The piano soloisT. AII oT The orchesTra concerTs are The resulTs oT several monThs' worlc under The adepT direcTorship oT Mr. Ross. The bieweelcly pracTices oT The orchesTra's sixTy-seven members are inTerspersed wiTh numerous secTional and ensemble pracTices. This is The TirsT Time Mr. Ross has aTTempTed To sTarT guinTeTs, guarTeTs, and dueTs aT The beginning oT The TirsT insTead oT The second semesTer. This plan has meT wiTh greaT success, noT only in giving The musicians more pracTice Tor The conTesTs, buT also in enabling Them To play aT various occasions. PAGE S8 Ag - 4. l Row I: Young, AlberTson, Trowbridge, Sprenger, P., PriTzIaTT, Radalcoyich, J., Langl'olTT', House, Grundhl, Crosby, Bliss. Row 2 Durnser, Toepifer Thoke, SeegerT, Lewis, MarTell, NaTzI4e. lyerson, WrighT, Leuch, R., HeTh, SceeTs, N. Row 3: War'en, I3 Ei k KiIberT, ChrisTiansen, KuTch, Radakoyich, G., John, SieyerT, Sprenger, B., Sprenger, R., LeiTgabel, Mr. Ross. MARTELLVIRGINIA PIERNER, JANET THIEL, SUZANNE WRIGHT, CONSTANCE CELLO LEUCH, DOROTHY NATZKE, MILDRED PRITLAFE, MONA TROWBRIDGEJANE WARREN, PETER ORCHESTRA STRING BASS BROIJWER, ELLIS CROSBY, MARTHA KILBERT, HOWARD LANGHOLEF, LOIS LEWIS, MARY LIEDER, BETTY MICHAELSEN, ELAINE HORNS SEEGERT, NEAL SRRENGER, PHYLLIS TODD, HAROLD DRUM DODGE, TOM TYMPANI ROM, MARJORIE FLUTE JEFFREY, JEAN REDLIN, JANE SWANCUTT, BETTY TROMBONE KRESSIN, ROBERT CORNET KUTSCH, HILBERT POLLOCK, DANIEL BARITONE BEAUMONT, ALAN SAXAPHONE LEITGABLE, KENNETH OBOE NEWTON, ANN ln The l935 DisTricT conTesT, WauwaTosa enTered Class A, and won a TirsT division award. ln The suc- ceeding STaTe conTesT held aT Wausau, WauwaTosa again enTered Class A, and broughT home a second divie sion laurel. The orchesTra's superioriTy is shown noT only by iTs conTesT record, buT also by The TacT ThaT TwenTy4Two leTTers were awarded To: Bob Kressin, Louise HerTTing, DoroThy Iverson, Alan BeaumonT, HilberT KuTsch, Anne lNlewTon, Joanne PriTchard, DoroThy Leuch, Ellis Brouwer, Mona PriTzlaTT, JaneT Radalrovich, Jane Redlin, Lila SceeTs, Henry Schmalz, Bob Sprenger, Roland Sprenger, Harold Todd, Russell ToepTer, ConsTance VVrighT, KenneTh LeiTgabel, and Helen Dimm. Alfhouqh The orche-sTra demands much OT iTs members, iT is really a big, happy Tamily OT sTudenTs working TogeTher Tor The sheer ioy ThaT They Tind in music. PAGE 59 Row I: Price, AIbrechI, Traczewirz, Van DaIe, HoImes, Kufsch, Sieverf, LeiIqabeI. Row 2: HaaI:, W, Nefhercur, P.. Bunde, Debus, Swancufi, E., HoIbrooI:, DraIce, Newron A., Radakovich, J.. SirnerIein. Row 3: Lieder, J., CarroII R.. Dodge, T.. I-Iarr, PoIIocIc, Sirass, ArneII, Moore, H., Warren, B., Todd I-I. Row 4: Cfawiord, Voss. AI., Kedinq, Mi'Ier, S., Spienqer, P., Barrie R. Schmidf, H., McCrory, Seegeri, FLUTES JEEEREY, JEAN WARREN, BRUCE SWANCUTT, ELIZABETH OBOES NEWTON, ANNE STRASS WILLIAM SOLO CLARINETS TRACZEWITZ, OSCAR VAN DALE, ARMIN SIEVERT, MILTON THOKE, FRED FIRST CLARINETS ARNDT, ELLEN TULLY, LENORE CHRISTIANSEN, DAN DRAKECSORDON SECOND CLARINETS ARNELLANN BARRIE, ROBERT BIERMAN, ROBERT KNORRWARREN I-IENDERSON,JACK WILLIAMS, LOIS SCHMIDT, HAROLD BAND THIRD and FOURTH CLARINETS VOSS, ALVIN COMSTOCK, ROY PRICE, ROBERT ENC-ELHARDT, JACK BEHREND. BERTRAM HETH, CAROL HAAK, WILBUR MOORE, HELEN ALTO CLARINETS GUY, JAMES DU SELL, PAU LA BASS CLARINETS I-IUMMEL, EDWARD CARROLL, RUTH BASSOONS ALBRECI-IT, HELEN LIEDER, JUNE BUEI-INER. ROBERT ALTO SAX POWELL, ELEANOR SIMERLEIN, RITA TENOR SAX SPRENGER, ROBERT KLINKER, THOMAS ERE comes Ihe bandI The bIasI of a whisIIe, Ihe disIanI roll of drums, and Ihe caII of The Irumpers announce Ihe arrivaI and draw a crowd Io The sIreeIs. As Ihe coIorIuI parade approaches, Ihe eriicienr drumfmaior, regaIIy dressed in whire and briqhI red, srrurs wirh shorr, high sreps keeping Iime Iior his IeIIow band members. Leir-righr'--f-IeII-righ+I I3erIecI Iirne, periecr rhyIhmI Nexr in Iine are rhe slrandard bear- ers hoIding aIoII Ihe American IIag and Ihe beauI'iTuI, new band srandard presenred Io rhe orqanizahon by Ihe Band Morhers' CIub. Now Ihe enrire band, eighry srrong, passes in review, dressed in bIue uniiorms wirh red and whire Touches. And whar a record Ihese peopIe haveI Irs Ihe band Ihar was awarded IirsI place in Ihe Iirsr division in Ihe Disrricr conIesI aI Shorewood and Iirsr place in The Iirsr division in Ihe Srare conIes+ aI Wausau, borh in PAGE 60 1 4 , Q 4- - Row I: Hummel, Guy, Tholce, BeaumOnT, ChrisTiansen, ArndT, R., T-lendersen, Sprenger. R. Row 2: Blanchard, Knorr, D., Bier- man, KeTly, J. Tully, Behrens, Du Sell P. Williams, Mr. Brendel, Row 3: Powell L., JeTTrey, Marshall, Knorr W., T-TeTh, Zirwes Palmer, Enqlehardf ComsToclK, ArndT, Row 4: Viclc, Umbs. Clarke, T-l., T-lay, D., MacDonald Dierinqer, Allison Boyce, Kressin, Hoover. BAND BARITONE sAx BUNDE, ROBERT ALLIsoN, VIRGINIA TUBAS LEITGABEL KENNETH BLANCT-TARD, BROOKS DEBUS, T-TARTUET ARNDT, RQBERT KNORR, DONALD sPRENeER, ROLAND SOLO CORNET HAEUSER, ROBERT BARWONE5 HAY, DONALD KUTscH. HILBERT YIcK, MARGARET BEAUMONTIMM1 HART WILLIAM BoYcE, DAVID HOOYER, ELDON DIERING-ERT FRANK PERCUSSION FIRST CORNET HORNS TROMBONE5 MILLER! STEWART CLARK, HAROLD TODD, HAROLD KRESSIN, ROBERT DODGE, THOMAS PQLLOQK1 DANIEL sEEeERT, NEAL HOLMES, Hue-H KEDINO, ROBERT SPRENGER PHYLLIs PALMER ROBERT WARNER EUGENE SECOND CORNET5 UMBS, JOHN TODD, WESLEY MAc DONALD, BRUCE HOLBROOK, JAMES zIRwEs, LUCILLE NETHERcuT, PHILLIP RADAKovIcH, JANET MQCRORY, RAYMOND MARSHALL, KATHERINE CRAWFORD, ROBERT KELLY, JEssIE siqhT-reading and Open compeTiTion. lT's The band in whose ranlcs march boTh sTaTe and naTional solo and ensemble champions. lT's The band ThaT in The pasT year was heaped wiTh honors: They were chosen OUT OT many oTher excellenT bands OT The sTaTe To play aT The STaTe Teachers' ConvenTion in The Milwaukee Audi' Toriumq They played aT The NaTional ParenT Teacher AsSOciaTiOn