West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI)

 - Class of 1941

Page 1 of 70

 

West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection, 1941 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1941 Edition, West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collectionPage 7, 1941 Edition, West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 70 of the 1941 volume:

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' ' A PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF WEST ' 6 f '- ' BEND HIGH ScHooL, WEST BEND, wlScoNSlN I E- oRS MA KUEHLTHAU, ROBERT RAURBSB ' ' ' E lj U A5 , BQ bww? f f W ll, , if U 9 Y S , V V' Qi ' J E . - W .fm BM- . v' 1 V ' f S 11' - - Q JW! BW W' W B if 5 W , ' ' B, X N ffl . r B ' ' ax Y - .A QSC' -1' ab N2 ffl QJ 'fy Q 5 mx Y Q IFX , . . W 5 Y , I 4 xr lg. X? I i-. il, 1 NIL ig - - img Q- M V 14 I X NS. YQ . . xr . i' . I akin UI . sr . .rs 14 N - .- x Kr S 5' 0 s - K xi L! K 1 X R ' or Q if ' i X N K ii-A E-.X 5 m g X Q K5 Q Q .A . -is vx - T ' N S., WN as - - Q Q -- Q 1x7 ' Q y KIK X K ta Q s L Q' ' l r WP c'x Xb P Page Four O Believing fhgf nofhing Qis sofclesiralje Go refain and yef sci difficulfzxfo -Eeimemiber as school memories, fhe Bend of I94IQhas record- ed a year in review. A presenfafion of fhe evenfs large or small which occur during one school year will capfure fhose memories. These evenfs began in fall when fhe school doors opened and did nof cease unfil fhe doors were locked in June. Do you remember how infer- esfing ordinary roclis became by sfudying fhemnihxcience insfead of skipping fhem over fhe bond? .Qnd do- you remember fhe Balmy aiufumn days when you fsfudied ouf oh fhe Gampuslyi Foofrballers, have you fdrgoffen yfhose sliullvsesslions eakrly in Sepfember' before regular play had begun? Dorjyou hecall fhe firsf fimei you opened your chemisfry or cifizenship book and gof diiwh fo fhe business of learn- ing? can youseniors sfill exiperience fhaf mingled feeling of gladness and sorrow fhaf you fellf when you were finally measured for youiixgraduafion gowns? Do you reinember fhe bash you gave your Thumb The firsf fime you pounded agnail in manual fraining class? Do you remember fhe Paul Bunyan dance and fhe fun we had in me informalliy of lumber-iacla ouffifs? Do you girls remember fhe barlced shins fhaf you suffered in fhose fasf moving field-hockey games? If you've forgoffen fhese fhings and fhe ofhers which make school memories, fhis record will help you recall fhem. In fhis year in review are shown fhe evenfs which arise ouf of one year of making our way in pursuif of knowledge. l ., if 9f jJg.1 1 :,.1.!?i,.J-' kuvvv.. f 're 1.115 r 1 , f Q x -s, i r 9 VY .1 J 4 X ,lr of V vm,- 'fx' x ' Y ' eff- + X A, ,ww 1-fff. .4 f 1 .' -- v,,K aff' - y L, V? , .r , .f. 1' Q- 'ffl ,tux ,VP-'K' 5 3 . , - 591 av - A LLL, ,V 1 A V, ,w,,Jf f,,. ,.L. . tm J Im 1? L' , ,,, fffif V ,J-1 N' K, Mft' J 4, ff W K ww ,M - 1 A . il :wk I my' A Al v 'J su w Qd Y xv Q 'WJ . Ay! . . I v A i -a.:y.vy9' Jug, -1 ,,,,,,., ri, , 8 Aff, A if I .VYW I I I I 1 ,Y V A vi 1 . ff' 'sol :Iyar-, .K 5 ,, 3 -. iff QW' ' V V- F4 iff.-mJg., ,L , ff' ., lr. 'llhvav he - 53 K K x m 'X ur- L N 'A 1 'M ' '-'iff in i, NJ: Page Five 1.0 I , . 1 'lf' . 'v-n.,q..4 pl-04' J.,,,,p7 . Mhbvvg ' 7wffk4!,M6,,... '. lx Il- lx' fa., fu., 4-J: w , ' 4 -4-1. - . 1 -gay, fs. 4,4-4-411..f,..f, . O 05' My MJ V ,a...fm-A4 .l fggv H5 ,,. 5-M.: .,,11b3f.. M -Jef,-4 'fi i'7?'f !' ei.qi, ggtgicf T ,igfe solely f Mo- ,cef few 04-'aifff U41-Z' fi 73 J ,J 14. W lillhvjf' my ilk X Page Six K T h Sincere Appreciation IT Mr. Hildebrand were To wriTe his auTobiography, whaT would iT conTain? lvlodesTly he would say, Teacher oT ciTizenship, economics and social problems, coach oT Tennis, and direcTor oT assembly programs. AlThough sTudenTs idenTiTy Mr. Hildebrand wiTh such acTiviTies and services, These are only one parT oT his sTory. To This we musT add a lceen inTellecTq a rare sense oT humor: an inTeresT in inTernaTional aTTairsg a disciple ol lzaak WalTonq one whose advice is soughT on presenT day economic problems: and Tinally a grand person. To give him recogniTion as a Teacher and a man, The class oT I94l dedicaTes This book To Mr. Myron E. Hildebrand. If IZAIQI IQE Ilf Dal t Une ForemosT in a year in review is The curricular work oT The sTudenTs and The Teachers. Our supervisors, The TaculTy and The classroom acTiviTy are inTegral parTs oT malxing our way in pursuiT oT lcnowledge. Dal I Twe Though The work in The classroom occupies mosT oT a sTudenT's Tirne, iT is play ThaT livens The day. SporTs, inTrarnurals, Torensics, and iournalism provided The diversion which kepT The school year inTeresTing. Part Three . The classes are The sTrorigesT bonds among The sTudenTs, Torrning The basis Tor rnany vigorous compe-TiTions and progressive movemenTs To advance The inTeresTs oT Their sTudenTs as well as Those oT The school. The iden+iTy oT each sTudenT and his leaders is an imporTanT parT of a year in review. Dart feur Merely showing The classroom, The acTiviTies, and The sTudenTs does noT presenT a compleTe picTure oT The school year. These phases oT our high school careers are inTerwoven wiTh The conTinuous evenTs which we have porTrayed candidly and called School I.iTe. T- , Page Seven s. ' y A Q Q Q WWW M Qlvlsols.. no 47 . S vi! y a in r ew m necessarily begin our school and sfudenfs. Through fhe media wifh a inisfrafo of our school who of guesfionnaires, sfandardized sfafe fesfs, - p an ecf our school life. lv1r.McLane. and personal inferviews, he gave fhe sfu- rving fhe communify as superinfendenf of denfs aid in doing fheir besf. l-lis careful esf Bend Public Schools, Mr. Bafho, our supervision was responsible for fhe co- iyygy Our Supervisors -- Mr. McLane Mr. Bafho Mr. Colby Page Eighf new principal, and lvlr. Colby, financial ad- minisfrafor of fhe school, are our super- visors. As one comes up fhe fronf sfairs, his eye is caughf by fhe very life-like porfraif of lvlr. lvlcLane which was presenfed by fhe class of I939 as a remembrance of his services. lvlr. lvlcl.ane, who has seen fhe growfh of fhe Wesf Bend schools from ifs early sfages, has provided for a unified sys- fem of educafion fhroughouf fhe cify. Al- fhough his dufies are many and occupy mosf of his affenfion, sfudenfs feel free fo come fo him for advice af any fime or fo chaf wifh him aboui' any problem. The facf fhaf each sfudenl' knows him personally is a complimenf fo fhe undersfanding execufion of his dufies. Mr. Bafho, in his firsf year as principal, faced roufines of orienfafion similar fo fhose of The freshmen, However, he quickly grasped and undersfood fhe problems of ordinafed school year recorded in fhese pages. To Mr. Colby, in his official capacify as assisfanf-principal, has been delegafed fhe confrol of school finances. l-lis efficienf regulafion of acfivify expendifures has re- moved all confusion and leff a soundly planned financial basis for our sfudenf freasurers. Sfudenfs know him besf for his all-round inferesf in youfh. When Mr. Colby saf for his picfure, he was asked fo wear fhe Silver Beaver Award, which symbolizes his nafional recognifion as a boy scouf council- or. To him also is given fhe fask of presenf- ing fhe mysferies of geomefry and physics so fhaf sfudenfs can grasp fheir pracficalify. The newly insfifufed poinf sysfern is under hissuryeillance. These men in performing fhe dufies of fheir offices have provided efficienf execu- five direcfion and sef a high sfandard of educafion. -vers-mug ff,-mid Mgfiya PM M5 4 MMCLZA '. 'Up' Piffgxjffww A me Mwwf, KCWMW J f gwkwwggf UW ffmw ,Qf1f ' 'K My Q X cf WMj Q, W M6 ,iifljfi 7219. ff ii MMM QQSQEEQQEW M322 Tl-IE BE Z? Li'-ff WEST BEND I-ues-I SCHOOL cg . Eiiiibiis S was Q35 'Flu' 14- 99. ,N s 1, .fx .1 W. ig, 'Ex - Q A f - QA - ,V -Q f f A if F Z S 435' This year The school board Tound iT he Uidin Hands . . The Tive members oT The Board oT EducaTion serve The public as a guide in all policies oT WesT Bend Public Schools. The board has increased TaciliTies To such an exTenT ThaT our school ranks high in The advanTages iT can oTTer The youTh oT The communiTy. Mr. A. H. Klumb has been direcTor oT The board Tor The pasT seven years, while Dr. A. H. Heidner has Tound Time Tor The lasT ThirTee:: years To Take care oT The Tinances. The posT oT clerk has been held by lvlr. D. J. Kenny Tor The pasT sixTeen years. SuperinTendenT McLane aTTends all meeTings To add his advice and To supervise The budgeT. Mrs. George KuehlThau and Mr. E. J. Krieger, who have served The board Tor Tour years, Tind Their inTeresT in The graded school educaTion. The TacT ThaT The board has done iTs work well is evidenced by The repeaTed re- elecTion oT The members. AT The annual meeTing an accounT is given To The disTricT on The accomplishmenTs OT The year. There is always a large Turn-ouT aT The meeTing, Tor The communiTy is deTiniTely inTeresTed in educaTion and wanTs To be cerTain oT The very besT. in order To TransporT The grade children. The bus has also been used Tor high school aThleTic and Torensic Trips. AddiTional eguipmenT was purchased Tor The vocaTion- al school in order To provide Tor Training high school day classes. ' To meeT legal requiremenTs The WesT Bend Public School SysTem expanded in I939 when a school oT adulT and vocaTional Training was esTablished. The adminisTraTion oT The new school necessiTaTed The appoinT- menT oT a special vocaTional school board operaTing To TurTher The educaTional oppor- TuniTies oT The communiTy. The Board oT EducaTion oT WesT Bend Schools has worked closely wiTh This newly creaTed branch OT The educaTion program. The board assisTed in The planning oT The TirsT day classes oT- Tered by The vocaTional school and has, in addiTion, aided in publicizing The work oT The school, Thereby increasing The enroll- menT. Mr. McLane serves as an advisory member oT boTh boards oT educaTion. ThaT The school board has been con- sTanTly on The alerT Tor improvemenTs in The WesT Bend Schools, is evidenced by Their building program which has resulTed in The new and modern grade school, capable oT necessary To conTracT Tor moTor bus service accommodaTing The increasing enrollmenT. BoTTom Row -- Mr. A. l-I. Klumb, Mrs. George Kuehl- Thau, Mr. D. E. McLane. Top Row -- Mr. D. J. Kenny. Mr. E. J, Krieger, Dr. A. H. Heidner. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FCRTY-ONE BEND he x c tives of the Classroo MISS FLORENCE MEYER-- B. A., UniversiTy oT Wiscon- sin. Science and algebra is her Task. The Treshmen make her room Their headoluarTers. IT Miss Meyer says some- Thing is OK., iT's OK. MR. ROY T. GRIGNON -- B. A., Lawrence College. M. A., UniversiTy oT Wisconsin ChemisTry lThe march oT sciencel. I-Ie Teels The acid burns The sTudenTs received in The lab will noT be in vain. AThIe+ic associaTion chair- rnan. MR. RALPH MOELLER-- B. S., UniversiTy oT Wisconsin. NoT only does he Teach science and physical educaTion, buT he also is our aThleTic coach. He is busy Trom Sep- Tember To June--TirsT Tae+baIl, Then baskeTball, and Tinally baseball. Won WalTer Alexander Scholarship and Big Ten conTerence medal. MR. JACK MARTIN-- B. E., Milwaukee STaTe Teachers. MarqueTTe GraduaTe School. Teaches biology and science. I-lead OT The ciTy recreaTional program. During summer his Time is spenT counseling aT youTh camps or in The army as a lieuTenanT. MISS CONSTANCE SHIPMAN -- B. E., Oshkosh STaTe Teachers. Algebra and more algebra consTiTuTe Miss Shipman's Tield. For varieTy she has charge OT The iun,ior prom commiTTees. Her work is well rewarded The nighT oT The dance. She is also adviser To The sTudenT council. MISS ELLA KUEHLTHAU -- B. S., Columbia Teachers Col- lege. Received her masTer's degree aT Columbia. Home Economics Teacher. Proud oT her new model rooms. KniT-one-purl-Two arTisT. MISS DOROTHY GIELLE -- B. E., LaCrosse STaTe Teachers. Sink iT! Whack iT! BaT iT! Tumble! Dance! CaIisThenics! --are The echoes oT Miss Gielle's domain-- The locker room and The gym. G. A. A. keeps her on The run. MR. IRVIN E. HOLZHUETER -- B. S., AgriculTure, Univer- siTy oT Wisconsin. I-le makes The besT EuTure Farmers oT America ouT oT our agriculTure-minded boys. I-lis baskeT- ball abiliTy is asTonishing. When he shooTs Tor a baskeT, he makes iT. Coaches baseball. MISS CEIL PODRUCH -- B. A., UniversiTy oT Wisconsin. German is Miss Podruch's pride and joy. She Teaches all Tour years oT iT. I-lead oT iunior class ring commiT- Tees. As a Treshman adviser, always makes homecomings a success. MR. FREDERIC B. BAXTER-- B. E., Ph. M., UniversiTy oT Wisconsin. The English language and The Bend are The channels oT Mr. BaxTer's work. The Bend knows him as iTs guiding hand, adviser, and hardesT worker. MR. JOHN REIS-- B. S., Milwaukee STaTe Teachers. In his arT classes he Teaches The sTudenTs how To be deTT wiTh Their hands. I-Iis singing is heard aT many programs. I-Ie insTrucTs The grades in music. Enioys Tlying an airplane as a hobby. MR. ROY CHRISTENSEN -- B. E., Milwaukee STaTe Teach- ers. Gives us our music appreciaTion, conducTs band, orchesTra and The school song birds. His worry oT The year-- cars To TransporT musicians To The Music FesTival. A MISS FAY HICKEY-- B. S., M. A., UniversiTy OT Wiscon- sin. English is her crowning glory. I-Ier sTudenTs make beauTiTul liTerary bookleTs and posTers. MRS. ETHEL GILL -- A. B., Lawrence College. Our cap- able librarian. WhaT would we do wiThouT Mrs. Gill To Tell us where we can Tind This book or ThaT reTerence? She keeps exTra busy Training librarian apprenTices and Teaching library science To Treshmen. MISS HELEN HUFF-- B. A., Carroll College. Teaches LaTin and ciTizenship. Organized The acTive LaTin Club. lnTeresTed in everyThing ThaT perTains To LaTin. Chair- man oT The social commiTTee. MISS LUCIA STANFIELD -- B. A., Carroll College. English and dramaTics are her prides. KepT busy wiTh declama- Tion, coaching ChrisTmas play and The senior class play. MISS ELLEN NORDVIG--B. E., WhiTewaTer STaTe Teachers. Has charge oT The commercial deparTmenT. Prepares sTudenTs Tor iobs in sTenography and Typing. I-las been in Europe, Mexico, and around The U. S, A. MR. MYRON E. HILDEBRAND- B. E., Oshkosh STaTe Teachers. GraduaTe work aT U. oT Colorado and NorTh- wesTern U. When he isn'T Tishing Tor TrouT, he is Tishing Tor answers in ciTizenship, economics and social prob- Iems. Tennis keeps him busy in spring. The assembly programs are accrediTed To him. MR. WILTON J. BAECHLERM B. E., WhiTewaTer STaTe Teachers. Prepares sTudenTs Tor ouTside iobs by Teach- ing ciTizenship and bookkeeping. Coaches B baskeT- ball squad. Likes To go on impulsive Trips in his PlymouTh coupe. MR. ROWLAND RUNKEL -- B. E., Milwaukee STaTe Teach- ers. Modern hisTory and ancienT hisTory are The subiecTs he Teaches. VVhen spring comes, Mr. Runkel's Tancy Turns To Track. I-Ie is Tamous Tor his winning Teams. MISS EDITH B. HEIDNER -- B. A., UniversiTy oT Wisconsin. American hisTory is The subiecT she Teaches. She has WashingTon CounTy hisTory incorporaTed in her course. The school museum is her main inTeresT. MISS FRANCES HERREMAN -- B. E., WhiTewaTer STaTe Teachers. A iack-oT-all-Trades, Tor she Teaches English, Typing, ciTizenship and business Training. The Campus Clipper owes The new column and heading arrangernenT To er. MR. DONALD O. OLSON -- B. E., River Falls STaTe Teach- ers. Working Tor masTers aT Iowa. Teaches English, speech, coaches speech acTiviTies. Is The peppiesT oT The pep-leaders. MR. WALTER SCHUELKE -- B. S., STouT lnsTiTuTe. Gives boys knowledge oT manual Training. Works hard on iunior prom decoraTions. DirecTs vocaTionaI guidance program. MISS BETTY ROSS -- B. E. Superior STaTe Teachersg M. A., NorThwesTern UniversiTy. She Teaches English and speech correcTion. ls responsible Tor a Tine school paper, The Campus Clipper. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Pag Ten ' the Moulders of ' Car ers Top Row -- Miss F. Meyer, Mr. R. T. Grignon, Mr. R Moeller, Mr. J. Marlin. Boilom Row- Miss C. Ship- man, Miss E, Kuehlllwau Miss D. Gielle, Mr. l. l-lolzl hueler. ...f Zwf W' Z., f' ,. Z! -60 '6Q0C lyvcfq, 'C' ' ' f f fxi 2 144, 714.2-Qvjdfh fn 4. 244 ' , N Top Row--Miss C. Podruclw, Mr. F. Baxler, Mr. J. Reis, Mr. R, Chrislensen, Miss F. Hickey. Boflom Row -- Mrs. E. Gill, Miss l-l. Huff, Miss L. Slan- N field. , 'i f ll O 471mg f .f C0577-J.,,,.4 Top Row--Miss F. Nordviq, Mr. M, Hildebrand, Mr. W. Baeclwler, Mr. R. Runlcel, Miss F. l-leidner. Bollom Row -- Miss F, Her- reman, Mr. D. Olson. Mr. W. Scliuellce, Miss B. Ross. Page Eleven aster the Mr. RoberT Poole-y, Doris GoeTz, Mr. M. G, BaTho l-l. Kannenberg, Mr, Walker, R. Jaekel Miss l-lickey's Freshman English Class Miss STanTield's Sophomore English Class Page Twelve th r ongu EveryThing Trom gerunds To parTiciples, Shakes- peare To newspapers, TexTbooks To magazines, and wriTing Themes To making speeches employed by our English deparTmenT in Teach- ing The moTher Tongue. When one leaves The TuTelage oT Miss l-lickey, Miss l-lerreman, Miss Ross, Miss STanTield, Mr. Olson, and Mr. Bax- Ter, our generals oT The army oT English sTu- denTs, he can compose a grammaTically correcT senTence, converse well, read a newspaper or magazine inTelligenTly, and wriTe an inTeresTing leTTer or meeT a speaking occasion. To provide Tor such an exTensive program oT Teaching requires careTul planning. Early in The year our English Teachers meT wiTh Mr. Pooley, PresidenT oT The NaTional Council oT Teachers oT English, and TormulaTed a pro- gressive prograrn Tor The counTy. The program meeTs sTudenT needs, Tor The sophomores, who sTudied The make-up oT newspapers, will nexT year use ThaT knowledge by publishing The Campus Clipper. Much oT The inTormaTion on periodicals was received by correspondence, buT sTudenTs were even more TorTunaTe To inTerview Mr. Walker, assisTanT-ediTor oT Lib- erTy Magazine, who came To address a sTudenT assembly. The ToundaTion oT all English courses is The work done on The Tundarnenisals oT language and liTeraTure. Each class oT English, ThereTore, reserves a porTion oT iTs Term Tor These basic sTudies. The well-baTTered drill book plays an imporTanT parT in This work. STandardized TesTs used by colleges Tor enTrance have shown ThaT This inTensive sTudy has been successTul, Tor The seniors are well above The average. The sTudy oT liTeraTure ranges Trom The wriTings OT The classical masTers To Those oT modern men oT leTTers. The program is supplemenTed wiTh assignmenTs which sTimulaTe inTeresT in read- ing and Teach reading habiTs. 