The SPY 1935
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The SPY 1935
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The Kenosha High School Year Book, The SPY, for the 1934 to 1935 school year.
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4/18/2017
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01/01/1935
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Kenosha High School Yearbook Club
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40746345 bytes
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School yearbooks
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text
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Kenosha (Wis.)
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Yearbook
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Kenosha (Wis.)
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Kenosha Ha1bor 1n the Ewly E;xhtif's
l====SPY================~
VOLUME twenty-four of the continuous senes of Spy yearbooks
A RECORD of the eighty-sixth year in the history of Kenosha High School
WRITTEN and edited by student members of the Spy literary staff
FINANCED through the efforts of the students on the Spy business staff
PRINTED and bound by the members of the Spy printing staff
ISSUED to students of Kenosha Central Senior High School, Kenosha, Wis.
1935
IN
EXPLANATION
In Kenosha, nineteen thirty-five i a commemorative year. It anniversary spirit tinges everything-even the high school year book. A
a
re ult this Spy may some day be called an "historical edition."
However, such a designation would be misleading. Although it contains historical material, this book i not, by any interpretation, a history.
The Spy is a record of the current year. It tries to mirror the intere ts
prevalent during the chool terms.
In keeping with the trend of the year the Spy ha included a few
columns of data about the pa t. It has not "gone old fashioned." The Spy
remairis. despite the extraneous material, a modern chronicle.
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
Oversea-ers
7
A<lmm1stration, Faculty
Seen through A lice's Looking Glass
Tracks Upon the Sand
r
17
Semo rs
Personifie<l in poet's ph rases
Undergraduates
Photographe<l ,rn<l enumerate<l
Ruffles and Cream
67
Act1v1t1es
T erse history of each organization
Victory's Route Is a Slippery Elm
99
Athletics
The historic past an<l present
Bridging the Years
113
.. A Little of Everything"
Essential hits of fun and mformat1on
Pathways of Trade
A<l\'ert1sement
W ares of the hetter merchants
129
fr' -
Reflecting m part the tranquil beauty of pioneer Keno·
sha- the enlightened community that gave the city and
state free education-this print shows several sites which
were land mar~s in early years. 'The Congregational and
Baptist churches, the warehouses of Will:am Bullen and
other businessmen, and the store·post office of Cogswell
and Ayers, are clearly visible.
6
----
'The exact scene is the south side of Kenosha's harbor
where the Simmons Company now manufacwres beds and
mattresses . H1stoncally correct eve:n to the minute detail,
the ongmal of this pamtmg, done by William Peaco.
Murals artist, hangs m Memonal Hall of the Kenosha
County Courthouse.
C9versea - ers
G . F. Loomis, AB., A.M.
George N. Tremper, A.B., M.A.
Superintendent of Schools
Principillll
p1935
7
PY
935
8
Dwight T. John, A.B., M.A.
Sylvester W. Ward, A.B.
Associate Principal
Assistant Principal
I
N AN attempt to discover pertinent facts m the history of
the Kenosha High School it 1s naturally of 111terest tu me tu
compare its growth during the time that I have hecn prinupal
with its growth prior to that time . A comparison of this sort
is of especial v.1luc hccausl' the period rnd1ng m June, 191 I,
comprised the first fifty years of its existence, while the period
from 1911 to 193 5 comprises approx1m,1tcly the next twcntv· five
years ,
During the first Ii fty years of its existence the school graduated
forty · four da. ses wtth a total of 509 graduates. During the next
twenty -four years, 1t has also, ;.s an interesting corncidence.
graduated forty-four cla"es. includmg the mid-year classes. but
with a total of 4109 graduates. Of the total number of gr,1du ·
atl's eighty-seven per cent have heen graduated during the last
twenty· four years.
In 1911 the enrollment grades 9 · 12, was 303 In 1935 the
enrollment, grades 9·12. 1s 3249 . the enrollment 111 the Senior
High SdH ol alone hcmg 23 24. While the populatmn of the
c!ly has rncreascd 2Yz tunes. from 21.000 to 50 000, th.: en·
rullment of the high school has mcreased I 0 times.
In the -amc penud the numher of teachers has increased
from f; ftcen to sevcnty·five . The faculty has not expanded at
the '<line rate as the school partly hecause unpruvrment 111
tc,1 ch1ng methods has made 1t possible for teachers to handle
larger group., cffect1vcly and partly hecause economic condi·
lions h.1vc made 1t necessary to keep operating expenses at the
lowest rca onahk level.
The curriculum, however. has expanded to meet the demands
of the tudent hody. In 1911 the chool offered onlv the con ·
vrntion.t! course of study of early American high sch<)ols S:ncc
then six entirely new departments have heen added: house·
hold arts fine arts, music , puhlic speaking, and physical educa·
tu>n. Sheet metal printmg. and drafting have been added to the
m,1n11al arts department; mdustrial geography. social prohlems.
and economics to the social science department: French. Sp:in1. h,
.md ltalian to the language department: salesmanship and busi·
ncss 'cicnce to the commercial department : chemistry to the
science department. and Journalism and newspaper reading to
the English department
All of the extra <llrncular act1v1t1es organized foothall.
baskcthall. debatmg. fwen'1cs, and journahm -111 which the
schoo' has won hurels placrng 1t among the foremost 111 the
country, have been developed since 191 :>.
The enormous expan,10n of the school srnce I ha\'e heen its
prmc1p.1l has not only stramcd the financial and educational
fac11it1es of the city hut has also taxed the 1111tiati\'e of the edu·
cator. The loyalty of such groups as the Girl Reserve. the H1·Y.
the Red Triangle. and the Student Council : the cordial co·
operat10n of the High School Parent·Teacher A"oc1at1on. and
the constant confidence and moral support of the community
at large ha\'e neYCr fai'ed us hut have helped us to carry out
our plans ard to find the solutwn to the many prohlems of the
cver·mcreasmg group of young men and women m our senior
high school.
Kenosha High chool is and always ha. been prominent as
an institution. \\' c arc happy to a crihe its success m a large
measure to its fine school citizenship .
G.
•. TREMPER. Principal
9
THE FACULTY
"Through the Looking-Glass"
by
Alice in Wonderland
University of Illinois
George Nelson Tremper, M.A.
Hohhv
Tralt
<l .1rt
AnJ '"" glaJh u·ill I drm~
(t1lln:t111g oh1n:t
tact
Tour Honor·s nobl1 health
University of Wisconsin
Dwight T. John, M.A.
Tr ..it • >nt:. well guy"
Hohhv ht ks
h1 Td the Ktng O'V n a lnm
As th \I u al~cJ ufl t11gctha. Al~
, Ill
ti the c •mpanv gcncrdll)' • ') ou 4TC all (l1 rdoncd
Indiana University
Sylvester W. Ward, B.A.
Hohhy
Fl'aturc
Pop to 2 ,000 etu Jena
..:hn,s
du: C(1tnp1llar called after h ·r. ' i·t'C somcth1n 1m
Cornt: hac~
1wrtant to say ·
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
Columbia University
Myrtle Bangsberg, M.A., Chairman
Hohh\
tht:.
it
University of Wisconsin
ora Belle Binnie, B.A.
Hohhy pcr!'onaltt1c..,
Th R1 l Q.ui n
he I
fe; t1 r
in~ h
'But u
n( on:
r •ti
m 1km~ J1 hn Lt
The: ~.ut ·n m le: 1 anJ pa!istd on.
l-t.-,1turt..
th..: thLiltt:r
l m1 cm U'hdt l \d'\' ' rhe Moc~ Turtl1 r··rli,•J
"•wing
Q, ''(;U ln
Bang'h rg
Bro\\n
Michaeli
Sm"h
10
Binnie
Olniel
Moodv
St<tlin
Bi.sbce
Dene more
Murrhy
Schult:
Brcistth
L!rnellyn
t::1 . . o:Jn
Blank
Jc g.s
Sh, ~er•
1 •ti
h~c:
"' n J , h ' ·If.
c1 ;}.1r
University of Chicago
Fe 1turt.
1n•m.1t11
s.11d the L11
Northwestern University
F
n her
d c· If
potlr
Elberta Llewellyn, B.A.
Hohhy musi(.
H r the. ~ae n pu1
il1r
~
F tur
Jlc. lc:c. c.i JJ, .l
Margaret Densmore, M.A.
Huhhv
R I
University of Chicago
prn.:try ~crapho .ks
7'u
honey 1. lort.. J h.11r
H;)l'-,t
l.rn~uagcs' · .sa1J thi
Edith Daniel, M.A.
Hohhy
\ m"
University of Akron
Ruth Brown, M.A.
Hohhy
lilt n
University of Minnesota
Ruth Breiseth, M.A.
Hohh\"
n t11r.tl \.'.harm
•• ,J ' r ' J
Oberlin College
Florence E. Bisbee, B.A.
Hoh~
Trait od h1ht)
'1 an. JU t h •
th1.;.Ha
\\'h n l L!H': ,1 u· rJ
Humpt'V Dumpt\'
I rhoo.~e 1t f(, lllC n neither more nc1r le.~.
pedJC
I b
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t n
t 1r
rh
111 y
f
If
t
r
Carlena Michaelis, M.S.
Hobby
University of Wisconsin
okmg
It t' -ryon1 minded thc:1r bu me
•i..IJ Jl.:1 r1 ind
ii :ii la.ster than
d11e
University of Iowa
Charlotte Moody, B.A.
Hohh}
1tur
A hnght 1Je
F
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Al
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I I
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1tu:.:.
J Al
University of Iowa
Laura Steffen, B.A.
'>
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Tr 1t
!- •k
I
1t
University of Minnesota
Eunice L. Smith, B. S.
H.iM y
Ir I•
mi TI)' th it
n
Tr 1t
to Ju
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Ylt J
1m
j}
n
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1
University of Wisconsin
Florence Barr Nelson, B.A.
H ,f,
t h r
University of Chicago
liobhy > ? > ?
I in
pl1 r .II th pu(:m.S that "1''T
h, ·n·t hen 1m ·ntcJ yd. '
ti
l11tt.,. hl1
r1
t
u1m1 mt J Al11.c: .s he11d.
Mary E. Murphy, M.A.
11.. h1"
Th
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th world
Fcatur
th, Dii h
11.i
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FOREIGN LANGUAGE DEPARTMENT
Laura M. Schultz, B.A., Chairman
HrJ
Lawrence College
Tr ut
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th
G11phon.
H, .hb,
J,. tng
YU hat
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lu
Tr
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University of Wisconsin
Carolyn H. Holah, M.A.
II> L
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J
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T
University of Wisconsin
N. A. Magaro, M.A.
,u
Hor
4.11
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e r
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Sp a~ t'l F n, h
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University of Illinois
Leona Schuessler, B.S.
"
T
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Syracuse University
Alma M. Merrick, M.A.
H
n.:
t
Michigan University
Annette Hall, B.L.
•11
s
•••J
State College of Washington
Juliana Blank, M.A.
H .. hbv
frank
dJ ,
n I
nt
r, Jt
·h<n v u cant thin~
fth
En'i.;
l Tllll.!t
hin
in
Hall
Schu fer
Jone
M rt lie
Ho Iah
\\'11
n
Kirk
R,fshol
Magaro
Hlnscn
Kn e
Smith
M nck
Ha-.rmgs
Lew
Da\1es
11
Virginia Wilson, B.A.
H·hh
wl tl111
"ilt:nL
Knox Colleg(
Pl rly te th
1n..
nJ
T'
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pl
1.
SOCIAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
H. H. Paddock, M.A., Chairman
orthwestem University
H.hhv tr1\ I
T. I
T ~It
h
ec.orum
e .. lean
• their
nJ n1 tt
J\latilda Hansen, Ph.B.
H 1hhv
I-
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ThL
r '
nu
University of Wisconsin
t·
IJ(
( hh
ho
rn1
the \ \ '11ru
ttl
1t~ 1 n_ste ~
ntle
Hope H. Hastings, B.A.
H 1hh\·
hridj..!;l
I
/1
Ir
h
h
hout h 1
J. T. Kirk, M.A.
f r
fl f
rhc Hatt r
TO n1 I
\.
11
W. C. Kruse, B.A.
mh howeJ
I•abel Low, M.A.
11
h rc
1
n.I
fr .u
n r d;·
·mleJ
1t 11 ma~e me
·h
Tr
kc n
large ~
e~lh
J ll
W. W. Martelle, B.A.
fi.1hln
'' J
th
~nig sa
Martin Rafshol, M.A.
H 1hh
1thl1 t11.
\\ di ' ll4
fanl
'Y(JU
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Glenn I. Smith, M.A.
SPY
935
1..k
Dohcrf\·
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\\ •. tlt .. r
Bad r
\'. lliam-
r 1--ricrn:-John .. on
Casv.ell
Cl.\
rry
M -.jr
R. mkcn,.h •.,_
Cbn-lcr
Ch1pc,
~ch cf r
f'umr1>
]
h in~
h pllrt:
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f e.1turc 1. rly h.11 r
u n t "!IOU 1om the
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De Pauw University
H
H •hhv
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n e cf humor
I m •
orthwestern University
t
av t1 on
F ·h nl,
11.in!'ih1r
Lawrence College
1rr Ill tHI
T
rn 1t
Northwestern University
1rt
I
I t lllft: k nd he 1rt
J out r.c:h n he ' w Alice
University of Illinois
Hohh\ tr.1 d
ThL k. n1 1·e oJ H ar!
H, 1bhy
""'rklmg t:\e
tun::
University of Illinois
111g
\,
1ifil J hearing
J1
rcaJ, I
m ~e htn If u Jul and
<>h d It me help t untlo tt. •
lu :l)'
·\11u:
.i11x u v
H, ,b},.
hmgs. '
Columbia University
,
uuf
en mciac m
Oberlin University
Tr it
·\
Et hel Mae Jones, M.A.
H ·hb\
tur
f , m\
n h
1t
rr\
c t 11
PUBLIC SP EA KI G DEPARTME T
John Davies, Ph.B., Chairman
Ripon College
H, hhv
Th'"
t
If
thL l ( rl(,I
h
•ht r
ft._ I('
tn
hout me th
,,
h
I r h.it
MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT
University of Wisconsin
Ona E. Andrews, B.A., Chairman
H4
l y
l
" ' (II
( rn
'"
~mt
,!
'
C. E . Bayler, Ph.B.
Hobb).
t•
University of Chicago
Tr
1ll
It
jrne Jo) I
r
1
sa J a tnmd ''
Florence Caswell, B.S.
H ,} y
( LJf r
Br
·t
fc ture
i,::L
M a rie Chrisler, B.A.
·u
rih~
H ,
nd
CathC'rine B.
Hnti 1\
1t
hex: I girl ....l mplexJOn
u
n ht he
Tf t
I
If
1t
a1n
University of Wisconsin
ovack, Ph.B.
OI
n
J(1
t1.
h r !f
nc
thl
nd
mith College
Tr
rt
run n th
1u
I
1 .. r htJ<leJ
n
n,
Mary Louise Williams, B.L.
I
tilt
University of Wisconsin
H .1h1t·
nd <m and on
n f ne and cn1c 111,
r. an i on '
the \\ h.'c lu n
p1irt
\\ h11t
H<ll bv
1J
uch
Tr.11t.
u of finJ1ng m ralS rn things I
Ah
r
h
1rr
·e at hi T
Hamline University
( •ntr, r1u·
ontinucd Tweedledum
1f
1d 1~ u w rl so. ' wou d he hut as 1t trn t
Ji,,ti '\
h•
Dw1,
n
lu
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n
J the \\ h
rhc :rn 1< er lo that 1
wh ll
. ,.
~
t
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<lt t rm in t1u1
R e aid n a
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
David Newberry, B.A., Chairman
Lawrence College
H1,lihv
h11
f
rk
tld h
Tr-i1t
t "'
~d ~andlv
Tr.11t
cou,J not in wt>r wtthour a
lona: t1·1u
finger pr(
t wait J in ii
t for
/o• hca
M a ry Doherty, B.A.
r
:i
inJ uh • ' u
and
m)
·n
in
<'f terror.
re J,
rte d
Cora Fabricius, B.A.
r
Univ
Tr
•nu,t rd 1 n t 4 btrd
y ;'h•1t1 'r
A)d nc r th
Ali,
1
na1~
v r1JiP
T
th1
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F
r
p
the \\ 'h1tc R,,hh1t / · ha trtt
un
l~
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v ttJ sec rhc M
k T11rt1c,
t
it
u·
1m
,he T mtum tree anti
x11k
t 1
r•
n
h
ti
n
Ripon Colleg~
1t:6.
1J the
t
Tr.ut: lfH o
"h11< "' th<
spy1935
~t
r
;'),1
n
University of Chicago
Jl,
r
ay
LP
University of Wisconsin
Kin
Charles H. Walter, M.A.
S,
!r
d
Prudence Schaefer, Ph.B.
H
Tra t
AllC(
University of Iowa
I
C. L. Mason, Ph.B.
Ht
I o
u.s
J
Iowa State Teachers' College
r ad
Oh PU:ASt
,,t
J, l1h r Hon
D. J
•h ught
H·
rs
University of Chicago
H. ~by "' 1d "' irk
Th
qu sll '1 rh
H· bb,
gr.
smile of •he J..: mgh
) . C. Chapel, M.A.
ht
Cuthne
M lonq
Oatc
T rcwyn
C nfi Id
SrP h
Rro~n
S tcfTu1 en
M enzel
\\ olfc
Kirn
Vala ke
North\\::n
Yod<r
Freeberg
La r.scn
I3
COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT
Avis Johnson, B.S., Chairman Michigan State Normal-College
Trait
f1 hing
Hoh iv
elad I (JUI t)
''You lrln·t thm~ ho
g.. n
., )'OU
Don J. Blankenship, A.B.
orJ1al1ty
the Duchc.u.
111d
State University of Iowa
F .1tun; Modi h dra
H"hhv g"ll
"r •u oo~
Elsie Cumro, B.A.
h\' let mt' mtr1 Ith e v1>u
httl4
University of Nebraska
H11hhy :-tn1i:mg
So thrn~
Fc.tt\Jre
e~ df
me li~e a JiU~·m·the·box
nd ur l
r vv•1 hair
h~ a
~ v '"<~et
John Guthrie, B.A.
H11hhv
University of Indiana
\\
be ~r oJ t",lucaur•n
h,1J th
U1
J, ·t
Ne:Iie Maloney
H. ihhv
h
t1\· 1t es
l<L h nt
E
T1
lot
J
dou n h
Dorothy Menzel, B.E.
H •I •v
:JO
DD
DD
n
t'
hid
rm
1t.J11<•r ror
v
,11,I the Duche
nJ th
m• ral o
tu J, • e rhat ma~t s the u•vrld fl.J round
Caryl Oates, B.S.
t• fL
Oh
1
Tra t
1i"-
r 1 int:
H\
thr
University of Pittsburgh
h at11rt:
rolHK
.\1 n
f'
h t
Milwaukee Normal School
( .. rrt·ntt:r work
An I 1•i;:,, 111 '..,tuan Alia wirh th11t\' un
H(jhb\
t
Whitewater Teachers' College
I.o"s Northway
H,1hhv
~
Milwaukee Normal School
·h1 rl'h
And
" k hrirr r J ha~
,\ h I 1' f ) du
Fe: 1tur•
rnlit11.:
f, n~
1
1d rh
nd .sati tale' ·
rnJ1\.1J11aJiq.
m ·lii
]...1 •!j
A i.
•Inn
Ben Trewyn, B.A.
H,,)
I
~D
University of Wisconsin
l
1th! th..
1r• I I t 1~
I\'
\Pu wuh pie
LeRoy Wolfe, B.A.
H.1t \
D
rt,11 n
11
•lfh
HI\'
rr
J has J1rhtr
~D
I
na11q.
I r oft r • ·11
J1
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University of Iowa
Tr ·1
Ir
H mrrv Vw LfH'V .sa1
'11nm11\
M
l\.
U•ljt'
W. 0 . Yoder, M.A.
H.,bb\.
h
Ohio Wesleyan
t\.tr\t 1mg
In rn\ \.
,J
.1t 11
rl
n.imt:
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n
horc laugh
nll ,1
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ART DEPARTMENT
Georgiana Canfield, Ph.B., Chairman
University of Chicago
Hulibv
-spy
Sokolik
1 llenz
\ onderhoof
Tully
Bvrum
Ih11 r
SI Her
H rlev
Ku ta
McDon ugh
PJlmer
f->le1
B~·utdle
Tary
Lomb
\\ .gner
..-r.dl u. url
I l in ure t
14
II
tr
·th r
J1
Tr 1t
irt
th
I~
It
nn
atalie Wilkinson, B.A.
tf, ihh'
. _. •IHr.h:t
·\nJ rl1
truru
935
{'o
t~
1 llf.t.
r
thdt
Rockford College
hriJ~,l
Jr t~'
l
Tr.11t
n M
anlf mu . . hne.s'
r .rhrng thM htgna u 111,
an<l tilt 111 on
ant memory
ri .. t1
,1
·r.it .c
n1
.111
Kenneth D. Brown, B.A.
University of Wisconsin
Hobby
mu ic
Trait \. -r .1t lity
h c m, up tu th m Alice hta1'd one o} th m
v
Li 1k uut
nou F1t•c' Don't yu .(pla.hlng paint oi.··r ·me li~e th11t!'
A.
INDUSTRIAL ARTS DEPARTMENT
Ohio State University
Harry Kirn, B.S., Supervisor
H1 I
nadifl
Well I .1huul,J like
mind
Tr- It
c; he a LITTLE larqcr
1r
ad Al1 e
photo~raphy
If he q·nil
mu1·h T1 or•
.,h thou'(ht
Stout lnst1turn
H.1h1t : phyir
1d1 h h hu.:
tht. ·nJ of his mouth n1 1ht m t h ,h 1nd
Arthur E. Freeberg, B.S.
H1 1hy
Stout Institute
Jund. n~
Trail
ports
Harvard C. Smith, B.S.
Trc11t
,,,
'it 's
I
I 1h
Tf
nd
Fe tnr
1he Kmg
flffJ(
c ri.?: n
\\
In
t.
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rht
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pl1
nt
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11.po11
r
Tnit
ii ingrn
Bill
11 Ali1 t
·If
Th
f'
'f• t
rt
t
t1
h T
1..
Sht
:f
mrrn~
fc t 1r
>d charactn hut
1d I c uid n. t
hr
J
I r
rh th
Columbia University
1e
the
t·
.~u
·n
1d t•
A
df•
En~l1:!\h
1·
1b1 1t h~
I
h,
,.
di f'tf•f't'T IT1 th
.Id foT snc ·zin> .
I
Theresa McDonough, B.S.
nt
y ~.
h1tt
pron
co
A
"up
University of Wisconsin
Tr: It n 1t tppcarance
~now
and /' t' ("mnt:d u ti
no plea.Jing it. ·
b tt rJ. r ·
University of Chicago
it< ~r rh
,11, er n..,
H hh,
o,
THAT a uhur«'
Catherine Boutelle
H, 1hv dan
Su•h
H.1h1t
r K "J<.
th
''
ind h ~m h1mull.
It
flt Oj..
pin
lip
Uf'
Kenosha High School
F
Jt
u·cet
11
t~ir
ruhy lip ...
h d'
it
1c
OFFICE
Azalea Terry
Kenosha High School
r1 n
H•1hhv
F
htr
head'' the Red
n~h after so mui.:'1
1
'luan an:..11
thm~m~."
Tr 1t br 1t"
Sh II be
h ml '' f'I J
Milwaukee Downer
hool
.r u
Marion Tully
H
Tr 1t~
gots
h~
ar
h\' re .din~
Alice 'oo~ed on w111' 5r
1
nt ., t
fH•l~ t
_i
mmt&r
memorandum-hook
Dolores Lamb, R.N.
H
hv
b< "''"~
ab•
I
Ali,
.1
T
.}I ict v. Y"
~-
Tr it
f h1.
1hlig1ri
th Kin~ t
ind began u:ntmg.
m. nntr
ni r
CLINIC
St. Agnes' School of Nursing
Tr.11t
atching 1he \\'h11
him and had 1h
f rn d a m
Cece~ia M.
H 1hhv
qu
Saint Mary's of Notre Dame
n 11
Northwestern University
F
tLu
fe4t11rc
h '·" IJ
nt
University of Wisconsin
t1 n.
tm
Ft. •t1 rt; d1 ~t1P1.:,1 h~ d lPI> r n,
t
J
uud lool{ at mt:. I ln on1 thar h,u pi ·n to a King
I m rntnbc "1u II n"l'er !f!t' .surh anorhl·r 1nJ t 1h •u·
u I'm
1
nor ('Ir J '
' h k hands wuh
o;,k 1tmg
,n
f
rn
travel
'7'her
University of Minnesota
1rt
"\• t'
Kl
Anna Kusta, B.S.
Hazel Herley
she thou,i.::ht
Mildred Vanderhoof, M.A.
lfohhv
:r•
Springfield College
J. Aldred Peel, M.S.
H.i~hv
on 1th ,. Jloit t:r n the garden that
.vid 1h Ru
H1 ·hhv tr. v I
I dun t
mov n
J
~tt
Indiana University
·°' k
Hohhv
fuJ
•r
fTt /(.
'Thrr
h ·lp
Tr. It h. hf ilncS>
J n.UU"rcJ
111·
H >hhv
Hohhv
Ruth Palmer, B.S.
Hohhv
t
th
Nilah V. Byrum, B.A.
1r
nJm
r •fl<Tlv
iJ 1hc Knighr.
Fred Bauer, B.P.E.
Hnhhv b.1. b.dl
/· look d ~
h ;oun I do that,'
LIBRARY
PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Dorothy Ellenz, B.E., Chairman
LaCrosse Teachers' College
II . i,,
1h it
pr .. 1·
b
MUSIC DEPARTMENT
Minnie Larsen, B.E., Chairman
Milwaukee Teachers' College
M1 hb; 1 1p
1
fC"OtlfCcft1l11
c
Stout Institute
arJ nmg
L
Tr it
Dorothy Slater, Ph B.
H. D. Valaske
ti •> ~v
Sh uld
Stout lnst;tute
cont• t
le
h u.· ·nt rn after 1.1 paust
r E\ ER1'THI G '
Rockford College
r• 1dir:
1
u·h... .. the matter wHh it' the: -;"tuan said m a
mdant..holv 101ct ' It'
•1t "' t -ip r I thm~. I't•t:d pmn'd 1t here.
Im c he a LOVELY 1gh1' ' sa1<I Tu•eedlcduin
Hohhv
Hohh
1f you wouldn ·c
Otto Steffensen, B.S., Chairman
Hohhv
x. ctn
HOUSEHOLD ARTS DEPARTMENT
Florence K. Sokolik, B.S., Chairman
m~
Kmr
J T
all readv
Wagner, R.N.
I
ht'
i.
thT
·h1 ·rf 1ln ·ss
anx1 1u.
in ca e he
t 1 a littl~
a
1·
r hn""
Marquette University
"'in~
Tr 1t
.scrtamt:~l
th.__ \\'hH1
.~1
kinJr ··
·n
15
SPY
935
Jn ~tmoriam
JLoi~ ~. j}ortb\tlap
Died March 29, 1935
Lois E. orthway was a graduate of the Kenosha High School
and a member of the faculty for nearly twenty years. The affairs of the school and the progress of her classes were her first
he was a hard worker. con c1entwus and sincere.
concern.
Sturdy individuality and uncompromising idealism were her
outstanding characteristics. In spite of the strain which physical
infirm1t1es laid upon her in her efforts to perform her duties,
Miss Northway never complained.
Though her pupils sometimes felt that she was exacting. they
respected her for her honesty and frankness, and loved her for
her sincerity and her sympathetic understanding. Among her
pupils and fellow teachers Miss orthway will long be remem•
bered and deeply respected for her forthright character, her infectious enthusiasm. and her unselfish devotion to the school.
1935
75racks upon the ~and
MID-YEAR CLASS OFFICERS
President. Stanley 1'.ewberry; V1ce-Pres1dent. Julia Mae Troke;
Secretary, Maqonc Ca<ly; Treasurer, Ha~ry M11lager.
HONOR STUDENTS
Troke
M lager
JUNE CLASS OFFICERS
l'rc 1<lcnt, Ch,trk' Lah,wowsk), Vice Prcs1<lent. Angdine
fiilottt Sccrctarr R1Lhar<l Ellison- Treasurer. \Valter Turner
HONOR STUDENTS
Angeline Bilotti. \.1)rnr Gor<lon. Florence Bnnkman, Dorothy
Johnson, Ru"cll Clarke, Helen Ce<lerherg. E<lwar<l Raucma.
Mary Lolllsc Dunn, Lucrctta Mae!. Helen Huntoon Margaret
Coleman. Heromen Kurosk1. Stella Kanchis Maqone Mur<loch,
Em Monterastel11, ~1egan \\'illiams.
Emily Spalding. Jane Herrick. Bernice B1elew1cz. Julia Barsi.
Milb Salishury, Ju,tme Ke-sler, Minna: Huh>en, Helen Schantek
1896
Leroy Anderson
... rra1ghr
An hone.Hy unfeigned"
and su.•oivrng '
1914
Adelle Barocca
Choru>, Spanish Club. Pep Club.
he scampers, alert and ga)·.
1920
Julia Barsi
1910
Joseph Bella
Bovs' G lee Club. Boys Chorus. A Cappclla Choir.
'\Vhat 1s the use of speech., Silence u.·ere fitter ••
Bernice Bielewicz
1910
py
taff, Laun
He'd a d1 'mon
Committee.
heart m hu le/' buas ...
Harlan S . Bitzan
Haro!d T. Bradley
1918
1919
Little Theatre, Stu.font Council, Stage Manag ·r.
And loo~.'i on hfe u·Hh qmct n·cs
Mildred Bridenhagen
M a rjorie Cady
1123
Rec. Senior Clas , tudcnt Counc. I, Pep Club, Blue Triangle, Tndcnt
nub. Spy Staff, Choru•. Girl Rc-crve, Spam>h Cluh, A C:appe1la Choir
Cla.s Play.
.. 7'h1ne eve~ u·ere blue, thv ha1r u·a.'I bnght,
Thy hat; u1as bratded on th~ head. '
Gwenn Caldwell
1910
Tenni> Club, GA A., Student Council, Pep Club. Trident C:lub
Deborah dan<.·eJ U'hen lhe u•a.s tu:o
As butt<rcups and daffodils do.
lb
Eletta Chiappetta
1905
Ch<>ru<, Sp.tm•h Club, Tenn" Club.
' And hair as darlt as the moonlc.u mght '
Joyce-Janis Christensen
1895
Chorus, Sec ·Trea. Sophomort! Chu~~.
She u a )• ung lad s J1:untale. ·
1933
Trident Club.
I praue your srrangelv rnJ1t·1du.al fore111.n u•a"Y.s.
1915
Richard Colby
usag~
m1'd
bt:.~poltt
hu noble mrnd '
Pearl Davidson
1916
Chorm, Glc< Club.
Sht:. was a quut little lad\
Eugene Del Frate
1921
Hes alu.·aH been square with -voun truly
U1rl
Rc~avc,
1915
Pen C.ub,
Choru~.
Girl ~l.'.:OUb.
She has m re hair rh,rn .,he nc:eJ~.
In tht .rnn tu a uoe to me.
Florence Enhoff
1921
Earth gan thee of her best.
Elizabeth Fato
1903
Two grat.'e brou·n eyes. $ct'treh bent
Upon a mcmor4ndum boo~ ·
John Fiori
The
1921
\'Ounci:Jter s hcarl ' nflows w1
JOt
Marion LaVe rne Fischer
1923
Per Club. Boy
Glee Club, Choru<, A Cappella C:hoor, L1ttk Th'"tre
DaVinc1 Club, tudent Council.
'He d.il11..eJ along the!' dm~v davs. ·
935
190 6
Dorris Dootson
1913
Latin Club, French Club, German Club, Chorus .
She needs a mou cxol1c air to hlo.uom m '
Gordon S. Chambers
Carmella Ch iapetta
\\.'hose
Chorus, Boys' Glee Club, A Cappella Choir, Pep Club, Cheer Leader
"'E's a daisy, 'e"s a ducky, "e's a lamb,"
p
Thrift Club, Spanish Cluh, S<e. Junior Cla•'·
Your age fijtun perhaps a liulc more
Th1S u a guess.'
Helen Ciganovich
1910
Richard Bisciglia
Gym Manager, Sport
1914
Ruby Chambers
Chorus, Spam>h Club, Golf Cluh
E.yes so blaclt they Jrau: one tremhlrn.'( nc(JT
Chorus. Girls Glce Club, A Cappclla Choir, Sp.1n"h Club.
But u:htn I salt' your t)'CS I ltncw
The angels sent the stars to )'OU.··
Forum Club, Choru•, French Club, Student Council,
Cluh
•Let me be the great nail holding a .s~'\·scraper
Through blue mghts into tt·hite stan.'
1923
Kenneth Chambers
'You au h~e the stern of a ,·0101g beach tree
1880
Glee Club, Ch<.ru>, G.A A
Each curl 1 pinned m place "
S eymour Fligel
And beams and .shouts with pure delight
\\'hen et· r'\rhmg u going nght
( D.1tt: 1nd1'-."atc )-T.tr tudt·nt~
1911
f.imilv ca mt• to Kt"no ha)
And r on
B:irocca
B:ir 1
Bdla
B1elcw10;
Cady
CaIJ .... cll
G. Charnhers
Ile! Fr.ttc
K. Chirnbcr
R. Ch .. rnl><r
Enhofl
Colhv
n:lv1d on
Dootson
Angrily shouting, 'You cant tax me to educate lu. cl11!dre11 1 ' the
nti=ens of Southport te.,:ily ref u.<ed to .rnpport a btll for free edu·
B &c1glaa
C Cha pett
F to
BH:an
I . ( h1appetta
F11.r1
P.raJlev
Bnd nhagcn
Chn .. ten .. en
f-1 .. chu
C1g;Jn0\1Ch
Fligel
catwn u·hen 1t was brought before them early m 1845'. Even par·
rnts of school age children felt that the idea was unfair
1\1
1907
Domonick Gallo
If f
' ·\•I
Red Triangle,
tudcnt Council, Vic1.>Prc!'.. Junior Class, lt.llian Club,
Studt:"nt Council Board.
'I se1rched for happiness and jounJ 1t m the sart.~J11ct10n
oJ u ·r~ u•ell Jone: anJ in .'lt'.Tt'lCC to others '
1928
Salvio Giovanelli
'So came the c.1f'lldlll u·1th the might'· heart.·
1910
Albert Glynn
1u~ht J •r hu .~lhilof dllll not
1h
1920
1856
Doris Gunderson
Chorus, StuJcnt C. unc11.
But u:here v1 u [Ms.~eJ thae 1.~ a tr.ul
Of bl1 .u mu t"l nn: heart.'
l s:drted \ •n dttra~c: ~1J
I finished as a thm~rn · man
1920
Stanley W . Ihlenfeldt
Footb,tll Team
Robust. /ncnJly
Donald Isermann
1856
Evelyn Barbara Jacobson
Girl Rc~t.:rv.:, C1rl Scout', Tr Jent ( IJb.
C lub, Ctrk GI··• Club
' Hc:r himd., dre strung tu cumJL rt,
Her h art u qu1i:k to haJ ·
1906
can \'OU frn.I
So vouni.; anJ dc:lic,Hc and kmd' ·
1924
Student Council, German Club.
E UJ-" u:h1tc dear uh1rc rns1de ••
1900
Anell Jocius
1903
re
qmct sea.
G.
Ella Ann Johnson
1915
Mary John son
(
1915
Jane Herrick
,
Fr1.·nch
( kh.
1902
Genevieve Hettrick
Tcnni... Club, Pn: . C A .'\
Jue anJ Jlet't,fouttJ
Loraine Hofba uer
1907
11 ru~.
Gin Cl uh, l )rchntra.
Th .le te ire role: of '\'OUT chcc~s ne:rcr u4nc
1913
Girl Rest.:rve, G.A A., Span1~h Club, Choru!t, Girl Scouts .
Alice Cla, has curls as wild
A~ a mormng,glon t•mc.
nuf pa 'ts
Lawrence J ornt
1840
Frances Kadwit
1923
A C rrdl; C h< •r. Bop' Ckc Club.
A ,,ong i.~ .rn,h a lvl'ch rhm~
That U't hould trv ea-.h Ja,, to 11ng
0 ITl n dre 1r a11ll Ion eh· J(rnJ
Shall sh, u·hu hunon /ncnJ lup du·ell. ·
1931
William Kanci a n
The. hc:alth,· comrade:
G A A . Trident Club, Niawauna Campfir~.
"'\ew ch.irm .she add to et en scene.
C,aman
LC't I <ho dJ b olJ /<1 hwned,
1 ·11 put a trrnket on. '
Carl Hartkopf
Helen Host
1921
n.A A., Cho1us,
Order " a lot·cly thmg .
m31Jc:n
Choru.s, Gkt: Cluh, A C;:1ppdh Choir. Girl Re c n
Orchc>tra. Spy Staff, Quill anJ Scroll, Lattn C:uh .
· Oi·er th< blac~ ~"' onJ the u·htte
'Yo1•r Jin~cn er pt rn the fire light.
.\hllttt-r d the nwcmh&ht s
1h ' ' hTC'a.\t
\\'tth horn anJ light anJ laughter
"lou
Eleanor Hansen
20
")our shaJo«' u no .'lhadoui, but a \Cattered .sun.\h1t1t:
Albert Jensen
1893
Floyd Guttormsen
935
1910
StLJJrnt Council, Spy St>fi
'\\'
A ~udden rush from the .sta1rttt1\'
A suJJen ro1J from the hall.'
(_ hnr11!', Tri<lLnt ( 11 h
C<1ppclla Che)lr. Forum Club .
a .singing bird ·
Minnie Huissen
ht4TTith • '
Chester Guidotti
\\'hat ·1ther
(,let:. Ch.• b, A
'M~ h • .nt 1 h~t
Spanish Club.
\\.·imming Team.
He
Chorus,
1920
Michele Gallo
19 17
Dorothy Howard
He. nars
It
a SOTl'l; ITl a t·o1ce that u su ut.
E!mer Kautenburg
1870
Bo ta Fh1 K .• ppa.
Just
calm •huTl'cr of ought anJ mu t"
1840
Eugenia Kedzierski
1928
Choru"
Hi.:r
mull and su. ect maternul wo1ds '
( J ).1te 1nd1catn; nar i;tmlt:nt'i; family camt to Kl·no-;h:1)
D. Callo
H rnck
M (hllo
H1.:ttnd:
G ovandl
ftn
Joc1u
L
n
H~.>fbauer
John
n
Clvnn
Hot
M I •hn on
ClnJott1
Gunderson
G'uttormsrn
Ho~
Hui en
K. d,. t
J~I nfcldt
Kann:111
f11rnr
The eloquent appeals of Colonel Fran~ m the local press cont'mced the irate voters that educatwn wa. an '111ve.1tmen~ in good
rJ
Han .. cn
lscrmann
Hartkorf
J.•oob n
K:111tcnhurg
Kedziersld
gov:r·1ment." At a second meetmg the measure was promptly
passed by the far•sighted and enthusiastic voters
~l
spy193
rt
1925
Justine Kessler
1916
Sophie Kielpsz
Beta
George King
1890
\V OTds I can ta~e and tn u:t<h them
L1~e a child at u•oT~ on. a p1ctun puzzle."
Jan ice Elaine Kitzrow
Stanley Klemaseski
1908
Elsie Luymes
1856
lean and smeu·v. •
1900
Thr It Club.
' A bou· and a smile arc pa.uport m anv clnne.''
192 4
Pep Club, Chorus, Blue Tr angle, Latm Club
T ou hai•t: .sac .soft a voice and slid a tongue,
1906
Irene Madison
1920
\\'ho el.u that mooon and that mien,
\\'ho cl.st that atr)· tread''
Byron Mar'. att
Matthew Kulbiski
1916
Spani~h
Club, Beta Phi Kappa, Fr:inklin Printer-.· CUI d
\\.ho 1u1·er dtfas and nerer demand.~
But, sm1hng, ta~t.~ the u·orld m hu hands"
1896
lntr 1.. ur.d Man. g1:•,
w1mmin~ Team.
And Beauty leans abol't: him as a tut
Lean.s u.·hen the duslt u su.·eet ••
Alice Marschner
Thomas Laken
1914
rrr~.
Peter La Macchia
T
11111~
1905
John Lapotko
1918
One u:ho lH:t'er turned hu b.icl{ but maTChed breast Jon,·ard
Clarence Larsen
1916
tht flou·cn, and the h1rJ.s."
Marjorie Larsen
1910
\\'hose pTOjile thnlled mv bovish duam ·
Lucille R. Lawell
1835
'Yet she u fa1r
And must hat·t: loi·t:s a plt:nt,·."
Esther Ledger
Student Council, Chorus, Girl Rc~erve, Sp: n1sh CL..h. G1r:
Tradent Club.
And her laueh tS thistl,doum dround her Jou· rcplic.s."
1915
German Club
\\'hen Katy laughs 1t' s 1ust the u.·ay
'That n{'f'les all began. '
Chester Maxwell
ltalaan Club, Spy Staff.
· Hu beaut' met me hl(.e a fresh u·md blou•m1t.''
935
Manager
Hair m hcap.s lay htal'ily
Frances Krueger
p
Club,
Ot·er a pale hrou· sp1nt•/rcc.''
Harold Kressin
I ~neu the- .tr11n
Kappa, Coll Club, Tennis Club, Spanish
Team, Chorus.
''Young man
Whv Jo you cal\ and cal~ and tal~I '
Ruth Louise Luquer
pani-h Club, Spy taff, " K" Club.
All da, long I hat-e been U'OT~mg."
H1#Y, Junior Rot:trv Club, Prr~ Fr nklin Printn!'>· CuilJ,
Club.
lt u•as no brn~en f'ttd
You leaned on when ''OU tnuted to his might
1913
Phi
~\v1mm1ng
1890
' And thu maiden she ln·ed u·Hh no otheT thought
'Than to lot'e and be lot'ed b, me."
IS
1925
Glee Club, Chorus, A Cappclla Chotr, DaVinc1 Club, Orch<Atra.
''fhc tunes would wal~ on Heps of air.
For m hu hand a wire would sing.·'
Edward R. Lubin
She holds her little thoughts in " "
'Though ga' they run and leap."
