West High School - Westerner Yearbook (Denver, CO)
- Class of 1937
Page 1 of 108
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 108 of the 1937 volume:
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Qidfwff 'ibow M74 MM WMM, 2, f Wy 3 ff' yi 1' 11 Q7 . ,X 4 L I, 4 9 I ,I L, C . N I if 'J To i ' ' . Il' -- A 'V A LII, K , x F A I Af VC by ' JI? If 'NRI' I I QV ' , ' ,kv ' +I.: II,-If J: XI PRINTED AT WEST HIGH SCHOOL QI' fl 'LI S' 9 I ' III' . DENVER PUBLIC SCHOOLS J I II I Jf yu ' I ' X ' F571 I ' f I WI I' KI If x f V I N rv, . , I U - A I fc ' f I I . yi x ! 'L D' hy' x oc! . I ' ' ,I jf' Ixifkua I' 1 'TJ X j D 'I jx ,, XJ 0 Na, X1 V 9I ,, ,,, I . I I , , RY , W A-.I A19 A ' V X I - . ' I' Af' Lf, fi ' I U XI I I I I. I, , H dx f ,jxlx ,If nity :.xQ!.'- 'SEP E '3', 'LXX XI Nl bis X v' I I1 I- ' 4. 1 V f J-1 In J -I , JV I, .- . N s A I X J fM,.QQff ,JH I C J MKJ IMA Mlwxwbfjij WLM fx 9 I 0 ff f 3 T I Sy, AWD 'rg i '5 I ? ESI? 1,2 II I IIH JM-I ff If: 4 .C-7 :J 'E 6 ? .i gt 4 'v J ' Cf I ,gb .7 if rs .Sl J ' 1 If 'JN A .'!J rj , J Q' iff! J I x - ,ff A 1 3 N I1 ,ffIf If? 'W ' 174, f., .2 I . . X 3 . -4 'vit .' . 1 'I 3 I 3 L 577 .1 1 W I fs ., . .S .I sl . X o 'I I 0 A ' , ' , I ,I ' , r ' -C f , .I V gif Q W VI., II 'HVTIVI x i. . 3'.Ji W3 QI? III If? , f I I ' , 5 ,D I u 4 XL 0 4 x f I ,J x I x, ' ' 1 1 i-9 , nf I i - J P . '- V ' ' 1' I , . ,l x 1... s t, G A qi, - 4 f 7 L I 0 f fa. .,1 ', I f , 'x I X. ' I Y I I Q -O fx gy, I D .J x y Hn F sf JJ 13 5, M Lf' O fi u 9 lv HE. , fd J f Hr' f'i'J -A' J !J, -,JfJj,f,D,7'N,5 AJ Of- X, 2 . ff J' :IPA My ,,J J -5 ' W ' WJ' .VH fy W Qs, R 'J if 'J' yy Q nf J,v!iby,F,f' ' In H jf, -,. V ,XD K, -- V THE WESTWARD H0 Published by THE SENIQR CLASS of WEST HIGH SCHOOL DENVEI2,COLO. 1 9 3 7 I 4 I ,, X fy yy. . X. IP' it A - ,V bb! vt!! XIJJV AX ...X X MAGIC TCDWERS Windows blazoned with the lights of the setting sun, walls revealing in their sturdiness the force of withstanding great obstacles, doorways invit- ing ingress to a world unlimited in its fascinating resources! The mystery and charm of the unknown and the undiscovered hold as much romance today as they did in the olden times and our beautiful school buildings send forth, as did the Castles of yore, youths trained for the encounters of lite. . - .64-f Five Y - x xxx n X ix gp-:Q '4' X ,wx For three years I, FRANK C. GRADE, have been in succession an insignificant freshman, an unnoticed sophomore, and an unimportant juniorp now as a pompous Senior, I am still just an ordinary student of neither A or E standing. I never had a chance to be a big shot, as Head Boy or a lettermang yet, like many others, I am sure I possess the necessary qualities. Probably I overestimate myself. Outside activities! A fellow would much rather major in sports, in some clubs, and in some dances than in English and social sciences. II tried for the different teamsp but never, except on one occasion, did I do other than sit in the bleachers. That one time I played a Wow of a game--I think, however, Tub apparently didn't appreciate my ability, for now I sit in the grandstand and yell with the cheer leaders-and some- times Without them. I've loved my teachers, fond and dear, especially the young supplies. I've strained my brain in the Math Club, trying to manipulate the slide rule, I've Worn out my shoe soles in the co-ed danc- ing classes and at the Y. on I-lobby Night, yet I step on my part- ner's toes. Of course my studies came first-sometimes. Fun! I've squired my best girl, ANN AVERAGE, to all the games, plays, and social hours. I'm proud of her because she was the first girl to buy a student ticket. I-Ier loyalty did help the school and didn't cramp my style or my pocket-book. I-Iere she comes now. I-Iey, Ann! What's that big book? It's the Annual. Isn't it keen looking? I hope to tell you! Let's sit down and read it. D O.K. Frank. Comfy now? We'll begin at the very first page. A. L. THRELKELD SUR SUPEQIINITEND-ENT Oh look, Frank! Here is a picture of Mr. Threlkeld! Well, what do you know! He's the only superin- tendent I've ever had, and not until my last Annual have I had a picture of him. I'm really, truly sorry he's leaving. So am I, Ann: and I know the teachers are, too. l should say sol Do you remember the day after his resignation was announced how quiet and still they were. Every chance there was, you could hear groups of them whispering together. Something like that poem, Ann, We learned in the grades. It started 'I feel so sort of lonesome, 'Tis a Sunday day to me.' Mother's been at Montclair, and she says it is a beautiful town filled With lots of rich families. They are Eight the kind to obtain the best for their children. T hey're getting it in him, Ann. Dad said he never knew schools to run as smoothly as these in Denver. I'll tell you why. He has children of his own: there- fore, he knows all about us, just what we like and need. And, Frank, we've had it all. I know it, Ann. Although, we don't come in direct contact with him, all of us are very proud of the many honors that have come justly to him, and down deep in our hearts we think heaps of him. The students in Montclair can't love him a bit more than we do. No. And what's more, there's not a fifth as many there to show him affection. l hope he doesn't forget us away out here. HARRY V. KEPNER A . , V' V, f ff' f 754--fiwwf I. CDUR PQINCIPAI. Look at this dandy new picture of Mr. Kepner, Frank! lt is good. l'm glad we have it in our Annual. Do you know, Ann, that we students don't appreciate what a high-up man he really is? He's so friendly with us-that's the reason. Iust unimportant mon are stuck-up and distant. You're right, Ann. l like the way he corrects us. Never does he say the words: don't, don't, can't, can't7 he just asks us, in such a kindly, courteous way, to do the right things that-well-we just do them. Did you ever read, Frank, all that 'Who's Who' says about him? He's been more than successful in three fields: the Masonic Fraternity, chemistry, and edu- cation. And, too, he's had another honor in the last one. He was elected a Vice-President in the Association of Secondary-School Principals. That's honestly one oi the greatest educational organizations in the World. l know it. Mr. Threlkeld has just finished being President of a similar organization tor superintendents: and Mr. Kepner's election as a vice-president means that he will automatically be president in two years. Denver is certainly going places, Ann. I was just thinking that the reason we have so many internation- ally known speakers in our assemblies is that Mr. Kep- ner is very prominent throughout the United States, and that great men think it an honor to grant him a iavorf' I don'i doubt it, Frank. Some day-why really nowfwe can hold our heads up high when we say that we have studied under Harry V. Kepner. Nine WILFORD H. WOODY DEDICATICDINI This is a good picture oi Mr. Woody. You're telling me, Ann, only he's not smiling. That's the expression he wears when I go to him with the familiar slip'-'Do not admit without an OK. from Mr. Woody.' I have several saved as souvenirs. I never knew anybody who has ever raised as much money for West as he. Have you? I couldn't possibly forget that mad campaign for the public ad- dress system. And how we do enjoy it, too: and how that man can broadcast! I think he knows more, Frank, about what's going Ten on at the State House-oh, the new laws and amend- ments and the like-than many of the people in it. He made me determined to go into politics. I was a clerk at the election he stirred up here last fall. Don't ever overlook his acting ability. He's been a perfect scream in the last two plays. There's nothing goes on around the building that he isn't in. At every assembly he's called to make a speech about activities or athletics. l like him best in athletics: he sure knows his stuff. Whew, but we all work. I'm glad that our Class of 1937 dedicates the Westward Ho to Wilford H. Woody. CDUI2 FACULTY HOW me the man who is tired of life and I shall suggest a hobby. lf he likes solitude, there are books and music, if friends delight him, games and sports are fine. The nature lover may hike or drive to the haunts that interest him, the aesthete has the world of art to admire. With a position, some leisure time, a bit oi cash, and a hobby, who would care to be a king? 'la CLARK H. STONE Assistant Principal HILDEGARDE S. SWEET Dean of Girls STUDENT ADVISGRS Here are two people, Frank, whose jobs I wouldn't have for a giftl The kids lead them a wretched life. A person seldom sees their offices-especially Mr. Stone's -without some miscreants and their parents sitting be- fore the desks talking and sometimes crying. You know, Ann, l've been lazy and good-for-nothing as far as studies go, but l've never been mean. I can hold my head up with the best as far as being a gen- tleman goes, l'd hate to have a record that some of the boys have: it will never get them any place. They think now that they are cuties: they are the only ones who have that idea. We girls just hate fellows like that and won't go with them. l notice you boys don't date girls that are constantly in trouble. l should say not: they're nothing but gold-diggers. Coming back to Mrs. Sweet and Mr. Stone, l think they have to be administrators, advisers, censors, counselors, detectives, diplomats, disciplinarians, judges, modera- tors, personnel directors, psychiatrists, psychologists, public speakers, strategists, and tacticians all in one. And what is worse in being all these, they must be able, adroit, alert, clever, dignified, discreet, efficient, felicitous, firm, ingenious, judicious, just, long-suffering, open-minded, patient, poised, proficient, reliant, re- sourceful, self-controlled, tactful, tireless, understand- ing, unprejudiced. Boy! I had more than you did. Hooray for advanced comp.! l give in, Ann. But we just know the meanings of the words, and they have to be them and act them. True! The way these two people do act shows they understand every word we've said. Thirteen I I AMES AANDAHL Iudiciously Amorous CARLTON AYLARD Counts Atoms ELIZABETH C. BABCOCK Elucidates Classical Books FLOYD F. BAILEY Likes Funny Bugs I OSEPHINE S. BARTOSCH Iust Sews Beautifully HELEN U. BAYLISS Harasses Untidy Boys FLORENCE L. BILDERBACH Finds Love Beautiful ' ADA L. BRIGHT Always Lending Books OLIVIA BRINKER Obsession: Boats MYRA A. CARSON Manages All Carefully ELBERT F. CHAPMAN Eternally Finding Culprits lames Aandahl Carlton Aylard Elizabeth C. Babcock Floyd F. Bailey losephine S. Bartosch Helen U. Bayliss Florence Bilderbach Ada L. Bright CHARLES R' , I Olivia Brinker Myra A. Carson Elbert F. Chapman Charles R. Craven Cl1CIS1I'1g ROl11'1d COUHITIGS IULIA DALY MARY A. DODDS RUTH L. DOUGHERTY RALPH M. EASLEY LEWIS V. FERGUS ADA G. FOLTS HARRY W. FORREST 'WILLA S. GIRAULT P. PAUL GOURLAY LOIS GRIFFEY EDNA E. GUSTAFSON FACULTY Iudges Debates Makes Admirable Decisions Regulates Letter D's Really Manifests Earnestness Likes Vacation Fishing Admires Good Fiction Helps With Finances Will Smile Graciously lust Practices Gentlernanliness Loves Grease-paint Expresses Easy Grace EDITH B' HAMILTQN Iulia Daly Mary A. Dodds Ruth L. Dougherty Ralph M. Easley , , Lewis V. Fergus Ada G. Folts Harry W. Forrest Willa S. Girault Elucldales Boclkkeeplng Hazards I. Paul Gourlay Lo' G i fey Edna E. Gustafson Edith B. Hamilton Fourteen - ilk MEIN xx bl Zfrcffaz' DON L. HARRISON Deplores Legislative Happenings IOSEPHINE HARVEY lust Happy LORENA W. HOCKING Likes Witty Headings GEORGE L. IENNINGS Gets Laborious Iobs EVELYN G. IONES . Evinces Great Iudgment ' LLOID B. IONES I Likes Being Iolly LULU M. KING Limitless Monetary Knowledge AMANDA L. KNECHT Appreciates Little Kindnesses ' l MARIE LANDEN Manifests Loveliness GEORGE M. LAWSON Genteel Musical Lad DOROTHY F. LEPPER - Does Fruitful Labor U- U AN Don L. Harrison Iosephine Harvey Lorena W. Hocking George L. Iennings . Evelyn G. Iones Lloyd B. Iones Lulu M. King Amanda L. Knecht Really Magnanlmous Lady Marie Landen George M. Lawson Dorothy F. Lepper Rose M. Longhn FACULTY Accepts Late-comers EMILY M. MARRS Edits Merry Magazines VINNIE E. MARSHALL Very Entertaining Maiden EDGAR R. MEYER Electricity Really Mastered . WALDO S. MILLER Wood Shop Magician CLIFFORD L. F. MOHR , Certainly Likes Fine Music ELMORE P. MOORE Eternally Parading Men FRANCES K. MOORE Foreign Knots Managed MAX T. MOORE - Marks Typing Manuscripts NEWTON C. MORRIS Noted Coaching Mentor MARY W. MURRAY Much Wise Management Alice Luckey Emily M. Marrs Vinnie E. Marshall Edgar R. Meyer ETHEL T. Waldo S. Miller Clifford L. F. Mohr Elmore P. Moore Frances K. Moore , I Max T. Moore Newton C. Morris Mary W. Murray Ethel T. Odgers EIUOYS Travehng Overland Fifteen MARY OLSON Most Orderly EARL A. PAUL Ever Acts Politely LOUISE S. PECK Likes Seeing Paris MABEL S. RANDALL Makes Swimming Revivify CYRIL D. REED Can Drum Remarkably ISABEL M. REID Is Mighty Rigorous FRED L. RINNE Finds Likely Rustlers IOE L. SCAVOTTO Iust Likes Soldiers ELLA W. SNYDER Ever Working Successfully SHIRLEY R. TAYLOR Submits Rigid Tests VERA G. THOMPSON Veritable Globe Trotter Earl A. Paul Louise S. Peck Mabel S. Randall W TRIPLER Cyril D. Reed Isabel M. Reid Fred L. Rinne Ioe L. Scavoito ' I I n Ella W. Snyder Shirley R. Taylor Vera G. Thompson Grace W. Tripler Generous With TI'CI1'1SCI'1p't101'1 NORTON C. TRUSTMAN BERTHA M. IONES Naturally Curly Tresses Bothersome Mean Iobs I. WARREN TURNER AMEE S' KARRICK Ioyfully Warbles Tunes Always Speaks Kindly DEMETRIUS VAN LANDIN HAM D G . HERBERT H. SESS oes Valiant Labors , Has His System EDWARD I. WATSON Easily Improves Wrecks SARAH M- SHEI-TON WILFORD H WOODY She Makes Sunshine Wonderfully Helpful Worker RUTH R. W AGNER R ll R ' W k OTHERS or THE FACULTY GQ Y equlres or DON F. ALLEN VIRGII.. WASHOM 1 n Does Fancy dvertising Ventable Wqrrlor BARBARA D. COUDEN GRACE E. ZORN Busy Do' g Charity Grudges Every Zero AQ, Sixteen fry I '. -1 -, Norton C. Trustman, I. Warren Turner, Demetrius Van Lanclingham, Edward I. Watson, Wilford H. Woody -Jiiilhh A CLASSES ' f Richard T. .fur r II ' :DI 2 ' ' ln' t Iune Epperson Don Solem till? LEADERS Here we are with the kids we've gone all through school with. These head boys and girls look good to me. To me, too, Ann. And what is still more, they were always good to me, not just merely looking so. Do you know I think that Billy Ieffs was the most modest head boy West ever had. There was never the slightest bit of conceit about him. I know that, also. He just went around among us doing everything a person could to make the school better and the children happier. Everybody loves him. He made National Honor Societyg therefore you see he has brains as well as popularity. Why look, Ann, every- one of the head students are in the N.H.S. That's the stuff that group is made of. But I wish that Billy hadn't been so shy of girls: he must have taken Herb McCarthy for his sample to follow. The girls may feel slighted, but we fellows like him all the more for his paying strictly to business. No one ever did more to improve the manners of us boys in the halls and lunch room than Ieffs. I tell you the school is better because of him. Margaret Richardson is very much like him and was liked by the girls just as much as your Bill was admired by the boys. She had a smile for everybody and was the kindest person in the world to the freshmen. l'll never forget the campaign for the head offices when Iune Epperson ran. The halls were actually covered with all kinds of advertising about candidates except Iune. There was just one for her that I saw, but it was so clever that it went into the hearts of all the students. Eighteen Remember it? 'lt's june in january' and it sure was. Did she ever write you any notes? IVle? She never even looked at me. Have I missed something? You decidedly have. She writes them in poetry. I have two she wrote me here in my purse. Let me read them. Roses are red, Violets are blue, The wind is unpredictable, 1 And so are you. n You are my friend, I hope. The Chinese peddlers smuggle dope, The cowboys throw and twist their rope, The astronomers look up thru their 'scope, His followers worship the,mighty Pope, The police have much with which to cope, The poor little love-sick maidens mope, The prisoners never give up hope: And personally, l wash my face with soap. So that's the way she gets 'em. Do you suppose it's too late for me to acquire a line or two. I'll buy her some candy and maybe she'll thank me sweetly. You can't buy Iune's affection, but she'll appreciate the candy. I might have a quiet confab with Don Solem, Ann, and see what he did to win the affection of all the freshmen girls. It was just about the time that all the freshmen began to find themselves that Don hove into sight as a basketball star and shiek, and how the little ladies felll SENICIQ OFFICERS Not just the freshmen, Frank. There are scads of Senior girls who would have given their eye-teeth for a date with him or just even a teentsy-weentsy smile from him. Hush, Ann, you must have had a crush, too. I don't care if I did. He's a keen looker, keen actor, and a keen dresser. l'll never forget how dandy he looked in that blue outfit he worel Well, let's go on and I'll forget my secret sorrow number one. Cast you teary eyes on the next page and sigh some more. There's dear old Cliff Tryon, our first president. Gee, but I liked him. He was forever and ever working for the school, always doing something .kind and bene- ficial. You're right, Ann. Cliff was and still is, for that mat- X. ' ter, the best all-round boy in school. We fellows think N' . he's true blue. 0 ' t Bob Hahn, Frank, is another of my secret sorrol sph Nuf ced He's too bright to live long. I was in ondxlof his classes-by mistake, I take it-and he always ade a hundred in recitations and tests. I wonder ho? he does it! - I ' , The bulletin said 'five per cent inspiration and the rest il perspiration.' He's hot stuff! ' I- . Which do you think is the better looking oflour two I vice-presidents? , I ' . v' yi . That depends, Ann, on which you prefer, blonds or ' 'X brunettes. I . ' I X- x L ' Can't say as to that, Frank. But I doxlchow that Don Trout is the biaaest tease in school, I was' trulytfglord when he was shut up most of the timehn the radio room to superintend the broadcasting. wel girlsthadxa , . little peace then. X' 1. J - If . 