0 reparef r uture ife Now is The Time Tor all good men To come To The aid OT Their counTry. This line always makes one Think oT Typing and all The associaTed commercial skills. Never beTore has our commercial deparTmenT had as many enrollees as in The pasT year. ln anTicipaTion OT The day when They will be salaried oTTice workers, Miss Nordvig's second year class pracTiced The arTs oT sTeno4 graphy on True-To-liTe proving grounds. Each girl was appoinTed secreTary To some Teacher in school. ln perTorming Their duTies Tor Their school bosses, The girls gained experience in correspondence work, Tiling, Typing, and dicTa- phone operaTion. Adeline Johann posed using The dicTaphone in The approved manner, while Doris GoeTz was phoTographed aT her Type- wriTer. The girls learned The use oT The Telee phone, and in addiTion, sTudied The personal qualiTies a young business-woman should have. lvliss l-lerreman and lvliss SchmiTz, who Teach elemenTary classes, build The ToundaTion Tor This advance Training. Every day Mr. Baechler's bookkeeping sTu- denTs Took ouT Their ledgers and accounTing books and Tackled problems analogous To everyday siTuaTions. One such class is picTured here, enTering accounTs oT hypoTheTical asseTs and liabiliTies which will laTer be replaced by acTual business TransacTions. When These sTu- denTs, in elemenTary courses, were compared wiTh others in a sTaTe achievemenT TesT, They ranked above average in abiliTy. Under The waTchTul eye oT Mr. Baechler, The sTudenTs learned The use oT The machines which aid bookkeepers, namely The bookkeeping machine aT which Ralph Tews is shown working. The success oT These modern meThods is reTlecTed by The manner in which local Tirms have absorbed The commercial graduaTes. Top l.eTT-A Mr. Baechler, Ralph Tews Top RighT -- Adeline Johann CenTer -- Doris GoeTz BoTTom -- RoberT Fassbinder, Florence Wagner, Evelyn Wilkens THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page ThirTeen old acts and igures The ward maThemaTics sTrikes Tear inTo The hearTs oT many sTudenTs. They Tear The Terms TangenTs and loci and logariThms. l-lowever, The main reason Tor Their anxieTy is ignorance oT The subiecT which, when shown in iTs True lighT, invariably becomes TascinaTing. The combined eTTorTs oT Miss Shipman, who is quick on The Trig, and Mr. Colby, who knows Euclid like a broTher, are direcTed aT desTroy- ing These Tears. The sTudenTs are sTarTed on The maThe- maTics Trail by Miss Shipman who insTrucTs sophomores in The elemenTs oT algebra. BeTTy ZeckmeisTer is shown solving a graph problem as Miss Shipman waTches, Doris Yahr and Lewis Rose are Two ouT oT many who Tearlessly reTurned Tor more. They are shown using Two oT The models which help solve problems in solid geomeTry. Miss Shipman, BeTTy ZeckrneisTer A sTudy oT geomeTry under Mr. Colby compleTes The average college enTrance re- guiremenTs oTTered by our school. When Mr. Colby Takes Time To poinT ouT a Tew oT The pracTical applicaTions oT The seemingly ab- sTracT subiecT, sTudenTs drop Their apprehen- sions and seT ouT wiTh a will. WiTh discussions and head work, They seek an undersTanding oT The Theorems and corollaries compiled by wise men. Florence Nielsen and Richard Berend are shown collaboraTing on a problem, while Wes- ley Kopp is holding a slide-rule iusT as iT he undersTood iT perTecTly. The TundamenTal aim OT any maThemaTics course is To sharpen The sTudenTs' wiTs and encourage logical Thinking. Because oT Their TarsighTedness, our graduaTes are noT only beTTer maThemaTicians buT beTTer individuals and ciTizens as well. Doris Yahr, Lewis Rose Florence Nielsen, Richard Berend Wesley Kopp THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND P oe FourTee'1 olve th ystery of Science Pofenf mixfures, complicafed apparafus, sfuffed specimens and queer smells malce up fhe average concepfion of fhe science deparf- menf. Every sfudenf af one fime or anofher finds his seaf in a laborafory where he gives way fo fhe Einsfein in him upon some experi- menfal phase of chemisfry, physics, biology, or general science. Mr. Marfin, Mr. Moeller, Miss Meyer, and Mr. Bafho open fhe field of general science fo all freshmen. ln fhese ele- menfary classes, all fhe specialized fields are sfudied and sfudenfs are given a firm basis for lafer choices. Mr. Grignon's chemisfry classes are among fhe mosf popular offered in fhe school, parfly because of fhe sfories Mr. Grignon fells and parfly because of fhe sfories chemisfry fells. Joe l-lashek and Carl l-loyer hopefully wafch fhe progression of an experi- menf while Roberf Schloemer coolcs a mixfure lcnown only fo himself. The sfudenfs of physics, under Mr. Colby, musf also spend much of fheir fime in fhe laborafory. The principles of Archimedes, Pas- cal, and Galileo are fesfed and fheir applica- fions are sfudied. Weird machines are em- ployed in fhe physics laborafory, such as fhe vacuum pump demonsfrafed by Virginia Brau- bach and Roberf Ashman. VVifh a background of a physicisf's implemenfs, Virginia Loebe and Miriam Prenfice wrife up a successfully com- plefed experimenf. Wafching fhe anfics of invisible creafures under a microscope, dissecfing specimens, and growing flowers for sfudy comprise fhe labor- afory worlq of biology. l-larrief Ross, Tom Son- nenberg and Calvin Claus prepare fo peek info a bug's privafe life wifhouf a fhoughf for ifs feelings. Joseph l-lashelc, Carl Heuer Virginia Braubach, Bob I-Xshrnan Roberf Schloerner l-larrief Ross, Torn Sonnenberg, Calvin Claus i Virginia Loebe, Miriam Prenfice arnin th inguistic Arts No curriculum is complefe wifhouf some for- eign language fo aid in fhe clevelopmenf of fhe culfural background of fhe sfudenfs. Here af Wesf Bend High, we have fwo courses in foreign language, Lafin and German. Lafin has proved fo be a favorife wifh fhe sfudenfs during fhe lasf few years. Wifh Miss Huff af fhe helm, fhe Lafini concenfrafe on all life. A l.afin Club was formed four years ago by fhe sfudenfs who phases of Roman were inferesfecl in dramafizing Roman life. Every year fhe big annual Roman banguef is held -- slaves, funics, Roman food, and Roman soup make up fhe program. These sfudenfs will know more Lafin fhan Ego amo fe when fhey finish fhe course. A sfudenf has passed by fun and an excel- lenf opporfunify fo increase his knowledge if he has nof had German under Fraeulein Pod- Lafin l Class ruch. ln German l, fhe sfudenfs are faughf fhe fundamenfals of German grammar as well as a greaf deal of vocabulary. Tesfs are nof in- freguenf. A German I class is shown wrifing one of fhese fesfs. Doris Cooley and Edriss Friedemann are 'rwo freshmen who have en- deavored fo masfer fhe German language. The second year German classes are faughf some grammar, buf vocabulary and reading are fhe real cenfer of inferesf. Among fhe sfories fhaf were franslafed are lmmensee and Germelshausen, fwo very inferesfing and Touching fales. The fhird and fourfh years are spenf in reading German liferafure of all kinds. Very deep discussions resulf from prob- lems encounfered in books fhaf are read in class. Abouf fhree books are fhoroughly sfudied in a year. All who fake German learn fo converse wifh Fraeulein Podruch. Beffy McCargo, Phyllis Michels Miriam Prenfice. Virginia Loebe Eclriss Friedemann, Doris Cooley German l Class Page Siwfeen Ia ivens the a . . . - 1.-- .- H MargareT G-umm ,isjfel parade. Mixed expressions greeT The baslceTballers. I AN All work and no play is said To malce rich men, buT a year ThaT is To be rich in memories demands play. Pencils, T 'W x V bi? E I Lx . A,l E U . 4 T.. ,J m' V f 5 In K 1 1 f, 1.5 T X 4 X 'L 5 3 I . 1 f boolcs, and sTudy are never dull when play livens The day and exTra-curricular acTiviTies Tlavor aTTer school hours. The enThusiasm oT The school is always uniTed by The cheerleaders and The peppy cheering secTion. Whe+her sTudenTs ioin any acTiviTy or noT, They do Turn ouT in big numbers as shown in The above picTure oT The gang aT The TirsT baslceTball game in The new gym. ln The above pic- Ture we see Audrey Wolf, BeTTy Lou Barens, and Marion Gonnering, Three oT our pep leaders, during a crucial momenT oT one oT our games. Music plays a large parT aT games by helping The pep along. Giving us a new slanT on music is lvlargareT Gumm, drum-maioreTTing. One oT The largesT acTiviTies in school could be called specTaToring. Seven periods a day are given over To academic educaTion, buT when The Tinal bell rings, Then The acTiviTy reigns To liven The day and To chase The cares away. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page Se-venTeen earn to Speak . . DebaTe, declamaTion, oraTory, exTempcraneous speaking and reading --These are The various phases oT Torensics ThaT are oTTered in our ex- Tra-curricular program. Each gives one an op- porTuniTy To acquire poise, To Think quickly and clearly, and To express his ThoughTs well. AbouT one-hundred sTudenTs Took an acTive parT in The various speech acTiviTies This year. ln The Tall oT The year DirecTor Olson called TogeTher all who were inTeresTed in debaTe, and work was begun on The quesTion, Re- solved: ThaT The power oT The Tederal govern- menT should be increased. Cases were builT up by The aTTirmaTive and Torn down by The negaTive which only made each sTrive To Tind an invincible argument As conTesTs passed, more and more de- baTers were weeded ouT unTil The squad was narrowed down To eighT speakers. Mr. Olson pondered and aT lasT decided To send John Jaekel, Ralph BenneTT, Dan ElaherTy, and Bob RaTTray To The disTricT TournamenT. This proved To be a wise choice because The Team came Through and wenT To The secTional and Then To The sTaTe where They were vicTorious. ln rec- ogniTion oT Their superior speaking, They re- ceived a red and whiTe banner which now decoraTes The corridor. FiTTeen ouT oT eighTeen debaTes were won in order To geT ThaT worThy piece oT TelT. BuT This was noT The end oT a record sea- son. Bob RaTTray enTered exTemporaneous speaking and broughT home a cup Trom The LiTTle Ten, and in The sTaTe Tinals emerged wiTh TirsT honors, a gold medal. Mr. Olson's parT as coach was indeed an imporTanT one. He puT TorTh every eTForT To give The sTudenTs a chance To gain speaking experience. Top -- R. BenneTT, R. RaTTray, Coach Mr. Olson, J. Jaekel, D. FlaherTy. BoTTom LeTT, Top- Mr. Olson, J. Monday, R. Malzahn, C. Claus, A. KieckhaTer, R. SchachT3 Row 2--D. Ziegler, W. Moilanen, M. Hansen, M. Bohn. J. BoeseweTTer, R. Ben- neTT: Row 3--M. KuehlThau. L. RosenThal, M, Gcnring, G. MarTin, M. PrenTice, V. Tess- mang Row 4--G. Grogan, A. Kluever, N. Reinke, R. Gehl, Miss STanTield. BoTTom RighT-- D. J. Kenny opens The sTudenT congress of The N. F. L. held in WesT Bend. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FGRTY-ONE BEND Page ElghTeen nd Writ r STudenTs who enTer The journalism acTiviTies oTTered by our school, do so To pracTice Their knowledge oT English. They wriTe TeaTures, news arTicles, adverTisemenTs, ediTorials, and special columns Tor publicaTion. In This way They apply The grammar and composiTion Teachings which They receive in Their English classes. The Campus Clipper, as The news organ Tor The school, responsibly reporTs every new happening, and in addiTion prinTs several spe- cial TeaTures To capTure sTudenT inTeresT. Miss Ross, Miss l-lerrernan, and Jean Horlamus, ediTor in chieT, supervise while 30 sTudenTs Trom all classes publish The paper. The Clipper was an eTTicienT paper, capably serving sTu- denTs and TaculTy and aT The same Time earn- ing a second-class raTing Trom The NaTional ScholasTic Press AssociaTion. hought The I94I Bend, published by The seniors, was responsible Tor The compleTe summary and preservaTion oT The I940-4l Term. Under The guidance oT Mr. BaxTer, a sTaTT was whipped inTo shape early in OcTober wiTh Mary KuehlThau and RoberT RaTTray as ediTors. Work was begun immediaTely To organize The book. ConTracTs were signed, a layouT planned and a budgeT devised. The sTaTT was posed Tor The picTure below as They casT Their bal- loTs Tor The dedicaTion. The business and Tinan- cial dealings oT The Bend were delegaTed To WalTer Tuchscherer and WalTer Weyres, man- agers oT adverTising and business, respecTively. The Two WalTers were snapped as They sold a subscripTion To one oT The 400 supporTers. Copies oT The yearbook are also disTribuTed To The sponsors lTound on The lasT pagel who have a keen inTeresT in The school's acTiviTies. Top l.eTT, Rear-- E. Schmidt J. Geib, J. Monday, G. PeTe, R. l-liller, J, Horla- musg Fore -- R. BenneTT, V. Geib, R. Jaekel, L. Geib. Top RiqhT-- Miss l-lerreman Miss Ross, Lucille Proeber lseaTedl. BoTTom LeTT--The Bend sTaTT vofes Tor The dedica- Tion. BoTTom RighT-- Business Managers, WalTer Tuch- scherer, WalTer Weyres, Page NineTeen Musical I-leurs The organizaTions which are aT The disposal oT Those who are musically inclined are band, orchesTra, boys' and girls' chorus, and mixed chorus. Nearly Two-hundred sTudenTs parTici- paTe in some Torm OT music acTiviTy. The sopho- mores ouTnumber every oTher class. The Band has become a pad oT The regular curriculum and is conducTed during The second and lasT periods OT The day. A halT crediT is given To all who parTicipaTe. Because oT The large number oT experi- enced musicians, The A band which prac- Tices during The sevenTh hour, is divided inTo Two groups. On cerTain days boTh worlc To- geTher. The band led by The drum-maioreTTes sTruTTed on such occasions as homecoming and The music TesTivals. Mr. ChrisTensen is building up maTerial Tor The TuTure high school band. l-le has a TiTTh and sixTh grade band which perTormed Tor The counTy school board convenTion. Some oT The members had Their picTures Taken wiTh John Callahan, The sTaTe superinTendenT OT schools. As a reward Tor good worlc in music, ThirTy- Tour oT our musicians were Taken To PlymouTh on May IO To wiTness The disTricT music Tourna- menT. In I942 The WesT Bend musical organi- zaTions will parTicipaTe. Each year a Musical VarieTy Show is held aT which The diTTerenT organizaTions demon- sTraTe Their abiliTy. This year's show revealed a loT oT hidden TalenT among The sTudenTs who were asked To presenT novelTy numbers. Cal- vin l-luber's swing band made iTs debuT aT This VarieTy Show and played Tor The dance aTTer The perTormance. Mr. ChrisTensen's special chorus oT TwenTy- Tour voices made a hiT wiTh all who heard Them. This group presenTed an assembly pro- gram aT ChrisTmas Time. They sang old carols Top -- R. SchachT, J. Flaher- Ty, lvl. Nielsen, M. Gon- nerinq, M. Gumm, F. Niel- sen. BoTTom l.eTT--WesT Bend's band, sowin' wild noTes. BoTTom RighT--Mr. Chris- Tensen serves a plaTTer. Add I School Ioasuros and special arrangemenTs oT ChrisTmas hymns. AT abouT The same Time They provided some music Tor The Kiwanis Club. ln spring The special chorus appeared beTore The RoTary Club. Songs Trom The Mikado were TeaT- ured. AnoTher ouTsTanding group was The boys' quarTeT consisTing oT Calvin Claus, Lewis Rose, Bob VornholT, and Brownie Grogan. This group specialized in negro spiriTuals. They sang aT several oT The local service clubs, churches, special gaTherings, and were even booked Tor several engagemenTs in Milwaukee. ln May, The eighTh annual music TesTival wiTh PorT WashingTon was held here and aT PorT. The selecTions were The besT ever ren- dered. The occasion, eagerly anTicipaTed by The sTudenTs, proved To be Tun Tor all. TI.- -,,-. J--. '.-J.--,-J. :E .--..-1- -,.J.f.,:J.f-- L-, IHC QIKJVYIIIH IIIICIUQI III IIIUDIL OLIIVIYIGU IIUJ resulTed in The deparTmenT underTaking new and beTTer Things To presenT Tor The enjoy- menT oT The public. One oT The mosT colorTul addiTions To The music deparTmenT has been The drum-maior- eTTes. ATTired in snappy cosTumes and wiTh baTons Twirling, These girls add a decoraTive eTTecT To The band when They are on The march. They are led Through Their inTricaTe maneuvers by Calvin Claus who is a Trick arTisT wiTh The heavy sTeel baTon. IT is signiTicanT To noTe ThaT This modern innovaTion has been copied by oTher surrounding schools. Besides acquiring The mechanics oT playing an insTrumenT and The TundamenTals oT orches- TraTion, The music sTudenTs learn To appreciaTe greaT music. A radio-phonograph and a supf ply oT records were presenTed To The music deparTmenT. The proceeds oT The varieTy show were used To purchase new addiTions To The sTore oT records. Mr. ChrisTensen, who came To WesT Bend Trom Mayville, has builT our music deparTmenT To iTs presenT level. He sTudied music aT Mil- waukee STaTeTeachers College, and in addiTion has carried on graduaTe work aT The NorTh- wesTern UniversiTy. STudy under The direcTor oT The Tamed ST. OlaT's choir has given him invaluable Training in choral and voice work. Top-- The special chorus sang Tor The ChrisTmas play. CenTer-- G, Grogan, C. Claus, C. Hansen, E. Schmidt M. Hansen. BoTTom, lTopl -- E. Barber, J. Kolar, lBoTToml -- W. Grady, R. SchachT, R. BenneTT, J. BaumgarTner. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FGRTY-ONE BEND Page TwenTy-one We ill Grow I One oT our school's newesT and mosT inTeresT- ing deparTmenTs is The agriculTure course, or- ganized on July I, I94O, as a Tour year course. Our agriculTure-minded boys responded whole- hearTedly and enThusiasTically To The new course. ForTy sTudenTs enrolled This year and TiTTy-Tive are expecTed To Take The course nexT year. There are ThirTy-Tive To TorTy parT-Time vocaTional agriculTure boys enrolled in aTTer- noon insTrucTion. Besides These, ThirTy farmers who wanT To learn more abouT Their chosen work spend Their evenings in a special agricul- Ture course. The agriculTure insTrucTor, Mr. l-lolzheuTer, is employed TiTTy per cenT oT The Time in The high school and TiTTy per cenT oT The Time in The vocaTional school. His job does noT end in The classroom, Tor he has Tield work in The counTry, on The home Tarms oT boys en- rolled in his classes, working ouT problems and Teaching The principles oT new Tarming meTh- ods as an aid To Their TuTure success. He worlcs Twelve monThs a year supervising The many Types oT programs carried on during The summer monThs. Over TorTy herds, num- bering 600 dairy cows, are TesTed monThly aT The deparTmenT's TesTing laboraTory. The boys learned how To prune apple Trees and oTTered Their services To Townspeople Tree oT charge. The FuTure Farmers OT America chapTer oT The high school is an organizaTion ThaT is spon- sored in connecTion wiTh The agriculTure de- parTmenT. While The F. F. A. emphasizes Train- ing in agriculTural lines, iT also gives The boys Training in public speaking and in aThleTics. The agriculTure sTudenTs learn pracTical Tarm managemenT by acTual experience in Tarm Tasks. A caTTle iuclging Team which aT- Tained The raTing oT good in a sTaTe conTesT is shown below in The upper leTT-hand picTure. The oTTicers oT The local F. F. A. chapTer are shown in The nexT picTure. They are Norman l-lembel, ReporTerg Ralph Wardius, Treasurer: George FalTer, President Carl Wagner, Vice- presidenT: and Carroll Hembel, SecreTary. Ex- amples oT The pracTical Teachings oT The agri- culTure course are The milk TesTing scene, and The insTrucTion Mr. l-lolzhueTer gives The sTu- denTs in rope splicing shown below. WiTh This spiriTed enThusiasm shown Tor our new agriculTure course bumper crops can be expecTed Trom The FuTure Farmers oT America. Top H LaaTsch Mr T-lolzhueTer, G. FalTer, Top -- N. l-lembel, R. Wardius, G. FalTer, E, Wagner N DeTTn-iann. C. l-iembel P. Lemlce, Mr. T-lolzhueTer BoTTom Cv FalTer M McCarTney, M. Derge. BoTTorn -- E. Wagner, P. Lemlce, C. Hembel THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page TwenTy-Two he ill Ooh I In preparaTion Tor home-making The girls in The domesTic science deparTmenT learn To cook and To sew and To perTorm many oTher useTul household skills. WiTh Miss KuehlThau as overseer, The girls work quiTe independenTly aT Their proiecTs. The domesTic science rooms in The vocaTional school are modernly equipped, which makes The course a greaT deal oT Tun. When sewing is begun, simple Things like smocks and blouses are made: buT by The Time The course is Tinished, The girls are able To make mosT oT Their wardrobes. Cooking is such Tun! EveryThing ThaT is prepared can be eaTen by The cooks. Some Times ThaT isn'T such Tun. OTTen some oT The Tood eaTen in The caTeTeria was prepared by The domesTic science girls. The caTeTeria pro- vides an opporTuniTy Tor pracTical experience. As The girls advance in The Tine arT OT cooking, They unde-rTake more diTTiculT Things. Luncheons were planned and Triends were inviTed. Some- Times The girls inviTed Their besT beaus. This Tended To prove The old adage, The besT way To a man's hearT is Through his sTomach. The Third-year class is indeed helpTul. Dur- ing The TirsT semesTer inTerior decoraTing is sTudied, while The second semesTer work con- sisTs oT a course in household managemenT. To supplemenT The domesTic science course Miss KuehlThau has organized a Home Econo- mics Club. The club meT every second and TourTh Thursday oT The monTh. The oTTicers Tor The pasT year were: Bernice Voeks, presi- denT7 Juneva Schmidt vice-president Edifh Degner, secreTary: Phyllis Mains, Treasurer: and Alice WolT, poinT secreTary. PoinTs were earned Through aTTendance, parTicipaTion in programs, being an oXTTicer and Through dona- Tions Tor home-made candy sales. When a girl has acquired 500 poinTs, she is given a pin in recogniTion oT ThaT achievemenT. The big evenT oT The year is The moTher and daughTer banqueT which is held in May. This aTTair gives The girls an opporTuniTy To display Their domesTic TalenTs To The besT criT- ics in The world, Their moThers. The Tavorable commenTs made by The parenTs prove The Thoroughness oT The course. The picTures below show The home econo- mics sTudenTs in Their club work and proiecTs. Top The T-lome Economics Club holds a business Topu BMO Mower and Dauqmer banquet SanTa Claus Threw kisses Ti T Th d Tic science mee ng. N . . . . . a e omes BoTTom -- Real Tood Tor real pracTice in eTigueTTe. Bolfom Prachce ln Sewlce 'S one of The Sublecis' parTy Page TwenTy TT ree l 1 Paper fgures are sciufinized Mrs. Gill works beneafh a John Jaelcel submifs a Bend J. Nehring examines a by Mr Reis V Johnson and finely leffered sign done in posfer fo Dorofhy Weiss' drawing. J Scl owalfe arf class. crificism. Tradifion has if fhaf one who would be an arf- isf lives his life in a gloomy garref, wifh a menu of dry bread and cold wafer. Even fhe promise of such a morbid fufure doesn'f seem fo upsef fhe arf class. No anemic ascefics, fhey are characferized by fhe lusfy spirif wifh which fhey enfered info all underfakings. Buf why shouldn'f fhey? The class is fhree fimes as large as lasf year: if has a fine room in which fo work. and fhe sfudenfs are given a good deal of freedom. Perhaps only a few members of fhe class expecf fo follow arf as a vocafion, buf fhe course is one which is infer- esfing fo all. Mr. Reis worlcs on fhe idea fhaf fhe purpose of arf fraining should be fo fosfer individualily and originalify rafher fhan fo sup- press fhese qualifies. Accordingly fhe sfudenfs are given a rafher wide choice of subiecfs and media. Lyman Unruh did some fine figure slcefching and Rosemary Rackow made some good wafer colors. Dorofhy Weiss did every- Page il fenfy four fhing unusually well, while Willy Dhein's pic' forial map of Washingfon Counfy is being used by fhe hisfory classes. Af firsf some of fhe sfudenfs had frouble wifh liffle defails like perspecfive . . some of fhe buildings proved fhaf! Occasionally fhe class had crificism, guaranfeed fo be fhe mosf painless deflafor yef discovered. The class did some figure painfing, a few landscapes, and a number of indusfrial designs. Perhaps fhe besf fhing abouf fhe class is fhaf if is largely pain- less. The sfudenfs are seldom aware fhaf fhey are being faughfg fhaf's why fhey don'f resenf if. A maior accomplishmenf for fhe arf classes was Billy Boldf's winning of fhe disfricf l-lelen Mears arf confesf open fo all eighfh graders. Billy chose as his subiecl' an indusfrial scene in Wesf Bend. Affer a year all arf sfudenfs have learned much abouf arf and how fo re- lease fheir original powers on canvas. h,IOI3 n l'IiI . . Romans Three -- L. Kral, W. Grady, P. SalTer and Joe T-lashelc awaiT a SparTan Toe. Miss H l-luTT LaTin M. Cvonring. nthe ayso ld emo True Romans are The members oT The LaTin Club. For Tour years They have Taken on Their Roman bearing. Miss l-luTT Tounded The club The TirsT year oT her Teaching. There were TorTy charTer club members. The charTer oTTic- ers are Evelyn Gehl, presidenTg Merlin MoThs, vice-presidenTq Viviane Geib, secreTary-Trea- surer. WiTh The able help oT Miss l-luTT These charTer members sTarTed Their club wiTh a bang. A consTiTuTion and by-laws were made ouT Tor The iudicial and execuTive running OT The club. AlTernaTe Thursdays were designaTed as The LaTin Club nighT. Many liTTle slciTs have been presenTed by The LaTini. In The second year OT The club's exisTence a Tull lengTh play abouT a girl, Margery Brown, who couldn'T concenTraTe on Caesar was presenTed. Ma- dame Grammar came To her aid and showed Margery, wiTh The help oT all her Tenses and coniugaTions, iusT how imporTanT and inTeresT- ing LaTin and Caesar were. This play was The biggesT LaTin evenT oT The year. The LaTin Club had a Roman banqueT on May TiTTh. The Treshman LaTin classes were slaves, garbed in shorT whiTe Tunics, who broughT The Tood To Their masTers and misTres- ses, reclining on The Tloor nexT To low Tables. Roman Tood was served, buT The l.aTini were noT required To eaT wiTh Their hands --Though many oT Them did. Mr. McLane, The guesT oT honor, looked guiTe regal in his Roman cos- Tume. LaTer, a busT oT Caesar and some Roman painTings were unveiled and They now adorn The LaTin class-room. This banqueT was such a success ThaT iT was repeaTed This year and will probably become an annual evenT. Daphne Huber, PresidenT, Virginia Sonner- ing, Vice-presidenT and Bernice Voelcs, Secre- Tary-Treasurer are The leaders OT The sevenTy- Tive acTive club members. WiTh such a colorful background These modern Romans are sure To become one oT The ouTsTanding TradiTions oT The school. IHE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page TwenTy Tve he Qminine ouch in Sports The 293 girls oT WesT Bend High School have an exTensive program oT sporTs, iusT as do The boys. MosT girls, wheTher They be Treshmen or seniors, parTicipaTe in some Torm oT aThleTic acTiviTy during Their school years. As a parT oT iTs prograrn, The G. A. A. sponsors Tield hockey, a comparaTively new sporT aT VVesT Bend High, volley ball, baskeT- ball, Tumbling, Track, and Tennis. Every Tues- day and Friday nighT aTTer school, The gym is Taken over by The girls who play hard and geT The mosT ouT oT iT. MargareT Held and Joseph- ine Schneider played up The baskeTball season wiTh an aTTracTive posTer. A girl musT earn one-hundred G. A. A. poinTs in order To gualiTy To be a member. PoinTs are given Tor every Torm OT aThleTic acTiviTy in which one engages, so member- ship is noT a hardship To be won by a Tew. lnTer-class TournamenTs are held in mosT oT These evenTs and class champions are deTer- mined. This year The seniors won The baskeT- ball and volley ball TournamenTs. One girl is chosen To direcT each sporT. She acTs as a boosTer Tor ThaT acTiviTy. This year The heads oT sporTs were as Tollows: hockey, BeTTe Krems- reiTer7 volley bali, MargareT Held: baskeTball, Nan OTTmerq Tennis, June DeBanog Track, Mary Anne PuesTow, and baseball, Eleanor Schnei- der. IT a girl earns IZOO poinTs, she is enTiTled To a WB. Those who earned WB's lasT year are Nan OTTmer, Jean Troedel, Mary Anne PuesTow, June De Bano, and Glenice Eimer- mann. In The Tall oT The year The girls don shin guards, pick up hockey sTicks, and scooT ouT To The hockey Tield nexT To The Tennis courT To engage in an exciTing game oT Tield hockey. Here we see Two shoTs oT ThaT very acTive game and in The inserT, a picTure oT Miss Gielle shouTing insTrucTions. On December I4 The G. A. A. held iTs iniTiaTion parTy Tor all girls who had earned Their one hundred poinTs. The week preceding The parTy, The new members had To come To school dressed in The mosT ouTlandish ways. Some had To wear pajamas under Their skirTs, some were required To wear exTremely long skirTs, while oThers carried alarm clocks. The picTure in The lower righT-hand corner shows The Table decoraTions and Tavors ThaT were used aT This celebraTion. ln The upper righT-hand corner are Tour acTive members, Joy Schneider, RuTh Gehl, Doris Cooley, and MargareT Held. May 2 was The daTe oT The gym demon- sTraTion which was planned and direcTed by Miss Gielle. The Theme was oT a paTrioTic na- Ture, and included dances and a Tlag display oT various naTions, There was a DuTch dance, a Greek charioT race done in auThenTic Greek Tunics, an English dance, and a paTrioTic American dance. ln The upper IeTT-hand corner is a picTure oT Miss Gielle Teaching one oT The dance sTeps To several sTudenTs. JusT below wc see our able gym Teacher demonsTraTing The elecTric phonograph To an enTire class. ' The Tumbling Club builT several human pyramids which showed The coordinaTion ThaT They had been TaughT. The Danish gymnasTics led by Viviane Geib were an example oT The way in which The girls develop equilibrium and poise. The highlighT oT The demonsTraTion was The queen and her courT. AT The climax Queen Doris GoeTz marched To The sTage, Two very young ladies carrying her Train. She was Tol- lowed by her courT oT TwenTy and Marilyn Bohn, Verna Johnson, and RuTh Vvleyres, Three prominenT Tigures. The Tinale, in The Torm oT a Grand March, included all girls in The demonsTraTion. IT was a very inTricaTe and digniTiecl ending Tor a splendid perTormance. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page TwenTy six x A x S as ? Em lf? B Bai is 59' ww - v a A x 1. ink ff R S, J ' . my 3 , LA , Q A extm A 'A Wx X 22 K M IX rf ii rw. ii X 5 k 155' Q 41 il I x fi' ' ' it' Q- 9 I , . 1 Q ' ,O ' 5' . Top -- Thespians in acTion. R. RaTTray, W. Grogan, M. KuehlThau, D. FlaherTy, M. PrenTice. Lower LeTT--J. lcksTadT, D. FlaherTy. Lower RighT-- D. FlaherTy, Miss STandTield. Page TwenTy-eighT Q lay swork Tacking scenery TogeTher, unTangling mazes oT elecTrical eguipmenT, applying grease- painT, and scraping iT oTT again are a Tew oT The essenTial phases oT The drama which are absorbed by each parTicipanT in This TascinaTing acTiviTy. Two very successTul producTions were sTaged This year, The ChrisTmas play and The senior class play. Miss STanTield is The queen oT The boards in WesT Bend High, direcTing all plays and aT The same Time giving each parTicipanT in The acTiviTy a greaT deal oT pleasure ouT oT his associaTion wiTh her. The seniors chose The play Cross My l-learT as Their dramaTic oTTering oT The year. Miss STanTield casT The play and be- gan Tive weeks oT inTensive rehearsal, The culminaTion oT which was The successTul pre- senTaTion on April 3. A scene in The play sTopped by The camera is ThaT in which Bob RaTTray engaged in breaking phonograph records while his Tamily, Wells Grogan, Mary KuehlThau, Dan FlaherTy and Miriam PrenTice waTched horriTied. The ChrisTmas play oT I94I sTarred Dan FlaherTy and Joyce lcksTadT in The Angel in Blue Overalls. Dan and Joyce are shown enacTing a porTion oT The play which was presenTed To a sTudenT assembly and sev- eral civic groups. Though The work connecTed wiTh The drama is noT To be minimized, The Tun de- rived Trom acTing surpasses The eTiorT. Miss STanTield, picTured righT wiTh Dan FlaherTy, won The respecT oT The sTudenTs by her direcTing oT The dramaTic program. Like The hard working blocker in a TooT- ball game, The sTudenTs who work behind The scenes deserve buT seldom receive The same crediT as The acTors. Miss Ross and her assisTanTs comprised The makeup de- parTmenT while Bill Kippenhan and Alvin Roecker were valuable sTage hands. he ootball ine-U I-IeaITh and viTaliTy are naTuraI parTs oT each person's make-up. The hours spenT in school and classroom Tend To suppress ThaT enThusi- asm so a program oT aThleTics is needed To supply an ouTleT Tor excess pep. Our aThleTic sysTem, wiTh Mr. Grignon as chairman oT The aThleTic board, embraces all Types oT major and minor sporTs. Over Three hundred people aT one Time or anoTher have uTilized The sporTs program Tor building a beTTer physique and Tor Tun. The TooTball players who represenT The brawn in school are inTroduced TirsT. RighT-guard -s I:riTz Regner lSeniorI.WeighT l4O. The man The oTher Teams Teared mosT and was voTed The mosT valuable player on our Team. Full-back--George PeTe lSophomorel, WeighT I33. I-Ie wenT Through The holes ThaT were Too small Tor Kissinger. I.eTT-haIT--Leroy Chapman ISeniorl.WeighT I64. I-Ie had a sTiTT neck mosT oT The season. BuT This was one sTiTT neck you couldn'T blame on anyThing excepT TooTball. QuarTer-back -- Jerome Kies lSophomoreI. WeighT I6O. Our yes man who said no. RighT-Tackle -- Lewis Rose lSeniorI. VVeighT l7O. I-Ie was a miracle man who noT only had brains buT also brawn. l.eTT-Tackle--Allen Ciriacks ISeniorI.WeighT 285. When he made a Tackle The whole Team held The poor oTher guy up. .fli - 'liiqii g-fi 1 fl 6 Fxfgyxf A135 A 3' - , ' WesT Bend R Q . 5-5 x WesT Bend JQAQQ3, A. . , TNT . WesT Bend gi K ij ! WesT Bend Q 5' lg' QWEQ - Vi WesT Bend -T - ' Q X ,xg A- WesTBend ,Q i I - r f' WesT Bend THE NINETEEN HUNDRED RighT-end -- Francis Murphy IJuniorI. WeighT l7O. I-Ie wanTed iersey No. I3 and broke his shoulder in iT. LeTT-guard --Donald OTTen lJuniorl,WeighT I53. I-Ie accounTed Tor a loT oT The Tackles. CenTer--Clyde Roehrdanz lSeniorl.WeighT I55. I-Ie noT only was a cenTer buT a guard Too. Full-back -- Alois Kissinger lSeniorl. WeighT l85, I-le was The brawn oT The Team. When we needed yards, we gave The ball To him. RighT-halT--Charles WalTer lSeniorI.WeighT I6O. All we had To call him was IChee-Cheel and he'd gnash his TeeTh and go in TighTing. LeTT-haIT -- Warren Grady lJuniorl. WeighT l3O. I-Ie always picked on The big guys. QuarTer-back -- Donald I-I eid IJ uniorl. WeighT I45. I-Ie was our yes-man. CenTer--George AlTendorTlJuniorI.WeighT I46. The Team needed a good man To Take care oT The ball, so Banker AlTendorT held iT. I.eTT-guard -- Bob Sonnenberg ISeniorI. WeighT IBO. Tearing Gus They called him. LeTT-Tackle -- Russell PeTri lSeniorl. VVeighT I65. l-Ie aTe, drank and slepT TooTball, and proved he knew how To play iT. LeTT-end-- Donald Glander lSophomoreI. WeighT I53. When The passes were Too low Tor I-IuTson I-Iancock, Donnie picked Them up. RighT-end -- AusTin ll-IuTsonl I-Iancock lJun- iorl. WeighT l75. We always Tied his shoes Tor Tear iT he did he'd sTrain a ligarnenT. RighT-Tackle -- Gordon I-IackbarTh lSopho- morel. WeighT I7O. Only a sophomore buT dangerous. 