He
Sigurd Linden
Bop
German Club, Chorus.
'As tf she had found tnngs, ltghc as the wmd"
1912
S ... ot.. t~.
Student Counc I, Beta Phi Kappa, Pep Club, B:ind, Bov<' Clcc C:ub,
Chorus.
I 1<•ould often thm~ co myself as I stTOde
Norman Mayer
1850
lkta Phi Kappa, Band, Chonis.
Deferential itlaJ to be oj use
William McClellan
Orchestra, Band.
Healthy fue
1858
the woTld be/ou me ·
Clarence Meltesen
H1·Y. Student Councal, l r,nch Club, Spanish Club
' Asltmg nothmg, TC't'calmg naught
But r11ntmg hu u·ords /Yom a Jund of thought"
Marguerite Meyer
Chorus
Supple 1tnd mooth
1885
191.5
lO
hn slim finger tip.~
(Date indicate . . year .;tudcnt·~ family came to Kenosha)
22
1r
K Ip z
Km~
La M cch1
L1 otk >
( Lu en
l\ 1 rl tt
J...
lu r1 s
M
r
Kitzrow
M. L.1r n
M1rs f...,Lr
Klc ase k1
L " II
M x"'ell
The u·1Jdy repated 'First Free School \Vest of the Allegher>ies'
t• s 011lv a few rooms m the b.i. ement of a lo< 1l d1urch f "r a
Kr
sin
Krueger
LJg r
LrnUe1
MCI II
M '"
K ,. k1
L bin
l\.fl ' n
L.1k n
Luquer
M, r
year 1m•;l a s J' ·rl't: b1dd ng t~as erected to ho"si the cxper'ment
1n fr.e educa .on that oo 1 heca u th mo l ·1 f r \\' SCO>Hin scliools
1907
Eleanor Migliano
Chorus, Thrift Club.
And then her eyes h~e stars turned low"
1873
Harry Millager
" But he was a joy to all hu fne n ds ."
1854
Blanche Miller
Pep C lub, Girl R eserve, Blue T r iangle.
" An d wh upercd to her ncig hbor'
Helen Miller
Hugh Morton
Helen L. Roseman
1925
Janet Rybacki
1853
1835
Thrift Club, Chorus
She docs t he wor~ about the house
As u:cll a.1 mo.st but h~c a mouu . ·
Helene Mary Nuprienok
Girl
1913
Tennis Club.
With hint of anstocracy ~
1871
1920
Swimming Team, V ice· Prcs. Spani h Club.
Leander su.·am the Hcl.espont -ond I u:ill .~w1m thu hcu "
24
ma~e
1904
Chorus.
Boo~s u 1t:rc
her pas.non and delight.''
Louis Schmidt
1911
StuJcnt Council, Beta Phi K. ppa, Franklin Pnntl·rs· Guild.
· H e doc~n 't trust a bu to lucl{.."
1895
Verna Scholtz
1907
Girl Reserve, German C lub.
H er heart h~c a moon, u alu·a,·s changmg
But there u alwa'1.\ a man 111 tt.
1932
Edith Senn
1912
a man a good u:if<, senSJble and s11ll"
1910
Charles Sarafinis
Chorus. Girl ' Glee C lub.
Laug h thy g11'1sh laughter.
French Club. Latin Club, G A .A., Trident Club .
"Cloudless t:'.\.·t:s . blue t:"tt:S .rn u:mdv clca,. ·~
'Td
H i· Y , .. K.. Club. Student Counc il, Captain
wimmmg Tc<1m, Lac 1n
C lub, Prc!<I. French Cluh, Pres , Sophomore Cla. s, Pres. Jun111r Cl·
l cannot leave the u.•tJtn till the dav I J1c .
Ruth M. Schwartz
Isabel Rauer
Kathryne Rebich
1925
Mills Salisbury
Tennis Club. Irtramural B.1~kctball
And sha~mg with .sdC'nt laughta
Gi rl Reserve.
"A light h eart lives long."
PY
935
1890
Chorus.
Roger Schmitz
Yet filled wHh whimSJcahty '
Tony Pellegrino
1893
Spanish C lub, 'tudent Council.
She had all of the t'11tucs.
Helen Schantek
1918
Re~cr v c,
Isabella M. Padula
1914
Swimming T eam, Student Counci l , Pres. Beta Phi Kappa .
He wh o ~nows and ~nou.•Ji that he ~n ou.·s, he u u·1u follou' him
There .s JOY rn mv punt: anJ U.'itlr.s.sneu. •
DaVinci Club, Girl Reserve, Trideot Club. French G;uh. Tenn s C.ub,
Golf C lub, Senior Life- aving Corp.
Tu;o children are mine C'H'.S bcJort th"" 1..,nma U'OnJcr .
Dorothy A. Ostrom
In t ramural
oftlv on hulc fut that ma~c no rnunJ '
Spy Staff, .. K.. C lub, Swimming Team, Student Council. Junior Ro·
ta ry C 1ub, Laun Club, Golf Cluh, Pres. Hi· Y, Pres . enior Clas..
"Clean boyuh beauty and high·hdd head"
Dorothy Northway
taff, Golf
1907
H i· Y . Student ('..ouncil, Chorus, Latin C lub, Italian Club,
M anage r .
'"But still he fluttered pulses when he said.
Good .. mormngf ·•
1913
B ut my h'art u only a little thing
An d lt docs n ot troub le me. ·
Stanley Newberry
Frank Rizzo
P. Vernon Rohling
In tramura l Ba.ketball Team l 9H.
" A nJ ah. when he saw pretty g11ls, he had a ta~mg eve.
Albert L. Mowrey
H i· Y , Spanish C lub, Beta Phi !Cappa, Student Council, Spy
C lub.
''Even the wist: a1' mt:TTY of tongue.
1920
' In t he whole world no other
ls dear ~ my dt:ar."
1920
Carl Daniel Reed
1920
Little T heatre. Pep c·ub, Fo rum Cluh, Kenew St>tl. Vice- Pre. Sorho·
mo re Class.
"I haut uen not hing lot 1dv as your eves.'
tD01tc indicates yc;u tudt:nt', family caml' to Kt:nl ha)
1
M1~liano
t )~tr •m
lhhacki
M llag r
P1Jul1
si11 . . bury
B. Miller
Pellegrino
S r 1fi s
H. Milla
Rauu
S.. h.1nt. k
Morton
R<h"h
S hm1Jt
'Seme.1ters"' lasted JU.It twelt·e wee~s m the first Kenosha High
School, and students studied f rnm texts with .rnch qua mt titles as
N wherry
Mo\\fCV
Reed
R1zzc
S .. hmuz
S.huhz
Nnrth\\a~l
R"hlin~
S-.h\\.Ht:Z
Nupricnok
Roscm:rn
1..:nn
Adams' "Chem:stry in Twelve \Vee~s " or Gray's' Tlmteen \Vee~
Course m Orthoepy
Similar courses now last an entire vear
1930
Gerrene Simmons
1911
Edith Sorensen
Chorus, Girls' Glee Club.
'Et>er, chord she touched eat•e forth a throh of mtlod,."
Mary Alice Starr
1895
French Club,
panish Club, Latm C\1b, Blue Triangk, C1rl Rl"scrvc
'Your smile 1S vtr)' su:ut, ''et it baffles me."
Merton G. Stauffacher
DaVinc1 Club,
py Srnfl, StuUcnt Council, Sw1mmin~ Tl·am,
Ch cf Intramural Manager, Cla1;s Pby Manager, Chorus.
If ''OU u.·ant u:or~ u·cdl done, ... t:lect a bun· man ''
1919
Elizabeth Voloi
G1ris
B nd
1914
1915
'"'\(ot quarrelsome , but .stout enough to fight ··
1903
She is prdty to wall{ with
And u:itt,· to tall{ with .· ·
1852
Mary Elizabeth Timme
Locker Guard.
'Mou than ''OUT angel's face .
A deeper su•('etncs.s ·'
Chorus, Glee C!ub. A Cappella Choir. Girl Re•crve.
"The little petals as~d of m<,
'Could mortal maid mou IO'L·eh bc 7 ' •
Maynard Wiersum
1888
?mra ie neither glum nor merrv
Arthur Young
1897
Full of OHrnge and .ore .~c1ent1fir ·
1875
Arthur Heinze
1900
As I mot cd with quiet feet,
I u•a. m~t by m1ghtv davs. ••
1
(l>Jtc
935
26
1929
II ll• Id n m tht u·md "
o.v1nc1 ( lub.
i·am "t11l
To sec me grave ' ·
Julia Mae Troke
1835
Chorus, G'c Cluh, A Ca.,pdla Choir, L~tin Cluh, Orchcsu.1, Stmknt
Council, Cl " Plav
\\ c r th b!onJ that maidens CTart. •
A
1905
111
Walter v/ells
Her hair
Soft·spolten and slight'"
Edward Tridenski
183.5
StuJcnt Cm.ncil. Golf Te•m. Golf Club, Chonis.
Onlv one daw;n I ~nou•,
The mMntn~ of her .~mdc ''
Marjorie Jean Weyrough
1915
Orville Topel
1910
Ch< r·is, Uher.' Club, Intramural B"krtba!I.
Then a be .m of fun outbrolte
On the rn 'lttth that -~Po~e. ·
Frank Lynn Wells
0
Raynetta Swadish
1899
ind lot'(' she got anJ eat·c.''
Rich JO'
'\'!(!alter Walton
Trc: ~. Franklin Printas' Guild. Manager lntrami..:r l Tl~am
'To !01.•c. his JellOU'•men .H~CUHh
Sam Sturman
1919
G A A , Trident Club, Tenn1< Club.
And Ht her t'Otce H m mv JTCam.~
To u•itch me mon and mo1 ! •
Anna Walters
"K" Club, Basketball Team, Footb•ll Tcom.
'The straightest I tt'CT 'at·e seen'
Leonard Stolfo
1922
Glct: Cluh. Chorus, C A.A
ga" tal~ing, anJ m sober grat•c"
Bn.\~ m
1847
Robert Stoebig
1911
Rec.I Trtan~k. U . . hcrs' Cluh, Ochatc Team, Stuc.lcnt Council, S ·mmar,
S\\; mming Team.
I l<>t.•e m-v lot·e and m-v lo1•e lo11cs me . ·•
Margaret Walker
Band, Orchestra, Chorus.
''And her tongue raad ltl(.e a ~qutrrel m tht' par~. •
1911
"There is none lt~e thee among the Janeen,
·one u:tth .swift feet.'
St:nior
1895
Margaret Sterner
p
p,.,. Club, Chorus, Girl> Glee Club.
George N. Virgil
Student Council, SpanlSh Club.
''To learning mu(h mclmed '
You u•1ll lool{
Josephine Viola
1910
Emily Spalding
1844
John C. Tully
Tennis Club, Boy< Gk< Club, A Cappell• Choir
'To me one sdh tas~ u h~c another "
Chorus, Girls' Glee Club.
'She mot•es a Goddess. and •he looJts a !i/.ucen."
incJ~catcs
year ,tudent•!\ familv came to Kenosha)
Simmons
S"adr h
Walker
Sorensen
Timme
\\'alters
SpalJ g
Topel
\\ ilton
St rr
TriJen ki
I'. \\ell
Tn..ike
St
Tulh
Stoebig
Viola
\\" \\ell-
\\'evrough
\\'1{P•Um
Spon.1or of Kenosha free education and most versatile citizen in
Keno ha l11.1tory u•as Colonel Michael Fran~
Besides being a
IT cher
Sterner
5tolfo
Sturman
Virgil
Young
Volo1
Ht!m:c
very .rncce.~sf ul editor and p11bl1.1her. and codifying Wisconsin
school laws, he u·as tou n cler~. mayor, and a.1sembly111an.
27
1926
Louise Abrams
Chon1'
French Club, Cub Staff, Kcnews.
'Ten thous11nd gr• ,u ideas plied hu mmJ
R IH dt c.1.l(htccn tilled her Ide
\l.'ith t h e dut1es of a u:1fe.'
1870
Charles Ambelang
Red TnJngk, 'K" Club, German Club.
I l1ke a towerrn~. hronz,· rohu.\[ tnllll
1892
1916
Matthew C. Andrea
KLnc"n;, Span1!->h Club, Manager of Foothall Team.
1.~
.~h111l
n.s
1awaun.1 Cluh,
Sht i:asts a u.·ise appraumg e"Vt
On ct'CT"I' pass mg lad."
Helen Babros
191 1
"rou au .rn ccquu1tc:h su·c:t:t. '
Jacqueline Battersby
1931
D. Vinci Club, nv Staff, G rl Rc--t.:rvc. D1..h;1tl' TL· m. S uJc
Su. ·ct u·1th pnsuas1on, eloqtunt
In pass11 n cool m ar~mnent
Lorraine Beam
t
C 1uncil
1904
Chorus.
Her t· 11ce her narrou.· chm. her grill'C small head
Seemed half the meaning of the u•ord.~ .~h(' said '
Glen Beaudreau
Genevieve Becker
Th
He
u-e.1~
tou~ a.~
1925
.md the ~entk the nbalJ and rnJe
h found them and dtd them all ~uod
Kenneth Boysen
1910
Little Th, ..,rc, Spy Stafl
He U"u:IJed pen or brush "
Frances Bozon
1918
Ch< r• ·s, German Club.
A., rnger u·ith the breath
A.~ daffo~li s neu•-horn
of life
Joe Brand
Dr .i
1929
t.c ...
1 net•er ltt11(!heJ
lie np:
ha~hJul
..
1916
Chorus
'But she wal~s abroad u.·1th her hc11.l m the an
Joan Ernestine Breslauer
There u·ith thumb to ~«P her place
Her mild e\·es gl1dmg t·ery slow
Aero.~.~ the pajles to and fro '
German Club, Latin Club.
I had TJ( ttme to hate .••
1870
1 am rt quiet gentleman
And I u·oulJ .11t and thm~ '
Helga Brandtberg
1934
1cl?"g
1931
C rl S\'outs, (,, rrT n ( '.luh, Kl·ncws, Quill and Scroll
" H er hand.~ are ncl'er quiet "
1916
Florence Brinkman
1919
Cir! Rcs,rvc, Quill and Scrol l. French Cluh, Lltm Uuh, Spv Staff
' But u·s und 1ng coals to :"\cwca.,tle
To .~t'nd a TOH tu "VOU. '
( DJtc ind1c.lto )Tilr
:>8
1895
'
Robert Bleicher
1924
Studt:nt Council, Chorus, Glee Cluh, Franklin Pr.nt .. rs' GuilJ. Frcnlh
Cluh, Pnnt1ng Staff ,
'Yo ur hnl!ht hair and H'TIOW evt
Italian
1910
hrca~m~.
Edward Bouschard
Fred Baker
Alfred Berenson
Sry Statf, C1rl' Colf Club
hupcr of htarts vou arc
1905
th r hi:r-u
1903
George Dale Blake
liftc a Ji!:(lTdcn fair
the tr;:c er.th" in l
,\cn•mg tea to frunds."
C1rl Rl"•tnt:,
man\ {'llt:aMnt hiouoms grou
.~
1934
sit here
Chorus, G!cc C lub, A Cappclla Choir, Pres . Girl Rescrn·, Prt""'
(' 1h Quill anJ Scroll, Kcnnv , V ct: .. Pn.·s. Suuor Cl.1 ....
I.\ 1t MuunNJ slipred from t1111rble' ·
1908
C r1 Rt.:.:-avc, Latin Club, French Cluh. n·ue Tn nglc.
She filled her u·or~ u·1th ec5taS\
And crowned 1t t<'lth a .\On~.
t
M.'ln.Q:\
Angeline Bilotti
c:t
Mary Austin
H .~
no1ul('Bh as mot•mg moth
1H
Bette Blackburn
•/ clt·ar wr.rc:r
Marcella Loretta Andrekus
\\ 'hi::r
Stc:ppmg
I
Girl Reserve, Chorw., Student Council. Laun Club.
'It is a lad,, .\U.'ttt .rnd fair.
Do V inCt Cluh .
Her h art
1910
Bernice Berres
Dorothy Beutlich
LaVerne M. Anderson
'Tour c,·e.~ are the soul
1906
Seymour Berkovitz
tw.knt"s Lir.11 y C<H~c- to
Arrnms
Beam
Blake
Amb Jang
Beaudreau
llle1ch<r
Andrea
Ander .. on
ll dcr
n. re
B·n1"ch rd
Bo""'tn
)f
Austin
Baker
"\ndrek.Js
Jlcrko\ 1tz
Blfrt:
Bt:11tlich
lki:on
Br n
llrandtb< rg
Fir t honors m the first tmbl1C spea~mg conte.~t enr held m Keno·
shu High School went. on April 26, 18'i'i to Joseph \' .~w1rles
Ba bros
B1ktt1
Br . . J;n1tr
Battersbv
lllack'>urn
Brmkm:tn
u·ho later became a Umte3 States Senator. H1.\ brother Charles
uas Im partner m the law firm of ·~uarles. Spence, and ~uarles'
29
1921
Andrew Brookhouse
''His spec:ch
is
a burnmg fire. '
1928
Mildred P. Burg
Her won.is au su.·eet and her laughter ga,·.
1895
Omar Burkee
·All unconcerned. he rolled along."
Joe Burnett
1919
Basil Busacca
1922
I caught hnn at U.'OT~ one da,· m\'5.clf.''
Qlllll and Scroll. Kcncw>, py Stall. Italian Club, Pr<'. Cuh St.,fl
"Blonde or 7'111an or brunette
Some of them u:dl ~c:t \'OU 'Vl"t."
Marie Cameron
ThL clot•tr bloHom.~
She is so sweet I
~15-~
1920
her fat,
Raoul Camosy
1917
K" Club.
' He lags the long bnght mormng through,
Et·cl' so uud of nothing to do.'
Italian Club.
The lad, of the soft u·h11e throat
And shell-tmt chee~s."
1923
Sara Casazza
Girl Reserve.
Hou.· su:eetly U'Ould t1u fresh sta brttu
Sha~e loose some loc~.\ of rnft hrouin h,111.
1916
1933
French Cluh, Latin Club, Spy St.ti!.
And her t'OllC' t.\ a .\tnng of co!ortJ bead.1 '
Mary Cesari
p
935
1908
Spy
all folded nearly '
1906
Martha Chukan
Blue Triang c
And I wa.~ blmd in a tau.•n\· gold,
Tdl she too~ her n··e.( awav. '
Russell Clarke
1910
Spanish Club, Jun ior Rotary C lub, Tennis Team, B,.k,·thall
Seminar Club, Pn:s. Red Triangk, Prrs. Studt:nt Counl.'.'il, PH
Class
Brd!iant comelv. and certain.
He gcnc:ra Iv got hu u.•av. '
Betty Ann Cleary
Team,
Junior
1886
Margaret Coleman
1930
Girl Rc.ervc, Latin Cluh, French Cluh. Q1111l and Scrcoll. TriJ,nt Club.
Spy St ff. Girls' Tcn1rn Cluh, G rls' Golf Cl uh.
Poi.~td ·nd heautlful .\ht .Stllnd.~.
Mario Conforti
H ·' lip
1909
h,df·pllrtcd 1nth the constant .\mile"
1885
Girl Rl'."t:rn:, N1awauna C lub, Choni~. G rL
Sht. is 11 \'Our.g lad .~ dream come true.
Gkc Ch;b,
1923
u hou ou.·n self u truthful.''
Dorothy Densmore
1922
French Club, Girl couts.
~ he rt ot·trflou.·rng
\\'1th mcasurc'cu ~mdncu
Gertrude Deom
1855
Thine e'·e ha.~ a gleam that is truer than ~old ''
1911
Peter DeVries
AnJ the qmc~ncs.~ of \'OHT smile "
1925
tall, French Cluh
L1ftml(. to lui:ht her su.·ut blue e\·e.~ and pride of Joft bro11·n ha1r
30
u·m~.<
l )r..-hcMra
~nou.·."
It lian Club.
There .~ a uery moduh woman.··
Elizabeth Ann Chambers
Her
He douht.~ not
Helen Cederberg
Clara Cesario
1925
·A htt It earth h spnte
Harold Cruthers
Fn·nch Cluh, L>tm Club.
A bird that wa~ts a fellou• up,
Should hat•e heen a butrt:rcup. ·
Span1-h Cluh.
She. must ha1·e cur Iv thoughts, I
Helen Christensen
Rose Mary Corr
1
Blair Catterton
1850
Pep Club, Blue Triangk, Chorus, French Cluh, Chen LeaJcr
'But mv feet the:v Janee 1t1 an.\wer to a dHtant tambourine
TriJ,·N Club. French Cluh.
I crossed the pool wuh easv stro~e. ••
1910
Jane Cappellina
Patricia E. Chapman
Gerald Dietrich
1926
1917
Chorus.
Manlincu and mce~ncss
In h1111 u·ere so allied.·
(Date indicates year student"!' f.1mily came to Kcno,.ha)
Brookho se
(';ut rlon
< It Jf\
Daring the early
[I, r•
CeJ,rl-<rK
< 11lt rn n
'60's,~nown
Burk cc
Burn tt
Bu,.acca
Cc-... 1n
Ces.1no
Cham ht: rs
C.mt.:ron
Charm n
Corr
Cruth rs
D1n .. m1·rc
r inforti
as .. 'fhe Golden Era ' of Kenn.~h:i
Horace Greele:y
High Sdwol fa mom vrntors were commonplace
(' m~.,.
Chn t n ("
n . . om
, .appellina
Chukm
J)1.;\'ru:
C.1sazz:i
Clarke
D-etrich
once addressed an assembly, and one pnncipal mi·1ted the grcrnd
ary t n masse to :;ee the fine Hudents of 111.~ high school
SPY
193
Violet Dixon
1909
Richard Earl Ellison
Blanche Dobranski
1902
Orin Engelson
' Menv u.•as m'·selJ and mern' could I .~mg.
P..:p Club, Girl Rcst.:rve
1910
1925
She runud to tht: sunlight
And sho<•~ her ydlow head.
Kathryn Isabella Dowse
1870
William Fogarty
1925
1842
Girl Rc ... ·rvc
One 1: ho u plea.rnnt 1md who alu•a\·.~ lnt·e~ hltn.lh·'
1910
BanJ. ( )rchc!'litra, Ch(1ru ....
H, hate.< to .<ee a bov the fool of boo~.< . '
Mercedes Frechette
Golf Club.
M anneTs
qmet. shadou.•·deep
1918
Milton Ellison
1907
Ckc Cluh, Chor11~, O rche"tra
Her locl{s are tied m haste
Sh, nei·n gazes bac-1{. ·'
1925
the final and perfect flo« er oj noble chaMdtr •
Doris M. Friedl
1885
Gnman Club, Orchestra
') u aTe o .~u·eet anll u:dJI"
1859
Pep Club .
Pc:nhed aloft m n<m, h.tlanLC' .n&('TC'mt •
Naomi Frost
1922
Betty Eick
He fr• wns gracefully ...
s11mt'
Andrew C. Fries
1912
"The light gleamed .rnft on hn Tat·cn ha1T
And heT hps U.'ere b?oom1ng a rosy red ...
Span1,h Club.
11
Carl Frech
frcmh Ch.b. G.A.A., Girl Reserve. Choru.•. Cub Sl'fl.
'\or could the pods ~not<' m F.urvland
The changrng u·onder of \'OUT hnc }acc.••
Lucent, confi n ed, and
1918
Choru.s
"\.o•tmlt and net· er
1~
Marjorie Edwards
1931
Sry Staff, Franklin Pnntcr!'i' Gmld.
All man m hH dom.Q:,
Frances E. Fonk
Girl Reserve, Frc~ch Cluh, Quill and croll, A Cappclla Chor, Latm
C lub. Cuh taff, tud ·nt Council. Bhll' Triangle
··1 insh ''our eye.<li m1ght alu:au loo~
As big tnth lot·e its nou· rhn uem.
Ruth Eckert
1933
if vou trv.
All bov m h1' lau~hter"
l\ 'al~mg Jown the street
In h1.<li gaunt long Ud\' •
Irene Eastman
1918
Jean Fairfield
Vincent J. Farley
1875
~ry~~~~
1~ youth. ·
Her mmJ is full of ,\htmng thou~hu
All s1h·er m the .um
1834
Girl Rc!'ervc, {_,,A.A . • Chorus.
' H er n·es it's plain, survey with ease,
\\'hatt: er to gfonct upon the'' please.'"
Harold Duffin
1926
Th is bov s content
For h1.~· 1.~ ltbertv h1
You can n ·t·n he: blue
pam>h Club, Latin Club.
The ble.mn~ of her quit< life
fell on u< h~e the dm•."
Lois E. Drissel
nu S,roll
Marion Lucille Englund
Chorus, G.A.A . Girl Rcscrvt.:.
Shi: ha5 a b11~ht and clet·er mmJ. •
Evelyn Doerring
Quill
B.1nd
So lightly u•e heed the flying hours.
Cecelia P. Dobrzycki
1910
Sran1"h Club, Dd,.1tm~ Tl' m, Kenn.'-·!', Latin Cl11h, Prt.:
D1Tect of .~peech and cunning w1th the pen
1873
Chorus
H r r, und chttlt '' lt~c a .mn•.rn•cctened apple '
Ulysses Furloni
1918
Choru._, Spanish Club.
M -v thought., rh iS mormng arc
As ran$tled a.~ m\· h,11r .
John Thomas Gaffney
1835
Coif Cluh. Sp;101,h Club, Little Theatre.
'You IPl'e me and I lot·e -vou
And a d11:::01 1,thc.:n too.
(lhtc m<l1..:.1h.:s }'l l f c;,tuJcnr·~ family came to Kcnmha)
~ 1xon
1Jo11ran .. k1
n1lr:vrk1
nncrnng
nrn: ... t
I ckcrt
~ g rty
Ed .... .rd
f. nk
Fick
M. Elli Oil
I rcchlttt.
R Ell or
r s;:cJ .. vn
Ir c
J TICS
I re h
The fine school bmldmg may hai·e attract~d ther.1, or perhaps 1!
u.a~ the brilliance of the students. At any rat: ns tors freqae11tlv
On "'cl
Duffin
I ng inJ
fo11rti1..'
rro~t
Farley
F rforu
Gaffney
Dunn
E t"' n
trod upon the "Welcome mat of thz early school. In one year,
L8(,0, ~.~ 5 3 {'ersons were the gue.,ts of the seco:1dar" school
191 2
Irene Gallo
19-01
Wesley Gallup
Orchestra, Chorus, Drum Major, Pre"S. of Band.
Blau. bug I<, hlou•, "' th< u·dd <eho<.1 fhmg.
Chorus.
A '1t•eh: ~tripling, brat•e and tall' "
Girl Rc!'crve, Laun Club.
· ' M v dav.~ au rops\:·tun·v thm~.~ •
189-0
La Vern Gergel
G.A. A .
On th\: chec~"' the sdow u ~rTtaJ. ·•
1912
1870
Marguerite Goergen
The JOY o) vouth and h<a th ha eyes displa"d."
1926
Marion Goldberg
Student Council, Pep Cluh.
ational Fon:nsic Le guc, French Club, De·
hate Team, Footb 11 Squad, Chen 1... trv Av.:.1rd, Prt:'. SL min. r C 1:h.
He was honest anJ bnght and the teacher. delight
1916
Swimming Tealll, Tumbling, cminar Club, Pep Club.
And he has lc:apeJ mro the u•at•cs, and croued the shmmg 5tream
1918
F. Alyce Grabner
Pep Club. Lhoru>, RcJ Tnan~lc, Lmlc The;itrc.
1923
Benton Hammond
F<x>tball Squ.1d. 8;1'kctball Squad.
whtch ,_.. moH
vou II be" Man
nn- son'·
1848
John Hammond
f<•>thall Te·1m, Ba>kctball Team, Prep Cluh,
And loud I whi.<tleJ a.< I went . •
'K" C:luh.
1916
Willis Hammond
·And hu hopes u.·crt high and h1. ht'.lTt was ga,·.'"
1914
Leonard Gorecki
1924
Clifford Hall
Scmmor Cluh, Student Counc1!, French Club.
Girl Rc.-.uvc, f''rench Cl uh, Blue Tri.1r.gk. Choru!', Ch:c Cluh
'·Life ro her a ha pp'· game
Myron Gordon
Blue Triangle, Latin Cluh, Gaman Cluh, Chorus.
' Rachel 1.~ chanmng, as she ~now.( ,
Much occuplt'.'11 u·1th hem~ fair."
And
German Club
Thcv man·e. at her blond tresses.
1918
Jeannette E. Hamsing
Chorus.
~.met
a., a nun
hTe,tthles.( u·uh aJorat1on'
1853
Charles Hansis
Swimming Team, Prep Cluh.
'It's U'rong to fltrt, but )"OU aren t mul.."h hurt,
And vou HAVE a lot•elv face' '
1853
Gail Hansis
H1·Y. Prep Club, Tcnni' Club, Lalin Cluh.
German Club.
To act from hont:'.H mot1t es purely '
1
>I an apple bough. ·
Virginia Graf
( :h<>ru,, L tin Cluh .
Thv tea.'im~ st{'eetnes.( haums me 'eL
34
1912
Rose Guzauskas
H r scatter.; bnghtnc-H .'
1860
Nellie F. Glerum
935
1898
Phyllis Grotsky
Ruth Haertlein
1911
Helen Gashon
p
Choru>, Glee Club.
Her ha1T a ru.ffletl crest oJ gold •
Choru<. Guman Club.
In her nes that S«~mg loo~
Of •ne "·ho s<arches far'
'You are the Sprmg,
It a I•« .1hould bloom instead
1919
Olga Grigorick
German Cluh
' Light of .<tep and heaTI u•as she."
1870
Ruth Gardinier
tall. and fair 1.< she.'
• \\'1th those deep and tender e-yes,
L1~e the. .,tttTS, .HJ .\till anti samtli~e"
1895
Verne Ganzer
1934
LaVerne Gray
Graceful
C1r1 Reserve, Chorus.
Bdoi-c:d h"V all not 1·umh popular •
1921
Georgiana Harker
1885
l>;iV1nc1 C lub, C1rl Rcsuvc, Chorus.
I SH t home and seu!
I ply mv needle and thuad. ••
( D.1tc indicates yl':lr stuJcn t '._ f:im1h cam1: to Kl· no. ha)
(,f111o
<it r
If II
n
Callur
Corcdi
B Hammond
Ganzer
Cr.ihncr
J H.lmmond
C.:ard1n1cr
Cnf
\\ HJrnmonJ
Discardrng textboo/zs to seize musl{ets tlnrty-three Kenosha High
School yollths entered the Cini \Var as "preserver., oj the m11on. '
r.ngcl
Grigonck
H;.imsmg
Gk rum
Grn[ .. k}:
(;
C. Han .... s
G Han 1s
\.( -<·rgcn
ZJU"kd"
Goldberg
Hacrtlem
Harker
Th· illustnous John McMynn, former principal of the school,
clso enlisted as a member Pf the b!ue·clad Northern regiments.
935
35'
JLJ
Dorcil Harris
1920
Josephine Horvat
1910
Leona Hosier
1910
Glt:Mn th, hc:1ll, f Jl(ll\l'
Sl·m1n;_r Club, Lat n Club, Fn:nch Clu0, Manag1.:r of Foolh:-111 Tl'am
St.1 hum.in
o w1ttv . u•1.,c:,
stc:adfa~t
1850
June Hartung
TriJt.:nt Caub.
ToJJv fuT ,, u·holc hour
Chorus.
A wum,rn fc11r for mc:n to He
1907
sl"J,u:ur t .lub, Junior Rot:1ry Club.
And t·1cu.•!i the ~udun with d hungry n·e
And Jouf., ahow 1t mbhhn~ on the .dv"
Chorus, French Cluh.
''A t'Ol(c: hl(.c: 1ce ,mJ t•clt•et.
f'.llli tonls of /,tiling u·,ttc:r '
\\'ho lo1·c.., the ruin,
Aud lot'c.\ his home'
h1rum, L1Ltk Tht·.1trl·, SlllJl·nt Council, Orat~ry .
Str<11,1.;h1 nJ .\light .:I.\ d \'otm~ l111ch trl'c
Choru~.
l·ra n klin Prtntt: i s C111ld
1\ fr.cnJ u·J10 ~nou·.s anJ dares to say.
'The hra11c su·c:i.:t u·or.l.-. th(u chct:r the: U'a'\I·'
AnJ ot•t:r hc.:r flltt CJHlt 11 glou1 as her n·e.\ ntct mine
1885
Dorothy Herrmann
1885
(, 1\ .A., Tr.Jt.:nc Club .
lotdll tt'afh '
1900
Ruth Heser
( '.h(,r .~.
Sh
Blut· Triang:h-,
C A A . Stluk!lt
tin
(.ourh:il,
1922
Frank W. Holderness
Chorus, Spy St:11l
1875
( horu
u.·av.:s
re
f-rances M. Hornung
SPY
H h
I 11
,in.I
1918
1
e u
he . '
Oornthy B. Horvat
Sh
935
36
.\ happv in sontt'\' of her ch oos1ng.'
Bov
1909
Ckl" ( :Iuh, Choru.
H r w1.I u·tn bt:(dUH.' ht' mu.\t.
P..o~ert Jacobson
I rep Club, h .. tb.dl Squ.1d, ll.1 h·th.dl S4u>J
h r l,o a 1 tt t J 1~111/i' .1 rJom ltlcnt '
1922
1926
On(t: in a u·hdc that .dow an~I lo1·elv
l u1fH
I J
hH
mile
(\'l'S"
1885
A n.amur h/1rhc anJ dcbond1r
1900
C n· Club, Chorus, Girl Rcsavc
Sill
a.\ 1c h ,.., .i f/ott cr
Dorothy Johnson
:v.:s of plt"Jsantnes.s '
U'
St11Jn1
AnJ .,rep., a uug rlit: cornllnr.
Marion Jensen
11th .rnn.shine m hh ()'f'.S
r,Iarion Holloway
H~r
Chor. ,
Lilian Jensen
1841
t·rl.·nch Cluh Laun (
Tall :t:u ~nm h1 \
CA A .
I rnllh C luh
( :Juh, Cam·in Club. B.mJ.
\'\11 r
h II u·c /mJ J1gnit:v IC'Hhout hont.H\· ?'
1uh.
Cbh.
Anniset Jankus
rd{Hdh· rn, ~t'.\ hl'T.\clf rutr\·,
G erhardt Hillmer
L
Pqi
John lstvanek
Lorraine Herrmann
C.uh,
Ciuh,
Sh, lift., her Im rh hr.1J aloft
1912
There: arc: lic:rmlt sou 1s th.1t ln·e
J ,1 the: pc:.1cc: of thc:1r ~c:IJ·(otHc:nt
rr..:1hh
Gaman
(ounol
Jacob Herrmann
Cluh,
1870
Jane Isett
c;ir 1 Rc"t·n·t..".
Ha north the u·orlJ Tequ1red
Sht: bathe.: I It 1n .rnnlc:.~ of g1i.:c:.
Prt.·1
1915
Peter F. laquinta
1880
Dolores Herrmann
,race: d1.1t 11 11
1918
Robert Hurtgen
1860
Roger J. Hawes
A
1875
Helen Huntoon
l wonJaeJ about ,·ou.''
John Hastings
1908
1929
l tt t' t ht: tn-. S,.an 1d1 C l uh. S t udl"nt Counci l ,
I rt:" frt·,ch (:!uh.
\ . h.'t u.n t1ngd1c UJ\'.\ll'T'\' )'OU c1rel '
Mildred Johnsen
~:lit:
r
cJ her head, the cov coqucrre.
1U.1h.: 11H..iic.itt:.., )C'ar u1du11'
Fn-s
Cir!
R,~1.nt.:
1918
bm1;y (amt: to Ktn
ha)
H. rris
H11lmcr
l.1 ll nt
Hartung
HolJ<rn s
I e·tt
Ha tings
HJWCS
0. Hlrrmann
Hollo" y
H11rnung
]<1cobson
Jank us
l~t\. mek
D. H.in t
In C1111l War and post-war years the school's enrollment was con·
s1derablv decreased. From 1864 to 18 7 3 there were no graduates
f) Herrmann
Hor\Olt
L. Jensen
J Harmann
Ho 1rr
M. Jen en
L. Harmann
Huntoon
Johnson
He,.. er
Hun gen
]1..>hn .. en
For a period of fourteen years not a boys name appeared on the
gradtutmg lists, and commencements were decidedly fem mine et•ents
37
py193
1918
Marion Jonas
Kathryn Jones
1905
Hattie B. Jurasiewicz
1914
(;irl Reserve, French Cluh, Chorus, Girls' Gh'l' Clllh, A Cappl'lla Choir
Her .sdt·er i•o1a
Is the nch mus1r of a .rnmmer h1rd.
Spani>h Club.
A quarnt pruinon ndts her davs. '
Sadie Jurik
\\ '1th alu.·a,·s rnmethrng m her smile"
Loo~s font'ard
(;Ice
1914
1883
/\nJ h,
1918
u·a.~
Chorus.
All her path.~ are peace
1914
Chorus.
For the wandt:r .. th1rst
And
tn\'
.soul
IS
IS on me
m Cathay "
Gladys Kjorstad
Club
Sweet as the first ilt'e violets, she. ·
Student Council
Mv day go« m·1ftly, happily.'
38
a .\ong on a .sunny mormng'
Ben Kovacs
1916
St·m nar. Chem1!itry La~ir1..t< ry A. stant.
He .\tudu.~ almost et·er"Yth1ng from .sonal art to .\nencc.
Alfred Krampert
1916
h nch Ch1h, Span"h C.ub.
''rou u•dl 11ce me rn the par~
RcaJm~ rh1· rnm10 antl the .qwrtrng page.
1907
what hustles
'\.ci•er ~ups nothrn
ror 11;1 her hu,t.rn .
l l U.'[lman
Milton Kropp
Span"h Club.
And he
1910
tU alu•a\·.~
qu1eth arrayed."
Heromen Kuroski
1884
t,crm~n
Dorothy Klafter
1895
lt~e
Latin Club.
1918
Jeannette Kisten
And her heart
Mary Kraujalis
111, 11'·-~ human «'hen he tal~ed ·
Marion Killin
1903
Sem.nar, Spant<h Club.
\\:ho dare.< to laugh out loud and free,
And I• t his froltc fancv plav.''
Chon:s, S:ian1~h Club.
A spar~ltng face, on which .1re b!ent
A hopdu! and a ren.nt•e loo~ ·
lland.
1910
Srmrnar Club, football
And years .succeedmg year.s sh411 gu·e
Regine F . Koprowicz
And son:dunes I see hnn as he shh u·rn~s. ''
H enry Kiertscher
1880
Girl Rocrvi.:
She had the art of U"tnmng with her humor.'
In. rease of honors to hu name. '
1917
Louise Keuck
Av, \hTCwd .scicnrHt, too
Ernest Kopecki
Bv two hlac~ eves m,· heart U.'as won
Band.
Band. Da V mc1 Club.
1905
Club, Chorus
Louis G. Keuck
1901
Ray Knudsen
Leo Kondratowicz
pcTSet·enn~ to the last. '
Dorothy Kennedy
Semmar Cluh.
A comrade bhthe an,! full of glu '
1915
Girl Rcscr\'l:...
'And music was her mouth
And sumhine was htr hair.•·
Stella Kanchis
1930
Oscar Kluk
Jean Koenes
1905
Lucille Jurvic
1891)
Hazel Kluender
Chorus, Gt.:rman Cluh.
Such heauri/ul, beautiful hanih I''
C1rl Rcsc:rvc, Latin Club.
And .~tl~cn p41u1es thrill him wtth her C)'C.\ '
1917
Student Council, B. 'kethall Team, Spy Staff.
'T'hc t·u1on of a u·arrwr hold
\\.'ould .~ t hn.1 danong.
Steven Kuzmich
1908
1919
Prep Club, Ltttlc The trc, I < r:r•ic, Spy St· ff, Pep C.1.h.
'He w11s t1('ICC' as h1g lU he .~amed.''
f Dari..·
indicatt·s year stm.knt 's family came to Kcm,sha)
L Kcuck
L. Kcuck
lt>n s
kine
J11C.1 1ew1cz
funk
Ii\ I rts htr
K1ll111
Jurv1c
Klalur
Kanch1
Klucnd<r
Kluk
Knud-.en
Kncn ..
K£1pcrk1
K1!-<tC
Korrowicz
K1c1r-.rid
K1mJr,1tnw1c:r;
KO\:lC"
Kr:imrcrt
Kr
Kropp
Kuro"ki
K JZrr1lh
l'rnal exams. now almost forgotten by Keno.~ha High School stu·
dents, were once co11.11dered of great im('ortance. After the (>apers
j dis
KcnncJy
had been carefully corrected. the dreaded mar~s were published m
th: news(>apcr so !hat parents alwa)'S ~new tlmr children s 6 r..<des.
\')
py193
1923
Charles Labanowsky
pv St·ff, Ken w::., StuUcnt Council, Quill and Scroll, Junior Rotary
Club. Prc.s. Senior Cla$s ·~-1. Pres. Red Triangle, Prl'.S. Pep Club.
The finest man 1 ~new"
Be still, my little dancmg feet
That would go
.\ll~en
shod."
Chorus, Girl
couts , Blue Tri::rngh.
1917
G.A.A., Chorus .
· 'There IS no fngate lt~e a boo~
<fo ta~e us la n ds away."
Stephania Lapszys
1918
1894
B.iskctball Team, Football Team.
Fee/in good and satisfied"
1923
Council, Footh.111 S4uad, Srv St ff. S .an"h Cluh.
Fur ~night hood u not in the feats of warre.'
192~
190J
1
Sit
and Stng while all the world goes by."
.' nd her face IS glad and sttll ...
935
40
Josephine R. Marescalco
1916
Margaret Marschner
LaVerne Evelyn Martin
stn~es me dumb.·
'Your suJdcn anJ mc'u.H11e 3mde ·
lland, Orchestra.
1929
1916
//, cculJ ma~e a fiddle rustle 11~< a lowland nnr
Marie Maurer
1926
1910
1889
Chorus.
Edmund Matysek
1900
Edvige Maccari
1926
Ital.an Club .
''Radiant wuh laughter'
Arvo Mattson
HIS u•ords u ert oalc.s m acorns ."
l
1909
"Hale and harJy as rhe highland heather'
Your laughter 1s so sweet, tt
1915
Robert Lindi
Go to u. 0 Jazzmen ''
ever so rudt: or so rec~less
A darlmg as you'
Student Counci1, Latin C lub.