ConvenTiOn also because OT Their excellenT worlc. These are iusT a Tew OT The Things remembered as The band marches by. From The sidelines Mr. Brendel, able direcTor Tor The Twelve years OT The bandis exisTence, proudly Sur- veys The brillianT, Snappily uniTormed specTacle. The crowd cheers, and a Thrill passes Through The classmaTeS OT The band members. Soon The end OT The uniT is seen, and The cheers lose Their resonance as The band disappears around anoTher corner wiTh anoTheI' shrill 'blasT OT The drum-maiOr's whisTle. LeTT-riqhT-leTT-- righT! PAGE bl rhies, Joha, Barrie, Jacobs, Grossenbach, Geiger, Pilaurn, Cody, Smiih, Delienbach, l-lirsl Ulalowslci, Gruenwald, Schmidl, Ferris, Jewasinski, Medd, Frase Se-iole, l-lauo. W CLUB HE Club, as lhe name suggesrs, is an or- ganizalion lor school arhleles who have won lhe honored The club was organized in I926 wilh rhe idea in mind 'ro bring lhese noled alhleles ro- gelher and lo lurlher boys' arhlelics in lhe school. ll also hoped 'ro bring aboui a closer associalion and more friendly feeling belween lhe boys and Jrhe coaches. To obrain a leller a boy is reguired lo have played lourreen guarrers in loorball and eighleen in baslcelball. When rhe club was slarred, such sporls as golf, lennis, and rraclc were inlra- mural and only minor lerlers were received for rhem, bul now lhese sporls are inlerscholaslic, and alhleles compeling in lhem receive major The club has nor been very aclive during lhe lasl lew years, bur ilaopears +o be slaging a lasl come- back. The office oi presidenl is held by Fred Smilh. PAGE 62 Row I: Dahllce, G., Hargadon, Wandel, Slrelcewald, Miss Hen- ninger, Miller, Reinlce, J., Gill- meisler V. Row 2: Jernagan, Vorhes, Fish, E, l-laalc, C. TCDSA CYCLERS NEWLY organized group oi enlhusiaslic pedal- lers, under lhe guidance of Miss l-lenninger, has come info rhe spor lighr of rhe high schools slage of clubs. The sociely of Tosa Cyclers was organized in rhe fall of I935 wilh four maior ob- ieclives in view: lo acguainl rhe bilce rider wilh lhe roads ol his communiryg lo inform him of rhe rules and courresies ol lhe roadq lo reduce bicycle mis' haps: and, laslly, io provide pleasure and healrhlul exercise. The program ol aclivifies included shorl lrips alrer school, Sarurday excursions wilh slops lor lunching, and a Chrislrnas parly. ln April rhe Parlcway offered a free runway for bicycle races. Now lhal Jrhe inlreresr ol lhe school is duly aroused, The club is sure ol having an increased membership nexl year. The one complain? ol all pedallers has been lhar Time and wealher have noi permilred enough ol lhis perlecl sporl-Wbicycling. Bahler, Zarrner, Thessin, Mal- Row I: Holcomb, Hein, Mrs, E Gibson. Jacobs B. Mullen, G. Row 2: Fahringer Adams, M. SchowalTer Adams B., See- gerT. Row 3: Grossman, GMT, TiTh, Fish, l-lall, Kepler, MarTin. ,ir- L4 K Row I: Roehl, Mi. l-leidTTe, Grossman, l-lein,STier. Row 2: Edler, Murphy Dieringer, Or- low, SchowalTer, Pollock. FORENSICS N The days oT ArisToTle, manls voice reached per- haps hundreds oT ears, buT Today Through man's invenTive genius iT reaches millions. Speech is day by day becoming a more imporTanT TacTor in The aTTainmenT oT success in every Tield oT human ene deavor. ln our democraTic age every individual needs and has The righT To every opporTuniTy ThaT will give him power To express more clearly and TorceTully his ideas To oThers. IT is wiTh The aim oT improving Their slcill in speech and upholding The high record oT our school Torensics ThaT The parTici- panTs oT This year's Torensic conTesT have sTriven Tor, and, Thanlcs To The invaluable guidance oT Their coach, Mrs. Gibson, have aTTained success. Our conTesTanTs were: Phil Grossman-OraTory, John Hein-fExTemporaneous Speaking, Mary MargareT Adams'fExTemporaneous Reading, John Fahringer -DramaTic DeclamaTion, BeTTy Kepler-l-lumorous DeclamaTion. DEBATE CLUB ETH TisTs pounding and voices ringing, The members oT The DebaTe Club expound Their Theories. Nor only do They learn The arT oT oraTory, buT also The arT oT logic, Tor which purposes The DebaTe Club was Tormed. The increase in The membership over lasT year shows The growing in- TeresT in The Tield oT debaTing. Mr. l-leidTlce is The adviser oT This organizaTion. The Teams won second place in The Suburban League conTesT, deTeaTing WesT Allis and WesT Milwaulcee, buT losing To Waukesha. The guesTion debaTed was: Resolved: ThaT The several sTaTes enacT legislaTion providing Tor a cornpleTe sysTem oT medical service available To all ciTizens aT public expense. The negaTive and aTTirmaTive Teams Toclc parT in several non-decision debaTes wiTh MargueTTe l-ligh School and WashingTon High School, in which The consTrucTive criTicism and experience gained were oT greaT aid To The debaTers. PAGE 63 son. Row 2: Kuchenbecker bau, Thiel. Row 5: Lippold, Weyland, Wilson, KilberT, CARDINAI. NEWS T-lAT would a communiTy oT over a Thousand inhabiTanTs do wiThouT some means oT ex- changing news? The need Tor such a clearing-house in WauwaTosa T-ligh's sTudenT body is meT by The Cardinal News, a sTudenT newspaper, Through which in TourTeen issues each year are broughT To iTs read- ers a record oT evenTs pasT and an announcemenT oT Things To come. This school year marks The beginning oT The sec- ond decade oT The News' publicaTion. For eleven years This paper has served iTs communiTy oT sub- scribers wiTh The news oT Their school world: sporTs evenTs, ediTorials on local Topics, accounTs oT maior school happenings as well as minor acTiviTies, Triendly gossip, and exchange iTems Trom oTher school communiTies. To produce a Tour-page news sheeT every TorT- nighT requires a wide range oT abiliTies: ediTorial wriTers, TypisTs, ad geTTers, reporTers, bill-collecTors, inTerviewers, headline wriTers, make-up specialisTs, errand boys,-all have Their share. Miss BernharT