1 P - . Q Now I know. You prefer Ralph Ginn jlfst because yffl ' couldn't rate with him. He never bothered ygou for It l second. He's another who left well enough alone vid , t followed the narrow path of duty. I N , . A I think a little bit of love is a duty. You do. tool else we'd never have had all the fun of the last four years . . while we were in West, would we? Q .IP Xu ' x You can't be a first class lover like me, Ann, and a scholar as well. I think it must have been fate that made Margaret and Vivian the secretaries of our class. Those two never did one thing independently: one was the shadow of the other, but I can't say which was t e 0, solid matter and which the shadow part. Don't fool yourself: they're both made of the best so matter in the world. Vivian is an all A student: I've been in her classes and have felt like a nonentity every time she recited. Frank, when I look at these first two pages - of our classmates, I'm proud of the Class of 1937 be- cause it had gumption enough to elect such desirable ' year and good looking students to lead us through our last A ' GQ Our class is a good classy now let's turn the page and read what is said about the rest of this year's grad- uates. tl ' I - 5 l Clifford Tryon Robert Hahn Dcn 'Trout Ralph Ginn Vivian Raines Margaret Richardson Nineteen SENIOIQS , f. ,E . -,:: .K ' vb ttrt i. , 'iijvavl , p g lf. , V ,V N J, . .7 like MX 1 .sffzfy Qi Nfl , tg 3 M G X xpgtwv Ng. . ,,.P. IN P2 A, f X Bs' T3 A Ni LQ 'Q Sanford Alpert Leonard Anderson Merlin Arbogast Ruth Barnett Twenty Margaret Amick Alice Anderson Leo Anderson Lillian Anderson Lohren Applegate Margie Aragon Bert Bales Iohn Ballos Agnes Barber Dora Basham Harold Basham Dolores Bashefsky SANFORD ALPERT: When he should be talking, he's very quiet: but in study halls he starts a riot. Football, wrestling. MARGARET AMICK: Very cute with hair glossy and black: at drawing and painting she has a knack. Nature Club. ALICE ANDERSON: Wherever you see her, she's on the go, at the dances, in classes, and Rodeo. Rustlers, Art Club, Escort and Guard. Stu. Int. Com. LEO ANDERSON: This bashful boy has a cheery smile, that makes his friendship worth the while. From Los Vegas H. S. LEONARD ANDERSON: He's quite attractive, jolly, and funny: he squires a girl when he has the mon- ey. Math and Camera Clubsp hockey, baseball, Spur, Nat'l Hon. Soc. LILLIAN ANDERSON: Full of pep and a little rowdy, she makes sunshine although it's cloudy. LOHREN APPLEGATE: A woman hater, so we're told: he's very tall but isn't bold. MARGIE ARAGON: Aragon's here without Cas- tillep wherever you see her, she's ever genteel. G. R. and Rustlers. MERLIN ARBOGAST: A jolly and carefree lad is he, no matter how hard the task may be. From North H.S. Wrestling, baseball. NX. BERT BALES: He starts his trombone at early morn, but was never known to toot his own horn. From North H.S. Band. IOHN BALLOS: He argues at the drop of a hat: he knows everything about this and that. AGNES BARBER: She's not bold nor does she boast, but she has a brain that's better than most. Girl Sports, Spur, Escort and Guard. RUTH BARNETT: To teachers she's the cream of the crop p to many schoolmates she's the top. Masquerade-rs, Spur, Treas. and Pres. of Girl Sports, Nat'l Hon. Soc. DORA BASHAM: She's never known to speak aloud and always remains aloof from the crowd. Iunior Escort. HAROLD BASHAM: A fellow who dances must be a loverp yet Harold keeps his affections under cover. Pre-Medics, A Cappella, Annual Board. DOLORES BASHEFSKY: She's gone to North, to East, to West: we wonder which one she likes the best. Rodeo. SAMUEL BASHEF SKY: In neatness Sam makes a very high score, and he talks, and he talks, and he talks some more. From North and East H. Schools. BERTHEA BAUGH: Berthea is really quiet and shy: she's surely a credit to old West High. Need- lework Guild Pin. WILLA BERKS: Cute and pert with saucy blue eyes: many fellows think she's a prize. G.R., Play Festival, Operetta, Spur. BRUCE BERRYHILL: ln Iunior High he was known as shy, but here in West, oh my, oh my! RICHARD BILLINGS: Be merry if you are wisep 'tis in mirth that happiness lies. ROLLAND BLACKBURN: On West Denver he yelled to the gang: with willing response the echoes rang. Hi-Y, Pre-Medios, R.O.T.C. Cheer- leader, football, wrestling. t X . 'f ,f. f K 1 I 'W -cf' ,g 33 , sf! ' O ,J ,gvspx-v In it 3, HW U 1 Z F' 5 515' li' Q- v t V 9215, rg., . 4,0-4 M pez 1,4404 fp 7 If Q S 1 ,fl y f WN Z f W 9 iff- y 479 tj ffl' -'lil ?'.tiffF1 W ' Samuel Basheisky Berthea Baugh Willa Berks Bruce Berryhill Richard Billings Rolland Blackburn EVM Oldis Blanchard Stanley Bollacker Sylvia Boscoe Carl Bosselrnan Ruby Brady Merrily Braecklein Wayne Brayer Orville Brelsford Gertrude Brook Dorothy Brown Clayton Bruner lohn Bueckerman Margareite Burns Margaret Busby Bernice Bush Duncan Cameron Anna Carlson Velva Carlson ' OLDIS BLANCHARD: Because his heart is full of joy, no one could ever dislike this boy. STANLEY BOLLACKER: He's a boy that is tall and dark, and thinks that school is just a lark. Rodeo. SYLVIA BOSCOE: As a singer she will go far, and she dresses just like a movie star. Rustlers, G.R., S.O.S., Operetta, Library Staff. CARL BOSSELMAN: lf television were possible here, we'd know the boy: it would bring him near. RUBY BRADY: lt's her delight to browse among books, in cozy little hidden nooks. Girl Sports, Masqueraders, Spur, Iunior Escort. MERRILY BRAECKLEIN: Speed in thought, speed in action, always meriting some attraction. WAYNE BRAYER: Many men work from sun to sun, but Wayne's work is never done. Nature Club, golf. ORVILLE BRELSFORD: Whenever a love bird starts its calling, you're sure to see young Orville falling. Masqueraders, Hi-Y, Hall Monitor, Oper- elfCI. DOROTHY BROWN: She's with her pal both day and night: the one is dark, the other, light. Pre- Medics, Typing award. GERTRUDE BROOK: lf a pretty girl is a melody, as people say, Gertrude's a song the livelong day. CLAYTON BRUNER: The stage is fun and a place of joy, to this tall, fair, good-looking boy. Pres. of Stagecralt. IOHN BUECKERMAN: Teedle-de-dee, teedle-de- dum, life at its best is loads of fun. Spur. MARGARETTE BURNS: She disliked East, but is fond of West: to be a good friend she tries her best. From East H. S. MARGARET BUSBY: Dark and peppy with plenty of vim: as good to a her as she is to a him. G.R. and S.O.S. BERNICE BUSH: A girl who types and also sews, can make a living for one of her beaux. DUNCAN CAMERON: His Model T, you must agree, builds up his personality. Masqueraders, Boosters, Operetta, baseball, Drum and Bugle Corps, Spur, Vice-Pres. Hi-Y. ANNA CARLSON: Anna's always full of glee, and sings for her friends quite beautifully. G.R., Play Festival, Spur, Escort and Guard. VELVA CARLSON: She's pretty, petite, with curly hairy in sports and classes she plays the game fair. Twenty-one stmlo G if tart CLYDE CARPENTER: He grows a tiny mustachio and goes with a girl on the Rodeo. FLEMING CARTER: His poise and manners make others look, as though they were ignorant of Emily's book. From Los Angeles H.S. Track Let- ter, Lieut. R.O.T.C. CARROLL CARVER: As he moves amongst his schoolmates from day to day, he proves he's a gentleman in every way. WILLIAM CAVANAUGH: He is afraid of himself and scared of others: he doesn't consider the stu- dents his brothers. LUCILLE CHARLES: She minds her own business and likes the boys: she's neat and attractive and makes no noise. From South H.S. MYRTLE CHESTNUT: Artistic hands and gracious soul, someday will win for you your goal. Art Club, Spur, Escort and Guard. EVELYN CLEMENTS: A friend at all times is a friend indeed: she always helps you when in need. GLENN COCKRELL: Glenn does much to add to our joys, but we wish he could do it without so much noise. From Oklahoma Prep School, D Club, Boosters, wrestling, All-City Tackle. HENRIETTA COHEN: She treats her friends in a manner sublime and chatters in class most of the time. Girl Reserves. HAROLD COOK: This youth of brains assists in the lab, but he wasn't given the gift of gab. Na- tional Honor Society, Annual Board. IRENE COOK: Her hair is blond, her eyes are blue, but that's no sign she's true to you. Int. Re- lations, Rodeo, Stu. Council. MILDRED COOPER: Popular in sports as well as in school, we know she follows the golden rule. Girl Sports, Art Club, Library Staff, Needlework Guild Pin, Gold D, Big Sister, Escort and Guard. DOROTHY COOPERSMITH: Dorothy's a red-head ho's surely worthwhile, a sincere friend who ears a smile. Annual Board, Pre-school Asst. Post Reporter, Delegate to Press Conference, Spur, Stu. Counc. Escort and Guard, Editorial Ed. Rodeo. DOROTHY CRAIG: Smiling, gracious, ever se- rene: in studies and friendships she's very keen. Nat'l Honor Soc. Spur, Escort and Guard, Big Sis- ter, Annual Board. WILLIAM CRAVEN: He talks all day till to bed he goes: we all wonder where he gets what he knows. Stagecraft, MERRILL CURTIS: He's generous, courteous and tries to please, but we hear he's afflicted with the talking disease. GORDON DADE: It's fine in these days of bustle and hurry, to find a lad who's not in a flurry. BETTY LOU DEAN: Sl'1e's the red-headed girl from Greeley High: until you know her, she seems shy. From Greeley H.S. Rustlers. ORAN DENNISON: He always keeps calm and helps those who're unlucky: he shows the world what it means to be plucky. Boosters, Stagecraft, Drum and Bugle Corps, Vice-Pres. Hi-Y. MIKE DEUTSCH: This good-looking boy with curly hair is one you hear talking everywhere. Clyde Carpenter Fleming Carter Carrol Carver William Cavanaugh Lucille Charles Myrtle Chestnut Evelyn Clements Glenn Cockrell Henrietta Cohen Harold Cook Irene Cook Mildred Cooper Dorothy Coopersmith Dorothy Craig William Craven Merrill Curtis Gordon Da :le Betty Lou Dean Oran Dennison Mike Deutsch Blanche Dillon Twenty-two ,aff fray! QW- if ,. ' ff' i9 BLANCHE DILLON: You'll always find her in 325-A: she'll be an efficient nurse some day. Pre- medics. VVILLIAM DILLON: The boy's never angry or im- polite, he smiles at each one with all his might. lnternat'l Relations, Operetta, Nature Club. CHARLES DINSMORE: He's good-looking, polite, and dances well: the girls all think he's mighty swell. Prom Laramie H.S. MARGARET DISMANT: She always strives to reach her goal-to keep her name on the Honor Roll. From Hutchkiss H.S. CHARLOTTE DOBERSTEIN: A happy face, a ready smile, then, now, and all the while. HELEN DODSON: She came this year from far away and keeps to herself most of the day. From Metropolitan H.S. ADALAINE DOMENICOI Her face is lovely and so is her hair, when you need her help, she is always there. G.R., Girl Sports, Operetta, Play Fest., Nat'l Honor Soc., Spur, Big Sister, Escort, Com. Pageant, Gold D. ROSE DOPPELMAYR: Seldom seen when she is blue, but sincere, happy, gay, and true. ELMER DUSTAN: He's a studious-boy while the lazy ones shout, but he'll be there when theyre down and out. Basketball, track, hockey, Spur. ERNEST DURAN: Dark complexioned and very neat: he's really a lad who's hard to beat. From Cathedral and East H. Schools. SEIXIIORS DON EDWARDS: My line is good and I've curly hairy when it comes to the girls, l've more than my share. Wrestling. LEROY EDWARDS: His hair is blond, his eyes are blue, when you give him a chance, he's keen to you. Track, wrestling. LILLIAN EDWARDS: She will smile her way through life and make some man a wonderful wife. Camera Club, Rustlers. PHYLLIS EGGERT: Brunette and fair of hearty swell girl, and oh, so smart. Rustlers, G.R., S.O.S., Pen Ramblers, Annual Board, Big Sister, Spur, Escort and Guard. MARGUERITE ENGERTS: She's blond and quiet and perhaps a bit shy, her work is good and her ideals are high. IUNE EPPERSON: A good student, free from carey girls like her are really rare. G.R., Girl Sports, Escort and Guard, Big Sister, l-lead Girl, Spur, Nat'l Honor Soc., Gold D. E ' DOROTHY FARMER: Sometimes' quiet, sometimes gay, but always in a friendly way. - GLENN FARROW: The modern life: 'consists of workg therefore good deeds l will not'shirk. ROSS FERRY: MaioriBowes should'givel,R'oss the gong: the boy wastes rhis time playing ping pong. Math Club. . ' WALTER ELACHMAN: A',farmer,Z a farmer l'm longin ,fto be, but there must be money in farming IUNE DUXBURY: Studies and work are not in her for We-' y '54 - ,- Q: A line: but, oh, how she likes to have a good time. PEARL' EONTlNE:, N earl jis always, smiling and Jw From Greeley H.S. gayf willing to helpln eyerywvay. ' ' XV Aw . 1, I X. 1 William Dillon Charles Dinsmore Margaret Dismant Charlotte Doberstein Helen Dodson Adalaine Domenico Ro e ppelmayr Elmer Dunstan Ernest Duran Iune Duxbury Don Edwards Leroy Edwards Lillian Edwards Phyllis Eggert Marguerite Engberts Iune Epperson Dorothy Farmer Glenn Farrow Ross Ferry Walter Flachman Pearl Fontine 'K Ian--h.1,,,fZg.ff .. - f Jill! R , r t N r if Twenty-three 'ru .I ,V I ' . f I, ir x i rw ' , 1 jL'w:UL' er-.mV ' 'J t' 1- . ,pgs I U Wilbur Franklin Ethel Friel William Fritz Dorothy Fuller Iohn Garbarin a Samuel Gates Allen Gibbons Ralph Ginn -:::f f - I-' tt D j LLEN FRANGOS1 Ever Serious, kind and true, very best type of friend to you. Needlework Guild Pin, Pre-Medios, Camera Club. WILBUR FRANKLIN: What a hit l've grown to be with my shining banjo on my knee. Band, or- chestra. ETHEL FRIEL: She has the brains and desire to do: but my, she is so afraid of you. Girl Sports, Big D. K WILLIAM FRITZ: Of work and studies he's never fearful: among his friends he's always cheerful. Hi-Y, Nature Club. I. Florence Glenn Belen Gonzalez Clark Goodell Betty Gottlieb Esther Greeno William Greenwood Lyle Grubb Gertrude Gruber Iames Guse v 4 , , I I L. at ' it Qi I . I I .,. I I I t Q ' - ' i' 'Nt' It Twenty four DOROTHY FULLER: Dorothy wished to become a wife, and she changed her Hunt to a Fuller life. ALICE FULLERTON: This pretty girl came to West this year and has used her time in spreading good cheer. IOHN GARBARINO: This boy a handsome man will make, but he never gives the girls a break. Prom Boulder Prep. Boosters, Drum and Bugle Nl gl rps. S MUEL GATES: All the girls under his spell got Jw- there Ey '5e1ng hypnotized as well. Boosters, Drum and Bugle Corps. ALLEN GIBBONS: I-Ie comes to school but would rather stay home: his rules of conduct are just his own. RALPH GINN: An answer to a maiden's prayer, with his bright blue eyes and wavy hair. Hi-Y, Nat'l Honor Society. FLORENCE GLENN: The deepest rivers flow with the least sound: that is true of Florence, so we've found. BELEN GONZALEZ: A bright little girl who makes many A's, and is genteel and charming in all her ways. G.R., Needlework Guild Pin. CLARK GOODELL: A finer boy could not be found, but you sel ow that he's around. Hi-Y. BETTY GOTTLIEB' A sweet girl with a pleasing 5 1 e s problems she will squarely face. ESTHER GREENO: She is on the go all the day, always peppy and always gay. Rodeo. WILLIAM GREENWOOD: We wonder if we could ever find a boy who has more peace of mind. Service Club, Rodeo. LYLE GRUBB: Such a very blushing boy is Lyle: wonder if he'Il be led up the aisle. Golf. GERTRUDE GRUBER: A brilliant girl who makes wise cracks and would like to come to school in slacks. Nature and French Clubs, Girl Scouts, Spur, Escort and Guard, Gold D. IAMES GUSE: Iust a shadow of our head boy and never shows a sign of joy. Hockey. ROBERT HAHN: A good speaker and actor, too, a quiet student and always true. Masqueraders, Pres. Nat'l Hon. Soc., Spur, Senior Pres. BETTY HAINES: A helpful girl is hard to find, but Betty is one of this kind. SEIXIIORS f ft L- 1.- ky.. 1 u . ! . rt, f Robert Hahn Marie Hazzard Erwin Hendler Frances Hernandez Betty Haines Phyllis Hammond PHYLLIS HAMMOND: She likes the members ot the R.O.T.C., perhaps a soldier's wife she'll be. Pre-Medics, G.R., S.O.S., Rustlers, Stu. Coun., Oper- etta. EDNA HANES: Ouiet, petite, slender, discreet. Girl Sports, Gold D. ROBERT HASTINGS: He studies hard most of the time, and on the girls won't waste a dime. From Trinidad H.S. Spur. EVA HATHEWAY: She's such a quiet, backward lass and never talks in the halls or class. From California H.S. VIRGINIA HAYNES: A cute girl who loves art: in social affairs she takes a part. G.R., Stu. Council. MARIE HAZZARD: The pastime is skating at the Mile High for this pretty girl, who is too shy. G.R., Rustlers, S.O.S. ERIN IN HENDLER: In winter he rambles around through the halls: in summer on sand lots he plays soft ball. Wrestling. FRANCES HERNANDEZ: 'Tis said she has a happy way wherever she goes throughout the day. CHARLES HIGGINS: Charlie is a play-time boy: swimming and girls are both his joy. Swimming, hockey. LOWELL HIGGINS: In being loyal none is better, for he always wears an orange sweater. Golf, baseball. DAWN HINKLE: Small in stature, she's never still: she has a pretty smile and wit at will. Rust- lers, G.R., Stu. Int. Corn., Big Sister. KATHRYNANN HODSON: At every chance she likes to tap, and with her toes she makes a rap. Operetta. OGDEN HOLLARS: Cowboys know that he is shy: but with football, oh me, oh my. Football, basket- ball, baseball. LAWRENCE HOWE: He came from a ranch and can truly show how to ride and punch like a real cowboy. LEON INGRAM: A brilliant student is this lad: a better one could not be had. Band, Pre-Medics, Spur. MARGUERITE IACKSON: Giggling and fun char- acterize this lass, who ever is coming late to class. BILL IEFFS: Billy's been a swell head boy: We wish him luck and also joy. Drum and Bugle ,353 ff tl Corps, baseball, hockey, Pres. Boosters, Sec'y Hi-Y, Head Boy, Nat'l Hon. Soc., Stu. Int. Com. CARL IACOBS: He tries to do the best he can and will sometime be a prominent man. HOWARD IARBOE: He likes to sit and dream in the sun: not lessons but auto shop is his fun. From Chicago H.S. MILDRED IENSON: In her you can surely see an outstanding personality. AUDREY IOHNSON: A more lovable girl you'll never meet: she's always quiet and very neat. Ogden Hollars Lawrence Howe Leon Ingram Marguerite lackson Bill Ieffs Carl lacobs Howard Iarboe Mildred Jenson Audrey Johnson .. .. ,......,.,.,,,? 5 K ix lx . Robert Hastings Eva Hatheway Virginia Haynes Lowell Higgins Dawn Hinkle Kathrynann Hodson .F J ff fb ifvgw-to SENIORS BEULAH IOHNSON: Small and quiet, perhaps a bit shy: she's studying now how to make a good pie. Girl Sports, Rustlers, Escort and Guard. MAURICE IOHNSON: He doesn't do any more than he musty yet he's a boy you can always trust. Nature Club, Boosters, Lt. R.O.T.C. ROY IOHNSON: In being honet and upright he's going some: his friends are many: his enemies, none. Baseball. IANE IUSTICE: One rainclrop helps to make a pool: and one good student, to make a school. MILLARD KEITH: There are many things he likes to do, and his dislikes are very few. R.O.T.C. LOIS KELLOGG: She has such blue and spark- ling eyes: we all agree she is a prize. Band. VIRGINIA KENNEDY: This bright girl thrills you through and through: she has keen ideas, humor- ous and new. From East H.S. Pre-Medios, Annual Board, Pre-School Asst. ALICE KERIN: Pleasant and very quiet, too: al- ways a friend that's true to you. From Brooklyn H.S. Pre-Medios. GLENN KERSTING: Glenn always answers a hearty yes when you ask him if he'll be a success. Spur. ALTON KILCOLLINS: Although he is quiet and a wee bit shy, you'll look at him twice as he passes by. A ELEANOR KINDIG: Peppy and pert wherever she goes, with a twinkling eye and a turned-up nose. Rustlers, S.O.S., Annual Board, Stu. Council, Es- cort and Guard, Big Sister, Sec'y and Vice-Pres. G.R. AARON KLAUSNER: Goodness how the teachers rave just because he won't behave. From East and North H. Schools. French Club, Spur. FRED KLEMM: He lives to learn and learns to live, but words of greeting he does not give. MARGARET KLINE: Fair of skin with keen red hairy she's ready to greet you everywhere. Camera Club, Operetta, Play Festival, Rodeo, Pub. Chair- man G.R. DOROTHEA KOELLING: She obviously thinks to be unmarried is equivalent to being buried. Inter- nat'I Rel., Escort, Spur. WALTER KRAUS: In attending high school he's been peripatetic, he strikes us all as being ath- letic. Track. PAUL KUEHN: He likes music, and some day that's the way he'll earn his pay. Boosters, Band, Drum and Bugle Corps. MARY LOU LAMB: Her face is fair, her heart is true, our dear, the lovely Mary Lou. LEOTA LAPP: A very pleasant girl is she: a suc- cess she's bound to be. Sour, Escort and Guard. FRED LAUNDER: Refined in rnanners and a lover of books and not so bad when it comes to looks. Spur, Nat'l Honor Society. Beulah Iohnson Maurice Iohnson Roy Johnson lane Justice Millard Keith Lois Kellogg Virginia Kennedy Alice Kerin Glenn Kersting Alton Kilcollins Eleanor Kindig Aaron Klausner Fred Klemm Margaret Kline Dorothea Koelling Walter Kraus Paul Kuehn Mary Lou Lamb Leota Lapp Fred Launder Bert Leisenring Twenty-six . - ,,, . .. ., , .- . . 1 V6. 3 qi y, S 1-gb , : tif l 3 F... .' V . . .lint xl K l , f, . 'JA ffflfll All J - VJ . ll Q fl 940 , ,.',1 . fl! ' W ' ' ' c , f 1' . Y' M J yu V1 U BERT LEISENRING: Around in tho nous he's od- ways seen, cmd in concocting mischief he's very keen. Cheer leader, Rodeo. SERENA LETT:A Commencement day doesn't end Hier strife: it's just the beginning of married life. Girl Reserves. EDWIN LEWIS: This true, blue lad, we all agree, will be the top in forestry. Camera Club. IOHN LOPEZ: Someday an engineer he'll be be- cause he shows ability. R.O.T.C. GERTRUDE LEVINE: She sampled three high schools, each a year and finally decided to grad- uate here. From North and East High Schools. LENORA LUNDBERG: Because she' full of vigor and vim, she spends most of her extra time in gym. Girl Sports, Nat'l Honor Soc. Gold D. PHILIP LUNDBERG: A willing lad who's never sad. Golf. NORMAN MacDONALD: Norman is a handsome student, cheerful, practical, and prudent. WAYNE MACK: Iolly little fellow with an active brain: though he cuts up lots of times, he's really sane. Spur. THEDA MAcoN:lrhio slender gin dances light on he feet: she's very trim and very neat. DANIEL MANUEL: It's rather hard to describe this lad: but you rarely, if ever, find him sad. SEINIIORS CATHERINE MARSAGLIA: Popular with boys and girls is she: with her friendly smile why shouldn't she be? G.R., Escort and Guard, S.O.S. ERNEST MARBACH: When in class he's a noisy clown, but outside he goes to town. LAFAYETTE MCCLARD: During football his les- sons he never shirks: when the season's over, he seldom works. Football, basketball, baseball. All- City O.-B. LILLIAN MCCLURE: A very industrious girl we know as her activities show. Pen Ramblers, Library pple, J ,I . Un. .u ,no I ' sion, Ffonon Club. pf' ,A M V,.1'f' , ROXYE Mocurarirr A good sport who iikoo the 1. j J . 1' boys, and every day she finds new joys. Rustlers, .' 