And 1 am ~ometunes prouJ and somdnnes mu~. "
LeRoy Leach
Cool wmdmg s11xorihones.
Roland Manthei
'' Wa.~ there
So thv dav, shall be unrolled
L1~e a wondrous cloth of gold."
Margaret Lauer
1905
B•nd. Glee Cluh, Chon·" A Carrclla Choir.
"Sub on the long
Chorus.
Grace was m all ha .11tcp.s."
German C lub, H 1·Y.
1912
"And her own eyes begin to shme
'ro hear her stones grow."
Valent ina Maraccini
Junior Rotary Cluh, Tennis C!ub, TL:nnis Team, Rt:'d Tri: ngle, StuvLnt
Richard Larson
They dance so light along.'
Consentine Mancusi
They weTC certain that Jun had a grecH head on hlm ·
Lewis Larson
1913
Chorus, Glee C uh, Latin Cluh, Orchestra
' Her finger.\ ~hamC' the 1vorv ~'''S
s. <1m.sh C1ub, Blue Trian~lc, Lat n Club.
1913
Harold G. Larsen
Chorus, Orchl·stra, Ccrm;rn Club.
''She sat and played in a duam.''
Grace Malmgren
Chort:s, French Club, Girl Reserve.
/\. r1eart so clean, a soul so bnght
"\lot et•ery age has found."
James La Rose
1891
C1rls' (,Jl'L Club,
Lucretia Mae!
All da'" all dav I brush
M y golden strands of hair."
Vivian Lake
1900
· Fair as a .Har, u.•ht'.'n only one
Is shmmg m the sb"
Doris Maegaard
1895
Evelyn Lafayette
(;horus.
"I chirped, cheeped, tnlled, and twittered.
Alice Madison
1913
Florence LaCombe
1910
H elen Maday
1905
But the charm of her presence was fe~t when she u·ent,'
(D:1tc indicates yea r studcn t'!ii fam1:y came to KL:nosha)
Labanow ky
Lautr
M.llH."USI
L.1Comhe
Leach
Manthei
L.ifayeue
Lindi
Maraccini
L•ke
M.1ccari
Mrtrc.:;calco
Lar"z:ys
Maday
Mar.,hncr
'If it's a holiday for the rest of the town its a holiday for m,
chorused students as the:y "struc~" on an electwn day in 1865
LaRoee
Madison
Mutin
H Larsen
Macgaard
Matt.:;on
I Lar,on
M.iel
Maty~ek
R Lar:-on
M•lmgrcn
Maurer
After deserting the high school the vagrants held a picnic in the
i~oods 'fheir protest was aimed at gruff tyrannical Pnncipal Hic~s.
41
spy193
1912
Jeanette Mazur
And ri<:at as can be'
Donald McNamara
1880
Dorothy Neu
1900
Agnes Nielsen
Chorus, Printing Staff.
\l'dl·fat'ored. straight, and slim"
Betty McNeil
Chorus. Glee Club, Pep Club.
For .\he U.'<H 1es · the qmct ~rnd
\\'host' naturs never vaTy."
Chorus, Pr nting Staff.
\\'ho came hut for }riend.~hip
And rook a uia ,, !ot•e'
George Nielsen
Jerry Nielsen
1896
Elmer Norby
Ruth Inez Molitor
1922
Enyd Norris
G A .A.
· Sn<tthed hi.< head and
Patu.-nLe is a plant th£tt grou:.( not m all gardens. •
1919
~ pa1 i>h
Club, Lalin Club.
1nJ he J. o~ed full CZ rosv ?.Stn
As the apple she u•as petlin ·
Her n·es au stars of tu·1'1ght fair,
1913
Marjorie Murdoch
1860
Girl R.·~t:rvl, Blul' Triangle, fn:nch C!uh. Chorus .
Tho•t u·ho.(e loc~s outsh .ne the sun'
G.rl Rc~crvc, Utuc Triangle, Lnm C luh.
" M ay ~nou· the beaut'\' in her heart
Bv the beaut,. in her t\'t'S •
42
1903
3
1898
8
1929
9
1860 {)
h rnch C lub.
I Icr l'tmdud reguldr. ha rn1Tth refined '
'·A.~
1917
ady h~e and quiet a.Ii' a nun ··
7
1923 :3
Ann O'Kon
hc.~1tlc
rnc,
Tranzo Oldani
3
1917
7
1 oungcr than spring, w1dwut the fa1nte.\t trace
Of dtSappotntmcnt"
Francis A. O'Neil
1896 16
Bond.
''To 1hm~ u·uhout confm1on clearly"
Wesley Osterberg
1849
1913
Footb: 11 Team .
' His hair was all in tanglt'd curl."
Gayle Olson
too. htr dus~v hair,"
Lucille Munson
1935
0
l folf alluring and half ,/iv.'
Girl Rncrn:, Girl S..:oub, Tennis Club.
Ht' C1!nnot hold his mind to eart h."
1910
nn thin~ing'
Ruth Grace O'Brien
Sm i li n g stood a ma1tl
1920
Ted Nehlsen
~<pt
Edith O'Connor
1927
Girl Rc.scni.:, Spy taff.
'She.~ so cutC' a.~ she can be
But l sr.111rt c.J .she can he
PY
9
' I 'i•c copied ct•erv film itar
In some mannt:r l<iuks or .\tvlt."
Blue Triangle, Cub Staff.
L1~e twil1~ht,
1909
Gailv bed1~ht,
A gall,int ~mght ·
Choru5, lt ~ l ian C lub.
Ji, t < '' fr• ·nd indeed
Betty Munro
0
He l('a,\ a a;cntlcsm1m from sole to CTOU'n,
Clctm favvrt'li, t1n.l 1mrc11allv thin,''
Oliver Molinaro
Enis Monterastelli
1890
Chorus, Latin Cluh, StuJnH Co11nc1l
'A student of old boo~ and days,
'To u·hom all tonRuc.\ and hands u•ere knnu·n"
Lalin Club, French C:ub, Girl Re>cn·c.
Her u· •rds ar snou·fla~es that softly fall."
Vera Mommaerts
4
Student Council
1900
Irene Moczulewski
1904
G A.A .. Trident Cluh.
Fur t\'lnj;f hl'T homict undl'T her chm
Sht. tied a \•oung man·.~ heart u·ithm. '
1901
Morris Menzel
Annalean Nelson
Frrnth C'luh
Air\l and pnalcnt, mcrrv hut nnt light"
Tinv and cheerful
1929
H 1.. y, Sw11nm111g Squad.
\\' orJs Ct1nnot bm Id }um
Hou• fair he i.~'"
(Dtt tc rnd1catc~ year Hudcnt ~ far.1.i ly came to K1.:nosha)
a)
Lobanow•ky
Lnuer
LaComhc
Lafayette
Lake
Leach
M.mthci
Lindi
M,naccini
Maccari
MdllCll
M.1n:.,c.dco
Lnr"'iys
Madav
M ·r1t.hm:r
· If it's a holiday for the reH of the town. it's a holiday for m.
chorused students as they ''struck' on an election day m 1865.
La Rose
H Larsen
Madison
Macgaard
M:iu ...on
M;;rtin
I Lir- n
Mae!
Maty ek
R Lar.,on
Malmgren
M.1ura
After deserting the l11gh school, the vagrants held a picnic in the
woods. 'Their protest was aimed at gruff, tyrannical Pnncipal Hicks.
41
PY
193
1912
J eanette Mazur
Donald McNamara
.~trn1ght
Dorothy Neu
1890
1900
Agnes Nielsen
1909
and slim ..
Betty Mc eil
( :hnrus, l;h:r Cluh, PL'p Club.
For ,,h, 1<'Js JCS· th~ quut ~md
\\ 'hv., n.iturs nct•cr t'4T'V •
C'lwru.s, L.ttn Cluh, ~tuJl·nt Counnl.
A tuJent of c !\I h1 o~ an.l J,ns
7'o u·hom al~ tvng1H'" and hand$ u·erc ~nou·n"
(, A A., TriJrnt Cluh.
Fr.r tvm~ ha homlt't un,fcr her chm
Sh
l(lf
'\otmg man s heart w1thm '
1901
Morris Menzel
('h(\fll~. Pr ming St.dl
\\'hv (tuttc:: hut Jor Jr1~nJ.\h1p
AnJ to·~ ,,u.'d'' ll>t'c '
Cle n /1Ll'OT1..d, dn.i 1mpcrhlll" thm."
1900
Oliver Molinaro
1896
G 1h h .light.
Cuh
Put1cn.:c: 1s
~tatl
S.,.r.it hLd hu ht J dnlf
On
thm~tng '
1919
Club. L tin Ch1h.
\nJ h, 11 ~<J jull <: ro'' 11grn
·\,1; the itf'{'lc she u.as paint
Enis Montera telli
1860
Ruth Grace O 'Brien
French Club.
H
t
nd ~d
TL
•ulur, hcr m11th refined••
1917
Edith O 'Connor
1927
n r1 R'""'"· Srv St ff.
A.
,J,. l1~e and quut a.~ 11 nun '
1923
Ann O'Kon
S"111hng stnod a ma1J bc.qJe me
H lj ' rm~ onJ ha 1f •hv.
Sht: ·' s l utc:: is she can bt
But .\i smart a.~ she can bt.
Betty Munro
1929
l't·c coruJ ct'CT'V film star
In ,\ mc mannt:r Joo~~. or ~tvlc. '
1
~p. nt'h
1920
(~1r1 Rl-:-.l'f\l',
Cirl S..:oub, Tt:nnis Cluh.
Hc:r nu Tt stars of tu tl1~ht Jan·.
L1 t t
i.:ht. too her du.s~' ha1r. •
1913
Tranzo Oldani
f, •th II Tc m
H h 1r u as all m tJngled curl •
1917
Gayle Olson
Lucille Munson
1913
Marjorie Murdoch
1860
C1rl Rv-t:nl-, Blnl- Tnan~lc. I"rcn~h C:uh. Chl•rus
..... h1
h e loc~s outshtnt tht sun •
Girl Rn•1..·n.1..·, Bh.l Tnani;:k, Lattn Club.
.\fa' n(
tht btaut' in her ht4rt
a, th heaut\' m her n·es •
He c nTlot hold hu m1nJ to tart Jt . •·
~Cf't
G.A A
all gardens.··
Vera Mommaerts
Ted Nehlsen
1898
Elmer Norby
Enyd Norris
1922
runt thJt ~rott$ not m
I. nt ~nigh<
A
( horus, It Ii. n ( lub.
Ih
is 1• fr end Uli.ICCi.I. •
Tri.1n~h:,
1903
Jerry Niel en
L 1tin Cluh, Frl~n..:h C''uh, Girl Rcsan:.
Ha u. 1..'fi.h
~nou fl.1~cs th11.t :softh fall.'
Blu1.:
1910
George Nielsen
St km ( 1un\°1l
He:. 11•0,., 11 e;entlt:man Jrom .~olc to crou·n
Irene Moczulewski
Ruth Inez Molitor
mcrn hut not light'
1880
('horu..;, Printing Staff
\\"dl·Jat·oud
1904
Annalean Nelson
Frl·nch Cluh.
A n •n(i {ln,J nt
Tin\' M1J cheerful
·\nd ll~ut a,.; c L1l ht"
") .1un~ r th n .Sf'!Tl'tl'Ot, 1t1thout th
Of d1. 1/'f'«in!mtnr'
Francis A. O'Neil
f'11ntcq trMt
1896
B. nd.
T
rh·n
:th ut confu.ston clearlv"
1929
Wesley Osterberg
1849
H1 Y. S\\:mm nh. "t ad
\\ 1rJ~ I.. nnut hudJ h1m
How fa11 ht
l!i, ..
l Oat!! md1cah>
n:1r studL"nt~,
bmih came to K nc..;ha)
M :uir
Munro
Norby
Mc amara
Mt1naon
4irris
McNeil
Murdoch
()°llnen
Menzel
Nehlsen
O"Connor
Moczuleu ki
Nelson
O'Kon
":\ 11.111111ly mar~s the .~pot now·a·davs, but a dot mar~ed the
spot that m earlier times meant a grade. Rerwrt cards were
Molinaro
Molitor
Neu
OIJan
C N1d en
01 on
Mommacru
J Niel en
()' eil
Monter tdh
A. 'iebrn
0 terber~
dinded mto s,pwres, and the p&sttlon of the dot indicated the
percentage earned by :lie ,·11Jent danng the mar~mg period
43
1900
Holger Ostlund
''Th< thoughts of youth 4T< long, long thoughts. '
1929
Doris Ostrom
Girl Rt.:scrvr, G ct: Cluh, Chorus.
''One U'hO cheers us, ~nowmg no hate"
1908
football Team.
· And none has quite escaped mv smile."
1916
Choru .
1914
Glee Club, Chorus
lt~e
· ·rou are
red wine and honey."
Virginia Powlowski
''fJn t/mct soul on all hc.stowrng"
Maurice Parker
1915
Tennis C.ub, Sran1sh C'.uh. Tl·nn1.-. Tram
H e u•ould pore hv the hour 01.-er a weed or flou•cr,"
Mary Parmentier
l"CJr the
1905
good art' <1lu•a\·.s rhe
mtTT'I .
Ella E. Rahn
1909
Chorus, Lerman Cub, Student Counl'.11.
1915
Girl Scouts, Blul.' Triangk, G r1 Rc:-rrv.,;,
No matter u·hat a person as~s vuu,
The bnl.ianr amu•n Ht't'er fiB~.' 'You
Warren Rasmussen
Swimming Team JJ, Ushers~ Club
Half asleep anJ half a1r<1~< '
spo~en u•ords
ht'dTt ,•Imped .\pangle.d·'
1885
Curtiss Peck
Second Band.
'The gentle mot·ement dnJ .dou• met1sureJ race'
Edward Raucina
1854
1909
L1Jc:: u a gift tu be uu1l et't:r'I tla'I . ..
Jayne Reffitt
1923
Her l"OrJs thtlt cf di u·cr.is u ere nurne t ••
Stanley Perkowsky
trench Club.
Glad that
1910
Blue Trian)!;1t:, Girl Rcsnvc, Choru~.
Pocahont•ts u.1as rc..t•ercli
By each ClnJ et•ery one ,
Henrietta Postman
Marie Paradise
Are hule
192 1
Orchcstr.1, Chorus, Band, Pep Cluh.
'O, my love IS li~e the mclod1e,
'That's swuth pl1t'1ed 1n tune '
Hattie Pietuch
Charles Paczkowski
Your suft
Florentine Piateski
Leopold Repka
My hopes did run
la·< am /."
John Perry
1910
Freda Reuter
1880
Angelo Rizzo
1918
Dorothy Roberts
Band, Chorus.
He u a grt'1t obscr:·er. and he lvo~5
t;')u1te throul(h the Jc:cJs of men. · ·
Chester Petersen
Club.
Humble and high
Prmta01'
in
one, cool, urram. d1fJcunt"
Marjorie Petersen
Her t.·cry fwu:ns arc fairer far
'Than smiles of other maidens arc.
mam~er o(
1922
Chorus, German Club.
She comes u•1th gusts of laughter
The music as of nils."
1900
Uand, Orchc rra, Italian C lub.
\Vhrn I play on my fiddle m Doo'!"·
Fol~ dance Ii~< a wat·< of the ><a.
1915
Latin Club, Seminar, Girl Reserve.
' Thy lips are scarlet lace, thy speech \s &uieet
Arthur Petzke
Sa:v, hat.•t tou thought lfhat
1907
and rn could I.
1870
man it 1.t
Lillian Pfarr
G.A A., Chorus, Blue Triangle.
Or ..,ou might be thC' quan •hut m a tou er .
\\.'ho nerer told the so 1d1t"rs u·ho she was.
Lucelia Roberts
1915
DaVmc1 Club, G. A .A ., Chorus.
A nose delicattlv done m n•ory''
Of u:hom men ~av 'He cou!d srn~e g1ann dou:n ' '
1880
Grace Roemer
1910
forum Club, Little Theatre, Student Council, N F. Logue, Chorus.
Her speclh u as a thousand eyes
Through u·h1ch u.·e .see rh e earth.•·
(Date ind1CJtes year st uJen t 's family came to Kl"no ha)
0 rlun
( I t r n
R H c
Ostrorr.
M. P tlr n
R c na
P cz'
I' t
:1.
R.1f1tt
Jr hn (;. Mc.\hnn. whose j'>ortrait hanJl;
Kl
p d SC
l'f r
R·P••
P rm
P "'k r
p. t kl
I\ tr
on the weH ~.z11 of the
lr 1>.ar . was the t/1 rd tnnnf>al r f die l11gh scl1r I He 1 be~·
Pu:t h
R::
ti
r
f'
f' m
lJ R hat
p rr.,
R
R mer
~ '>t n
for his wor~ l'l orgam::mg the c11rnc11ltt"l • ma~e ,hp
ier I adt ~need s11h1ect s a genmne secondary school course
45
py193
Marguerite V. Robinson
1835
Mmt 1;h re: 1t
Mary Constance Robinson
1835
Lattn C lub, D.1Vrnci C lub, French Club, C horus,
Happiness U'a.~ born a twm."
Leonard Roman
'') ou "hould hat·e
heard hnn h.\tcn.''
1928
l ootball Team
'\ot long ago I Jell in love.'
Glee Club, Choru"
Modestv is the beaut,· OJ women.
1922
John Rutchik
Tenni> Club.
1900
Robert Ryan
Seminar Club.
Cou/J an lush heart be quiet
\\"hdc: thL SJ nng U'•H runnm not'
1910
Span1>h Clcb.
C::h( oulJ rather he: than .sam tll he
Virginia Savage
',ir, Rc:-t.:rvc, French C.ub. Choru:-, Glee Club, Tr dt.:nt Ch.h.
1918
"You h~c vour fun
a.~
wc!I
a~
anvonc
1923
Jov of her hfe beamm$Z. our of her fMe"
Leona Seelman
1919
Cho rus, German Club.
"Such a lot to do, dear.
Such a lot to ice''
Orchestra, Gkc C lub, Grrman C luh.
F r H un · t lt·hcre vuur m(hcs
1930
.\tc1p
1t ·.~
1('hcre
1880
1880
slee~
Mary Schmitz
Prep Club. Lmlc Theatre, T ennis C lub,
It u•a.\ a great plague to be too handsome a man,
c t4ra•
Dorothy H. Serles
1926
~prrng 1
'
1927
re ha h11nJs and t•crv ~mJ. '
Alice Serpe
John Shatrwka
Sem nar Club, h'>:hall M .. n .. ~<r
And hdd hlS head
/". one of ~·ngs ,~ .. re.l.te I ·
Helen Sikora
1903
1914
1926
Choru.;.
. \ prr td \Otmg hc11d nnd gentle neJ:
1862
Chorus.
Thought.\ that m quu:tncH confute
The l101.q k'OT d are hen. ·
William Schramm
Italian Club
\',·can on his .muling /lice a dream of
Chorus, G!l·..: Cluh.
And ~hc h .rn•a:low~Jlat .an.l Jrcc
Choru>
AnJ her nes are puols u h1ch "h,ne m Jar can .on.).
Irma M. Schmidt
\our
start.~
S •ft
1902
Julia Savaglio
46
Lynn Scoville
C1rl Scouts, c;c r man C luh.
She danced h~e a """I oj pcta I; dou·n
Uur quiet t·dlagc street.
1935
191 7
Band, Orchestra.
· He boa.Hcd and thn· smiled.'
Richard Sentieri
Erna H. Sanders
PY
C horus
" f 1rcl1ght and .u,1rlight her ens'
Mildred Seidemann
the: mo.H u'hen It comes to the ann.
Her tal~ "·omes out as smooth anJ
J\s bua.Hs of smgmg birds. '
1921
Pearl Schwab
Nettie Scoville
1836
Jean Runals
I am strong a
StuJcnt ( .m1Pcal
Elwood Schwenn
1908
Lawrence M. Ross
1867
Helen Schultz
t ornm. L1ttk Thl·:1trc, Pt:p Cluh, C1rl Rt"-t'nt
Courage and Hope art 7'hou
And Lot'chnc.ss · ·
Blue Tr angle, Fn.nch Club, DaVinci Club, Girl Rc'."nn:, Chorw•
All u·ho jo'' U"ould wm
Ruth Silbert
Esther Sionkiewicz
1850
1918
Chorus, G:cc C lub, Bice Triangle, G.A A
She tied her raven nng.ets m,
(i1rl
1914
Rescnc, Blm: Tnanglc
A loo~, a u•orJ . .a note, a nd th en
. he d11hs her preU-,; nOSC' again '
( D ate inJ1c,1tc.s yc.1r st mknt's fami ly caml' to Kl: nosh :1)
"l :w:iglio
M Rohinson
Schmidt
Sc J,,ttn
St 1Jt.·m inn
M Rohm on
Roman
Schmit•
S If r•
Ross
Schnmm
s "'
R11n:1h
Schult:
S._rrc
Gaye.It of all students of the Gay-Nineties were the boys who re·
c/He.,ted permission from an unu·:·/J;ng school board to pract:ce
R.1tch1k
s,h .. oh
Sh,.rn.,b
Ryan
Schwenn
S1kor
Sandc·r111
L. Scoville
S1lb.-rt
Savage
N. s~o\'•lle
1onk e\\ 1c:
lxseball in-of all strange places-the new auditorium, pnde of
the students and of the taxpavers--in fact, of the ntv at large
47
Margery Skilbeck
1921
French Club, Cir. Reserve, G.A.A., Chorus, Girl Scouts.
Josephine Skovronski
'·And a
t 101ce
dS
L.11m Club.
Dap t•encd m boo~s"
1907
Gilbert Thompsen
1915
Dorothy Thornton
G.A.A.
'"Oh! she u
li~c
1914
1913
Student Council.
·· odung u so hard, but he'll sc11rch and find .r.
1918
"A laughmg )'Otmg man, sum\\' u·1th Jrn~le.s '
1918
Dorothy Spence
Chorus.
\\'ho nci·cr wanted a good u·ord
From thou k ho spo~c her pra1~c
Gone with hn llltlt: chm
Thnut ahead of her'
'There
is
no 11chncss aboi•t a sound bodv.'
Arlyne Stern
1895
1885
Chorus.
'Your loose•curl<d h<ad flung high '
1912
Mary Stipanuk
Music Clubs, Lalin Cluh.
One Ja1r JtHt rn the laugh.ng tTOlt'll'
PY
Chorus.
· H<r
chee~s
h~e
1he dau·n of th< dav"
Jean Stowe
Blue Triangle, Girl Reserve, Forum C.ub, G. A .A , French C
The u:h1te ro.H: told me of your brou:.
935
48
1881
Leona E. Tucholl
Da V mc1 Club .
.'>X_atun: I lotc~d . and next to Nature, Art
1918
Betty Tucker
In ngle, Lat.n
Cluh, Spani<h Club.
Her )'Otmg J<h.e huld.s a ~nc seremty.
1844
Janet E. Tully
n1...ent Club, Blue Triang:e, l'r..:nd1 C,i,h. CA.A.
But smiles each other chase
from hp.s to eves all over
·J hy <u.·et:t and sunny face.
1884
Walter Turner
lh:J Tn . . ngle, Spy Stafl, Student Council, Trc.1s. Senior Class.
lvfy heart u u·ann with the fneml.s I ma~e."
1915
Carl Uhlich
Hu loo~s was ~md o
h.trd to forg«
'
1885
William Ungemach, Jr.
1915
Natalie Stone
1910
Ila V mc1 Club.
And the wnc.:.s nj her voice, h~e the music wh1Ch seems
Murmured lot rn our ears b,· the Angel of dreams'"
1
Little Theatre, Pep Club, German Club, Girl Re,erve, Forum Cluh.
''Into my face are her brown eyes a·glancmg.'
Grace Stewart
Charlotte Marion Truskowski
B .c
1929
Lamar Stauder
1917
Inez Topel
basketball Team, Football Team.
" But Lan celot was a luhc young ~my.ht."
Thoma• Sorensen
1852
Esther Timme
Seminar Cluh, lhVmc1 Cluh.
She: u!lll lu to notu u·ith her fair red hp
Girl Reserve, Chorus, Glee Club.
"And one u glad, so pleasant are her u.·avs.
Morris Sorewen
mt erv sure that 1 m in love. '
1
1916
Frank Soeka
1915
C:hortl'•
a JHdurc m the sprrng.
Frances Sliakis
1900
K ' l;Jub, Foocb:.11 Team, Baskcthall Tram.
lino of hatt I, .1 fought and won ·
low as tht .sea··
Joy Slater
1914
Aloysious Szantor
'Y« with darling wiles of youth"
Blnd, Orchestra.
· /'\nd ~new what he was about
1899
Frank Upright
1918
b.
He d nei·er settle
In any province.
(Date indicate
year 'tuJcnt'
family came to Kenosha)
Sk1lbed
St rn
T cl
Skovron.sk1
Sti:wart
rru~ko\\
k1
Slat«
Sli ki-
s, k
Stip.uwk
c..;,onc
c..;ld\\C
M. S1>rfnscn
SzJntor
Tucholl
Tt hr
T 1.:.
Turn
D1m11g the World War, Kenosha High School manaal tra;nrng
st11dent.1 bwlt a chic~en hoase u·h1ch stood on Mar~et Scjtiare
T Si)ren,cn
Thcm:--s
u h
Spence
Thornton
Ung m orh
St;.. der
Timme
u-.nght
replete with fowls and feed. A .111;n tac~ed to the shed read
HELP \VI]'\ THE \\'AR BY RAISING POULTRY
4;
spy1935
1860
M ega n Williams
Eugene Vandenberg
1910
Shirley Wilson
Eve rett Vaux
1928
Fern Van Bendegom
Chorus.
'Tou turned Jwm the fa11cst to gau on her ft1ce."
"rour .\f11nt s secret h11.le.~ lt~c gold."
And he "'"' a Jolh /ellou•
And the merry lrt•e the fidJle.
And the mcnt l(Jt•c to dance. '
1875
1897
Helen Wojciechowski
1910
1922
Mary W olslager
1921
Joe Wroblewski
B nu, Orchestra.
Sometnnc.:.s I .rnnlittli(:IJ g1t·e loo~ for loo~. '
\\'1th ,111 a frtend .\ hc.:.sr t·1rttte.\ .shinrng hnght
alu·an cheerful
Herbert Walter
Spani>h Club.
"Ht. wor~s, ~·cs, hut ea.uh and u•el1 •
Dorothy Ward
1933
(;1rl Rt..:..,crvc, Band.
Allen Wisch
Football Team, S\v1mm ng Team.
A spmt ~mdh as the deu•
And daring ,1.~ a flame''
Richard Wachs
1930
(;1r1 Rl·..,avc, Student Council
' Her rhce~s .me Tuddv and her eve.\ .me clear'
Girl Rc!'ervc, Fri.:nch Club.
I shall net·cr hat e to he alone,
Solitude to me 1s un~noum.'
1909
Chnr '· Ckc Cluh, A Cappclla Chor
Ami et·erv warbler ha~ his tune b,· heart.
1913
The bnefest words are best. ..
1
Jack Wyss
Rnl
1880
Jean Wells
Cir} S.:oub, French C'ub, Student Council, G.A.A.
I laugh and ltft hands to the wars aheaJ
C':nnc on' I am rc11J\" f)r \Ou 1' '
'~lei:
Carl Yordi
Cecelia Zapuscienski
19L4
'Your umophist1catct.i c'Vcs
Au Jull >f heautiful .mrpnu '
Florence White
Success
1921
ll•1$il'.~
1911
1913
Chorus, Orchc.stra, C1rl.s Cle.: Cluh, A Cappclla Choir.
' I meet her on the dusty street,
And dtt1.qc.~ .~pnng about her feet."
Myrtle Z ahn
1912
Girls Glee Cluh.
her Jiving fouote('ls.
Dorothy Whiteford
Lucille Young
\\'ho h.\lnu once 1nll 11-,ten tu•1ce
Club Chorus
Se1·e1al of naturc's peop 1e
I ~now, and the\' ~nou me
Mary Wendt
1930
Such a lad Lrncoln might hat·e been '
1859
Dolores Welter
1891
I rranglc. L1ttlc Thcatrr. Spy Sc.fl.
' Failure is not fur one so gnu hi J'lroud.
1889
She dabs her perfect little nose
And pau her U.'at·ed h,111 '
Girl Rc... avc, Lat n Club.
PY
935
All silence and all gluten '
Donald Wieske
Frail }lames are set hehind his eyes."
La Verne Zierk
1885
Rmd. Orchc.str:l, Gars' Clcc Club, G1..-rnan Cluh, Chor\1!11,
Mtisic she lot•ed and fnendh grutmgs."
1890
V n !lo nd<gom
II lute
II 1 •
V mhnllf'rg
II ht• ford
y,,,J
Vaux
II" kc
I\ chs
11' l11Jm
I\ lter
\\ 11.,.on
Young
1..;/icr T1early twn thousand students marched to the site of the
The dri::le that nn•arwblv accomJ1a111es a parade was not .1bsent
I\' rd
\I I h
11·c11,
\\
CH:,·h1 \\
Zapusucn"ki
kt
\\.e?tt:r
II olsl. g r
Z:ihn
\\ cn<lt
\\"rt. h1n\sk
Zerk
rresent h.gh 'chool to witness the laying of the cornerstone, which
tool1 rlcce on the afternoon of 7 hursday November 20, 1924
51
spy193
1915
Ella Grinder
Dtl1gc:ncc. is tht mother of gouJ luc~
'
Herbert Haubrich
First Band.
He
1898
1)25
In
1854
John Bohatkiewicz
1915
1923
52
rodm
extrcmeh u.·ell u·here er he t•ent. '
1890
1915
WA
clear as cn:.tal.
Lawrence C. Jones
BanJ, Cooking Club (and con I cook!)
I'm qwte. a clet't'T hand at ma~ing .steu·s. '
Edwin J acyna
1.}
an empt\: church u:ithout him.
Trygve Johnson
·K
1913
Club, ChJru>H1s hair u. a "Velluu as nt"u:·cut prnc.
Stanley Koloski
S, m
1924
1910
It :. quiet
1
S\\1mmmg Team .
H e gnn al&n~ the da\s as he .H ts anJ thm~s
nut afraid
Cha r'.es Hunt
1928
He. uas straight and stT<m~. and hu eyes u.·ere blue
As the rnmmer meeting of s~y and sea '
Richard Dunn
\'t:t
.swet:t to
1895
011~ed
His mind
In fnendsh1p he was true.
SPY
935
,\O
Golf Team, Pre< Golf Club, H 1·Y
0 anat n tht hero u·ho wins a name' ·
Student Coun'11
William Dewey
11\S
i;
Walter J. Frost
Hou.· much 1t u:as of hun u:e met
\\'e cannot c1·tr ~nou: '
Ernest L. Chambers
hall say' '
Robert Engel
He:
m
1852
A trnud t'Otce
Prep Club.
l made no ansu.•n oj the tongue
But ansu:er of the eyes.
who
Kay Smith
Then. a.~ vm u·a1t calmh, JUH u:h1.stle 11 bit.'
-JUI ui..J
1865
he rt thm~s oj
\\'hat h,
B.,;< Glee Club. A Carrell.1 Choir. Choru" BmJ, Orch,··tr.1.
Francis M. Achen
1911
Frt:nch C.luh, Lum ( .luh, Lntk· The::nn:, Orchcstr.t.
1 nn hou• su ·pt Ot'cr 11 \tring and a Ion~ lo•t' note
the: atr
Rita Schwaiger
nly lo< ~eJ forward.
Roy Jackson
W. Gibbs Sc hroeder
t4
1925
1
1910
he .tmiling at 111e he u·ould ·
I D :ih: 1nd11..";1tcs vt:ar studen t 's f.1milv caml' to Kcno,ha)
1883
Nicholas S. Koos
Ed wa rd Kuczyc
I
And
1912
thin~
and think Jbout It
71'1 1t almost splits m)! head.
1924
V1n · l·n·.s. l·r.1nklm Printers' C111ld.
' l .smile with secret mJTth
tall and
trn1ght and lathe '
fair a, a goddc:3
I.)
sitting beneath 11 flotvcn 1g {lc:d h rue
1906
Robert G . Nelsen
H
gr(''
1884
yet 1oyous, huw
~neu•
1909
no hllter mood
1860
he u heartv, hale, and <ann<d.
And th
h n
,, nl
t
1860
hJS
m
Arthur E. W allestad
h
Tt
Tt
\
thtT
1'CT
th'1U1.
r r 1ch ('luh, B n
Phi K.1ppa.
r1. ords ~tpt mt t mv tnJe
Ir
Mary W elter
Helen Wilcox
,p J at hn SJl nee: and fancied sht spo~t'
o} aim
Cath erin e Bertog
1900
n th
'\.
hcMt l'Jj m~. a jlu .s 1n mv hech
Milton Peterson
1931
I play mv lute and fa\hHm little tunes
()
dt'''T
(01te rnJ1 ... atcs \t.:ar
tuJl·nt st r.u ... CJ"TI
t
K(rn h )
Btrcog
Ptter<> n
1930
1919
She. f, tdll n tr ha ' lou~td H nc
I ~
·11 "'"t I h .1ld ''°t I '
htT
1861
U.'lth (1 .limj:knc.u
1905
1922
1 ' T ippcd an cellophane,
th,H
n1
1
k :/H faithful
1918
1895
hca1t liiaghe.>d through
Leona Mae Webb
1n lot c u.'1th hc:rnt'Y
f'lorence P iehl
Tho
fu as any fiddle
Leonard Wachs
T 1n
('.!J JI l
( I
1
H erbert Ward
ung f'Otcnt1a 1 ~m.Q:ht '
ou
H
'M
Elinor P iehl
11 r
Ralph Thomas
1878
Gkt Cluh, Pep Club,
A
1895
Fr
n1 ·T'1 t nudnight 4.I J,1\ through
I 1, uRh <.nd play as others do
Th,
George P ias
'
AnJ u·h, n m .un11c.
I ih
th Canterbuq bells '" playing l•ule tunes
rescncd yet free'
Anth o n y Paura
Thv pvt1 ·nr broU'.\ that
tuippcd.''
Dominick Suriano
on the wings of a .)tonn."
111
1921
lyTIC
(,,If ( .. 1111 I ntr,1rrur.1l B.l kctb 11 ond ew1mmtng.
A ~ind uj 'i ..niJeran~ .sp1nt that ~tc~.s fur 411'
1917
Ed ward Murawski
H~
Chori1 , Dram.J Club.
'} o r
mt, nu a tnrnOT
1933
Ma rgaret Anita Mikkelsen
Sh
Florence Jean Socha
Charles Stulgaitis
Brya nt Meyer
firur·
1912
t.a1<ly h" form '
David Starr
Rich a rd Lavenduskey
H1
Emil Pietrangeli
So
SJ' "''" Club. Sommar Club.
A youth, light·hearted and content"
\\' ltt.:r
1887
Joe Barengo
And ,.ct he smiles
.~o
1923
Robert Luebke
1909
Julia Matazinski
unstfullv.
Calvin Benikovsky
·rou seem so )'Oung. )'Ct au so qua rnt I y u•1u.
Swimming Tl·am, Pep Cluh, Franklin Printers' Guild.
H )ti ch erfulh he seem.\ to gnn
1915
B. ,k,·th.tll, Footh:1.1l, Sw1mmm~.
All the purenc.:. .\ oj his nitturc shou·s •
1905
·fh, ught.s that in qmetness confute
The: no1sv u:orld are hers. '
1904
1913
Ckc Club, Chorus, Gt.:rman Cluh.
1902
Fr:inklin Printer> Guild, Ba,hthall ''B" T eam.
Pensire, not sad. m thought int•oh·ed, not daTr
p
935
Fearless and sh"
1916
C' 1"" Play, Chet.Jr., Little Theatre, Glee Club.
A feath<red hat upon her head,
And boot.< upon her feet'
54
~>ft
uncert.1mt'' '
1905
Henry J. Sevey
1877
He ·re L\ ''OU u·ith a .rn11 1e fwm frundlv C'Yt'.~
'Those calm eyes, that qmet speech'
1921
1(·h1ch thou feclcH "
Tht th.n
Charles Sikora
1926
On m~mg wings
/,f 1 ,I. ,. ~( forgcrtm~
tas~s
undont' "
1885
1920
\\ atch hun m his anoent Ford
In u·h1ch he .oB a verv lord.
Bernard J. Wallig
Thl!I air
the voung unu•eaned n·es
June M. Lindblom
rill
Raymond Tenwinkel
A l- epu of stlc:nce eloquent '
Joe Lesnik, Jr.
h
Alfred Savaglio
"let 'o cunnmgly thou concealest
1899
Albert Koos
B.inJ, Or hl tra, Sl·minar.
The prettiest one he ~ncu· last ,·car
Charles J. Sigger
fulfilling abso•ute deer«
In (asual simphot,·
C:rl"
1890
John A. Rose, Jr.
Stu .... n t Cm,nul, Pep Club.
Little he care.s and less he ~nows
\'.'h,thc:r the road $h1dl 1t"all hnn. '
Erna Konitz
1923
\\'hat lot'ely things
1840
Stanley Klonowski
1906
7'h" h11n.I h.ith rnade."
That u cH so stTdt>i(ht and shm '
Sydney Kastman
1907
Gin' Cluh, ( .horu~. Cnman Club, Girl Rt:.,.crvr.
' But a swift. g(t" life nuts me best. ·
Albert Robillard
G 1rl Resent.::.
M' heart " li~e a b1Td <et frce '
Lucille J onaitis
went
Good bTecdmg u the blossom of good ien.~e.
Ann Demencius
Anthony J. Holowicz
H
Thomas O'Connell
l ntramur.11 Basketball M anager.
H1s ~ind blue e-ves u•ere ga,· and glou•mg."
David Hale
A ~ln.na mo.\t ~md
Th t 14 II h~e ~umhrnt." where
Dorothy Miller
1928
Isadore Broski
1915
bt1n Cluh
1890
Louis Bonofiglio
1890
'Politic, cautwu.~. and mehculou.~·
Clarice Wenger
Spani>h Cluh, Chorus.
"She learned her hands in a fain talc
And her mouth on a t•a lcnt1 n e. ''
Clarence Willems
1867
euere 1s but a mere i·cnecr
1914
1835
I h111•t a rendezi•ous wit h Life ...
(D..:tt· mdicatu1 n.:.1r ."t11Jn1 t · .. f r.u·v cnmt.· to Krni ha)
SENIOR B
President. John Goodwin: Vice·Pre~ident, . Loren
Henr; Gian•onio; Treasurer M.tch2ll G:nkowsk1.
Their families have livl'd in Kenosha for more than seventy.five years.
ch r1
l\4 t n. R lph <"><> "' n, t'\ hn H.rnc}. Hcanor Nonhv.ar. Rose~
r z, , , M1ldr
Bk •dorl
rh ir families have lived in Kenosha for more than fifty years.
R1 h rJ ChrL~tc1 s n, Milton I> ds. Lucillt: H1qcr, J.1mcs Kmg, Rohut
\\ ltcr PnJJ1s, Ju1 1 1. Ru sell, Z1h lie S . . bcuncman.
Kn·pp, <:h1rlt·s L nhll,
Th"'ir famdie have lived in Ke.,flsha for less than fifty years.
Jluh rt AJ:11n • Nt:l A,lc t.:n, N.incv AJri.m, Alvo Alhm1, Lcv.:u Andrcuc~
I
l·. grnc Art:nJt, Befll!Ct: Auscn, M nm Bach, MJCh el BanO\CZ, n()flS
B 1 s, M rgr. B., ttan, Ra" ord B th', Shuburn Bear, Mori Ann B, II.
AJfr. j B rg, D..:no Btrn.11.. lu, Ccurg: Hel k1, .E\a Hilott, Leon Bleashka, Fred
Hinck. nn1st: Brtc"l, Olg .. Brnn.it1, C tht.:rmc C ,hie, Rita Caddock, Virginia
(,h11ppt:ttt, lrcnt.: Cholak, Ant\ J nt: ( larkc. l.e111lt Brunner, Omar Bl1rkcc,
Nick lluttcra, E rl. Co<lJock, Elmer Chri t e-•·n, Hden J) Angelo, Tony De
(.i11ar<a, I> xtcr D1.:frang, M rte I> I Fr .. t , Rt:na DeClJ...St), L(1rram D !>cll1cr,
Mun~! l>1Jnsmg, Sh1rkv I >r.1ke Ann J)ph J'"t:\ 11 z R1chi.'!rJ Dunn, JuJ111t.1
l.ddy Rtnol~I F ;1pp1, J<ihr- (;, llo, Ho\\ rJ Cc ht:ck, Hc:iry C ..1nto111u, ~11trhcll
S.i'.1e;
Secretary,
Cmkov..sk1. Juhn Goodwin, M;:if'C Cro . . , MaJdmc Cm1ch:in, H rlof H n en
Lucille H ns n, JL.mt:ttc Hi;rhr Lht..m 1cr, Arthur H r c, Rutl H 'U'-tun,
Maxim: Hunt, Edwin Jacyna, Clurcnce Joh;1son, Cor.nne
John n, .hck John .. on. Rohert John·o-'. \Vill1am John . . on, H rolJ Jornt, J 1ck
K r.ih tsns. Stanky Kczcnk C\.\.ICZ, Ct.:l)rgc Klacyn k1, Ton1 K)O\. , 1'1·rm··n
Li ccn Hu .. ard,
Knapp, f;Jv.:arJ Knl.tr, Eh.1c K<ir<:dtu:-., RavmonJ Kreh .... E::.>thcr Kr ust.:r, Gtr,
aldm..: Kub;d]. Ru~"tll Lamb, St..)phic L.1pn:v.:1ch. Jol J) ut r, Lill .in Lcnnd i,
Emma Leonetti, Irma L1\ing ton, Lorr.1me M rtk, C ,c·1a M rtm, 1-\clrn
M.n•. M.rg1nt Maw.:r, Anna Mdlt, Bennie 1\"aumoi.\t . . h, \\alter ~;1vo1c.:h1·k,
1
Agnes ]\;1! '011, Ether Ndscn. Leon Nick J.... Kcnnt.th 1"1ckola1. Edna 01 on,
Louise P;1hst, Filmt.:r P.1r. d1~c. M.irian Pdt.:r en, Philip ha ngd1, Ro"c Plau~
"hm1.>, Joe Rnhh·n", j(1hn Roth, Raymond Ry . .-k<1w . . k1, Fnnk S .. cco, Jim Salerno,
P ulmc Sarg nt, H. m<t Sehl gcr, fr<J S<rpe, Lo·if So·thno, Kathnn Shankland
Margant Shield, Inmg S1huh<rg, Dcoroth; Sm1th, l'.J;< rJ 'm1th. ]on<t
Sonntnhug, R- vmond 'tamm, Edward Stankt w ch, Primo Stdani, Donald
Stt:wart, (;race Stt.wJrt, Llffcn St1lk, Harn.;-tt SuhJ1.,h·, £.,thn Suri no, Rob1.rt
Sl.\cenc~. Al
Talcronok, Dorothy Thom, Ins Thom.1 ... M nan Thomcy,
je.mettt: Thomrson, Marg:ar1.:t Thum:-en, Cec1rg1a Le Thornton, Shirlee Torrt:y,
Donald Tracy, M ry V L h, \\'1Ili, Van Lc.nr, Leonard Vogel, Donald \\'aJc,
Mc.1de \\,Liker, Lt.::-11.:r \Vcgnrr. Jc ·nnt: \\'h t;1krr
Rohen \\'hyrc, V1rgm1a
Z huk J\CC, Ht: en Z~nic Cnilk Zukow . . b.