direcTs The enTire sTaTT which now numbers over sixTy sTudenTs. In The course oT iTs progress The Cardinal News has gradually increased in size and gualiTyg lasT year iT was awarded FirsT Class raTing by The NaTional ScholasTic Press AssociaTion judges. The number oT iTs paid readers is above seven hundred. Members oT The sTaTT work wiTh a zeal inspired by The opinion ThaT The resulTs oT Their eTTorTs are noT only eagerly awaiTed by The sTudenT body each issue buT also Torm collecTively a hisTory oT each generaTion's school days. Even To Those now in school old copies oT The News bring back halT-Tor- goTTen memories oT The good old days. The Cardinal News is a member oT The Milwau- kee Suburban Press AssociaTion, The Quill and Scroll SocieTy, and The NaTional ScholasTic Press Associa- Tion. Babich, Bemm, Grossman, Or- low, SeegerT, STaTTord, Schus- Ter, Angle T-lein, Bradley. PAGE 64 Row I: Redden, l-lerTTing, De- bus, Bishop, Erancke, AlberT- l-lackeTT, l-l., Pollnow, PeTer- sen, WhiTe, Murphy, P., Fish, Miss BernharT. Row 3: Young, J., MarTell, Grede, Gross, M., Spanley, Yeko, Mallon, Sass. Row 4: Conger, Dodd, Knowl- Ton, Brodd, Dahlke, l-lake, Lie- PeTerman, Trowbridge, Eldred, Row I: Pllaum, Dielzel,Viclcer- rnan, Underhill Foy Tracze- vilz. Row 2: Mr.Marlin,Swill, Adams, M., Unlerweger, Bemm, Weimai',Basche. Row 3: Wood Godlrey, Murphy, Schroeder, Kepler, Silver, Reic. Row 4: Means, Tielenlhaler, Bickler, Olconnor l-leuel, Walcelield. CARDINAI. PENNANT TUDENTS rushing lhrough lhe halls, pens in hand, colliding wilh one anolhery sludenls silling on lhe slairways or leaning on lhe radialorsy sludenls calling and iolcing wilh lheir classmales: il is lhe lasl day ol school and lhe Pennanl is oul. l-low does lhe l936 Cardinal Pennanl diller lrorn lhe many olher annuals lhal have been published by lhe Wauwalosa l-ligh School sludenls? Lel's page lhrough il and see. lnlormalily is lhe lcey-nole. On lhe inner covers. lor lhe lirsl lime, we lind a calendar ol lhe oul- slanding school evenls ol lhe year, lhe credil lor which goes lo Miss Cox and her Arl classes. Re- member lhe lun you had on each occasion? Loolc al lhe division pages: lhe lull page pholo- graphs lalce lhe place ol lhe block-prihl arl worlc ol lcrmer years. They are jusl scenes lhal are com- monly lound around our school. Now lor lhe lacully seclion, There are no lormal piclures ol lhe leachers-only inlormal classroom poses, showing our inslruclors as we all lcnow lhem and will always remember lhem. Underclassmen as well as Seniors are represenled lhis year. The addilion ol a l-lome Room seclion gives more allenlion lo lhe Sophomores and Jun- iors. ll also assures everyone ol a piclure some place or olher in lhe boolc. Allhough lhis was Mr. Marlin's lirsl year ol worlc on lhe Pennanl, his wide experience wilh olher ana nuals helped lhe Slall greally and lurnished il wilh many new ideas. l-le ioins lhe Slall in hoping lhal lhe currenl edilion ol lhe yearboolc presenls a lrue piclure ol school lile al 'Tosa l-ligh. Babich, Traczewilz, Underhill, Wangerin, Kilberl. PAGE 65 RED ARROW I-IIZI Red Arrows everywhere! Girls wiTh painTed Taces and sTrange cosTumes now malq- ing proposals, Then indulging in communiTy sere- nading on The busy sTreeT curb-This is a common sighT aT school in The spring and Tall when The Red Arrow iniTiaTion Takes place. BuT aTTer all The hila- rious amusemenT, oTT comes The painT and sponTa- neous spiriT, and once more The girls are serious, eager girls who have earned eiqhr hundred poinTs and aTTained a IasTing inTeresT in aThIeTics. The eighT hundred poinTs needed To become a member may be earned Through parTicipaTion in inTra- mural sporTs or ouTside acTiviTies. Besides promoTing girls' aThIeTics, sporTsmanship, and leadership in sporTs, The Red Arrow club hopes To aTTain cerTain social sTandards. Numerous Teas were sponsored ThroughouT The school year Tor The TacuITy, The members, and alumnae members wiTh a picnic as a Tinal round-up. GIRLS' ATHLETIC ASSQCIATIQN IXICE more Monday rolls around, and wiTh iT comes The eighT o'cIocIc meeTing oT The Girls' AThleTic Board. I-Iere all problems ThaT arise in The Girls' Physical EducaTion DeparTmenT are seTTIed. Plans are made Tor The inTramural program To be carried ouT during The weelc. AT The end oT any oT The inTramural seasons: hoclcey in Tall, basI4eTbaII in winTer, volleyball in spring, baseball, and Traclc, members Tor The all-sTar Teams are seIecTed, and schemes are concocTed Tor parTies, bangueTs, and Teas. This board was insTiTuTed IasT spring and has succeeded in carrying ouT iTs purpose: To acT as a board oT direcTors Tor The Girls' Physical EducaTion DeparTmenT. This group acTs OT iTs own accord, IegisIaTing by maioriTy voTe. Miss Vescolani is prese enT aT The rneeTings, buT The girls Themselves are The acTual rulers. Once again we have an example CT sTudenTs reigning and doing so very capably. H7-29,5 i Row I: Babich, Miss Vescolani. Row 2: Knippel, Nehring, Francke, Haberf, BarTIein, Reid, LippoId,VicIc,Cafroll,V.,Brady, Schuerer, Gross, M. Row 3: DennisTon, Finclc, D., Furnner, D., I3aumgarTen, D., Foy, Pe- rerscn J., Hay, Allison, Biclc- ler, Greenrnan, Weiss. Row 4: Klein, Frislce. i Row I: Tomlinson, Miss Vesco lani, Franclce, Viclcerman,Weiss, Bickler. Row 2: SwancuTT, En- gel, I-Ieimsch, BarTIein, Babich, PaTzIce, Frislce. Row 3: Iverson, Roehl, Nehring, M., Juneau, M. L., I-lay, Allison, Gross, M. PAGE 66 SQUAD LEADERS' GRGANIZATION EVER before in fhe hisfory of fhe school have fhe girls' gymnasium classes been held wifhouf fhe supervision of a feacher. This year, because of fhe squad leaders' excellenf work, a subsfifufe was nof necessary when Miss Vescolani was gone. This organizafion is composed of girls inferesfed in Physical Educafion and capable of direcfing ofher girls. Every year more and more girls enfer