7 - - PlyrnouTh O I2 - - Waupun O O - - l'Ioricon 26 O - - Beaver Dam 26 O - - - I'IarTTord I3 7 - - - Columbus I4 O - - PorT VVashingTon I4 AND FORTY-ONE BEND he ridiron rents When The Wesf Bend High School gridders reporfed for fhe I94O season, Coach Ralph Moeller sfarfed fhe ball rolling wifl- body- building calisfhenics. Alfhough he was new af fhe iob, he insfanfly won co-operafion and respecf. The fellows couldn'f help admiring Coach Moeller's record: regular end and cap- fain of 1939 Universify of Wisconsin's foofball feam, brillianf dash-man on fhe frack feam, and sfudenf who ranked near The fop. The same courage and infelligence which made Coach Moeller capfain of his college feam, won fhe Wesf Bend boys. Wifh spirif and fire, fhey foughf fhe firsf games defeafing Plymoufh and Waupun. Buf fhe remainder of fhe season was a hard pill fo swallow. The Red and Whife fasfed defeaf before fhe offensives of Horicon, Beaver Dam, Harfford, Columbus, and Porf Washingfon. Wesf Bend 7-- Plymoufh 0 Wifh fhe opening kickoff safely fucked un- der his arrn, Kissinger decided fhaf fhe shorf- esf disfance befween fwo poinfs is a sideline. The Plymoufh fellows execufed a couple of swan-dive fackles in his general direcfion as he raced by, buf diving was rafher ineffecfual on fhe foofball field. Vlfhen fhey pulled fheir noses ouf of fhe ground, fhcy were chagrined fo see AI in The end zone. Plymoufh never passed fhe fiffeen-yard line and Wesf Bend had slashed deep info fheir ferrifory as fhe game ended. Wesf Bend I2 -- Waupun O Dishearfening is whaf Waupun called if. Affer sfruggling mosf of fhe firsf half fo score, fhe referees whisfle broke up fheir liflle parfy on Wesf Bend's four-yard line. Buf fhe Red and Whife knew how fo fake advanfage of a break. Walfer gained ground on a couple of end runs and Hancock snared fhe passes placing Wesf Bend far down fhe field. Heid knifed across fhe line for The firsf fouchdown. The kick for fhe exfra poinf was wide. A pass fo Hancock and aggressive ball- carrying by Al culminafed in a second fouch- down and a decisive vicfory over Waupun. Wesf Bend 0 -- Horicon 26 In fhe opening minufes of fhe game, Hori- con drove info fhe end zone for a fouchdown. Never during fhe remainder did Wesf Bend pierce Horicon's forward wall. Being in Red and Whife ferrifory, Horicon scored fhree . . Top -- Dead-eye Regner wings one. T -- Al C k fh . . . . Coach Ralph Moeller. Boffolziwn N The lgigklspiinile iqjgrzglgiddt Boffom -- Scrsrnmrargii pcgynasprcmgrlne when Hancock so u r THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page Thirfy fb ,',. I-Qax,fVvs.f0vvk. Axwhvwxsx lui M NIIC, ,Ar . 4 . f ll, U 'sl I ,I X. rave! own the ield K iv il A '. lv. J- ffl...- M T' . Gfffmllf-iff lll'1 l l I SJ! more fouchdowns, a smashing vicfory over A , I J 7 , - y Wesf Bend. 'll -'Inf-'f .JN P1 rw 'N 1 if J' Wesf Bend 0 -- Beaver Dam 26 The Benders, on fhe firsf few plays of fhe game, were a fough nuf for fhe Beavers fo crack. Buf like an old wafch, fhey ran down foo soon. and fhe ball reverfed fo fhe Beavers on downs. A scoring spree followed wifh Bea- ver Dam walking over Wesf Bend in fhe firsf guarfer and again in fhe second. The Wesf' Bend boys found fhis hard fo fake lying down. Grady raced far down fhe field, and Kissinger drove fo fhe one-yard line. There Beaver Dam held fhe Red and Whife scoreless. The Beavers closed fhe game wifh a final fouchdown. Wesf Bend 0 -- Harfford I3 Man lvlounfain hlarfford won fhe mafch, buf if wasn'f a quick and easy kill. Wilh fhe heaviesf line in fhe conference, Harfford scored only fwice againsf fhe Red and Whife. A powerhouse drive in fhe second quarfer re sulfed in fhe firsf fouchdown. When Harfford again knifed across fhe goal-line in fhe fhird quarfer, Chapman baffed down fhe punf leav- ing Wesf Bend af fhe fail end of a I3 fo O score. Wesf Bend 7 -- Columbus I4 The Homecoming celebrafions ended on a depressing nofe when Wesf Bend was defeaf- ed in fhe annual game by a sfrong Columbus feam. Columbus began fhe scoring in fhe firsf guarfer wifh a successful fouchdown affack and place kick. The second half, however, was played in Columbus' back yard. Wesf Bend again fhreaf- ened fo score in fhe lasf quarfer affer Al infer- cepfed a pass. Buf a cosfly fumble losf fhe ball fo Columbus, and wifh if Wesf Bend's chance fo fie fhe score. Wesf Bend O -- Porf Washingfon I4 The Red and Whife foughf fo refain fhe bulldog of vicfory, buf all fhey won was parf of Porf's foofball field. When fhey came off fhe field, black mud covered fheir suifs, and weighfed fheir shoes like lead. In fhe opening quarfer and again in fhe lasf, Porf plunged info fhe end zone fo score. Bofh fouchdowns were followed by successful conversions clinching fhe vicfory. Regner was a sfandouf in fhis game keeping up fhe spirif of fhe feam wifh his usual pep in fhe face of defeaf. , . 4- ,, Top --Al. Kissinger sficks his sfraighf arm where if will do fhe mosf good. Cenfer--A loose ball brings a swarm of invaders. Boffom -- I-Ieid grimaces. Nofice fhaf if fook fwo men fo gef him. Page Thirfy-one he ard ardwoo 5 Top--EighT real baskeTballers: D. Schoedel, D. I-Ieid, D. Glander, G. AlTendorT, A, Hancock, C. WGITSF. L. Chapman, A. Kissinger. CenTer4- Hancock scraps Tor The leaTher. BoTTom--STraTegy is haTched Tor The B SCIUGCIZ W- Grady, A. Herman, Coach W. Baechler, E. PrechTeI. B. Caspari, I.. Kral. Page ThirTy-Two WesT Bend 20 -- Slinger 32 In a hard ToughT game, The TirsT OT The season, The Benders IosT To a TasT Slinger Team. Coach Moeller played mosT oT The sguad in order To size up his maTerial Tor The coming I.iTTle Ten baskeTbalI season. WesT Bend 22 -- Kewaskum 2I Coach Ralph MoeIler's baskeTeers bagged Their TirsT game OT The season wiTh a good brand oT baskeTball by beaTing Kewaskum. Kissinger Took scoring honors wiTh eleven poinTs. The Team TuncTioned well as a uniT. WesT Bend 23 -- HarTTord I9 On Their home Tloor wiTh The help oT Kis- singer's scoring, The Benders won Their TirsT conTerence game by beaTing The TasTbreaking Team Trom I-IarTTord. Kissinger sTarTecI his LiT- Tle -Ien scoring wiTh I5 poinTs. WesT Bend I7 -- Slinger I8 In a hearT-breaking game Tor The WesT Bend rooTers, Coach IvloeIIer's Team IosT To Slinger. Kissinger and WalTer led The scoring wiTh 8 and 5 poinTs respecTively. WesT Bend I7 -- Oconomowoc I8 Vl!esT Bend IosT The second LiTTle Ten game To Oconomowoc. The Benders IosT The game by one poinT. Kissinger kepT up his mounTing record by dropping eleven poinTs Through The neT. WesT Bend 26 -- Kewaskum 20 WiTh Two Tough beaTings under iTs beIT Coach lvIoelIer's Team Took The Tloor Tor re- venge. Kissinger Topped scoring honors wiTh 9 poinTs while Slander and WaITer were second wiTh 5 poinTs apiece. WesT Bend 26 -- PorT WashingTon 34 Playing againsT Their TradiTional rivals, The Benders IosT a Tough baTTle To The TasT PorT Team. The game was a seesaw aTTair unTil The IasT guarTer when DemeriT's Team ouTscored The boys Tive To one. Again Kissinger Took scoring honors wiTh IO poinTs. WesT Bend 3I -- Waupun 22 ATTer Taking a beaTing Trom PorT, The Benders wiTh revenge in Their minds won Their second conTerence game by beaTing a small buT TasT Waupun Team. Kissinger scored I7 poinTs To keep The conTerence lead. WesT Bend 29 -- PorT WashingTon 22 WiTh a sTrong comeback aTTer an earlier deTeaT, The Red and WhiTe wenT over To PorT Strive to Win WashingTon and beaT The PiraTes. Al again was high scorer wiTh I9 poinTs. WesT Bend 2I -- Horicon 30 IvleeTing a sTrong Team on Their home Tloor, The Ivloellermen Took The shorT counT deTeaT aT The hands oT The Horicon Ivlarshmen. Kis- singer Ied The aTTack Tor The losers wiTh TiTTeen poinTs. WesT Bend I3 -- HarTTord I4 In whaT proved To be The sTrangesT game oT The year beTween The Two mosT evenly maTched Teams in The conTerence, The Benders IosT To HarTTord Orioles I3 To I4. The game was close ThroughouT, wiTh neiTher Team hav- ing a Iead of more Than Three poinTs aT any Time. WesT Bend 27 -- Columbus 3I MeeTing a small buT TasT Team in Colum- bus, The Red and WhiTe IosT anoTher conTer- ence game. Columbus held The lead Through- ouT The game buT was pressed hard near The end by The sharpshooTing oT Al Kissinger who scored I7 poinTs. WesT Bend 30 -- Berlin 33 ATTer a long Trip up To Berlin, The Benders Tried hard To overcome The home Tloor advan- Tage, buT meT deTeaT 33-30. Hancock Took scoring honors wiTh nine poinTs. Kissinger, WaI+er, and AlTendorT each scored seven poinTs. WesT Bend 22 -- Ripon 3I In This conTesT The Red and WhiTe wenT To pieces in The TirsT quarTer and could noT over- come a I2 poinT lead To upseT The Ripon Red- men. Again Kissinger led The scoring wiTh IO poinTs, WesT Bend 22 -- Beaver Dam 37 In This game wiTh The conTerence cham- pions, The Benders held Their own Tor Three guarTers, buT gave ouT in The TourTh. Kissinger Took scoring honors wiTh IO poinTs. AlTendorT and WalTer were Tied wiTh Tive poinTs. WesT Bend 20 -- Mayville 24 The Red and WhiTe IosT The IasT conTerence game To lvlayville. WalTer Took scoring hon- ors wiTh seven poinTs. The game was slow. The Benders closed Their conTerence wiTh Two wins and eighT deTeaTs. in The TournamenT aT Waupun The Red and WhiTe beaT Sheboy- gan Falls and IosT To Ripon and PorT Washing- Ton To Take TourTh place. AI Kissinger, senior, Tinished The season as high scorer in The LiTTle Ten. A+ ,f If Hu W h V K H1 . ' Charles WalTer sTrains To Tip The ball To a CenTe Hancock ouT sTreTch GFISG VTIOTTTSVI GS 5 F66 VO O SFS DFI S THT1 TeammaTe. es a Columbus Toe THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page ThirTy Three Sfandingn Coach Runkei, R. Grogan, G. Dunsf, R. Puesiow, A. Hancock, L. Rose, F. Murphy, H.S+rupp. Cenier--M. Derge, W. Zahn, W. Grogan, R. Beck- er, L, Lemke, R, Eassbinder. Boiforn -- L. Kaufh, R. Wis- icerchen, R. Uhiman, E. Schoenbeck, C. Huber, D. Heid, J. Schalles, R. Hin- senkamp, F. Regner. Leif--Wiskirchen iakes a hurdle. Cenfer -- Grogan soars over 'rhe bar. Righf--Becker, moving up. Lefi--Caspari swafs if in fhe pond. Righi'--Courf of Honor: L. Berend, V. Taylor, Queen M. Srnifh, N. Kircher, J. Schneider. Lirnbering up The hickory. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND l Cinders . . . nts Swin WesT Bend l-ligh's Track squads have been very successTul in The pasT, winning sTaTe meeTs, secTional meeTs and LiTTle Ten ConTer- ence meeTs. The I940 season was To be a comeback buT even Though Runkel's boys ap- proached, Tied and even broke records The Team didn'T carry home a vicTory Trom any OT The seven meeTs. On April I3, The Benders meT Oconomo- woc and losT by a score oT 62-5I. - The windy day oT April 20Th broughT l-larT- Tord and PorT WashingTon To our home oval. The Benders Tied PorT +ha+ day, buT HarTTord won over boTh wiTh a large score. On The Tollowing SaTurday PorT and WesT Bend again compeTed in a Tield Triangular meeT aT WhiTeTish Bay Tield. The boys gaTh- ered 4l.5 poinTs. Russ Uhlman in winning The 440 dash Tied The previous record seT in I939. The nexT meeT was a dual aTTair wiTh Pio Nono. The Benders Took Two TirsTs: Bob Gro- gan in The pole vaulT and DunsT in The shoT-puT. On May Il in The secTional meeT held aT PorT Washin'gTon, Tive WesT Bend Trackers qualiTied Tor The sTaTe meeT. Two weeks laTer in The sTaTe meeT Gladdon DunsT became champ wiTh a heave of 44 TeeT 83A inches. BuT The big meeT oT The year, The LiTTle Ten ConTerence, was held aT WesT Bend. Awards were made by Queen Maybelle SmiTh and The honor courT: Norma Kircher, Virginia Taylor, Joy Schneider and Lorraine Berend. DunsT esTablished a LiTTle Ten record wiTh a heave oT 47 TeeT 3 inches in The shoT-puT. Wis- kerchen ran TirsT in The hurdles: L. KauTh and R. Grogan scored seconds: R. PuesTow and R. Fassbinder raTed Third places. Mr. Runkel, The coach oT The WesT Bend Track Team, is recognized as one oT The besT coaches in The LiTTle Ten. Mr. Runkel sTudied aT The Milwaukee STaTe Teachers College and graduaTed a bachelor oT educaTion. AT college he played TooTball and baskeTball and Tor a Tew years coached all aThleTics aT WesT Bend l-ligh. Perhaps The greaTesT complirnenT which could be paid him is ThaT everyone acclaims him as a swell guy. In I940, as in oTher years, baseball and Track conlended Tor The spoTlighT oT sTudenT aTTen- Tion. AlThough The galloping gladiaTors of The cinder Track gained The upper hand, The base- ball nine showed They had plenTy, oT spiriT. The Team deTeaTed Three oT iTs Tive conTerence opponenTs wiThouT The beneTiT oT an admiring Teminine gallery. The TirsT' opponenT oT The season, Kewas- kum, capiTalized on Two hiTs and Two errors To win The pracTice game, 4 To 0. WesT Bend's piTchers allowed only Tive hiTs,, buT The Team was sTill green aTTer Three weeks oT pracTice. Experience gained in The TirsT game helped The boys To make a beTTer showing againsT Horicon. AlThough Horicon led in The sevenTh, The Benders drove in Three runs To Tie The score. An error in The eighTh neTTed Horicon The winning run. Oconomowoc, lasT year's LiTTle Ten Champ, was The TirsT vicTim. BeTore The wiThering Tire oT Kissinger's piTching only Tive hiTs were made. Beck slugged Two doubles To puT The game on ice. Some oT The Mayville vicTories in oTher sporTs were counTer-balanced by The WesT Bend Team's reversal oT The usual procedure. Mayville became The underdog when WesT Bend Tied a 6 To 5 score on iTs Tail. The Red and WhiTe buried l-larTTord under an avalanche score oT 8 To I. Horicon, deTeaTing WesT Bend Tor The sec- ond Time in l940, broughT The Team's winning sTreak To an abrupT end. The Red and WhiTe suTTered The same TaTe They dealT To l-larT- Tord by permiTTing Horicon To score eleven runs To Their one. Besides winning The maioriTy oT iTs con- Terence games, The WesT Bend baseball Team was high in individual scoring. Schoenecker hiT .400 by blasTing The ball six Times ouT oT TiTTeen aT The plaTe. The remainder oT The boys sTruck ouT abouT halT as many Times as Their oppo- nenTs. Several members oT The I940 Team gradu- aTed in June, buT oThers remained in school. Kissinger, Gumm, Bohn, Slander, and Turner were a solid nucleus Tor The '4I baseball Team. Page ThirTy five n the Sprin , Rackets Swish and Ulf Balls Whirl' The WesT Bend High School Tennis Team coached by Mr. M. E. Hildebrand and com- posed oT LeRoy Weinand, Lloyd Klein, Tom RolTs, Fred Weiss, and Paul Kaesberg in I940 compleTed Their mosT successTul season in several years. LasT spring They won Three dual meeTs while losing Three and Tinished TirsT and second in The Two Triangular conTesTs. In addiTion To These, WesT Bend enTered The STaTe Tennis TournamenT aT Neenah-Menasha. The Team Tinished TourTh in The LiTTle Ten Tennis MeeT held aT WesT Bend. In The LiTTle Ten MeeT, Tom RolTs com- peTed in The singles, and The Team oT Vv'einand and Klein compeTed in The doubles. They reached The semi-Tinal round. The I94I Tennis Team was hard worked This spring, being in The midsT oT a sTrenuous Ten game schedule when The Bend wenT To press. These Tellows, who will receive due honor in The i942 Bend were: L. Weinand, P. Kaes- berg, R. Hiller, L. Unruh, E. SchmidT, J. Jaekel, R. Jaekel, R. Klein. All OT These boys excepT Paul Kaesberg and John Jaekel will be back Tor The I942 season. THE RECORD FOR I940 HarTTord deTeaTed WesT Bend aT HarTTord. WesT Bend deTeaTed HarTTord and Beaver Dam aT WesT Bend. WesT Bend deTeaTed Horicon aT WesT Bend. Oconomowoc deTeaTed WesT Bend aT WesT Bend. Waupun deTeaTed WesT Bend and Beaver Dam aT Wayland. WesT Bend deTeaTed Ripon aT Ripon. Wayland deTeaTed WesT Bend aT WesT Bend. WesT Bend deTeaTed Waupun aT Waupun. Page Th rTy six The spring Tonic Tor many boys is The opening oT The golT season. Mr. Grignon and his golT- ers drove To The WesT Bend CounTry Club Tor a pracTice season oT pasTure-pool. The boys who compeTed in conTesTs among The LiTTle Ten schools are picTured below. They were AlberT Froede, Dan FlaherTy, Coach Grignon, RoberT SchachT, Vwfarren BuchelT, RoberT KaempTer, ArThur Sepersky, William BuchelT, and Leroy Chapman. EighT Times They sallied TorTh wiTh The implemenTs oT Their sporT, buT only Twice did They reTurn wiTh vicTories. The TirsT maTch was held aT WesT Bend and The boys Tinished Third To Waupun and Beaver Dam. A Trip To Mayville puT The boys in compe- TiTion wiTh Three oTher schools. They reTurned wiTh anoTher Third. Their puTTers couldn'T dope ouT Those Tricky greens. Oconomowoc came To The WesT Bend links nexT and was compeT'enTly beaTen by The Benders. IT was a Tough job, buT Sepersky's spoon shoTs were phenomenal. HarTTord and Mayville were nexT on The schedule Tor a maTch To be played aT HarT- Tord. While WesT Bend losT To HarTTord, The golTers clipped Mayville's wings in revenge Tor an earlier plucking They'd given WesT Bend. The same Three schools reTurned To WesT Bend Tor a maTch and wenT home in The same order. HarTTord, TirsT, WesT Bend second, and Mayville decisively lasT. Beaver Dam enTerTained The golf squad nexT, and The boys were impoliTe enough To deTeaT boTh Beaver Dam and Waupun. Then Qconomowoc, on The home course, ouT-poinTed The Benders in a maTch beTween Cooney, VVesT Bend, HarTTord and Beaver Dam. WesT Bend Took a second. The season ended wiTh The LiTTle Ten Con- Terence meeT, The Benders Taking TiTTh. Sian qi Q fa A L.