55
J
'IOR
Pre ident.
lfred De imone: Vice -President. Gene Englund :
Tr asurer. E,·a Latham .
for mor
than
> ar .
evenl)·-fiy
Their families han:e
ecretar}··
Ii\.~
1n
Keno ha for le
l "', , Alfred (, , 01"' , Con-t nee
Ruth M cGl\Un, .'\ 1 1Ja M , bier,
P~\\.dl.
l rral
R1 <, R " II
nahl Todd
fift1> year •
The1t fam.ilies ha"e 11':ed in
Chari
E rl H a
·1utcnbur
t
M.:Gone k. Riche.Id Po,.c'I M rnll Rh
935
Tho
56
'• Tho
, Tull~
Ethel • lac • ru
s
M rv
J nc
u ·r, R.ith
Ch ncell r,
, M ildred
ChrHerucn. Fran
C.: nrad •
J
CnJCd, R th Cla
Corudm1. Der h
l > t n,
I'< w
R vmc nd
11,
Jl1
J).
H. dJ)1h l>1rJ1k, f\.1
f·n •lur<l
<' 1
M r.- ),
/)1 \llH
De Simone,
Fhrnlll, l..t>rr1:n1:
Donald
Harriet
Kar;1v.·ay,
Stanlcv
KcJi:1crsk1,
Phyllh Doc>tsot', J1 romc Dorman,
Milton Dt.:tHt,
KlaJ1va,
R.1ymond
Klau.s_..,
Sdm;1 Knudsen.
Rohcrt Kolo.1r,
Vnn..:
Kordoskc, Lout c
Ko t('f,
Fg:gl "ton, M.1xrn1:
Engelwn, V1v1an
Li ghind, H rris f·n,.kson, K.1thcnnc FalJutu, ArnunJa Fans,
hid h v., J1mcs Flr~J.sn·1
M r
AlfrcJ
lbd n Don.sing
Kolm<•-.,
La
Kcnas,
Rohnt
K·l11n,
Hdcn
For1:-.t
K \ u,
Koi:lowsk1, Bnn1cc Krc .... m. Marga Kri"tl nsen, Che..,tu Krurm"k1
Lillian
Kolha-.111k,
\\ ltcr
M it Kn1 c,
Cnirgi na Fischer, CIMa f1,..h,
Anne Klll1k, Olga Kuhar, Henry Lahan, V111ln L hanow-.h, Myrtle LJr1d11.~.
f l1Kk r, Stdl.1 J onk, E.1rl h)<.t r, M fl<ln Frd'-lla, Ru ... sdl FreJn1d.son,
Joi.' Lasto\'IC, Eva L:itham, M,1rwn Lau r, \\'1lma Lauer, E!s1c Lema~. Raymo::d
Man- F·LIJ
R lph I :no, Fr. nk (,.ndn r, John C sscr, C:onnJ (,;1uss. K.1thl·r1nc Ccorg1,
c,o lit u..;:k1,
rg
(,1
AHrt.:d
Leona
l ;r c , .. I , Jcarn:tt·
Jo crh
Cogolil,
Alvm
ColJman,
(;run\\ ,t!J, EHlvn Crcgorv,
Elamc
Ll·~tcr
C,ordon,
Irv ng
( .rcwcno\\·. Mi~Jrl-J
Lcmh, Hckn Lc_..kov.·1cz, Paul Lev mov.11.:h, Fcrni.: L1Jd;, Elhnur
Sam1,..cl
Loe nte,
ina
Mansfield
Eliz,1h<th
Ma .1rn
Pt:t
Lipovsky,
M. s an,
R< sc
M i;.o;:ari, Rohcrt M:i ircr, Dorothv McCaffrcy, Eh:. nor McD<Jv.dl, John McC1ll
(,t
ffith. Hd .. n (,n.skl\·ILh, f;cr IJ Cuthormscn, Hope Cuthric, Mary H.'lakc,
R1rh.1n ML·nr ... N1,rm"n M1chcls, Bernard Milhv1ti:, Robert M1lkr, Colktta
I{ 11
h H nth m, f-r.rnr
M111k, Hcrh rt Mo rickc, \\'alter Mochrkc, Joyce Molit{!r, Thomci .. Montemurro,
H J:o\,\:tC?, DC!nalJ H.1m11.1ng:, MiIJn.:J H nscn, John
Ji fl n k \\ 1nifn d H.1rmun, Lrns .fl.in H.1rvdl, EJv.,1rJ H.1rtnd, ]l;rnnc Hudc,
J,1m . . Moon:, Ed\.. arJ Murphy, C:irulinc Muto, Gladys Neu
f hn H~ lmir ki, H.1rlt:y Hl rhrn.:htsmua, C1lhut Ht.:rrmann, June H.cks Sylvia
El1i:ah1.:th Nicrnl
Hill
()) .. on,
RKh.1rJ Hirchl'rt, Julie Htti:kl'r, Arno!d Holan, Olga H< 1oi.:hena, J<>hn
H ntf'f
Ros
IJz111rd, D,d1
IhlenfrlJt, ClaJ}s Iverson, Ina J,tchon, EJward
f.1 nc .i.H.%, Hdtn ]lni .. ta, Mildrcd ]lnkins. Ros,tlyn Jensen. St nh y Jcns..:n,
Pt:rrm,
Plld"l'll
K nncth
Johnson,
\\.inifn.d
John.son
John
Jakuhowici:.
Mi1ry Onosko,
Ted Oster,
Donald
Ozanne,
John
A\Crlc
Padov:Jno,
Erm..,.t
Panthocfcr. M •. r)ortc P.rkcr, John Paulin, Jame, Paubcn, Helen Pedley, Ward
C.cnrudt
Johnson,
D(•r s Newhouse.
. Gon.:ori N e!-.1.:11, Jane O'Brit.:n, V1q~m1a <YC.unnor
L1wr ·nc
Burdett
Pn-.rchmi,
P1t:rce
Dort.:Jthy
C1.;cr~
Pt.:tcrscn,
Ed'-\.1rd
Pcttrscn.
Sherman
P1tr:;;on, M r-.h.11 Puts, St fill\· Pora
57
SP
1935
Stettner
Praniskv, Mike Pratch, frank Pu1Jokas. Orella Quiel, Helen RafTcrtv, Clifford
Edgar Tanck, Lorr.11nc T.mn<r, Neil Tatman, John Tnwall, H .. ttie Trempt,
Rand:1ll, Cnald1ne Rapp, Eileen Rasico, Vaughn Rasmussen, Vita Rasmu.scn,
John Ratehs, Idabelle Raught, Helen Redmond, Janet Regner. Leo Richardson.
Ruhl'.rt Ril'schcl. Thomas Riley, Char ks Rizzo, George
R1Ut1tto,
Henry Rocda,
Hl'lmuth
turm,
Dorothv Tahhcn,
].me
T.1hhcrt,
Tacki,
DoAald Valente, Jerome V;m<lu\\all, Jack V:m Skih, Luc11lc V.1rn1s, Morgan
'
Vaux, Fr.ink Vcpraskas. Zoe Vollbracht,
Inc~
Wade, Carl Wall, June Wall,
Charlotte \\'all1g, \\'dl1am \\' llos, Barhar.1 \\'arJ, Ethel \\'art<r, C<rildmc
Earl Roemer, Ho\\ard Rosin . . k1, Dorothy Ro.stkcr, Jeanne Rousseau, Jane Rugg,
\\'ehb.
Kenneth Saeger, frank Savaglio. Kenneth
Lucille \\'elta, Al:cc \\'engt:r, Evelyn \\'t:rn, Eva Mac \Verner, Lois \Vicrsum,
chnc1dcr, Ray Schold, Ralph Schw,,ru,
Rohcrt Scoville, Fred Se1dcman, Elmer Seiler, Ferdinand Scrto, Mary
Olga Sharrwka, Harry
p
1935
Ro~.i11l·
Harriet Podhcr. Angeline Potcntc. Mary Ann Powell. Robert Powell, John
helley, Fred Sherry, Sophie
Lucille Simon, John S1p•ma, Miles
Gene
mvthe,
Esther Sorensen,
Howard \\'elch,
fern
\\'ellman, Richard Wellman,
haffer,
Irene \\'ntrhal. Violet \\'h1tmire. Adeline.\\ 1dmar, Kenneth \\'1ght, Adrienne
1lwanow1ch, Irene Simon,
\\'1lliams, Bill \\ 11liams, Brosia W1lhams, Charlotte Williams, Sylvia William•,
loniker, Lester Smith, Genevieve
mohk,
Harold Sorcmcn, \\'1llard Sorcn<en, Helen
Spt>aker, John Spcl..'.a, Lum St u.kr. Ruth Stein. E"ch:n Stenstrom, H:-.rold
58
Ruth \\'e1dman,
Henry \\'ibon, Verdell \\'iskc, Chester \\'orock, Ethel Worth, Donald Wruck,
H.irolJ Young, jl'an Young4u1st, Robert J. Ze1vers.
JU IOR B
Pres id ent, Fran cis Porter ; Vice-President, Richard
Stewart ; S ecretary.
Treas u rer , B la n ch e Boe rn er .
Their families h ave lived in K enosh a fo r more th an se venty- five years .
R1c.:'l I t BloxJorf
1
t\A.
II
Don
BOHl".
Kt nnlth
nr ·~~t.:r.
Eli Lll• r B1
h
Jc n ... cttr
( )il\u (·art on, Thom,•s Donln·, Kathkt.:n McN.1m.1r:i, \\'Iii.~ North·
\, Rt rt Schmitt
Che tlr St.rnkv, RKh .. rJ Stnvart, Norman Thomp~on,
lhn \\ tf\C, f"JwarJ \\ 1 "Oil, Ahn· \\"okott, Ralph King .. kv, J:1ck M:lw:1rd.
T h eir families ha ve lived in K e nosh a for more than fifty years.
Al
AndLrson, Lo111"c And r.;on, l>tto Bloxdorf, 81.inchl B1•t·rna, Thom.is
Rn nn n, \\ 11larJ 81111, Mavis Jackson, Cr;t(C Johnson, Arnold L.1r en, LL' Roy
LunJ1<kn\\:, V1olt·t M vcrs, Adc1lph Na: en, Clarence Otto, Rita Rodtr.;, Charles
Str;ingha~. Roga Turkclson, J.rnt:t \\'e1 .. ~. Rohcrt \\\,th, Evelyn T.inck, M anon
Fr,inct·s T,1nrk. M anon Janet Tanck
Th 0 ir fam ilie 1 h ave lived in Keno sh a for less than fift y years.
Fkanor Ahlcfeldt Jamb A1cllo, C ·11
AmeC'ht:. Gordon Andt.:r .. on, Irene
Andcr~on, Ruth M rt
And rson, Ruth M.ir1on Ander .. on, \Valtcr Anderson,
PalmLr Andrc!iiCn, B ·rry Antaramian, R;1ymonJ Applq~att..:, Glvndon Axt II
Roht.:rt lhch, Jaml.'..s Bilrrctt, St;inky Bash1m.ky, Emcr.,.on Becker, Dorothy Beck·
man, K.ttJO:l Bern"'· Peta 811.:rJz. Stephen B11l1ng.;, Joe Bilotti, Li.wrcncc Bono•
figl10, Marg:in:t Bo11ofiglm, Pr i.. cilla Booth, V1olct BorJcn, lsahcllc Boyington,
Loui .. 1.: Boymgton, Jim Britton, Charleton Bn \\n, Doroth\' Bro\~n. Fr n(k Bruch,
D~)n!' Bryant, Leonard Bq:..;ky,
811~::1. Ro .. emary
Ca .... o Budta, John Bulik, Edith B1rw.:dl, En:lyn
C JJod, Roblrt Carl~on, Francb Cc .. ano, Evcrdl Chamba~.
Manon Chn~tt·n .. en \\ 11liam Chr· tcn!-cn, Dori" Chn,t1ans(·n, Marion Chr~t1an•
"en, Davis Chri . . toffcr .. on, n~;nald Clarke. Josq1hmc Cleary, M ildred Conforti,
\\'illi,1m { oc,rL·r , H.1:d L. Co~hun, H d1.:n Con .. tantt, Dorothy Cordtz, John
Cyzak, Eldor Dahl. Bcttv O;rn~fidd, Dorothy Dl'ignan, P:wlmc Di: Scifc, Arthur
Dimeo, f;lady!- Dragance\\ 1a. Con.stance Dr10kw1ne, Genevieve DuJzin!'ki,
59
z
<t
C)
:c
0
f
SPY
935
Robert Eckert, Karl Eils, •.O.ndrew Enhoff, Frank Falcone, Josephine Falduto,
Marye Falduto, Jean Field, Hcr>hcl Fetzer, Bill Fina, Hdrn Flatley, Lou,.
Frangclo, Katherine Frazier, Dante Furlon1, Charles G.intzcr, Melvin Garb,
Merle Gardner, Mary Gaudio, LoUts Gigliotti, Alice Godlcw;ki, Jane Goldbng,
Chiara Goodman, Thdma CooJman, Bnn11.:c Gr ""er, Dorothv Gra!'"l'.r, Vl·rnon
Gray, Harold Groenke, Berry Gro..o;sman, Ed Gulan, Eugene Gulhransen,
Eugene Cumbmgcr, Richard Gustafson, \Valtt.:r Hackharth, Bruce Hahn, Ru.!'.-;dl
H.tmachek, Vivian Hcn<lrickscn, Hilma H1tchlt.:r, John Holicka, Earl Holl1.!>tCr,
Gcnc Horidovotz, Doris Hudson, \Villard Huff, Robl'.rt Hughes, Jo-.ephmc
Hujik, Clifton Homan. Eugl'nc Hunt, Clifton Hom.in, Dons Hudson, Jo-"crhme
HuJik, Shirley Jacobs, Margaret Johnson, Vera Jornt, Carol Jorgensen, Chn.-;tmc
Juska, Andre\\: Juga, Scanky Ju.skiew1cz, Irving Kadw1t, Tony Kam1eniecki,
J11l1a Kara\.\.,ly, Hdcn Katovich, Rohen Keating .Rus.,.ell Kcllm;in, Dorothy
Klacynskt, Dorothea Klcma, Shirley Kolar, Alvin Kobs, Amelia Kondrat,
ick
Koslica, \\'alter Kozlowski, Millie Krause, Hattu; Kulb1ski, E!ithcr Kuro.'iki,
Mary Lantow, Phyllis Larson, Alfred Laurin, Beverly Leeker, Robert Le May,
Laura Lcmorandc, Ray Leonard, Harold Leto, Myrtle Lindgren, Rosa)ie Locicero,
Doris Longworth, Mai y LucianJ, Rose Lukman, Eleanor Lulcw1cz, Robert
Lundskow, Lorraine Madsen, Jeanette Malewicz, James Marks, Crace Martin,
Louis Matala<il, Chc~ter Mato..c:ka, Annie Mattson, ld;i Matt.'{on, Hcnr>· Mazzei,
Robert Mcilrath, Ruth McNeil, Lorna Meyer, Ruth Millar, Constance Miller,
Jack Milward, Ruby Mommaerts, Earl Morton, Martha Munro, Carol:ne
60
Murrav, Marion Nel!!.On, Phillys Neu. Janet Nielsen, Theodore Nie\.\.·icrdow~ki,
Brrnhardt No<.1hk, Dick ()'Bryan, Mary O'Brien, Re ahdlc Oben, Peter
Ovazchuck, Dc1nald P.1bst, Cbra Papoll, Margaret Parmrntier, Concctt.l Pclticori,
VaJa Pcrrr. Lester Peterson, Rui..,.dl Petrick, Tonv Prng1torc, Ray Pofahl,
Sophie PuLisk1, Frann:s Porter, Ernu.t Pr<itt, FloyJ Pn:11Lin, V 1r~ n1a Prc!'bn,
Gt:orgc Pnbyl, Ella Priddis, Dorothy Provencher, Joe Putcrka, Ekanor Quick,
Paul Qu1l1c1, Renata R;\ffone, Edwin RanJ;\ll, B~rnicc Ra .. mu .. t·n. Lois Rc<l~trom,
c;corge Recd, Ralph Rcgh, Lc>t r Ricker, ConJi.i R1uo, Donald Roemer, Fr>nk
Ro'Zko, Benigda Rudzik, George Rumachik, Donald Ruppa, Edward Sandberg,
Jack SaunJrrs, Helen
ava~hi, Loui
S.ivoy, Raymond Scheller, Ro•abellc
Schmitz, Ray Schncehager, .Edward Schnuck, Elvera Schrocdt.:r, Robl'rt Schultz,
Eu~ent.: Shl1m\\.·ay, Ht:nry S.::heunemann, Ruth Schwaigcr, Nina Shchet, Alex
Sicilia, Vt:ronica S1la1kil, Anne Simo, Lurn,1 Smith, Vnnon Smith, Swen Soren,
sen, M:.qorie Speaker, Anne Stan..:d, Gcuq,e Stange, Joe Stanich, Harold Stern,
Ted Svtkow<ki, Paul Taft, \\'ilhert Tallev. Joe Tenuta. \\'·ll1am Tcrwall, Anita
Thoma~. Nedra Thomas, Mugarct Thomp~en, Clarence Toomey, Gcurgt.: Untulis,
Soph1l' Vancht:na, Maq?arrt Van Hazmga, Frank Van Th1d, Vera Van \Vie, Joe
Verchinsky, Dorothy Vcrncz.zc, Leigh Virgil, Lois Vol!\:kr, Clarence \Vavro,
Carolyn Wenzel, Fred 't\'enzcl, Evelyn Wertz, MarJOrte We•ch, Leroy Wheeler,
Ells\.\.·orth \\'h1tdoot, Ve1non \\'oltcrsdorf, Harry \Vozniccki, John Y;\cukowicz,
Luu1sl· Yantorn1, Victoria Zapen ki.
SO P HOMOR E A
President, Robert Well
Gertrude Sentiere
Their familie~ have lived
tn
Vice-Presiden t, Lawren ce Anderson ; Secretary,
Ke n osha for more th an seve nty-five years.
And n•on, JL.111 And1·r ...on, D(Jrothy Arn.kr~on, Jerrold AnJrc\."·~. \Vil·
B1uc
ham J>d\1 rg, Rohnt Fm.tl.:r, M;ir>· G.1lht.tn, M~1rion GL·hl. Dolores Cruencnwald,
M.Hv
H mmtJnJ. Elinor H,111n;ik,
\\'aync Hansis,
R1charU H. rmon,
Patricia
Th ~ ir
fa m il ie> h ave lived
H:trold
AmmL·rman,
Charles
Anderson, Henry Andt:::rson,
Adeline Amechc,
Harrington, D(•ruth~· Kdly, Ralph Kirst, \V.dli" Mink, Helen M1schkr. Hope
Robert E. Anderson, Rohen H
Nd un,
John
Si..hm1n,
Max Andresen,
I HIS
IJ<1'
H.or<>ld \\'h 1tc, Ralph \\'illcm
\\
Lcon;1
S..:hwamgt.:r, Mary
Ellen
Todd,
Julia
Tribur,
Their fami lies h ave li ved in K e n os h a f o r m o r e th a n fi ft y year s.
B~ tty
Lhn t1 n .:n
Connrn:
Cl Hord,
\\ dl1am
Clifford,
MarJorie
Evans,
K 1th Lomrg.1n, Phtltp Nc\.\.m.1n, Annl· Olsen, Don P;1rtndge, Janet Powdl,
Rohen Schlater,
fhaint y, Pt:tcr Ty:-.on, Arhnt.: Zimmerman.
\Villiam Schmitz,
Audrey
John
AnJcr... on, Ph lomcna
Irene Andrzcjc1.1..·sk1,
Bl"tty
AnJl·r~on,
Lawrence
Ander:-.on,
Andcr on,
Andcn•on,
Andre~.
Andrew Anoszko,
Ev .. Andreoni,
Mildred Applegate,
Gladys Apyan, Vance Archer, Elmer Arndt, Manon Arnold,
Daniel Ask,
Mary
Dons Bain,
Atk10s,
Jack Augu.stine,
Virg10ia Backe,
Cht.:stcr
Bain,
M. rjorie Baker, Edith Ball, Angeline Barca, Frank Barca, Raymond Barengo,
Cl.1rah 111 fox, Florence Grovcnow, Ann Kappas, Lewis Kranz. Robert Langer,
R g<'r Pr.ingl', Joseph Schmitz,
K e n os h a fo r less tha n fif ty yea rs.
1n
llcrd Adams, Flo,·d Aiello, Sclsus Albritton, Nick A!fanr., \V1ll1am Al.,tcd,
Dorothy
Albert
Barter,
Bill
Bastian,
Marguerite
Ba ten burg,
Anna
Bauman,
Robert
Bau,.chclt, Frank Becker, Mildred Bedrosian, Mary Bcllavcr, V 1ncent Bergant,
Floyd Berkley, Patricia Bewley, \Valtcr Bielski, Melvin B10ncy, Agnes Bistrick,
Clifford Block, Dorothy Bloomer, Parvcnc Bohanan, Kenneth Bohm, Theresa
61
p
193
Du~
magcn.
Pt:tronilla Brehm, Virginia Brink, Ek:mor Brono.,kc, C. Conrad Brown, Ray
hanicw1c.z 1 LL'O DumL""K, Lois Dunham, V.1kntinc Dziatlk, Augu!iit,1 Eckert,
Brown,
Lou s Bruno, John Buchm .... S;dly Bucko, Thod Bugalck1,
Russ1.:ll EJqu1!iit, I>cJrothv Eick, Cccili.1 E1 ... Lnh.n1cr, Cyril Ell1son, Tom Ellison,
Burdick,
Lorraine Burg:,
Bernice
Burgt.tt,
In·1n
Burket.·, Mary
\\.111ifrt.·d
Janl·
B11rn~.
Cht ... tlr Bu ...... Ann:ihclle Bu-. .. a. \\y1ll1.1m Bu .. k1rk, Frt.·dlrick c:aln:n, Rh.-h1trJ
Carney, Ruth Carta,
Bt.>~IC
c.... tlc. Carbino Cattani
Cha..,..:, M.1y Ch:i" . Manha Chatt rton
Tonv Ct: ...lflO, Eug..:nc
Ralrh
Lamh1.:rt
Endn .. ,
Doscmagt:n,
b'.ccn
En~cl.
Doris Downey,
Margarn
Etzdmudl r,
Downing, V 1ctor
Elsie
Falcioni,
Leroy
Fakoa, P.rnl FalJ1.;to 1 HuhHt Fal1.H111, R ta f1rlL't, Hov.:1rJ Ftlton, Edmund
Ferch, Cyr I F1 .. l:hu, M, non
flamman~.
Ir nt: log.mtv, TcJ Fonk, Richard
E'a Chain, En:rt:tt Chri . . tt.·nsl·n, Mund
Fonk. Ark1.c Forg.1rty, ja(k Fn:d.mJ, J.inc Fm.:: JI, \Val tu Fru.: , Roht.:rt Frye,
'en, M. r1oru: C.h:mt.n', Evdyn ColLn~. Jo.i;,..:ph Conf<1rt1,
Joe C hron, P;iul C.11lu, Roh rt Cana\\.tY, \\ 1lhur Calhr.11th, Ht.:rhert G.11latin,
Eddie Conk\·, Steven Conrad, Franct.:" Cook, Janet Cook, Helen Copen, J.llll'
John Gal1.1tm, C:ithumt: G ll1g.m, John Galnch, Richard C,mz;, Arthur Garcia,
Chn . . 11an, Lucille Cl
Corr. Leno Cor ... o, S;1ra Co ... t;1ble, Eugene Co ta bile, Ralph Co .. t.rnzo, Mildred
Hore C.1rJnLr, John C:1tl: , Rogt:r Ct mu~n.ini, Dorothy Gentes. Fr.ink Gentile,
Cox, L<1rrainc Cry...tal
Ang:do C1..·rm1naro, Pt:tc Germinaro, Hdcn Gira, Lawrence Glerum, Evelyn
Ruth
PY
\~ Illi.tm
Bonodio, Mami1..· Bonofigl10, Lynn Boo..,tcdt, Lorr:unc Bordeau, Frank Brand,
Sally Lou Cummmgs, Bill;· Cunningham, Lottu; Cyzak,
n,1hl. V1rg:111ia Danhof. Vwla D;mtt.:, Ru.,scll Davcson,
Lino D.tymo,
G.ockncr, Ail1..·cn Godfrcv, David
Gottl.ch, Earl Grade, Gerald me Gra scr,
Joy De Kok, Alvah Dcn>morc, Yolanda De Santi•, Pharon De' Gardms, AlhlTt
M.1r1on Gra,:, Tonv (;r.1z1ano, Maqoric Cr cnwoo<l, Roh rt Gregorio, Rich:ird
De Simone,
Gregory,
HJrr:et De Vnes, Martha De Vries,
D..:zck, Dorothy Dick ... Fntz Diener, Jam
George De Young,
George
DH.:tman, \Valter Domn, Htkn
Donat, Lucille Prin!'mg, Jeanne Doot on, Frances Dorfmeist('r. Harold Do c~
935
62
Hdl'n
Gnffiths,
Dorothy
Guido,
Alta Gunderson,
Dale
Guthrie,
Palmaa Ch· 1k . .s, M 1r1oric H.illctt, Franct::S H.tm :s. Richard Han che, L. Enk
H1
n. M. ru: Hasenhurg, Ch.1rl1s H,rnhrich. Margaret Haun, Floyd H1u u
Don;}d Kotz, Chr:-tcr Kozd, Je.1ncttL Kozlo ky, Edw<lrd Kreh", Gutav Krcsain,
MilJrt.:d H,1u.c • Dorothy Jll'1P.tl n, l~rnc.:.st Hrn i.::y, Marjoni.:: Harmann, Donald
Charle" Krogh, Alice Krupin~ky, Hdcn Kuczt:nski, Anna Kulick, Evelvn Kuret•
If rz
\\ dliam H hhor.I, Lvlc H1,kn, Rol.nJ Hill, Th,cd<>r
II nn r
M rgaret
Hinz,
\\'alter
Hix
Jack
Holtman,
II II n
f, r Id
I
n r
H rr., E'canor H,>rnank,
lg
•
,
Mart
Huhcr, R
I Iv r
n, L 1h Inn
Jc
, M
Ell.
d Job sen
'h1rl y
Holm
M.uv
ky. Mar~· Ann L.1ha, Rohen Laiscn, Rkh rd La Jcunc.s,.e, Kathryne Lamacchia,
Rudv
Hodal,
L«rry
Anna Lapotka, Jack Larsen, Marjor e Lar .. cn, Rohcrt Larsen, El zaht.th Larson,
Holtman,
H.1!
Hoppe,
John L. 1rin, Mary La: r, Pollv Le D. n'k, Gertrude Lc1k
Hov.; to,
Hornet
Dorothy Le Roy. \\rarrt·n Lewis. Dori" Living1<ton, Ed\.\ard Lohan, HuolJ Long.
Hlapc1k,
M .. rgarct
E\. may H,;rnhy. Agni.:
c'l J-h.htr,
1
lnnk
Hill
Mmn11.:
Lorr in
Hu1~"cn,
g rct Jrnk ns, Rohen Jen en, B..itebcl!e Johnson
Joh sen
Adah
Hunt r, Jc
J.1co en, Stanh:v Jctzni.::w1c.t
C.1fford Johnson,
~J,.e Jo~ns n, Luro John on, Rohen John on, R
Ccn t~rnce Jona1t1, Rav )t::>rnt
Harry
cl Johnson,
Benny Ju 1k1c~ ch, Ktnn th
Madge
M qone
Lov.;:c,
Ben
Maddc~.
Luhm .. ki,
D.m1cl
Loi ..
Luchke,
Mignu s n,
Marjone
Eugene Leonard,
Lumley, PJ)ma
\\ 1lhcrt Makou-ke,
M1tk•
Lura,
Mamert,
Jul .... Marroney. Alfred Martell, Mike Martin, Gemma Ma .. .,an. Grt:tchcn
Mas JC, GroHr Ma .... c, Ch<t Mctt l<ik1, Kathn.·n Motzur. Eugene M.iurcr, Ray
Maurer, Rt::b<'rt Mevcr. Eh.na M1gliano
Dons Milkr, M:itt Miller. H.:dw1e
Karch r, R1charJ Kauu:. Virg1m.1 Kdc', Clari.::nce Keller, Ralrh Kcr .. t, EJward
M,>Jory, Helen MoJory, Fr:ink MoJngan, Virginia Merritt, Otto Monzfeld,
Keuch. Fl zahrth K11.:rto hu, M,1n: King, Richard K ng, Dolores Ktr!;ch, Nina
K.1thletn Murph;,
K1tchrn, Ed Klci!<t, Jeanette Kkmasdsk1,
Vincent Klemko, Helen Kl vick.s
Nd .. on, Maqoric Nelson, Marvin Nelson, Anton Nemetz, Victoria Neumann.
l'JwarJ
JIJ
].i<k N:cholai
Kbttz<wski,
Irene
K11oeJler, Lurraine Koc ~1
Kl11n.i hcsk1,
Klimek,
Eugene
Klos,
H.irolJ
LluyJ Kollman, ( yrylla Koprowicz, Marian K<Jto,.ky
Chari
N.nC1ch1<k,
B<rn1e NcJwcck , John N hi , Carl
Jack Nol.in, Jeanette No,alik, M. rg .• rct Oberst, Elayne O'Brien,
Ml rlc OgJ ..~hv, Cenn 1n c (YH<trc. Eda OJ Jani,
Lillian OJ .. i.::n, R.1y Ol~on,
63
b:tJ t.: nno-.:k". Stanlcv l)n~:ko Virg1md Orht, Eiken O ... rah1..rg, H rn:y
0-.tcrga rJ, Lolll"' 0-.rcrga rJ, Doroth\" 0-.tlunJ, Hdt.:n n . . trov.; k1, H.1rolJ
0\\ n .... Fl11vd Packman, Naomi Pait, Louts Pan .. cw1~:. Vera P;rny.in, Jo.,cphmt.:
P pon, Rav P n-.1:: u, Janet P:iuJ ... cn, Lerov P1uJ ... en, \'1ctona Pa\,\;l.1k, Ht h:n
I' tcr n, {;c rge Pfe 1' r, CarrPdl Pi.coo, H k
I' eke.- [), na!J Piehl, ( ath·
cnnc Pa:trich, Ru .... ,.JJ PulSOn u:r, Juha Pm::1, C rm Ba Pu1ol M n PL c ntL
Donald Pl v;, \\'alter Plut • Antomctt P
, Eddie Podb re-k1 Che tcr
Pohlman, Francs Polak, B1.,;rn1ce Polanskv, John Polo ... kt, Ernc ... t P nz10, Joe
P1... ch, B.uv Pl .... .Jr, ln'lt.: P tman, AJde Po,1kr k1, Anna Fratch, Ellsv.Prth
Pr lt:t.r. Viokt PrJ\ in"k}, Hi;; kn Pro~tko, Joe Pucci, MafalJa Pucci, Anna
Pi;ntilk. Ann Putcrk:i Jamt>· Putcrka, Bo..:rmcc Putra John R1.:inh:irJt, AJalbat
Rec-er, Muv Reffitt, Frink R me1k1-, D rothy R mk Doroth} R rich, Arnold
R Jt r, Hdcn Rtchard ... Eumcc Riemer, Mar;· Rinaldi, Eileen Rl[tr Man
R1::0 J).,rothv Robert ha", J ::> Rohb1rui, Robert Roeder, \\ ,rnda Ro<l w1ch
\\'crnt.:r Roemer. Henn· Rohling:, Vmla Romano, Anna Romon, Du:k R1 .. c, Jo .. ph
Ros • V1 t1...r Rr "''I, B{·tt~ Roth, R nsom R •th,
orm '1 Ruch .. am n, M. r1 Rum
ch1k,
l rmJn R11 .... 1.:I1
M. q. Sa' rn Elnj r S.1mp lrcoc 5 nJberg, V1r~11ua Sant
poalo, Al Schaefer. M rgarct Schocffcr, Lillian Schultz, Dorothv Schknkcr,
Hirry Schre1, Lill n Schult: Roger Schult.z, Harmon S aver, GertruJ S nt cri,
0
PY
935
64
Jo, rh Ser~. nt. Edg>r Serles, N th1li SenJ1s, Hazel S,·thnc, Jack Sha~kland,
M kL Sh.Hf\\ka, D"r1 Shi ".11v. \. An .1 S1l.1.k.1, Bcrn.1n.J S )\, 1no\.\11.h, 1"11z1h:·th
Simo on .... (;JcuJv ... S1rrin :>ros, H..11·P Sim), HilJa Simon, j.ack Swg r, Fr c
Sin:' <k1 !·Im r Sm th H "' rd Sr 1th Roh<Tt Smith, \\'and. Sn tin ki, Joe
S,
H z l · ,rens n. Magdak c Sor nson, Mdrg1u·t Soi 1 • J n Sp k v.1z.
Lt~
Sr tz r
Lorr me St nlq.·, M, tha·... St nl y, Milton Stenstr >m, Fr nk
t
Ollc Stone, De <f
Sturw., Ant
Sut r1 M1t ... h II S\.t<v. k, Scph1
Sz llg:l Hdcn Thomas R1chdrd Th mcv, Paul Thompson, Helen K.1lc11.:, La)ton
T >pd. H kn Trotter, Mildred Tulbeh • Bl .. :K~• Urh •n k1. ft
Va cdun ,
Fr.rnc('~ \' I 1Hini.:, \\ ,1n1c Van Lone, Mike Vc~pr1skd , Viola Dante, Kenneth
Vogl r. Alh<rc Wadsworth, All.in \\ 1lkcr, Fr,rnk \\'allace, Josephine \\' 1dew•
k1 Mn \\ "'ork , M1k \\'ainelk >, M.irgaret \\' ' ' r, Rohcrt \\ her, R•>bcrt
\\dis, Charle, \\ cndt, Dma \\ e-tra, Ern t \\ h1terock, H.1rord \\ h1tworth,
Jern \\hit ••o\rne \\ 1ck trom, F<tht'r \\ 1dm r, I rl \\''here, Rue r \\ 1 r :n,
lrlne \\ u.:rzh1ck1 l "orbcn \\ 1cr.zbKkJ, In.:nc \\ ~helm, Paul \\ 1lk.m , Earl
\\ 11liams. E d.i \\ rrch, \\' ltcr \\'rrch JrnI' e \\'oc1n1a:, Thom
Woodard,
c, eel .1 \\ mbJc,ki, Mildred Y ird1, Jack Yuk, B nm Zatonc, Ch.irks Zamoc,
Stcll.1 Z.rnio, Chc,tcr Ziko"' kv.
1
r
SOPHOMORE B
Pre id ent, Jam es
Ge n evieve Lukman .
I h :r farnilie
Pres ta;
Vice- Pr es1d e n ~,
h ave lived 1n Ke n osh a f or mor e than seve nt y.five years.
J } Ba I y. l>or dn I~ hie . \\ oc dr " f mk. M,7 n Peter-on. Eloise S,hul en
\\ht hr, <,r
\\ 1lcox
Th<
Their fa mili e~ have l ived in K enos ha for more than fifty years.
Mauncc Amhc!Jng. Clad;s BJrth. Donald H1orn, Robert Bundi·.;, P.1ul Ern~t.
\\ 1lhs fohrx on, LUClll1 Pu:ry M.1P.irct Pov.. II. \\.ddn.1 S~·hnrll, Rohen Torrty.
Albert
Homer ;
Secretary,
J;nc B II, Dorothv Beaum1 r, H lm1:th Becker, Harold Bergr n, Joyce B·rkhol:,
Th re 3 B1sc1gl d, Clo_ rlc
Bo· sen,
Ellis Brunner,
Bl kc, H lcn lkhatk1cv.1c:, Donna &ng, Dorotbv
(lid
Burbridge,
Berth
Bere--, L n.rJ Britt '1, Arth
Chai
er . \ olcu Ch n::b rs, Lo
Anker AJc on, Ehisa Albin, Lcui
Andrulis, Dorothy Appl
than fifty years .
Am"ros , \\'11l1am AnJ.r<on, Anton
I ab<lle Ar ndt, Edward B.1as, M.ry BagJnna • Mary
y,
Ch13pr<tta
La Verne
J •<rhin
Burnett,
C rt- re, :s'eoma
1c Clark, Joe
Jean Clark, J
Camro.1esch1. Clihon ( -0nard, R< bin Cooper. Julta Costa'l.zo, Ed\\: a rd Cro s,
Aurur
CC!f;)
C1.:r•, D no Cun, Gtrtrud
Czarnecki, Hrlcr D
nl: Vric.... Adel me n~ Chn .. tophH
I
Ju'.'.'Cph
~. L t.
Oc Marco,
n >k . . u.... tt. ~ rd Dolliver .
Anthony Drukunes, Hd1,,:n Duhan1 v.1cz, Lata Ervin, Harlcv Fakon, Eleanor
f1,h, Bernice Fcx, Clnle fr.drick <n
Their fam ilie'i have li ved in Ken osha f o r les
Rc--ell Burg,
Carn
Cogda,.
Rigo
Gr ZlJn,
Lorr ine
H II
R
H "le'.
Albert
brccht me er,
\'nne
s .. m Crcco
Charle< Fr e , H !en Gallo, \\ '11liam
Angeline
Grudzm ... t1.
Marie
n
H msmg.
Al cc
H "tmgs.
Loui:i
Hees,
Ruth
Heigl,
\\~ Ir. r
Helg en.
H i;gm,
Ch rlc
H. ff,
Robert H olm,
Guidotti.
Owen
H er·
Albert H omrr,
65
py-
935
Lt.:onarJ
Housh,
\\'1l11s
Huhl'ft,
\Vilham
Hu1.:ttcn,
Kathrvn
Huis!'C'n,
Lh.tt1mtJ, Ja~k Igo, Frances btvam:k, LoUJs Jal:t}UC", Jack Jami.:s,
"Cn,
Jensen,
En:}yn
Archie
Jone ... ,
Mar~
Donna
ret
Tonv
Penza.
Frink
£..,thcr J n-
M .• r\"ln
P1u ..on,
Gt.:nl
Rudy
Pra~htna,
Jcn,.cn,
Arnold
John..,on,
Richard
J hn~ton,
Potcnh::,
Mmmc
Kalb,
tanlcy
K:icuc\1.c.z,
V1rgm1a
M nan Q1.. rJ01w,,
Jurga1t1 ,
Lorraine
Pt.:tcr,1:on.
Pn:,ta,
Jame
J m R.1 mu 't.:n,
Pit
Vincrnt
,
Elda
R nzull1,
Hden Kc,hcl, Joe Kluka, Gkn Knud.cn. \\'1lham Kohloff, Manon Kra.1, Joe
Hi:kn
Ro"m '•
\\.1lhc
Ro:zon1, Jovce Rud\·, John
Lane,
M1kc
C.1rl
Lapccw1ch,
L3r ...on,
Jeanett£
_azarew1ch,
Mary Lc1mh·1ch,
Leon Lennertz;, \\"'1lma LipO\ .. ky, Thyra Li\-mg .. ton, Genevieve Lukman, Mary
Machan kc,
Edw-ard
Joe
Marcoc,
Madng:ani>,
G1
rt
Fred
Mancusi,
Muschncr,
John
Gertrud"
M ri:inkus.
Mandel,
Ro.-.t.:
Marshall,
Palmtr
M rtino.
Erm:1:t ~ h:rno, Allln SJndht.:q.~. Rot.:
C-.rmdla Sc•rbto.
Vir~inia
S .1mar.
St nc «
M n 1n
Stanky
Hcl n
Pu1Joka •
John R1tacca,
artor, Ro .iii
Russo,
Elm r
John
Rog n,
Rutlu"' lei
!),1\;,1glio, Ph1ll1p Scalzo
Schill in~. David Schmcll n~. John Schm1Jt, John
hoonmaktr, MarJ<•flc S1.'.hne1d r, Ru-. .. d Sc t
Anna
Phillip!-!,
PoN11lo,
H,1rncttc Rcgh, Anna Rcmh,irJt, Muy
Muy R1tacca,
Rt..:mhan.h,
Kuc.zyc, \\'alter La ha now. Paul
Tony
Proi<itko,
bn
La Combe, Margan.::t Ladv1cnka, Grace Lambrecht, \Varner Landcau, Martha
Vir~11u.1
Pctzkc,
Virginia
Const1nc1.
P1ctr;mti;di,
Kalinou'k, Alkn Kampman, Emon: Kan10", Irene Karahct"O"', Gordon Keller,
Krcnc1 , Myrl Krc .. ~in, Bt.:tt} Krt:-U!'-l:C, Hcnq
PY
935
Perri.
Cht:-.tlr S4•rt.:n •n.
,
Franc1
Holgcr Sorenson,
Shelly, Honora Sh1dd,
\\'"Hl1am
Spring,
Frank
L ·-tcr Stank. Harry SI ta, Edward Stange, Viola Stella. Jack Stephan,
St1.r~.z.
Kcnnlth Str mJ, Viet r Sturm.in
Andrei.-..· Talcronok.
Elaine
U.tllani~.