'l I ' l' ' 7 G.R. HAZEL McKEE: Timid and shy, We wonder why. GLADYS MCNALLY: Sparkling, snappy, dark brown eyes make Gladys quite an appealing prize. Girl Reserves. HAROLD MELCHING: When you see Harold round about, you say There goes a handsome scout. ESTON MEYER: Try to get him if you can, this dark and handsome soldier man. Boosters, Pre- Medics, R.O.T.C. WALTER MEYER: A smile as coy as his can be endears his personality. ESTI-IER MHARES: A girl with a handsome head of hair attracts attention everywhere. tp. ' Serena Lett Wayne Mack Roxye McCurry Edwin Lewis Theda Macon Hazel McKee X - Iohn Lopez Gertrude Levine L Daniel Manuel Catherine Marsaglia Er st Gladys McNally Harold Melching if I sign 'Hr , X sw rsh, d Norman MacDonald Lillian McClure Esther Mijares Twen' y-seven AMW? 5 Dime s Twenty eight HMZMWWJ 3 5, X ilk 3' if ll ?n gI 6- JDJ .1 , 7 Allaah I Emma Milhoan Clyde Miller Elaine Miller Marilyn Miller Opal Miller Dorothe Milzer Lucille Mitchell Edna Moore Hugrt Moore Dave Morehart f M01 1 EMMA MILHOAN: She wants to be a physic-Lan, DOROTHE ILZER: A orker is Dorothe, full of sure, and the heathen Chinee she will cure. Pre- C . QAILLER: This boy is always at his ease, s- ys e uiet, please! From Leon , Camera Club, Annual Board. ELAINE MILLER: She's small and dresses up-to- date, and 'often comes to classes late. MARILYN MILLER: For studies Marilyn does not care: but when there's dancing, she's right there. Student Council. OPAL MILLER: A pretty girl, we all agree: that boys like her is plain to see. Girl Reserves. edics, Spur, Nat'l Honor Soc. Kay Morimoto Klaas Mulder Marie Newell Maynard Morgan Shirley Morton Nathan Nemirow Dacymae Morrison Dorothy Muncy Frances Nelson F r glee, she's pleasant and charming and sweet as can be. From North H.S., G.R., Camera Club, lnternat'l Rel., Pres. Safety Coun., Nat'l Honor Soc., Ir. Guard. LUCILLE MITCHELL: A popular girl quite lovely to see, and the very best pal a girl can be. G.R., S.O.S., Rodeo, operetta, Play Festival, Big Sister. EDNA MOORE: With her music and winning way she'll be a great success some day. HUBERT MOORE: His studiousness will bring him 6EF the world will know his name. From North H.S.. Debate Club, Student Coun. DAVE MOREHART: In the library Dave tries to please, but all the girls he likes to tease. Library Staff, Hi-Y. MAYNARD MORGAN: He shows polish and good etiquette, that make a hit with the girls, you bet. Pre-Medios. KAY MORIMOTO: A swell fellow with a head full of knowledge: I'm sure he'll be tops in his chosen college. From Central H.S. Spur. DACYMAE MORRISON: A face with the skin you love to touch, and all her scholmates love her much. SHIRLEY MORTON: Ioyful in work as well as in play, gaining much knowledge every day. KLAAS MULDER: From early spring to latest fall, he answers to a pigeon's call Spur. DOROTHY MUNCY: I'm just as bashful as I can beg it hurts when people look at me. NATHAN NEMIROW: When he pulls Wool over anyone's eyes, he has the idea that he is wise. Band, orchestra, Spur. MARIE NEWELL: She will always happy be, the kind of girl we like to see. FRANCES NELSON: Trying with all my might I aim to put one over whenever I can. Pre-Medios. DONNA NORTHRUP: We never hear from her a peep, and yet we know she's not asleep. From Stoneham HS. Rustlers. CARROL OAKLEY: Red-haired with peaches and cream complexion: she fits every requirement with perfection. PHILIP OAKLEY: He likes to golf, he likes to dance, but what is life without romance! Golf. tt 04.-. ' ttf f ,.. W... .T Mfwftittf 'Fr 5 1 ' 'Tl I Donna Northrup Carrol Oakley Philip Oakley Martha lean Overl'n Katherine Overman Earl Owens Walter Palmquist Lucille Pass Earl Payne Virginia Peterson Iris Pliibbs Daniel Phillips Edna Pickell Fern Plummer . K 1 1,4-L ,Zwffffs 01-ffl' f-1 'V Q S 33 I ' 221 ,a-,4A,-I-Gift' QJLLH . - MARTHA IEAN OVERLIN. with genteel mqncwner' ' if ' c6T1If?'sT?J75Oun., secy sr, Class, sedy Nat'l Hon. she wins her way although she has not much to say. Pen Ramblers, Typing award, Escort and Guard, Spur. KATHERINE OVERMAN: She wishes to help in young children's up-bringing: but at present she interests herself in singing. A Cappella Choir. EARL OWENS: To this young man it never oc- curred that it's pleasant both to be seen and heard. WALTER PALMOUIST: No matter what the strug- gle or strife, he'll certainly make his way through life. LUCILLE PASS: In office Work I long to beg the life and love of a steno for me. From East High. EARL PAYNE: All know he plays a trombone in the school, but sometimes he also plays the fool. Band, Orchestra, Operetta, Spur. VIRGINIA PETERSON: Always delightful and al- ways fair with lots of brains under her hair. IRIS PHIBBS: Very petite with a winning srnile: everything she does is quite Worthwhile. Annual Board, Needlework Guild Pin, Pres. Rustlers, Escort and Guard, Big Sister, Spur, Pres. Art Club, Nat'l Hon. Soc. DANIEL PHILLIPS: One of the three wise men was he, and he sang alone a sweet melody. From Sacred Heart H. S. Operetta. EDNA PICKELL: Her brains and humor give heaps of fun, and thus the friendship of all is won. Pre- Medics, G.R., Sec'y Safety Council, Vice-Pres. Pen- Ramblers, Spur, Nat'l Honor Soc., Escort and Guard. FERN PLUMMER: Demure and quiet all the while, but oh what sunshine in her smile. Camera Club. CLARENCE PORTER. In dress he's always very precise-a virtue that is certainly nice. DOROTHY PROHASKA: Dorothy has a lovely voice, and office work is her special choice. G.R., Operetta, Iunior Guard, Treas. Pen Ramblers, Nat'l Hon. Soc., Sec'y Pre-Medics. ROBERT PURCELL. He always wears a cheery smile, that gives to him a winning style. Boosters, Drum and Bugle Corps. WALTER RADOVICH: Come all you cheerers and gather 'round, this fellow gets up when he's knocked down. Football, basketball. VIVIAN RAINES: Blue eyes, neat as a pin, golden hair and lovely skin. Math Club, S.O.S. Stu. Int. Soc., Treas. Girl Sports, G.R., Big Sister, Gold D., Escort and Guard. VIRGINIA RANDOW: She sings and sings most beautifully and fills her hearers with rapturous glee. Operetta, A Capella Choir. NORMA REIBER: Her pleasantly quiet poise brings with it many joys. G.R., Nature Club, Band, Or- chestra, Spur. IUANITA REICHERT: We'll just say bright and know we're right. LESTA REID: Where brilliance is, there's always a Way to reach the top of fame someday. G.R., Nature Club, Spur. Clarence Porter Dorothy Prohaska Robert Purcell Walter Radovich Vivian Raines Virginia Randow Norma Reiber Iuanita Reichert Lesta Reid fs- ,li IL!! .jI'. ' vt. , g v IJ , r I If It I I ' riff 'fl ,j'J. I Twenty-nine 3 it X lr. SEIXIIORS IMOGENE REINKE: Here is a girl, quiet and serene: of course you know her name, Imogene. Pre-Medics, Girl Sports, Nat'l Hon. Soc., Camera, G.R., Escort and Guard, Spur, Gold D, Big Sister. LAURA RICE: A lovable girl is Laura Rice: wher- ever she is, she adds spice. Pre-Medics, Girl Sports, G.R., Camera Club, Spur, Gold D, Big Sister, Escort and Guard, Nat'l Hon. Soc. CHARLOTTE RICHARDSON: Dignified with charm- ing grace, she always wears a smiling face. Book Club, Girl Reserves. MARGARET RICHARDSON: Margaret, wise and good and fair, is modest of manner with a kindly air. S.O.S., Stu. Int. Com., Stu. Court, Operetta, Nat'l Hon. Soc., Head Girl, Big Sister, Com. Page- ant, Sec'y G.R., Sec'y Sr. Class, Spur. BARD ROBERTS: A boy well liked by all around although he seldom makes a sound. Baseball. RUTH ROGERS: As a student she does well: as a friend, she's just swell. Nature Club, Escort and Guard. HELEN ROWLAND: While reading her writing, you realize that Helen is an intellectual prize. Girl Reserves, Pre-Medics, Spur. SAM RUSCIO: He likes his studies, you can see: but swimming is his specialty. Swimming. ELI RUSSELL: I cut up like a clown that is true: but if you were I, wouldn't you? Masaueraders. Internat'l Relations, Boosters. Lt. R.O.T.C. ELEANOR SALMONS: Crash, bang, clatterl Here comes Salmons: so that's what the matter. Camera Club, G.R., Nature Club, S.O.S., Needlework Guild, Operetta, Big Sister. SYLVIA SHANER: A better girl is hard to find: she's always friendly, always kind. Masquerad- ers, S.O.S., Spur, Escort, Commencement Pageant. ILA SCHMACHTENBERGER: Peppy, popular, cap- able, sweet, a better friend you never meet. Pre- Medics, G.R., Annual Board, Rodeo, Nat'l Hon. Soc., Spur, Escort and Guard. ANDREW SHAVER: He's tall, polite, and very slender, and does all good that he can render. OTIS SHREVES: Girls try to borrow his big D sweater in order that they might know him better. Wrestling. ANDREW SIBLE: He never appears in a rush and surrounds himself with a genuine hush. CHARLOTTE SIBLE: So slender and tall and loved by all. Orange and Black Queen. BONNIE SIMMONS: Girls have seldom been more true, none more sweetly kind than you. Pres. Safety Coun., Needlework Guild, Pres. G.R. PAULITA SIMMONS: A friendly girl with ready smile, cheerful and helpful all the while. Girl Re- serves, Erench Club. - ROSE SANDOS: Oh your eyes, wonderful eyesg ESTELLE SIOGREN: She is shy and very kind: they're dark in color and large in size. always truthful you will find. Glee Club. O SAGER: All year long Roy has been seen DONNA SLAGLE: A ready smile and pleasant Qgtle girl who thinks he's keen. Pre-Medics, laugh, her sunny cheer reveals but half. - Imogene Rm' Xxlnaura Rice Charlotte Richardson Margaret Richardson Bard Roberts Ruth Rogers Helen Rowland Sam Ruscio Eli Russell Rose Sandos Roy Sager Eleanor Salmons Sylvia Shaner I. Schmachtenberger Andrew Shaver Otis Shreves Andrew Sible Charlotte Sible Bonnie Simmons Paulita Simmons Estelle Sjogren Thirty MAXINE SLAVSKY: One day she's sad: the next she's gay: We all of us think she's unique that Way. From North H.S. Girl Reserves. CARMEN SMITH: Here's a girl of fun and skill of Whom We'll never have our fill. Nature Club, Treas. Girl Reserves. RUTH SNEAD: Her sparkling eyes and merry smile will take her many a happy mile. ERNEST SNYDER: This boy, a good and faithful friend, is always loyal to the end. DONALD SOLEM: Don certainly would be very glum if he couldn't forever be cracking gum. French and D Clubs, Annual Board, Rodeo, Head Boy, Capt. Basketball, Spur, Nat'l Hon. Soc., Stu. Court, Pres. Stu. Coun. and Int. Com. IAMES SOWELL: Friendly and cool, he adds to our school. MARGARET ANNE SPEER: Capable, friendly, yet reservedg her popularity is deserved. Vice-Pres. of Spur and Pre-Medics, Treas. Nat'l Hon. Soc., Stu. Coun., G.R., Spur, Commencement Pageant. EILEEN SPENCER: She is the brunette girl in one of my classes that's the spunkiest of all the lasses. Pre-Medics, G.R., Rustlers, Masqueraders, Intel. Rel., S.O.S., Camera, Operetta. GWENDOLYN SPILLER: Her air, her manners all admire: her voice with Wonder does inspire. Girl Sports, Big D, Operetta. DAISY SPOON: She's traveled beyond the At- lantic Ocean, but of being stuck-up she has no notion. Nature Club, Rustlers. SENIOIQS WILLIARD STAMBAUGH: He isn't tough nor is he rough: he's just right and that's enough. I LE. Of course love has knocked at your door: so tel us what you're Waiting for. S.O.S., Pre-Medics, G.R., Annual Board, Rodeo, Pres. Cam- era Club, Treas. Pen Ramblers. CHARLOTTE STEIN: Ambitious and very keen of mindp a finer girl you'll never find. From Littleton H.S. S.O.S., G.R., Operetta, Escort and Guard, Spur, Treas. Camera Club. VIRGIL STEIN: For every Why he has a Where- fore: he makes a very talkative friend therefore. Pre-Medics, Camera Club, Internat'l Rel., Spur, Annual Board. WILLIAM STEININGER: Keen and alert you have to be to get along successfully. IAMES STEPHENS: Lo and behold, what have We here, a shy young lad who's quite a dear. From Santa Rosa H.S. Pre-Medics, Hi-Y, Math Club, Camera, Basketball Letter, Annual Board, Track. FLOYD STEPHENS: He's determined and cheerful -these traits We admire: he's brilliant in studies and that we desire. From La junta H.S. MARIORIE STEVENS: A most likeable girl is she and always surrounded with company. ELEANOR STILLWELL: What her name is, she Won't tell, for she lost her own with a Wedding bell. ROBERT STOFFEL: He's quiet, dark, and some- what tallp he's just shy of girls, that's all. '. s W Q- fyy-H M JW wf Z'j,,y!f wif u 4 X xr, l Donna Slagle Maxine Slavsky Carmen Smith Ruth Snead Ernest Snyder Donald Solem MargaretAnne Speer Eileen Spencer Gwendolyn Spiller Daisy Spoon Williard Stambaugh lean Steele . , Virgil Stein William Steininger Iames Stephens Floyd Stevens Marjorie Stevens Eleanor Stillwell ' - 'F 7' -as Qt , . .5 ,P Iames Sowell Charlotte Stein Robert Stoffel Thirty-one 1 M, of . F0' -if . f T32 I gms-M 4 Angelina Stone Thelma Sweeney Irene Taylor lack Thompson Ienme Lee Thompson Frances Thorne Ieanette Tipton Helen Tommack Virginia Travis Don Trout Clifford Tryon Ruth Tullos V101g Turpen Evelyn Vail Charlotte Vandervort Don Vaughn ANGELINA STONE: Black hair and attractive eyes, within which sincerity lies. G.R., Escort and Guard, Typing Award. THELMA SWEENEY: Tall, blond, and slender is she, just as movie stars wish to be. IRENE TAYLOR: Always laughing, small of size, loads of fun and also Wise. Girl Reserves. IACK THOMPSON: Where he is, is hard to tell: but when he's here, we like him well. From East H.S. Hi-Y. IENN IE LEE THOMPSON: Blond and pleasant we have found: we're always glad when she's around. Rustlers, G.R. FRANCES THORNE: There are many things she likes to do: but her dislikes are very few. From Hayden H.S. S.O.S., G.R. IEANETTE TIPTON: She's very keen and never mean. HELEN TOMMACK: In her work and duties she's never slack, she's always an honor to Orange and Black. Spur, Escort and Guard. VIRGINIA TRAVIS: Noted for tenacity, vim, and veracity. G.R., Camera Club, Rustlers, Girl Sports, Big D, Needlework Guild Pin. 'G' 'f SEIXIIORS I wif' 1 ...ff Milf, film n X ', W F - U -,L fl 4LY' f ' '0 ' .1 .MIQY We .tfftflf dirt TROUT: Handsome, dark, and full of fun, aiden's dream wrapped up in one. Football, asketball, baseball, Stu. Int. Com., Vice-Pres. Iunior and Senior Classes. CLIFFORD TRYON: Cliff took heed: this he achieved-the glory, the honor, the privilege to lead. Boosters, football, basketball, baseball, hockey, Ir. Pres., Sr. Pres., Spur, Safety Coun., Vice- Pres. All-City Hi-Y, Stu. Int. Com. RUTH TULLOS: In'Iune her diploma she'll receive: she more than deserves it, we believe. VIOLA TURPEN: Willing to help she's always been, success in the world she'll surely win. EVELYN VAIL: This pretty girl has dates, you bet: her specialty is a tall cadet. From East H.S., G.R., Rustlers, Iunior Guard. CHARLOTTE VANDERVORT: We emphatically wish to state that Charlotte's eyes are sure to rate. Girl Reserves. DON VAUGHN: In choosing girls, he's very charyy but with the boys he's always merry. Rodeo, foot- ball, basketball. ERNA MAY WAGNER: Erna May shows that in being vivacious, it is possible also to be gracious. Pres. S.O.S., Camera Club, Masqueraders, G.R., Escort and Guard, Big Sister LORRAINE WALL: Dark eyes and dark hair plus a little manner of I don't care. Camera Club. GEORGIA WALLA: As an S.O.S. she's always alert and snatches the freshies who're snippy and pert. From Linwood H.S. Spur, Big Sister, S.O.S., Escort and Guard. RUTH WALLACE: Never an idle moment had she: she was always busy as a bee. Rustlers, Rodeo, Inter. Rel., Nature Club, Big Sister, Pres. Pre-Medics, V.P. Masqueraders, Sec'y G.R., Safety Coun. HARRIETT WARREN: If it's fun you wish to find, just keep Harriett in your mind. V. Pres. Camera Club, G.R., Pre-Medics, Pen Ramblers, VLP. of S.O.S., Escort and Guard. RUSSELL WALLICK: A diligent worker, steady and true: in the face of all odds he'll pull through. IEAN 'WASI-IBURN: Iean is such an active sprite, we think she rnust be very bright. Girl Sports, Pre-Medics, Camera Club, Nat'l I-Ion. Soc., Spur, Big D, Big Sister, Escort and Guard. LEWIS WEBB: I'Ie's noted for popularity but not because of hilarity. From El Paso I-LS. IANE WEBBER: Although a quiet girl is she, a friend worthwhile she's sure to be. Nature Club. WALLACE WEHR: With girls he always has or date: poor fellow, that would be his fate. Orches- tra, Student Council. , I AVA WHETSTINE' A tun fr e orchestra an o s e goes, dan y on well trained toes. Girl Reserves. LIBBIE WHITE: With her blond hair and light com- plexion, we're sure she's the object of someone's affection. S.O.S., Girl Reserves. ELEANOR WI-IOWELL: Her name looks like the song of an owl: but she's English, so she calls it Howell. IUNE WILCOX: Pleasant, quiet, and discreet: she's a maid you'd like to meet. Pre-School. BILL WILKINS: His face is round and his smile is cheery: he keeps his friends from becoming dreary. 3 5,Erna May Wagner Lorraine Wall . I lean Washburn Lewis Webb ' - - Eleanor Whowell Iune Wilcox , Vincil Wilson Walter Wilson 4 RUSSELL WILLIAMS: A smile as shy as yours can be is the lonely heart's necessity. Math Club. NATALIE VVILSON: Natalie has so many friends because a helping hand she lends. Pre-Medios, Math Club, Spur, Escort and Guard. SAM WILSON: He's determined and cheerful, most admirable traits: he's brilliant in studies but has few dates. VINCIL VVILSON: This handsome youth is a la is ,T 5 . - 1 ' ' L I l ,, fy 1 - 1 ' . d I . , of grace, but he always shows a poker face. 0 V99 fl ' WALTER 'vV'ILSON: I'm always a gentleman andffi, V01 I'm also quiet: I'd weigh more on a scientific diet. Drum and Bugle Corps. LOUISE WINKLEPLECK: This cheerful girl is really attractive and in P.E.G. is very active. Play Festi- val, Spur, Escort, Commencement Pageant. ' MILDRED WISE: Striking eyes and winning smile, raven locks and oh, such style. Rustlers, Pen nf. v ', Ramblers, S.O.S., Spur, G.R., Escort and Guard, A I I . AM Big Sister, Annual Board. ' ffl: ff EDWARD WOODARD: Edward's considered bash- ful and shy, but we'll admit he's a regular guy. Math Club, Spur. RICHARD WOODRUFF: Very serious, infinitely rnysterious. Spur. g is fx. nf W QC? Q, L., 4,471 ,, Lf, - Vx-4. -H 1. f. ,.4, V - , ., L u Mft Q . ' , --,VGA ff f gr if' g,'., ,. ,..1, ,434 fd L., 7' DI LLL . ,. '-.L f f -. 1 - Georgia Vlfallaxh Ruth Wallace Russell Wallick Harriett Warren lane Webber Vfallace Vx'ehr 'Wava Whetstine Libbie White , f Bill Wilkins Russell Williams Natalie Wilson Sam Wilson' Mildred Wise Edward Woodard Richard Woodruff Nw. .0 . I W 7 .A i.,'...,,....1 Thirty-three I ,r ,X , l mil lylrl f IJ I Zvi t ill X Thirty-four l Harry Worl Ieanette Wright Russell Wright Bill Baxter Lorraine Boddy Robert Burns Alma Clow Allen Holley Genev'e Wooldridge HARRY WORL: Within our halls as you pass by, this bright-eyed boy you're sure to spy. Hi-Y. IEANETTE WRIGHT: A tall good-looking blond, of whom we all are very fond. Rustlers, G.R., French and Nature Clubs, Rodeo, Big Sister. RUSSELL WRIGHT: Always teasing and free from care, with a disposition as bright as his hair. Na- ture Club. BILL BAXTER: A yocleling cowhand is jolly Bill and always a lover at his will. LORRAINE BODDY: A silent girl with flaxen hair, who does her work with meticulous care. Pen Ramblers, Spur, Escort and Guard. ROBERT BURNS: When classes are held, he likes to go in his brother's car for the Rodeo. Camera Club, Rodeo, baseball, football. ALMA CLOW: She is thin as a will-o'-the-wisp: we hope she never eats Ry-Krisp. ALLEN HOLLEY: In a tennis game Allen is con- sidered wary, but he has never been asked to play with Fred Perry. GENEVIEVE WOOLRIDGE: She's temperamental and works like a whiz: when she's a friend, a friend she is. Girl Sports, Big D. ROBERT ALEXSON: The inquisitive find how things are made and immediately hasten to learn a trade. ALVIN BAER: He's going to learn to look after money: then he can call some sweet young thing Honey. Basketball, baseball. IAMES BERRY: He's here just one hour with beam- ing face because there's a woman in the case. VERA BIGELOW: Every Iill must have a lack, and she does have a wifely knack. HELEN BILLETTER: Small in stature, not in mind: in her a true friendwe ever find. Iunior Escort. EVA BOWEN: This girl tries with all her might to keep herself ever out of sight. IUANITA BRADEN: She enjoys life in a great big way: and if permitted, could talk all day. BRUCE BREWER: In his calm way he passes each day. NEOMA BROWN: Dependable and very kind, a girl all like to keep in mind. DACYMAE BURKE: Her voice is very soft and weak: no one ever hears her speak. Spur. PEARL CHESLEY: We know that Pearl will not re- main single because with boys she likes to mingle. From Trinidad H.S. IUAN CHINN: Courteous, polite, and very neat, a combination that can't be beat. LOYAL CHRISTENSON: To be gay always is his aim: his disposition is ever the same. GEORGE CLAYBERG: His types of snoring, we all know, could earn him a living on radio. CLARENCE COCHRAN: He gets slips for the study hall and never shows up there at all. ALICE CONLON: She's a good example to all of us who about our studies make a fuss. ROLLAND DARE: He is a captain and a cadet, and he does well with the girls, you bet. Capt. of Cadets. STANLEY DEBACKER: In classes at school he's the show-off kind: in his lab at home he uses his mind. x if, ,t SENIORS-tRow ll Reginald' Calvert, Bob Burns, William Baxter, Alvin Baer, George Clayberg, Robert Axelson, Woodrow Ellis, Rolland Dare, Loyal Christensen. tRow 23 Melvin Gart, Irving Isaacson, Bruce Loup, George Gettman, Charles Logan, Arnold Kimble, Clarence Morris, Elmer Mickalson. tRow 33 Archie McFadden, Lester Popiel, Earl McNal1, George Pierson, Marvin Keeney, Hyman Rosenfeld Iim Manning, Billy Martin. GEORGE DECIANNE: He's not very well ac- quainted with West: probably he likes St. Ioe the best. From St. loseph H.S. LILLIAN EATON: It matters not if her work's not done, she's always ready to have her fun. WOODROW ELLIS: He now bears a president's name: we hope he will win a president's fame. MILDRED FINN: Dancing and fun suit her fine, but housekeeping is really more in her line. RAYMOND FITZWATER: The doorsyof West he goes in and out, but he doesn't care what the life's about. From Beatrice H.S. R.O.T.C. WALDON GARLINGTON: This red-headed lad who plays football can always be seen when he's in the hall. Baseball. 