- U Kle-in0J e I!7F We ss BOH m Row U P,K V. l'Qx YN. X 1 1: N, i Y' v I wr? fa Q 3 Is Welnand q poor lffle ball7 M WWW Golfer Flaher Schaclv W Bucheff R Ka Seafed A Sepersky W II a Buclwelf L Chap THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY ONE BEND ,qw Mr mldebrand coac I K ---- , ,wi Ml? lllivick icks the Best . . lr My TW lvl TB ks h maTe in awards To each boy who dons QQ Tic uniTorm are The Trophies presenTed o The sTudenTs who excelled in each oT The major sporTs. Each year Carl Pick, oT This ciTy, donaTes Tive cups, one Tor baskeTball, TooTball, Track, baseball, and an all-round Trophy. This year a Trophy was also given To The ouTsTand- ing parTicipanT in Tennis, golT, and girls' sporTs. Coach Ralph Moeller and Virginia Loebe are shown admiring The Trophies which will grace The manTels oT The deserving aThleTes in l94l. The cups are awarded by a secreT com- miTTee, The only member whose idenTiTy is known being Mr. Grignon, The Chairman oT The WesT Bend High School AThleTic Program. The resulT oT The secreT ballofing among The commiTTee members is announced laTe in The spring aT a sTudenT assembly. The T940 win- ners shown above wiTh The cups and Their donor, lvlr. Pick, were Gladdon DunsT, Track: Fred Regner, TooTball: Earl PrechTel, baskeT- ball: Reuben Wiskirchen, all-round: Earl Schoenecker, baseball: and Mr. Grignon. The I94-I winners were noT announced in Time Tor THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND l.eTT-- Mr. Moeller and Virginia Loebe admire The I94I Pick Trophies. RiqhT-- I94O winners: Top, G. DunsT, Track: E, PrechTel, baskeTball: E. Schoenecker, base- ball: BoTTom -- C. Pick, donor:F.Reqner, TooT- ball: R, Wiskirchen, all-round: R. G-rignon. The l94l Bend: They will receive proper recog- niTion in The I942 publicaTion. The school has been deeply graTeTul To Mr. Carl Pick Tor The Trophies which he has pro- vided. His generosiTy provides a Trophy which ranks above all oTher individual awards granT- ed. Thus The person who has been mosT de- serving is given an award which is singular and supreme in The special sporT. Mr. Carl Pick, as a WesT Bend manuTacTurer, has main- Tained a sTrong inTeresT in all Types oT sporTing compeTiTions. ln an address To The sTudenT assembly in The spring oT I94O, lvlr. Pick laud- ed The Theories oT KnuTe Rockne, re-aTTirming ThaT The inTellecT oT young men can be culTi- vaTed by building Their bodies and Teaching Them sporTsmanship and Tair play. Mr. Pick, in addiTion To supporTing The high school pro- gram, has been insTrumenTal in seeing a muni- cipal sporT program insTiTuTed. The ciTy play- ground sysTem oT The CiTy Park is a parT oT ThaT program. The Pick Trophies are always awarded as a surprise aTTer The Tinal aThleTic conTesT. ur Student ides . . I eip? i - , l 5. ' A' l fo' 1 in ,ff N gf 5,-of l x 3 ' Q ' ' :QN 4 7 ' 1 XMV ':.-2: s w x cz 5 -X l i. Top- D. Flaherfy, l-l. Gumm. Boffom --J. Pefri, M, Krafzer. Each year fhe individual classes choose an execufive fo guide fhem Through fhe business affairs and pleasures of fhe school year. Picfured above are The four class presi- denfs, who are looking af fhe new sfudenf handbook, an aid fo sfudenfs who know liffle abouf lhe acfivifies and rules and regulafions of fhe school. Because fhe presidenfs had an infimafe knowledge of fhe problems fhaf come up wifhin 'rhe classes, fhey were called upon fo help in fhe preparafion of fhis handy booklef. For fheir presidenf, fhe seniors selecfed Dan Flaherfy whose exfra-curricular fasfes smacked of forensics and whose execufive abilify was oufsfanding. I-le was a mem- ber of fhe sfafe champion debafe squad. l-lenry Gumm from Gumm's Corners near Jackson was elecfed as iunior class presidenf and prom king. In addifion fo his social and adminisfrafive dufies, l-lank found fime fo engage in various sporfs. Foofball was fhe chief inferesf of Michael Krafzer, fhe sophomore class presidenf. Mickey gof a real fasfe of The complicafions fhaf arise for fhose who direcf fhe acfivifies of a class. James Pefri, fhe freshman chief execufive did a fine job when he led his class in fhe win- ning of fhe Homecoming Cup. Each of fhese boys has been efficienf in leading his class in successfully conducfing ifs affairs. Pa ge Thirfy-nine ' bitious freshm n TriTle nervous and uneasy, buT noT really TrighTened, is a good way To describe The Treshmen, one-hundred-nineTy sTrong, who en- Tered The WesT Bend High School on SepTem- ber 3, I94O. The largesT class ever To be en- rolled in The school, These Treshmen were Tull oT life and viTaliTy and enTered Their acTiviTies wiTh an enThusiasm which was characTerisTic of Them ThroughouT The year. FirsT sTep in be- Top Row -- M. Kaiser, W. Moilanen, O. Lenz, V. Johnson, G. Kraemer, J. OTTen, M. OTTQ, L. May. Second Row--H. Klein, B. Lueplce, M. Meuschlce, M. Miller, A. Kolar, S. Koch, R. Maurer. Third Row -- D. Jobs. P. Liesener, M. lssel- man, L. Knoeclc, L. Konopilc, J. Nehrinq, M. Klein, BoTTom Row --J. lclcsTadT, H. Le Mensa, M. Naab, E. Miller, E. Miller, D. MonTgomery, Y. Koenig. Top Row -- V. Gilberlr, M. GepperT, C. Ger- ner, C. l-lansen. E. l-lagner, M. Bohn, E. Barber, L. Fara. Second Row -- L. l-lausmann, D. Gonnerinq. M. Domann, J. BoeseweTTer, J. Fassbinder, B. Donneman, B. G-riqnon, L. Carbon. Third Row -- A. Abel, B. Birzer, R. Beck, D. Cooley, M. Bruesch. L. German, G. Grogan. BoTTom Row -- M. Bassill, C. Averill, l-l. Bieri, K. l-lassmer, D. Hahn, R. Gehl, E. Friede- mann. Top Row -- S. Wiedmeyer, C. PrenTice, C. Voc1T, R. Weyres, K. Spangler, P. PeTruslca, E. SchwichTenberq, D. Simon. Second Row-- R. Wagner, L. WulTF, P. Varnes, B, Tennies, A. Riesch, J, Sauer, D. Voelcs. Third Row--J. SchowalTer, L. Schellinger, B. Tessman, B. Wardius, E. ZeclcmeisTer, J. Schubert J. Philippi. BoTTom Row -- R. Raclcow, M. RuT, A. Wen- delborn, H. Riclc, J. SmiTh, E. PTisTer, B. SchachT. coming an organized uniT was The eleclion oT class oT'Ticers. Then wiTh The excellenT guidance oT Miss Podruch, Their adviser, They underTook Their new enTerprise, ThaT oT making a name Tor The class. Their TirsT achievemenT was The win- ning oT The homecoming award, The much coveTed LiTTle Red Cup, FooTball began The Tall acTiviTy season, and Jimmy PeTri broughT honors To The class by Top Row -- D. Hoelz, W. Jaeckels, A. Lev- erenz, E. KohlschmidT, L. Kral, R. Hron, F. Held, O. Lochen. Second Row-- B. Kranz, G. Herman, Vv'. MarTin, R. Herber, E. Kruepke, K. Klinqbiel, M. Huber. Third Row -- T. KahnT, D. Mondloch, R. Klein, C. Kluever, N. Hennig, R. HarTh, R. HeTe- brueq. E. Klukas. BoTTom Row- D. Kuqler, R. Kickbush, R. Jaekel, W. lcksTadT, R. Loebe, E. lv1arTh, H. LandvaTTer, L. Melius. Top Row --H. Basler, H. Birchhauer, R. Al- binger, J, Berend, H. Gerner, E. German, G. Benike, E. BuTT. Second Row -- E. Franckenberq, H. Gensman, R. BolTz, R. Bauer, G. Gumm, R. Faqg, D. DayTon. Third Row -- L. Bohn, C. Berg, J. Cechvala, R. Gorman, N. Bingen, E. Fleischer, D. Ollers, L. Geilo. BoTTom Row -- G, Beine, J. Geib, F, Goecks. R. Becker, A. Bruesse, J. Casper. Top Row--C Turner, T. Wiedmeyer, VV. Updyke, D. Ziegler, B. RolTs, H. WaechTer, E, Zell, K. VeiT, Second Row--R. WornardT, R, VVeiss, R. RochwiTe, D. Sauer, E. OsTrander, D. Schneiss W, Wilkens, J. Pamperin. Third Row --W. Ruplinger, J. Weninger, C. Seidemann, J. PeTri, R. Ruf, M. Wilkens, E. 0TTen. BoTTom Row-- C. Wagner, N. Uhlmann, P, STier, R. SchaeTTer, W. Weidman, D. Schoen- beck, G. Sonnenberg. Who ro vor whore making' The A Team. Besides This, I94O-4I seemed To be a banner year in speech acTivi- Ties. Eleven freshmen parTicipaTed in debaTe. Two oT The eighTeen Treshmen who enTered declamaTory work represenTed The school. The exTemporaneous reading season sTarred Grace Grogan who won a TirsT place in The LiTTle Ten among Treshmen and sophomores. OTher acTiv- iTies were well represenTed loy The class oT '44. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page ForTy one OFFICERS Presidenl - Michael Kralzer Vice-presiden+ - - Roberf Marfh Secrelaryfrreasurer - Marie Knoeck he S ph more Despi'I'e The lac? +ha'r lhe sophomore year is supposedly an awkward year in high school, fhe class of I943 has overcome Hs handicaps and made a very inleresling and excifing year of i+. Of course a spiriled class Thai' won Jrhe coveled homecoming cup when 'rhey were green li++le 'freshmen could no? be expecfed 'ro have a dull rime af any momenr. Top Row -- C. Willcens, A. Willcens, H. Wag- ner, B. Ziegler, B. Zeclcmeisfer, B. Suckow, R. Slrupp. Second Row V- E. Willcens, B. Schneider, D. Vanderwallner, L. Slrupp, l-l. Techlman, K. Schoenhaar. Third Row--G. Schmidt D. Schowalfer, E. Weiss, D. Schulze, D. Willcens. Boffom Row --J. Schneider, R. Schachf, R, Seebolh, C. Yahr, C. Weslenberger. Top Row --J. Flaherly, P. Dhein, B. Casper, W. Gerner, D. Seidel, V. Gonnering, M. Gumm. Second Row--J. Baurngarlner, J. l-lolz, D. Jaclclin, R. Engeleiler, L. Berend, R. Ziegler, J. l-larns. Third Row -- D. l-leppe. J. Haendel, A. Be- ger, B, Bingham, N. Glenn, D. Goebel. Boffom Row--W. Gorman, J. l-leppe, M. l-lafzung, L. Erber, B. l-leider. cher. . Kaufh. hafen, P. Rosenlhal, M, Klumb. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Pa ge Forly-'rwo Top Row -- R. Malenaer, M. Knoeclc, M. Pam- perin, B. Lochen, D. Pleur, E. Pleur, M. Kir- Middle Row--l.. Redlinger, A. Prosf, V. Riclc, D. Kurlz, M. Oelhalen, G. Kohl, D. Boflom Row -- D, Lodus, M. Moll, M. Oele 99' MWX. lib 1 .El , e ouTsTanding members oT The class 4 Ed malce This year a success were Cal- 'vlnl ClauT 'and Jack Monday in Their speech X ryllgismexmembers oT The sporT squads were The i MQW, if , Ia , worhi porTs cannoT go by unmenlioned- Jlozv 0-of Slander boys, Aubrey Herman and RoberT A Caspari. Music gave The sophomores Their re- laxaTion and many oT The peppy sophs be- longed To The glee clubs, orchesTra and band. t 6445. wuz, . M1-HMG! .zeyeajafcc Top Row -- R. Hron, D. Glander, C Claus L. Francine, R. Caspari, W, BuchelT, H. Glan der, K. Fassbinder. IZ 1 econd Row --J. Froede, P. HerberT, A. Her- ma n, L. Boden, J. Gerner, J. Goeden, J German, L. GroTh. y Third Row-- W, Gundrum, A, Bell, R. Hiller R, Cooke, L. Foy, F. Bales. BoTTom Row--J. Hahn, R. Hinsenlcamp, C l-lembel, C. Crebhart P. A'Thaus, Ll. Grady Top Row-- R. Willlcomm, J. Yahr, E. ST Thomas, E. Redig, R. SchachT, J, WiclcerT T. Sonnenberg. Second Row --V. Weinreich, R. Rudolph, Q SchowalTer, H. Schalles, L. Unruh, E. Wen- delborn, G. PeTe. Third Row -- P. SalTer, L. OsTrander, J. Tang- ney, H. STeTTen, D. Neumann, J. Waala. BoTTom Row -- D. SchowalTer, L. PrechTel, T RaTTray, R. Rainey. Top Row-- K. Kocher, F. Lange, D. Merriam, M. McCarTney, W. Kuhn, H. KirsT, J. Kin- caide. Second Row -- D. Mondloch, A. Jagow, R. Kleinhans, R, Lemlce, J. Kies, L. Jordan. Third Row--C. McDonald, R, MarTh, M. KraTzer, J. Monday, J. Leffingwell, R. Mer- Ten. BoTTom Row--M. Klein, R. Kaempifer, M. Klein, 6. Jansen, H. Miller, J. LhoTlca. ScholasTically The members oT This class are on The Top wiTh Daphne Huber heading The honor roll wiTh a 96.4 average, good in any man's language. The girls' gym c'asses worked hard on The gym exhibiTion and helped To malce iT a success. IT The soph year is supposed To be an inf beTween year, These Tollcs oughT To do marvels in Their imporlanl junior year. Page ForTy-Three Q Grown p niors OFFICERS PresidenT - - - - Henry Gumrn Vice-presidenT - - Elmer SchmidT SecreTary-Treasurer - - Jean Horlamus On a warm day in SepTember, I94O, a group of eager young people swarmed back To school as iuniors. They Tound iT easy To drop The cock-sure aTTiTude oT Their early days and To subsTiTuTe The confidence and digniTy loe- TiTTing Their rank. Headlining The sporT news were 40 ener- geTic juniors wiTh such names as Grady, Han- coclc, Heid, AlTendorT, and OTTen seTTing The pace on The gridiron. Hancock and AlTendorT Top Row --M. Koch, R. Kraerner, D. Klein, B. l3uesTow, H. Kienholz, G. l.enZ. Middle Row -- B. Kirmse, H. McCarTney, M. Mouzalcis, B. Kowanda, M. MoThs, D. PeTers. BoTTom Row-- B. KrernsreiTer, R. Mrazilc, L. Quaas, M. Kissinger, E. Quaas, R. Jaelcel. Top Row --J. Horlamus, V. Braasch, J. Ed- wards, M. Hansen, J. l-iomuTh, B. Hess, A, Cechvala. Second Row -- D. Franlc, H. Boyung, R. Fal- Ter, J. Harns, H. Cechvala, M. Gonnering, A. Frederick. Third Row -- B. Barens, J. Hood, V. BolhalTer, V. Berend, l.. HeTebrueg, J. HarTmann, K. Driessel. BoTTom Row -- R. Boden, H. Boehcher, F. Friedemann, B. FeiTen, F. Harns, J. Frank. R. Hiller. Top Row --J. Schneider, E. Rusch, H. Rilling, M. Slesar, M. SeyTerT, F. Ruefenacht D. Schmidt A. SlaTer. Middle Row -- F. Weber, R. Ziegler, V. Rehm, Alice Wolf, V. Weyres, B. STevens, F. Wag- ner, M. Wilcox. BoTTorn Row -- D. Schernmel, N. Reinlce, J. SchrnidT, A. Wolf, R. Yaerling, D, Weiss, M. Winclmler, l.. Schwinn. Page ForTy Tour THE re nto ver thin were also The r'nainsTays of The baskeTball squad. Ray Becker, sTar halT-miler, Hank Gumm, ca+cher as well as hard-working presi- denT OT The Class OT '42, and Leroy Weinand, anoTher man ol The neT squad, were only a Tew oT The 2l ouTsTanding iuniors who reporTed Tor spring sporTs. Keeping pace wiTh The boys, The girls boosTed The 6. A. A. by providing 22 mem- bers, and BeTTe Lou Barens as presidenT. Top Row -- E. Schmidt J, LeTTeI, W. WendT, E. Wagner, H. Prahl, D. Rounseville. Middle Row --J. Schalles, W, Turner, F. Yahr, D. VogT, E. STier, R. Wiikens. T3oTTom Row --H. Philippi, A. Schmidt L. WalTer, l.. Roecker, H. Reimann, L. Weinand. Top Row--C. Abel, R. Berend, H, Gurnm. W. Dhein, P. German, J. Ecker, R. Becker. Second Row--F. ForsTner, J. Degner, E. Bingen, R. Beck, K. Bock, M. Gehl. Third Row -- R. BenneTT, A. Gadow, Cv. Al- Tendorf, L. Geib, J. Bohn, V. Dengel. BoTTom Row --A. Froede, W. Grady, R. BuT- ler, R. FeiTen. Top Row--R. Malzahn, E. Miller, A. Han- cock, C. Heuer, H. Hinsenkamp. Middle Row -- N. Hembel, J. KirsT, D. OTTen, E. LandvaTTer, P. Lemke, L. Hausmann, C. Huber. BoTTom Row -- H. Kannenberg, C. Meyer, D. Heid, J. Lochen, H. LaaTsch, A. Melius. NINETEEN HUNDRE BUT sporTs did noT rob The oTher acTiviTies oT members. Speech, Tor insTance, had 22 jun- ior parTicipanTs. Key posiTions on The sTaTT oT The Campus Clipper were held This year by a number oT juniors, The work oT Jean Horlamus, ediTor-in- chief being oT special noTe. The greaTesT social evenT oT The year, The STardusT Prom, was led by Henry Gumm and Joy Schneider. D AND FORTY-ONE BEND Q cave Qhind zjwj ifwl' MQ' gf mil. M il3l1T'7T5!'T'ldW W A SENIOR OFFICERS PresidenT - - D. I:laherTy Vice-presidenT - - W. Grogan SecreTary-Treasurer - B. McCargo Every class ThaT graduaTes Trom school can be said To have become proTicienT in some Tield To The exTenT oT being ouTsTanding. The class oT '4 li is no excepTion To This ruleg and Though iT is noT as large a class as many which have graduaTed Trom This school, iT made up in gualiTy whaT was lacking in size. lvlosT classes became ouTsTancling in one Tield, buT The class oT 'fl-I was ouTsTanding in many. Each adviser oT an ouTside acTiviTy will have To raclc his or her brain To replace a member oT his acTiviTy losT by graduaTion. Seniors are Tound in every acTiviTy oTTered in school, including boys' and girls' sporTs, boTh major and minor, music acTiviTies, speech work in all oT iTs phases, worlc on school publicaTions, club parTicipaTion, and oT course, The Tunda- menTaI aim oT school iTselT, scholasTic accom- plishmenTs. IT is hard To imagine a TooTball Team wiThouT a Regner, a basl4eTball Team wiTh- ouT a Kissinger, a G. A. A. wiThouT Nan OTT- mer, a band wiThouT a Grogan, a debaTe Team wiThouT The cheer oT a RaTTray or a FlaherTy, or even an honor-roll wiThouT a Rose, buT nexT year This will be True, and, hard as iT will be, subsTiTuTes will have To be Tound. As Treshmen The class enrolled a ToTal oT l3O members. The class made The highesT con- TribuTion in magazine sales Toward The pur- chase oT a movie projecTor. The Treshmen oT ThaT year Tinished Third in The Class Achieve- menT Cup race. ITs oTTicers were: President Fred Regnery Vice-presidenT, Eugene SmiThg and SecreTary-Treasurer, Dan FlaherTy. In The sophomore year The class oT '4l sTaged The largesT high school parTy The school has ever seen. IT was The largesT because The unprecedenTed number oT 450 sTudenTs aT- Tended. lThe TirsT Tloor show ever puT on aT a high school parTy was successfully sTaged aT ThaT sophomore parTy.j The class oTTicers were PresidenT, RoberT RaTTrayq Vice-presidenT, Wells Grogan: SecreTary-Treasurer, Doris GoeTz. The junior year immediaTely calls To mind The junior prom and in Their adminisTraTion oT This acTiviTy, The class oT '4I again upheld The high sTanclard oT our school. In addiTion To presenTing an enjoyable prom, The class showed iTs True colors by winning The class achievemenT cup, awarded To The class wiTh The besT record in all school compeTiTions. This was also The year ThaT Fred Regner was award- ed The Pick aThleTic Trophy Tor TooTball. OTTic- ers: PresidenT, Bob Sonnenbergq Vice-presi- denT, Wells Grogan: SecreTary-Treasurer, Lois RosenThal. The senior year proved To be The crowning year Tor The class oT '4I. A smashing hiT was The class play, Cross My l'learT, TeaTuring THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page EorTy-six What We Have Bob RaTTray, BeTTy McCargo, Dan FlaherTy, Miriam PrenTice, WalTer Tuchscherer. Mary KuehlThau, Allan KieckhaTer, Virginia Loebe, Lewis Rose, Lois RosenThal. Audrey Kluever, Rosemary Bell, and Wells Grogan. Three sen- iors, Bob RaTTray, John Jaekel, and Dan Flaher- Ty, and junior Ralph BenneTT were members oT The sTaTe championship debaTe Team. As a lasTing memorial The class presenTed a speakers' rosTrum To The school. The senior oTTicers picTured opposiTe are: PresidenT, Dan FlaherTyg Vice-presidenT, Wells Grogan: Sec- reTary-Treasurer, BeTTy McCargo. STrongly linked To The record oT The class oT '4I are The names oT several seniors whose leadership and class spiriT have marked Them as ouTsTanding. The people whose supporT has been above average deserve The name oT leader. The class oT I94I recognizes The meriT oT These individuals Tor Their all ouT service. ForemosT is Dan FlaherTy, permanenT