Daisy
Eleanor Mattioli, Ida Mayo, Alice Meade, Virgm1a Meurer, Thomas Meyer,
Thiel. Dolorc" Thwmg, Leona Travis, Mar:e Tunney, Donald
Joe M1h1s, Dan M11lcr, H,rhcrt M1lkr, Vincent Mmk, Leonard Molholt,
Va1tku", K.1thryn
A1bcrt Molinaro, Lill an Monta, Evelyn Montemurro, Alex Montgomery, K!:nncth
tura, Jamc..; Vcrncnc, Frank \\';1IJ0, Eli.zabcth \Vcavcr, Fred \\?c,.tmc, Rohcrt
dson, Alfred N1ccola1. Agnes Nielsen. Lc1u1.-. Noto, Leo
upru:nok, Thomas
O'Brirn, Ba"lla Q,tff, Donald Otto, Mary Pacf!h, Flor nee Parker. Frank
66
Valask~.
M.1rmus Van Boven, Frank Ventura, \V11liam Ven,
\\'h1thcd. EJ"ard \\'1lle, Lorraine W1>1rand, R.1ymond Woinicz, Stella Yacu·
km.\·h.·z, \\ 1ll1am YzJonow1ch, Jeanette Ztllcn, Ro c Zuffa, Vla"ta Zvoda.
Cfluffles a11td 0Jream
SPY STAFF
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
hrst
Semester.
~econd seme~ter.
Stanley 'ewherry
B.1•il BusacLa
Bl Sl~ESS EDITOR
\\'alter Turner
l'RL TL'(, DIRECTOR
VtPCCPt Farley
i\DVERTISI. 'G DTREC'TOR
C:harlc, Lahanov..«ky
,\SSOCIATE EDITOR
1·rank Holderness
Sl BSCRIPTIO.' MA. ACER
J.1ck \Vy
Pl BLILITY DIRECTOR
Hcroncn Kuro-kt
I AU I TY ADVISORS
1t'
Dorothy "later
H tT\,1rd C
Smith
I· >\Cl LTY
Marg icnte Rohmson Shnlcy Batter hy, B rmce Btelewtcz,
c;e1t•ule John ton, a t ted hy M1
Edith Damd
"E IOR"
D n Recd, Bette Blackhurn, Myron C<1rdo11, June Lmdhlom
Jo eph1Pc \'101.i, MarJone Cady. Mmmc Hut cn, Lorratn•'
Hotbauer. R".lhert Jacob en
<"LASSES
131.inLtie Boerncr
Cl l BS
\ho Alh1'11 Jape Herne.·
BOYS' ,\THLETICS
tanlcy Kleme e kt, Peter La M cch1a
I TRA·.\fl.JRAL
Merton Stauffacher
GIRLS' ATHLETJC
r. n tance 'ennedy
Bu acca
ewberry
Turner
rarley
PY
1935
67
The Spv was first puhltshec.l 111 1912. Sponsorcc.l hy
Tn-mper, ne\\ school pnnc1p;tl, the hook w.ts com·
po~eJ hy Lawrence Eastman, the ec.l1tor, anc.l Arthur
Ltrn;:m.t~, m.tructor anc.l first ac.lv1sor
Alex Olshefsky
\\as the hustness m.rnager.
Okl though the Sp,· c, it was prececll'cl hy several other
school puhlicat10ns. ~u1d fat, a paper, haJ appcareJ a
early as 1895.
A History of Knwsha High chool and Annual, the
l.trgest volume e\·er prnc.lucec.l hy the high school, was
wntten anc.l published m 1903. It chro111clec.l the year
from the founc.lmg of the school, printcJ the p1cturco. of
each grac.lu.ttmg class, anc.l containeJ much original h1ston·
cal matenal.
An 1rregul.trly puhlisheJ magazine, the Owl, wa · fol·
loweJ by the P1~e c.lunng the fir t c.lecac.le of this century.
The latter paper became the Spy 111 1912 anJ was pub·
lishl'cl as a monthly magazine till 1926.
Besic.les Langmas, ,t<lv1sors of the annu;tl have been
Oh\'er Hill, Miss Olga Stieg, and Mt s Dorothy later.
The respons1b1lity for prnc.lucmg the annual falls mamly
on the shoulc.lers of the cc.l1tors an<l busmess managers.
On the pv such officers have he'n.
G
Labanowsky
DO
)00
100
DD
~D
=10
PY
935
\\ yss
Kurosk1
BRIDGL G THE YEAR
Helen Cederberg. assisted by Miss Edith Da111cl, Enis Mont·
erestcll1. Pnsc1lla Booth
COPY READL 'G
Jacob Herrmann
TYPI 'G
Janet Tully. Ruth O'Brien. Dorothy Herrmann
BORDER
Russell Jacohsen. under the d1rect1nn of Kenneth Brown
.-\DVERTI I~G
Leigh Virgil. Ralph Kmg,lcy \\ 1ll1am C
chnut:. Loren
t1lle. Merrill Rhev. Paul Ga1lus. Henry G1anton10. Charle
, trangberg. Frank. Remc1k1s. \\'illtam · H>pcr
SuBSCRIPTIO 'S
Gail Hansis. \\ tilts H,1mm1)nd. Charleton Brown
PRI~TI 'G
A.< istant Foremen: .-\Ian .-\nderson. Y11.::hacl Banove:
Pre.<Hnen: Karl E1ls George P1as. lne
ta111ch. Howard
\\' c'ch. Richard BloxdorL . Robert Powell. J ihn Terwall.
George Godlewskr. Edward Hartnek. Clarence Otto. Rus·
sci Richter, \\"1llard 'orenson. Rohert Gannawa)
Compo.11t11".» Gordon Anderson \\.alter :\nderson. Ken
neth Brugger, Milton Dctcrt, Andre\\ Enhntf. Frank Fal
cone. \\'1lltam Fina. Dant.: Furlco111. J<•hn Galv1ch. D\1nald
Hcr:og. Theodore Huxhold .• 'ick Koos. John Mayer. John
"!\1.::Gill. Robert Miller. Tom ~fontemurro Ted Oster.
Charles R1::0, George R1::otto. Robert chuet:. \\'1il1am
Tern all. John Yarnkowi.:::. Frank avagltc. James Putcrka,
,loc Bilotti.
68
1912
191 3
1914
I 91 5"
1916
191 7
191,
191 9
1920
192 I
1922
Lawrence Ea~tman, Alex Olshcf~ky
Manon Ha\Tm, Harold Picken
Earl chm1t::, Eel. Haubnch
Haro Icl C:urt1s, Elmer W 111. or
larence Joernc.lt, George Dor ey
Art Heyman, Bill Purnell
Gertruc.le Langan, Jack Bruce, Jo eph Ep tein
Roger V mcent, 1c.lney Bisno
Chester Zeff, Robert Murdoch
Gordon Brme, Law on Adams
George John on, Evan Polaski
William Schroeder, Hemrich Kueho
Rohert V 1rgil, Frank Keenan
192 'i Harry Pious, Kenneth Clark
1926 Harry Pious, Richard Sullivan
1927 Casimir cheer, Rohert Williams
1928 Leonard Standrnger, Edwin O'Brien
1929 Betty Erlenhorn, Arthur Even, lngve Olson
1930
ancy
elson, Lawrence Meltesen
1931 Cathleen Corr, Malcolm Bishop
19;2 Mary Cook, Charles Story
193 .' Betty Even, Conrad Shearer
11n4 Betty faen, Stanle}
ewherry, Jane Cleary
193 'i Basil Busacca, Stanley Newberry, Walter Turner
ThL fin,rnually successful Spy orga111zat1on ohta111 · the
funJ-, necessary for the production of an annual from
thrl'l' scource · : suhscnpt1ons, a<lvert1s111g, and a"essments
m cl,lsses an<l clubs for pictures.
The Spy has purcha~ed a number of acce~ one· for the
lm:h school pnnt shop, where the yearho.,k is now pnntccl .
These pu~ces of equipment mclude ·
1 Ltrge Im pos111g Table
1 8xl2 Press
I PO\, er Stitcher
Cluing Machrne
5t.rn<lmg Book Press \\'Ith 26 Bras· Bound Boar<ls
Complete "ix7 Camera Outfit
Ko<lafleLtor (T wm flood lights)
Smee 1932, the Spy annual has been printed and l·ound
1n the high S<.hool pnm shop under the J1rection of
H,lf\ ard C m1th, the pnntmg rn tructor.
The 19 '\5 Spy is unique among the school\ year books.
Some of the u ·ual current·year material has been ~acn
fice<l to allov. mtere~trng or valuable h1stonc:.d data to 1:-e
pubh5hed.
192.1
1924
Reed
H1..rr1
Blackburn
Boerner
Kem• e k1
Cederbtr,
tit.:rrmann
La Macchia
Tully
B nove:
\'ir1t1l
Krng::Jc,,.
i\.lbmi
Ke ned\
Rob1. • r
...\nJer~on
spy-
935
y
1935
The temporary change 111 emphasis has been occasioned
by the aJ\cnt of the memorial year, 193'i The Keno"ha
City Ccntenn:al, the nationally cclebratcJ found111g of
the Boston Latm chool JU>'t three hunJrcJ years ,tgo,
anJ lc'ECr memorial occasion;; have ma<le a historical motif
f< r the py almo~t 1m perativc.
In this year's book may he found photographs of the
Kcno;;ha of the pa ·t. In the pnnt · when: people are
hmvn, the figures arc almost invariably Keno"ha High
,hool graJuatcs. Typical of the persons 111 the pictures
arc: Harry Baldwm, Mm me tarkweather, Li:::ic tan·
bridge, Horace C..:ile,
athan Allen, Alice BraJy, Jenme
Bluimc, Jes. 1c Johnson, Walter Farr, and Mary Dexter
Dewey.
The old photograph
which appear on the d1vi,,1on
sheets and m the "Bndging the Y cars" section -were
'iO
<;CcureJ for m:e in the Sp-v hy Mis-; Eli::aheth Lyman. They
;ire printeJ through the courtesy of the KL'110sh,1 County
H1stoncal oc1cty.
The camera artist ""·ho snappcJ the rem.trk,thk photo·
i~raphs \vas Louis 1.1. Thier;;, a student at Kcno<ha Hi1zh
School Junng the early sewnties
ot ,ti] the pages of the 193 'i Spy arc filkJ with histori·
cal m,ttenal. The staff ka\es the task of <lis.;emmatmg
more de'atled informat10n to the student wntten h1 tory
(,f K. H.
me Decades, and to the city's great Centcn·
ma! Pageant.
The picture of nearly everyone affiliated with the school
appears 111 th1 · new, enlarged Spy a hook whJCh is a
concise recorJ, not only of the e1ghty·s1xth year of the
school' history hut more briefly of the other eighty·
f1\'e as well!
FRANKLIN PRINTERS
GUILD
Founded in 1932
J 1r t s, mt: ttr Pfl!l1J-.;nt, Thomas L ken \' ci.: Pre 1J nt, R charJ I v n ..
1
cJu kq, M1d1.td H 1110\t:Z, Trc uru, Le rn.1rJ Stolfo; f
ty Adviser, Harvard
( Sm1tt
Su.::cn(... S1.0mc tt:r Prt: 1J-.nt Vmccm f rle}, Vic\: Prc!ll c t, J1..hn (, 11
St: rct. ry, M1eh4lcl HarnJ\C'Z Treasurer, R1charJ Ll\tnJu .key; Faculty AJ1.1~er
H rv rd C Smith.
N, I Add lsor, Ah > Al1'm1, Moch c Brno•<% Rtd ird L 'cndwkq, Vin·
t:nt f rl1..v, Chesur Pl'ttrson Pt.:tt:r l:iqu ntt, FrcJ Baku, H \.\drd \\elsh,
Ru ,
R1Chtu. fr.~~ Tu .. II, \\'11larJ s, ren on, Karl E1l , George God
It.
1
1\r\ M t on, Jr.>e St m h, Ruben Po\'\£ 1 • fr nk S c... c Jim Sa 1uno,
RK~ rd Bl xdorl, B,JL-r Oonsmg. Joh" (,af!o, John Hip~nt'k, Lou' Bonofiglic
:\nthonv H1>lov.:1cz, AJh rt Koo , Th rn
l lkCt'. Leor. Jrd Stolfo, M tthe1.."
K ,JL k • Lot! Schmidt
, \<lv,rnce<l tu<lents m pnntmg constitute the member·
-hip of the Frankl111 Printers' Guild which was orgamzed
111 the Fall of 193 2 hy Harvard C' Sm 1th, print111g m·
tructor. The club gives students who have completed the
entire coun-e an opportuntty to mainta111 their mtcres:
tn<l kill 111 pnntmg.
o tudent less ad\·anced than the
third <emes•er in pnnt111g is admitted to membership.
1l•son, James Clay, Charle- Van P<ttten, and
Walfor<l
D~ane C'hristofferson v.. ere former members of the Guild
In 1933 the Printers' Guild paid a vioit to the C_ntury
of Progre Exposition and observed the display n graphic
<trts. Another excurs1< n took the members :o the We ·ter 1
Pr:nters at Rac111c. Pa<ldock' Lake was the scene of their
annual spring picnics 111 1933 and 1934.
1\ Graphic Arts award 1~ pre<ented hy the Franklin
Printers' Guild to the graduate \1.•ho has shown pecial
mtere<t 111 pnnting and has ma'n•ained a good -chola tic
record. Awards have been earned by James Clay, Ca I
Larsen, and Loms Schmidt.
Experienced in printmg, the members of this organiza·
t1on do much of the work on the material that is prin~ed
111 the department. Commencement programs, tickets,
,rnd numerous pamphlets are the product of this organ'.:a·
ti on.
71
s
1935
STUDENT COUNCIL
Founded in 1911
Fir~t
Cad\:
.S1.:m1.: .. t r· Ch d C..oun . . il<>r, Rl""' · (I rh, \'u·c·C..oun\.'.tl( r. M r1<ric
1nJ Trc .. uru
J in-.: HKk . F11.:ult} Ad' r, M 1rt1n R. f.. hol
'ccr..:Ur)
M.1r,ortt: Cad}, CorU1 n Chamber~. t::... thcr Lcdgn
( larcn..:c M It\.."' n
J) no I Reed, Vcrron Rohloni:, \\ oltcr \\'ell', Jacquelm
1-l tt.r<h,, R
II
( l.rke. M,r n Cordo:i. \\ 1lltS H mmonJ, Robert HurtJ.: n. l C'\.\.I Lr on,
\\ alur Turner, Mildn:d Blox..Jorf, Henry C1anton.o l ck Johnson, \\' ll1am
fuhnson, H rrllt S..:hlag r, Arg ·} , Bilott1, John (~<)( d\.\JT', [,c rcn .St 1h:, J.. nt.:t
SPY
935
ome dei:?:ree of self-gm:crnment for th~ student hody
\Va Mr. Tremper' aim when he started the tudent
Council -;oon after he hccamc pnnc1pal A vcnt,thle age
he,;ide other organi:ations, the tudent Counol has score'
of names of early members who have acquired fame or
fortune. Amon~ them arc Kenneth
ord,trom, Betty
B!a1r, Homer Bi::hop, Kenneth Brnv,·n, Sarah Britton
Kenneth Clark, Douglas fa·an~, Ellsworth Riel, Eli::aheth
Bonson, Lloyd Landgren, and Kenneth avage.
Upon the shoulder of this orga111::at10n re ts the responsibility for the de 1gn of the class nng and pms. In 192 7
72
'-'o:.:
nJ
Sm ~tcr
(:, rJ~ I • s r fi:lf\
( h f ( <unc1hr
fl I
I oo I{ J tro m, \\oil
M qor 1..: Srl 1hr
rr
ur I
'
Rl
l
1
Viet (A n 11 r Myron
• )o AJ\ I l r. M rtm R t hol
1 (Irk
H• k . l
Sim' ne.
Bl rn r
Pr tt
t
the tudcnt Council cho e a -;tand;trd nng for the chcnl
Though the I 9 ~ 2 Council urged the adoption of the
tudent Cooperative pl<tn, 1t w,t, not mtroJuced mto
K H
The ,;amc Council 111troduced the honor roll
pomt system nO\V effect1\·e 111 the <chool.
Among the plca.;,mt highlights in tt · hi tory the tudent
Council pl.tees the I 926 cha-t1~ement of the teacher whn
·nterfered with phy,1cs ~tudents lea\ing cl.t~s for rdre·hmg
aqua.
It w,1s thrcugh the effort.; of the Student Council that
the pnce of haske~ball ticket.; was reduL ·d to twenty cent .
ANNEX STUDENT
COUNCIL
Founded in 1933
5
hr r S ml hr
Prt hh nt, J irl M11rton ; V1 t~~Pn: dt 11r.
r r.<v h re.I Cl11mha l aculri Ad" r, ll T . Joh
R, l
rt
hm tt
1 au.rt Ct i\nduson, P .Hrac1:1 H, 'Al y, Bill C unnmghotm, Ir }.; r, ntilc,
MaJi(t l )\.\, l'lull r N1 "m. 11, l·r rk H ,1n n, Al cc Krup o k1, lhrnic Pcil,rn k1
I I v..orth Pr 1ti1 r, J ro11 \: R 1 m.11k , I l1 k Rot', Hill S hm11z, Joe S hmn1
Infant hrnthcr m the <ll1ncx h ar~ <l remark.ti ly clo c
res mhlan cc to the wonJly·wi ' ~u<lent Coun 11 in the
mam hutl<lm~ The little fellow, i:reate<l 111 193 3, follow.
111 1t ol<ler relative' very foot teps.
Even he fore there
was an annex, there wa ,t meeting of counc1llor..:. In the
prmg of 193 3 repre •ntative of the •vcral junior high
hool met for <l <l1scu sion meeting The following fall,
the Annex Coun• ii wa organized .
Alfre<l De Simone wa the fir t pre 1dent, with Eunice
Schneeherger a v1ce·pre 1dent, and h1rley Battershy as
~c retary .
The •>fficer ,rnd memher immediately hegan
to coordinate their cla mate - into a unified tu<lrnt hody.
S co d S m '" l'r rd I, R h<rr \\'rll , Vic · l'r rd nt L '" nc
n:!:, Sert ry, (, rrru 1 S ntJtr•, ! acu ity Ad\1 r, D. T . I hn.
And r
(or rim I
Suira ri, Mdt n St er tr om, R11 rt \\. ell , Ari n Z1mmt:rman,
h . en JI Chamher
l. rl Mort on, N1d Alf.100 , M;ic Cha e, Ro rt S hrnut
Prcrar:n., m.it r-.d for the Ltrger hutl<ling to a 1m1bte
i the infant\ fir t du~y A - F "r t A . 1stant to the mam
buil<lin · ~, it undertake to ,miuse scho il spmt m ,rnncx
r;•nk . Its meml ers .dso perform rou·ine <lut1e ahmJt the
.tnnex.
The pre·1dent of the annex tudcnt Council c.ccup1c
the scat of authority at sophomore assemhlies and presides
mer the well·on 1an:::c<l tu<lcnt ho<ly at ,di u~h gather,
ln!.~S .
mce the advent of the council, the annex has had it
tate of chaos replaced hy quiet, organization, an<l order.
ow even annex tu<lcn• frel the hand-of-authority
y
1935
QUILL AND SCROLL
Founded in 1931
Fr t St.:m . . tlr Pn:..1Jent, Rt(harJ Elli...on; V1ci.:~Pr .. 1J nt, Flor1.:nl.'.:e Brmk·
Srat.·t C\, .: \n dine B1lott1, F.Kultv Adviser, M1~ ... Ch~uluttt: A. Moody
Si.:c nJ S mr t ·r Pr 111Jt ""'t, Aho A1hin1, V1"-'e Pre 1J nt M.1rg.1r t C'...olcman,
S l.'."rltary, M.1rv Lollie Dunn; f.1( hv AJ, .!'t:r, M
Charlottl' A. Moody
:\ho Albini, florence llrmkman, Ra ti Bu-a<c , Richard Elli-. n, J<.>an Brc.s·
1
man
Quill anJ Scroll, ,t chapter of the 111ternat1onal honorary sooety, \\'<b started 111 Kenosha, March 4, 197'1, hy
Mis· Charlotte MooJy. There were only three charter
members, Alice Wallendorf, Mahe! \vift, and Dan
Ragon.
Due to ~tnct quahficat10n for membership, the cl uh 's
-;1:e mcrea.;ed slm~ ly. However, by June, five more
.;tudent · h,td qu,thtied, anJ heen 1111t1ateJ Muy Cook,
Ro>e D'Angelo, H~len Haglund, Margaret Lippert, and
Hilmer Gustavson.
pnng, 197'2, brought four new mem~cr·, B'·ty Even,
Doro·hy Roders, Clair tone, and Irvmg Walhce. Ruth
Lepp, Joan Schut:, anJ Lo\l.:ell RicharJ,on JOmcd the
group 1n January, 19:;:;
W th Mrs Mary D. Brodford as speaker, a writer'·
reception wa.; helJ 1arch 2, to cre·tte mtere t in a pro-
ucr. Marg rct Col man, Angchnc B1lott1, J.ine H·rn k, Muy l...>u1 e D nn
poscJ booklet of creat1\ e wntmg, nameJ ''BuJs." The
first publication J,tte W<h May 22, 193)
At the Medill Press Conference,
orthwestern Uni\"crsity, Lowell RJChanbon and Irvmg Wallace won first
in the team contest and placed 111 eJitonal, sports, and
fea•ure writmg
When the "Kene\v:" exp1reJ from acute financial
trouble Quill anJ croll haJ no way to renew iL mem·
l·ersh1p, hut ten iournah-;m tudents \\:ere initiateJ as
a,· ociate members.
In May, 1934, a team of four \'.1.'as sent to the MeJ11l
Pre - Conference at
orthwestern. Later 111 the term,
the econJ eJ1t10n of "BuJs" was issued.
This spring a Keno~ha team again entereJ the Medill
compet1•1on. "BuJs" was spon.;ored for the th1rJ time
0
BET A PHI KAPP A
Founded in 1918
hrst Seme t r
~
r t •}
n
Tr,
Pre 1J..:nt
u·r
Vernon R(Jhling, V cc·Prcs1J..:nt, LoUJ
l >
S hm dt,
F cu:t\
AJH r,
Charle•
Slhm1Jt,
Second Seme ter: Pre!1dent, Helmuth Sturm, V cc-Prc 1dcnt, Hcrh<rt Ward;
0
\\'alt<r
Secretary
Ihn RccJ, Elm r Kaut<nburg. EJ .... irJ Lulun, ( r<nc M It en, • 'orman
M yer M tthe" 1'ulb1 k1, T"' Kl• '3, L rl Y rd1 John Pcrn John l tavanck
Ci1.1dotu
Smffing .tt lowly harharians in true rnlki!;e fraternity
tyk, the lone Greek· letter society of K. H S. <till retains
the exclusive standards 1t set up when It was founded in
19 L hy y Ivester W. W arc.l, physic instructor and assiY
t. nt pnnc1pal. At its meeting-; sc1ent1fic prohlem· which
.tre too complex for regular cla:s \\'Ork are c.liscussec.l.
The early cluh, which was very popular, hm1tec.l it<
memhersh1p to twenty male·, prohihit1ng g1rb entirely. Its
memhers were held together hy "honc.l of eternal frienc.l,h1p ·• anc.l a common c.lcsire to kn l\\' more ahout physics.
Leonard Hahn, T ony Gianantomo, Everc~t Mc eil, Len
Buchman were the first officer of Beta Phi Kappa.
1\nnually, the club held a full day picn1L After a visit
to Yerke Ob~crvatory, the mcml er· playec.l ba-oeball at
John H lrl"
nd T1
uri.r, \\alt r Turner.
k., Ly n
'coHlle, Arthur Pct:kc, Mitch
G.nko... k>, ChC$tc1
Padc.lock' · Lake.
A beach party, in no way scientific, wa also held. The
twenty girl compamons of the cluh memher, on these
occa ·10ns were voted upon at a regular meeting and the
-elections were quite final. H owever, the young lad1e.;
were alway< well fec.l, anc.l recorc.ls show no refmals fr'-'m
those 111v1tec.l to Kappa heach partie .
Beta Phi Kappa ha~ two par~icular c.li ·tin t1 ins. it wa~
the owner of the \'Cry fir-t radio set at K. H
, 1t had
an orchestra which played at school <lances.
In recent years, the cluh has \'Isited the Adler Plane·
tarium and the scientific exhihits of the Chicago World'~
Fa•r
DA VINCI CLUB
Founded in 1931
hr .. t t;i;;:mc ... tcr: Pre .. 1du1t, CorJ( n Chamh1..r .. \'11..c•Prc-.1Ju1t. Rohen Mc._ "c1l
'-'1..:crct:i.rv rd Trc .. 1ir r ( harlottL Tru<:.k v.~ki; Fa1..~uhv AJ" ~ r Mi .... Gt q;.1an:l
l Canhc:d
M r ..·cl!a Antlrckt1:-;, J<t~4ucimc
r d1-1, (JPrJon Chamber~, Hckr
CL tt!1ana
SPY
935
Harke , R1 th H. U"ton,
H. ttt.:r"h~, Catherine C' hk. Jo-.e, h Cor
f)'A.ng le, R \ Pl' c, \'1v1a11 l:nlidund,
MHt~
L td
L. t..;f l mvr nJ
R1 h rt
111ce no Greemv1ch Village \vas handv and no Latm
Quarter stretched forth welcoming arms, Mi's Georgiana
Canfield gathered together high -;chool arti~t · and, with
Conrad Shearer and Rtchard Kilt:. a. the first presidents,
'tarted a lPctl art colony, the Da Vmo Club.
At once the duh ;:ought funds for its treasury. The
fir t year a dime d:rnce finance<l a trip to Chicago for
twenty member . There they visited the Ar~ Institute
.tn<l the Field Mmeum.
At Da Vinci Cluh meetmgs, members d1scu s art techmque and study the history and developmen~ of the arts.
\'\.'itching easily from canvas to tage, the duh Ji~-
76
S,
md Slrne-.t r:
s~ crct.1rv
n
Prl dt.nt, Jo crh Cori ld1111
rnd Tr
L. Canfi IJ.
"llfCf.
Chu le th
V1 ... c·Prcs dent,
Ren td R.if•
rru--k v. k . I· h:ulq. A VI er
Mi.:~t1!,
'na Mansfilkl, HL1tn Nurr1cnok. Rt.:
~. thcr
St ri o. Ch rlotrL Tru,,.kc ,._ .. kt, l t<1n,1
I
M
"a R.ffo1 , Lut1l1a R bnts,
Tucholl,
f,.._ 1nrn
\\'hit k r
."\rthur Young
pl.tye<l its .;kill in theatrical ,trt in 1933-34 hy presentrng
a sha<low movie before hoth the as~emhlies. Ammate<l
hits of <larkne'" enactl'<l, 111 pantomme, the tn.tls of .t
stru~gling portrait pa111ter from re.1ect1on to <lejectionto :ucc1>s and .t <hadow wed<lmg.
Hearts an<l paper !,tee ad\-crt1::c<l a Valentme dime
<lance, sponsore<l hy Da V 111c1 this year, an affair which
proved another financial succe'"·
At holiday time the members decorate festive container-.
and fill them with candy. These gay hits of cheer carry
Da Vrnci\ Christmas greetings, smcere and art1 tic, to
the y( ung people of Willowhro 1k Sanitonum
SEMINAR
Founded in 1921
first S..:ml:c.tt:r
Pru1Jeot Dor(. Harri . V ce·Prcs1d nt MJtthew A11dre.1
S1.: 4rtt.1rv B n Ko\dC
rrt' ur r. John Shatrwk , f acult, AJ\ t:r M1 M ry
A Doh rtY
S on Semesti:r· Pre 1 Jent, MHon C1_.rdon, V1ce·Pr 1d1.:nt, John Hlstmgs;
S er t n·, Lrnc~t K peck1, Trt: lflf. Marthe\\ Andr a Fa.cult} Ad" er, M
Mary A Doh<rt y,
f11rns
M 1thc11. Andre> Leonard C:c•rcckt, \\oil Hammond, Myrop G rdon Dore.I
John H 1<,ltni.!:, (};(.H Kluc-k, I.e.> KonJratov.1cz, Ben Kovacs, Nicholas
KO(_ , 'R.ubt:rt R.. an J•ilin Sh tr"" kl. Ernc:;t Kop1.:ck1. Forest Ko . . acs. Ja k
Do" e, Mchm G rl> R,Jb<-rt Kdkr, Rog r Gerlmg, Dale lhlcnfrlJt, R<>bert
)Jcobson, B,nton HJ1nmond, ChJrI
AmbclJng, Bo;;rn rd Mdke\U:
Although orgamze<l with the pnmary purpose of in·
LrLasmg mten:st m chemistry, emmar has not confine<l
1· acti\'lties strictly to "Clence All stu<lent projects haw
rece1ve<l :t ar<lent support. Miss Mary Doherty, the
founder ,m<l facul~y a<lvisor of the cl uh, ha - kept it active
Officers for the cluh were fir..;t ekc•c<l for the fCClln<l
eme;ter of the year 1920·21. Carl chm was presi<lent,
Mary Lu<lw1g, ccretary: Elmer tctson, ;:ergcant·at·arms
Interest an<l ability lil chemis•ry is rewar<l.::<l by emmar
Each year the club presents a valuable awa·<l to th:
"tudent who has done the be,t \\'Ork ill the department
This year Myron Gordon received the Seminar award.
Memory h)(iks fille<l w!th clipping- and pictures wer<.:
p:-e:'cnted to the 1926 football team by the club as one of
its n .n ·soentific projects. Books and leaflets on the late ·t
<levelopments in chemi try are kept in the library, an<.J
\\'hen the club 1 pro~perous, equipment 1· purcha ·e<l fo1
the chem!stry department
Among the alumni of Seminar are Rudolph Pen:a
Loms Bristow, Dr. George chulte, Gerda Paul en, Harr)
Cchn, D,mald Ritter, Verneale later, Kenneth Brown.
and Or\' lie Leonard
0
77
SOCIETAS ROMANA
Founded in 1931
F1r:-.t \:m1... .. ta: Gonsub, Grace M.ilmgrcn, Lucn.'t1a M.1d; Pr.1ctor, Helen
Ccdt.:rhng: AcJilc, Matth w AnJn.::a; Qu t: .. tor, Houv (;1.mton10~ f'1ctilt\'
AJv .. u .... Ml .. Alma M1.:rrick. M1'" Carohn Holah.
1.. hd Dov..-.e. M r •'.'or t Coleman. Lucn.t1a M:id, M r1ori..: Murdoch, Grace
Malmgn:-n, lrcni.:: M, .. ::uk\.\-.kl, La Vi.:rn And r ... on. Jrtnc H..:rri~k. {.A.in:-.tlncc
K1..:nnl'J._,., H ... kn Ca~h1·n. Ht:nry C1;1nton10, M.1r1or1t.:
d .. on, MHthn" An1.. r1..: 1,
Cemma M .... ~ri. Eileen () .. tt.r~r~. Marv Bi.: t1:1.', JJck hJnklanJ, Jam.:t S n-
y
35
The "Bim1llennium Vergilianum" occurred in 19~0, the
year which also marked the heginning nf the Societas
Romana, the pre:-ent Latm cluh, which \vas founded by
M·ss Carolyn Holah and Miss Alma Mernck. Among its
early memher were Helen Grahner, M,try Cook, Ione
Ripley, and Hedwig Rauer.
Celehrating the two-thousandth anmversary of V erg1l's
hirth the Latin 'tudents pre ·ented a pageant 111 an October
as5emhly. The drama, Dido and Aeneas, took its story
from the fourth hook of the Aeneid
The officers of this cluh take their names from the old
78
S"-·conJ St:m sta . Consul, Cran: M lmgrcn, Luc1tt1 M.1cl Pr.ittor, H Jen
drrh~ ri;, Ai:Jilr. M Htht v. An<ln.:.1; <ll1.1t t >r, H rv C1antcn10: F1culty AJ ..
\'l~Ll:-., M1~:-. Alma Mnri1..k, M1 .... Carolvn H()lah
r e!lhi.:rg, Mi!JrcJ BloxJorf, Vn .. M11mm erts. Janrt Po\\f'l1. R y 01 ( n. Bl.in he
Botrntr, Blrlllct B dt.:\l,,JC'Z. Mi!Jru.J Cox. M rgar t Sch,1etl<r. H rrit.:t S . . hl gt:r,
Orl'lla Quid, \\ il11 John .. on, Joe Kluk..1, (,cnc P1etr.mgd1, Ho\\,1rJ Dollncr,
ni•Coth\" App}1,;
Roman ci\·il officer~. Two con uls alternate m pre 1ding
at the meetmgs. The aedile 1s the secretary, and the
t1uae::;•or collects the dues and fines of the memhers.
' The Lat:n award of the at1onal Classical As. ociation
1s pre<ented by OC1etas Romana to the tudent in the
graduating chc who ha the highest average in the semor
year of Latin. This hrnnze medal was first won hy Bernice
Anderson m 1931 Other· who have received the award
are Ione Ripley, Helen Grahner, Alice Lagenhack, Helen
Jupmk, Bernard Apple, M,try Ann,t Jen<en, and Bernice
B·elewicz
IL CIRCOLO DANTE
Founded in 1931
t f!i.t s, "'Jle!HT
sl~ TC"t
Pru111d1.:nt,
J1
rv 1nJ Tn:a llhf. Lolli c
crh
y
Ttnut:1
v cc-J>rL 1Jcnt.
N1dc.
nt< rm, Fatultv AJ, 1s1.r. N choL!ii
Butt n,
~1
g ro
.Second S1.:m t r: President, Angeline B1lott1; V1c(•Pr 1dent, Aho Albini,
· act. rv nd Tr
rn, V:dcnt
M r cc • f"aculty Ad" 1 er, 1''1cbola MJg 1r·J.
Pl t r M.
ri, Fr;ink \,l nt I • Alfnd n.._ !Simone, Aho A hint
C r Cea rro,
EJvigc M.1cc.1rt, V.1knttntt Maraccm1 S;ir.i Lo .. t htlc, Jant: Cappcll111a Marghe-r·
t:i &.naJ10, Th r
1 Bonadio, Julia Pmzi, El 1e Falc1om, Hden Co; en, He en
S, v.1glio, \'iola Rom.1no, M~'TIJc Bunofigl o, Ralph F -nt,
1tk B11ttl ra, Joe
TlnL:t.1,
Youngest m the lingui tic groups, II Circulo Dante,
founJeJ hy Mis Ru·h Brown, give· ..;tuJents an oppor·
tumty to practice speakmg m Italian. Italian life and
cu ·tom·, especially those which have heen brought to the
UniteJ ta•e·, are stuJieJ a~ one of the cluh's most ahsorh·
ing mtere, t .
Harry Grasso, AJolph CarJinali, anJ
ancy Metallo
were regular attenJant · at the early meetmgs Offices m
the club h<l\'e heen held hy Mary Ma1tilasso, Adolph
CarJinah, R1charJ Sent1en, Peter LaMacchia, and Jane
Cappelma.
Folk dances, a colorful part of life in Italy, have fre·
quently featured the programs. The tarantella has been
danced in costume before the cluh. Facility in peaking
has heen hastened through games and plays presented in
Italian. In December the holiday customs of Italy dominate the meetmg.
Belie\"ing that language is only a serious pursuit on
test day , the duh frequently hold partie: to g1\·e le\"1ty
i~s due. Il C1rcolo Dante recently decided to present an
award to the outstandmg student of Italian tn the gradu·
ating class. This June the award was given for the fir t
time.
Th1rty·one 'tudenL are enrolled in th1 popular club.
Louse v.nturn1, Pd r LaMacch1a, LOUIS Fr ngelo. Ra ii Bus.1cca
Ange o R:zzu Angeline Bilotti. M ry Luc13r. , L.rn.rence &nofigl o, .t-r,mk
Bar .. a.
79
SPY
1935
CIRCULO ESPANOL
Founded in 1924
hrst Slm tt.r
Prt.. 1dlnt, i\ho Alht . V11:e-Pr1.:s1d nt, R11..·h rJ Elhson,
·o.;..._rctan. ()lga Br ett1 F1Lultv AJ, lf', Mr Annette Hall and Miss Leona
· hu -kr
"~cond S mt~t r
Prt• 1dent, Ahr i\'h1111; V 1.: ,J>rc!l.1Jcnt, Rtdltrd Fii on,
ccrct>rv. Olg. Brunat1 I 1cult, AJ, 1 er , Mrs Arcc<tc Hall rnd MIS L or
S bu, I r
Aho Albini. _fc._an Be.rn, Dt:no Bcrn;li:ch1. \\.1lb m B nnc~ \r10kt Borden,
()lg Brunu, .lt..ancttc ( tt\H'il, l·Hhn CbamNr,.,, Ar'1 Ch1t1Jq\1cz. _I c Cor·
, S Iii Lou Cum"' g>, Fhk·r llahl, ll xt<r De h ng, .:\hah ll nsmor,,
Cla de l>1bbl
Rich rd flh on, Her ~d htz r, :\rthur C rc1 , John Gate ,
He'
Cr1 .. k1, ... h, AllrJ (,a-..:rq.~m
lnmg (,r TI\\ IJ, EH:hn Glolnr. Loi
J n H n II .1 tphm H1.Jt . \\ II rJ Huff, L ra Joh n, \\ 1mfr,d J •hn n
Kenn th K. n.'llf, \\ ;1lti;r K ~10,, .. 11 Ernt.>t Klped1, Lt.:\.\.LS Ld -.on, Erl Murton
PY
1935
The clackmg castanets of Sunny Spam may -;cem a far
cry from \\'ork a Jay Kcnc ~h.t, but to the member' of
C1rculo E. panol life on the rom,lJ1t:c pc1rn.·ula 1,; no
mystery.
The fir<t pani,;h club, startcJ by Eli:ab -th B 1no=on, hclJ
.t fc,_, mcct111gs, but \\'a,; not \\ell orgam:cJ The irregu·
l.mty of the mcct111g- alln\\'cJ 111tercst to cool, anJ 1t J eJ
a: the enJ of the year.
In 1929 the club was rcon~an•:eJ hy M1<s Henrietta
Cr.1ybll ,rnJ chr ·tencJ C1rrnlo E. ranol The offi,ers for
0
that year \\Cre Rm.;clJ Gica-on, Ell.1 Clau,cn, Margaret
Lippert, ,rnJ Mcl,,t Warren.
Th" tune meet•nl!' were he!J with regularity. At
rrc cnt there ,1rc three ,t semc,tcr, anJ ,tt them <inly
pa111sh i,; spoken.
Prcmrnen-.c came to m.tn} pa111,h Club member~ in
colle(!c:
el lo anJ M,trio Pacet-t1, H,trolJ BJ<l~, \Villiam
Fonk, Kenneth Clark, anJ DnnalJ Trenary
Wilham
Sehr· 1e<lt:r " no v 111 the Pht11 ppme,, ,rnJ Ch,trle.; }.tskwich
1s coachmg at Holy Cro::-, re\\' Orleans.
DEUTSCHER VEREIN
Founded in 1911
hr t ~t:mt.: tt:r
Prt.: 1Jent, K.Hhtnnc G1..·urg; V1ct:·Pr~ 1Jent, Elsie Conradt;
Sccr('tary (,-lad}'S K1or tad Trc.i. urcr. Irving S1h.uhcrg· P1 in1 t, Dc>n
gaarJ; facult .. AJ .. 1 crs, M ss Lrnra M .S..:hultz, Mt s Juliana Bhnk
Mae•
lt:Ru.,· Andtr Hl, (;cnev1 v1.: B ,kcr, Hi.:lmuth B ckcr, Pearl Bcd1.er, Dorvthv
Blc1chcr Ruth Conr1J, Eli;,1c ConraJt, Pauline Dt: Seifc, Eva l:.ht..-nhe, Dona
Friedl, \\alter f-r1t::s, Ruth GarJm1er. Kuhermc Georgi, Alyce Grabner, Mane
c;r•> S, Ruth H.urtlt.:in. C.1rl H.1rtkopt, Jt.:.innc·tte Htrhrecht me er. June Hoff·
mann, [).I
Ihlcnfcldt, I me I ttt, Cr.ice J"hn on, Minnie Keib, Justin<
K In Cladv· Kior t.1d, Alfred Kolmc", La\'erne K<ordOlke, Rtehard Larson,
Three and one half decade, ago a group of tu dents
Alex
began the fir ·t organiz.a~1on for German student
Olshefsky was pr~sident. The other offi:ers were Olga
Egger, Marion Haven , and Kathenne Langan.
Dunng the war German wa dropped from the curnc.ulum, ,tnd the German duh naturally expired.
Deutscher V erem der Kenosha H och-schule, the German duh of today, was founded October 21, 1929, by
M•ss Laura M . Schultz.. Edith Schneider served as the
fir<t pre ident with Alex cheer as vice-pre ident; Ruth
Second Semtsta: Pre.~nJent Katherine Georgi. Vice·Presidcnt, Elsie Con
radt; S.:~rctarv. Clad1s K1or tad. Tn: sur r. In mg 1herbug, Pam t. Dons
Mu~aJrd; Faculty Ad, 1i;as, M1 s Laura M. Schu.tz, Miss Juliana Blank.
Joe Lastovic, Elsie Lema ' Nina Man fidd, fa lyn M U, o.,n Maegaard,
(:C, t>nce Miller. Orella Quid, Ella R•hn . .'\rh; n S<h tz, Arnold Reuter,
Fr . . da Rcuta. John Roth, Norman Ru di, M rgar1 t S-h -- r. Ralph S.:-h\Jo.artz,
Rob<rt S,o\llle, Our .th) S ·rl , Ntr' 'heb<t, lnmg Sil rl r~. Arlyne t rn,
hrn \\.ellman, LaVnne Zitrk.
Kuenkler, secretary: and Clare Gober, treasurer. Evelyn
Ahlef eldt, ophie Georgi, and Lillian Petz.ke belonged to
Deutscher V erein in its first years.
Even'.ng meetings are the rule 111 this club and are held
one~ a month. The Chnstma meeting ts a part; with a
special holiday program. All the meetings are conducted
in German.
Each spnng the club holds a meeting to which everyone 111tere~ted in German 1 invt~ed. The gu~sts are entertained by a play, the highlight of the year 111 Deutscher
Verein.