4 MELVIN GART: This boy maintains he has the right to talk at morning, noon, and night. ELMER GAUTHIER: In watching Elmer, we have the hunch that he likes no one but his Valverde bunch. GEORGE GETTMEN: His Wife his boss is sure to be: if you're in doubt, just wait and see. MELVIN GHELBER: Alert and glad, a regular lad. From North H.S. ARTHUR GOLDBLATT: His name means gold-leafy it would be funny if Arnold could turn it into money. ANDY GOMEZ: When having fun or in baseball strife, he always claims This is the life. HARRY GORDON: He talks and toots and makes so much noise that his teachers sometimes lose their poise. ADA GRAHAM: In the school office she likes to work, the meanest job she never shirks. WALLACE HALL: He's full of wise cracks and clever jokes: fun at all his friends he pokes. ERNEST HANDKE: In sprinting races he takes the lead: but in speaking to people, he's shy in- deed. Track. CHRISTOPHER HERRERA: This athlete, who is tall and slim, has sterling qualities latent in him. Track. IRVING ISAACSON: For every team he makes a try and often is able to get by. MARVIN KEENEY: And when he is a married man with babies on his knee, he certainly can tell them how good he used to be. Pre-Medics, Mas- queraders, Lightnin. IERRY LAHR: Football has Ierry's heart and soul 'cause all rush him in this role. Football, swim- ming, wrestling, Pres. of Nature Club. MAX LAMBERT: Sometimes quiet, sometimes gay, always charming in his way. From Louisville H.S. CATHERINE LANDERS: Although she's moved to old Wyoming, a diploma from West High she'll be owning. RICHARD LAWSHE: lf a willing worker you should need, call on Richard: he's good indeed. ELBERT LEWIS: He's small, blond, neat, and very trim, and has a heap of brains in him. Boosters, Camera and Math Clubs, Drum and Bugle Corps, Spur. CHARLES LOGAN: A genteel boy who's some- what tall and doesn't go with girls at all. 1 S E N I G IQ S NOT SHOWN IN ILLUSTRATIONS BRUCE LOUP: A fellow honest, intelligent, and kind:-characteristics most difficult to find. LAWRENCE LOVE: With his bright smiles and winning way, he brightens always each one's day. IAMES MANNING: This September he came here and started in his Senior year. BILL MARTIN: A lawyer must live years at college if he wishes legal knowledge. From Boulder H.S. Baseball. ERNEST MARTINEZ: He who goes for aviation deserves sincerest admiration. From Vale H.S. EARL MCNALL: From a section of town quite far away, he comes to see us every day. ELMER MICKALSON: You'd never think, upon my word, that he can Warble like a bird. Camera Club, Wrestling. CLARENCE MORRIS: ls he quiet or is he shy? Can't he talk or won't he try? WILLIAM MULLER: When you're looking for him, he can't be found: what he's fondest of is the dark background. From Boulder and North H. Schools. ROBERT NEATHERY: At drawing pictures he Can't be beat, and a better friend you'll never meet. From El Paso H.S., Rodeo, Annual Board. LUCILLE NEWELL: Friendly and gay in a kindly WUYQ ROBERT OLSON: Here's an attractive boy you ought to meet: he's always polite and very neat. RUTH PERDUE: She's a silent, dark-haired twin, who's always happy through thick and thin. GEORGE PIERSON: If thinking could put on in the front line, he'd put himself there in a very short time. R.O.T.C. FRANK POMPONIO: Frank has cheer and pep and vim: West may well be proud of him. LESTER POPIEL: His future everyone can guess- it's tooting his way to success. ELSIE RICKETTS: It's certain that in the business swirl, she'll be a mighty successful girl. Thirty-six HYMAN ROSENFELD: This young lad is an inno- vation, for whom we can find no imitation. From North H.S. MALCOLM SAUNDERS: He leaves study hall without permission: he's never caught or shows contrition. From St. Ioseph H.S. Football. PEARL SHADRICK: She's intelligent and takes to sports: we never find her out of sorts. EARLINE SILVERTHORN: She will always be just the girl we like to see. From Wheatridge H.S. EPI-IRAIM SOLIS: Smart and artistic, a' credit to West, where courtesy counts, he rates with the best. Debate, Inter. Relations, Masqueraders, Car- ter Memorial Art Award. IANE SOSTARICH: This peppy, dark-haired lass has a smile for all who pass. Girl Sports, swim- ming. THEODORE STAMOS: If this young man becomes an M.D., his studies very hard will be. From Ogden H.S. FLORENCE TEFFT: Young love has knocked at this girl's door, I'm sure she shouldn't ask for more. ARTHUR VINCENT: Whenever a crowd is gath- ered around, Arthur a mile away is found. ELIZABETH WRIGHT: She is busy the live-long day just because she's made that way. From Golden H.S. Rustlers. NILA WYATT: She enters into work or play in the same good-natured way. ELIZABETH YENKIN: She never leaves a thing undone, and she is kind to everyone. MARGERY YOUNGFIELD: Not too quiet, not too gay, and she has a lovable way. ROBERT YOUNGKIN: Happy am I, from care I'm free. Why aren't they all contented like me? IOHN ZICK: Kindly, true: earnest, too. LIONEL ZINN: On having pleasure he is bent, and he considers his hours well spent. PLATES BY COURTESY OF COCKS-CLARK ENGRAVING COMPANY, DENVER Q fa CLASSMATES .tgmw Iosephine Barela Ellsworth Bell Naydene Bishop Don Euler Louis Harper Charles Howard ' Evan Iones Ray Jones Russell Layton Myrtle Lovely Mildred Masters Lester Mathews Dorothy Roller Gloria Sauve Now, Ann, let's see what juniors, sophs, and freshies had school-loyalty enough to have their individuals . 1: 1I'1. O.K. 12 B's first. We'll take them as they come. I clon't know the boys very well, but that laughing one -oh, his name is Evan Iones-sure has the dandy teeth. That's the reason he's laughing. The girls have some to show, too. Take lean Fuller. Where are you going to take her? Wherever she'll go with me. Watch her strut her stuff next year. ' '. 'jl3 . tai, Bill Simmons Edith Burger Roberta Burger lack Carlton Kathleen Dorsey Iean Fuller Ianice Kluge Geraldine Lee Peggy McCool Thirty-eight Naydene Bishop will do some stepping, too. Keep your eyes on her. I have been for some time. The way she is looking out of the corners of her eyes forbodes trouble for somebody, and I wonder who it will be. You don't have to wonder. Ask the man from Boulder. Do you know that she writes volumes to him each week: so don't try for her. I think Don Euler and Russell Layton have what it takes. I suppose you mean good looks. And good manners. Charles Howard seems full of the old Nick. Ianice Kluge is his good second. She'd show a guy a good time, and I bet she dances well. She'd have to have rhythm to hold hands with Frankie Burg, he couldn't endure any other kind. Well, well, I can pick a dancer even by her picture. Kathleen Dorsey looks lonesome Without Iune Beamer. Those two are as thick as Imogene and Laura. And both are very swell dressers, just regular fashion plates. And could advertise any beauty product on' the market. I think, Ann, they have it all over most of the girls. Iune's coloring is perfect and it doesn't look put on to me--it's nature's very own. She's a knock- out. ls it true that Bill Simmons is a regular hiker? I have heard that he walks miles at a time. Right-ol But don't forget to add that his mother drives after him in her car to bring him back home. 'Scorchy' Matthews in the upper group is a good egg. He must be Scotch because he answers the description of a Sandy Scotp then, too, he plays golf. Dorothy Roller, Frank, has a head full of working brains: she-'s true to family. The Rollers make every- one else appear a nit-wit. f v4 Geraldine Lee's name is the most musical, and she fits it with looks. David Thompson, Frank, has a good showing of teeth. He's a cutie. So is Betty Simmons. Two good lookers in one family would be plenty hard on the purse. You're right. And there are two Umbargers on this page. Iames is one of the most gentlemanly boys in the school and- His sister is going to be a blossoming debutante very soon. I've always noticed that people who have their pictures in the Annual the first year they're in school always become somebodies. Mrs. Umbarger is one of the mainstays in the P.T.A. and that fact is responsible for the good performance of her children. I bet she' proud of them. Maybe if our mothers had come to P.T.A. we would have been outstanding students instead of just the ordinary common kind that never do anything. My That remark shows your color: blame your indiffeyfyvww ence on your mother if you wish, but keep mine out of it. She has to work too hard all day to bother wi me. Bob Mitchell will be going places: he was water- boy for the basketball team this year and the co- manager. Ted Brown has already started to go. I do like to hear him on the radio, he teaches me correct pro- nunciation. Who teaches it to him. No one has to teach him: he's one of the perspiring boys who digs it out for himself. I'm goofy about the two freshmen, Marie McCollum and Norman Payne. I don't see why more freshies aren't in step with the times and grow up. Did you have your picture in the Annual when you were a freshman, Ann? I know I didn't. I eat my words. Can you tell me why Bob Rounds always rushes the candidates for head girl? That's not hard. They're always pretty and l let's keep our eyes on him and see what girls he be with most in Iune, she'll be the next head girl. Laureda Shimel dates all the time: she's sure ular. On the other page is her one and only, Frank. Ray Iones, you mean. Which comes first, good dan ing or a steady? What's bothering you now? Did Ray 'acquire Laureda because he was a good dancer, or did he specialize in the art after he started going steady? That's the chicken and the egg problem that has never been solved, and neither will a boy's actions be accounted for. Let's go on with the Annual. - fl I, .,1.,.e ---X fi f IQ. r Q La., .. 6- V '91 I Lim 4 t Betty Simmons Iames Umbarger Ted Brown Alice Adams Bob Mitchell Louise Padon Lucille Zager Ellen Stevens Connie Walden Cecelia Reardon Elaine Iohnson Betty Mulder Laureda Shimel Marie McCallum David Thompson Maybelle Morrison Bob Rounds Wallace l..aPoe lean Mullen Ruth Umbarger Norman Payne Thirty-nine 1 Am Q, Z it ' , ,,..- A. -- --H' Forty ,MY C, ill Hill FIRST PICTURE-CROW l Wis, Vivian Martin, Ruby Kemry, Lorraine Dinsmore, Dorothy Brose, Helen Barker, Frances Haglund, lean Nelson, Susan Chavez. CROW 2lArdyce Hendrick- son, Vifanda Eisenring, Martha Stevens, Clara Beam, lund Bogard, Geraldine Luers, Kathryn Douglas, Iulia Herrin, Florine Messenger, Harriett Etheridge. CROW 31 leanette Shaeter, Wanda Wilson, Alice Hanstein, Gertrude Cain, Maxine Riddle, leanette Dodge, Ianice Kluge, Helen Nicholas, Dorothy Bueckerrnan, Ruth Richards. CROW 47 Rowena McDonnell, Ruth Carbaugh, Betty Iune lordon, Ruby Knapp, Emily lohnson, Genevieve Capra, Katherine Schlessman, Margaret Grauel. SECOND PICTURE-CROW ll Grace Kyelberg, Wanda Proctor, Villetta Becker, Iune Beamer, Helen lohnson, Ruth Harbin, Vera Graff, Doris Cooper, Enid Schoeneweiss. CROW Zl Rosella Simmons, Norma Norlie, Evelyn Fouts, Edith Marie Burger, Ernestine Ainsworth, Barbara Shir- ley Youngblood, Bertha Peterson, Gladys Agnew, Evelyn Leigh. CROW 3l Clarence McClure, Dudley Gelwick, Mary Dell Kennedy, Lois Kilham, Mildred Wailes, Elna Opheikens, Althea Seckler, Lorraine Trippel, Annabelle Martinez, Della Vasquez, George Pagliasotti. CROW 4? Kenny Worl, LeRoy Starnbaugh, Billy Vander Weyden, Iohn Chestnut, Glenn Montgomery, lames Lucas, Buddy Webb, Roy Lane, Ray Rossback, Warren Richards, Leon Dotson. THIRD PICTURE-CROW ll Eddie Bohn, Charles Walker, Bob Applegate, Reynold Le Doux, Ed Henley, Bob Heggenberger, Art Smith, Fred Smith, Bill McDowell. CROW 2l Herman Feld- man, Iimmie Raines, Stanley lohnson, Cecil Miller, Charles Iohnson, Herman Austin, Sam Feld, Harold Kleiner, Harold Haddon. CROW 31 Bill Thorney, Ernie Smith, lim Kiesler, Frank Bergman, Russell O'Day, Tom Hastie, Walter Starr, lack Vine, George Sallee, Ierome Looper. CROW 4l Donald Wourms, Fred Pennie, La Verne Rounds, Don Compton, Bob Marker, Harold Bersche, Alfred Rowland, Kenneth Hobbs, Lee Overman, Robert Moore. ., H1,!,,. ,JSM , ..,, ,ff FIRST PICTURE-CROW 13 Cecile Youngblood, Shirley Keene, Norma Kerper, La Vonne Hub- bard, Lavona Patton, La Verna Lambert, Nellie Gebhart, Georgia Campbell, Margie Spencer, Corinne Breckenridge. CROW 23 Helen Davis, Madeline Adkins, Rosy Brizrnann, Maxine Besore, Kathleen Madden, Helen Boothroyd, Ruth Waite, Agnes Sullivan, Kathleen Murray, Helen Hardison. CROW 33 Thelma Morgan, Louise Padon, Geraldine Burke, Marry Harris, Ruth Sette- gren, Gwendolyn Hyde, Evelyn Hettner, Marie Williams, Mildred Dennison, Doris Hayes, Mild- red Lehrer. CROW 43 Ardis Skull, Frances Bridges, Grace Archibald, Dorothy Washburn, Dor- othy Clark, Mabel Rose, Bernice Morgan, Virginia Wiegand. SECOND PICTURE-CROW l3 Sherman Strobeck, Harold Luers, Albert Gorman, Charles Tif- fany, Paul Bates, Buford Messenger, lames Mason, William Beston, Ioe Chinn. CROW 23 Harvey Pings, Charles Lutes, Bill Thomey, Carl Logan, lack Cecil, Don De Haas, Albert Moate, Torn Tuffield, Clifford Smith. CROW 33 Bill Tyson, George Sallee, Walter Starr, Russell Rowe, Don Claren, Gene Thomas, Fred Nigh, Charles Dietrich, Dave Bunskill. THIRD PICTURE--CROW l3 Virginia Carlisle, Dorothy Dunn, Ernestine Carleton, Betty Berryhill. Vida Rhoten, Gertrude Gasser, Evelyn Scroggins. CROW 23 Louise Williams, Alice Noshowup, Catherine Sharits, Erma Lee Charles, Margaret Blossom, Dorothy O'Neil1, Marie Miller. CROW 33 Ivan Baker, Bud Snively, Billy Graham, Herman Ochs, Henry Robinson, William Shaefer, Raymond Maes, Tabion Marrs. CROW 43 Thomas Perry, Arthur Chapman, David Brunskill, Ciar- ence Pendleton, Rudolph Lloyd, Leroy Starnbaugh, Herbert Cohen, Alvin Cram. Forty-one lil EE , ii' T iii Ig-j TT' I 'Ti , Pl, 1 1 fjljjfvg Q ll l L U! wJVx.mK iff! ' Eiaoifd ski'fff'i5Te1iQi 'pefgicfii iJr5riif5'BQug1lfi1e1ef5' FIRST PICTUJRE-lRow iJ'Li11a4m Helter, Ludora Harbin, Gladys Van Loon, Betty Wille, Elaine Lame, Phyllis Garvey. lRow 27 Frank Brocesky, Shirley Schelling, lessamine Collins, Virginia Farrell, Betty Brizendine, lean Hayworth, Viola Gunn, Mary Athens, Mary Glson, lirnrnie McMillan. CROW 31 Francis Mann, Beatrice Vadill, Harriett Shaddock, lrene Stevens, Edith Bailey, Mary Hinkle, Rose Marie lohanson, Hattie May Bullock, Cecil Akin, Sam Lusky, Eddie Oshier. Row 41 Morris Edwards, Bernard Vallhart, lay Melnick, Robert Crites, larnes Clark, George Decker, Neil McGee, lim McCool, Harry Shafer, Robley Aspegren. SECOND PICTURE-lRow ll Susie Anderson, Doris Lee Thornton, Florence Hover, leannette Tipton, Virginia Dare, Rosalie Propp, Lucille Delaney, Ramona Hayes, Marie Hatheway, Ardythe Anderson. CRow 2l Don Roberts, George Pierson, Rose Payne, Dorothy Thompson, Virginia Travis, Florence Wanless, Gladys Missing, Corinne Schultz, Elsie Hesford, Bob Neville, lohn Berry. CRow 35 Sam Ruscio, larnes Rogers, Walter Radovich, Melvin Taunt, Ted Kararnigios, Herbert Daniels, Clark Gable, Frank Absent. lRow ffl Louis Cohen, lack Frischman, Frank Brocesky, Iohn Rowland, loe Bush, Robert Green, Lloyd Wagner. CLASS OFFICERS-V -Geraldine Davis, Anthony Stone, lesse Dillahunty, Betty Yockey, lames Kiesler, Buford Messenger, Lcxvona Patton, Doris Hayes F.. . S w-.T..L.J I ,W . .,..........4...- .. ...mi rf, . - .: Forty-two ...M Q, E .. md K H9 in Q, ATI-ILETICS Forty-thre sus it. ., W.. Y. W M mln Ill! ll Ly! ill All-ILETES CN PARADE I'm almost afraid to look at these pages, Ann, we didn't make much headway in our games this year. I know, Frank: but you must consider that our teams were composed of almost all green material. Lafe McClard had played before. Surel And he made All-City, too. When our boys are experienced, they always land on top, next year will be our turn again at the championships. We have the best coaches in the city, l've worked under all of these five, and I know how truly good they are. They deserve better results than they seem to have COACI-lESeFred Rinne, Wilford Woody, Elbert Chapman, Newton , Morris, Earl Paul Forty-four eat obtained. They all know what they are doing, but the boys are not so sure of themselves. l wonder why the band picture is here. Because, Ann, the players did so much to make our football team a success. Lahr and Cockroll are football men. But look here, Ann! Here are some guys with tennis rackets: we must have had a tennis team. TENNIS M GCLF Who would have guessed it? Why don't more of the boys go in for tennis, golf, and track. All you fellows think about is football. Look how wild all Colorado went over Glenn Morris this last summer: he was in track. Fred Perry is making all kinds of money with tennis now. lt seems to me that these sports pay more than football. Nobody is laughing at Iesse Owen, either. He's going to make SlO0,000 by his running and then retire. I admit Dutch Clark is going places with his football. Sure he's going places, Ann. And lots more men of the grid will be able to rate in the sports world of foot- ball from now on since it is going pro. lt's been just the ones who got coaching jobs that could cash in on their football experience. Now it's different. Colleges seem to wish football players more than those in other fields. Al Nikkel went to Yale this last year, and he played basketball. He won a scholarship there. You have no grounds, Ann, for criticizing the boys for not playing tennis. I don't see any feminine face on this team. Have you ever heard of Helen Wills Moody? Seems to me she has gone, and is still going, places in the World of 'NIP TENNIS'-lack Frischman, Harold Kleiner, Harold Haddon, lacob Lerner, Bruce Loup sports. You talk all the time about your teams in volley and basketball. Eleanor Holm Iarret made all kinds of publicity with her swimming. All kinds is right. Can you tell me why Bruce Loup has an individual picture? l thought individuals went to All-City and championship men only. He came too late for his picture. l remember well, for l was out on the grounds, watching Clyde Miller take it. l-le must have brought this snap in later. Here are some more forgotten men-our golf team. Golf is a keen pro-sport, too: and we have had some good teams in years past. Didn't 'Tub' say last year that that our teams used to come in first or second every time? Yes, he did: but it has not been in our time, Ann. Maybe if the school made the pupils pay to see these folks play, the students would value the games more and attend some. Have you ever gone to a golf or tennis game? Noi Have you? Not guilty! I don't know a thing about either one. Per- haps these sports require more than an average brain to understand them and to play them: that would let us out. But in one of them the p ople talk a great deal about 'love,' and we coimi get i n that. I've always thought that golf belonge olri fnen's sons, for only fellows whose fathers b xcgng t ' ountry Clubs and the like get ct chance to pl ll th time: these games take lots' of practice. Mosinf ur boys have learned by being caddies. l, eyer iii X or a job on the links: l've gone out for ice lxgons to ake my muscles strong. Caddy- ing is goodg w for olf champions since the rich guys are going 'n strong' or polo. X GOLF-t-Lowell Higgins, Lyle Grubb, Bob King, Wayne Brzilgr, Plxill ndberg, Lester Mathews, Billy Lind. N At Forty-five i X VARSITY FOOTBALL-CROW ll Carl Stanley, Kenny Worl, Elmer Thiel, Pete Ambler, Bill Smith, Bill Girtin, Walter Gialdberg, George Maurer, Don Trout, Amos Terry. fRow 23 Mgr. Ted Karamigios, Henry Eisenhand, Kenny Hobbs, Howard Wagner, Winfred Russell, Bob Flieger, Roy Lane, Sam Buckstein, Walter Radovich, Ogden Hollars. fRow 3t Ierry Lahr, Mgr. Ralph Ginn, Arnold Kimble, Sam Levine, lack Cecil, Late McClard, Iohn Patterson, Carl Logan, Fred Pennie, Kenny DuBois, Ernie Smith, Buford Messenger, Don Vaughn. l - x. J tOOTBAI.I. Here we are at 'Football'y it just had to be our luck that in our Senior year we would have the first inexpe- rienced team for a long, long time. You were just say- ing about the rich going for polo. West made its start in that direction this year. Look at Naomi and Bert on ponies! Didn't you envy them? Noi lust girls envy. So? I recall quite vividly a certain boy who was sore when he was not nominated for any Senior office. Which is worse, being envious or getting sore? Time to change the subject, Ann. Let's see who's on the football squad anyway. There were sure a lot out. The gang made a better showing when they were sophs. lust think! Lafe is the only one in the lot that made All-City! Oh, you girls make me tired. The whole bunch of you rave about Lafe as though he were Robert Taylor, can't you see something in other boys in the school! Envious or sore, Frank! Well, it does make me sore, I guess, because all the fellows on the team tried with all their might. Although our aggregation did come out at the bottom, they can hold up their heads for their pluck. Next year they will show the conference. Let's read the Write-up and see what the Annual has to say about the season. It's short. West's 1936 football season was not quite so successful because of the lack of seasoned players. Lafe McClard and Ierry Lahr were the only returning lettermen. On a bright day in October a determined bunch of Cowboys went to the D.U. stadium only to be walloped by South 39 to 7. The following week a superior Manual aggre- gation defeated West's cohorts 20 to O. The West -North game found the Cowhands on the short end of a 6-0 score after a bitterly fought game. Then came the day of days, the first West-East encounter, which proved Forty-six l kd' the old motto, THE SPIRIT OF WEST THAT KNOWS NO BETTER is true. West commanded suchan early lead that East could not overtake the Cowboys, the final score being I4 to 12. On a cold, snowy day South's championship-bound Rebels again turned back West by a 20 to O score. The second West-Manual game resulted in a 25-7 victory for the Bricklayers. The final game of the year on Turkey Day between our ancient rival, East, resulted in a heart-breaking defeat of 7-O. FINAL STANDINGS TEAIVI WON LOST TIE SOUTH ........... 