fhe gymnasium classes, and fhe squad leader or- ganizafion is fhe solufion fo fhe problems fhaf re- sulf from such an influx of sfudenfs. Sfrange as if may seem, fhe members of fhe gym classes do nof mind being insfrucfed by fheir squad leader friends. The purpose is fo promofe and encourage reliabil- ify, dependabilify, and leadership. Leadership is fhe mosf essenfial requiremenf. Alfhough fhis sys- fem is sfill in ifs infancy, if has affained an excep- fional record. The facf fhaf fhe meefings have one hundred per cenf affendance is remarkable in if- self, for fhis is fhe largesf girls' afhlefic organizafion in school. Squad leaders observe fhe old saying, All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, for recreafion plays a parf in fheir roufine. Af various meefings business was dispensed wifh in favor of enferfain- menf. There was a wiener roasf in fhe fall, and a sleigh ride parfy was anficipafed, buf fhe weafher was nof favorable. An annual sfunf nighf was spon- scred, wifh all fhe squads parficipafing and fhe squad leaders displaying fheir originalify. Since if is impossible for Miss Vescolani fo be in close confacf wifh every girl, fhe squad leaders have fhe opporfunify fo know fhe members of fheir squads, and more undersfanding befween fhe girls has resulfed. ln addifion fo fhis fhere has been beffer confrol of fhe classes and improvemenf in Physical Educafion work. Row I: Goeller, Nehring l-leimsch, Smifh, B., l-larms, Beerend. Row 2: Jarnbor, Krisf- ianson, Gross, J., Kepler. Tie- fenlhaler, Schlifz. Row 3: Bell, Offen, R., Schwerner, Dodd, Spliff, Vickerman. Row 4: Mann, J., Baumgarfner, D. Kleffi, Meyer, Godfrey, Klein. Row I: Carroll, V., Bickler, Miss Vescolani, Gross, M., Schue- rer, Friske, Row 2: Lippold, Juneau, M. L., Babich, Pafvke Braun, J., Falk. Row 3: Redlin, Benneff, J., Fraser, Doherfy, Francke,Angle. Row 4: Becker, Reid, Barflein, Weiss, Pefer- son, J., Kriwifsch. PAGE 67 i Row I: lv1acRae, WilTerding, BenneTT, M. E., KrisTianson GriTTiTh, I.angholTT, SchliTz, Roehl, Angle, Doughei-Ty, Weber, G. Row 2: Miss RaT- cliTT, Frodermann, C., Paulson, Fink, H., Reiss, Fischbach, Lohr, Rupp, Fischer, M., Brown, F., Spanley. Row 3: Berry, V., Feericlc, Kelly, T., RichTer Holmes, Clarlce H., Feiling, Lees, Moore H. Kepler, Tie- TenThaler. BOUT AND SPUR CLUB LOPITY-CLOP, clopiTy-clopl This soon became a Tamiliar sound To The many enThusiasTic mem- bers oT The newly-Tormed BOOT and Spur Club. Through The combined eTTorTs OT Neal Quinn, Tom Nichols and Charles Frodermann, a number OT would-be eguesTrians Tound an answer To Their hopes in This club, esTablished Tor The purpose oT improving horsemanship and arousing more inTeresT in This sporT. Miss RaTcliTT became The adviser be- cause oT her inTeresT in riding. On aTTernoons OT auTumn and spring members rode aT The Bluemound and Parkway Riding Acade- mies. The romance oT moonlighT rides was Tre- guenTly dispelled when sTudenTs Tell Trom Their mounTs. In order To reTain membership in The club, a sys- Tem oT honor poinTs was Tounded. Every ride re- corded wiTh The Honor PoinT Chairman gains one poinT Tor a member. AT The beginning oT This year The cavaliers began aT rock boTTom and learned The essenTials oT Tine riding. Then The members were divided inTo Two speciTied groups, The beginners and The advanced riders. The aim oT This division was To enable boTh secTions To enioy Their canTers wiTh people OT Their own abiliTy. Some oT The boys began To dabble in polo, and a Tew games were held beTween repre- senTaTives OT The Two academies. Plans are aTooT To TurTher This absorbing phase oT horsemanship nexT year. OTTicers Tor The TirsT semesTer were: Neal Quinn, presidenTg Tom Nichols, vice-presidenT7 BeTTy Kepler, secreTary: Ralph Paulson, Treasurer: Hugh Holmes, social chairman: Nancy Fishbach, honor poinT chairman: and Charles Frodermann, program chairman. These same posiTions were respecTively held dur- ing The second semesTer by leanne Roehl, Charles Froderman, DoroThy Jambor, BeTTy Kepler, Howard Finlc, Claire TieTenThaler, and Jane GriTTiTh. Horses, horses, crazy over horses! T PAGE 68 5 ' fy Maxx, ws 5, A ' 4 I .ffij r M 9 - K L 1. 1 N - ii 4 . X -'Xmwfm qw M., A..,. , . ,.,, 6, 2 fv1wgmfe:g,-Lf .- -,mmm fum , X, ,Sv wx 5 ':fgHz4,e5yiegs2gf2?Efii:t ,W Q 4. fm me Lf X S ww, rw?f,Gy,H1Z17wmsmk7 5,3 ,, . I see in Ihis crysIaI baII- WaI,aII I Icnowis whalr I read in Ihe paper. YouIreIeaninq Ihe way, Alan. J VW 'ww ,ii we MN MI VWX i M The s+ar+ of +he homecoming parade. Who made mince rneaf ou? of fhis IIoa+7 We'II skin 'em alive! The Winner! Such Iuxury. I+'s Ihe gypsy in Them. PAGE 70 'YM T CUDAHY Jw M PAGE 72 .Mg ,kiwi ww L- I Love a Parade. There goes llwe band! So long, fellows, Prelly sofl. Lefs make if blgl Our music leaders in flue wagon? Tl1ey're olll Conlemplalionffby Marlin So deep in sludy? All l do is llwinlc of you Tlwal finishing louclwl PAGE 73 Nhuuuubw s.. MEM Amfonio is Cer+eIr1ly un- done. Do I look Hke a hovel-posf or a prop? PAGE 74 Sweet e-dieufkll keep my oafkmf' There will come by. a Chrls+ian 'xl pray H1ee,+arry. Give me Hue key. Oh, my dauglwferl Oh, my duca+sl l am dumb. 'lah wb Ei Q,..qz M 3 f - x f FEM V 'Q f, 5 9755 f' ' , A 7,3 , s gm, , ,Z SF , 4, , ,ix 2 X sf 21+ 9 'EE 152- 1 QB' ' i i 'ia i .' l 1 hifi. m 3 5-gffiffi JE, . .W- V fif9sJ'L?Q 9 ,D F A ,V Rf -ik , 5 3 F S51 ' J ? My 1 -ff-,W 'fgwb-fa ,M ' K A -QW, Q '1 4 , ,. ff fy, f 'f ' Xi. ,fs .QQ 'X ,Ffa 3' .mg .uv 1, A .Q X. i e Fai May l Cul in? Queen Mary and Alice Cine for lhe money, lwo for lhe show Will you sign my Pennanl? Penny a look! Going clown PAGE 76 WM Cule lillle boy! The winlry winds clo blow Razz-ma-lazz, Rubinolil l-lowls my crediT7 Calrching up on lhe news ll's This way, Coach i IF' 1 .1 , 9 a 3 3' ' I w Q k 3 k 1 4' S 'i'X?3' .X 3 ' My ffvi. 1 .t iw? W i f 5 ' f f 1 is Q! 1.62, t 5 t t V ,xi , 1' ' fx, . . 