81
p
935
LE CERCLE
FRANCAIS
Founded in 1927
F : ~t · ~ mt ..•ta· Prt: 1dc nt, Don•th y Johnson .
Sccr ·t.1q, Jvhn Roth , f at..: Ult\' .>\J\1 .. er.. . ~1 1
'chu.·::-:-;kr .
All l- n: n.: h
1935
V1r g
M an · Rob in on,
1a \\ti on , Mi
L1.'00 J
S c.:~on d St: mes tcr
Prt.:SiJr nt , D o rm hv Juhn o n· V n:-c· Pre1 1J nt , M ary Ro l-i nson ,
Vir gm 1a W1laon, Miss Leona
St.:crt: tan. , John Roth , f 1ct1lt't AJ\1 er. M1
S..: htu: .-. -. lt: r.
mpmber .. .
"L'espnt" of the French student found a new outlet
1927 \vhen Mu chultz foumled Le Cercle Franca1 .
Entertamment and fluency m speech are sought by the
duh, and amusement 1s quant1tat1vely provided.
John Brickley wa · the first pre,.;ident of Le Cercle and
ophie Heuvclman and Kathryn Miller \Vere v1ce•presi ·
dent and secretary treasurer. Jane O'Donnell, Rachel
m1th, Maclyn McCarty and Edwin Lahanowsky were
among the first to roll their r's at the meetmgs.
Drama m Le Cercle Francais has ranged from scenes
of Les Miserables to Les 'frois Oars (The Three Bears).
Marra:ne de ~uerre wa one of the most successful of all
French club play· . Le Voiage de M. Pernchon. the
humorous adventures of a well ·to d·i, self -;at°sfied hour
geois, who took hi~ wife and damrhter on a trip, provided
111
PY
~ t u d t: nt:s ~ r e
V1 ce~ Pr t:" iJcn t ,
ome h1lariou scene .
Christm,ts, 19 3 3, brought three new dramatist · hefore
Le Cercle. The French ) cla - , commissioned hy Mu
Wilson to wnte some holiday plays, produced three wnt
ten by Bernice Biclewic::, Mill ' alisbury, and Robert
Heller, which \'.:ere pre,entcd at the hristmas meetmg.
Inspired by the Century of Progrc Expos1t10n, m the
fall of 1934, Filmer Parad1 e and John Roth collaborated
on a clever playlet which depicted a French family at the
World's Fair.
One former mcmher, Frances Sheppard, had an oppor·
tumty to venfy her knO\vledge of French this year : she
won a scholarship enabling her to pend her Junior year
of college tudymg 111 France.
· c
PREP CLUB
Founded in 1931
Otlicc
C: h1et, funi r Chi I, S,
bier
Chane llor of th
Fx..hc<,u r
S picier .
F c t y A d" er. \\ llace 0 . Yoder .
Sh rh n II r, I r nus A,h , hi n r M P r>d 1 , R f>crt I cohso~. J cph
(,< cla
St' n Kl1zm1ch, Lccna rd Vog I. M ~ r on (,c r Ion, Juhn Ha nm nd ,
\\ 1lh Tl S h r mm, Jac k S
Vanety 1s the gu1d111g star of the Prep Club.
o
d efinit e program confines its \'crsattle mcmher".
Arthur Siker launched this JCJ\!lal organi:at10n 111 1931,
.tnd it ht ;unused itself throu.!.!"h the years till now
M elodrama from the Prep Cluh, v.:h1ch produces it
own .tu thors and aLtors, h.ts often enthralled the asscm hlies Among the ,pectacles which haw convulsed au ·
d1cnces arL "Sand," or '"The Hump on the Camel'' Back,"
and ·'The W ch."
.. Mis · Kenc1sha Hu~h School" was d1 cov1:red hy the
Prep Cluh l1l 1933. After an exten~l\'e campaign. a
populanty contest \\\ ts held at one of the 'cm1 -annual dime
dances sponsored hy this duh. The wmner was awarded
the alluring title and a ring.
In the field of athletics, Prep h;td no peers dunng the
sea 0 on 1933 · 34. Both the mter•cluh baskethall and foot·
!'all champion-hips found a mche in the club'· mus1:um
The diversity of activity that motivate.s the Prep Cluh
1s carried on hy the member.;; e\·en after they ha\·e left the
fold.
Walter Horidcl\'et: and lr\'1111.!" Wallace were eriously
infected with wanderlust An exploration tnp 111 C~n ral
America effected at lea.;;t temporary relief from the malady
and furnished them with material for speeches and news·
pa per articles.
The ;mnouncer on WCBD 1s Edwin Gorsegner. while
Tames Scheer i de\'O':ing h1 · time to wntmg . The \'01ce
that talks, ··Jack Arm~trong," the "All American Boy,"
through his adventures, belongs to Jame Ameche who,
like the preceding four lads, 1s an ex-Prep cluh member.
nder .
83
SPY
1935
HI Y
Founded in 1923
F"r.;.t . cm1.:--ttr: Prc.;.1Jent, St;"tnkv Nu'"·hi.:rrv; \'icc·Pn.-..1Jcnt. Thomas Lakcn;
-i. n. Dan R e<l: Trc•n·ur r, Cl.1rl net.: Mthl''ln. Corn .. pon<l11 g Sl·cn:tdry
1)1
lJ StC'\\ n, t- 11..ultv AJ\1' r. J. C C:h.1r1.: 1 .
. S1·l·o1 J Scnf .. tcr
Prt 1<l1 nr
Ca I H r.1 ; Via Prls1Jcnt, Don)J Stn\ :i.rt,
s~ flt IT\, R1lp~ K ngsl1.v
Trt:.lSlJf{T
\\ t!iln
(),f rbtrg, ( ( Ht"p01 ding Slc
ht n. Rogtr <".:rim~
f·1n.lt\ A~.h1str, J C
C:li,1ptl
St 1nh:v
Mcltt· .. 1.·n
Cl rt:n1.·c
Englund
RcJ;:tr CHling, R ch.1rd L.m1on, C11l Hms1, \\ 1ll1flm J<•hn"on, fr.ink R1zzl.
erv1ce, to its members and to the sch, ol, is the keynote
of Hi Y. The hcttcrment; of the moral, ~ocial, scholastic,
<>nd athletlC phase of life is its personal and puhlic plat·
form.
When the Hi Y duh was organized by Charles Lesl:e
Lewis, memhcrsfrp \Yas confined to jumors and semors.
} fcl'1h::r-h1p for ~cphomores was obtamed 111 193; :;4
throu.:!;h amending the const1tut1on.
The hoy in each graduatmg class who has he t fulfilled
the Hi Y a ·m of general development 1 presented with a
reward. Gordon Rahr rece1\'ed the honor \vh;;n it was
fi.r.;t given m 192:; The Hi Y av.:ard ha also been earned
hy Jame. Osborn, Frank Chromec, Leo Porn:aniecki, John
G1hhs Smith, Earl Thom, cllo P.tcetti, Charles Ja~kw1ch,
Earl
chcrer, Mano Pacetti,
ncl Hanson, Bernard
Latham, Ed\'-ard K1rar, Ed\vard JaskwICh, Rnhert Heller,
and Stanley ewhcrry.
Repre~entat1vcs from the H1 Y attend the
tate Older
Boy ' Conferences. In 193 3 Ht Y furnished prol!ram · for
the football game . Banquets he noring fnothall, alumni,
or themselves, are specialties of the members.
In the Hi Y second hand rook -hop, students can huy
and ell text hiob without payinl! a <ervice charge.
Richard Ashley, Dav.d Ritter, Donald Trenary, Rohcrt
Virgil, Harold Bode, George Timm, Wilham Schroeder,
;:nd Kenneth Brown arc all former Hi Y memhers
S
84
7'o;,;\\h1.rn. Thom " Liken, 0.1n Ru.:d. Donh.J St('wart,
Kml.'!'1 v, \\ alta Fro .. t, \\ i:.;.Jq· Osti.:r1"l"f)!:, Gent.:
R lrh
Lort·n Stilh, J1m~l'I H"rnttt, Sht.rhurn B etr
0
RED TRIANGLE
Founded in L926
l·
"'
rt.:
t SL Ti e tt.:r PrC' dt.nt, Ru cl
q. , Ht h K t fl)4, ·1 ' ur r.
Cl rk
\ i..1._ · l'r J nt ( harl es Amhc:cmf;?
luhn (,c ,J..,. . F.u:Jltv Ad\1 • H H
R
r"
l
r
St? onU
")
So;;mc(,tc r
r taq, bul l-o ter
Pr st~
Tre
t,
er
\\alt r Turner
Vtt:c Pre 1dt.:nt,
A1trt_J De Sim ne·
ft1cult~
" k \\ y
AJ" ts r. H
H
I' ddock.
I' JJ~ 1.. k
I (:I
k ,
J 1 k \\)
le Amhdang, Boh Kl .ttmg . Juhn ( 100J\\. n, \\'a t r
Alfr J ll Sicrurc, Ch r. tor tlr". le I L rson, J ck
( h
Red Tn;mgle, JUllH>r partner in the Ii.rm of H1 Y ,md
Red Triangle, w.ls founded hy Mr. Em:k,on. Memher<
of the sophomore and JU111or classes with a schola•t1c
"\ eral!;e of e•ghty were the only ones admitted to n1emher
··hip. Among the fi.r;;t memhers WLre Ge rge Epstem,
Tc n L.tnL Homer Bi-hop ,rnd N rm<tn Greenv,:ood
Snee 1932, only graduat:on termma LS t memher'~ affiliation with the cluh.
Through its sophomore award, Red Tnamd:? has enour<t red under-graduate .chol. tic, athletic, •n<l character
;1ch1cwn1.:nt. Charles Ja;;kw1ch won the Ii.rs~ award in
192 7. F \
other hoy-, Kenneth
ord :rom, ,\n.lrew
Fe "t.!r, Rohert Hasting·, Rohert Heller, and Arthur
Kne•hlcr, have heen ,\warded this di<tinct10n.
,\Id ''· ( h rl s L bano"' ky, M1<h le
M tthc" Andr .
Gallo, Ge rgc \ irg·I
M mll
Rhcv
Collahora~:on I etween Red Triangle and Hi Y produced
a pa:r of .:w1mmmg meet· 111 192 7 to finance the beginning
of the high school tank team. The same year the two
cluhs entcrta·ned at a "'Baskethall Banquet" for the
triumphant team.
In 19~ Red Triangle started a fund for hand uniforms.
Money was r;w:ed through a foothall dance ·ponsored by
the t\'>·n cluh;;. In 1931, Walker Perkin , a memh.?r of
the first Byrd Antart1c Expedition, addre~sed th.? a<:sembly
under the au<piccs of Red Triangle.
/,hie supporters of the cl uh 's numerou< ac~inties hav,
been Edward Cros)n, Anton Iavcllo, Ed\\'in Lahano;:;sky,
Rich.trd B, lde, Robert Hendcrmn, Le.~n Refner. Dan
Ra\;on, and M.1r·o Pacetti.
DEBATING
Begun in 1903
Affirmative~
N ~:ltl\l."
Rohi.:rt Hurtgen, Richard Elli.!'on. Myron Cordon, Captain.
J •nt: Hid ... Joe Go~ol . J1cllutline BJtta~h}, C.1pta.m
Dchatmg fir t became a major rort at K. I I . m 190~
\vhen W. ]. Hocking, the pnnc1pal, ·pon oreJ two liter.try
and oratoncal sociejcs, the Ca tihans and Delians. Th.::se
t\':o groups hegan active <lehatmg 111 the school.
Armed to the teeth with mvective and arguments, and
seconded 1:-y half the student hody, each of the two rival
de'.1at111g teams entered the oral field-of-honor once each
year, t(; wm victory fnr their soc ety or to sacnficc a
larynx in the attempt.
PY
1935
Cast1han or Dehan, a their alle({iance might he, the
dehater argue<l the i ues of dehate to the detriment of
their opponents and the plea ure of the great delegatmn
of student upporters most of the duh members who
enthusiastically shrieked encouragement and waved han·
ners at the direct10n of a duh cheer leader.
6
Altnnatc~:
Gl·ne Hnrt<lon·tz. F1lmtr Paradise, Steven Kllzm1ch
D,t\llS . M•n.1gn · Clifford R. nJ 11
Co,i<h. John I)
· Rivalry \Yas keen hctween the two duhs. From the
openmg d;i.y of school till the hour of the annual <lebate,
a fur'.ou feud separated them The entire tudent ho<ly
was divided mto defender of Ca t1han and defenders of
Delian flags. Even the suhjects of <lehate were highly
controversial. One year the question was "Resolved: that
the mental ah1lity of women is equal to that of men "
Early speakers of these groups were Richard C.t\an·
augh, George Gihhs, Munson Paddock, Jo eph Lippert,
Ward Rowh(nom, and Roy Donley Men like G. W
Taylor an<l R. V. Baker were judge .
D~hating floun he<l for many year . In 1911, under
Mrs. Per<l1ta Dewey Pope, puhltc speakmg mstructor who
began the speech department of the school, it wa particu·
larly wccessful. In suhsequent years, hov.:evcr, it irn·
N. F. L.
Founded in 1931
Pr 1Jcnt, Janet Sonnenl~rg. V1n·Pre 1J nt
lune Hicks, facult¥ AJv1ser, John D D•Ha
JaC1.1ueline 8dtt rsb.,, Secrt:tary,
M ymn Gordon, Joe G,JgoLi, Rubtrt Hurtgen, Crace Roemer. Eugt:ne HoriJQ•
•etz, Ruth McGon<gle, Jane Rugg, Rich ard Ellison, Filmore P aradi>e, Elaine
Gordon.
portance ahated.
The present era of dehating date from 192 'i when
John D . Davies came to the school as speaking instructor
and .::oach.
Smee 1927, when the Kenosha teams Joined the Wr ·
comm High chool Dehatmg League, they have won one
hundred, and kn twenty·three dehates. They ha\·e won
fi\'e state ch am pionshi ps.
Berth on the dehate team· ha\'e been held by Daniel
Lencioni, Harold Bode, Eva Ragon, eil Glerum, Arthur
iker, In:ing Wallace, Walter Hondo\'et:, anJ Edwm
Gor.;egner. James Ameche, formerly amt ng the elite of
'.1igh "chool p~aker~, now live by his tongue on the air
wave· of .B C .
Havmg talked cotton mto the ear , of their familie ·,
friends and home rooms, the more accomplished speaker'
of the school •ought new eardrum to annoy. They found
the needed outlet for their volaule talent m
F L.
competition.
Speaker5 who place m an N. F. L. contest may become
members of the Kenosha chapter of the National Foren 1c
League.
Pmnt' wh ;ch may he earned through active participation
m peaking act1v1t1es, designate the
. F. L. members'
official rank
•udent v.:ho have I 0 p01nt are a\varded
the Degree of Ment , those with 30 pomts the Degree of
Honor: those with 60 the Degree of Excellence. and tho~e
with more than I 00 pomts he Degree of Distinction At
present only Myron Gordon, Joe Gogola, and Coach
Da\'les have the latter degree
87
p
1935
STUDENT ROTARY
Founded in 1933
Fir-t Scm<-ter. Pre<1Jcnt, Charles Ambd ng, Fae 1 ty A<lnstr, G. N. Trcmp<r
R "di CI.rk , Cl>. r1
Laban " kv. C:harl
Amhclang John HJ<t1ng ,
LC\.\J" Lar-.on. Ccne Englund. G. 'rt Tbomr-. lll, EJ\\arJ H rtne . ]1.lC c.)gola.
H nry c; nt n10, MHun U rJon i\ho Ab1r . 1'.1l' S,1Ii~hun, Th mas L l n,
Unique among K. H.
oc1et1es 111 that 1t meets regu·
larly away from the high school, the tudent Rotary -!uh
,tppear: on the pages of the Spy f1Jr the first time m 1935'.
March 28th of thi· year the duh wa · entitled to cut
its second hirthday cake The Boys' Committee of the
Rotary Cluh, ,1cting 'Jpon the suggestmn ot G.
Tremper, school principal, organi::ed the group two years
ago.
PY
935
Young though it ts, tudent Rotary can hoa$t •ome
well knmNn former memhers. Among thl.'m .tre H·1rnld
Kapp us, Frank Pucci, Robert Heller, HO\\ ard Han,is,
Stanley "' C\\·herry, Mektn Monteen, l.onraJ Shearer
Jr., and Edwin Gorsegner.
88
Sc ... or:
S..:mc ttr
Prl'·1dcm,
Charles
fLhult' A~hi!'itr, C. 1'i. TrL"mpl'r.
K tlll~. St<llllt.:\ Ne\\htrq, CJ\"
M,mt n, Fnnk Pucn Hu ,)J Kappus
1'.iit
Amhelang;
Secretary,
Joe
Gor cgnor, Ho\.\.m.i H.rn
Fr 1rn 1 M .. G1vern.
Gogola;
Mdvm
faery month the Y. M. C. A cafctena 1s the site of
the tu<lent Rot,1n,tns' mcetmgs. The boys arc given
hird's eye vte\'-"' of the vanous professions and husine s
opportun1t1es that he hefore them by $peakcr · who arc
e\.ccllcnt rcpre-en·at;\'es of their field._
At one luncheon Ernest Marlatt addressed the group
with Journalism .ts h1.; topic. The medical profc,s1on was
represented hy J F. Hast111gs, M. D.; law found a ·pokes·
man 111 George Taylor. Opportu111t1es 111 hanking were
shown to the young men hy Charle-; Allen; the city
engineer, Rohert m1th, was the speaker at one meetmg
The lot of a chem 1 st was de,crihed hy Russell Tree of
the American Bra,;s Company
t
"K" CLUB
Founded in 1930
l )ffi..-as
Pr 1J nt.
I- ran~
Socb. V cc· Presu.1cn t , J.1ck Kanhetsos, Sec rctan-
Trc urcr, Rnhut Jaceih ..on; F<icu lt v A d\'l~ er. Fred 8 ; n .
U1llorJ Randa ll , T r nzo Oldani, f.dJ1c Con l y, G1lhn t T bomr on, Dc. rc1l
H uns, Joh ... l;oodwm, lack Kar.-.htts<s, Hcn111 N aumo,u: h , Ben ton H ammond ,
Roh1._rt facoN >f', H 1rok. l r n A rthur I>1m1.:o B· n \\ er\t:, Arth ur H11rnc,
D1,:no Bt: r nacc h t , EJJ1e C: 11I n. La rr v Ro .... , Leonard Cored 1, Char1
John M cC 1ll L~ KonJr toY.:1c:, P rimo Stefani, Fran k Soc ka
AcLOr<ling to all trad·tion thL "K" Cluh houl<l he the
heaven an<l haven of the a<lonng females of the &:hool.
The tragic truth 1 . the hig, letter-weann ~ , he-men are
1ctually •eparate<l from their infatuate<l follower' during
" K" Cluh meeting .
''K" fosters cooperatmn and hetter under-tandmg be·
tween teams and athlete . Dedicated to the propo 1tion
that all sports are create<l equal, 1t prevents d1 cor<l among
the various athletic groups. In 19~0 1t furnished funds to
pay for minor injurie,.; from foothall.
Among early member,.; of "K" were Fnt: Borak, Mano
Pacetti, 1att Bokmueller, Paul Hartnek, an<l E<ldie Kirar.
In 1932 the athletes gave the girls a "'hreak." "K"
a •chool popularity contest and en wned the.
victor, "Mis K. H . S."
The same year the club prO\·ided gnld football· and
transportat10n to and from the practice field for the
championship eleven.
Ba. ketball pro {rams \vere furnished to spectators hy
the '"K" club dunn '~ the -eascm 1933 -34. In recent year"
the club has been devoting it energies to the find•ng of
ways and means to pnl\'ide money for the transportation,
for care dunng pennds of in1ury, and for the general
need· of the athletes.
H an I",
~ po ns< ;red
89
p
935
GIRL RESERVE
Founded in 1924
F1r ... c • !ll(:-t ·r Pr ... ,J nt, .-\ngdinc B11ott'. \'1cc·Pn. ... 11.knt, J. nn ._ ~1cls1.:n,
S a t n .1nJ Tn.:a . . ur-.:r, Echd IV( 1.· Kru l r: Fa1. Jlt\ :\J\ ""tr ... Mi~' Mvrtk
B.mg-1'-<r~. M1" Juliana Blank
M1" H, re H -t ~-. Mi-. hhd M •c Jon<>.
~11 .... L ur
.\:h h:, nd Mi .... \'ir •nlii \\ .. o~
Sc~ond
t mc~tH
Prt ... 1J1.:nt, M. rv Lou1~1: DL•nn; V1(e~Prt: .. idcnt, Janet
Look, Slad~q anJ Trt.J urt:r, .f.101.. l)'Rriln. Facultv AJ\1 . . er, M1
Myrtle
B n~ .. h<rg, Mt~ . . Ju11ana Blank, M ..... Hop1.. H.1~tmg , Mi ..... Ethel M lC Jonca,
~11,
Laur S-.huh::, and M ss V1ri.::m1a \\ 1lson
M rv A.,.::--tin, An~rl nc B1lo:t1. Mlf}Orlt.: Ca<lv. h.i rg rft Coh:man. Rn~cm. rv
Corr, Bi nlhc D hr n .. 1. {), rr1 ... Door:-00. (<.:cha Duhr:hk1, M r' Lom"
Dunn. H !en G . . hon. lrt:n-.: Calk, M. non ColJh-.:q;. J.. n
J..,1.:tt, K thnn
Jone, _1~ n ·Ot'·nt>, En1 .. M ntcra.,tfll1, Lucillt.: Mun-.. n, M rJOfl1.: MurJoch,
D •r
( troni, ~hr uentc Rohm .. n, ~{ q
R hm .. on, E::thcr
10nkf\'- 11.:,
Duroth,· \\.hitdorJ, Megan \\'11liam~. h1rkv \\-alson, FranCl .. Ft1nk, Doruthv
I hn- n, Maroon Jon>', J ha Mac Tr •k . St pb ma Laps:}>. L \'an And.r>. n,
H1..nntn.1 P1.:...tn1an. ln:nt: Mo1.:ult"' 1, Doruthv B... utli ... h. J i:qudinc BJttt.:r:-hy.
Juhc H1t:kcr, Br t• \\ 11l1am-. Sh1rlcv Batt r-h'. M1ldnd Bloxd <rf. D .. rc,tbv
LorJt:. Est Ile Fonk. Elamc (,. rdon. B<tt)' 'cnt, L.n.,nc KorJo<k1, E1h I
M
Krut: • r, \' ol c L hmo"'h, Mvrtlt L1.:p1J11., Kathken M~1': mar.1, ?\'ma
M.n,hdJ, R,ith M,Goncgk. GlaJv, Neu, Jane O'Brien, Helen Pcdkv. Dorothy
P t<r-on, Marie Pov.ell, Orella Qut<I. H Im Raflcrt), (cha SJfransh, Luc1lle
S .. hmac. J.mct Sonnt:nhug, Hd1::n S.1.:ahr, lntz \VaJ1.:, C1..ralJm1.: \\ ebh.
Lc1rrame Bordtau. Vmkt Bordtn, EHlyn Collm-.;, France Cook, Janet C'..ook.
J nc Corr, .lll} Cummrn , Muriel Dan rn~. P uhnc D Suk Kathi, n
frazu.:r, Cathum1..· Galli~an. Ail1..rn Co;.u.:Hn. v, M.1r)- H.1mmonJ, M.1ry H.mncr.s,
P. tnc1a Harr n~ton, MdJr d H \\C, Margartt .lenk1ns. 1)1Jrnthv K llv, Millie
Krau ... Alio..t.: Krupm . . k1, Durothy L<Rov, MJf}urie M.tJJ n, Dons M11lcr,
Ruhv Momm frt , \'1rgm1a M rntt, Jann ~~1tl t.:n, E1lcrn l) ... tuhurg, Josephine
Papon, Man::;ard Parmcnt1tr. Ella. Pndd1 . Bottty Roth, Lorramc Stanley,
C nrud1.: "1..r1t1u1, M.uJ 1fl1.: \\' sch, Ir nc: \\.ilh Im.
The Girl Re,en.e Club, founded by Mr . G.
Trem·
per, ha - had an unu:ual career. The first duh '"a' re·
.;tricted to 3unior r, 's and semors, was electiYe, and re·
quired of its members an e1gh~y per cent schola tic average
A ,tudent loan fund for high .;chool girls and the pre-;
entatmn of the Girl Resen·e Award were 'tarted dunn !
the early years. The awarJ 1s given to girls -how111g out·
<tanJing development in scholar.;h1p, <ocial act1vit1c , and
athletic, during their high school career .
Blue Tnangles figure prom111ently in the history of Girl
Rc:-en.·e 111 Keno,ha High. In 192 7 Blue Tnangle I was
~·aned for <ophomores and JUmor B's. The duh aJopted
1
90
the Girl Reserve standards with the exception of the
dect1ve memhersh1p.
Populanty soon overwhelmed the lone Blue Triangle.
One duh could not accommodate all the girls who desired
membership; so 111 1928 Blue Triangles II and III were
orgamzed.
Each Chn tmas the Blue Triangles gave a children's
party A real Christma tree with lights and a small gift
for each child always featured the gala afternnn. At
Thank g1vmg a basket for a poor family wa usually man
aged by each Tnangle
The exclu ·1ve Girl Reserve Cluh and the Blue Tnangles
flew out of the v..111dow one day 111 the summer of 1933.
When the students returned in the fall, a grand reorgamza·
tHm of g1rls' societ1e - was effected. The old cluhs had
\iamshed In their places three new organizations were
formed: a sophomore, a Junior, and a semor Girl Reserve
umt. All cholastic requirements were abolished.
Though each group work under it - own officers, the
present Girl Reserve Cluh is composed of the three units,
and general officers are elected who pre ·1de at the meet·
ings of the collective orga111::at1on.
Act1vitie of the new Girl Re erve groups are similar in
type to tho e of the old organization. In 1934 the ch1I·
dren 's Chri tmas party, onginated hy the Blue T nangb,
w<ts re\i1ved; the emor G1rl Reserve presents the Girl
Reserve Award whenever a graduate can '<ltisfy the re·
qmremen• .
T he old soc1et1e -' a pirations and tradition dominate
the renovated, 1m proved Girl Reserve and, unlike most
clubs which pass through a period of complete metamor·
phos1-;, Its pro pects for future glory ,tre unusually bright.
GIRL SCOUTS
Founded in 1923
hr t St'mC tcr· P.ttrol lead r , Aileen Godfrey, Lo15 Redstrom, Blanche
Boerner; faculty Adv1 r , M,.a Virginia \\'1loon. M
K.tbenne Mcilrath .
SeconJ !"..:me tt:r
Lot Red!>trom, Blanche
Virginia Wilson, M1
Katherine Mcilrath .
P;;trol lcada , Atl en Godfrey.
llo rnn, hculty Adv15..r . M
J>oruthy Le Roy, Vug ma Momtt. Mildred Bedros .. n, hirley Kolar, V1rPre Im, Josephine Hu)lk, Blanche Boerna, Frances Cook, Renata Raf·
~ma
tom. Mar,uric MaJJcn . Harnet Huber, Jantt N1 h~en, Le.is Red trom. Ollie
Stone, Btrnicc Schwartz. Anita Thomas, M.itrgarct P.irmenu r. Aiken Godfrey.
Oun
M1lkr. Lorra e S1anlev, Mildred H,,...,., Evelyn Collins, Mary Ham•
.Elsie Johnson .
monJ, .Eva Andreoni
Patrol Leod rs . June Cordell, Geraldine Rapp, H len Pedley, Captains, B tty
Schmelling, S.rah Brttton s,hwartz.
Ruh Andenion, Pn cilia Booth, June Cardell, Grace J . John.on. Mary
L.1genbock, El 1e Pachlic . H<ien Pedley, Geraldine Rapp, Marguente Robinson,
M 1ry Rohm n. M.1raon Si:baut.z, Jean \\'t·ll
V1q~:mia Zabukavec. R emary
Zen,
1
A 1000 per cent increase 111 membership, since the year
the fir t local chapter of the Girl couts was founded, 1s
the record of the Kenosha troop .
T he Golden Eaglet ha heen awarded to mne girl .
T he first to receive it were arah Britton Schwart::,
Eleanor Loomis, Bermce H aubrich, and M ildred De Berg.
Betty chmellmg, Margaret Clausen, H elen W ilson,
and Beatrice Regh were promment former couts.
Smee 192 \ annual rallies and '"mothers and daughters"
parties have been yearly events.
Recently the Scouts tried winter camping and spent
part of thei r Chnstm,t - vacation at Lake Plea-ant.
91
py1935
PEP CLUB
Founded in 1933
PY
935
F r ... t S1 mt.::-tt.:r Pres1dcnt. C'harlv• Lab1nov. .. k). V1t.:c Pr1.:s1Jcnt, DJ1~ AnJl'r·
"On :Sccrt:tary, Bt:tt\ D. 1 .. fidJ, Tr1.:a"urcr. Gurdon Ch.1mbt.:r .... F cultv AJv1~cr,
M mn R f,hol.
Sl(CJnJ S mt:stcr Pn~tdl nt, Ed\\ 1rd Kol.1r· V1i...c·Prc.s1di.:nt Morg n Vaux,
Se flt.1rv, \'10h:t L.1b.rno,,~k,
Trcasun.:r, Thum.
R1ky; Faculty Advt er,
Mutin Rof ho!
.:\ho L'\Jbin1, Dale AnJrr ... on, .:\nJrc\.\! ,.\nJray1.:w . . k1, Bern: Antar.1m1 n,
V:rnghn Anranm1an, Glady:-. Apy.tn, Addle Barocc<1, Sh1rlcv Batta .. hv, Otto
Bloxdorf, Lot11" Bono6gho, M,1rgarec Bon1..>hgho. Ch,1rlt.:ton Brown, Maf)Ofl1.:
Cadi, bud) Chamlxr'. Gordon Ch,mlxr-. P. t Chapman. Frane<> Cook,
Jant:t Cook. B tty Dan-.field, Bianchi.: Dt1bran .. k1, Dorri ... Doot"-on, Juomc Dor·
man, :\nJr<\\ Fne'. John Gallo, Ah in Goldman, LeonlCJ Cureck1, Clifford
Hlll M rJorie H1lku, Ru ..... eJl H:tm.1chel Joe Ht:nat, Ruth H,.;"\.:f, Jultt:
H11:hr L<h, rd Kol r. l thn Kur ki Charle L•bano" kv, V1okt Labanow•
l'kY. Mvrtlc Lindgren, Ruth Luqut:r, Ruth McCumglc, B-t.:tty Mc c1l, Ruth
l\1cNl·1, V1r~m1.1 <YL0111oor, L11l1an 01 t.:n, Mari;~an:t P. rmcnt1er, Thoma&
R1lcv. H lu1 S hultz, Boh Schutz, Irv ng Silverberg, Dorothy Smith, Arlyne
Stan. Juli 1 Pmz1, Florcnt.nl' Pl,ltt. k1, Ahl Roqk r, Edith Senn, Gladys Stm•
mon:-, Marion T.mck, M11q,~dn \'au , Ji -.t.:phrnc Viola, Marg1ret \\'a.Iker, Fern
II dim.in
Founded as a ucce·Eor to the Booster club, the Pep
Club has de\'oted 1t · time and energy to cncourag111g
student support of athletics and other activities.
It pre·ented gold track hoe· to the I 92 7 ch am pion, h1 p
track team and 111 1930 ga\'e trophies to the swimming
champions and a banquet 111 honor of the football squad.
Reorga111.::at10n 111 19 3 3 un<ler Mart111 Rafshol gave ~he
P~p Club new \'igor.
It immediately 1111ected \'Itahty
111to pep meetings and ga\'e a rnccessful C\'cning dance,
the Pigskin Hop .
Dunng the football -:eason, 1934-3), it sponsored Home
Com111g with a parade an<l a Victory Dance.
Pep Club helpeJ finance the football team and the band,
pro\'1ded enterta111ment for basketball spectators between
halves, and feted the Big Eight champions at a dance.
The Pacett1's, Ken
or<lstrom, and Charles Ja kwich,
former Pep Club members, have been prominent 111 college athletics.
92
SOCIAL SCIENCE HONOR ... --..,"""
FORUM
Founded in 1935
}1r 1dLnt, H rumen K ro'>k1; V1cc•Prt!'l1Jtnt, Mynm (Jordon;
Trc urn, Angel nc Bilotti, AJv1,.trs, Soc}( S-.:1encc t1culty.
A,_dme Amet..J-c, M.1rv Atk1ns
Dort
Bain, Mu1on Ko1t .. ky
Ser t .. ry•
M11tLn Stt.:n•
trom, Hl.:kn O .. trm.,· ... k1, V1i.:tona Pav.lak, Leno Corso, Jim Rohhin .. , Russell
Dorothy Thomq. S.dly BuC'ko, Jcnnae \\·oJmcz, EJJ1c Raucina.
Con tan1.c Ki.:nncdy, N n;;i M.rnsfidd. Sh1rhy Hotttr hy, Jant: ()'8nen, Dim.dd
EJqul!!t,
Pabst. R.lph S,h,,.,1rtz. R"y S<hold, Hcnrv \\'11 on, Doroth~ Klafter. Herry
C1 ·ntonao, Mu10n Dorr flinger, George N1el"l'O, Alta Gumkuon, Agnes Hov.ctu,
R1
rt Anderso11, Jt rry
, '1c en. hh ! Krcugcr St::.nlcv Kadz r41. /\ c n
G.>Jfrey, \\'ilhLrt M .. kou kc Bunard M1lemtz. Fr:k H;inq·n, Janet Cook,
M1!Jm.l Cox. Hd n Kle-1ekts, Don Miller, Jc• phi c l'•pon, R ta F rlcy
L11rr.11ne B{lnh:.iu, Lvdvn Collms, P.rnl <:.11lus, Mu\.· Hinnu~. Jo.ti:k 1'11.ho' 11
Ru 11 Clarke. \\ tlhs H.1mmonJ, Will m Ungcmach, Stella Kanch s. Lucr<t
Mac!. Hthn Cl~Hhlr~ Evelyn Bu
J f' hr (,rc\tno1."
C Pe HoriJo\ctz,
Elc nor M,Dow II, R,.by Mommaert
B rnicc R mu> en, I), nalJ TodJ,
Durcithv Rosthr. J()hn MJyt:r, Eken Rasico, Milton Kropp, Em Mont ra .. tdli,
Cc11l H.m as, Ma.rJGflC Mun.kxh, Maq Loui c Dunn, L v.:1s La sen, Bcnwn
H1mm .nJ, Deir Hh'r Johnson, Ma.ttlu.:w KJlh1e;k1, M1chck Calle. Ja.ne Hcruck
"Bram Trust," "Intelligellce,"
either title might he
g'\'cn to oc1al c1cncc Honor Forum, an augu..;t group
of ..;tuc.lcnts all with grac.le: of ninety or aho\'e in .;ocial
c1ence stuc.lie · who meet weekly to c.l1scu"" current -=ocial
prohlems anc.I to gain a hetter unders~andmg of ..;ncial
science.
0
K-HI STAMP CLUB
Founded in 1935
Prc!iiiiJent
Edv.:ard Kcuck
V
Pr 1J 1t, Fr
k G1 nt le
1.:crt t ry· Tr
urer,
In the nursery of cluhdom at Kenosha High chool this
spring was founc.I the K H1 Stamp Club. The m:w arnval
came on March ) , 19 3), arriving JU St ahead of St.
Patr'ck', Day and spnng Contrary to e~tahli:hcd custom,
this infant has four parents, Edward Keuck, Frank Gentile. Ru~~ell Huber, and Tom Woodard
Collectm·~. studying, and trading the fascinatmg labels
of po,·ta re is the purpose and pnmary act1\1ty of the club.
It aim ;urns to extend the range of stamp knowledge of it.;
mem 1·ers anc.I to make converts for the colorful hobby
A limited memhersh1p \Vas deemed ad\·i~ahle Theref re, only thirty-.;1x of the a\'id -tamp connois,eurs may
bclon ~ at one time.
93
spy35
BAND
Founded in 1928
Dm::ct•A. C L Ma~on; A""btant O;rc..:t . .,r. \\ c!'kY Gallup; Prc..,1dcnt, H ·rb...rt
Hauhnch; M.10. gt:r, Cl1:nn Cartwr ght.
olo Corner:-.· \\'cslcy Ga1lup, \\.il·
ham UnJ::-.•.1ach. F1r .. t Corn ... t-.: Ani;do R1::0. K-.:nnc.h \\ 1 ht, First Trumrus:
Mi.:~dt.: \\'alkcr, Gi.:rha:rdt Hillma.
~l'l:Ond Trum. -.:t-.:
i:.JmunJ M r . .·~ck,
Don Id Cl.irk. Fr1:nch H rn"
Pi.:ca MJ..-. n. Jamt.:~ Ft.:rgu-.un, LaVcrnc Ziak.
R:ilph Aldt.:r"<m.
Bu1h>Ol''
Fred Blod, R1ch.1rJ H rm.in.
Tro1..1honn
Rich rd Hm.:hcrt, Karl Fn:ch, Sh1rkv \\·i1 ... ,)n, Eugt.:n1.: Shumway, Rudolph
DurJ1k. Sou..,;1phom:s
F.(ir-.:ntinl· P1. u·-.k1, \\'tll am J •hn" 1n, H ro!J \\'hn
\\Orth. E·fbt 8.1 ...... ~ L. \\ft.: ... I int.:"
Flut .ind P1..:..: ,)(
Lurrarnc Tannt.:r,
l cwt" Kr.inz, Ch rks H.1uhnch
Oho..:
Fr.mcc T.tnm:r.
E l10tt C.l.1r11wt
\\'il!.ird Bull.
Fir<t B·flat Cl.mm"!'
RcnolJ Ftlippt, Gknn C.irt11mght,
K1ert~1.:her, Jue Stamtlh. fH:-hn Bu""
Third Cbr.nt.:t"· Che tt.:r St.1nlcy,
KennLth Fonk, Al Sch.1d", S<conJ Clartnlt•
R1d1ard \\'cllman, Henry
r r1 \\'1lhag, Erik H111 . . cn, C'"ctlJ Holmen. Aho S.n:ophom John Roth
Tenor Saxophone Allt:n \\ri..,ch. B.1r1tom: S.u:c•phont.:
Don \\'ruck. H.1sm(ln
Lou1" Kcuck.
Alto Clarinet
Con,.l.'nt1nc Mancu.;1.
fi;i..,.. Cl.1nnl·t: Bary
(~ro-. man.
Drum"
Ht:rhnt Ha11hrich Flwt d Si.:h\\.l-nn, Rov Jack on, Clif
f< rd Blnck.
Martial music wh'.ch can he appropr:ately played only
hy a band-did not have an exponent m Kenosha High
chool until 1928. The present 1mtrumen•al group is the
result of the efforts of the Band Association, formed in
19~7 with Paul Voe!:: as president.
The first concert hy the hand wa given at an assembly
m May, 1929. In February, 1930, Mis- L01s orthv,:ay
was chairman of a carnival, the proceeds of which, com·
hined with fund raised by Red Triangle and H1 Y, en·
abled the group to huy a set of uniform .
Resplendent 111 red hra1d, the Keno~ha High chool
Band made it puhlic dehut, Apd, 1930, in a spnng con
Included 111 the perwnnel ( f the hand dunng the
early year· were 1~dnan D.:Brum, LaVerne Han~en, Ken
neth G1rard, Alice Km<ella, Ben Langnes, Jack Rose, and
Edward Mitchell.
In 193 I 1t played several program. at the Gateway
theatre.
While ousa 's marches were still played, more el,1horate
compos1t1ons hegan to he handled effectively hy the hand
In (Wernher, 1933, 1t played at the general es ion of the
W1 consm Teachers' Association at Milwaukee.
94
cer~.
ORCHESTRA
Founded in 1926
Dn::ct1r M1 .. M nu.: M. Lucn. V,tlms fF1rt S mctu)
Edel Chr1
tcr. (fl. Mr n Chri t n tn. Jantt C..ook, j. nl ( orr, D.1n1cl (,nbo\\JCZ.
tl.,J (, tt r
n, fh cJor Huxhold, Cl di J, rsor., G ralJ Jc In, S1gcrd
L1r1Jcn. EJmund M t}5Lk, Pt ter M.1 n, Arthur Petzk , C1hhs S.hrocd r
M1ldr J S, 1d c
Violins IS
nd Sc e<t r)
Ank r Adelson. J Don. Id
BJ r , An. Id John n Loui Pdn sew1c:, Lorrarnl P t rs in. Rudolph Pr11'1.h1111
J·J\'I. rJ S n hag, Di nald Stt:\\..irt.
Viola · Doris fnc 1. Ctrtr d
I> !Tl . ( II
f I rt Sc
tcr)
M. rv J• h" r, C<ed1. Z.1pusc1 ruk1. Cc lo
!Se ond Scmr-tn): hanc<' Pol k
Stnn~ Bas
Lucille Han en, \\'111 m
MrC!cllan, Esther Nc!son flct : L.
Kr. nz, Lmr in T ncr. RI> Clarin t
R no hi pp1 Kum th Font, R1 h.<rd \\·, llman. Cornets (i ir>t Scm t r)
\\' Icy Gallup
\\'ill1am Ung<m ~h. Cornets. !Second S mC>tcrl
M 3Je
W Iker Trombone I fir t S mcstcr) Richard H1rch rt
f·r1.:nl'h H(Jrns
L.1Vcrnc Z11..:rk. Jame Ferguson.
Drum : Roy Jackson,
EJ~ood S ... hu.cnn.
P1c;no (f_r .. t .St.:mc tcr)
J 1 c Hur c
D1,rothca K!cma,
D1 r Miicg ard. Piano &51.:cond S1.:m t(·r} · Vu R. mu
fahvm tnngham, stu<lent at Kenosha High chool
ahout 191 ), le<l the very first orchestra in the sch 101.
While this m-trumen:al group never gained particular
fame, Stringham <l1<l Recently one of his composit:ons
was played hy the e\v York Philharmonic Orche~tra on
a ra<lio network hroa<lca 't Stringham. himself. 1s new
,dJiliated \'-.'Ith the Mu,ic Department of Columhia Uni\Trsity
Paul W mdesheim, another early student, began an
orchestra m 1911- 12. He d1recte<l the "most talented
musician 111 the school" accordmg to the annU1l of that
year a group which mclude<l hes:<les W111deshc1m, who
dcuhled a- a l't \"tolinist, Marie McCaffrcy, pianist. Paul
Doehm. 1st v1ol1111st; LoUJs elson, '2n<l viol111ist; and Sam
I\ U'~cr, drummer.