8 U U MANUAL ....... 5 2 U EAST ............ ...... 3 4 O WEST ...................... l 6 0 NORTH .,,................. l 0 1 . ' , ' -wh 3, I ' E . . ts. I t I, ff I' , ' ' .i it I ' 1? rw- aa rss . jt K+ , R- fe-ff.. r' up fe M M 3 4- lfgfi - TIQE MCCLARD -if.-4 ' . -. rg-ww n,.,w3 SOPHOMOIQE LETTERMEN-Lafayette McClard, 3 yrs., Senior: Ierry Lahr, 2 yrs., Senior. One-year Men-Clifford Tryon, Sr.: Arnold Kimble, Sr., Don Trout, Sr.: Sam Buchstein, Ir., Kenny DuBois, Ir.: Bob Fleiger, Ir., Bill Girtin, Ir.: Ogden Hollars, Sr., Boy Lane, Ir.: Sam Levine, Ir.g Iohn Patter- son, Ir.y Fred Pennie, Ir., Wintred Russell, Ir., Billy Smith, Soph.7 Ernest Smith, Ir.: Amos Terry, Ir.: Don Vaughn, Sr., Howard Wagner, Ir., Kenny Worl, Ir., Pete Ambler, Soph., Elmer Thiel, Ir., Walter Palmquist, Sr. 1 lay Melnick, Soph.p less Dilahinty, Ir.. Managers-Ralph Ginn, Ted Karami- gios. Others who participated-Carl Stanley, Soph.p Irving Isaacson, Sr. Guess that's that. lsn't it queer, Frank, how we do not wish anybody to be as good as we are. Two years ago we were so griped because our team was co-champion with South, and last year how we did crow when we were entire champions. Now this year we get a certain satisfaction that North was just as bad as we. Look, the CHAMPIONS Annual Board put North last when really that school should come first alphabetically. There's a heap of consolation in that little jesture on the part ot the kids who wrote all this. There's no need to soft pedal when talking about the sophomore team. That's true. We can certainly say some kind words about them. They're championship material through and through. Boy! What a team the old school will have next year with all the juniors left and these soph kids coming up. What were the scores they made? l know them by heart, Ann. There was the tie of 6 to 6 with North, 7 to 6 with Manual, 12 to 0 in the East game, and 21 to 7 against South. They topped the score in a non-league game with Garden Home 25 to l2. Do you know the members of the squad? No, but I'd like to. Can you name them for me? SOPHOMORE FOOTBALL SQUAD-CHAMPIONS-tLying downl Benny Lavatto, George Maurer, Alvin Sostarich, Clifford Owen. tRow ll Don Haloin, Ioe Chinn, Carl Hobwood, Bill Smith, lay Melnick, Pete Ambler, Elmer Thiel, Walter Goldberg, Sam Feld. CROW 27 Gene Tromas, Buford Messenger, Stanley Johnson, Cecil Thompson, Milford Barrows, Bob Pugazzi, Tom Tuftield, Iohn Baker, Iohn Snow, Ray Maes, Bob Crites. tRow 35 Billy Vander Weyden, Wally Giesler, Don Claren, Bert Metcalf, Rex Morgan, Bob Klinker, Henry Eisenhand, Frank Ferris. F t 1' tt A Str. E: . . Forty-seven V.. ITT!-H775 lx L' XX ,-. -- CGS HRS One thing is certain, Frank, we may not have been outstanding on the gridiron this year, but we did not let our defeats dampen our ardor. Remember how I rustled? We Rustlers thought our new satin blouses were the classiest ever. I bet they shone a plenty when we were drilling on the field. I'll say they did. I had to wear my smoked glasses, You make me tired! The Rustlers weren't the only ones who had new out- fits. Don't forget the band and their new uniforms. How could I when we were paying for them all year. I'll never forget how we Went through that grusome mortuary just to help the P.'I'.A. make their share of money for the uniforms. What makes me sore is that the band members didn't have to pay a cent for theirs while we girls had to buy our material and sit up sev- I eral nights sewing on them. What are you laughing about? I was just thinking how long it would have taken Glen Cockrell to make all the suit that was draped around him: his uniform was so big. Who was your cute little captain, Ann? I never saw a fellow who is always talking about other 'girls as you are. Guess I'll rave a bit about Don Solem and see how you'll like it. But your attraction this time is Iris Phibbs. Last year we chose our tallest girl, Bertie Work, as captain: this year it was our shortest. lt seems to me, Ann, that the old-time rustlers, from whom you took your name, xt e good shooters. Vtfhy in the world didn't you girl fs actice once in a while with your gun? For two ye I Xnow you couldn't tire the cap when the crucial mome came. But--oh, that's what you can count on from girls. xx' X. N DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS--fRow ll Clifford Smith, Bill Ieffs. iRow 21 Frank Brocesky, Webster Burrows, Clarence Pendleton, Monty Vincent, Bill Vander Wayden, Harold johnson, Berton Evans. iRow Sl Henry Burg- man, Duncan Cameron, Don Euler, Atkins Trenchey, Art Smith, Ray Ros- back. tRow 43 Bob I-leggenberger, Albert Wolfson, Earl Myers, Robert Green, Bob Green, Fred Clark, Albert Iaki, Robert Agee. CROW 5l David Romero, Billy Bailey, Tony Aranda, Ted Reynolds, Dick Maes. Or Mr. Rinne's revolver. You mentioned Glenn Cock- rell a short time ago. You know he's the best sport I ever knew. When he couldn't play on the team, he got behind the student ticket sales. He sold the most tickets. But why couldn't he play? Why was he considered ineligible? Because he had played one year on Oklahoma Prep team before coming to West. Gosh, how that boy could kick goals last year! That last point has Won many a game. l heard he is going to D.U. next fall. We'll be reading more about his kickingp just watch. You brag all the time about your good Rustlers. We Boosters were just as super-super as you. lf you had had to drill under Cyril Reed as long and as hard as we did, you would want people to appreciate you, too. We made and sold shakers and tags before every game, at the West-East game we marched. And our Billy Ieffs means just as much to us Boosters as your Iris Phibbs does to the Rustlers. What a time we had on Armistice Day! I and the rest of the Drum and Bugle Corps marched until our dogs were too tired and stiff to move, and then you wanted me to go to a dance in the evening. I should have taken you though: you looked so keen in your ninegallon hat. Don't be funny! lust because the announcer at the reviewing stand called them nine-gallon is no sign that you should rub it in forever. They are ten-gallon ones. Still talking about hats, Ann, didn't the R.O.T.C. boys with their envelop caps look cocky. I heard some one say that our unit was the best marching group in the parade. No wonder we all marched the best. Mr. Trustman led that band around and around the race track until the members just had to keep in step. The Music Went 'Round and 'Round. , ,I W 'lf lla DRUM AND BUGLE Oh, punk! Mr. Rinne put us girls through the paces: and Cyril Reed drove your group almost insane with practice, Sergeant Moore wore out the streets in the vicinity of West by hepping his three companies hours at a time. Maybe if the faculty were allowed to march, there would not be the need of so much practicing on any- one's part. Really, all of us like to show off, but staying after school is another story. Let's look at pictures some more. 9 Here are Naomi and Bert on their horses. They gave the true Western touch to our section of the parade: they almost stole the show. Naomi was keen to let West use her horses. Here they are at the game. The cheer-leaders-the 'pepul's choice'-and darn good ones at that. Every time our spirits almost reached rock bottom, these three guys yelled with such enthusiasm that we responded with cheers that nearly rocked the old stadium. I remember how they knocked on their favorite tele- phone pole for good luck. But they didn't knock hard enough. Our luck in ath- letics this year would destroy the firmest belief in that old superstition about wood bringing good fortune. Take basketball, for instance. lift! Nj!!! ,VP ft I Forty-nine -e--.A JM-l., Lg , FK .. til ui! ' Q PQI ,Sty X S ' 4, X 4 y T... K T, ., T RUSTLERS UPPER PICTURE-CROW ll Elaine Willis, Betty Simmons, Della Vasquez, Elaine Wright, Iris Phibbs, Evelyn Fonts, Lillian Edwards, Dawn Hinkle, Violet Humphreys. CROW 25 Betty Lou Dean, Marie Hazzard, Phyllis Hammond, Iune Beamer, Kay Dorsey, leanette Wright, Florine Messenger, Norma Norlie. CROWSD Florence Hover, Annabelle Martinez, Dacymae Morrison, Donna Northrup, Fay McQueary, Maybelle Morrison, Daisy Spoon, Shirley Morton. CROW 4l Mildred Ienson, Marjorie Wuergler, Margie Aragon, Evelyn Vail, Iune Travis, lune Bogard, Virginia Wiegand, Marguerite Church. LOWER PICTURE-CROW ll Cecile Youngblood, Rita Gonzalez, Ann Tenario, Eldora Skiif, Ardice Scull, Retha Mae Rainer, Shirley Flieger, Virginia Carlisle, Audrey Marsh. CROW 27 Rosalie Propp, Mildred Wuergler, Donna Northrup, Phyllis Garvey, Mildred Lehrer, Rose Brizman, Iackie Herrick, Donna Mae Maurer. CROW 39 Betty Warner, Enid Schoeneweiss, Helen Hardison, Gladys Van Loon, Betty Brizendine, Kathleen Murray, Constance Pille, Dor- othy Dunn, Betty Berryhill, Marguerite lackson. CROW 45 Elaine Iohnson, Ruth Waite, Maxine Besore, Dorothy Clark, Althea Seckler, Margaret Thomas, Bernice Morgan, Ruth Forbes, Marie Miller, Laverne Lambert. CROW 57 Helen Boothroyd Lavona Patton, Bernice Kissel, Florence Newton, Helen Iohnson, Ruth Settergren, Mable Rhodes, Hattie Mae Bullock, Barbara Iohn- son. Fifty .. .,., .'... .. ,, L. . A , f f Xp QQ Bill Thorney, lesse Dillahunty, Bob Flieger, Elmer Thiel Bob Metcalf, Elmer Dunstan, La Verne Rounds, Rudy Borga, Don Solem, Sam Levine, Ogden Hollars, Alvin Baer, Don Compton, lam Stephens, Bill Thorne, Harold Bersche. BASKETBALL Yes, Ann, take basketball! Look at the scores a minute. West 17-South 22 West 27-East 36 West 15-Manual 33 West 24-North 18 West 18-East 20 West 21-South 23 West 17-Manual 46 West 24-North 25 Those are the scores all right, but they don't tell the real story, Frank. I'll never forget that frantic West-East game of 18 to 20. Our boys played the last half like fighting demons: and when Harold Bersche sank the would-be tying score of the game only to find that it was a split second too late, I yelled, screamed, and booed just like all the others in the West section. I did the same the next game, our second with South. How that Rebel team staged a come-back in the second half and Won in an overtime period by one throw. l would have gone out on the floor and fought if I had dared. I'm proud of you, Frank, because you didn't. I felt like it, too. Do you remember how the last game at North was played the new way without the center jump ex- cept at the beginning of the game? I don't remember that so well as the fact that West didn't get one break all season. Look at that blamed scorel 24-25. That made us tie again with North for a cellar position, and our boys deserved a better rating. Misery loves company. We ought to be on mighty friendly terms with North. Like fun! How Bersche held the North's leading scorer Was a knock-out. Rudy Borga played a bang-up game with the Rebels: he is West's high-point man. Bob Plieger was the high-point man, Frank, in the first South game along with Rudy: don't forget him! Sure l won't, Ann. Sam Levine, Bob Flieger, and Don Solem did keen playing in our one victory, the first game with North. I think we have some good lookers on our team. You would fall, too, for Don. You haven't a ghost of a chance, too many are ahead of you. lt doesn't do a bit of harm to do some star-gazing. He was made captain. Try your wiles on lim Stephens or Elmer Dunstan. They might retaliate, you never can tell. Let's take a look at the team. LETTERMEN of Basketball: Don Solem, Capt.: Elmer Dunstan, Alvin Baer, lim Stephens, Don Compton, La Verne Rounds, Bob Thorne, Iesse Dillahunty, Sam Levine, Rudy Borga, Bob Flieger, Harold Bersche, Bill Thorney, Elmer Thiel. Fifty-one . V Y A-0 0-A In Y v. ,C WS SMITH ll This picture looks good to me, Ann. Which one? Ernest Smith's? I: Yes. He made All-City in heavyweight wrestling. He downed the giant Maul of North in a riotous match. He looks like a giant himself. Is he the only one that did anything? Why no.l Shreves threw his Manual and East oppon- ents: Miller threw an East many Raines won against North: Flodin against Manual, and Mickalson against South. How many did Smith throw? WRESTLERS-'1Row ll Robert Harvey Pings. Cl-low 21 Don Howard larboe, Howard Roll WRESTLING He won all his matches except one, and that one was given him on forfeit. I'm glad girls don't go in for wrestling. l don't see any fun in being thrown in a fight. You wouldn't! There's all kinds of science in wrest- ling, just strength doesn't count. A man has to use his head all the time: he just can't be caught napping a half second or down he goes. Tell me the fellows here, Frank: I don't know many. How little some of them seem to be. They're the lightweights, silly. Wrestlers are paired according to weight. Here go the names. William Craven, Walter Iones, Charles Stott, George Maurer, Iames Raines, Neil Mc-Gee, , Elmer Mickalson, Clyde Miller, Ernest Smith, Walter Radovich, Kenny Du Bois, Shreves, Merlin Arbogast. 'iftv-two W 4? 'PO BASEBALL' KROW ll Roy lohnson, La Verne Rounds, lesse Dillahunty, Don Trout, lim Kiesler, Bill Thorney, lake Lerner. CROW 23 Yifalden Garlington, Maurice Smock, Ernie Smith, Coach Paul, Bill Girtin, Iohn Lewis, Herbert Daniels. i BASEBALI. l'm ashamed, Ann, that l can't tell you much about the baseball team and the playing of the season. l've been too busy looking for a job to go to many of the games. Of course, l never go to a game Without you. l'm glad you don't. Look who're on the team and that will be answer enough. I suppose you mean Don Trout, but l'm just as strong for lim Kiesler and lesse Dillahuntyf' La Verne Rounds looks plenty keen to me. You know, Frank, this team was picked for looks as well as for sporting ability. The brains aren't lacking, either. If you doubt my word, take a squint at Maurice Smock on the back row: he's always in Spur. l don't see how a heavy-weight like Ernie Smith could play baseball, Babe lost out when he became fat. True, Ann, but Ernie will run so much fat off him play- ing this game that he will have to eat five or six meals a day to get into the heavy-weight class by next Winter. Wouldn't it be bliss to eat all you could and not be afraid of loosing a slender figure? I suppose l'll have to hear that remark the rest of my life. Look at the lettermen down here. Are they the only ones who made letters? No. I have a hunch the others fotgot to Wear their letter sweaters and were not allowed in the picture. Doesn't Phil Oakley blush a lot when a girl speaks to him. Be kind to his youth, Ann: he'll outgrow that. Look at yours truly. D CLUB- tRow ll Elmer Mickalson, Phili Cakle , Bill Girtin, Bob Burns, Roy-lohnson, Otis Shreves, John Patterson, Win- P Y fred Russell, Kenny 'Worl. fRow 21 Ogden Hallars, Arnold Ki mb letfs. CROVJ 39 Roy Lane, Don Trout, LeRoy Edwards, Howard le, Bob Don Solern, lay Melnick, lames Guse, Bill Palmquist. RS QD 1 v 1 .E , r. Q Fifty-three , V! gy Ajj!f,!W,,.4ff1 .- X L TRACK--tStandingl LeRoy Edwards, Fred Pennie, Arnold Kimble, Ernest Handke, Donald Compton, Harold Harring- ton, Mgr. Mervin Lewis. KKneelingJ Frank Carey, Ted Karamigios, Harold Haddon, Al Nikkel, Fred Chacon, Chris Hererra. TRACK TEAM H936 Look, Frank! What are some of last year's students doing in this picture? Oh, that bunch! They're last year's Track Team. The Annual always goes to press before track season opens. That's it, is it? Now maybe this Annual will have a championship left over by that super 1936 Class. Pooled again, Ann. This team was a cellar contribu- tion: but Gaskin here captured the 100 yard dash in the Colorado relays, and Kimball topped the high-jumpers in the city meet. See how many of these we can recall. The lettermen of 1936 were Lester Allen, Fred Chacon, Norman Compton, Ivan Gaskin, Iarnes Gregory, Ernest I-Iandke, Arnold Kimble, Arvel Knapp, Al Nikkel, Fred Pennie. TRACK-tRow ll Gene Stoddard, Walter Kraus, Lewis Webb, 'Mil rd Barrows, lames Iones, Elmer Moore, Roy Amick, Rufus Miller, Evan Jones, Iames Hinds, Frank Carey. CRow 21 Albert Wolfe, Ben ie ato, Robert Neville, Sam Feld, Clarence McClure, Robert Iones, Richard Nelson, James Mason, Dave Haworth, Tony Aranda, Donal ' orms, Louis Hill. KROW 35 Arnold Kimble, Don Alvarado, Iohn Aranda, Bob Flieger, Harold Hadden, Billy Smith, lay Melnick, Fred? ie, Elmer Dunstan, Ioe Chinn, Dewey Tapp, Carl Stanley. tRow 47 Alfred Rowland, Rex Morgan, Don Compton, Howard Wagner, K y Duk ois, Howard Roll, Edward Hansen, David, Whitilcer, Clifford Blue, Roy Fuqus. 1 -' - T t fa' 1 ' 1 ri X Y 9 , 1' 'Q , . 