'Qi JL. 3 K I 1 . A W, - Y 8 ' . X A , gt Q 1 ' 5 nj u ,Y t A Q is X L ,mmWL. ..., , ,gf i NN' 'V QV' MS' A WS if '- 71 9' iw f A u 5 ir N25 V 5 ,X ' L. M 1 W .,., Y Q' li' Q gr if S X 'Q' A 1-sro, . . v- ' ' 'wa s Q N F A, Q 'C I A N ---fr-- nvf' ' 'Q - 'C .. . - sf ,Q ,gYgM3r,, Y xx V A I - K , 55, A ,, , A 1 gk 'JSM-Q Z -Zwif.: - 1 1 1 I X465 f IQ., - wk, 7 ff Q gg. Y f 5 Q w X m M as V f wgfifilflzifw.-z1Q' ' ' fE,rQM FOCTIEALI. FGQTBALI. SUBURBAN CHAMPIONS OR Ihe Iirsl Iime in WauwaIosa's hislory of Suburban League compelilion, Ihe I935 'loolball Ieam secured Ihe much coveled championship hon- ors. Many limes in pasl years hopes ol qualify- ing lor Ihese Iaurels were upsel by an inevilable slroke ol bad Iorlune which inlervened al Ihe cru- cial momenl. The besl posilion any Iormer Ieam realized was second place. Overcoming such handi- caps as a heavy schedule, Ihe relurn ol only four Iellermen, and a poor siarl in Ihe Iirsl Iew games, Coach Jackson shaped an oulsianding and power- Iul squad which, in addilion Io winning The cham- pionship, placed Ihree members on Ihe All-Subun Ioan Ieam, a Ieal equalled only by Waukesha. Using Ihe same combinalion, double-wing back and semi-punl Iormalions Ihal proved so elleciive Iasl year,Ihe Cardinal back-field consislenlly gained enemy Ierrilory. Wifh Zarlner aI lull, Marlin aI quarier, and I-Iaug, Rahn, and Cody rolaling aI hall, Ihey Icrmed a combinalion which had few equals in Ihe mailer ol speed. Fisher, a Junior I-Iigh lad, was ollen in Ihere boofing a drop kick or converling a needed exlra poinl. SCGRES Wauwalosa I8 Wauwaiosa I4 WBUWGIOSG I3 Washinglon , 25 Waukesha , I3 WGSI MIIWGUIYSG- -6 Wauwalcfa , H7 Wauwaiosa , I2 Wauwalosa 6 Wesl Allis W8 Whilefish Bay, , 7 Soulh Milwaukee O Wauwalosa O Wauwalosa , I7 Wauwalosa 7 ,,,cc I 2 Wesl Division 3I Cudahy , HO Shorewood H H O RESERVES Row I: Cook, Fischer, Flynn, Loos, Wangerin, Ulalowski, I-Iayne. Row 2: Coach Scoll, Kufchera, I-Iari, Jacobs, Or- Iow, Mgr. Schmidt Coach Ac- cola. Row 3: ComsIock,Tesch, McCrory, Barlels, Frase, Pei- Ier, Pofralz. Row 4: Radako- vich, Loomis, I-Iolcomb, Cou- Iure,Schar'F Iv1cCarIhy,OeIIein, Wandel. PAGE 78 FQGTBALI. SUBURBAN CHAMPIONS The Cardinal line was one ol lhe besl in lhe conlerence, usually perlorming beller lhan ils op- , ponenls. One reason lor lhis lies in lhe lacl lhal il oulweighed any olher Suburban lineup. Because ol a slrong sense ol leam worlc and cohesion, il lunclioned almosl perleclly. Wi+h l-lummel al cen- ler, lvledd and Geiger al guards, l-layne, Dorsch, Thessin, and Jewasinslqi, allernaling al laclde, and Nichols and Mallhies al ends, lhe lineup lell lillle lo be desired. The leam slarled lhe season badly, losing lhe lirsl lhree games. l-lowever, lwo ol lhese were wilh non-conlerence elevens. Aller lhis disappoinling beginning, lhe squad sprang lo lile, delealing Waukesha, co-sharers ol lhe Suburban lille wilh Wauwalosa. The closeness ol lhis game, probably lhe loughesl on 'Tosa's schedule, is demonslraled by lhe score, I4-I3. The subseguenl opponenls were nol as lormidable, and Wauwalosa easily al- lained Suburban honors. The average score per game lor lhe boys in cardinal was eleven poinls, as opposed lo len lor lheir rivals. All in all, lhe I935 loolball season was lhe mosl successlul one ever experienced al 'Tosa High. ALL-SUBURBAN TEAM MEMBERS MARTIN-l-le is a sparlcplug on a winning leam. Allhough Marlin played guarlerbaclq during lhe season, he is placed al hallbaclc lo assure him a spol on lhe all-slar leam. ll would be uniusl lo deprive him ol such a raling. lvlarlin's passing and running made him a conslanl lhreal and he never lailed Wauwalosa in lhe pinches. GElGERill was Geiger and Dorsch who held up a greal deal ol Wauwalosa's delense. Geigens biggesl value lo lhe Wauwalosa leam was his excellenl baclcing up ol lhe line. l-le is a deadly laclcler and gave a lypical exhibilion againsl Soulh Milwaukee when he accounled lor al leasl len laclcles. DORSCH-Dorsch was invaluable as a leader ol inlerlerence, paving lhe way lor many ol lhe ball car- riers' long runs. l-le never lel up in his smashing, hard play and proved one ol lhe lcey men in Wauwalosals delense. Coach Jaclcson paid Dorsch a greal lribule when he called him lhe besl laclcle he's had since he began coaching al Vlfauwalosa seven years ago. lWisconsin lNlews.l ln lhe Whilelish Bay game Jacksons Red Raiders dis- played lheir championship lorm as indicaled by lhis louch- down play. PAGE 79 REGULARS Row I: Fischer, Jacobs, IvlaT- Thies, Placeway, RoberTson, Fer- guson. Row 2: Mgr. Srnifh, l-lir3l'. Fahringer, F., MarTin, Rahn, Fahringer, J., Coach Jackson. BASKETBALL T Tl-TE beginning oT The baskeTball season sporT reporTers were prophesying ThaT WauwaTosa would Tind iTselT near The Top aT The compleTion oT iTs playing schedule. While These predicTions were a Trille exaggeraTed, The Team beTTered iTs record oT lasT year, Tor wiTh all games included, Their per- cenTage raTing sTands aT .53O. AlThough a Tew leTTer- men reTurned, The maTerial as a whole was handi- capped by youTh and inexperience, buT was a beT- Ter balanced uniT. The mosT remarkable Thing abouT The squad was iTs heighT, Tor Coach Jackson could You can'T play ball while waTching The camera, Jimmy! PAGE 80 place an enTire guinTeT on The Tloor wiTh over a six TooT average. Coach SCOTT, a newcomer To Wau- waTosa's coaching ranks, drilled The Team during The laTTer parT oT The TooTball season, when Jackson was unable To work wiTh The boys. WauwaTosa opened The season by losing in suc- cession To SouTh Milwaukee I8-I9, WesT Milwaukee 23-25, Vlfaukesha 28-33, WashingTon 22-28, Racine l-lorlick 22-35, and Shorewood 29-33. All These games were losT by The smallesT OT margins. NexT RESERVES Row I: Siegel, Siogren, Voss, Schmidl, Bradley, Finclc. Row 2: Coach