presi- denT oT The class. His record oT leadership be- gan while he was a Treshman and conTinued To The end oT his senior year. In addiTion his per- sonal record in all acTiviTies parallels ThaT oT The class and reserves Tor him a prominenT place. Lewis Rose is parTicularly admired Tor his versaTiliTy. He was a Track man, a leTTer win- ner in TooTball, a debaTer, an exTemp speaker, and a journalism Tan. ln spiTe oT a heavy ac- TiviTy load, Lewis graduaTed wiTh TwenTy cred- iTs as The valedicTorian. His characTer marks him as an invaluable asseT To his class. Wells Grogan's winning personaliTy and accomplishmenTs have earned him a Top place in The class roll. For The lasT Three years oT his career Wells was elecTed vice-presidenT oT The class. Music, Track, golT, debaTe, exTemp speak- ing, and journalism were among his acTiviTies, buT his biggesT accomplishmenT was his work as presidenT oT The sTudenT council. AnoTher ouTsTanding senior is BeTTy Mc- Cargo. Each oT her Tour years oT high school Tound her a volunTeer worker on all homecom- ccomplished ing and social commiTTees. In her senior year she Took a lead in The class play, was elecTed class secreTary-Treasurer, and in addiTion was voTed The girl who besT represenTed courage, honor, and scholasTic accomplishmenT in The D. A. R. conTesT Tor WesT Bend High. Mary KuehlThau served The class as an associaTe ediTor OT The Bend, in which capaciTy she displayed The journalisTic abiliTy she had developed as a member oT The Campus Clip- per sTaTT. Besides she represenTed The school in serious declamaTion during her junior and senior years, and These same dramaTic abiliTies earned her a place in The class play. TT one were paid Tor over-Time, Mary would have a large check. A sTeady helper Tor Tour years in making many class acTiviTies TuncTion is The record oT Lois RosenThal. She represenTed The school in humorous declamaTion, music, journalism, de- baTe, and played a parT in The class play. lnvalualole To The Bend sTaTT, a member oT all class TuncTions, a represenTaTive in speech work, Campus Clipper helper, Thus did Viviane Geib serve. ln her senior year she was elecTed presidenT oT The BoosTer Club. Many a SaTur- day morning she devoTed To Tinishing an odd job Tor The annual. LasT buT Tar Trom leasT are RoberT RaTTray's achievemenTs. Bob holds Two sTaTe champion- ships in speech: debaTing and exTemp speak- ing. As a sophomore he was presidenT oT The class. As an ediTor oT The I94I Bend he is To be crediTed wiTh iTs novel arrangemenT. The sTudenT body business manager and adverTising manager oT The Bend are com- bined in The person oT WalTer Tuchscherer. Also business manager oT The Campus Clipper in The junior year, Wally's TalenTs make him an honored senior. The record oT The class as wriTTen here shows one essenTial TruTh To be in evidence. WesT Bend High School will miss The class oT '4l jusT as The class oT '4I will miss WesT Bend High. Page ForTy seven Grad ates of 1941 CARL ALBINGER- Baskelball 27 Track I7 Soccer I, 2, 37 Golf 47 Inlramurals I, 2, 3, 4. CAROL ALTHAUS--Volleyball I7 Baseball I, 27 Glee Club I, 27 Guidance Secrelary I7 Homecoming Floai' Commillee I, 27 Pageanl I7 Home Economics Club I7 Gym Exhibilion 27 Lafin Club 27 Class Play 4. ROBERT H. ASHMAN -- Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 2, 3, 47 Homecoming Slunl Commillee 47 Pageanl' I7 W. B. Troupers I7 Class Play 4. VIRGINIA BASTIAN -- Bend Slalzl 47 Baskelball I, 2, 37 Glee Club I, 2, 37 Guidance Chairman 37 Music Fesli- val 2, 37 Homecoming Floal Commillee 37 Homecoming Slunf Commillee 27 Prom Commiflee 37 Pageanl I7Gym Exhibilion 27 S. A. A. 3, 47 Musical Variely Show 37 Campus Clipper Sfall 4. ROSEMARY BELL -- N. F. L. 3, 47 Declamafion 27 Original Oralory 37 Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 47 Guidance Vice- chairman 37 Music Feslival I, 2, 3, 47 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl I7 Lalin Club I, 2, 3, 47 Class Play 47 Social Commillee 2, 37 Gym Exhibilion 27 Musical Variely Show 3, 4. BEATRICE MAE BENIKE--G, A. A. I, 2, 3, 4WBI Baskel- ball I, 2, 3, 47 Volleyball I, 2, 37 Track I, 2, 3, 47 Baseball I, 2, 3, 47 Sludenl Council 27 Homecoming Slunl Commillee I7 Soccer 2, 37 Bowling 47 Tumbling Club I, 47 Gym Exhibilion 2, 47 Field Hockey 4. BEATRICE P. BENIKE -- Harllord High School7 Wes? Bend: G. A. A. 2, 37 Baskelball 2: Volleyball 27 Track 2, 37 Baseball 2, 37 Glee Club I7 Home Economics Club 2, 37 Soccer 2, 37 Gym Exhibilion 27 Guidance Secielary 2. DOLORES BOETTCHER--Guidance Secrelary 27 Home- coming Slunl Commilfee I7 Pageanl I7 Prom Commil- lee 3: Lalin Club 2, 3, 47 Gym Exhibifion 27 S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 47 All School Play 37 Class Play 4. VIRGINIA A. BRAUBACH -- Sleuben Jr. High lMiIwau- keel, Glee Club I7 Washinglon High School lMilwau- keel, Girls Club 27 Menomonee Falls High7 B. A. A. 37 Prom Commillee 37 Wesl' Bend High: Humorous Decla- malion 47 Glee Club 47 Mixed Chorus 47 Musical Variely Show 3, 47 Class Play 4. JOAN CAMERON -- Bend Slall 47 Campus Clipper Slafl 3, 47 Orcheslra 47 Band I, 2, 3, 47 Sfudenl Council 47 Music Fesliyal I, 2, 3, 47 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl I7 Social Commillee 47 Gym Exhibilion 27 Musical Variely Show 3, 47 Class Play 4. LEROY CHAPMAN -- Baskelball I, 2, 4WB7 Fcolball 2, 3WB, 4WB: Baseball I, 27 Homecoming Floal Commil- lee 27 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl I7 Soccer I, 27 Goll 37 Inlramurals I. ALLEN CIRIACKS--Foolball I, 3, 4WB, Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 2, 37 Homecoming Slunl Commillee I, 2, 3, 47 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl' I7 Boosler Club 37 All School Play 37 Class Play 4. COLLEEN CROGAN-- N. F. L. 47 Declarnalion 2, 3WBI Sludenl Council 2, 37 Guidance Secrelary 47 Horne- coming Floal Commillee I, 37 Homecoming Slunl Com- millee 2, 47 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl I7 W. B. Troupers I7 Ring Commillee 37 Boosler Club 2, 47 Tumbling Club 27 Social Commillee 3, 47 Gym Exhibi- Iion 27 S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 47 Chrislmas Play I7 Class Play 4. Page Forly-eighl JUNE R. DE BANO -- G. A. A. I, 2: Vice-presidenl 3WB. 47 Baskelball 2, 3, 47 Volleyball 2, 3, 47 Head of Tennis 47 Track 2, 37 Head of Track 47 Guidance Vice-chair- man 27 Homecoming Floal Commillee 3, 47 Prom Com- millee 37 Pageanl I7 Soccer 2, 37 Boosler Club I, 2, 47 Bowling 47 Tumbling Club I, 2, 47 Gym Exhibifion 2, 47 S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 47 Field Hockey 47 Class Play 4. EDITH DEGNER--Glee Club I, 2, 3, 47 Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 47 Music Feslival 2, 3, 47 Homecoming Sfunl Com- miflee 37 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl I7 Home Econo- mics Club I, 2, Treasurer 3, Secrelary 47 Soccer 27 Gym Exhibilion 27 S. A. A. I, 2, 47 All School Play 37 Musical Variely Show 3, 4. MELVIN DERGE-- Volleyball I, 2, 3, 47 Track 3, 47 Glee Club 47 Mixed Chorus 47 Homecoming Slunl Commil- 'ree 2, 37 Pageanl I7 Boxing 47 Inlramurals I, 2, 3, 47 Musical Variely Show 47 F. F. A. 4. NORBERT DETTMANN- Glee Club I, 2, 3, 47 Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 47 Orcheslra 47 Band 2, 3, 47 Music Fesliyal I, 2, 3, 47 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl I7 Arr Club I, 27 Musical Variely Show 3, 47 F. F. A. 4. RALPH DUENKEL-Volleyball I, 2, 3, 47 Baseball 3, 4: Pageanl I7 Soccer I, 2, 37 Boxing I7 Inlramurals 3, 4. RUTH ANN DUENKEL--Glee Club 27 Gym Exhibilion ' Pageanl I. GEORGE FALTER--Glee Club 3, 47 Mixed Chorus 3, 4? Sludenf Council 47 Music Feslival 3, 47 Homecoming Slunl Commillee 37 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl' I7 Variely Show 27 All School Play 37 Musical Variely Show 3, 47 F. F. A. Presidenl 4. ROBERT FASSBINDERH Exlemporaneous Speaking I7 Bas- kelball 27 Volleyball 47 Track 3WB, Sludenr Council 2, 37 Guidance Secrefary I, 2, 3, 47 Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 27 Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Slarnp Club 27 Boxing I7 Inlramurals I, 2, 3, 4. GRACE FEITEN --Volleyball I7 Baseball I, 27 Glee Club I, 2, 3, 47 Mixed Chorus i, 2, 3, 47 Orcheslra I, 27 Music Fesfival I, 2, 3, 47 Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 27 Homecoming Slunl Commillee 37 Prom Commillee 37 Pageanl I7 Lalin Club 3, 47 Gym Exhibilion 37 Musical Variely Show 3, 47 Class Play 4. PAUL FUGE-- Baskelball I7 Guidance Chairman I7 Home- coming Floal Comrnillee I, 2, 3, 47 Homecoming Slunl Commillee I, 27 Pageanl I7 Chairman ol Magazine Sales 2. DANIEL T. FLAHERTY-- Bend Slall 47 N. F. L. I, 2, Sec- re+aryATreasurer 3, Presidenf 47 Debale I, 2, 3WB, 4WBf Exlemporaneous Speaking I, 2, 3, 47 Original Oralory 3WB, 47 Oralory I, ZWBQ Class Presidenl 47 Sludenl' Council, Presidenr 3, 47 Homecoming Floal' Commillee I, 3, 4i Homecoming Slunl Commillee 2, 37 Prom Com- millee 37 Pageanl I7 Sludenf Congress 47 Slamp Club 2, 37 Lalin Club I7 Vice-presidenl 2, 3, 4, W. B. Troupers I7 Class Play 47 Ring Commillee 37 Boosler Club 27 Golf 3, 47 Variely Show 27 Chrislmas Play 47 Reading Play Commillee 4. , THE Carl Albinger 1 Carol Alfhaus Roberi' H. Ashman Virginia Bas+ian 'Rober+ Arends Rosemary Bell 5 Beafrice Mae Benilce Xxx Beairice P. Benilce in xii Dolores BoeHcl1er 'Roberl A. Bohn Virginia A. Braubach Joan Cameron Leroy Chapman Allen Ciriaclcs Colleen Crogan June R. DeBano Ediiln Degner Melvin Derge Norberl' DeH'mann Ralph Duenlxel Rufh Ann Duenkel George Falier Roberi' Fasslaincler Grace Feifen Paul Fuge Daniel T. Flaheriy NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND All Viviane Mary Geib Doris Goeiz Wells B. Grogan Leo Groh May E. Gruehmacher June Caroline Handlce Joseph E. Hashelc Marylin Heilmann Margare+ S. Held Joyce Herman John Jaelcel Adeline Johann Paul J. Kaesberg Allan C. Kieckhafer William H. Kippenhan Alois Kissinger Dcro+l'ny E. Klein Audrey Kluever Jean Koffel June J. Kolar Wesley W. Kopp Mary Kuehlfhau Pearl A. Kuhn Wilberi J. LandvaHer THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Paqe Filly IAA! 0 I o I o 1 I Graduates of I . . . , 0 o 4444, ,ia f7O 0 fa VIVIANE MARY GEIB--G. A. A. 2 3, 4: Bend Slall 2, ADELINE JOHA -- G. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4 Bend Sla 3, 4: C p lip Slarl 3, 4 D amaiion I, 3, 4: N. F. L. 2, ,4: Declamalion I, 2WB, 4: Exlem - I s lang 2 e luW2, b araneous S .' J I' , , 4, alle , ix s I, Q2 3, 4: c es r , 2, 3: Guidance 2, 3, 4: lee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, , 3, 4: Chairman I: Guidance Vice-chairman 2: Music Feslival Slu enl Cou il 3: Gu' ance Chairman 2: uidance I, 2, ,4: Homecodng Bloal Commii e I, ome- ' chair 3: Mus' Feslea , 2, 3, 4: Ho e om- g S'I'un+ Commiflee I, 2, 3, ' o lee 3: n mill ' ommill I: La ' lary- easurer , , , :go I: Lalin Club I, , 3, 4: Soccer I, 2!3: Ri ommillee cer I: Ring millee 3: Boosler Club I, 2, Presidenl 4: 3: Social Commillee 2, 3: Gym Exhibili 2: S. A. A. Tumbling I, 2, 4: Social Commihree I, 2, 3, 4: I, 2, 4: ool Play 3: Field Hocke 4: usical Gym Exhibilion 2, 4: S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4: All School Variely , 4: Or eslra 2,3, 4: ' IT 5 PI i Ocke . R -- e is B, 4: se all I, 2: DORIS GOETZ- G. A. A. 3, 4: Baskelball 2, 3: Volleyball Homecoming FIOBI 9 21 3' 47 prom Commli' I, 3, 4: Tra k I, 2: Bas all I, 2: Class Secrelary- a- +6631 P596 T li I am BIS 4? S A- A- I-213-4 s r 2: GI Club I, , 4: Mixed Chorus I , 4: LLAN C. KHA ER -- e ralo 3 : us' F I, 2, ' ingFloaI' ' , Club , , horus 2, , : , , : omecom g Slunl Commillee 3: Prom Com- millee 3: Pagea I: Soccer I, 2, 3: Boosler Club 4: Orcheslra 3, 4: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Guidance Chairman I, 4: Guidance Vice-chair an 3' usi Fe Iival I, 3, Bowli 2: T mblin Club 2, 4: Gym ExhibiIicf2 ' 4' ming al C ' e , 3:jHomecZng Mus' al ow 3, , Bend s+aI'l 4. I Commilfe ' eef3?aqaQnI I: - ' L I De aye lass Play 4: ing o rllee 3: Boosler Club 2, 4: 4: Exlemporaneous Speakin 2, 3: Baskelball 3: Track MuSICaI Varleiy S W 4: Badqer Boys Slale 2' 3' 47 glass y:Ce,p,e5:de ' 3' 47 Glee glub 7 M:,,ed QN IAM H. KIIPPENHAN -- Bend Slalzl 4: Te ms 3: and Choru :Orcheslra I, 2, 3, 4: Ban I, 2, 3, : Sludenl 2 33VM'f FGSIWGI 3? Page Ii mp 7 u I s' I, 'ance ' :G'- ar' O I - o ance ice-c ai ma : usic Fesfival I, 2, 3, 4: Home- ALOIS KlSSINGER-- Bas kelba II I, ZWB, 3WB, 4: coming Floal C ilfee I, 3: Homecoming Sfunl Com- Foofball 2WB. 4WB: Baseball I, 2WB, 3WB, 4: Home- millee I, 2, 3, , Prom Ge al hairman 3: Pageay: coming Floal Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Soccer I: Infra- La I lub I, 2, 3, 4: Clas y 4' Rinq Commill 3: murals I, 3. B ' 'GI CO I - ' All afllo DOROTHY E. KLEIN--Glee Club 2, 3: Mixed Chorus 3: PI 37 MUSICRI Vafiefv S 3,41 Badger BOYS' Sfale 3- Orcheslra 3, 4: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival 2, 3, 4: L GROH:-- Volleyball 4: Prom Comrnilfee 3. P. O'TVCQm+mIglEe 3gP:Q?jf1+ IBIGYZ1 Exhibifion 27 MU- MAY E. eRuETzMAci-is e d sm: 4, eree Club me are Y OW ' ' ass ay ' ' 2, 3. 4: Mixed ciiofus I, , ,Luge Fijgl 3, , 'W K'-U RU , 5 H 41 Frlif? Homecoming Slunf Commillee 3: ageal I: L lin I' OFGVIG :Deakin ,.Ex+e boraneous Reading Club I 2: Gym Exhibilion 2: S. A. A. 2, 3, 4: Musical Glee CI I GI-4.1 Vice-chairrnan 2: Music Fesle- - , val 2: omecoml loal' Commillee 4: Pageanl' I: Varie 3, 4.9 0 CI , G , ,, ass y I 0 2 3 4, '. . Ben93ifff'f'-'Glas ' JEAN FEL--G. A. A. I. 2. 3, 4. Bend swf 4: , , , usic Fes :val , 2, 3, 4, Homecomi q Floal C CI. S+ H 3. B kfb H I 2 3 4. B b H Commilfee I, 2, 3, Homecoming Sfunl Commillee Us Ipper a ' as e a age 5 I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Co illee 3: Pageanl I: Lafin Club I, 2, 3, 4: Gym Exhibirion 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4. JOSEPH E. HASHEK --Track 3: Homecoming Floal Com- millee 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 2: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Slamp Club 2, 3: Lalin Club 2, 3. MARYLIN HEILMANN --Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Orcheslra 4: Band 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commiflee I, 2: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Gym Exhibilion 2: Chrislmas Play 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: Class Play 4. MARGARET S. HELD --G. A. A. 3, 4: Bend Slalil 4: Baskelball 3, 4: Volleyball I, 2, 3, Head ol Volleyball 4: Track 4: Baseball 2, 3, 4: Sludenl Council I: Guidance Chairman 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club 3, 4: Soccer 2: lnfrarnurals 2, 3, 4: Tumbling Club 2, 4: Gym Exhibilion 2, 4: Field Hockey 4: S, A. A. I, 4. JOYCE HERMAN --G. A. A. 2, 3: Bend Slafl 4: Volley- ball 2: Glee Club 2, 3: Mixed Chorus 2, 3: Guidance Vice-chairman 2: Music Fesliyal 3: Homecoming Flval Commillee 2: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Soccer I, 2: Prom Queen 3: Social Commillee 2: Gym Exhibirion 2: S. A. A. 4. JOHN JAEKEL-- Campus Clipper S+aI'l 3: N. F. L. I, 2. 3, 4: Debale I, 4: Exlernporaneous Speaking I: Tennis 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commilfee I, 2, 4: Prom Com- rnillee 3: Pageanl I: Arl Club 3, 4: Sludenl Council I. lee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Band I, , 3 :Guidance Secrelary 3: Musi Feslival I, 2 , 4: ecomin Ioal C mmillee 4: mecominq nl m ' , ' roragom ' ' , . Troupers I: Soccer I, 2, 3: Boosler Club 4: Bowling 4: Tumbling Club 2, 4: Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: G Ex- hibilion 2, 4: AII School Play 3: ' v Hockey usi- cal Variely Show 3, 4: Class PI JUNE J. KOLAR--Volleyball I: Band 3, 4: G ' nce Secrelary I: Music Feslival 4: Pageanl I: Gy xhib' lion 2: Musical Variely Show 0 o WESLEY W. KOPP -A Track 3, 4: Glee I Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Band I, 2, 3 4: Music esliyal I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee 3, 4: Horne- orning Sfuni Commillee 2: Pageanl I: lnlramurals , 4: I School Play Q: Musi a Va ' ly Show 4. MA T --B nd 'ra 3 r : s Iipper 'Ia , : . F. L. , 4: e e , : ec ama- lion I, 2, 3WB, 4: Homecoming F I Commilfee I, 2, 3: Homecoming Slunl Commillee I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Com- millee 3: Page-anl I: Sludenl Congress 4: Soccer I: Class Play 4: Ring Commillee 3: Boosler Club I, 2, 4: Tumbling Club I, 2, 4: Social Commillee I, 2, 3, 4: Gym Exhibilion 2, 4: Variely Show 2: S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4, PEARL A. KUHN-- Bend Slakl 4: Campus Clipper Slall 3, 4: Glee Club 2, 3: Mixed Chorus 2, 3: Music Feslival 3: Homecoming Slunf Commillee 4: Pageanl I: Gym Exhibilion 2: Musical Variely Show 3: Class Play 4. WILBERT J. LANDVATTER--Guidance Chairman 41 Homecoming Floal' Commillee 3: Prom Commillee 3. Page Filly-one If I JOHN M. LANG--Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club I: Mixed Chorus I: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Music Fesliyal I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageani I: Soccer I, 2, 3: Box- ing I, 4: Inlramurals I, 2, 3, 4. LOUIS LEMKE--Volleyball I, 2: Track 2, 3, 4: Home- coming Floaf Commillee 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Inframurals I, 2: Saluiaforian 4. VIRGINIA M. LOEBE- Bend Slaii 4: Campus Clipper Sialzi 4: Debale I: Declamalion 2, Exlemporaneous Reading 3: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Sfudeni Council Secrelary 4: Guidance Chairman I: Music Fesfival I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commiflee I, 2, 3: Homecoming Sfunl Commiliee 2, 3: Prom Commiflee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club I, 2, 3, 4: W. B. Troupers I: Class Play 4: Operelfa I: Ring Commilrlee 3: Tumbling Club I, 2: Social Commiflee 2, 3, 4: Gym Exhibilion 2: Variefy Show 2: S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4: Musical Variefy Show 3, 4: Orcheslra 2, 4. BETTY McCARGO-- Bend STaI I 4: Campus Clipper Sfaii 3: Class Secrefary-Ireasurer 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Guidance Chairman 2, 3: Music Feslival I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Commiliee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club I, 2, 3, 4: Class Play 4: Tumbling Club 2: Social Commil- 'ree 2, 3. 