5 fN Sw, time -E GTG' FX? 5 , Qfftil, f l ,- Fifty-four JY? a ' it -A x A XAML. W tl Hi.. .fzufffli wel 5,11-1- l all 4 Z Mft' GIRLS' ATHLETIC, Wowl Look at this good picture of these girls doing something or other. The girls aren't so keen, but look how the photographer snapped that ball. Now look here, Frank, I admit that the ball is good, but I want to tell you right now that you need't begin to slam the girls' athletics as you always do. I'm not going to stand for it. Well, listen to the lady! But why include tems' sports in an Annual? They are-n't important to the school. Aren't important to the school! You don't know what you're talking about. Our sports are just as important as boys' any old day. How the girl can rave! If your sports are so good, why don't the girls have inter-school contests as the boys do? There's a School-Board rule or something forbidding them, but the intra-mural games we hold are just as exciting and as interesting as the boys' games even if we don't break a leg now and then. l tell you, Ann, that there were once inter-school games for the girls because my mother has a picture of the championship basketball team ot which she was a member when she went to old West. I bet the girls got to pulling hair. There wouldn't be half the chance of pulling hair now when two-thirds of the girls wear theirs short as when your mother played, for then the hair hung down to the knees. Your reasoning is rotten. lust for the sake of peace, we'll drop the subject-for a while. Fifty-five WT- f ' CCI D D'S You're just quitting because you're licked or perhaps you saw the girls in the Sport Club with their letter sweaters and decided that they are important after all. Almost every girl here is popular and good-looking as well as important. Gold is tops everywhere. lust look them over, Frank, and see for yourself the kind of girls who go in for sports. I don't know Lillian Anderson very Well, but she seems to have plenty of pep and personality. I know her well, Anng and she's all you think she is. Mildred Cooper is always busy. She helps with the books, did sewing for the Needlework Guild, and is always helping somebody. And has time to stay after school for sports. What a girll Lenora here is the president of the Girl Sports Club. Ruth Barnett must be an important member, Ann. She's always smiling, and I've never heard anyone say a word against her or anything she has done. Neither have I. The same goes for Iune Epperson, too. When the Rodeo held its contest, she was voted the most popular girl in school. Vivian Raines is the bright one. All A's I've heard. Ruby Brady's right along with her. I believe, Ann, that she knows more history than a text book author and more about law than the president of the Bar Association. Edna Hanes is one of the most dependable girls you'll ever find. Hey, Ann: this is queer! What? Here's Laura Rice, but Where is Imogene Reinke? They've been going around together for such a long time that I began to think of them as inseparable. It's like seeing half a person when you see just one. Fifty-six The really important ones are these with the gold Dsgpiii ,ve Lillian Anderson Ruth Barnett Ruby Brady Mildred Cooper Iune Epperson Edna Hanes Lenora Lundberg Vivian Raines Laura Rice ll I guess Imogene didn't get enough points for a gold D. Points? What do you mean? ll Iust this. When a girl gets one hundred points, she receives a small felt D. For each additional hundred points, she has a felt chevron. She's earned a big D when she has eight hundred and fifty of a thousand points, depending upon whether she entered West as a sophomore or a freshman. If she makes 1000 or l250 points, she gets a gold D. My U ff' I Roberta Burger A. Domenico Ethel Friel Gertrude Gruber Imogene Reinke Dorothy Roller Gwendolyn Spiller Virginia Travis G. Wooldridge What are those little black stars tor? l've seen some of these girls wearing them on their big felt D's. Oh, they get those for every hundred points after they have earned their gold D's. On this page is the other half of the Rice-Reinke two- some. You're right, Frank. It seems that those two do spe- cialize in everything they do whether its chemistry or BIG D'S athletics. I don't see how they do it. You could probably do the same if you weren't so lazy. It takes ambition to get around the way those girls do. I've never seen you excell in sports either, Mr. Funny- man! Skip nt You started it. We were talking about girl athletes-remember? All right. You know I never thought of Roberta Burger as a sportswoman. She doesn't impress me as being athletic. Appearances are deceiving. Take Ethel Friel for ex- ample. I know her, Ann. She's somewhat blond with lots of hair but is almost timid. I always thought that athletes were tornadoes until I took a good look at this book, and I find that many of them are just gentle breezes-not that I'm disappointed. Here's another of your smart girls-Gertrude Gruber. Her scholarship is very high, I've heard. So is Adalaine Domenico's. She's made N.H.S. in her junior year. I don't know how Gwen Spiller stands in her lessons, but her voice does 'rate with me. She's a swell singer. At last we've found one thing on which we can agree, anyway. Dorothy Roller is the only junior in the bunch. It evi- dently takes gobs of time after school to make all the necessary points since only seniors seem to have the big letters. Dorothy must be plenty good. Can you imagine two girls being thinner than Vir- ginia and Genevieve? I just wonder whether or not they will grow fat after they stop playing in all the sports. Activities keep people slender: running and jumping are better than Rye-Krisp for keeping a movie figure because there is no cutting down of food, and you know I do like to eat. Fifty-seven CJ JS ll ii ti Q Virginia Peterson, Ruth Barnett, Agnes Barber, Edna Hanes KN Q l' N BASKETBALL--CROW IJ Darline Clark, Mary Snead, Charlotte Wehr, Dorothy Roller, Dorothy Thompson. tRow 21 LaVerne Lambert, Nancy McFarland, Roberta Mes- senger. k i4'SlM flifflllf SPEEDBALL-CROW ll Genevieve Capra, Annabelle Martinez, Betty Simmons, Gwen Spiller, Ethel Friel, Dorothy Bueclcerman. KROW 21 Helen Pekrul, Florine Messenger, Lorraine Trippel, Della Vasquez, Susan Putallez, Dorothy Abbot. Fifty-eight VGLLEYBALL BASKETBALL SPEEDBALI. N .::fI-I-.411-gf ACTIVITIES ati X Q- Y WEST NATIGINIAL Z Harold Cook Dorothy Craig A. Domenico Iune Epperson Robert Hahn Fred Launder Dorothe Milzer Edna Pickell Vivian Raines M. Anne Speer lean Washburn Leonard Anderson Of course the Annual Board would have to put the National Honor Society first. It always comes in ahead of the rest of the organizations and clubs. I've had such a good time in all the clubs I've joined that I wish they came first. I don't think, Ann, that this has any social life at all: it's not that type of organization: it's only an honor and satisfaction. I did make Spur one semester and I swelled up like a poisoned pup. It is just as well you didn't make N.H.S. then, or you'd have burst. Some people are easily inflated: then they lose their real value. Don't preach! You've no room to talk because you have worn out two sweaters just showing off the 'D' you made in sports. Which did you prefer, GR. or Girl Sports? The best friends I've ever had are the girls in Sports. Scrapping, losing, quarreling, winning together for four Sixty long years tie us players together in a way that can't be compared to any other form of friendship. But consider, Ann, that I've been with you on most of your GR. fun. You can't forget our many Hobby Nights together: you taught me to dance in order that we could enjoy more of them with one another. I tell you, too, that we Hi-Y boys have been loyal to all the West G.R.'s. The two 'Y's' and the school dances have given us most of our social life, Frank. It's no wonder that the West GR. has growing pains. I liked my Camera Club immensely and have had the most practical instruction in that under Mr. Taylor. I bought me a scrap book, and I want you to come over after dinner to help me paste rny pictures in it. There's no fun in sticking pictures on paper: I've out- grown my childhood. If I make you some fudge? I Q' I-ICNCR SCDCIETY Ruth Barnett Ralph Ginn Billy Iefis Lenora Lundberg Emma Milhoan Iris Phibbs Dorothy Prohaska Imogene Reinke Laura Rice M. Richardson I. Schmachtenberger Don Solem Well, that's different. I'll bring Dad's patching cement along: it isn't so sticky. I learned in Nature Club and have far more pleasure now on my mountain trips than I ever did before. I know what I see. Oh Frankl Of all my experiences! I had a brain-storm once and joined the International Relations. The kids ther spoke an entirely different language from mine. I went twice and then dwindled into a nonentity. My experience in Math Club was about the same. I bought a crack slide rule and sold it, as good as new, for half price. My head was really solid concrete there: yet down in printing one day Mr. Ehret, who engraved our Annual pictures, used his slide rule in figuring on enlarging and reducing pictures just as easily as I do a foot rule. Was my face redl In French Club I had the time of my life. Miss Peck goes over to France nearly every summer and brings back the cutest games. We learn to play them, and she gives the winners candy. I often wondered just why that club lived when most of the other language groups fizzled out a long time ago. If there were a Spanish Club, it would fill the audi- torium. Mr. Craven said once he had a Commercial Club, but it included half the school and almost killed off the sponsors. A fellow, Ann, can't be an active member of all the clubs, but I wouldn't have missed the fun I had in Boosters, Hi-Y, and Nature Club for all the world. If the Press Club really clubbed, it would be a grand wow. The one dance was a knock-out, but all such good times cost money, a thing I don't have. That's the reason I like GR.: we can have a peach of a time for a nickel. Let's turn over the page and see what clubs we didn't belong to. Sixty-one g,.,Js 0N-5 'JJ .riff X . fy fwt , ' -'f 'rr' ,. lx . v , Sixty-two SPUR 40, STUDENT COUNCII SENIOR MEMBERS OF SPUR-Sam Gates, Leonard Anderson, Loyal Christensen, Robert Hahn, Robert Hastings, Leon Ingram, Bruce Loup, Wayne Mack, Harold Melching, Klaas Mulder, Nathan Nemirow, Earl Payne, Don Solem, Virgil Stein, Floyd Stevens, Don Vaughn, Ed Woodard, Richard Woodruff, Russell Wright, Iohn Bueckermann, Harold Cook, Oran Dennison, Wilbur Franklin, Ralph Ginn, Fred Launder, Edwin Lewis, Elbert Lewis, Kay Morimoto, Bob Neathery, Agnes Barb , Ruth Barnett, Willa Berks, Helen Billetter, Lor- raine Boddy, Ruby Brady, Myrtle Ch tnut, Dorothy Coopersmith, Adalaine Domenico, Iune Epperson, Gertrude Gruber, Doroth elling, Leota Lapp, Edna Moore, Martha Over- lin, Edna Pickell, Dorothy Prohaska, a ieber, Lesta Reid, Imogene Reinke, Laura Rice, Ila Schmachtenberger, Charlotte Sible, argaret Anne Speer, lean Steele, Charlotte Stein, Helen Tommack, Ruth Tullos, Georgia lla, lean Washburn, Natalie Wilson, Margaret Richardson. STUDENT COUNCIL-tRow ll Doris Washburn, Iosephine, Garramone, Viv' ion, Ramona Haynes, Betty Mulder, Ieane , Dawn Hinkle, Georgia Campbell, Dorothy 'nes, Iune Epperson, Viola Gunn, Vivian Man- Shaifer, Doris Cooper. tRow 2? Harold Robinson, Iune Duxbury, Virginia Wiegand, Kathe ' e Neujahr, Ruth Wallace, Clara Beam, Iosephine Parsons, Evelyn Hetfner, La Verne Nels Fred Hendrickson, Maurice Smock, Do Oakley, Ruth Barnett, William Fritz, Ray Iohn Thompson, Wendell Moate, Kenneth Messenger, Sam Nikkel, Stanley Iolgyson. sr harlotte Wehr, lla Schmachtenberger. CROW 31 ut, Bob Heggenberger, Shirley Smith, Carrol s, Pat Moriarity. CROW ossie, Fred QE Q 155 Don Girtin, Ray Baker, , Don Solem, Buford 1 . i EIETMFWT f t ? Y -f S Xb X. T Q ik Q3 7 - . ,X I f Lf' - . 'f , Cn fjffw' SERVICE sos l SERVICE CLUB4CRow l3 Duncan Cameron, Philip Lundberg, Rober Hastings, Don Vaughn, Donald Purcell, Harold Lucas, Irwin Hendler, Leonard Anderson, Carroll Carver. CROW 23 Iohn Searle, Ralph Ginn, lames Hinds, William Greenwood, Donald Edwards, Andrew Sible, lack Carleton, Bert Leisenring, Harold Klein. CROW 33 Robert Burns, Merlin Arbogast, Eli Rus- sell, William Thorney, Don Trout, Orville Brelsford, Bob Heggenberger, Elmer Mickalson. CROW 43 LeRoy Edwards, Lawrence Howe, Malcolm Saunders, Charles Iohnson, Harold Flint, Sherwin Markham, Sam Levine, George Ganson. CROW 53 Warren Bradley, Sam Buckstein, Ogden Hollars, Ted Karamigios, lesse Dillahunty, Robert lones, Russell Wallick. S.O.S. CLUB4CROw l3 Harriet Warren, Erna May Wagner, Georgia Walla, Libbie White. CROW 23 Eleanor Salmons, Catherine Marsaglia, Sylvia Shaner, Mildred Wise, Phyllis Eggert, Connie Waldon. CROW 33 Phyllis Hammond, Marie Hazzard, Ann Pudlick, Barbara Weiss, Sylvia Boscoe, Margaret Busby. CROW 43 Betty Graham, lean Steele, lean Nelson, Margaret Richardson, Wanda Wilson, Eleanor Kindig. CROW 53 Lucille Lucille Mitchell, Vivian Raines, France Orne, Louise Pruit, Margaret et Grauel. X f' 1 OV-:ML ' l I If, ' 9 , A ww 'HWQJ .M . lv , LV ,tdiyw 5331 C af tit ,Lita 'SKF his N3 x V . . fs ' Sixty-three tit wr ' ii Q L.. ANNUAL fmtffqfgtixxgf Do you know w ich ones wrote all the poems about us Seniors. ' -, It My WPA f V . Yes, Frank. Virginia said everyone joined in on that part, but Helen Rowland was the keenest in rhyming. She's so quiet you'd never think it of her. She did the faculty, too. What did my little Phibbs girl do on it: she's in this, too? Those girls in the picture with her and Iris did most of the conversation. Conversation? Who ever heard of conversation in an Annual? Search me! I'm just quoting Virginia. Maybe when e have time to read all the print in the book we'll find till of the pictures. This group with all the boys are cutting out and past- Q, me. I never read the writing part until I've had my li S9 Harold Basham Naydene Bishop Harold Cook D. Coopersrnith Dorothy Craig Phyllis Eggert Virginia Kennedy Eleanor Kindig Clyde Miller Here's the gang, Ann, that wrote this book. Let's see who they are. Okey-doak. I know them all because I took the pictures of them. You took the pictures? How come? l'll tell you later about these pictures, but let's talk about the people. They certainly had enough to say about us. Sixty-four th ing the pictures. I both saw and smelled them doing their work. I don't see why I didn't get a swell write-up in the front of the book, for Eleanor Kindig is there. I took her out several times and she might have bragged on me a bit. You're like most of the Class. You don't do anything outstanding during your four years in school: yet when the Annual comes out, you expect to have a full page all about yourself. You're not Head Boy. What do you hope? l guess I've got all that's coming to me. Basham told me he did the athletic pages. I bet Dorothy Craig was good on ity she's good everywhere. She'd have to be to make National Honor in her junior year. Talking about National Honor, how many in here are among the brains of the school? They all are. You don't think Mrs. Bayliss would have any dumbies to fool with. No, guess not. If I could do my high-school life over again, I'd try out for some of the big things. I hope the sophs and freshies take heed of our mistakes and do differently. BCDAIQD W all Z TXJ Iris Phibbs Helen Rowland I. Schmczchtenberqer Don Solem Ierm Steele Virgil Stein Iczmes Stephens Mildred Wise L Sixiy-five 1' o bp, ff! 1 f 'Q ilf !f,ff lfMr. Dorothy Brose D. Bashefsky O. Brelsford Margaret Kline Russell Layton Myrtle Lovely Ruby Brady Irene Cook D. Coopersmith l. Schmachtenberger Don Solem W. Stambaugh Esther Greeno Wm. Greenwood Edna Hanes Virginia Travis Connie Walden Ruth Wallace THE RQDEG These people look harmless, but how they did tell our faults. You must have been hit by a brickbat. Not hit, Ann, just grazed. Have you any idea who threw all of them? Some one told me it was lean Steele mostly. I think the criticism helped some, but the people who deserved it most are the ones who never buy a Rodeo, Or else are too-thick skulled to care. I may be just a C-grade student, but l am clean and decent mannered, and l resent having to go to school with some of the pupils that bring ill repute on us all. Sixty-six You're right, Frank, l, too, think it's awful that young people our age have to be publicly reprimanded for our manners in halls and in the lunchroom. We're all of us too old to think crudity attractive. l'd hide my face with shame to have my name mentioned in the Rodeo as some of the kids had theirs. Did you ever find out who the Free Lancer Was, Ann? Yes.' lla Schmachtenberger. She Writes a glib pen. She was on the Annual Board, too, Wasn't she? She must have had a busy year. Dorothy Coopersmith was on both as Well as lla. It must be great, Frank, to like to write themes all day long. Don Solem's here, too. Tl-IE IQCDDEQ STAFF Dorothy Brose and Bill Simmons were the editors: they must be gluttons for work. lust think of it, Ann, hun- dreds of people make their living by writing all day long for newspapers. Hats oft to all on this page for the amount of labor they put in for us. Don't forget Miss Hocking. Teachers have a way of giving all honor to the student when really they are themselves the inspiration and urge back of it all. I'm glad that both of us bought student tickets to help finance the paper. So am I. Not every one in my home room bought one, but the chiselers took mine just as soon as lwas through with it. That's life all right, Frank. We have neighbors who borrow all they can and keep their own money for gas and picture shows. Mother hates them. She's sure taught me to stand on my own feet. But what did your neighbors teach their children? 6- ' 6 ii., Bill Simmons Alice Anderson Stanley Bollcxcker Bob Burns lane Justice Lenora Lundberg Lucille Mitchell lean Steele Don Vaughn ,W-eff Sixty-seven ..l.....J .c..i.. Sixty-eight SAFETY CGUINICII. 449 LIBRARY SAFETY COUNClLefRoW ll Cliff Tryon, Russell O'Day, Ted Brown, Loyal Christenson. CROW 25 Ruth Wallace, Bonnie Simmons, Betty Simmons, Edna Pickell. LIBRARY STAFFfCRow ll Corinne Breckenridge, leanette Shafer, Helen Hardison, Shirley Kuehn, Barbara Innis, Ardyce Henderson, Margaret Grauel, Lillian McClure, Alice Dunlap. CROW 27 Marian Wilson, Gwendolyn Spiller, Harriet Milstein, Elizabeth Wright, Dave More- hart, Agnes Driscoll, Arlene Slciff, Grace Callow, Sylvia Boscoe. CRow 35 Miss Bright, Miss Gustafson, Mrs. Foltz. - , ,531-' ff' -L4 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 4477 BOOKS INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-CRow lJ Mary Dell Kennedy, Lois Kellogg, Eileen Spencer, Irene Cook, Virginia Randow, Dorothea Koelling. CRow 27 Iosephine Parsons, Ruth Wallace, Natalie Wilson, Charlotte Doberstein, Frances Thompson, Frances Hagluncl. CRow 35 Virgil Stein, Robert Applegate, Roy Sager, Fred Doppelmayr, Charles Iohnson, Louis Harper. GLEE CLUBfeCRow ID Herman Feldman, Wallace Wehr, Clyde Miller, Dan Phillips. CROW 3l Harold Kleiner, Frank Carey, Malcolm Saunders, La Verne Rounds, Andrew Sible, Bob Neathery, Frank Burg. CROW Sl Lewis Webb, Elmer Mickalson, Bill Dillon, Cecil Thompon, Walter Flachman, Raphael Bonelli, Merlin Arbogast. BOOK CLUB-CRow ll Vivian Sickler, Agnes Wilson, Mildred Cooper, Charlotte Richardson, Lucille Mitchell, Doris Cooper. CRow 23 Marie Williams, Marian Lawshe, Betty Mae Blat- tenburg, Evelyn I-Ieffner, Mrs. Babcock, Vera Graft. .1' E Sixty-nine GIRI. RESERVES GIRL RESERVES-CRoW I3 Dorothy Walker, Helen Grosso, Ienny Lee Thompson, Irene Tay- lor, Ann Pudlick, Eileen Spencer, Paulita Simmons, Susie Anderson, Caroline Mohr. CRoW 23 lean Steele, Barbara Weiss, Libbie White, Rosella Simmons, Edithmarie Berger, Lucille Zager, Florence Montgomery, Laura Bowie, Gladys Van Loon, Donna Radevitch, Augusta Adler. Ellen Frangos. CRoW 33 Harriet Warren, Roxye McCurry, Ellen Stevens, Marg- aret Anne Speer, Dorothy Prohaska, Margaret Breckenridge, Ieanette Shafer, Margaret Busby, Sylvia Boscoe, Harriet Milstein. CRoW 43 Margie Aragon, Dorothy O'Neil, Frances Thorne, Doris Cooper, Lucille Delaney, Margaret Grauel, Florence Newton. CROW 53 Mar- zette Neveu, Charlotte Vandervort, Lorraine Vandervort, Catherine Marsaglia, Dawn Hin- kle, Virginia Haines. GIRL RESERVES-CRoW I3 Mildred Welsh, Eleanor Kindig, Connie Waldon, Mildred Wise, Bonnie Simmons, Ruth Wallace Erna Mae Wagner, Margaret Kline, Betty Yockey, Naydene Bishop, I-Ielen Grove. CRoW 23 Ardythe Anderson, Phyllis Eggert, Eleanor Salmon, Opal Mil- ler, Rosalie Ruskin, Beulah Iohnson, Angelina Stone, Imogene Reinke, Adalaine Domenico. CRoW 33 I. Graham, Henrietta Cohen, Pearl Mayberry, Goldie Wright, Phyllis Hammond, Marie Hazzard, Iune Bogard, Virginia Kennedy, Evelyn Vail, Laura Rice, lla Schmachten- berger. CRoW 43 Elaine Willis, lean Reid, Charlotte Stein, Kathleen Dorsey, Iune Beamer, 'Wanda Wilson, Sylvia Roser, Norma Reiber, Lesta Reid, Helen Rowland, Lucille Mitchell, Ieanette Wright, lane Iustice. E F WIYXS Seventy i'xr PRE-MEDICS PRE-MEDICS-CROW ll lean Steele, Harriett Warren, Blanche Dillon, Margaret Anne Speer, Ellen Frangos, Alice Kerin, Edna Pickell, Shirley Morton. CROW Zl Lorraine Trippel, Phyllis Hammond, Frances Brown, Natalie Wilson, Virginia Kennedy, Emma Milhoan, Margaret Church, Laura Rice. CROW Sl Virgil Stein, Margaret Grauel, Naydene Bishop, Katherine Overman, Betty Simmons, Peggy McCool, Ellen Stevens, Helen Rowland, Imogene Reinke, lla Schmachtenberger. CROW 4l Harold Kleiner, Roy Sager, Eston Meyer, Louis Harper, Rol- land Blackburn, Leon Ingram, Eileen Spencer, Clyde Miller. CROW 57 Ruth Wallace, Marvin Keeney, Maynard Morgan, Russell O'Day, lames Stephens, Harold Basham, Roy Lane, lames Umbarger, Fred Montana, Dorothy Prohaska. PRE-MEDICS INITIATES WITH SURGICAL MASKS-CROW ll Harriett Warren, Blanche Dil- lon, Margaret Anne Speer, Ellen Frangos, Alice Kerin, Edna Pickell, Shirley Morton. CROW 2l Phyllis Hammond, Dorothy Brown, Natalie Wilson, Virginia Kennedy, Betty Simmons, Emma Milhoan, Marguerite Church. CROW 3l Naydene Bishop, Katherine Cverman, Peggy McCoOl, Louis Harper, Ellen Stevens, lla Schmachtenberger. CROW 45 Roy Sager, Eston Meyer, lim Stephens, Harold Basham, Rolland Blackburn, lan?es Umbarger, Leon Ingram. :Tru ' NW Cvlafvl ,, X: 1 j J, , . N WJ x gi. t ff lm 1 -LL , UL tx U' 1 C l 7 H C l ., , .