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Page 20 text:
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50144 ' One tepee on the YN est Seattle Reser- vation always sure to be crowded with young lndian war- t riors, and often many maidens, too, was the Boys' Club Lodge. Boys' Club includes in its membership any brave who lays down wampum for an Activity Stamp book, some 620 war- riors, and for the past ten moons has exist- ! ed under the guid- , ance of Big Chief Pop l-lannaford, dfo rating for its presi- dent, Mike Mohun- drop Bob Clithero for vice-presidentg and Howard Bellows as secretary-treasurer. As in the sun of '44, Boys' Club tasks were carried out in true lndian fash- ion by various committees, organ- ized to get things done in an effi- cient way, while braves grew mighty under the stimulus of giving friendly, constructive service. Perhaps the most important com- mittee of these would be termed the Personal Achievement Committee, which had the vital but difficult duty of developing leadership and direc- tive gualities within the braves, ulti- mately inducing tribesmen to get into school activities for experience in leadership. Because lndians are known from the Cascades to the Olympics as friendly, it was quite natural that braves organize a Friendship Com- l4 OFFICERS Mike Mohun President Bob C1 thero Vice President H ward Bell ws S .-T . mittee. which not only kept up cor- respondence with lndians who were out of school because of illness, but made any new members of the tribe feel at home on the range by intro- ducing them to school life at West Seattle. Furthermore, the Boys' Club estab- lished a minute-man organization, the School Service Committee, that hourly was on call to perform the miraculous emergency services which creep up, even on an lndian reservation. West Seattle braves are deeply conscious of the morale of their war- rior brothers in uniform and had at least one sure way of keeping it tip- top. The Letters to Servicemen Com- mittee was originated so that stu- dents in roll rooms could cooperate with the Boys' Club in sending let- ters from home to former school mates in service. Each roll was allotted the names and addresses of certain warriors in service, then braves and maidens c o l l e c t e d appropriate newspaper clippings and wrote letters. Thus, while the earth was - e afire with war, and peoples were thrown off balance mentally as well as physi- cally, the West Seattle braves lived through days of worry over studies, draft classifica- tions and jobs, without risking - scars. MR. HANNAFORD
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Page 19 text:
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12 0 Left to right: Phyllis Birkett, Lois Baker, Pat Waterman, Grace White, Dorothy Swift fDepartment Headl, Mary Io Radovitch, Iane McDougall, Barbara Garlinghouse, Nancy Woodhouse. Cv 5QJllLlk.Q Q Left to right: Patty Wright, Pat Topping, Pat Pierce, Lee Fridlin, Galina Kay IDepartment Headl, Barbara Amidon. Q Front row: Shirley Good, Betty McCoy, Beverly Snow, Yvonne Cleverly !Department Headl, Rosabelle Carl- son, Florence Fell. Back row: Roberta Pfiel, Beverly Whaley, Connie Iensen, Marjorie Myers, Pat Burkett. Pnfmnnal Q Left to right: Margaret Dear, Gerry Gaillac, Ioyce Couch KDepartment Headl, Hazel Escott, Betty Amsler. CSQJLUIICQ gon Uicfvfuf 0 Left to right: Ioan Arps IDepartment Headl, Eileen Eide, Cmissing is Marie Blythl.
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Page 21 text:
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io 5QlI.IlllCQIfl.QIl C0 . Left to right: Bill Wood, Len Vann, Lloyd Benjamin, Russ Casson, Bill Hoard, Iim Knapp, George Knutkowksi, Wally Bostick. Pmaonal dchiwunenf CD . Left to tight: Chester Whitman, Marvin Goff, Eugene Swanson, Gerald Pitzer, Everett Frogner, Iohn Francis. Co Left to right: Gari Benham, Tom Ames, Bill Churchill, Don Ragghianti, Bill Marcoe, Bob Doggett, Paul Pugh. ,icfzvrcc Co Left to right: Dale Moody, Howard Bellows, Hoger McNutt, Pete Holzheimer, Charles Shorrock. J ' Cv Left to right: Paul Munson, Bill Hooper, Bob East.
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