Scofl, l-laug, Belver, Grossenbach, Radalcovich, Mgr. Jewasinslci. BASKETBALL our live defeaied Whilefish Bay 4l-24, and Coun- iry Day 3I-I6, and losl ro Wes+ Allis I8-27, and Souih Milwaukee I7-2I. A+ This poinl ihe boys experienced a long winning slrealr, for lhey were vic+orious in ihe seven succeeding games: Wesl Milwaukee 47-I4, Waukesha 27-26, Counlry Day 26-I9, Shorewood 26-22, Whiiefish Bay 38-20, Wesl Allis 39-28 and Plymoulh 60-9. The game wi+h Ply- mouih was 'lhe iirsl for Wauwaiosa in lhe dislrici Jrournameni. The Cardinals were eliminaied in lhe semi-finals when Walerlown defealed Them in a close game, I9-I8. A+ cenier Caplain Carl Malrlhies was assisled by Don Ferguson. The guard posiiions were alfernalely held by Bob Placeway, Jimmy Marlin, Bruno Rahn, John Fahringer. and Cliff Swan. Ro+a+ing al for- ward were Jimmy Nichols, Burleigh Jacobs, Fred Fahringer, Burns Roberfson, and Craig l-lirsl. Jimmy Nichols was 'rhe only member of Jrhe learn ro be los+ lhrough gradualion. Whai are you waving al, Bob? PAGE BI CRGSS CCDUIXITRV THE cross-counTry Team, under The direcTion oT Coach Greenwill, did noT win honors as a whole, buT is able To boasT oT some oT The besT runners in The sTaTe. Fred Smifh, probably The besT cross- counTry runner ever To wear The cardinal and whiTe, Took TirsT in nearly every race he enTered, and cli- maxed The season by winning The Suburban meeT, seTTing a new record oT l2:2I.4 over a 2.4 mile course. WiTh Elmer Seigel coming in TenTh, Melvin KasTern placing TwenTy-TiTTh, Fred l-loppe, ThirTy- second, and Fred Mueller ThirTy-ninTh, in a Tield OT sixTy-Tour runners, WauwaTosa Took TiTTh place wiTh a ToTal oT IO7 poinTs. In The individual meeTs WauwaTosa deTeaTed WhiTeTish Bay 25lf2-3Olf2, losT To Shorewood 32-26, Cudahy 29-26, Waukesha 47-IS, WesT Division 34-2l, WesT Allis 36-24, and SouTh Milwaukee 48-20. DespiTe The compeTiTion oT The TooTball sea- son, cross counTry aTTracTed a large number oT boys. PAGE 82 FronT Row: Coach Greenwill, l-loppe, Mueller, Sonnenberg, Siegel, Naus. Back Row: Reu- perT, KasTern, SmiTh, Darling. Row I: Becker, Mgr.. Zarfner, Ferris, SmiTh, UlaTowski, Barrie, Medd, Mgr. Row 2: John, DeTenbaugh, Bahler Oeflein, Tesch, Frase. Nelson, Joha, Coach Greenwill. Row3: Zim- mermann, Dryburqh, B., Dry- burgh,W., Volz, Dorsch, Jewa- sinski, Radakovich, GodTrey, Ziefle. TRACK SUBURBAN ci-iAMPioNs THF I935 Track Team conTribuTed one oT The major surprises oT The year in sporTs circles by winning The championship aT The Suburban meeT held aT Waukesha. The enTire season was a suc- cessTul one Tor 'Tosa, Tor aT The TirsT meeT The A squad beaT Waukesha while The B squad losTg nexT Shorewood Tell before beTTer Cardinal A and B Teams: WauwaTosa placed second in a dual meeT wiTh Waukesha and WesT Allis, deTeaTed WesT Allis, Took TirsT in a dual meeT wiTh WesT Allis and Cudahy, Triumphed over Solomon Juneau, Took sevenTh in The STaTe meeT, and climaxed The season by amassing a ToTal oT4I,1f poinTs To win The Sub- urban Championship. The Team's superioriTy is dem- onsTraTed by The TacT ThaT sevenTeen oT iTs mem- bers were awarded a leTTer: Bahler, Barrie, DeTen- baugh, Dorsch, Ferris, Frase, GraT, l-laug, Joha, SmiTh, Swan, Tesch., UlaTowski, Volz, ZarTner, ZeiTle, and Manager Becker. GOLF SUBURBAN CHAMPIONS THE i935 golf feam won seven ouf of eighf rounds, defeafing Shorewood, Wesf Allis, fhe alumni, Margueffe,Whifefish Bay, Washingfon, and Soufh Milwaukee, losing only fo Forf Afkinson. Af fhe Suburban meef fhey made a clean sweep of medal honors fo win fhe fifle for fhe second suc- cessive year. The day of fhe Suburban fournamenf will long be remembered by all parficipanfs, for a soaking rain which drenched every player made good shofs exfremely difficulf. This handicap failed fo sfop Wauwafosa, for Jimmy Nichols shof rounds of 77 and 8I for fhe lowesf fofal of fhe day. l-le was followed by Burleigh Jacobs wifh I59, Fred Sfreng wifh I62, and Jim Tiefenfhaler, who shof fhe lowesf eighfeen of fhe day in 75, fook a fofal of I63, giving fhe Team 642. This was sevenfy less fhan Whifefish Bay, which finished second. Jacobs is fhe only member of fhe feam who will refurn for fhe I936 season. TENNIS D ESPITE fhe handicap of inexperience, Coach Peacock's i935 fennis feam won approximafely one half of ifs dual meefs. Beverly Jackson disfin- guished himself by winning mosf of fhe dual mafches. ln fhe Suburban meef neifher The feam as a whole nor any individual placed. ln fhe Sfafe fournamenf Jack End and Beverly Jackson enfered fhe singles and won fhe firsf round, buf were de- feafed in fhe second. Capfain Bob MacKinnon and Kennefh Barnekow were defeafed in fhe guarfer finals. Taking info accounf fhe facf fhaf mosf of The members of fhe feam were new and inexperi- enced, fhe squad's performance was cerfainly cred- ifable. Seven members of fhe feam were awarded a leffer, namely, Les Sfafz, Jack End, Capfain Bob MacKinnon, Beverly Jackson, Dick Grossenbach, Ke-nnefh Barnekow, and George Sirofkin. Of These Dick Grossenbach, a sophomore, will be fhe only veferan refurning fo fhe I936 feam. Coach Accola, Biehn, Tiefen- fhaler, Nichols, Jacobs. Coach Peacock, Sfafz, Grossen bach, Jackson, Sirofkin, Barne- kow, Crosby. PAGE 83 WRESTLING AUWATOSAS second year of wreslling showed a decided improvemenl over lhe lirsl. A greal many more boys fried oul for lhe leam, which dernonslrales Ihe increasing inleresl in 'I'his aclivily. Whereas only one meel was held lasl year, seven look place during l936. Cf Ihese Wauwalosa won Ihree. Our boys Iosl Iwo meels wilh Washinglon by scores of O-35 and I5-3I. In lhese meels Tom Nichols was successful in deleal- ing Iwo previously undelealed men. Wauwalosa won 'rhe lirsl series ol marches wilh Wesl Allis wilh a score ol 33-8, bul Iosl' in lhe second engagemenl I5-I9. They also vanquished Wesl Ivlilwaulcee, 20-IO, in