When, 111 1926, Miss Minnie Lars~n hccame musIC 111·
·truc:or at h·gh school, the orche tra hccame a live reality.
Under her gu1<l:tnce, the group of mus:cians grew 111
numrer and playm·~ ahility till they were 1mpre,01ve of
01:c and pleasant of tone.
The high <chool orchestra accomplishes two purpo.::es of
<list net value. It teaches the tu<lcnt an<l entertains the
!chod an<l commumty.
95
A CAPPELLA CHOIR
Founded in 1929
M
F1r .. t S mv•[t.:f
L;ir .. 111
Accomp
1.. t, JJnt.: Hnri,;k. Fciculty D1rt...:h.1r
M1
Mmnii.:
hr .. t S mt.: .. flr Sd-.u-. AlhrHton, Cbd~
.A.py. n, Jos rhmc BarL'•;;: . Jul c
lhr .. 1, Am:rl1nc Bdott1, H. rLrn Btt;::rn, H,1rv!J Br1Jll\', Ruth Brtiling. M qorii.:
CaJv, EH·rdl Ch,1mhcr-., Gurdon ( hamh1..:r ... Fr.rnces Coc·k. Ah ih Ut.:n~morc,
M. r-\ Lc·u1~..: Dunn, Dl•f •th\· Ho\\ rd. Ro\' J ttk ... 111, M.ug ri.:t John-.. n, Kathryn
1.. nt"'-, l.:l\\r nee Jornr, L1ll1J.n L1..:undli, S1g:urJ LmJln. ( os1..:ntin1..: Manlll-'>I,
Boh McXi..: i , \\-c1lt(r ~to,:hrh, V1t
R ... mu .... cn, Holl rJ Ru-.-.dl. P~1ulin1.:
Sau~'• .J,1,k Sh nklanJ, c;1 d,
Simm n, ( harJ,, 'tr ngbcrg,
S,irg< >t, \ ug
Included m K. H. S. curr.culum only \\'hen a full tune
instructor was hired at the time of the opening of this
l:m1ld111g, music in Kei1osha enmr High chool date from
the organi::ation of the first student orche :tra a~'out 1910.
M1 -- Edna Cameron organt::ed two o h~r mu.;1cal Wl'l'
t about this time· an octet and a Girl 'Glee C'lu\ B th
!~rnups \':ere very act1\"C, the Octet s·ngmg at c1\·1c func
~1cns a~ well as at schoc I gather·ngs. In the first x:tet
,-:ere Edson Hardy, Alex Olshcf-.ky, Herbert Curt ... , P.ll!I
Wmdcsheim, Le·ter Crook, Irwin Mamland, Zcnas
Pilcher, and George B -cker. everal of the 1~1rls 111 the
early glee club were
athalie McKensie. Esther Turkel
96
S
Trt
nJ ~kmc tcr
Prl-.1dcnt
urlr, Ccct.•l ... Z:ipus(1t.:11sk1
Ihlnuth Sturn: Sclr•t.irv. FromCt.:11 C...ook
f1ltilt\' ,.\,\IS r, Mas Mmn1t.: M Larst'"'
lid rnth Sturm, Inc;: Tor..:l. J1..ha M 1..: Tr11h, John "I1.1lly, Jtr•>m4 VanJcr""'1ll
Int: \\ idt, Jt' ~ne \\-h1tJkcr, M .. rv \\ol.,.l.1gtr, ( lltl
Z.1pu c1en,.k1, La\'ern1.:
Z1lrk.
Fr1..:J R~kcr. J:in t Cook D11ruthv Dl11smort, Aile
CoJlrc\ Jane H{'rnck.
f.t:>na Hollf. Hclul Hunto<n, M,1qorit.: MJJJtn, B..:tt; Ml.'.!':t l, N om1 Pait,
Fr.mn:-. Polak, Hckn Rn.JmonJ, Eh:n,1 Schron.kr, Vuun1ca S11.11ka, Anne
St,1n' I. Luc1lh: \\ t:ltlf, Los \\'1crs11m.
mn, C-•thenne Perk111s, Helen Barden, Marguentc Miller,
M.tbel Rai,ch, Alice McCall, and Ruth Lilley.
In 1912 .t Minstrel how, directed by Miss Cameron,
was presented at the Colt eum. Proceeds of the production
l ou•~ht new linoleum and furniture for Mr. Tremper's
office.
In 1926 Miss M111n1e Larsen entered the music depart·
1 ent ,tnd populan::ed harmony clas cs, chorus, glee clubs,
.. nJ ;•ll mu,1cal actiY1ties.
Miss Larsen mstitute<l a system of awards for outstand·
ing music student·. Twn award- .tre given, ,1 minor one
GIRLS' GLEE CLUB
Founded in 1927
M
f'.r t S mec;ta· Accompanist,
Larsen
f,tnt' Hnr1ck. t.tC11ltv l)1rector
Ma
M1nn1e
( il;1Jvs Apy.m, Jo!i1icphme Baro.!ko, Juhl BJr 1, Angd1ne Bilotti, V1olt:t Borden,
Ri...th Hrc mg, E·.t:rt:ll ( hamber , Ann Chatll11ncz. Frances Cook, Hel n Copen,
Pearl D<nH.i.-;<JO. Mar on f1:-;d1cr. M.1ri0n Fra tld, Jane H.-.:rrid:, Dorothy
Hn\1.dfJ, Eveh·n J.tcohsen, Marv John on, Kathryn Jon·, Dorothy Kennedy,
Erna Konttz. L-.thcr LcJ~a. L1.lian Lroncll1. Lucretia Macl, Dort Macgaard,
BLttr McNeil, Ruth M.:~ eil. EJna Olson, L11l1an l)l!'..:n, D ri
O.'itrom,
f-r.mn
Pol .. k, H1.:nnltt.1 Po .. tman, V1t,1. Rii.smusun, Jdabclle Raught, Helen
Redmond, lean Runal. Prnlm
Sarglnt, V1rgm1a
j\<tge, Ruth
..:hwartz,
Nt:tt1c S1..ov lk. Alice Scrp
Nathalit:" St.:r\al , M, rgaret Sh1dJ .. , Veronica
S,Ja1lc , R1Jth S11hnt, ClaJ, Simmons, Edith Sorensrn, E tht.r Sorensen, Anne
for all who earn two or more credit m music, and a major
for more ahle tudent-.
The Girls' Glee Cluh agreed to upport the project and
soon it was put into operation. Immediately, m~erest in
music was stimulated and enthu iasm for mu 1c work he·
t..tme more general.
A total of one hundred twenty·five studen:s have re·
ce1ved small award dunng the eight years they ha\·e been
offered.
Large award were earned hy Jame· Cowan,
orman
Greem\< od, Rohert Hansen, La Verne Hansen, Adnan
Dcl3ru111, Sophie Georgi, Alice Irene Km ·ella, Ro:e Ern~t.
Willis Rockwell, Arne Encben, Richard Mc rtcn on,
~~cond ~~me ttr
Acrompana t, J)~lrothv t.ack; raculty 1J1rect r: M1 Minnie
M. Lauen.
·tancc, M.iry !:it1ponuk, In z Topel, Julia Mae Troke, Josephine Viola,
El" h<th Volo1, Inez \\'aJc, Ddurcs Welt r, Luc1l!e Welter, Jeanne Wh1tJ er,
Man· \\"t1lslager, M}rtle Zohn, Cecelia Zapmcien lo. LaVcrne Zied.
M r.:ella .'\nJrekus, Margu ri.e Bat<nburg, \\'m1fred Burdick, Mildred Cox,
A1lnn <:od.rcy, J•n Goldbug, Virginia Crat, Ol11:a Grigorick, Luc11lc Han en
K thn.n Hui sen, B tty B. Jvlm Jn, (;t.:nn:1C\C Lukman, Rose Lukman, Mar•
1or e Madden, Virgm1a Orth, Hdl'n Peterson, Marv Rmald1, Manr: Ru.macb1k
l:htrJ .S..:hrucJer, Ann,1 Slb1b, E ther
tJft.:nscn, Grace
tcwart, Adeltnt.
\\ 1Jm:-r, Lot \\ 1cr um. Mirgurrite \\'1bon
Frank Zahukovec, Chester Ervin, and Jane Herrick.
Each per,on in the latter group had more than four
music credits.
In the current year, the mu ic department ha been
especially active. The glee club and choir were featured
eparately a well a - m a combmed presentat1011 of
Gounod'· Faust, during a concert in December.
The program of second semester appearance- mcluded
the Annual Spnng Concert for 1935, a brief program
l'efore the Forum, incidental entertainment at the State
Paren~ Teacher Convention Ses;;1ons.
The orche·tra and other musical groups will probably
.tppcar 111 the city'.; Centenmal Celebration
97
SPY
935
BOYS' GLEE CLUB
Founded in 1926
hr"-t Scm~ .. tcr; St.:1:-.u" Alhrittt.>n, H rl n Bit;:an, H rolJ Bradlcv, Conrad
Browne, Cordon Ch.imha .. , Pt.-tt.r Ch.it Io\' t."2:, Al\'.1h Dfn!lmori.:, L1wn·ncc
Hi11lanJ. John J.. tvant:k, Rov Jack"<ln. Lawrence Jornt, , tanlcv Kr:cnkC\\.''.CZ
Su~urd Lmd(·n. C'A .. cntmc M.10 ..·u .. 1 Pdcr M .. ri, Rohen Mc!\:'c1I, \\·,lltd
M·>chrke
Rohen 1\d on. L\\\f1.T1l"t.: Pcr . . 1..chmc. Howard Ru .. :-cll, Edward
S.rnd!>.:rg, John S1p>mJ, Hrlmcuh Sturm, John Tilly.
S1.:conJ S..:r.r~trr
M 1ri..l~ Amh:-ldng, \\'111 m Anda m.
\\ llltarn .lohn,.on, P,1ul L.1Comh , l-'rt.d M.mcu 1, (;1,;0flo!l
J
J)( nalJ B1orn,
Ph rson, M.1rvin
Pu:r .. on, Luc•C'n P1i.:ry, Gcnc PtctranJ,!cli, Rudolph Pra .. hin ... J.1mcs Presta, Leo
Rich rdson, John R1t cca, Rus~cll S1 st(•, Hole r S1 r ns n, Tom \\"h1tJkcr.
f r .. t s~m(" t~ r: Accompan1.st, J nc H rnd, Lu:ulty Ad\i<:Lr, Mi:'S Minnie
M. L.ir-"L'n,
BOYS' QUARTET
SPY
J.. t Tenor
R v I•.! ,,in
1nd Tc·nor
Boh Mc1':c I
l)rrccrnr· M1,. Mmn:c M
935
98
I rscn
Joh1 T ""! r
2nd B.1•>
A~ <.:.mpan1st
Hdmuth Sturm
Intrigued hy the unique musical pcn1hility of small
song group , Miss Minme Larsen organi::ed several of her
fine't male smgers into the "Boys' Quartet." Although
the group was formed 111 eptemhcr, 1933, 1t was prac,
t1cally unknown until this year.
As the tuneful am ha. .;ador · of the high school mu ic
department, the memhers of the quartet have entertained
the P. T. A. and other groups.
Thi seme ter, after January graduation had dismem,
bered the quartet, Howard Rw;scll replaced the former
semor memhcr, John Tully.
C\Jictor!/s CJ1oute is a 0lippery /ilm
HISTORY OF ATHLETICS
18<)()
o silk moleskms, conferences, forward passe·.
B.tll L,trrier cnes "<lown" v.hen tackle<l. Touch<lown
counts ~ pts. Dropkick 'i ONE game a year. "K"
heroes Ktmball, Eaton, Glover, H,urnan
1S9'i
SLOres 111 '9'i, 'Wi Racine games is 0-0. '97 "R"
team <loesn't -;how up. "K" varsity plays "scrubs."
Stu<lents, clearing fiel<l for '98 Waukegan game,
<l.image property. Are arreste<l Stars Allan, Cole,
Hansen, orenson, Timme, Schumacher.
1900
I 90'i
191 0
Play football 111 any open fiel<l. "Tag" paying
spect,ttors. Team man,t.ger he .oks games. Isermann
makes lone touch<lown 111 '00 Thanbgivirn~ game
Players huy own equipment, R. R. tickets.
tar
quarterback Lvnn Hannahs, Capta•n Arthur Ho!
<lerne~ . Pl<ty Oak Park, Chicago, Milwaukee, Wau kct!an And feu<l al enemy Rae ne Capt , n Cleary,
'O\ ts ma tcr punter Other lea<ler· player-manager
Glcrum, O'Donnell, Grosvenor, Mad<lock.
R••ketball popular under Coach Burnett. Use
Y M C. A court Pcnah:e only punchin~ an<l tnpp•ng. port is rough! Two Racine ·~amcs, '()) 5pltt.
Cleary iroes 70 yds. for touch<lown. Players who leave
l'<Lme can't return. Teams run out of players. Cono:cript spectators. Few 'ignals. Puntmg strength
means victorie . Loom1 Brothers.
Frc,1ucnt <lefcats. '1 '2 football team <l1shan<ls in
mt<lsea ·on '14 team get· •houlder pads. "K" heat<
Elkhorn, 130-0 Many trick plays. Large followtng .
Start howling team. Basketball: free-for-alls; cores
of fouls, preliminary game hy girls Star . Hardy,
Clarke, Ncb,on, Pctzke.
"Love," "Bear" arc captain' nicknames. Many
lossc '19 basketball team, gym-less, lo e 7 of 9
game . Occas1on,t! football victories. Athletes· chnell,
Hammon<l, Reith, Ryan, Llvejoy, Muhhch, Bentson,
Goo<lman, Meyers, Gerhar<lt.
191 'i
19'.10
z
<X
C>
f
0
f
Bel01t on frNhall chedule. Madison on ha kethall.
Reorga111:e Administrative Department. Athletic
Boar<l Pep Mect111g· Muhlich win 10 "K'" '29
Basketball team gets silver medallion ; '24 football
team gets cleated hoes. Track records. Player·:
Rahr, Dicks, Penza, Mudler.
192 'i - Interest 111 track. Cros country runners win cup.
'26 ha kethall team ties for Big 6 title. Wms district
tournament, third 111 state meet.
tars:
. Pacetti,
Jensen, Beaupre. ''27 team runner-up 111 state tournament Intere t in sw 1 mming Hire Engel as coach.
Athletes
ordstrom, Franks, Shipley, M. Pacetti,
W K1rar, M Jc:ulewsk1, aw1cki, erpe.
1930
Foo+all team heats Madison West 75-0. erpe is
conference high _corer, 94 pornts. Football champ1omhip_ '32, '34 Basketball team win 14 game·.
tars: Borak, Klcmaseski, Maccari. '32 Sw1mmmg
team w111s state meet for th1rd time, Track team for
•xth, Bauer made head coach Second in conference
haske•hall '32, state meet '34.
99
y93 5
100
FOOTBALL
Football Schedule
Sept. 1'i South D1v1s1on, Milwaukee ........ Here
Sept. 22 J anesv1 lie ...................... Here
Sept. 29 Racme Horlick .................. Here
Oct. 6 Beloit ......................... There
Oct. I 3 MaJison East. .................. Here
Oct. 20 Ma<l1son Central ................. Here
Oct 27 Racme Park ..................... There
()\, 10 Ma<l1son West. . ............... There
"Big 8 Football Champions!"
Anywhere m the Conference this phra e arouse re pect
an<l a<ln11rat1on for the school an<l the team to which it
1 applied. With the passing of the foothall season, the
wurJs acqu1reJ new meaning at K. H. S. a the school
watchcJ its team lowly develop in•o a powerful gridiron
machme that reacheJ its peak of efficiency m the brilliant
,rnJ succes ful Madison East game
Slowly, hut urely and positively, the team proved its
real stamina an<l la ting trength a it <lefeate<l team after
team on its schedule, to write upon the page of K. H . S.
griJiron history a record that ranks with the mln bnl
liant of the chool's previous athletic acwmph.hment .
To the student who clo ely followed the team's progress, 1t . eem like a wil<l hut pleasant dream that the
team which emerged from its first game by a mere one
pomt leaJ could finally re10'n as the undisputed winner of
the Big 8 Champion.hip crown.
"A fightmg team!" is the way in which Coach Bauer
u ually de. crihes the eleven. Perhap his comment explams
their success. Even if 1t does not, one thing 1s certain:
merely to prate manely of their store of such qualities as
·chool loyalty, teamwork, or heroism, will not suffice a
praise for so valiant a group of players. Instead, let it be
sai<l of the Kenosha Champ1onsh1p team that they recognizeJ the odd· against them, played har<l and well, an<l
finally were rewarded by a champ;on hip smile from Lady
Fortune.
SEPT. I 5 Successive first clowns, after Thompson had
hlocke<l a D1v1s1on punt, resulteJ in a touchdown hy
Horne; Hartnek kicked the extra point. An mtercepted
Kenosha pas perm1tte<l a Milwaukee touchdown, but the
D1v1s1on attempt for the tymg point failed. In the scorele s fir ·t half, Hartnek 's effective punting gave K. H. S
a light advantage. Keno ha 7, Milwaukee South D1viSH .n 6.
SEPT. 22-Dangerous for the first time in years, Janesville' Bluebird held the local team to one touchdown 111
Kenosha's first Big 8 Conference game of 1934. H orne,
carrying the hall on a fa t end run, made the only score
of the game. Except for an intercepted pass by Camosy,
the rest of the game wa uneventful. Kenosha 6, Janesville 0.
SEPT. 29-Speedy end runs, the Horne specialty, marked
up six pomts for K. H . S. early 111 the game. Hartnek,
who kicked the extra pomt, later passed to Thompson for
the second touchdown against Horlick. The offensive line
plungmg of Paczkowski, and the defensi'\'e tackling of
Bernacchi and Camosy were factors in the victory. Kenosha I 3, Racme Hor lick 0
OCT. 6-Fearful lest Beloit repeat last year's win, the
team qmckly piled up four touchdowns, adding six points
each to the scoring records of Horne, Gogola, Hammond,
101
py1935
THE SQUAD
and Pac:kowsh Hartnek kicked one extra p•iin~ and
frequently punted the hall out of danger. tarnng 111 <le·
fen e work were Camosy, Ambelang, and Werve. Keno·
ha 25. Beloit 6.
OC'T. I 3
conng a touchdown with four minutes left
to play, Kenosha fought 1t. way to victory 111 the ~cason \
most cnt1cal game. After Ea ·t kicked a field goal, Kenosha
passes from Gogola and Hartnek to Horne advanced the
hall to a point from which the lat~er player carried it over
the goal !me for the winnmg touchdown Keno-ha 6,
Madi on Eat 3
OC'T. '20
umerou punt and pa ses late m the game
failed to enliven it or to produce .cores. Of the player· on
the field five were outstandmg: M adison backfield men,
Owen and Arnold, who prevented Keno ha goals; Kara·
het os of Kenosha, \.vho starred both defensively and of·
J_
102
fensively; and Hartnek and Paczkowski, who gained much
ground for K. H. S. Keno ha 0, Madison entral 0.
OC'T. '27 Heroic <lefen ive play marked the game 111
\\.foch both Horne of Keno:ha and Hamme of Park \.vere
s•opped completely, Horne bcmg knocked out three times
an<l finally hcing earned from the field. Yardage ga111
were made principally by Hartnek an<l Paczkowski, while
quarterback, Gogola, controlled the team's play a<lvan·
tagc,msly for Keno ha. Keno.;ha 0, Racmc Park 0.
OV. I 0 Wa1t111g for East to heat Central and give
K. H. . the .onference title, the undefeated Redmen ex·
tended their record by thoroughly beating We t 111 the
final game of the cason Gogola' two touchdowns, one
after a forty yard run, featured the game. Madison's pas
attack failed agamst the Kenosha team, all of whom played
their po-lt!on· cre<litahl) Keno.;ha 27, Madison 0.
r
Basketball Schedule
Dec. l 'i
Dec. 21
Jan l l
Jan 18
J•tn 25
Feb
2
Feh.
8
Feb l 'i
Feh. l ()
~ ~.' r.
l
MaJ1.son C<t. t ................... Here
Racine Horltck. . . . ............. Here
R.tcme Park .................... There
Janes\tlk ..................... Here
Bclmt ......................... There
Rac111e Hor lick .................. There
R.;•c111e Park .................... Here
M.u..11son Eas' ................... There
J.rnesvil le ...................... There
Beloit ......................... Herc
Ever smcc the famous wooJcn horse episode took place
.tt Troy some centuries ago, Jark horses have maJe their
unexpecteJ appearances to put to naught the predictions
of prophets sport anJ otherwise.
Before the ha ... kethall season starteJ, the K H. S. team
w.ts "uncert,un," "a 4uest1on mark," in thL column of
most Wbcons111 sport pages. The possibility that an untrieJ team might rise to a leaJing place Ill Conference
st.rnJm ~ f,uleJ to impress .tlthletic eJitors
By m1J ,;eason the skeptical <cnhes were considering
Keno,;ha as a "p 1ss1hle contenJer" When the team won
the Big ,q champion hip, the awakeneJ writers calleJ ,hem
'"apparently unheatahle " After the Distnct Champ1onshi p al-«1 was .tJJeJ to the list of burcls, newspaper accounts to!J of the vic'ory 111 phrases <tuJeJ with the aJJCdlvLs "J,iz:lmg," "s1::l 111g," anJ '"terrific "
. Kenosha's early Jefcat 111 the tate Tournament EcrveJ
to re.;tore .t little face to the -.port eJ1tors, hut even th1 ~olace was short liveJ, for the Jark-hor-e team \\'On the
con.olatH n rounJ of games.
1'-'.:.rny K H. S. teams have \·:on champ ·onsh1ps of one
<ort or .tnothLr, hut few, if any, have given the ::chool more
~hrills .mJ gloat ng chuckle-. than the '3 'i Daskethall SquaJ.
py1935
103
"B" TEAM
D1•n D1t:t:;, Ht:nn: \\?il<:.on. \\iH1a:n B:nncy. Ch1rl·ncl. \\c&H•. J)l·rn B :nac:h1. M1..:ha I M~rtiP, Arthur Dimeo.
Leon 1rd Vogd, Edward Gulan, Joe Gogola, \\'a lter Ko.zlow~ki, John McGill, m.magt:r,
PY
935
DEC. 15-Led m coring by Thompon, who e 18 points
for the game were more than East's total, the ha ketball
quad thoroughly vanqui hed their fir t opponents of the
season. Keno ha 3 'i, Madison East 17.
DEC. 21 Eludmg both men who guarded him, Thomp·
on managed to score 13 points. oeka added I 0 points to
h1 own record . The other 3 pomt made a wide lead more
impre s1ve. Kenosha 26, Racme Horlick 1'i .
JA . 11 Lar ·en' two long, arching hot 111 an overtime
period gave Keno ha victo7 af•~r Hammes, of Racine,
tied the core 111 the last m111ute of regular play. Kuroski
and Thomp on, who wa high scorer, were al o out tand ·
111g. Keno ha 26, Racine Washington Park 22.
JA . 18 conng freely and effectively, the Keno ha
quintet won ea ily with Thompon and Lar on each con·
tnbutmg 10 pomts to the team' total. Keno ha 40, Jane ,
104
ville 26.
JA . 2 5"
Tra1!111g by ) pom~s a bare 3 minute before the
end of the game, Keno ha managed to wrn when, after
succe s1ve field goal by Englund, Panthoefer, and Thomp·
-;on had ued the core, oeka put 111 the wrnmng basket.
Kenosha 20, Beloit 19.
FEB 2 Although they were frequently behind, the
K. H . S. team won 111 a game, which was too clo e, con·
1der:ng the calibre of the opplnt1on. Except for the
scoring of Thompson and Kuro -ki, Keno ha might have
been beaten. Kenosha 18, Racine Horlick 15 .
FEB . 8 A dull game, enfeebled by endle fouls, was won
by Kenosha with little event except the adding of I 0, 8,
and 7 pomt to the scoring totals of Thomp on, Larson,
and Kuro ki re pect1vely. Kenosha 27, Wa hmgton
Park 13 .
FEB. 1'i In a contest which serve<l mamly to prove that
the newly acquire<l Kenosha power was really genuine,
Kenosha won with Thompson lea<lmg the . cormg list
through his 9 pomts. Kenosha 3\ Ma<lison East 22
FEB. 1<> Although Kenosha's victory was never threat·
ene<l, the game was genumely important. It gave K. H. S.
un<l1spute<l claim to the Big 8 Conference championship,
an<l mac.le Thompson high conference scorer for all time.
He mac.le 11 point , hnngmg his season total to 98 one
pmnt more than the ol<l recor<l Kenosha 35, Janesville 22.
FEB 22 Hole.ling Thompson scoreless <li<l not mean v:ctory for Ma<lison Central in this close non-conference
game Kenosh:t 19, Ma<lison Central 17.
MAR. 1 After Kuroski tied the score with a free throw
in thL last sccon<ls of pl,ty, Kenosha mac.le two ha ket m
the owrt1me perio<l the econ<l al o hy "'Curly," tn re·
main undefrate<l in the regular eason. Thomp:on 's ba ·
kct rai. e<l hi ,cason total to 1O'i points. Keno-;ha 36,
Belmt 32
DISTRICT TOURJXAME T Two games gave K. H. S.
1!s thir<l consecutive <l1 trict championship. In the first,
when the opposition wa at least momentanly dangerous,
the local team won from South D1vt.ion Milwaukee 33-20.
The final game, in which Kenosha had much le s competi·
tion, enc.led 34 9.
0
SWIMMIN G
SWIMMING TEAM
. L >n, rd G 1r ck
Ju:k A1 ,.,, t1 • Chl t~ r P r• r ln P.elmfr AnJrco::tn.
Stan1ev
JC\d)(rry, M ll Sal h11ry T~d ~1 u;1crOJ\.1.. kJ, George Pnhvl. ;\lhert
G vnn, Rohen Knapp. Roh rt S
ney, Vernon Rohlrne;, EJ ...he H.:irtn k.
R1rh rJ ll•Jfln, H rolJ Long Jr
l u' Bonofi •lio, Tony Pell grmo, John
(, il\h:h,
N.OV. 23-Following Captain Gorecki, who won both
l 00 anc.J )0 free tyle CVLl1tS, the team splashec.J t l VICtOry
with lir.sts by Sah hury, (100 yd. medley relay); Sv;eeney,
(100 yd. back ~twke); and the
e\'..berry, Pelle~rino,
Salisbury com hi nation, ( 1 50 yd. me<llcy relay) Keno~ha
4(i, Day View 27.
ST ATE TOURJXAMEN:.T
"'Unlucky D" may re silly
superstition to most of the school hut to the basketball
team it has potent meanmg. After wmntng thirteen
tra1ght game , it lost its tate meet opener to teven Pomt
l 'i -22. Two consolation games, which of cour,;e were of
little consolation, were easily won hy the squad after they
ha<l lost their 19 3 'i chance at the tate Cham pionsh1p title.
DEC. 8
uhstituting for imal·d Salisbury, icw1erdow·
::;ki gaine<l the only fir t place Kenosha took dunng the
meet. Diving, single other even• where the local team
figured £eriously, ended with Hartnek and Galv1ch taking
<econd and third honors respectively. Kenosha 27, Boy·,
Tech 51.
105
py-
935
SWIMMING, continued
DEC. 14 With e\.·ery K. H.
contestant placing in
some event, the wimm111g team won a victory in which
ah.hury, Hartnek, and Galvich were especially outstand111g. A feature of the program wa an exhibition of divmg
g1wn by an Olympic champ10n. The "B" team ,dso won.
Kenosha 13, Deerfield hield 56.
FEB. 1'i Disqualified 111 the 120 yd medley relay, the
sw1mm111g team missed victory by :; pomts. N 1ewierdow'k1 \.Von the 100 yd breast stroke and the 60 yd. md1v1dual
medley relay. Knapp was first m the 200 yd free style
;1 was Hartnek 111 diving
Kenosha Yi, West Milwau ·
kee 38.
JA
. I I -Gorecki and
iew1erdowski each won two
events, the Captam takmg the 100 and 50 yd. free-style,
and Ted the 75 yd. individual relay and I 00 yd. breast
troke. Galvich was fir t 111 diving. Kenosha 46, Bay
View 27.
FEB. 21 Meet'ng a supcrlat.ve set of swimmers 111 the
Mame Township High chool team, Kenosha was defeated
,l their opponents won first places 111 7 out of 8 events.
Hartnck, diver, was the only v1ctonous Kcnoshan Keno,h,l 19, fame Township 'i6
JA r. 18 Though handicapped by an infected toe, Sali bury won a fir t place 111 the 100 yd. breast stroke and
econd 111 the 60 yd. individual medley relay. Gorecki,
iewierdowski, Hartnek, and Sweeney were al o outtandmg. Keno ha 27, Boy ' Tech 46.
·
MAR. 8 Defeatmg Bill K1rar, former K. H .
star, 111
the 40 yd. free style event, Lon~ shared honors with
iew1erdowski 111 the meet Bnth swimmers won two
events. First places were ;ds,) annexed hy Gorecki, Knapp,
and Galvich Kenosha 46, Y M . C. A. 27.
JA . 2 5' Except for the upenor sw1mmmg of Bill Kirar,
the "Y" wa, powerlc,s agamst the school. ah bury was
fir.t in the 100 yd. hrea t stroke and 75 yd. md.vidual
medley relay. Knapp and Gorecki, who heat Kirar, each
won a free style event. Keno ha 46, Y. M . . A 27.
State Meet
FEB. 2 Wmning five out of the nine events, the wimmmg team won easily.
altshury was first m two races
hut was beaten in a third by his teammate,
iewierdow-ki. Hartnek won the diving conte t. Kenosha 49, We. t
Milwaukee 24.
106
Althcugh they had won the me2t the previou year,
the swimmmg team of 193 'i left this year' meet with a
sn::th place rating and a total score of only 8 po•nt .
1ewierdowski alone of the Kenoshans wa a star. In
wmnmg the I 00 yd. breast stroke event, he broke the old
state record held by alishury. Galvich won a fourth
place.
TUMBLING
1--.dv. ud H 1rtm k. ( .1p t 1111
l>lln BoHt.'., Btn \\ rvl, Pt.:t t M
ri,
John C dT<rt·; Fr n~ B a~Jon a ,
nc Hunt , R1 h. rJ ( lhv , J•,hn Ca1'1ch, Lcui Borofiglio, John B1 Ii h,
Ktnm:th Sdml1dtr, Tony Vcrkon, Ce ii ChriJO.tlJn, Ltn c;~rcck1, Tin\-· K me
nu ck , St tf'kv K r.i t:~k1, Ch<irlf's H ns s John Bc1h ,1tk:l\'\: ICZ lknn;· Ron, dio.
Fu~
Exercise, mo.;t of 1t hmng to watch an<l t:rin;; to tlo,
route hy which the tumhlcr gams the coor<l.na·
ton and -trength that 1s necc ·sary 1f he 1s to "float throu ~h
the ,1;r with the greatest of ease", -and lan<l with a mmi ·
mum if pr!
When the squa<l of tumhlcrs, directed this year hy ]. A
Ped and trained by Edward Hartnek , have concluded the;r
strcnunu::: cour<:c of traming, they display their arts hefore
spectators.
The team has given cxhihitions for the Eagles Cluh,
Round T.thlc Cluh, Amencan Lcg10n, High School as·
<cmhlics, Washington Jr. High School a 'emhly, .rn<l ,1t
the K. H . S Athletic Dl'mnnstrat1on
JS the har<l
TENNIS
Jack A'der,, W1ll1ap Sehr i. Maurice Purker, Ch,'rlcton
Brown Jack Saunder- Clarence E. Bayler. co.ich. Le,:;;s Lar<on.
Herhert 'Nard, Gene Englund , Rus c'I Clarke.
Lacking a home court, veteran<:, and egu rmcnt. t!:c
tenm-;; team managed ~o 'vm iust on~ v:ctory <lur.n~ the
entire cason.
Lahn, ' •ho reached the quarter finals n t 11c st?.t:
tournament, was the mo t out~~an<lmg meml·er of the quite
un-out tandmg t.2am. H ts court col leagues, L;:>r::;en. Rut·
ch1k, .tnJ Ward, were cffect1v.2 at llmcs l'ut \,·ere usually
rm..·erJe-;;s again!'t their more •earnned opponent".
In one ah1hty, that of pro<lucm•~ mtereEt·ng, enioya' le.
as~cmhlic•, the Tcnni.:; Club '" supreme. Always re~ iurcc
ful 111 this field, it has hought such entertamers a - the
Mc Elroy hrothcrs and their orche<:tra tr K. H S. One
( f its reot 1mportat10ns was the colored anJ colorful
t;ca Juhilec sin~crs, the 19~ 5" contribu:1on to the school's
cntcrta'nment
0
107
py193
INTRAMURAL ATHLETICS
Salishury, Byron M,1r\att, Conrad Cams, Gordon Nielson,
Paul Taft, and Eugene Englund On the -;houlders of
these lads fell the task of su perv1s111g the extensl\:e 111tra
mural competition.
Intramural athletics gives the student an opportu111t1
to learn to pl.ty a game, to referee it and to time 1t A
strengthened hody, and 111crcased -;kill and knowledge 111
sports result.
Intramural Manal(ers and Coach
Well organized, actively virile, intramural athletics give
the male student a chance for more practice and compett
DO
)00
100
DD
:=JD
=10
t1on in athletics than 1s provided in the regular gymnasium
periods.
Intramurals, v,:h1ch are even more vaned than the major
port program, are conducted through home rooms. Each
Intramural Track
"Best non-var ity·trackman" in K. H . . 1s the title
Rorert Keating is entitled to claim ,ts w111ner of the intra
mural trackmeet held at L111coln Park. N eare t competitor
to Keatin<~ in the event wa.
1chcls. Desen.ing of honor·
ah le r1cnt10n for their show111g in the meet arc W crvc.
Drath, and Long.
room has a manager, v-.:ho receives directions from a gen
era! manager, the agent of ]. A . Peel, Director of Ath
let1c-.
M erton
tauffacher was General Intramural M anager
th1 year. Frank Riz::o held an auxiliary po ition.
managers of 111d1vidual sports were Leonard
PY
935
108
tudent
tolfo, Mi lls
Baseball
Star annex speed-hall pitcher, Eddie Gulan, and his
eight teammate from 203 (a) , defeated all their opponent
on the diamond to w111 the 1934 Baschall hamp1on hip .
Playground hall was introduced 111to the intramural
. chedule to instruct student in hatting, pitching, fielding.
Swimming
Charles Pitt· was the leading contestant in a swimming
meet held January 24, 193 'i. Besides hcmg first in the
2 'i yd. hackstroke event, he was a memher of the winning
relay team, and was given first rating 111 the diving exh1hitHm hy the judges, one of whom was Hartnek, varsity
diver.
Hansis and Stanley, the other memher · of the relay
team, took first places in the 50 yd. free style and 2 5 yd.
hrcaststrokc, respectively.
;rnd the l.ttest rules.
The complicated ta ·k of planning the chedule of compctttion wa · given to sen10r manager, Leonard Stolfo.
Intramural Sport Champwns
Basketball
Perhaps the second floor atmo phere is e"pecially healthful or perhap· 1t i mere comc1dence, but all the tarring
Free Throw Tournament
Accurately fl1pp111g a haskethall through a hasket while
standing at the nearest free-throw lme 1· probably the
most individual of all the sporting arts. Consequently,
wmnmg first ratmg in such an event 1 a distmct achievement
John Shatrwka of Room 214 mam hut!dmg posse ed
this ah1ltt1 sufficiently to wm the e111or Divis10n Cham·
pionsh1p.
In the annex Jivis10n of the free throw contest, George
DcYoung won first phcc for his home room, 203 (a )
team in haskethall were from middle-story home rooms.
In the haskethall finals, semor home room 208 defeat ed
the .. Butcher " of 209, led by Guidotti. M attson and
1elson were high ;;corers for the winners, while Gallo
wa fi rst for 209.
T he last game was played before tudent pectators.
Room 202 annex won the sophomore championship by
defeatmg 204. W illiams of the \.vinners and Ellison of the
second place team 'hared high coring honors in the final
game.
109
GIRLS' ATHLETICS
G.A.A., core of athletics for girls in K H
., was
orga m:cd 111 1905'.
Extra curncular, expenmental, daring, the first Girls'
Athletic Assoc1;1t1on met for exercises and haskethall under
the d1rect1on of (Mr.) M. A. Burnett, Y.M C.A. coach.
The 1905' ha kethall team had Jmt six memhers: Edna
Reith, Addie Taylor, Helen Jen<:en, Celia Pirsch, Margaret
Pm•ch, Chnstma Van Lier.
Costume \·vere more formal than comfortahle or practi·
cal. Long, full hloomers, even longer black stocking ,
middies with wn t-lcngth sleeves, tics, and \.v1dc ha1r·ril'·
hons all were worn hy the school's athletic young la<l 'es
111 th1 20th century!
'·H.B B." wa the my.tic title of a ecret ociety forr.icd
by memrcrs of the hoys' and girl ' athletic team ' \vho
ha<l met informally at immon ', L1hrary one evening. The
cluh met at the home of the members-apparently to de
vise way to keep the explanation of the cryptic m.me
secret; fnr the an:wer to "What 1 H.B.B.7" has nc,·er
been made public.
Frequently the early G.A.A. held parties at which they
engaged in such dangerous and heroic pastimes as needle
threading conte L, fights-with water pistols for :\'eap:'n,
and candy pulls.
The girl- carried k111ttin to the big athletic contests
,md would alternately cheer and k111t·and·purl throughout
the game.
G1rb' athletic act1V1ty was centered at Mun gen 's Roller
Rmk, no\v knO\'.'n under the name, Academy Bowling
Alleys.
110
A star, male, foothall player exccutc<l an fa~ypt1an
temple <lance at the gn<l1ron hop given in 1918 hy GA.A,
v.:h:le one of his corpulent an<l clumsy teammates w< .n a
water-pistol 111 a nee<llc-thrca<l;n.~ contest. With the
weapon, the fat youth procee<lc<l to "kill'' his cc.ach.
The prc-cnt G.A.A <latcs from 1926, when it was
orgam:c<l hy Mr . Ruth Zander, \vho ha<l been a<l\·1sor
of the Outmg C'luh, ,1 lesser progenitor of the new G .A A.
Under her upervis1on, girls' sports were <livi<le<l into the
<lepartmcnts haskethall, hasehall, h1kmg, sw1mm111•~. an<l
ten111s. "K" weater were awar<le<l to the hest athletes.
Mary an<l Dorothea Hannahs, star girl swimmers, Sara
I3r tton (Mrs. Harry chwart:), an<l Mary Rho<lc arc
cvcral of the most w•<lcly kno\".'n first members if con
temporary G.A.A.
A h1ghli~~ht 111 reccn. G.A.A. act1v1ty is th: Play Day
hekl 1n Racmc, May 26, 19~0. a sport c1rni\·al at \!hich
there were n'orc than I 'iO girls.
Th.: faculty a<lv1sors of reorgani::e<l G.A A., cmce Miss
Z;!.n<ler have heen Miss Elisaf-eth Bernhardt, Miss Char
lctte Curran, M1 s Jean Brockway, Miss Dor•s Le faster.
.. nd the present 111 ·tructors, Miss Dorothy Ellen::, Mis"
Ruth Palmer, ;•nd M '" Mildrcd VanJerhoof.
0
A quite healthily plump G.A.A. pockethook hccamc
suddenly thin and sickly look111g as a twenty-seven dollar
donahm s•ripped it of its vitality early this year. The
L'oney, wh;ch wa contrihuted, to the girl ' athletic dcpartmcn~. !'ought equipment for teniquoit, hadminton,
horseshoe<, and tahle tennis.
The comparative kill of the various girl athletes wa ·
Girls' A thletic A ssociation
f ~t Si>mt_"-kr: Fr• 11 nt. M, •r t \\ II r V
Pr 1J~ nt. Ruth McG1\erno
St.: tt.:t:ir}, Be rue K
n, Trt.: 1r r, B r
Gr,1
S ... cunJ S, mt.: tu Prcs1J nt, M r} H.::tak , Vice Pr 1J nt, Ruth Md.11\crn,
Sl ctu . Bun ice Kr1.: m Trea urcr. Bt:rn1cc C,ra er
H.l n Amtchc, Ruth Andtritor, C,l~ndon Axtdl, M ry He' n BdJvt.:r,
Ruth J) hi, M TJC1f1C I \,Ills, Helen (;ird, Alt(e CuJlc\.\ k1, Bfrmcc c;ra t.r,
HdL
C1ri"kn:1i.:h, M rv H ah. Olg1 H~·rochcna. Mary King, Nma K1tcht'TI
J intn Klcrna fski, Jt.: JH: tt, Kozlo"h, Brrmcc Kr m. M..:q LJ:ar, Dorothy
LcR.,y, Ruth Mc(,i"crn, IJ1zahC'th N1 ... co1 1 Janet :N1clson, Josephine Papon,
R11
Pl uh 11c
H..:I n Pt.:dlt.::v, L1ll1an Pfarr Ann Put rk.1, Ann Sadov.: k1
Btrmcf": Schw rtz, Amta ThcJma , H, le n Thomas, Marg.1n:t \\.Jllcxr, Irene
\\'1crzb1ck, AJru.:nne \\ 1l11ams, Alice \\.olcott
1
tested through tournaments. In the tennis competition
three hundred contestants swung rackets th.:- fir.;t s.:-m.::ster
and four hundred the -;econd Tmester. Precedence 111
volley-hall 1· established hy tht: results of a tounMment
TOnsored hy G.A.A
The Golf duh is actn:e. When the \veather permits,
the member. go to the Murnupal Coif Cour.;c for practice
.ind sport se\'er;tl times each week.
Girls' Tumbling Club
( 11 r
S1.:cr1 t·1n Tr
J V.nJ rhoof.
Pre 1J nt
Rt.:tty AP
Ad, .. r, M1
M1l~r
1rLr. Josephine Cle.1ry, Faculty
Audrcv And non, M•rionc B.1ktr, M. c Cha c, Betty Ann Cleary Joseph me
Cle q.. Jc nnt.: Dootson, Helen Gira, P· t Hetrrmgton, Frances HolO\.\ICZ, Mildred
J<nkm, Mildrru Johnsen H met Karav. y, Mac Kr
, Helen L 'kov.1c;,
Ro lte Loc1cc-ro, !rent.: Mocz ! v.:sla, Eleanor Quid., June \\"all, Violtt \\'hit,
ffilft.:.
