Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA)

 - Class of 1919

Page 17 of 28

 

Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 17 of 28
Page 17 of 28



Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

The Target 15 OUR CONCERT. Our annual concert will take place Thursday night, May 29th, in our auditorium. The organizations are all working hard and expect to give the best kind of a program. There will be two soloists, Barbara Lull, who is an artist on the violin, and George Eldredge, an excellent bari- tone singer. We feel very proud of the work done in our music depart- ment and we know the school will support them by seeing to it that the Willard auditorium is filled to its limit. Come, one and all, to show your appreciation of the splendid program that is to be given as the climax of a faithful and very suc- cessful term ' s efforts. COLUMBUS NAVIGAT. Post eum iacent atrae Azores. Post eum iacent portae Herculis. Ante eum iacent umbrae litorum, Ante eum iacent ignota maria. Comes bonus, Nunc oremus, inquit, Nam ecce! stellae ipsae non sunt! Die, imperator valide! Quid ego di- cam? Inquit, Navigate, et navigate, et navi- gate! MEDA HOUGHTON, H8. SANTO TOMAS. Santo Tomas is a mountain in the northern part of Luzon. It is about thirty miles from the China Sea coast, and has more than seven thou- sand feet elevation. It is considered one of the most beautiful peaks in the Philippine Archipelago. To reach Santa Tomas from Ba- guia, the summer resort of the Philippines, which is five thousand feet high, one must go some four or five kilometers on a rocky plateau that is partly covered with a coarse sharp grass and a few ferns. After passing this stretch, the trail winds upward, and occasionally there is seen a beautiful tree fern. There are places on this trail, where one looks down on the tops of tall trees, and if a stone is thrown, it can scarcely be heard as it falls. In other places it is hewn from the perpendicular side of the rocky mountain, and is scarcely three feet wide. If an Igorot carrier is met in such a place, though he has a case of milk on his back, he will perch on the side until the Americans have passed. When the summit is reached, the view is exceedingly beautiful. The country all around lies out like a re- lief map. Close below are the foot hills with two sparkling rivers wind- ing in and out on their courses to the sea. Below the foot hills are the very green rice paddies and brown tobacco fields. Where the sparkling rivers run through the brown fields, there is a narrow rib- bon of sand ori either side. Be- tween the fields and the white sandy beach are beautiful groves of cocoa- nut palms. Far in the distance the blue of the sky meets the blue of the sea in a dimly distinguished line. Very few people visit Santo Tomas as it is a very long rough walk or ride. MARGARET WRENTMORE. SPRING. Oh, Spring has come with colors gay To dress the land anew, With poppy, snow-drop, lu pin gray, And baby eyes of blue. With these come cheery songs of birds And hum of bees ' mid gardens gay; Warm sunshine tells us winter ' s gone, And happy are we all today. MARJORIE WAIDE.

Page 16 text:

14 The Target and Herbert Dreisbach. They gladly welcome as newcomers Will Hub- bard (clarinetist), Addison Cole (cor- netist), and Hugh Bishop (base drum- mer). THE GLEE CLUB. The Glee Club did splendid work at the Bond Rally held in our audi- torium just before the election. The two bond songs composed by Miss ElleVhorst for the occasion made a special hit with the audience. The Club has been invited to sing for the Intermediate High School Teachers ' Association program to be given in the auditorium in June. At the present time the members are preparing four selections for the con- cert, one of which will have a violin duet obligato. The Glee Club has never gotten better results, and their work is greatly appreciated by their audiences. BASEBALL. On May 1st the Willard baseball team played the first game of the In- termediate High School series with Garfield. The team, after two months of practice, showed an efficiency of team work that enabled them to win the game to the tune of 11 to 1. With a little support the team should win the series with ease, but it needs the little support. The lineup was as follows: Bliss, catcher; Ditzler, pitcher; Van Nos- trand, first base; Takahashi, second base; Harms, third base; Cheek, shortstop; Thatcher, left field; Clev- erdon or Biglow, center field; Lowell or Whitton, right field. The game was featured by the heavy hitting of the Willard nine, and by the steady pitching of Ditzler. The team kept up the good work against Edison and Burbank, beating Edison 3 to 2 and Burbank 11 to 2. The Edison game was hard fought and was won at the last minute. Neither team scored until the second inning, when Harms singled, stole second and went to third on Thatch- er ' s out, scoring when Bliss doubled. The game went to the fifth inning without another score. In the first of the fifth Edison put over two runs, due to a couple of errors by Willard. It looked to be all over but the shouting when, in the last of the seventh, Bliss and Cheek got hits and scored on Van Nostrand ' s double. The Burbank game was never in doubt, due to the steady pitching of Ditzler. Willard pounded the Bur- bank pitcher for eighteen hits. Cheek made a home run in the fifth inning. Ditzler had good support all through the game, especially when men were on bases. TENNIS. The girls of the seventh and eighth grades have organized a tennis team, •with Susanna McCann for their cap- tain. The ninth grade will meet Monday, May 12th, to choose their captain and her assistant. The best players will participate in the first tournament, which will be held on the Hillegass courts. After several games have been played the seventh and eighth grade champions will play the winners of the ninth grade tourna- ments. Everyone is asked to join the team, whether she is an experienced player or not. About 50 boys interested in tennis organized, electing Edward Chandler manager, and Sheldon Cooper as as- sistant. A tournament is being ar- ranged and the time for matches is being scheduled. The sport promises to be very popular this season.



Page 18 text:

1 6 The Target TARGET STAFF Editor Elizabeth Denbigh Manager Adolphus Cheek ASSISTANTS Barbara Ames Madalene Hull Anita Aylworth George Jacquemart Mildred Bell Jeanne Jardine Gardiner Johnson Helen Beaumont Gordon Johnson Jackson Bliss Finette Kelly Maurinne Brown Wenonah King Mignon Callish Thomas McEneany Helen Carlin Kathleen Morehouse Marion Clymer Pauline Morton Inez Donnell Anna Powell John Eldredge Murray Putnam Kenneth Ferguson Eris Sanders Fred Foy Massaye Shinohara Mildred Heavey Henry Takahashi Ruth Henderson Richard Teggart Lucile Higgins Gerow Van Nostrand Mary Huggins Elizabeth Walters ADVISORY BOARD Mr. Clark Principal Miss Christy - Teacher to know why, but it is true. Some say that the boys would rather play marbles than baseball. Others, that we haven ' t the room for athletics. The real reason is, however, that the teams have never been enthusiastic- ally supported on the field! Rickety, rackety, razbo! Jickety, jackety, jazbo! Willard, Willard! Lots of pep! Pitch ' em good — we ' ll beat ' em yet! Willard has never done much in the way of athletics. No one seems

Suggestions in the Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) collection:

Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

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Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Willard Middle School - Target Yearbook (Berkeley, CA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924


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