4: Gym Exhibilion 2: Varieiy Show 2: S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4: Musical Variely Show 3, 4. PHYLLIS MICHELS -- Debale I: Glee Club 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival 3, 4: Homecoming Floaf Commi+Iee 4: Prom Commifiee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club I, 2, 3, 4: Gym Exhibilion 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: Class Play 4. JANE MILLER--Slinger High School: Baskelball I: Vol- leyball I: Baseball I: Wesl Bend High School: Decla- malion 3, 4: Baskelball 2: Volleyball 2: Track 2: Base- ball 2: Guidance Secreiary 2: Homecoming Floar Com- miflee 4: Homecoming Sfunl Commillee 3: Prom Com- millee 3: Soccer 2: Tumbling Club 2: DORIS E. MOTHS -- Bend Siafi 4: Glee Club 2, 3: Mixed Chorus 2, 3: Pageanf I: Gym Exhibifion 2: Musical Variely Show 3: Music Feslival 3: Class Play 4. RUTHE NEUBAUERU Homecoming Floaf Commiflee 2: Homecoming Siunl Commi+'ree I, 3: Prom Commiflee 3: Pageanr It Laiin Club 2, 3, 4: Social Commilfee 2, 4. AGATHA ANNE OTTMER--G. A. A. I, 2, Sporls Man- ager 3, 3WB, 4: Bend Slalii 2, 4: Baskefball I, 2, 3, 4: Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: Track I, 2, 3, 4: Baseball I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Sludenf Council 2: Guidance Vice-chairman I, 4: Music Feslival 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 2. 3, 4: Home- coming Slunl Commillee I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Commiilee 3: Pageanl I: Soccer I, 2, 3: Boosler Club I, 2, 4: Tumbling Club I, 2: Social Commillee 2: Gym Exhibi- Iion 2: S. A. A. I, 2. 3, 4: Field Hockey 4: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: Class Play 4. MARCELLA PERSZYK--Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Orcheslra I, 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival I, 2, 3, 4: Pageanf I: Operella I: Gym Exhibifion 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4. MIRIAM PRENTICE -- Campus Clipper Slalzl 2: Declama- lion 2, 4: Exfemporaneous Reading 3WB: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Sludenf Council 3, 4: Guidance Chairman 4: Music Fesiival I, 2, 3, 4: Guid- ance Vice-chairman 3: Homecoming Floaf Commillee 2: Homecoming Sluni Commiflee 3: Prom Commiffee 3: Pageani' I: Lafin Club I, 2, 3, 4: Class Play 4: Ring Cofnrnillee 3: Social Commillee 3: Gym Exhibilion 2: Variely Show 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4. LUCILLE PROEBER--Campus Clipper Sfaif 3, 4: Debale I: Exlemporaneous Speaking I: Glee Club I, 2, 3: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3: Music Feslival 2: Pageanl I: Gym Exhibifion 2: Musical Variefy Show 3. Page Fiily-Iwo Graduates of '41 . . MARY ANN PUESTOW--G. A. A. I, 2, 3WB, 4: Bend Slaii 4: Baskelball I, 2, 3, 4: Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: Ten- nis I: Track I, 2, 3, 4: Baseball I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Music Fesliyal I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal' Commilfee I, 3, 4: Soccer I, 2, 3: Boosier Club I, 2, 4: Bowling I, 4: Tumbling Club I, 2: Gym Exhibilion 2: S. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: Class Play 4. ROBERT C. RATTRAY-- Bend Slalili Edilor 4: Campus Clipper Slafl 2, 3WB, Edilor 4: N, F. L. 2, 3, 4: Debale 2, 3WB, 4WB: Exlemporaneous Speaking 3WB, 4: Class Presidenf 2: Sludenl Council 2, 4: Guidance Chairman I, 2: Homecoming Sfunf Commiffee I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Commillee 3: Sluclenl Congress 4: Class Play 4: Boosfer Club 4: Social Commillee 2, 3, 4: Variely Show 2. DOLORES REDIG -- G. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4: Declamalion I: Baskelball I, 2, 3, 4: Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Orcheslra I, 2, 3, 4: Sludenl Council 2: Guidance Secreiary I, 4: Music Feslival I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Sfunl Commiilee 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club I, 2, 3, 4: Soccer I, 2, 3: Gym Exhibilion 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: Bend Slali 4: Class Play 4. FREDERICK J. REGNER-- Bend Slaff 4: Debafe I: Fool- ball 3WB, 4WB: Class Presidenl I: Sludeni Council I, 2, 3: Guidance Chairman I, 2: Homecoming FIoa+ Com- miriee I, 2, 3: Homecoming Sfunl Commifiee I, 2: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Track 3WB: Lafin Club 3: Ring Commiflee 3: Social Commilfee I, 2, 3. HAROLD L. RIESCH -- Pageanl I: Equipmenl Manager 4. ALVIN C. ROECKER--Track 3, 4: Homecoming Floai' Commiflee 4: Inframurals 2, 3, 4: Class Play 4. CLYDE A. ROEHRDANZ--Baskelball I, 2: Foolball 3. 4WB: Baseball 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commiilee 4: Homecoming Siunf Commillee 4: Pageanl I: Boxing I, 2, 4: Wreslling I, 4. LEWIS ROSE-- Bend Slalii 4: N. F. L. 2, 3, 4: Debale 2, 3WB, 4: Exfemporaneous Speaking 2, 3, 4: Foofball I, 2, 3, 4WB: Track I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Orcheslra 2, 3, 4: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Valedicforian 4: Guidance Chairman 3: Music Fesli- val I, 2. 3, 4: Homecoming Floaf Commiflee I, 2: Homecoming Siuni Commillee I, 2: Prom Commiifee 3: Pageanl I: Sludenl Congress 4: Class Play 4: Social Commiffee I, 2, 3: S. A. A. I: Musical Variefy Show 3, 4. LOIS ROSENTHAL--6. A. A. 3: Bend Slall 3, 4: Campus Clipper SIai'I 3, 4: N, F, L. 2, 3, 4: Debale I, 4: Decla- malion 2WB, 3WB, 4: Class Secrelary-ireasurer 3: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Guidance Chairman I: Guidance Vice-chairman 2: Music Fesfival I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floai Commillee I, 2, 3: Home- coming Sfunl Commillee I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Commilfee 3: Boosfer Club I, 2, Secrelary 4: Tumbling Club I, 2, 4: Social Commilfee I, 2, 3, 4: Gym Exhibilion 2, 4: S. A. A, I, 2, 3, 4: All School Play 3: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: Reading Play Commillee 4: Class Play 4. MARGARET M. RUF--G. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4: Baskelball I, 2, 3, 4: Volleyball 2, 3: Track 3: Baseball 2, 3: Orches- Ira 2, 3, 4: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Drum Maiorefle 3, 4: Music FesI'ival 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floai Commiflee 3, 4: Prom CommiI+ee 3: Pageanl I: Slamp Club I, 2: Soccer I, 2, 3: Gym Exhibilion 2: Field Hockey 4: Musical Variely Show 3, 4. VERNA MARIE SCHEID -- Campbellsporl High School: Baskelball I, 2: Orcheslra I, 2, 3: Band I, 2, 3: Music Fesfiyal I, 2, 3: Wesi Bend High School: Band 4: Music- al Variely Show 4. MARION RUTH SCHLOEMER -- Glee Club I, 2: Mixed Chorus I, 2: Pageanf I: Gym Exhibilion 2. L. GORDON HOOD -- Foofball I, 4: Baskelball 2, 3: Prom Commillee 3: Homecoming 2, 3: Pageanl' I. John M. Lang Louis Lemlce Virginia M. BeHy Phyllis Michels Jane Miller Agaflna Anne Offmer Marcella Perszylr Lucille Mary Ann Puesfow Roberi C. Rafiray Dolores Redig Frederick J Harold L. Riesch Alvin C. Roeclcer Lois Rosenlhal Margaref M. Ruf Verna Marie Scheid THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ON Loebe McCargo Doris E. Mofhs Rufhe Neubauer Miriam Prenfice Proeber . Regner Clyde A. Roehrdanz Lewis Rose Marion Rufh Schloemer L. Gordon Hood E BEND Page Fiffy-llwree Roberf E. Schloemer Eleanore Schneider John Schneider Donald O. Schoedel 'Jacque D. Schmidf Daniel J. Seeborh Shirley Seperslry Eugene W. Smi+h Roberf S onne nlaerg Vivia n Tessman Ralph G. E. Tews Helena Tranholm Jean Troedel Waller A. Tuchscherer Bernice Voelrs Roberf Vornholf Charles Waller 'Marvin Werniclre Ralph H. waraaus Richard T. Wendelborn Dorofhy Wesiphal Wal+er J. Weyres Phyllis Payne Mains Dennis Mouzalcis Mary Kafherine Wiskirchen Doris Yahr Richard P. Yogersf Rcberf J. Ziegler THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND ROBERT E. SCHLOEMER -- Glee Club I, 2: Pageanl' I. ELEANORE 'SCHNEIDER--G. A. A. 3. 4: Bend Slail 4: Baskelball 4: Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: Baseball 2, 3: Glee Club I, 2: Guidance Secrelary 3: Pageanl I: Soccer I, 2: Gym Exhibilion 2: Field Hockey 4. JOHN SCHNEIDER-e Volleyball 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 2: Pageanl I: Soccer I: Boxing I, 2: lnlramurals I, 2, 3, 4: Horseshoes 2. DONALD O. SCHOEDEL--Baskelball 2, 3, 4: Baseball I, 2, 3, 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: lnlramurals I, 2, 3, 4: All School Play 3. DANIEL J. SEEBOTH -- SI. Philips High lChicago, III.I Band I: Lalin Club I: Wauwalosa High: Wesl' Bend High: Glee Club 3, 4: Mixed Chorus 3, 4: Band 3, 4: Music Feslival 3, 4: Prom Commillee 3: Musical Variely Show 3. SHIRLEY SEPERSKY -- Exlemporaneous Speaking I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2: Homecoming Floal Commillee I: Pag- eanl' I: Home Economics Club I: Lalin Club 4: Gym Exhibilion 2. EUGENE W. SMITH -- Class Presidenl' I: Guidance Chair- man I, 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee I: Homecom- ing Slunl Commillee 2: Pageanl I: Lalin Club I, 2. ROBERT SONNENBER6 --Foolball I, 2WB, 3WB, 4WB: Class Presidenl 3: Sludenl Council 2, 3: Guidance Vice- chairman 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee 3: Home- coming Slunl Commillee I, 3, 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Prom King 3: Baslcelball 2, 3. VIVIAN TESSMAN -- G. A. A. I, 2, 3: Declamalion 4: Exlemporaneous Reading 4: Baskelball I, 2, 3: Volleyball I, 2, 3: Track I, 2, 3: Baseball I, 2, 3: Pageanl I: Home Economics Club I, 2: Lalin Club,3, 4: Soccer 2, 3: Gym Exhibilion 2. f I RALPH G. E. TEWS -- Concordia College: lnlramural I, 2, 3: Pageanl I, 2: Wesl Bend High: Foofball 4: Track 4. HELENA TRANHOLM --Volleyball I, 2, 3: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3, 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club 2, 3, 4: Gym Exhibilion 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: G. A. A. I, 2, 3. JEAN TROEDEL--G. A. A. I, 2, 3WB, 4: Baskelball I, 2, 3, 4: Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: Track 3: Baseball 2, 3: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Prom Commillee 3: Pageant I: Soccer I, 2, 3' Boosler Club 2, 4: Tumbling Club 2, 4: Gym Exhibilion 2: Field Hockey 4: Musical Variely Show 3, 4. WALTER A. TUCHSCHERER- Bend Slamcl 3, 4: Campus Clipper Siaili 2, 3V!I3, 4: Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4: Guid- ance Chairman 3: Music Feslival 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee 2, 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club 2, 3, 4: Class Play 4: Business Manager 4: Variely Show 2: All School Play 3: Chrislmas Play 4: Reading Play Commil- lee 4: Badger Boys' Slale 3. BERNICE VOEKS--Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival I, 3, 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Home Economics Club I: Secrelary 2, 3, Presidenl 4: Lalin Club 3, Secrelary- lreasurer 4: Gym Exhibifion 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4. Graduates of '41 ROBERT VORNHOLT--- LaCrosse High: Glee Club 3: Mixed Chorus 3: Operella 3: Boosler Club 3: lnlra- murals 2: Wesl Bend High: Baskelball 4: Boosler Club 4: Inlramurals 4: Class Play 4. CHARLES WALTER-- Bend SlaPl 4: Baskelball 2, 3, 4: Foolball I, 3, 4WB: Track I, 2: Baseball 3: Guidance Vice-chairman I: Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 2: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: S, A. A. I, 2. RALPH H. WARDIUS -- Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4: Music Feslival 2, 3, 4: Pageanl I: Boxing 4: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: F. F. A. Treasurer 4. RICHARD T. WENDELBORN -- Pageanl I. DOROTHY WESTPHAL-- Glee Club I, 2, 3: Mixed Chor- us 2, 3: Music Feslival 3: Homecoming Floal Commillee 2: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Lalin Club 4: Gym Exl-iibilion 2: Musical Variely Show 3. WALTER J. WEYRES- Bend Slalii 4: N. F. L. 3, 4: De- bale 3, 4: Oralory 3: Volleyball 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus 4: Music Feslival 4: Prom Commillee 3: Sludenl Congress 4: lnlramurals 2, 3, 4: Social Commillee 3: Badger Boys' Slale 3. PHYLLIS PAYNE MAINS-- Volleyball 2: Baseball 2: Glee Club I: Homecoming Floal Commillee 4: Prom Com- millee 3: Pageanl I: Home Economics Club I, 2, 3, Treasurer 4: Slamp Club Secrelary-Ireasurer I: Soccer 2: Boosler Club 4: Gym Exhibilion 2: Class Play 4. DENNIS MOUZAKIS--Track I, 2, 4: Orcheslra I, 2, 3: Band 2, 3: Music Feslival I, 2, 3: Homecoming Floal Commillee 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pageanl I: Camera Club 2: Musical Va- riefy Show 3: Foolball 3. MARY KATHERINE WISKIRCHEN -- Bend Slaiil 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mixed Chorus I, 2, 3, 4: Orcheslra 4: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Guidance Chairman 2: Music Fesfival I, 2, 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commiflee 2: Home- coming Slunl Commillee 4: Prom Commillee 3: Pag- eanl I: Home Economics Club I, 2: Gym Exhibilion 2: Musical Vaiiely Show 3, 4. DORIS YAHR-- Porl Washingfon High School: Chrislmas Play I: Declamalion I: Wesl Bend High: Bend Sfalil 4: Declamalion 2: Exlemporaneous Reading 3, 4: Guidance Chairman 3: Guidance Secrelary 2: Homecoming Floal' Commiflee 2: Homecoming Sfunl Commillee 3: Prom Commillee 3: Lalin Club 4: Class Play 4. RICHARD P. YOGERST--Exfemporaneous Speaking 4: Glee Club 3, 4: Mixed Chorus 3, 4: Guidance Vice- chairman 3: Music Feslival 3, 4: Homecoming Slunl Commillee 3: Prom Commifree 3: Pageanl I: Social Commillee 2: Musical Variely Show 3, 4: Homecoming Floal Commillee 2, 3, 4: Class Play 4. ROBERT J. ZIEGLER-- Mixed Chorus I, 2: Orcheslra I, 2: Pageanl I. ROBERT ARENDSA--Green Bay, Easl High School: Fool- ball 3: VVesl' Bend High: Foolball 4WB. ROBERT A. BOHN'-- Baseball 3, 4: lnlramurals I, 2, 3, 4: Baskelball 2. JACQUE D. SCHMIDT'--Sludenl Council 3: Guidance Vice-chairman 2: Homecoming Floal Commillee I, 2: Homecoming Slunl Commilfee I, 2: Pageanl' I: Slamp Club I, 2: Ring Comrnillee 3: Social Commillee I, 2, 3. ' No piclure. Page Filly live . Kylja, s . 'Mi . A fl ' V 'T . 0, 'J A f j J , rg i ' -1 r 0 JA 5 U 0 e ne Te n T caTiOn ' eac i sTudenTs rse which Mr. Schuelke arranges. This year ' how use ed aTiOn.'A ade i knowle hree speakers, prominenT in The educaTion ' wo be 'TTle us ' no pl or iTs uTiliza- Tield, addressed The sTudenT body. The TirsT '- T l Tic? were 'pT in mi or if ewere ignoranT man To speak was Mr. D. Walker, assisTanT f I fs To Th T caTion r w'-2' he is be su' ediTor OT l.iberTy Magazine who sTressed The ' T I l . ' haT each sTudenT could accom lish an - ' f - . s lk il f ii p'?'nTT p Y i T. 'C e C all. an OT T e dance Thing he wished iT he seT his mind To iT and had C TTee, pr :ded our sTu n body . . . 1 I T . . . The courage To sTick TO his guns. His clever Wi a mo , ex nsive program vocaTion- , ', , , . ' . . meThOds OT lecTuring capTured The individual , f jl guidan so T T no one need a e diThculTy , , J a T' ', ,in sel ng his r her liT fs w The program sTudenTs aHenTIOn' K Q pf ,ca did Hof F , genie,-ed solely The second speaker, Dr. Lammers oT The The O Qigong! fork, ever. Educafion- Milwaukee Public School SysTem, warned The Y T I Ce was He dl iving Sfudenfs Con- sTudenTs againsT being hasTy abOuT Taking are . dvice and 'd in raising iheir schalasne highly peid defense iehs beeeuse The iebs K, J 5Ta ings and in ge ding Courses begf 5uiTed would be desTrOyed wiTh The reTurn OT normal T heir chosen 'O . A vocaTiOnal program is TDUSTVYGSS COf1CllllOVlS- . rovudedyever' Tlief Yeah OF-7eVllnQ Tf9.T.T'e The Third and lasT speaker was Mr. Merri- i STUTZTGHT- 'es nd SF-7'3Ve'T'mf? flCT'V'T'e5 man, The regisTrar OT The UniversiTy OT Wis- I VTTNCT' T' Te' he rfuncg OUT Thelr llves' SO' consin, who Told The sTudenTs ThaT iT They had . 5 C'f?l Qulda 9 TEUQTTT The Tundamemal rulee OT nOT Tound one Tield, a sTudy. or problem Tor 5 1 1' eTigueTTe and social living. These Tour general which fhey had 6 Consuming inieresil Hwy had K Page FiTTy-six Types OT guidance have provided Tor The Train- ing which The academic sTudies cannoT supply. The aims OT The guidance program were TO help The individual know himselT, his inTeresTs, his ThOughTs, and abiliTiesg TO analyze his Op- pOrTuniTiesg To help him adiusT himselT To all siTuaTiOns: and, above all, To presenT a basis Tor The TuTure plans OT individuals. Mr. Scheul- ke has recognized The old axiom OT sTudenT guidance by mainTaining ThaT selT-guidance is The besT guidance. The program presenTs The TacTs and parTiculars OT many iobs and allows The sTudenTs Their Tinal TesTs aid The sTudenTs in making The viTal selT- analysis which Torms The basis Tor all decisions. An exTensive reTerence choice. STandardized shelT is provided Tor guidance maTerial in The library. The wealTh OT maTerial which iT cOnTains reTers TO every conceivable vocaTion or proTession. A TavOriTe parT OT The guidance program Trom The sTudenTs' sTandpoinT is The lecTure Tailed in Their high school work. ln addiTion. on six diTTerenT occasions, speakers Trom The local Tirms came TO school and spoke To spe- cial groups abouT individual jobs. These speak- ers and The chairmen OT Their groups are shown On The opposiTe page. The enTire philosophy OT guidance perhaps was besT summed up by PrOTessOr Jones OT The UniversiTy OT Pennsylvania when he said, Guidance is Tounded upon The principle OT The conservaTion OT human liTe and human energy: iT is based upon The TacT OT human need . . . COndiTiOns abouT us convince us ThaT human energy is wasTed, lives are mis- spenT, misery and disasTer resulT Trom lack OT direcTiOn and unwise selecTion OT OccupaTiOn, OT recreaTiOn, OT companions, and OT educa- Tional opporTuniTies. Mr. Schuelke wiTh unTiring eTTorT has pro- vided This successTul and -scienTiTic schedule OT guidance. 