lhe lirsl meel, bul losl The second by lhe narrow margin of one poinl. Only one meel was held wilh Pio Nono, bul' The score was 35-I8 in favor ol our learn. Tom Nichols, Ralph Wandel, Paul Sonnen- berg, and Wilbur Dachenbach won recognilion as some ol lhe besl wresllers in lhe sl'al'e. SWIMMING N rhe lall of I935 lhe long promised swimming pool was compleled al Hawlhorne Junior I-Iigh, and Coach I-Ianlce was pul in charge. Since Ihis was lhe lirsl lime a swimming leam was organized, Ihe boys were nalurally placed al a disadvanlage because ol inexperience. Considering This handi- cap rhe leam did befler Ihan one would al 'lirsl' expecl. Wauwalosa losl Io 'rhe following: Milwau- lcee Universily 2I-42 and I9-54, Boys' Tech 24-48, Wesl Allis I9-54 and I5-58, Washinglon 33-38, Wesl Milwaulcee 28-45 and I4-58, and Norlh Divi- sion 34-39 and 30-43. The Cardinal mermen de- lealed Cudahy 40-33 and Washinglon 38-35. Some ol lhe more consislenl poinl-gellers were Oscar Traczewilz, Weldon Erase, Bob Arndl, Bob Dry- burgh, and Clarence Elias. OI lhese Traczewilz, Arndl, and Elias were lorced lo give up compeli- lion because ol gradualion. la l Fronl Row: Joha Nichols, Co- nanl, I-loppe, Dennislon. Back Row: Richards, Wandel, Fro- derrnann, Dachenbach, Kircher, Geiger. 4. Row I: Peifer, C., Krill ,Arnd'r. Dryburgh, Kehoe. Row 2: Cook, Dahms, Cody, Sewell, Holden. Row 3: Mgr. I-lauge, Kling, Peiler, J., Guy, Davis, Erase. Row 4: Elias, Scherr, I-Iolmes, Zarlner, Traczewilz I-Ioadley. PAGE 84 l-largadon, Zinniel, Siegel, Krie- I ger, PeTers. T , gm Q , . Rowl: Oerding,Bruss Schmidlr, RadTke, Coenen. Row 2: Coach Accola, Jahnke, T-largadon, Thessin, Noonan. Mgr. Hum- mel. ROW3: Dimberg,OeTlein, BenneTT, Henderson Radako- vich, CoTanch. SKATING AUWATOSAS skaTing Team under The super- vision oT Coach Accola, compleTed a Tairly successTul season in l936. The Suburban meeT ThaT was To be held in January was posTponed because oT unTavorable weaTher condiTions which made The TournamenT impossible. lT was Tinally held during The second week in February. The place chosen Tor The meeT was Oak Park Lagoon aT SouTh Milwau- kee. Donald Hargadon broughT home a Third place laurel in The 440 evenT, and Warren Krueger con- TribuTed a TiTTh place in The same race. The relay Team which was composed oT Elmer Siegel, WalTer Zinniel, Daniel PeTers, Warren Krueger, and Don- ald T-largadon came in a close TiTTh place in The relay evenT. The relay race was Tor IIOO yards. Each member carried WauwaTosa's colors Tor 200 yards. AlThough The men on The Team puT Their whole hearT inTo Their sporT, WauwaTosa Tailed To place in The Suburban meeT. VQLLEVBALI. OACT-l Accola's volleyball Team suTTered a hearT breaking deTeaT in The Suburban Tourna- menT, Tor aTTer conquering Waukesha in The TirsT round, They succumbed To The Spring CiTy aTh- leTes in The Tinals. The Team which consisTed OT CapTain Carl SchmidT, Jack l-lenderson, AI Oerding, Dick RadTke, Don Coenen, and Bob OeTlein, played Through Three games wiThouT a subsTiTuTion, and was augmenTed in The Tinal game by Bob Dimberg, Anson BenneTT, Bob CoTanch, and George Radakovich. WauwaTosa wc-n The TirsT Three games, deTeaTing Waukesha TI6-I4l TI6-I4l, SouTh Milwaukee lI5-l4l U5-8l, Cudahy lI5-Il TIS-ll, and Then losT To Waukesha TIS-71 U5-ol. ln The pracTice games The Team was unusually success- Tul, Tor They vanquished The TaculTy, SouTh Milwau- kee, Shorewood, WesT Milwaukee, Waukesha, WhiTeTish Bay, Cudahy, and WesT Allis, Tied WhiTe- Tish Bay, and losT one To Waukesha. PAGE 85 PAGE 86 I 8-24-3 2-shifll Well, looys, rnalce up your mind which way you are going. l've go? sand in my shoes. Who has The ball? Careful lhere, Crash, Jusl lry fo slop Bruno! Dorsch malces anolher poinl' for Wauwalosa. Sideline expressions. AGE PAGE 88 Hes s+ill going round and round. Jus+ one more puff! The loafing period. A shof well puf. Some follow ihrough! Where does i+ hur+ +he mosf? Tosa goes over Jrhe +olo. We're holding our Thumbs Too, Dick. Happy landing, Cari. The swimmers iaice Jrime ou+ for a liiiie insirucfion. No fair holding heels. Swimmers fo your mark, splash! bang! PAGE 89 ARMY-Miss Vescolani, Loos. TieTenThaler, Allison, Foy, Tom- linson, BarTIein, BelTon, WleT- schak, Edler, Reid, Engel, WolTT. NAVY-Miss Vescolani, Ju- neau, Nehring, l-lerTTing, Jam- bor, Gross, KleTTi, Schuerer, Babich, Fraser, STeiner, Ben- neTT. l HOCKEY l-lE cusTomary Tall cold weaTher gave The hockey spark To The hockey enThusiasTs This season. All The games were conTesTed aT The newly marked aThleTic Tield aT l-loyT Park. ln spiTe oT The long hike To and Trom The Tield, a surprising number oT girls Turned ouT. The games and pracTises each Wednesday and Friday nighT resulTed in The selec- Tion oT The class Teams. The Teams This season were chosen by The individual classes Themselves, and noT by The selecTion commiTTee as oT Tormer years. The juniors proved Their superioriTy by winning The championship. They deTeaTed The sophomores in The TirsT game wiTh a score oT 2-I, and laTer Tri- umphed over The seniors wiTh a 2-O vicTory. The sophomores in Turn deTeaTed The seniors wiTh a score oT 3-l. PAGE 90 From These class Teams The members oT The all- sTar Teams were picked by The class capTains and The selecTion commiTTee. The all-s+ar game had no luck wiTh The weaTher man, as slush and snow ac- companied The game aT The CiTy Park, buT The girls braved all obsTacles and played a grand game. Marion BarTlein, capTain oT Army, led her Team To vicTory wiTh a score oT 2-O over Navy, whose cap- Tain was DoroThy Babich. ATTer The Army and Navy game The alumnae challenged The all-sTars To a game aT l-loyT Park. Some oT The graduaTes who played were Irene Page, Joan Tharinger, and Janice SueTlow. The alumnae showed ThaT They sfill had some pep by gaining Two goals over The all-sTars' one. An in- Tormal