- , ,, ,:,,.f,, 54... 11.-. ' ,' ua' 1 ' .,s,, 4 I , , lafff .- ,,f,.n,- arg' 4, Seventy-two it ' Win? FINE ARTS 449 CAMERA ART CLUB-CROW ll Dave Shephard, Evelyn Leigh, Vera Graff, Mildred Cooper, Margaret Ainick, Doris Cooper, lris Phibbs. CRow 2? Doris Nelson, Betty Hatten, Evelyn Hefner, Max- ine Riddle, Myrtle Chestnut, Dolly Varden McDowell. tRoW 35 Helen Boothroyd, Lavona Pat- ton, Cecile Reardon, Max Kerr, Robert Callow. CAMERA CLUBetRow ll Clyde Miller, Elmer Mickalson, David Thompson, Charlotte Stein, Eileen Spencer, lean Steele, Harriett Warren, Erna May Wagner. tRow 23 Laura Rice, Imo- gene Reinke, F. Azlein, lane Iustice, Ellen Frangos, Betty Sirnrnons, Ellen Stevens. CROW 37 Marie Foster, Virginia Travis, La Verne Lambert, Florine Messenger. CROW 43 Virgil Stein, Louis Harper, Iohn Birch, Edwin Levine. tag. Xi X3 .i '9 .gui .I .v-' ' 4 WA' ' ' il ' ' 3 , 5 C x MAT!-I 44 by FRENCH MATH CLUB4CRow ll Frank Epperson, Cecile Youngblood, Donna Northrop, Kathleen Mur- ray, Natalie Wilson, Vivian Palnes, Nellie Gephari, Dorothy Thompson. CROW 25 Harold Haddon, Russel Layton, Fussell Willlcms, Edward. Woodard, lames Mason, Walter Holley, Ross Ferry. CROW 3D Earl Presoott, Tom Hastie, lim Stephens, Bill Vander Weyden, Robert Heggenberger, William Beston. FRENCH CLUB-fliow ll Georgia Frangcs, Louise Williams, Dorothy O'Neal, Lillian Mc- Clure, Marguerite Ford. tl'ow 27 Ethel Friel, Elaine Cavanaugh, Helen Boothroyd, Lavona Patton, Mary lane Harris, Geitrutle Cain. Cow 3l Clfflord Smith, luan Chinn, Edward Levine, Gene Thomas, Herman Heiit, Charles Hamm, Alvin Cram. 13 nam! mamma il 35321 enum ann: 11 ,mama mall: wil 1 amz nun-an L W iTua 1l ui 34-'Nl if Nt- ,limi Seventy-three Ctr Seventy-four v 1 , ' .ef' . f'-. - ,1--.ff . ' ' 1 NATURE M STAGE CRAFT NATURE CLUBfCROW ll Grace Wright, Rosalie Ruskin, leaneite Wright, Lois Kilham, Elaine Willis, Margaret Amick, Margaret Grauel. CROW 25 Henrietta Cohen, Gertrude Gruber, Ruth Rogers, Doris McCullough, Ruth Sherrick, I. Webb, Daisy Spoon, Barbara Iohnson, Norma Reiber, Lesta Reid. CROW Sl Ethel Friel, Bob Flieger, Arnold Kimble, Russell Wright, Wayne Brayer, Irving lsaacson. CROW 4l Winired Russell, Bill COWden, Terry Lahr, Roy Iohnson, William Fritz, Frank Pomponio. STAGE CRAFT-CROW ll Don Alvarado, Clyde Carpenter, Clayton Bruner, Charles Brown, William Craven. CROW 27 Mack Ruske, Iohn A nda, eorge ettman, Roy Iohnson. CX C Cliggoilvir C Q y T-.-.1-W.,-,J of-f W..--L........' 1 1 uni' S11 21 -il J Iii W ' Q 1 Q L- MASQUERADERS 44 ,, I-II-V MASQUERADERS--fRoW ll Pauline Berkens, Sylvia Shaner, Dorothy Roller, Eileen Spencer, Bonnie Simmons, Ruby Brady, Ruth Barnett. CROW 25 Frances Haglund, Dorothy Brose, Erna May Wagner, Ruth Vlfallace, Connie Waldon, Naftalie Solis, Miss Griffey. CROW 35 Louis Harper, Sam Nikkel, Ted Brown, Bob Younkin, Robert Martin, Stanley lohnson, Duncan Cameron, Orville Brelsford. Q HI-Y CLUB4lRoW ll lames Million, Cliff Tryon, Bill Scott, Bill Ieffs, Sam Gates, Duncan Cam- eron. tRoW 25 Rollancl Blackburn, Sam Nikkel, Robert Tones, Gene Thomas, Ray Rossback, Orville Brelsford. tRoW 31 Charles Dietrich, Winfred Russell, Iames Clark, Don Euler, Henry Begman, lack Thompson. CROW 43 Mr. Gourlay, Kenneth Worl, William Girtin, lim Ste- phens, Iames Kiesler, Clark Goodell, Raymond Baker. K X, Seventy-six WW DEBATERS 449 GI FF Cl UB DEBATE CLUB-CROW ll Betty Ford, Miriam Stamey, Barbara lohnson, Dorothy Somerville, Mary Snead, Priscilla Harmon, Iune Bannon. CRoW 25 Pauline Berkens, Helen lohnson, Iune Bogard, Bertha Peterson, Pauline Henson. CRow 35 Louis Cohen, Titsa Andrews, Avalon Guild, Marzetta Neveu, M. Morrison. CRoW 4? Billy Walcher, Ephriam Solis, Bob Neville, Marvin Berger, Ray Baker. CROW 5? LeRoy Stambaugh, Don Haloin, Ted Brown, Gerald Singer. GLEE CLUB---CRow lb Herman Feldman, Wallace Wehr, Clyde Miller, Dan Pan Phillips. CRow 23 Harold Kleiner, Frank Carey, Malcolm Saunders, La Verne Rounds, Andrew Sible, Bob Neathery, Frank Burg. CROW 3? Lewis W' ebb, Elmer Mickalson, Bill Dillon, Cecil Thomp- son, Walter Flachman, Raphael Bonelli, Merlin Arbogast. his 1- cf , 0,0 . tio. ...NJ cms' or FF cu use GLEE CLUB-Upper Picture CRow ll nriett Co , Estella Covillo, Lillian Eaton, Dorothy Prohaska, Vera Bigelow, Eleanor Salxlion a llltlrikle. CRow 23 Thelma Moesta, Alice Fullerton, Eva Hatheway, Marguerit Bggllfert rcrnpces Nelson, Sylvia Boscoe, Betty Rake- straw, Hariett Webster, Estelle Sjog 'n.' ,ow ' iola Turpin, Margaret Kline, Mary Lou Lamb, lean Clausen, Twila Black, ele vWil6zi I'Pearl Shaclrick, Bernice Morgan, Lucille Mitchell. CRow lil Constance Hol er, lil-llclred ailes, Alrna Clow, Esther Greeno, Marga rette Burns, Frances Boillot, M gGf A? Sveer, Virginia Randow, Margaret Hichardson. ' J GLEE CLUB-Lower Picture C ll S a Palatax, L' ise Williams, Eldora Skiff, Belen Gon- zales, Frances Hernandeiycyiol M to 4 leant aham, Elizabeth Pendergast. CRow 23 Mary Thorngate, Helen D Vis, nestin' CE1Xleton,'Rut-h Settegren, Mary Hinkle, Betty Briz- endine, Betty Wille, Iea Ha olqtfl, ttie ae Bullgck. CRow 35 Luclora Harbin, Shirley Schelling, Betty Newt xatherine S les' anULElain Wright, Bonnie Parham, Bernice Mor- gan, lda May Opie, a J ine a gan.C CROW 4l:K'oly Dorsey, Pauline Hensen, Esther Pass, Clara Bearn, 'Gloria K1t1cpdp,'E'l,cfle ce Newto , Gladys McNally, Doris Hayes. l,Wt Seventy-seven ,, 1, , ,dfwfv -'VM-1 -?-ffff. ., ,log 4, CA.A,,f. ' X71 ' fy iff' iff ll E ORCHESTRA MEMBERS Edith Bailey, Dorothy Baxter, Lolita Bunnell, Theda Dean, Lucille Delaney, Ieannette Dodge, Helen Dodson, Marie Foster, Alice Goebel, Mary Harris, Virginia Hughes, lNilma Hurst, Shirley Iones, Lois Kellog, Nancy McFarland, Mary Olson, Mary H. Olson, Rachel Patterson, Rosemary Proftit, Virginia Redman, Nocma Reiber, Mabel Rhodes, Gwen Spiller, Virginia Travis, Norma Walters, Minerva Wilson, Nila Wyatt, Ruth Cain, Ernest Bergstrom, Som Berman, Frank Brocesky, Sam Buckstein, Iohn Burch, Frank Burg, Loyal Christensen, Lee Garcia, Harry Gordon, Dean Foust, Charles Iones, Ben Ketcham, Morey Langert, Bruce Loup, Bill McDowell, Paul McMahan, lames Mason, Nor- man Payne, Bert Pedersen, Lester Popiel, loe Reiner, David Romero, Clifford Smith, Edwin Schultz, Gene Stoddard, Dewey Tapp, Bennie Valdez, lim Von Nostrand, Wallace Wehr, Dan Wiley, Bob Younkin, Manville Lundy. ORCHESTRA M A CAPPELLA Cl-IOII? A CAPELLA CHOIR-lRow ll Virginia Randow, Margaret Anne Speer, Dorothy Prohaska, Mary Harris, Betty Lou Dean, Eleanor Whowell. CRow 25 Violet Humphreys, Mr. Turner, Dorothy Bueckerman. lRow 35 Dudley Enos, La Verne Rounds, lames Umbarger, Charles lones, Harold Basham, Bill Dillon. Seventy-eight P IIXIDLJSTRIAI FDUCATIQIXI Here are the trade boys. They sure owe a lot to their course. Some of them already have promises for jobs, and then they can be married. The spring weather has gone to your head or heart, I don't know which. Why don't the boys use their trade knowledge to work their way through some big engi- neering school. Mr. Watson advises them to. Those, Ann, who took a regular high-school course along with their trade may do that little stunt: the others can't. I wish I had done both. I did spend hours in the auto shop, and I feel that my work there is a passport to a job. If I can persuade some garage owner that, l'll be in luck. What else of the trade course did you take? I labored over mechanical drawing and in the machine shop, too. The trade boys don't mingle much with the rest of the school. They're too busy, Ann. It's on the job all the time with them. Carter Fleming is an officer in the cadets: that makes him do some mingling. I don't see how he keeps his uniform so clean when he is working with machinery most of the day. He does though, count on that, for he's spotless. Re- member has was dressed in white flannels in his indi- vidual in the Senior group? How could l forget it. He's the only one so far in the Annual that was adorned like that: even Mr. Lawson, the Beau Brummel of the faculty, didn't doll up that much. Look at the picture again, Prank, with the exception of the first row, don't you think these boys look older than the average run of West-High boys? They're not, Ann, l'm surep but they're just ct little more earnest than the average run of students since they know definitely what their life Work is to be, starting perhaps this lune. Then, too, these boys have just three years to stay in school, and they have plenty to do in those years. Many academic pupils have four more years of study in some college after high school, and school life keeps a fellow younger than the work-all-day life does. l know that's true. The married alumnae who come to school visiting seem older than the ones from college who drop in during their vacations. As long as our parents have the responsibility of us, we are carefree: but just as soon as we are on our own, responsibility wll make us older. Fred Launder was in this group, but he finished in lan- uary and had a job at once. He was in the machine shop. Mr. Forrest is constantly receiving calls for good boys to take jobs. Lex Wa1ker's in the machine shop, but he should be taking auto mechanics. Why, Frank? Oh, he bought himself an old Chev and tears it apart every evening and works on it for hours. We sure laugh at him. l don't se anything humorous about that. Well, he always, says before he starts in on the disect- ing job, 'I'll fix it right this time.' The right time has never come yet. I bet many, many, parents wish their boys were more content to work all their spare time on an old car than to go trailing off into all kinds of mischief. My brother fools all his time on his '28 Ford. Once in a while it runs long enough for him to take his girl out for a ride. The old flivver keeps him sattisfied. A girl is about all that will keep some boys working on a car forever. Dallman Morris was sure hard hit when he started with one of his girls: I think he still has her. What did he do? It's what he didn't do. He never got a job right: he put every part on backwards. We sure guyed him by ask- ing whether she was a blond or a brunette. He'd never tell. You boys become better acquainted in the three hours you're together than we do in our fifty-minute classes. Course we do, Ann, because we can talk to one an- other: here are some snaps: let's look at them. Where are you in the picture, Frank? I was under one of those cars. Seventy-nine What was the matter? Were you bashful? No. We fellows aren't down there to have our pictures taken. I was tightening the rods. I don't know what the rods are, but I guess it's all right. You don't need to know what they are. I'll do the driv- ing for this outfit. When we are mar- Now wait a minute, Frank. You persuade the garage owner, get your money and some pay: then you can talk about marriage. Don't think I haven't taken shop, too. I can repair electrical contrivances and put in washers. I wish that I could learn to make some liitle stools in the wood shop. Don't fret, Ann. I'll make them. You take sewing and learn to make the needlepoint tops for the stools I make. We must use cooperation. Cooperation is right. I saw you wiping dishes once in 100. I won't forget that either. Our hands, Ann, have done better than our heads. The practical side of the curriculum turns right out of high school students who become immediately machin- ists, auto mechanists, carpenters, electricians, printers, stenographers, and wives. Harold Melching must be thinking of the wife part because he has gone with Phyllis Hammond for years: they never miss a dance. How do you know? We don't go to all of them. The girls tell me. Perhaps, Prank, our friends say the same things about us that we say about Phyllis and Harold. W'e've been good friends for ever so-I just can't say long now. Our high-school life does seem short now that it is about over. Take Howard Iarboe 'way back there at the auto farthest back. What about him? He's too blamed methodical. Every Monday, Wednes- day, and Saturday night he takes his girl outp on Eri- days he goes with the gang of boys. When does he study? Tuesdays and Thursdays, I guess, if ever. Then, too, he changes girls every ten months. I wonder what he'll do when he's married. Forget his troubles, Frank, and look at this pie-crust top Vincil 'Wilson is making for a coffee table, and that contrivance in Edward Hansen's hands. Oh, I do wish you had taken woodwork. That Hansen is a prince among fellows. He certainly looks it. He's going to Washington this summer. On a pleasure trip? Yes. To the Boy Scouts' Jamboree. He's a life member and has every honor possible for a boy to have. n u 1: 1: You never know from his actions that he was impor- tant. He never makes the slightest mention of himself, ever. I-Ie wouldn't, Ann. I think the reason that he has be- come a somebody is that he never fools around, but just tends strictly to business. Did you know that Vincil Wilson had a big picture of himself taken at Eox's Studio for his girl? He must like her. Gosh! That fellow one day sawed right down into his finger with a hand saw and never stopped sawing even when it hurt, but just kept on going farther. Ooheooh! Don't tell things like that! That what happens in shop. Ernest Marbach's wide awake. g 1 nwq '-QQQM. I fbi 'Qi I S FN! -'Ly Q, .. .,,, tg 3 Eighty Ju . Now, what does he do? He buys up old cars, strips off the saleable parts, and sells them. He bought an old Packard for eight dollars, stripped it, and sold the good parts for twenty-two dol- 1ars. Show me to him! He sounds like Rockefeller. Oran Dennison is just about as good as Marbach in making money. A dollar's a dollar to him always, he works at any or everything for the mighty cash. What ,are those boys doing in that bottom picture? That's work in industrial science. I never took that. It looks interesting, all right but I wouldn't like to climb the way those boys do. You're a girl-so what Here's a boy all the girls are after. What's his name? The one with the curly hair? Sure! Tommy Alford. The girls are nuts about him. There are two or three waiting outside the machine-shop door at every hour. They just have a sit down strike for him. They're not that silly! lust come down and see. They even wait until fcur ll 1: MACHINE SI-IOP AUTO MECHANICS ELECTRICITY WOODWORKING PATTERN MAKING PRINTING o'clock for him. See the boy by Mr. Meyer? The one in the nifty white shirt? Yes. That's On-the-job Jim Sowell. He's never missed a day in his four years in high school. He must use Alka-Selzer. That other fellow there, Mil- lard Keith, is the blushingest boy l've ever seen. That's odd. He's a bell-hop at the Olin and should be used to women by this time. lsn't that the rest of Ed Hansen's table. All the standards for tables are the same. You should have seen the tile top Tom Rogers made if you wish to give your eyes a treat. That equare one in the picture is good enough for me. Do you know, Frank, I think boys have more chances to have good times in school than girls. I don't know. Boys get hurt more because they're too nosey around machinery. Art Snively lost a chunk of his finger because he didn't mind Mr. Miller. We girls get burned in cooking and stick our fingers with needles, yet we don't have electric saws and un- manageable hammers. I guess it's each to his own type of work. Girls never will be riveters although men do sew. I ix 'x Eighty-one EIGHT O'CLOCK What do you think of the Cadets, Frank? You didn't join them. I Wanted to. lust look at the dandy suits they wear and notice how Well they carry themselves. Don't think I haven't been noticing them for the last four years. They're always neat. A few of the other boys are spic-and-span in their attire every day: some, just once in a while: others, never. I'm going to start watching the Cadets feet to see whether or not their shoes are constantly shined, and whether or not they have been broken of walking pigeon-toed. Aren't you too particular about boys' appearance at school? Not one bit. Appearance goes far in telling the char- acter and habits of any person. If all the boys were inspected as often as the P.O.T.C. fellows, West would look as though it had had its face lifted. I could stand the shock. But if you wanted to join, why didn't you? Mom thinks it looks like training for war, and did she ever turn thumbs down! But Frank, do you believe these West boys will ever have to go to war? No more than I would. They'd have heaps over me: they'd be sure to get the juicy jobs. No K.P. or private duty for them! That's what R.O.T.C. does for a fellow. ls that all it does? Eighty-two WEST RCTC Course not, Ann. These boys have a better chance for a free education at West Point or Annapolis. Even avia- tion has a wider opening for them. You know how wild l am to go in for that. All boys like to take a chance and to do dangerous stunts. I prefer the ground for my activities. Another advantage these boys have is that at Mines and Aggies or at any other college where there is an R.O.T.C., Cadet boys often have practically all their expenses paid while they're acquiring their education. Pretty soft, I say. That part of military life doesn't interest meg I would have liked, oh so much, to go to the big ball the high school corps give every spring. The girls who did get to go said it was the niftiest dance they ever attended. OFFICERS-KROW li Mr. Scavotto, Sponsor, Rolland Dare, Captain, Sgt. Moore, Officer in Charge. tRow Zi Lieutenants: Maurice Iohnson, Fleming Carter, Les- ter I-iofer, Louis Harper. MILITARY TRAINING Why shouldn't it be, Ann? All such entertainments are copied more or less from West Point. The hops there are considered very formal events. Mrs. Babcock told us how crazy all the Vassar girls were to go to West Point for balls. Mrs. Babcock went to Vassar, you know. That was to be expected and the dances are still popu- lar, I suppose: for all girls fall for a uniform. There is something about a soldier, I'll tell you. West has had several of its captains go to West Point, and they are still with the army. Cadets are given first chance at the scholarships. Girls don't have many chances to pick plums. l've been watching our company grow. When I was a fresh- man, there were such a few boys, and now see the three platoons. The band helps a lot. Music gets into a person's blood somehow. I love a parade, Frank. The boys hated to lose Sergeant Moore to North: I hear he has been promoted to Lieutenant. I don't know much about his military ability, but he was the best dancer I ever saw on a dance floor. I'm ff SL 1,4 strong for him. I-Iow's the new man? He's as good as the other officer. He is a lieutenant in the Reserves and a sergeant in the regular army. The boys get the real army stuff and training under this Sergeant Washomf' Why does he wear different uniforms? I thought there was just one kind. One, Ann, is the Reserves uniform and the other is his regular army one. The boys have to be careful and address him correctly, either Sergeant or Lieutenant, according to his uniform. Well, I never! If our teams did not win victories, our Cadets brought distinction to West. They received first place in the parade on Armistice Day. And they won first place in the Federal Inspection and for Company drill. I know our boys rated second in the total points at last year's Field Day. I'll never forget how one boy bought new shoes for the Day's parading and drillingp..,he came to school the next week in almost bedroom slippers 'and Walked stiff-legged for a week. The nit-witI I bet he didn't have any skin left on his feet at the end of the day. He had a genuine taste of the real meaning of being a soldier. Eighty-three .XLNMNJ--N YR' ' ' M'1 'ii'-- 'f PLATOCNS FIRST PlCTUREeCROW ll Lieutenant I. Scavatto, Cecil Riordan, Maurice Iohnson, Capt. Rolland Dare, Lieutenant Elmore Moore. CROW-23 Eston Meyer, Leonard Le Doux, Don Putnam, Harvey Silvey, Clifton Suttertield, Raymond Kurd, Mervin Evans, Marvin Dillon, Keith