4 H M- w,.......1h. ,, Top --Vocalional Guidance Reference Shelf. Cenler, Row One-- A. Kieclchaler, A. Kissinger, E. Eklo, P. Goshaw, G, Hernbel, Row Two -- H. Sferlen, E. Smilh C. Claus, R. Vornholl, E. Siler, E. Slcaliskey, Row Three- W. Grogan, T. Simesfer, VV. Harlh, A. Heidner, D. Mc Lane, R, Boclen. Bollom, Row One -- E. Smilh, C. Schloerner, P. Kauih, A, Kuehllhau, K. Welch, H, Hackloarfh, H. Schroeder, E. Kraemer, D. McLane: Row Two --Sgr. Spielman, R. Marfh L. Rose, A. Berg, R. Vornholr, Mrs. K. Welch, V. Forbes R. Knapp, S. Fisher, L. Hausmanng Row Three --J. Lanq, M Kuehlfhau, D. Goefz, C. Croqan, A. Johann, V. Geib, G Feilen, B. M. Benilce, G. Lenz, D. Flaherly. Top, Row One -- P. Basil, R. Schachl, H. Schroeder, A. Han- cocli, J. Schmidt W, Harlh, L. Oslrander, Row Two -- A. Bilslein, G. Feilen, J. Cameron, A. Finch, F. Lanclvaller, M. Kuehllhau. Cenfer, Row One -- C. CoI!En5, A. Langenbach, C. Schloe- mer, R. Endlich, H. Arnfieldq Row Two -- W. Grady, V. Forbes, G. Alfendorf, M. Held, W. Morrison, J. Geib: Row Three -- R, Rainey, M. Hansen, H, Berlchollz, R. Sonnen- berg, Bollrorn, Row One--R. Bennelf, F. Murphy, A, Ciriaclcs, Furlong, L. Miller, W. Buchelf, R. Kloppenbergy Row Two-- P. Kaesberg, W. Bucheli, H. Slelzlen, E. Maxon, A. Weas- ler, B. Kremsreiler. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page Filly-seven Q i Exlemporaneous Speaking , ,Lf x U' I Ji vffr W W 112 riff , Wg3f,Zly:Qy'Q,,,iMeIt rs of Merit -- he WB 5 l M . VQ1'lllffii Mm jpfjgo all Tennis Regner ,pf M 7 ,ffm 1' iff! if l Charles Waller Donald Ollen Leroy Chapman Auslin Hancock Alois Kissinger Don Heid Leroy Weinand Paul Kaesberg Lyman Unruh Roberl Hiller Roberl Jaekel Ralph Klein Elmer Schmicll Roberl Rallray Exlemporaneous Reading Mirabel Hansen CI d R ii d Omlory y e oe r anz Gordon Hackbarlh G I, Dam Flallerly George Allendorl of Roberl Sonnenloerg Dan Flaherly Debale George Pele Roberl Kaempler X X3 Ralph BSMEH Warren Grady Robeiul' S Chi r Oh Jaekel Allen Ciriacks Waffen B 9 l , erl Rallray Donald Glander , A ' an Flaherly Russell Pelri , , i Wells Grogan Francis Murphy Sludenl Fl! if lj Mirabel Hansen Jerome Kies Wf r Ucll er Waller Weyres Lewis R059 r l A Lewis Rose Harold Riesch, Manager XC us f ,J o f Q l A Campus Clipper Baseball l 9 f J George Pele Ralph Duenkel Don Glander Clyde Roehrdanz Roberl Beck Howard Slander Don Rounseville Leroy Hausmann Roberl Bohn Roberl Caspari Jerome Kies Allen Ciriacks Ardell Schmicll Henry Gumm Track Wells Grogan Lewis Rose Auslin Hancock Ray Hinsenkamp Ray Becker John Schalles Warren Grady Melvin Derge Cheer Leaders Audrey Woll Belly Lou Barens Marion Gonnering ei OP Z Gruelzmacher ne Hanclke arylin Heilmann Adeline Johann Wesley Kopp Virginia Loebe Belly McCargo Nan Ollmer Miriam Prenlice Mary Ann Pueslow Dolores Redig Lewis Rose Lois Rosenlhal Helen Tranholm Jean Troedel Bernice Voeks Mary Wiskirchen l f J lil! rj l I l 'V e 'b ' V' r' ,l li!! 1 I J Orcheslra Wells Grogan Adeline Johann Jean Kollel Marcella Perszyk Dolores Redig Lewis Rose Margarel Rul Lucille Proeber Waller Wendl Jean Horlamus Joan Cameron Rulh Jaekel Bend Mary Kuehllhau Roberl Rallray Waller Weyres Waller Tuchscherer Honor Roll Lewis Rose, Valediclorian Louis Lemke, Salulalorian Joan Cameron Dolores Boellcher Paul Kaesloerg Roberl Rallray Pearl Kuhn Lucille Proeber Rulhe Neubauer Leo Groh Waller Weyres Lois Rosenlhal Dan Elaherly Alvin Roecker Wells Grogan Miriam Prenlice THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Capturin the Spirit of Homec min The Tense exciTemenT oT homecoming sTarTed almosT Two weeks beTore The big day. There was a greaT deal oT secrecy, Tor The besT sTunT and TloaTs help To win The LiTTle Red Cup. In The Top picTure we see RiTa MaTenaer and Norma Glenn working on some implemenTs Tor The sophomore sTunT which was given in rhyme. The sec- ond picTure shows The Roman inTluence which builT The iunior sTunT. For Their hilarious sTunT, The seniors saTirized The hisTory oT Columbus discovering Ameri- ca. However, iT Took The Treshmen To show The pep, co-operaTion and Team work which were needed To win. FirsT oT all, on Friday aTTernoon all sTudenTs ad- iourned To The TooTball Tield To hunT Tor The school colors. The Tinder is allowed To lighT The big bonTire ThaT evening. WalTer Gundrum, who is shown riding TriunnphanTly on Jack Bingham's shoulders in The Third picTure, was The lucky boy This year. AT prompTly 7:00 o'clock Friday nighT, The pa- rade oT TloaTs began To move, The seniors leading and each class Tollowing in order. As soon as The high school campus was reached, The TloaTs were dis- manTled and all burnable arTicles Tlung inTo The Tire. As The blaze spread, and The crowd was Torced To move TarTher and TarTher back, we saw This group in The boTTom picTure, waTching and preparing Tor some sudden rush oT exciTemenT. When The sparks Tinally died away, The lasT sTudenT deparTed wiTh happy ThoughTs Tor The coming game. The nexT aTTernoon aT 1:30 The band paraded down Main STreeT, showing OTT The drum maioreTTes in Tull array. Cheering sTudenTs Tollowed gaily along, as iT marched Toward The high school Tor The game. AT The dance in The evening, Though The game had been losT, high spiriT sTill prevailedg and when Tho homecoming Trophy, The LiTTTe Red Cup, was given To The Treshrnen, voices rose in cheers. They main- Tain They are going To win iT every year. he R, MaTenaer and N. Glenn work on The sophomore TloaTs. The juniors puT on a Roman sTunT. WaI+er Gundrum Tound The TooThpick and goT a Tree ride. The bonTire is reTlecTed in each happy Tace. Pa ge FiTTy-n P 4 ' M l V ' ucating Hand LeTT--Mr. Rice, direc- Tor oT The vocaTional school. RighT-- R. Schloemer Tiles his proiecTy Mr. Glenn Johnson insTrucTs a pupil. l.eTT-- B. Kippenhan, L. Hausmann, D. OTTen, J. Schneider. RiqhT-- E. Wagner, R. Beclcer. Since January I, I94O, The VVesT Bend Public School sysTem has boasTed an excellenT school oT vocaTional and adulT educaTion. The board, consisfing of WalTer E, Malzahn, presidenTg Mrs. Jos. J. l-luber, secreTary3 I-l. A. ArnTield, SeTh Meyer, and D. E. McLane, engaged Mr. B. D. Rice as direcTor oT The school To replace Mr. G. A. Wiclcman who resigned The posiTion OcTober I, l94O. The TirsT vocaTional classes were organized February 5, I94O. Courses were oTTered in commercial worlc, Trade and indusTry, disTribu- Tive occupaTions and general subiecTs. The en- ThusiasTic response oT The Townspeople To The opporTuniTies oTTered necessiTaTed The laTer addiTion of an agriculTure course and addi- Tional commercial courses. Miss CaTherine SchmiTz, commercial insTrucTorg Mr. l. E. Holz- Page SixTy hueTer, Teacher oT agriculTureg and Mr. Glenn Johnson, Teacher oT Trade and indusTrial work, were employed To meeT The growing demand Tor insTrucTion. There are TwenTy-six classes serving 580 people in boTh day and nighT school acTiviTy. The program oT The vocaTional school has an eye Tor presenT day condiTions, Tor provi- sions have been made Tor The Training oT de- Tense workers. Ten deTense Training classes are serving over IOO Trainees Tor deTense indus- Tries. In addiTion The vocaTional school co-oper- aTed wiTh The N. Y. A. by providing educa- Tional Training Tor The unemployed youTh OT The region. These young men and women laTer Tound iolos in specially esTablished worlc oppor- TuniTies ThroughouT The counTry. School' 'ifo Cohsiiisibii ' ' G 1 .,. x , , , ,, k T . rt 9 ly' 1 , , .5 5 , - . The year has passed in review, and now, before closing The cover, we Take a lasT glance aT persons who have been in The news. The sTudenT's foremosT consideraTion is his scho- lasTic work which is pursued in boTh The pracTical and Theo- reTical fields. Miss Heidner, shown here wiTh Dolly BoeTT- cher, combines local and counTy hisTory wiTh her regular American hisTory classes. Miss Schmifz Teaches shorThand in The vocaTional We Nil 3555 T f'- school, giving commercial sTudenTs The pracTical founda- , x Y 1 W' - Tion which will fiT Them for iolos in indusTry. ' :Qi I An imporTanT person in The adminisTraTion of our - at fy X 3 school is Miss June KarsTen, The office secreTary. She com- , AQ, --43 .V pleTes The Tasks which arise ouT of a school day. I Y Mary KuehlThau and Viviane Geib found pleasure in - f performing iournalisTic surgery on some Bend picTures X which needed Trimming. The social aspecT of school life XE is Topped each year by The Junior Prom. King Henry ri Q X Gumm and his Queen, Joy Schneider, had fun making The I ' fs picfure below, for The oxen yoke provided The afmosphere of Teamwork. The ediTors of The Bend, Mary KuehlThau and RoberT RaTTray are shown as They worked ouT The annual's policies. THE NINETEEIXP HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Page S1xTy one uf Y'rs+ 'JV ' J ' 2 v ' fm L Q., ,kv af' Q , my -f , f lt 4 yy W V M 'J Y . U ' X' f f - Qa 1 - by uk Q' 3 p.. 1 0 Q 0 0 f 1 D' N I ii 1 fl lil ' A ', , My 0 5 , wi:-Aff' Coirelafed wilh 'rhle serioyyside ollschool are Jrhe hospiial bed which claimed him for +wo ,VCV ljlae evenydayivccurrenks in sludienr life. Some weeks aller he underwenlr an appendeclomy. 4 frfare common? aCe 5 5me aregumque' buf all are Roland Kickbush Jroolc 'rhe slrale lral-Fic de- -! mle9'Aal Pells ',Gl+ll'le WEN- parlmenhs driving lesl as did many olhers. l lis ,bf In - ,Bjll Kippeinhan, hlceeper of lhe lighls, is expression be+raysaJimmy Lynchinihe making, ,V his ,SMJWU Checking 56519 new equlpmenl Wlllcll Annually, Jrhe doors of rhe school swing , Q A Wf3Q!f5U ClW55edilOV llle B?nClxl3Y llle Class Ol wide +o admijr lhe people of lhe dislricl for 'V 1, Milo- .Q Q! ' Open House nighl. Bob lvlarlh is shown regis- i,. V-Uwe American pod of Wesf Bend Tering +wo of The many who aflended in I94O. lg K helps sludenls in lheir observance of na+ional A favgrife Wifh H19 bays ig The Manual fd ,, holidays by providing pafriolic programs of an inspirafional nature. A+ commencemenr ex- ercises Jrhe poslyawards lwo medals +o lhe oulsranding boy and girl in The senior class. These covered awards are given in recognilion of scholasiic abilify, personalijry and general adaplabilily io sludenf life. Mr. Hildebrand, io whom Jrhe l94l Bend is dedicaled, is shown as he lay comforlably in THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-ONE BEND Arfs Course. Earl Klulcas is shown making use of a new iig-saw fa cur our an inrricale wood design. The class achievemenl cup is a coveled award, lhe presenfalion of which 'falls under lhe supervision of Jrhe Sludenl Council. Marie Knoeclc is shown worlcing oul lhe poinls accu- mulaled by The various classes in 'rheir year long efforf for supremacy. 0 ' . . -, . , . 'iff af f swear sf- fp T ' -, J- .X- T '-- ' f ' '- 'Wd' 1 7-v 1f- Y YFIII the 0 5 ,L f-Wr ' Lfrfra' T ff f Necessary TuncTions are perTormed Tor The school and sTudenTs by unsung men oT impor- Tance. The year in review would noT be com- pleTe unless each oT These was given a TiTTing menTion. Among The hard-working iuniors lnoT in- cluded in The group picTurel is Mrs. Henry O. Regner, who enrolled The second semesTer To compleTe a deTerred high school educaTion. lnTroducing--Mr. Roy T. Grignon, hard working chairman oT The WesT Bend High School AThleTic Program. He is shown giving insTrucTions To Ralph Wardius and Wesley Kopp beTore They mixed iT up. WiTh Mr. Grig- non's help, The boxers puT on Two successTul boxing Tourneys. In addiTion To The newly creaTed boxing acTiviTy, Mr. Grignon is responsible Tor The schedules oT all aThleTic evenTs. ln' spiTe oT his many duTies, Mr. Grignon is conTinually seek- ing new ideas Tor The purpose oT sTimulaTing pep in The sTudenT body. lnTroducing -- Earl Guzzie Baer, and Ted Zarling, keepers oT The door. These men kepT our corridors and classrooms clean and The campus in a sTaTe oT beauTy. lnTroducing -- lvlr. HuberT Becker, ChieT Engineer oF WesT Bend High. Mr. Becker and M I W -f R W d' , M . 6' . 9 ar Kolp riqnon E' B rIinq ff' his helpers saw ThaT The building was heaTged.i'n winTer, cooled in spring, and pleasanT aT all Times. Mr. Becker has Tor TwenTy-eighT years perTormed The TuncTions oT his posiTion, oTTen giving services above and beyond his regular duTies. He is shown mounTed on his power mower which helps him keep The grounds in good condiTion. lnTroducing--Mr. WalTer Schuelke, head oT WesT Bend High School's Guidance pro- gram. Mr. Schueike Teaches manual arTs in The high school and The vocaTional school. He was phoffographed aT a drawing board as he waTched Charles McDonald draTT a Tloor plan. Hours oT research and work have gone inTo Mr. Schuelke's guidance plans and The inTer- esTing and all-inclusive program which he oT- Tered was a crediT To his eTTorTs. IT is TiTTing ThaT The l94I Bend should end wiTh This acknowledgmenT oT service, Tor school work ThroughouT is composed oT service oT one Type or anoTher. The year in review showed how Teachers served sTudenTs in Their pursuiT oT knowledge: how sTudenTs served Themselves when play livened The day: how The classes served The sTudend's by mainTaining uniTyg and how all combined compose The service oT edu- caTion given by WesT Bend High School. Mr. H. Becker C.McDonald Mr W Schuelke Page SixTy Three Ql eh r a Service Slalion I. or I-I... Carbon's IGA Sfore Cenlral Barber Shop--J. Mair Cify Bakery ' onsumer's Milk and Ice Cream ompany ooley Manuiaclurinq Co. ' ramer, Peier J. s Barber Shop A iron I a K an he Ie? ales L I, . W I. s , Son d e Company on Corporarion fdfigligeri I i rion Soda Grille E Y VS Assocjafe a ow Milling C ap er X1 Gehl r I ine Mare ual qe ss, Company Fiel urn' Ma rl' rsr onal Bank Slore - Qu. 4: r Sponso ' ,ey-G C525- P4 I I Modern Dry Cleaners 81 Lau y Moser, Sam N I:n's Mears, Groceries and ocke N dle Shop ' eara, Ed. C. ll' eara and O'Meara ar and Varnes Sales Corp. enn J. C., Company e d Pharmacy ' ' Andrew k. Edwin k JonB. ick Manuiaclurinq Company Presenl' Brolhers Reqner, I-Ienry O. Il, :Ii I fi BA O 5 k d i i 1: GU ,ff K f , 6 . Li I O l 37 I ' Pfeiffer, R I I R . P , + Sh ?l+v D B ' Firsr ale Bank Relssed im F 25+ Us S Us F IA. C. l Ren.ErI,O, orniey 3 r m ' r I' hl Brorhers Manufacl r' q C mp y USS! Shiggypepiome mi ehl, Waller , ,Q . Gesserl Meal Marlcef mpsorl CIISVLOIEI . 74' ! Godfrexfs Beauw p chachls Service Sfahon , 7, .1 a n Sowing. Evelyn x9 I Schaeferfs Painl Slore I 0 f I-I ry Y Gominq MB? H , S hleqels Bakery I f ' GA S e . I . I hloemer and Srollz Gqnrlnq, ' , , of ac A . f .. nmndi Funeral Home I J o dy Company Gleai AI nh IQGSMIQ ea CO my Schowaller, Norman A. Grove Bad er Pai I ore . a L Irer Company H N S der Dairy ae q, Cha es. and ons ' I o so araqe Hbfews ea ow roe rs Jewelry Ki h John . f chu iz Broihers Company Maye nsurance Aqency X IlVVwZIgIjfffgre ' ' ' I Sears oebuck and Company Weidman, Waller R H I . V Sime r and Schowalier A I , Idl Calwn J' S 70 I Sn' , VVaI+er K.-- Hardware if ,-Tp' eldj alvey' S herland S Karnnel Korn Shop NEWBURG ' MI ky I I-Ierdi Bowli Alleys , ' i' I H . Teddys Barber Shop Weber, I-I. F., M. D. I X Grin 9 1 .. , . -Y . - Uboink Fuel and Dock Company Wesipha' S Tavem I B 'NWO SQ' I S I ufb eeiirs club 33 ome ry oo I r ' X Hog' pumifure Chaise Van Bee an Prechlel Mofor Com WEST BEND I' . 'mme L mber Q0 ny Wenrorf, er+.I-I. Amiry Leafher Producls any be oseph I: WGSI B9 AIUVn'nUV'n COn1DGnV Ashman, I-I., Florisi V2 Ja e r s. Irl WSSI d Boifllnq Works Baehrinq, I-Ierb--S rilll J I .. hoe Srore G Bend gonsumefs CO'ODeV6f' Barens, John W., rdwarel , J y'sI u r Se vice fafion Q I Bend QUII-Wnnenl' COVDOFGH V1 Barfell' Beaufy Shop X . 5'I'm5 X GUI ' es? BSHCJ I:dl'fT1er S Elevalor Basrian, EImer-- Tavern IKae yi . D., ell' Service S'raIionX Wesl Be Lifhia Company . Bauer's Bakery K 'Kauih, P. M . 7 K Wes? and Mermac Thea? xx Bauer, K. T., M. D. Dgelkhaier . . . end MO+Or Company V I Beacon Lunch and Resfauran X .Ind Sl' rp V yi Bend News i I Bgrendl La .X I . irgheri , . .X esr Bend Office Supply -- R. La I B Iilerg of Circuir Courfil K sch's Sian a Service Sialion I Wesr Sing Pil ern ar I, E. -M. D, x 's, Joh , Garaqe an r ic We n PING CV , loedorn's IncI-grpora d SI' ' n V e Wes Bend SaQ and Loan Ass clarion I NB sewelle, Ed, D ' orl dick Ma ke+'-- M. E. Sc midi, prop. We Be Tran 'I and SGFVIC 0n1D5nY I Jr, R. W. ruq any ' - i e,, Ed. .. and Son We n rqeir B rher' Meir I I S i ingham Kon umber Company uesler, I-I. .. araq Wesfp aI's Eune I I-Iom r y, I-Ioward, J w I and Opfomerrisr uhaupr, Louis U W' e, William . ell, Wm. E Y La 'r I-Ialc ery Wi onsin Gas and Eleclr C any uckley, Jyld C. ' oal Y d I W 's Shoe fox ' Bucklin, F. . Lynch, . Meye , M, D. A Woolworfh, ., ompa y Burckhardl Elecrric Service , X Malza , Walle E. 5 7 Zi Ier, B. C. up Cann and is if Q. Men's Appare 0 Zi Ier, B. C., d Com any A X . ' ring b h Jes? News Q 4 Eng gs by iac En av q Compa X ' Blancli Binderies, . S. P o. I9702 , Lice 8, Mil, kee Q . Paqe Sixfy-fo B CD we g1 f f-:sffwfp farm , K WWE! fn EE .5 f ggi ,M Lf 7 ,Zf kM LQ,.z.7Qff7,jVf,pAu,.Zf fw+,w.,4Qffy4Q4 15,24 Ayiffff WM Qgkf X 0


Suggestions in the West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) collection:

West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

West Bend High School - Bend Yearbook (West Bend, WI) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


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