Tea was Then held Tor The winning alumnae aT which The appeTiTes oT all were saTisTied. BASEBALL ll TRIKE ONE! Can'T you hear The umpire yell? The lasT girls' sporT oT The year. And oh, how much Tun They have-a game Tor everyone! Baseball, one oT The TavoriTe sporTs among The Senior I-ligh School girls, held iTs parTicipanTs and specTaTors spellbound in a rioTous season. The TirsT parT oT The season was devoTed To prac- Tice games aTTer school, each oT which lasTed Trom Tive To seven innings. New rules and plays were Thor- oughly gone over beTore The Tinal Teams were se- lecTed and beTore The all-sTar game was played. MosT oT The Teams challenged each oTher in prac- Tice games on The Lincoln School playground. Weeks oT pracTice and hard playing broughT The Kolcoes To The Top in The all-sTar play-oTT. Through double plays, home runs, and hard hiTTing, boTh Teams shone in Their own places. Marion WleT- schalc, capTain oT The KoIcoes, led her Team To vicTory wiTh nine runs againsT six Tor The HS' WhaTs capTained by Caroline Iverson. This Tinal chame pionship game was played The TwenTy-Third oT May. BoTh Teams had The sparlc ThaT lcepT The specTa- Tors on Their Toes inning aTTer inning. They also are To be congraTulaTed on Their splendid sporTs- manship ThroughouT The game. Baseball provided The sporT enThusiasTs wiTh anoTher desirable oppor- TuniTy Tor showing Their aThleTic prowess. These all-sTar Teams were The TirsT To be selecTed by The Girls' AThleTic AssociaTion7 Sue GodTrey, Connie PeTerson, Carolyn I-lay, Caroline Iverson, Marion WleTschak, DoroThy Babich, DoroThy Buch, Mary Tierling, I-lelen Gray, Mary Louise Juneau, Jane van der I-loogT, and Emily Aldrich were The reliable members who had This responsibiliTy. KO-KOES L Row I: Allison, I-lay. Klelri, Miss Vescolani, Klug, Babich, Fraser. Row 2: Godlfrey, Weiss, Vickerman, Franclce, Woller, Reid, Slcacel. S-WHATS-Row I: Tomlinson Miss Vescolani, UnTerweger Row 2: Juneau, M. L., Yelco I-Ieimsch, BarTlein, Lippold Nehring, Juneau, M. I-I., Ben neTT. PAGE 9I 1-66 PRINCETON-Row I: Ueclce, Miss Vescolani, Weiss, Viclr, BarTlein. Row2: Jambor, l-lay, TieTenThaler, Biclcler, Gross. YALE-Row I: Babich, Knip- pel, Miss Vescolani, Van Ge- merT, Killian. Row 2: Lippold, WleTschalc, Reid, l'loward, Dahnlce, I-leimsch. BASKETBALL FTER many years oT hard pracTice wiThouT suc- cess PrinceTon Tried again and wonl Perhaps iT is noT because Friday, The ThirTeenTh, was un- lucky Tor Yale, buT because PrinceTon had an un- usually sTrong and TasT Team. The game began like anoTher Yale vicTory wiTh Killian, Reid, and l-leimsch making Tour baslceTs in The TirsT quarTer. Yale sTiIl led aT The end oT The halT wiTh an eleven To Tive advanTage. Juneau broke The ice Tor PrinceTon wiTh a shorT shoT. Carolyn l-lay, veTeran Torward, Then made Tour sTraighT Tield goals which senT The Tigers inTo The lead. Carolyn conTinued her scoring rampage, and The game ended wiTh a score OT TwenTy-Tive To eleven. Miss Vescolani coached boTh Teams, and The game was reTereed by Miss STaTz, a naTionally raTed re-Teree. Yale and PrinceTon were capTained PAGE 92 by Bernice Knipple and Jane Weiss respecTively. Each capTain was given a small silver baslceTball aT The annual banqueT. PrinceTon was also vicTorious in a game againsT The alumnae. lnTramural baslceTball proved iTselT as The mosT popular sporT again This year, Tor over Two hundred and ThirTy girls parTicipaTed. The pracTice Teams, Tormed by The girls Themselves, challenged each oTher every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday nighT. During These pracTices The selecTion com- miTTee chose Three class Teams. ATTer conquering The sophomores and seniors in decisive games, The iunior winners received The championship Trophy. Alice Engel, JaneT Biclcler, and Carolyn l-lay were capTains oT The respecTive sophomore, iunior and senior Teams. From These Teams Yale and PrinceTon were chosen by The commiTTee, The Girls' AThleTic AssociaTion, and Miss Vescolani. Ground sliclcs, ground sliclcs- clon'+ you miss. Now, girls, +lwa+'s knee aclion. And lo 'rllinlc llwal +l1ey're all chasing +l1a+ one lH'+le ball. PAGE 93 .Xxx PAGE 94 Girls, you're noi paying allen- Hon! The +ops in volleyball. lNl1al's llwis, llwree on a courl? Seven lillle merrnalcls. l-lold on, girls. They lcnow how 'ro keep alloal One for llne money-l Ou? goes 'flue bad alr-in comes llwe good. if w 'Th ki X, QL. .:.-f:.2-- , ww: ,, Y 12.3, Wm 1 M. , f , M 'V-M, 1 W - M ,pl -.WW L may 5, 3 'I M U. . S, KET 4 fggsgf -. ' 'mar .Wwui4'- ,V ,. we , , f wel' 2 Z M ' ' N, .gf .3 L. .7 ,.:. V S , - , 5 2 .. ' Q -... A. 'uf-R 4'-Ee-',j , ,5v:1,l 'f.'..4'L-- T- uhm-w-1- ' the 5 -stfw 3 1 MMM ,U 4' su xf, 3, fu -.M 44 N.. , A K , 2 ,. V 0 A 6 I ACKWCDNXXLEDGMENTS l-IE STAFF ol the 1936 Cardinal Pennant Wishes to express gratitude to Miss Cox and her classes For the art worlc, to Miss Crosby lor checking the English in the senior sectioni to Mr. Ross for managing our share of the Student Finance, to the photographers, looth student and professional, to the faculty lor co-operating in the matter ot informal snaps, and to the Milwaukee Journal and the Wisconsin News lor the use ol two sports pictures. Produced By I The Fowle Printing Company Milwaukee, Wis. lcgwj L0 .pi lim 31104 JM 17 's P5 A M 1 an Zn? 7 1 ui... LL BASKET BALL SEASQN YULE DANCE JANUARY EXAM: 1 ff' f' 9 Mi s! X lk If I fl , f E .. WARN DAYS HASOUE CLUB PLAY Q lg T 34 ' u it S HVY ACC BANQUET G gl 'Z 4' , f i sf' f' Ji XS 94-I NY QMJTW x 4 gLl IE L If L WSWS 2,2 BANQUET 4 mf' 9 In .-,.J'i3:L?v'wN x k E , A- ' f 1 t : f E+ 5 W l ' I I g L , 1. Q 3 wQg 'i1 f Jw- 4 4 ji Q ' , ' 'ff 6-gf' 5 f E ' ' ii 3 ui ' 5 1 ' L1 .' -,WH .. I 5 Wy? .Q .wi S A C V T Lx! :M fi Q -EW? X ' fi! N H M57 f 4 'NNT f Akay f2 j xgzrf . AWARDSF' DAY
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