Verberg, Albert Wolfe. CROW 35 Willard Kennedy, Robert Hufiaker, Wallace Hall, Merle Carson, lack Milton, Homer Leaman, Millard Keith, ElWyn Coates. CROW 47 Roy Sager, Rolland Blackburn. SECOND PICTURE-CROW ll Louis Harper, George Pierson, Lester Hofer. CROW 25 Sam Nikkel, Manuel Lopez, William Shaeter, Charles Ash, Raymond Fitzwater, Robert Reid, Charles Maes- tas, Robert Honley, Lloyd Flint, Charles Iohnsson, Richard Lawshe. CROW 33 lack Stoddard, Norman Langfelder, Leon Leech, lames Maher, Glen Lyon, Iames Clark, Clifford Blue, Ralph Munell. CROW 47 lack Frischman, Iames Madison. THIRD PICTURE-CROW ll Fleming Carter, Leslie Lequalt. CROW 23 Keith Bowes, Alvin Cram, Leroy Tarr, Iohn Olsen, lohn Searle, Russell Honley, Fred Clay, Harold Hatch, Iimmy Smith, Albert Moate, lohn Baker, Iarnes Turner, Bob Applegate, lohn Chestnut. CROW 33 Harry Shafer, Harry Mathews, Iohn Holberg, Melvin Ohearn, David Durrill, Harvey Poore, Albert Solis, Har- rison Teeters, Robert Huggins, Wallace Morgan. Eighty-four PLATES BY COURTESY OF COCKS-CLARK ENGRAVING COMPANY, DENVER I if .r4,f'V'yl ,.' gk' t ANNE SCQAI3 BUCK Well, here I am according to agreement. I brought along all of Dad's tire cernenty I think that it will be enough. Let's get busy. Gee whiz! Did you take all those pictures and develop them in the Camera Ciub's dark room? Sure thing, Frank! Aren't they keen? Yep. Are these two all the Senior picnic pictures you took? Think of all the lun we had, and neither one shows a bit of the eats we made disappear. Sorryl You see, Frank, all the games were played with the kids' backs to the sun, and these are the only ones that didn't turn out perfectly black.. Look what a kick Erna lvIay's getting out of this, Ann. She gets a kick out of everything: that's the reason she's so popular. Mr. Reed's shoes look spotless even in this picture. I wish that the boys of the school would please take note. Meaning me, I s'pose. I'm willing to bet his wife is responsible. When we're married, I'll give you that little job. If you came here to paste pictures, get busy. Put this one of Edvina and Ruth next. I call it 'Before and after taking'. I think, Ann, that Ruth is the best sport in school to stand for this. You bet she is. She's a genuine sport everywhere. Look at her dimple. She has another just like it on the other cheek. It's queer not to see Iohn Berry hanging around on the out- skirts of this snap: Edvina's holding Ruth's hand just out of habit with Iohn's. I've often wondered whether he ever arrived at class on time: he always took Edvina to hers first. Such devotion, and it lasted for two years. This one is a mate to the other. It is 'The long and short of it'. My little Phibbs girl again! We should have made her the mascot of our class. Gosh, Bersche looks like D and F's iootman, but you probably call him Iris's guardian angel. I wish I could have posed with herp I never get a break. Oh, shut up and stick this one on next. ll' , . lil. ll :mi Eighty-five u What in the dickens is this for? 11 To remember Boosevelt's-Presid ent Boosevelt's I meanfvisit to Denver just before election. These people waiting for slips to class are just about one-fifth of the line of the absenteesp nearly a third of the stu- dents stayed out, and our school resembled Chelten- ham on a jewish holiday. lt took all the office force plus Mr. Kepner, Mrs. Sweet, Mr. Woody, Mr. Chapman, and a student or two to handle the crowd. You stayed out, too. Do you see yourself in the throng? No, Ann. I was 'way out in the hall: I didn't get to my first class at all. For which you were thankful. Seems to me you had advanced comp. then. Forget that nightmare and give me another picture. Since election was the topic of conversation, put these in next. By gum, our election. We had fun then and learned more about voting than all our history books told us. Somebody said that this freshie is Esther Sjogren's brother. I-Ie spells his name Shugrenf' She prefers the Swedish: and he, the English spelling. Mickey and Phyllis posed frightfully here: they look as though they were singing the 'Hallelujah Chorus' rather than electing a president. Taunt looks like a dyed-in-the-wool politician. Come on with the next. Wait just a minute, Frank. This is an excellent profile of Betty Lou Dean, and her blouse took so shiny like. She's a lovely girl but is so quiet that no one really appreciates her ability. I wish there were some way to make some of the quiet people talk more. Let well enough alone, Ann. just think what this school would be like if everybody talked as much asewho were the talkers in the little couplets under the Seniors' names? You have a sense of justice, but I have one of humor. Imagine how it would be to hear William Cavanaugh whooping and yelling at you the moment you came into the building. Or Bert Leisenring and Mike Deutsch crawling back in the deep shadows because of shynessf' I wish the pictures in this one snap showed more. .,WhY?,. They are the nest egg for a regular Art Gallery in West. Miss Longan has a dream of a beautiful place to be given over to really fine paintings where the pupils of West will see lovely artistic creations every day in their school life. She says we have to grow into art appreciation. Mr. Trustman holds the same idea about music. He will soon have a regular symphony orchestra, and maybe by its playing the students will learn to under- stand classical music. The assemblies when the best type of musical selections are played are honestly dis- Eighty-six xf 4 .4 graceful, and l've noticed that no more of the outstand- ing singers of the city have been brought to us by the Hi-Y. That group used to bring delightful musicians to entertain the students. I know it. l don't blame the boys for giving us up as impossible. We've brought all this on ourselves. l admit that l've not always been polite, and l've noticed you haven't either. Well, Ann, we've generally managedeeat least these last two years--to sit together in assemblies. We al- ways came in too late to find a seat with our home- room groups: then we could sit together in the back and talk all during the program. W'e're just the average students for certain. Look at the smile on this one. This was the first morn- ing after Miss Le Fever was married, and someone called her Mrs. Bilderbach. Her happiness made such a hit with Georgia Walla that our S. O. S. vice-president started at once to get herself a man. ls that the best she could do? Bob Burgener would have been more to her size. Wouldn't it cause a laugh to see Georgia hanging on to Bob's suspenders. You know, Ann, I would have enjoyed snapping the freshmen's backs: they're so cocky. The backs? Don't be like an English teacher. You don't look the part. Thank goodness for that! How the Rustler's blouse shines in the picture. l took this at lunch period, and .1Jf,f.J see how that girl is hanging on to her sack. 1 can't see why a man as pleasant as Mr. Bailey always has to look so solemn. l'd like to sock that guy in the corner one. Why, What's he done to you? He was looking at you and not paying a bit of atten- tion to the pictures Mr. Bailey was showing. By the way, Frank, Didn't Sam Levine work hard to learn about running the movie camera? lt took him quite a long time to get the films in so that they would run straight: but he learned. Yes. You can see in the picture that he is more intent on watching the machine than the picture. But, Ann, I was just looking at all the boys in the pictures on these two pages, and take a look yourself. Do you see that only one boywfand he a cadet'-has a tie on? Let's see! I guess you're right. Look at the girls, there's not an untidy one any placeg were too proud to appear in public dirty and partially dressed. But there is one little freshie back under the pay telephone who not only has on a tie but a white shirt in addition. Mrs. Bayliss made all us boys put on ties for the group pictures because she was ashamed to have the Annuals go to other cities and some foreign countries with us fellows sloppy looking. We had a mess of a time to find ties enough to go around, but she wasn't on hand when you took these snaps. If these were movies, we'd all be chewing gum, West keeps Vlfrigley a millionaire. , 1 , ff, Our old flivvers help Rockefeller dispose of his gas. . ,f . X - ,fd f 4' 'f'-L'l 4'fJ' Eighty-seven - I jfflgl F5 Eighty-eight il slr. S' Here's where we save ourselves some money and probably keep Amelia Earhart's husband from becom- ing richer. What do you mean now, Frank? Why the book-shop. Mr. Putnam is a publisher. This is as good a picture as you have taken. Mildred and Charlotte's eyes are bright here. They're bright everywhere. Because the girls are bright. They worked hard all year selling your old books, and little thanks they received. After the first of the year these girls were helped by the others in that Book Club. You remember we saw their pictures in the Annual this afternoon. Mrs. Babcock is their sponsor. l'll never forget how that woman had to beg the children to come for their left- over books and their money. I just hung around third floor for my prospective cash. How tired I am when I see that remembrance of chem lab. I can almost smell it. I'm grateful for I-Iarold Cook. Perhaps he doesn't know it, but he made two grades in chem, mine as well as his. He wouldn't feel grateful for your grade: he'd blush with shame if he had any grade under a B. Mr. Aylard showed that a rr1an's a man. What do you mean? He picked the sweetest, prettiest girl in school for his assistant in lab. Am I sore! Spare yourself the worry: Leila wouldn't even look at me. You had it in for Faye's face. Leila Cheney is pretty and very refined. I wonder just why Mr. Taylor never has a girl assistant. Edna Pickell could have made one. Sure. She knows everything. I can't imagine what it would feel like to know the correct answer every time to all the teachers' questions. One day of such bliss would land you in a hospital. Do you suppose Mr. Taylor's wife won't let him have a girl assistant? No, of course not. Girls don't like messy experiments. See for yourself that neither Edna Pickell nor Margaret Anne Speer is putting her hands in the water. Cook's doing that. The assistant gets in on all the dirt. Did you take radio, Frank? What would make you ask that question? Too much work connected with that for me. You always like to play around with anything me- chanical. Play around is right, but that course was not play. Before a student could receive his credit, he had to pass some kind of state test. You know my tests, and I did not dare risk losing the five points for I had just enough hours and not one to spare. And you can't swap your car for a night in exchange for credits. They don't come that way. I didn't make much on my car this year. But you didn't tell me why you failed to focus Faye McQueary? I can't think of everything at once when l'm taking pictures. Feast your eyes on your Iris once again: here she is in the Needlework Guild display. You didn't do well for the girls in the background, did you? And what is this sewing all about? I didn't know enough at the beginning of my Camera Club life to have a bright light on the background when I was taking a picture: but I learned. With the nickels the boys gave, these girls-Berthea Baugh, Dorothy Cason, Mildred Cooper, Marguerite Engberts, Alice Fel- ton, Ellen Frangos, your Iris, Eleanor Salmons, Bonnie Simmons, and Virginia Travis-made twenty-two gar- ments apiecep other girls sewed, too, until West sent three hundred and forty-two garments to the Needle- work guild that supplies clothes for babies whose moth- ers can't afford to buy any. That's swell. How many did you finish, Ann? You forget my name's Ann Average: so I couldn't be bothered. Did this baby here wear some of the clothes? Silly! That's the doll in 325A that girls practice on. Blanche Dillon certainly gives the impression of being a regular nurse. She is going to be one: she does every- thing Mrs. Lepper does. She'1l be O. K. then. Mrs. Lepper is the most under- standing woman I know. I think West is too lucky for words to have her all the time. She does everything for us kids, and we are all good to her, too. Do you remem- ber when somebody was sent home with an infectious disease of some sort how she came into 208 and washed off all the furniture that the person could have touched. That taught me a lesson, and I henceforth stopped bit- ing my fingernails. You might start manicuring them as well. I'm no sissy. You know, Ann, this page of yours is made up wholly of pictures pertaining to homelife. When one stops to think of it, we learn heaps about home-making in West. Here are girls cooking and boys eating, just as it should be. CQ Yes, but just look how the boys dressed up for their R .ID Q big dinner. Bard Roberts is in cords, and that fellow D hasn't any tie on. X N Not very many wear ties except when Annual pictures are being taken. Miss jones has on a bib. f You dumbbell! That is a beautiful collar. Bert Leisen ring is wearing a five-cent grin at the very thought of eats. Boys never conceal their feelings. What are Basham's feelings then if he is not hiding them? He has a most saintly look. Come on, Ann, with the next picture: I'm growing hungry. , Q Not yet. I was just thinking about Charlotte Sible. You knew, of course, that she announced her engagemen in April. She showed us all her diamond. She's very pretty, and didn't she win the prize for the best costume on Orange and Black Day? Yes. Can she cook, too? I suppose so: she can do everything else. Helen Bil- letter, Charlotte Vandervort, Ruth Rogers, and lane Sos- tarich took good pictures. That Helen Billetter has the most elaborate coiffure in school. I wonder how long it takes her to do her hairy she has curls and curls and curls. The more I look at these pictures the more I think that Miss Iones doesn't have on a collar, but that white is her apron. Coming back to Helen, I think I'd have just as many curls as she if I had as much hair, and that I'd take all the time to arrange them if I had the chance. My, Iris has curls on the top of her head and in the middle of her forehead. Don't get angry! I-lurry and tum to the next page. I 1 'X 5, . Eighty-nine 7l!0'f 1- V 1 W, f if Don't hint for anything to eat. Here are the Spanish dancers. They gave us one of the best assembly pro- grams of the year. That Aranda boy with Frances Her- nandez is my secret sorrow. I have heart thrills every time I see him. Then you do have them a-plenty, for he's twins. Belen is with her brother, Ramon. I wonder if he sings? His sisters do. Stella Kimbrell and Rose are with lake Vigil and Charlie Maes. They sure stepped it off. This Thanks- giving picture comes next. Eats again. You had better make me some fudge, or I'll faint from weakness. Ninety lust as soon as the last picture is pasted, I'll make you o' blg pan full. We did actually outdo ourselves bring- ing food at Thanksgiving. The program was good, too: but I'll never forget how the girls on the front row weaved back and forth so much of the time. That was rich. I was back stage helpingp and I'll tell you, Ann, those girls were in misery. They had to kneel so long that their knees were killing them. It sure showed that they weren't used to praying much. Or scrubbing either. I wonder if our Commencement will be as colorful as the one last year. Do you remem- Wow stunning these girls looked? Yes, I do. There's my little cutie right in the midst of them. And Ada Graham is one of them. Did she grad- uate in Ianuary? I haven't seen her for an age. She was married at Christmas time. I tell you, Frank, we have the most marrying class I ever heard of. There are Dorothy Puller, Mildred Finn, Eleanor Stillwell, Beulah Kohn, Thelma Moesta, Alma Clow, Rhona Cor- nell, and there are rumors about the Reichert girl. I wonder whether it was common sense or lack of money that kept us from doing the same. That child marriage in Tennessee did start something. Whenever an event rates the front page, an epidemic of similar ones sweeps over the country, it hit West in its full strength. lt's a wonder more of these girls didn't suc- cumb, especially Adalaine Domenico. I think she is really beauty personified. Such eyesl Louise Wimplepleck has bright, dark eyes as well as Adalaine. These girls all are tall and dignified looking. They're excellent students as Well. Only those who make high grades can afford to take time to be in all the plays, programs, and operettas. Do you realize, Ann, that the pictures we're pasting on these two pages are pertaining to the stage? No, I hadn't. Did you have any of the faculty play? Not a one, nor any of the Senior performance either. I tell you what, Ann, we'll save a few pages at the end of this scrap book for Class Day and Commencement pictures. This picture of the eight girls reminds me that I'm going to have a mighty sweet girl in gorgeous dresses on these two occasions. Neither one of us has rated on these pages, but we can have a page of our own at the end. What do you say? The brightest idea yet. I'll have a picture in each of my new-shall I say gowns? My prom one as well as the others. Don't you wish me in with my new white trousers? I've saved a long time for them. I stayed out of school almost too many days this spring to clean lawns and wash cars to earn money for my two outfits. I almost flunked some of my courses just for my trousers. They should go down in our school history. Do you recall, Frank, that I wore my mother's gradua- tion dress on Old-Fashioned Day? It was twenty-two years old. Mother and I laughed so hard at its queer style and its ruffles and tucks. I wonder if my white one will look as crazy in that many years? I will try to save it. Men don't save clothes that way. Whoever heard of a man hauling out his Wedding suit to show to his children and grandchildren! Our styles don't change enough to cause laughter or dismay. I'l.l wear mine out. But let's get on with the rest of the picturesg I still wish some fudge. Here, Frank, I put all these broadcasting ones together. Will you ever forget 'Lightnin'? When I see Mr. Kepner standing in the background of these pictures, I am thrilled through and through. Why, Ann? Don't you remember how hard he worked to get the public address system into our building? It had been his dream for years: and you can tell by the satis- faction beaming in his face while he is listening to all these kids read their parts to us in our rooms just how much pleasure and gratification he has in seeing and hearing his dream come true. Mr. Woody is here in this one. I-Ie worked hard for the system, also: he can broadcast swell. You should have heard him announce all the basketball games at the big A. A. U. meet in the City Auditorium: his voice filled the big hall to the topmost corners: and what impressed me most at the time was that he never seemed to time, or that his voice never became husky. What could you expect from a chest like his except a voice like that of the reputed Daniel Webster? Their chest expansion looks the same, judged from Daniel's pictures. Ted Brown has a good voice, yet his chest is nothing out of the crdinary. I hope he never gets chesty. What a punk pun, Ann. Can't you do better? Whatcha doing with Ted's photo? I'm going to paste it here for memory's sake. He gave this to me when he won second place in the Kiwanis Oratorical Contest. I was very proud that he won it and to think that he's just a junior. It's all right to be proud of him, and he deserves the honor: but I hope he doesn't go in for too many outside doings and let the teachers work him to death just because he is capable. You've heard about the willing horse. It never hurt Bob Hahn, Frank, and just look what he's done in his four years. We'll hear more of him in col- lege. I'm afraid We'll not be in hearing distance. Remember your wiles didn't work on him. The wisest man in the world had a thousand wives: I can't see why the next wisest couldn't have liked just one little dumb but beautiful girl. 'ew l N M047 Bonnie Simmons isn't dumb, and I know you think she is the prettiest girl in the class. Do all the girls think Bonnie is as lovely as the verse about her in the Annual said? Thai was very complimentary. I remember that she was one who sewed twenty-two girls for the poor babies. She's just like that verse, Frank. The Annual Board was right. That boy is Louis Harper. 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Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.