Tumbling, the la~est sport to go fcmmine, entered the
athletic program of K. H. S. girls for the first time this
year.
The fir t aim of girl ' tumbling is the development of
, trcngth and on::anic power through v1gorou, phy-.ical
:tct1v1ty. T he less strenuouJy athletic purpo es of the duh
arc sooal tra111111g and the de"·clopmcnt of ::.uitable
rccre, t1onal ,tcti\'itie · for lei,ure time
111
Grace and health, the prerequ1 1tes of beauty, are by·
products of the Trident sport program. Proficiency m
sw1mmmg and other aquatic art 1s the ultimate goal of
the club's members.
Although many of Tndent' members hold life aving
badges and other msigma designating supenor swimming
ability, not a hoy belong to the organization membership
bemg given only to the girls of the school.
Tndent has evolved a ng1d senes of tests by which the
ability may be measured. peed 111 sw1mm111g and form
and grace in divmg are po111ts most carefully rated.
~o
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JD
TRIDENT CLUB
President,
Harriet
chlager;
V1ce·Pres1dent,
Vugm1a
Morritt,
Treasurer,
Hdcn Pedley, Faculty Adviser,, M1-. Dorothy Ellenz, M1.- Ruth P !mer, M1'
Mildred Vanderhoof.
h1rley Batter> by, Blanche Boerner, Marjorie Cady, Helen C1ganovich, Betty
Ann Cleary, Josephine Cleary, Margaret Coleman, Frances Cook, Janet Cook,
Eileen Engel, Frances Fonk, Bernice Grasser, Mary Haake, Maqone Hallett,
June Hartung, Lorraine Herrmann, Sylvia Hill, Maqone Madden, Ruth Mc·
Givern, KJ.thleen McNamara,
irgmia Morritt, Majorie Murdoch, Helen Nu·
prtcnok, Hdcn Pedley, Isabel Rau .r, Janet Regner, Dorothy Rcmk, V1Cgin1a
Sa\'age, Harriet Schlager, Esther 511renson, Janet E. Tully, Margaret Walker,
E\'dyn \Vern.
112
Not all the act1v1t1es of Tndent are for intensive per·
sonal education. This year 1t pre ented a water pageant
entitled "The Pnncess Learns to Swim." A large cast took
part 111 the production which was held 111 May dunng the
mcet111g of the State Parent Teacher ' A ociation.
In the cast of true hydro-drama were all the watery
counterpart of a King's Court. Jesters, heralds, pages,
and queen.
Far from being novice at aquatic actmg, Tndent's
member have on many previous occasions taged colorful
pageants·of·the·pool. Every year the group pre ents an
exh1bit10n of some sort. This year's play constitutes a
new high pomt 111 succe s for the club in its production
of this unusual type of drama.
CJ3ridging the o/ears
Bridging the Years
A note from Mr , Charles £i(uarles, of Milwau~ee . f ormerlv
Emma 'rhiers of Kenosha. Mrs. 'rh1ers was a member of the
cla.1.1 o( 1874 , the class to which Mr.1. Bradford belonged .
'"I was 10 the clas· of 1874. There were five of us-all
girl·, as the hoys had left school, mo tly to go to work
The school was held in the second floor of the original
high of Kenosha. There were three rooms, one large as·
semhly and two recitation rooms. The principal was Mr.
H 0. Durkee. The graduating exercises were held at the
school and cons1 ted of es ·ays of the clas memher::.. The
uhject of mme wa~ Tram of Thought. One girl gave a
prophecy. The only thing I remember of 1t was that I
was to be the fir ·t woman president of France. Reverend
Henry Simmons gave a ·hort addres · and presented U>
our diploma·
We all wore white dres e ·.
T he only
flower- we had were a large hunch of garden ro es given
us by Mrs Ha tings, who lived on a farm near Kenosha ."
Mrs. Mary Davison Bradford
The Sra}"'"'rt Dd •ndi r In r uremt nt a~ .r.h ·n ~h~ wa~ Supt::rintendent
of the Kt:no:-ha .:hool • Mu . Maq· D.n 1son Bradtord champton:J the
cau~t: of Keno_-.ha High S.::bool. In th s school she ha~ lxen • student,
tt;c11,:ber, and a.,
tam principal
113
Saturday
Darling Jeanie.
\\'hew! Picture me in a state of collapse. This husrne;s of
herng a sweet girl graduate is wearing. hut I think the thing
that nearly finished me was not the actual fest1nt1es but the
horrible suspense beforehand Really. I nearly forgot my womanly
<lign1ty and embraced Mr. Newberry on the spot when he told
me that I had passed physics. but I kept myself very well 111 hand
Here I am. forgetting a'l vestige of my manners. Thanks
just heaps. Jeanie. for the gorgeous bracelet. All the r,irls were
practically green with envy when I wore it to the class play.
That was Tuesday the 11th. tf you're a stickler for details
and the title of the stupendous production was "lnt11:1ate Stran·
gcrs." which somehow has a kind of daring sound hut aimed
out to he awfully innocent and funny.
Thursday morning we all got together to practice how to walk
up the stage steps without stumbling. an<l how to rccc1w our
DO
}00
JOO
DD
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1935
=10
-spy
diplomas with a gracious smile. (I smiled at myself in the mir
ror for a half an hour before we left for the exercises Fri<lay
night.) Everybody more or less insulted everyho<ly else m a
clever way. and then we all went home to rest up for the banquet.
That ts. some of us went home to rest. hut I h.1<l to sacrifice my
siesta on the altar of beauty. I horrowc<l the family chariot
an<l cruised aroun<l getting a finger wave an<l mamcure. Well.
I finally got dressed and ready for the hig •lK1al c\·ent of the
year. an<l if I do say so myself. I don't think even your hrnther
Bob could have resisted me. I was draped m a black moire
creation trimmed with silver mesh. and I wore those tricky new
heelless sandals and gardenias. my dear. no less. y cs rrom
Jimmy sweet soul. The dmner was he'd m the Elks' Club hall·
roo::i. so dressed up Ill class colors nd the cla" flower that no
one wou'd haYC recognized 1t. We had the class poem and a iot
of music and speeches and yummy fou<l. 'cause. after all. food
is ;:n e•·scnt1al part of a han4uet. I crawled mto hed at an im·
earthly hour that night and it was hard to get up at the <rack
of dawn Friday morn111g and go down to school for our car<ls.
And then Friday night was the real performance
\'v'e all m,1rched 111to the auditorium at eight rn:'ock. or course.
I'YC spent most of my adult life dreamrng about the day \1.hcn
I could parade around n a cap and gown before 2n a<lm.ring
. ud·ence. so with my urnal luck I got into a class that voted lO
graduate 111 street clothes. Even my aesthetic soul. hO\·:ever.
was appeased with a really chic hlue silk . The orchestra played
and the A Cappella chem sang Hopsidee Pomtlm. and hy
the time the salutato~ian and the valedictorian had spok~n. I
was feeling sort of tear·y: rn I started th111k111g of <ill the funny
th111gs l had ever heard of 1n my life. to holster my droop111g
spirits. Gut I felt pretty solemn when we all filed onto the stage
to get our diplomas and when Mr Loomis handed 1:11ne to me.
I secretly resolved to do someth111g noble with my life after I
get through \\1th college (1f I ever do).
Coodness 1 The telephone 1s ring111g 1ts head off. so I'll have
to dash . I'ra Jook111g forward to a summer of sleep. And don't
forget you 're com111g to stay a few weeks 111 J u!y with me. I
hope you !t~e re111g la:y.
Lots of love
Simley
935
114
Kenosha, Wisconsin, June 22nd, 1875
My Dear Emmy Lou
You c.rn imagine how th•illed I am over the exciting ch.11n of
c\·u1ls that h.i made up my life for the pa t few weeks. I c.rnnol
yet fully realt:e that I have graduated, and that after four
happy years .1t Keno<h,1 High School, I shall nevermore 1.1.ander
up .rnd down its halk The feelmg 1s one closely akrn to s.1dness.
But first, dearest Ernr'ly Leu. let me thank you for the hcaut1ful
emhr01dcrcd has4uc I 1-cc< g111zcd your ex4u1 Ile W<' k a'ld ap preuated more than words can tell the long hours you must
ha,·c spent helping to make my graduation a 1oy1nis one
The exercises took place .1t the school, and couPt rs e.;-ays
were read. I do not mind s,1ying th t J was a ha fidg t>• hy the
end of the progr.un. Ho\\ ever, I was ne•v< u and riv harid
were clammy when I got up to read mrne. Whv th •t should
he o I don t kno\\. as J knew nc,1rly C\~ryone in the a•ict l'llce.
and they were all most sympathetic and smiled encour .,, 1"ly
I m1Paged to get through rt. and after\\ards •magmc my ur·
prise Reverend Si n'lwns to'd rne my essay "'"" a cred1tah'e ope
that I read very well! I'm afraid I hlushed a deep cm~ on. as
I \\a very much confused hy the compliment. The trtlc , ..,
The Tlwrnv Path to S11cce~"
Everyone s,ud th.it we made a \'Cry pretty picture on the platform, which sounds vain, hut I re.illy don't mean to he I'm
,,ercly trying to parnt an accurate picture of the proceedings.
My gown ""' of white Il'l slrn fil'ed with tiny tucks and the
trarn swept twelve mches. Dear Mother \~orked so hard on it,
though, of course, he had help with the fittmg. My whit l:1d
g'ovl's lame from Mil\\.iukcc as " prcsu1t from my Uncle Henry
Gihbons, and when pulled out re chcd fully to my shou fer,!
Of cour<c I wore t'1ern crus cd hclow 111) Jeeves \\htch did not
come 4u1te to my elhow' T!>ese day,, one could not po-srhly
gr.id11atc rf she did not carry a fan .rnd J larried the :11h•t<'
1
Chmc e 1 k OPe that Mother h.1• been sa\mg for me all ,i.Nc
year,, Do you rememher it' I can truthfully say that 1t v.as -i111te
the most ha'ld omc one there and I wa \'Cry proud of •t
Fortunately, my curl papers worked well the night hefore, so my
hangs were frr~zled 111 a \\ay that left nothmg for me to de ire
And. Emmy Lou, thmk of rt 1 I had ten hou4uet,! My, I
felt like a pnnce<s slttrng up there on the platform w1t'1 all
those flowt:r• piled around rny ket My ophomore flower girl
was Mary Purcell and she was very weet and helpful However,
rny rnmciencc hother me on the core that Mother and F.. t11er
could not well afford to pend o Pluch money on flowers hut
they ,ud that I only graduate once and that their dau~hter
<hould have everything JU l as nice a euryone else
The graduation address was shcJrt, for which I was thanktul
al'd then we received our diploma< . Oh, T kno\\; I shall kce;
mme forever I can hardly hear to let 1t out of my sight.
And now I rnu. t close. Do let me urge you to contmJe your
high school career, and not lo drop your c:as,c a> you are
planning I am convinced that more and more w<imen will
gradual<' m future years, and I we 11ldn 't have mi cd the thn I
for anythrng
Hoping that you an· weJ:,
I ,1111. dearest E111my Lou,
A ff ectton a tel y.
Su ie.
Miss Emmy Lou Brewster.
18 7 5
I J)
PY
At 7: 30 Mother comes m and
awakens Susie . . . Susie rises
and dons a basque and skirt in
a cold room . . . washes face
and hands. Removes curl papers
and brushes her hair high on
the back of her head with bangs
m front . . . wa!ks to school
with the girls.
Hangs her cloak and hat on
a hook m the hall . . . Phonics
class. Spends all period saying
voice exercises: b·a, ba, b·e, be,
b·i, bi, b o, bo, bu. bu . . .
Composition clas . Writes a note·
worthy essay on Spring . . .
As embly Hlll. Becomes tangled
with the binomial theorem
and spends rest of time writ·
ing verses expressing her de·
vot10n to her black-eyed music
teacher . .
Algebra. Blushes painfully at her failures, and wishes algebra
Assembly period
were not included m the curriculum
Concerted effort on "Sweet Adeline."
Home to dinner.
State Const1tut1on class Reads the first part of the consti·
tut10n of the state of Illmo1s . . . Literature. Is charmed with
the new !tterature book which not only tells ail about the
aut~ors and what they did. but actually prints excerpts from
their works . . . Word analysts. Learns that mural comes from
the Latin word murus mean mg "wall."
.
Get hat and cloak and rides to Bessie's home to pull taffy
. . Hurries home to help with the evening meal.
Supper with the family.
Leaves for the weekly meeting of the debating society at the
ts more influential than environment." . . . Father comes to
high school. The uhject for debate ts "Resolved: that heredity
935
116
take her home
Goes to bed. Reads 'fhe Count of Monte Cristo until mother
calls to blow out her candle .. is fast asleep at 9: 30.
Eats breakfast of oat·
Ezra ts called at 6 A M by Ma
meal and milk . . . Feeds the chickens and Betsy, the horse . . .
Cleans up the buggy, and spades garden plot
Walks to school
Calls for Sam and Zeh . . . Is tempted
to play hookey from school. and go fishing Decides to wait for
a warmer day
Rectt 1tion m physical geography class. Class plays "capitals."
a guessing game
. Spelling-bee. Boys against girls. Boys lose
out on queue . . Reces<. Plays ''skin the cat," and chin's self
twenty times on handhar. . . V1s1tor arrives during arithmetic
class . . . Pupils get out of ten minutes of work while visitor
speaks on 11cce" and How I Attained It
.
Gcoq~e throws
some rubber into the stove ,
Classes arc suspended for the
rest of the morning.
Dinner: potatoes. baked corn, pork-hunk, apple pie
Wntmg class.
pills ink all over desk and floor. Has to
scrape floor •.""1th glass .
Music. instructor interrupts class,
and all mg Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes." . . . Class
quotes memory pieces .. Reads Will Shakespeare's Hamlet
. . . Recess. Has to . tay tn to learn memory piece . . . Gram•
mar cla. s. Studies parts of speech
. All four classes excused
from compos1t1on work. to cttend graduation exercises, four !!'iris
and thrc~ boys graduating-biggest class in three years.
School s out . . Fellows go for a swim at the mill pond
Someone ties S!tm 's clothes into knots.
Blacks the tove. and cleans lamp chimneys . , Chops wood
and tai<es .a .?ath tn Ma's new wash·tub . . . Puts on " unday·
go·to·meetm clothes for dance at Higgin 's barn.
upper: corn beef and cabbage
Calls tor Katy. and wa'ks to Higgin 's , .. Slim plays the
concertina. and Mr. Peck fiddles. Have square dances and Vtr·
gmia reels . . . Mrs. Higgins serves 1ce·cream and cake and
coffee . . . Party late m breaking up .
Fellows walk home with Katy and her beau . . . Boys go
t1ck·tackmg. Get chased by Farmer Perkins.
Get home and is greeted by Pa at the door. Is reprimanded
for keeping late ho\jrs . . . At twelve o'clock sinks into a well·
feathered bed.
Shirky 1s ,1wakcnetl at 7 ·I~ hy Whispering Big Ben, "the polite
"'!otlcrn al,1r111 clock ftr,t 1t whispers, thel' It hout ." Yawn
anti sh11ts 1t off .
Gets 11p, t.1kes ,1 hnsk shower, tlres.e<
sl ,1rtly II' .1 111otl1sh sports !rock arr.111ges her "permanent"
curls. anti <uhtly applies her 1Pake·11p
Eats a light hrl'ak
t,1st of orange JlllCC ,inti h11tterctl toa t . .
Dn\C off to scbool
111 her Lafayette
Coe"' to chi:mhlr} rcc1tat1on for two penotls. 01 cu"1on of
electric ref rrgcrators. Becomes horetl anti 1s reprnnantlcd for
1s ng her lipsu,k 1n class
St11tly. Rc,1tls The Literary
D1g(lt for history Tries her hantl ,1t writing f rec \'Crs!' for BuJ.1
. .
French. lnform,tl tliscuss10n of Eva Le Gall1cnne's per·
tormancc m LAiglun . .
Horne Room Day First Colli c tn
the progressl\·e hanyuet. Etiquette rules concern111g the cocktail.
Honn· to luncheon
Re.ids her mail: three letter f1orn at!·
m1rcrs ,1l as many colleges, an tn\·1t,1t1on to a sca\'enger hunt, an
at! for c..1rtl tahles th.it autorn.itically shulil!' anti tleal the .:.1rtl .
Back to 'lhool frne Arts. Is work111g on ong111al dre" de•
Pool. Swims the length 111 14. 'i Fl11tfs her hair at
-igrithe clectrrc tlncr, anti the "permanent" curls come up smt!rng
Amertl.ln history. Many op11110ns ;met! as to the n·lat1ve
<IJcscss anti fatlure of the
.R.A.
Gets her fur rnat from her locker, and s1gh111g at the th.Jught
c_,f the 111tfirmhetl experiment, wearrly mounts the stairs lo the
ldh
Strolls tlown to Hurt!' wrth the Cllrrent attr.ict1011 .lilt!
Jrn"ns truuhlcs 111 .1 tlouhlc malted milk . .
Reaches hnrnc,
t 1rns on the ratl10 anti manicure< her f111ger narls to the •11ne
of the late t pop11lar songs.
Drnncr at home wrth family
Srts tlown to 'll1tly for .ir1 hour, " mtcrruptetl twtee hy 'phon.-'s
rrng
Goes to a h;1,kethall g;unc at chool anti cheers tlutifully
Out rrtl111g with the gang and home to her house where hunch
r;11tl the kitchen for orncth111g to cat Sufficiently fillet!, tht'
guc ts t,1ke their lea\'e . . . 1\t ele\Cn o'clock she rernemhers
he ha<n 't tlone her f'rench for tomorrow. Sighs, tucks Antlrnnv
Adi·erse under her arm, anti goes to bed.
Jack is a\\akenetl at 7 o'clock hy a tlog\ lick111g hrs face anti
tear1ng off hed cloth111g. Gets up, pertorrns a fc" exer.:1ses
. Has hrt'akfast urangl' JUlll' Grap<'
\\"a<hes .rntl tlresst''
, 'ut , toa<t, anti milk
"T111
Elizaheth" starts fatrly easily only neetl crankmg four tunes
Rattles off to school. Prcks up
a "carload" on the way . . .
Runs out of gas. Fellows "chip
111" and get one gallon . . .
C.ir hreaks down three blockf rorn chool Sturm .rntl Mc "eil
ha\'e to p1i-h
Tartly at ,chool, has to -pent!
first hour 111 library . . . At·
tends his Journalism cla,<. Really
enJoy himself while the teacher
1s out of the room . .
English
cl,1"
Rcatls Atle's The Fable
of a \Vonderful
Meal
of
\little~.
I
sent to office to
sign
gun·hook . . Spend'
pcrrotl pract1c111g Jones' tln,111g
trchnty 1e during Golf Cl uh
l'leetmg
hxcs car anti cats at \Voolworth's hot ht>ef -andwich, coffee,
pol a toe< anti s,d.itl, topped off wrth a cherry 111,t!tetl
R1tles
.irountl to\\ Jl. Honks at gtrl friend' St•>ps to make date wrth
Sytlnt'y Cady, .tnd t.tkt's her to chool
!'alls asleep rn physrc' class. Is sent to office 'ans tie. and
returns hcncath one of "Pop" \Vard's favorrte blue·green spcc1·
rnc1 s . . Ci\'rl \\' ,tr 111 history clasSwirnm111g team
pr Ctlce
Eats tl111ner out with the family. Begs lea\'e early
,\ttcntl, meeting of Hi ·Y Leads discussion on tlurng away
,,·ith socks anti neckties .
. Goes with the hunch to Hurd'<
. J\sks some fellows O\'er.
Gets nd of the gang. tunes 111 on ratl10. and listen< to \Vayne
Kl!lg
Reads popular murder mystery Fan-Doo. the Elec·
tncran
. . Locks all first•floor w111dows anti doors securely and
retrrt's .it l 2:4'i A. M.
117
SWEET LAVENDER
Haunting a· the fragrance
Of half-remembere<l lavender,
The <leltcatc la<ly,
The beau gallant,
The fragile grace of long ago ...
H . CC.
PY
1935
118
SECOND APRIL
Lovely as the ram·<lrcnche<l
Leave of Apnl vmlets,
The skin of rose,
The mouth of dew,
The lingering laughter of young eye!
HCC
935
119
September
6
10
Miss Bangsbcrg arn\'cs 111 ' \ C\\ York from England on the
Berengaria
Jack \'an k1kc figures out at 12:30 ,-\ M . that there are
2391 ·2 hours left of yacat1on and rcsoh·cs to waste e ·cry
one of them
Kenneth Brown. our rnfant prodigy faculty mcmbcr•to be.
signs a ten week contract to appear as pianist 111 a rad10
program scnes rn Madison.
\\' e sigh \\1th en\·y as Walter Hord1\·ct: and lrYrng Wallace
leaYc for Jungle trails to search for the Founta111 of l31ood
Three hundred and twenty teachers arn\'C 111 town , Buddy
Goldman has a nightmare
Eighty two earners of the Kenosha
C\\'S attend A Century
of Progress. \>. ' c arc represented by Robert Sweeney. Mano
Fiori. Don Cook. and Charles S1gger.
CALENDAR FOR 1934
17
18
19
21
24
29
October
9
10
K H
banks 94 59. a\·eragrng 41 cents per pupil \\'c
arc so accurate and systematic'
Home Room Dav 111st1tutcd Fifth period C\'cry \\' cdn..:sday
is to be deYoted cxclus1\·cly to home room act1\·1t1cs or
projects
Cheering 111 the court hy clcYcn roo1m. Cheer leader Berry
Antaram1an somewhat handicapped by a dozen people
lcan111g out of the same w111dow with hun. thus mak111g 1t
difficult for him to decide whether or not it's his <'wn
arms he\ \Va\'ing .
\\'ard Perrin g1\'Cs a creditable performance of Et•erv :nan
at the P T A.
Jerry Dorman 111 a red bathrobe and Steve Ku:m1ch 111 rolf
k111ckcrs star 111 the Little Theatre's production of B'.!lib:tt
And ha\·e you heard' Bernice Holderness weds a football
pru Ill Louts\'llle. Kentucky.
Charles A . Wells. noted cartoontst. traveller. and rep<>t tcr
draws clever pictures and speaks words of wtsdom on
Russia in assembly .
Eddie Guest. as Fon11n speaker. pleases with "Ma and the
1\uto" and other poems.
November
12
17
19
22
29
The solemnity of the Arnust1cc Day Asscnbly docs ltdc
to dampen the sptrtts of the rec1p1ents of another half·lrnl1day
Victory lends her wings to dancing feet at the B1;.: Eight
Victory Dance.
Mrs. Pedley misses a lamp shade and finds that Helen h, s
borne 1t off to the G .A.A rummage sale
Everyone appears with a sh111y face, ncatly·comhed hair. and
well·prep~red lessons. V1s1t1ng day Many \'isttors expected.
but the ant1cipat1on surpasses the realization .
Thanksgiving Day. Approximately three thou-and pounds
of turkey consumed by K. H S students
December
2
7
17
21
935
+
24
120
The '\,ailing committee .. g1\·cs a prc\·1e\\' of Faust.
A Japanese garden 111 Spring! The Junior Prom leaves
noth111g to he desired Her royal highness Jan ct Sonn~nhrrg
has rehearsed lead111g the grand march for three w~cks.
with little brother act111g as double for Myron Gordon .
Chri•tmas trees -1>111c forth from \'anous rooms ;:I] O\'Cr the
building Christmas carols arc sung 111 the ha'!> hy the
mixed chorus.
l3q~inn111g of holidays. Bu1ld1ng cleared m five second; le <
t1·1e than at the last fire dnll
Mr. Kirk asks Santa Oaus for mnrc h•stor~· student' !tl.c
Dorothy :!','cu.
CALENDAR FOR 1935
25
January
7
13
16
24
30
Miss Wtlk111son , always first with advance styles, leads the
school\ cp1<lcm1c of mea !cs. Many others follow her
fashton h111t.
Six of our literary lights bcg111 writ111g a h1'tory of K H.S
111 observance of the 300th anniversary of the found111g of
the l3oston Laun School, forerunner of the American high
school.
Miss W ii son cntcrta111s her honor student at tea ]\ous
nous amusenons bien , n est·ce pas 1
Dorothy l3eutlich almost commits sUtCJ<le 111 the aud1torium .
Occasion· Hearts .
One hundred social blooms gather 111 the library for Quill
and Scroll's formal tea, and are urged to start blossom111g
soon for Bud s.
Jackie and Cl1flor<l arc guests at President Roo cve!t's B1rth·
<lay Ilall
April
21
22
26
4
6
11
14
Thr Scn10r A's wave goo<l·bye for the last time, ah. yes . and
half the class returns the next day for P G. work!
Mr . Paddock, Mr Wolf. and Mr Kirk look some\\hat
harassed as they take a flock of new Sophomore B's under
their wings.
\Ve go highbrow and see four Shakespearean plays w1th111
six hours' time . Cae>ar's resurrection provokes mirth . G:obe
Theatre Players.
"Buy a bond, buy a bond, buy a bond!" Teachers recc1ve
first corporate notes, redeemable June, 1936.
Tommy Gaffney swears undying devot1<m in num.:rous
pretty miss1\·es sent to numerou.s pretty misses.
M.rny gullible sophomores report to Mr. John's office after
bc111g told by their friends that Mr. John wishes to see
them . The April Fool joke 1s funny at firt, but at the
twenty·fourth repetition, it becomes someth111g else .
Easter Divers bird. and sundry flowers pose on hat .
William McClellan writes term paper on Mv Last Four
Semesters of English 6
·
Chet Hubbard presents "Mis Prep Club," Janet Tully to
you. with a diamond ring \\'ho'll be the second donor?
May
:!5
February
Miss Cumro is offered an exchange po it10n as teacher m
Hawa11 for one year. Olli authorities decide they can't <lo
without her.
31
W11l1s V .. n Lone hangs a May basket on Eleanor Bush's
doorknob, and trips laugh111gly away.
Acute cases of Spring Fever. Epidemic steadily 111crea,111g.
Authont1es plan to close school June 15.
Charles Ambelang and Mary Louise Dunn still stand111g, still
talk.ng. outside of Room 203
March
8
:o
22
Latest report on measles Shirley Battersby 1s broken out
on'y ninety m111utes and " forced to hibernate for two wreks.
Pep Club Dance for the basket bait team. Only .wo <cam
members bring girls and dance. Letters awarded.
Mr R fshol has a birthday party with a real cake candles
and some bee·yoo·t1·ful present.
The Ju~1lee . S111i{er.s under M r. Bayler's earnest sponsorship
< n heha f of the Tennis Club, s111g- for assembly
PY
1935
ONE CENTURY
1835-1 49 Pioneer found Pike Creek- pri\'ate schcol
first \\"1!1ter, Re\. J.1son Lothrop teacher rename \'illage
outh port
71
settlers, mostly nat1\·e American:;; M1chad Frank comes to outhport Association of Free
chool Fnends R . H. Dem1!1g, Charles Durkee, ]. B.
J1lson, f1chacl Frank- territorial legislature authon:es
free ,chools 111 outhport- first puhltc school da ses 111
basement of t Mark's Church
econd Ward chnol,
first huildl11g for puhltc education appropnat1on for
high 'chool land donated hy ereno Fisk - huilding cmt'
·+500.
1 49-1861 Fmt free high school 1!1 W1scon.111 dedicated
Julv 2, "suhstantial hnck hmldmg and well n~nt1lated"
122
·Se\'enty feet long Zu111glu1 Graves, pnncipal--only
one other pedagogue " all branches of English education
usually taught 111 common district schools and academies"
city 1!1Corporatcd as Kenosha Principal John G McMynn, re\'olut1onary educator, experiments with course
of study school hell, predeces or of alarm clock purchased, 1'i O, for forty years ummons tardy students
high school -lasses called semors, first middle, second
middle, and iun•ors clos1!1g exercises quite a bargain,
thirty·s:x declamations for a quarter, no cat-naps for the
audience Thomas ]. Conatty, prinopal High chool
Exhih:tion, program of forty numher:: colloquies, tahkaux, readm~~s. d1alo ~ues, speeches, and music examina tions, semi public victims sing before and after each
one "scholarly lay men" assi t at the ordeal.
1861-1371 Twcl\'e yeaL elapse hefore first commencement graduating cla&; of nme tudent rece1\·e certificate
C1\'1l War -Pnncip.d Conatty enlists ~2 h1·~h school
boys follow- blue umforms more potent than hlue·hack
spellers former Pnncipal McMynn commands the tenth
Wffconsin infantry no masculme graduates for 12 years
enrollment drops- principal rcce1\·es appointment as
consul to mr(apore- high school report, 100 111 deportment for ek\'en of the twel\'C senior~ principal mcknamed "Palm Leaves and Rose " Lee surrender , patri·
otlc srngs, holiday G
Alhee become pnncipal
teachers go to Institute at Bnstol, ,;tudy a fourth reader
and mt ·llectual anthmet1c- four girl graduate<; receive
hlank diplomas-to the writing master, diplomas .een
no more state law: "~eachers mu. t speak En<;l1sh with
facility and correctne~< "-few graduates-Durkee inau<~urates '"The Roll," ,1t afternoon exerci,es pupil report
any whispering, hade of ocrate' and \Va,hington,
,thovc windows, sec numerous prevancat1ons, roll custom
1gnom1111ously disappears Miss Anna Gillett rhetoncals
crow<le<l with visitors history an<l civics required as re·
suit of Civil War.
1871-1880 State Je.,islature hccomcs e<lucat·on,1!Jy
min<le<l, rules const1tut1on of Umte<l States an<l of Wis·
consm be stu<l1c<l w;tr has squelched enthus1aom for
cch<x>ls, enrollment very cmall, recuperatJOn slow M> s
ecley has fire in her eye, impudence on tongue when
told she has a fertile 1mag111at1on, poor girl thmks she i
heing called "green" to 1880 only three pnncipals tay
more than three years, Durkee holds record of five com·
menccmcnt program, twelve rea<lm~s an<l seven musical
numbers, admission 3 'i c instructor arc versat;le, teach
everyth111 ~: botany, al!!;cbra, orthoepy, composition
0
1880-1891 School records s111gularly va<~u" ;ntercst ·n
education lags, few practical subject
Sta!e sends out 1 ts
of subjects, mild h>nt th"t cour'e might re improved "flowers in profusion an<l rooks presented to graduates"Bible rca<lmg cut from rorn111<~ exercises a uncomt1tu·
t1onal Kcncsha High chool appears on the Univers'ty
of W1scons111 accrc<lite<l list Franci Clean' principal
high school buil<l111g ha<lly worn, new building planned,
onginal contract 34,810, cost nor· ten thousand dollar-:
grade . chool torn <lo\'..'11 to make room for edifice.
1891-1895 Pcrilou tnp to commencement through par·
tially finished buil<l111g, no railings, to palatial au<litonum
- thirteen sweet girl graduate
reunion, "Let u all come
and get a brick from the old huild111g a a memento"
-June 19, Kenosha High chool Alumni Associat>on
founded, appropriation for waste haskets and dictionaries
--classes in new huil<l111g -<led1cat1on -four teachers
scarlet fever ep1<lemic-huil<ling hous~s grades one through
t\veke -literary society, discu ·ions in auditorium-no
essay at '92 commencement student raise money for
drop curta111-rcunion 111 Chicago- gra<luat111g classes
still small Col. Frank <lies, Dccemher 26, 1894.
189) -1902 Sc:-i·centcnn·al of free rcl1"ob, m'ri' c·r, cf
Alur.1111 Aosoc1at1on gather from all parts of the Umte<l
tatcs, toastmaster,]. V. Quarles Cc-I. John G McMynn
returns, whole town feel rem1111scent, Mrs. Mary D.
Bra<lfor<l gives address 111 honor of Michael Frank-girls'
gym club, first orgam::e<l work in music Spanish·Amcri·
c n War moti·m to aholish commencement exercises ef·
fect1vcly blanketed at Board meeting Martina Erick-on,
a Tstant pnncpal -Dav d CoJ"perfield 1s dramatic cluh
pre <luction a• Rhode Opera House.
12~
SPY
935
1902-1911 -Action! Principal Hammill stimulates schol·
ar hip, college exam now hold no terrors for Kenosha
High School graduate· initial Junior·Semor Prom ex·
tra curricular activitie , girl ' chorus, boys' quartet, Dehan
and Castilian ociet1es Kenosha High School History and
Annual, '03 Hocking prinopal first profe ional sup·
erintendent, P. ]. Zimmers-Jeffne, automobile manu·
facturer, donates manual tra111ing equipment · ·tudents
exult as electives come in- aud1tonum enlarged enior
pubh h 'The Owl, aim to remember every member of the
high school at lea t once a year green report cards are
~ent to parents of pupils who have failed 111 one or more
ubJect - office attendants patrol entire buildmg every
ten minutes-hookkeepmg seem to he the rage four year
commercial cour-e Mrs. Bradford become supennten
dent.
Ca!o>t of The Intnnarc:
124
[rangers
1911-1916 Tremper regime beg111s public speaking
high school students take on sophistication as lower grades
move out of building
Lyceum League
commercial
course hnnks to two years student council first Spy
-chemi try laboratory emors become philanthropic,
their donations buy showers populat10n of town doubles,
enrollment increase Prom, curl papers for all young
ladies school wired for electricity "at parties almost
every hoy took a girl and ome took two" ·auditonum
divided mto classroom -semor girl very spiffy, have
new mirror Mr. Ward wi hes no holdmg of hand· 111
his classes football
enator LaFollette addres es stu
dents-fla h photos for the Panama exposition, "We'll
get there one way if not another" football game with
Racine, "Racine High' cheering sounds like a clam talk
mg underneath a steam roller" congested halls, over
loaded cla · e .
1916-1922 Junior high chools alleviate crowded condi
t1ons lowly fre hmen become lords of the domam 111 their
ne\v home
pamsh duh · like mushrooms superv1 ·or
for art
World War, Harold Williams, captain of foot
ball team, first to leave for camp German dropped
Kenosha High sells S 16,000 worth of Liberty Bonds flu
and three weeks vacat10n graham muffins at enior ban·
quet Armistice Day, no school, parade auction sale:
item ~. history text-book, all important facts underlined,
read (,nly underlmed material enrollment climbs voca·
tional ~ubJect · more numerous Mis Spence, first librarian
- Professor C. A. Lunn gives a lecture on the Emstem
theory at the Woman'· Club, faithful legions attend
headed hy "Pop" Ward school pageant "The La~ht"
consist of eleven glimmer·, tracing the progre of educa·
tion repair expense have long mce pas ed twice the
original co.>t of the huilding G. F. Loomis, superintendent
of .chools.
1922-1926 Committee of c1t1zen recommend new high
.>chool, contracts awarded-Black Red Peppers- Sheik
Society appears, requirements: Bell-hottom trousers, red
tahle cloth around waist, red petticoat on hean, tomato
cat up on hean, and good lungs Setteretpep Cluh, girls
only >id homes used as high school annex, commeretal
building three hlocks away-]. F. tarkweather, '61, lays
cornerstone of present high school Radio Cluh makes it
poss1hle for whole school to hear inauguration of President
Coolidge, all postpone lunch to hear him-girls organize
Cosmo Cluh to do way with cosmetics 111 school; hoys
and teachers meet many strange faces Bmlding spnnging
up, impatience - assemhltes at the Orpheum Theatre.
1926-1930 New million and a half dollar huildmg com·
pleted hectic moving week, hu. he! baskets distributed,
students load up with hooks and depart-Washington's
hirthday and fir·t cla se in new home exploration -{me
week of dedication, practically everyone who can talk
makes a peech - wimming All-American Spy mu.1c
instructor-classe tart five minutes earlier, over produc·
tion of tardy slip ·-journalism, Kenews--dd huildmg becomes Central Junior High--<lome tic and manual arts
rcmam there.
1930-1935 -Stock quotations fall; enrollment quotations
nse Alex Scheer wms American Chemical Society fellow·
.hip Ted Stanford writes "Victory Song," two thousand
copies to student first dime dances bi-centenmal of
Washington's hirth Spy dedication: "To George Wash·
mq;ton, the man, the citizen, the President". - '3 2 enroll·
ment 462 student ahove maximum, crowded classes,
crowded halls, crmvded hour·, crowded dispositions-di ·
continue general a.,;emhlie - a few home room migrate
to old huilding- Central Junior High hecome.- High chool
Annex, infant sophomores turned loose in it intramural
sport newspaper readmg -honor roll revised --militant
locker guards--Home Room Day-Kenosha' centennial,
alumni reunion, The Pageant of Our Schools.
p
1935
125'
.A,.ll Together Now, Let's L\UGH!
HUMOR COLUMN
ETIQUETTE
Fred herr}': "\Vhat would he the proper thing to say if. rn
car\'lng the duck. 1t should skid otf the platter and Into yout
neighbor's lap?"
Mtss Kusta : "Be \'cry courteous. Say. 'May I trouhle you for
that duck?'"
Yesterday upon the stair
I saw a man that wasn't there.
He wasn't there again today.
I wish. by gosh . he'd go away.
- Selected .
In the Manner of 1908
DID
YOU
K
'OW?
In 191 'i Mr Ward \\as coach of the h:gh school debating
team.
In 191 'i the Orpheum Theatre charged an adm1ss1on pnce of
only live cents.
Mr. Wolf fell In love with his wife when both were students
In the seventh grade
The following faculty members are graduates of the Kenosha
High School: Kenneth Brown. Mathilda Hansen. M1nme Larsen.
elson. Lois
Nicholas Magaro. Nellie Ma'oney. Florence Barr
'orthway. Catherine ovack. Dorothy Slater. and
atalie W1l·
ktllson.
Freshman: "Haven't time to take the Owl. I already takr
algchra. physical geography. Latin . and English ." The Owl ,
1908
THEME
PY
935
ophomore B
ophomore A
Jun10r B
Jumor A
en10r B
entor A
P0st Grads
Faculty
126
SO
G
Tiny Little Frngerpnnts
ril Get By
Have a Little Dream on Me
Flirtatwn Walk
I've Got an Invitation to a Dance
Fare Thee Well . ,A,.nnabelle
Out in the Cold Again
What More Can I Ask
It's such fun to dream , and for the lads who h,1vc no dream
lady WC suggest that they thtnk about Kenosha High. Perfect
Sen10r Girl She has eves like Irene Gallo\. a nose like Evelyn
Docrnng' s. hps like !l.fary Parmentier\. and hair like Jane
Isett\. She has Angcline Bilotti's smile. Ruth O'Brien\ dimples,
and Florence Brinkman 's complexion Her Irene Madison figure
1s dressed In Hazel Kluender\ clothes. Her schohstte ability 1s
that of J ulta Barst ; her personality, of Mtnnie Hut"en She has
the poise of Mercedes Frechette
And for the little girls we present Kenosha High 's Perfect
Scnwr Boy. He has the phys14uc of Benton Hammond, the
scholarship of Myron Gordon, and the personality of Frank
oeka. His eyes arc Vern Ganzer\, his nosi• 1s St mley
ew·
berry's and his hair is Byron Marlatt's. He wears Blair Catter·
ton's clothes He has a smile ltke Charles Paczkowskt's and a
complexwn like Wesley Osterberg' . He has the athletic prowess
of Gil Thompson and the dcpcndahil1ty of Louis Bonofiglio
His courtesy ts that of Robert Hurtgen
THE SPY GLASS
FOR YOUNG SEEKERS
T O : \ CHILD ASLEEP
You arc curled up in a big wing chair,
.'\nd th.: moonlight laughs on the flour;
Your weary fingers, unbending, louse
The \'olume of faery lore
The tiny Dresden shepherdess
On the mantel nunds her sheep,
And the drowsy world is slumbering
Jn sighing silent sleep
The silver ash of the dying fire
Warm on the hearthstone lies,
The phantom faeries of sleep have tossed
Soft dust in your lo\'ely eyes
IF
YOU
CAN
Tell me something you know that' nicer
Than Chinese tea in a Chma pot
With poppies m a low blue howl on the table
Beside a wicker basket filled with crisp, Scotch scones,
And your eyes smiling at me over your cup .
Educators assure us that within a decade the subjects that
are now required will be elect1\'e. Great idea. Funny how our
class is always some ten years behind these great ideas. We
wonder how many of the future sophomores will sign up for the
Geometry Club, and how many of the girls will be in Seminar.
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall,
All the king's horses
And all the king's men
Had flat feet.
As we look hack over the advertisements of yesteryear, we do
not wonder that the good old days were days of prosperity.
\\'ho with a heart w1thm his breast could have resisted such ap·
peal as these; "Buy an honest piano at an honest price," Alden,
B1dinger, and Co. "To remember that party, have a flashlight
made by Sydney." "We wire house at cost. Two years to
pay," Kenosha Gas and Electric Company; "Give us a call and we
will con\"lnce you that we carry a complete line," John M. Reg·
ner
The ads which were written for gentleman's clothes would
con\'ert Mahatma Ghand1 into a Beau Brummel: "A mJss1\'e
mtellect may succeed without good clothe , but it is hand1·
capped," "There's vim and spirit. clean cut character in e\'ery
line of Isermann' Bros. clothes for men and young f'len:" "We
ha\'e suits u1tJble for big boys, little boys. good boys bad hoy·.
rough boys, and boys of e\'ery makeup." Lauer and Dai(enbach
Calendar entry for March l, l 913: First robin of the eason
een. (He wa•n't robm anyone.)
Come mto the garden Maude. Right up these stairs. Our
other beauty spot at Kenosha High (the first one 1s the page of
graduates) 1s the- greenhouse. lt 1s especially lo\'ely during
1\pril May and June.
~
u
f
PY
935
t
And then the originality of other days! Back m 1911 the
following names were suhm1tted when the students were looking
for a name for the py: 'fhe Pill , 'fhe High School 'Tell 'Tale,
'fhe Parrot , 'fhe Dorot/1\' Bar~. 'The Monthly Grouch. 'fhe
Heart Brea~er, 'The Sto;ie Brea~er, and Mi:;:; Yule:; Dwry
Think of annually taking 'fhe Pill. or loyally supporting 'The
Grouch, or dutifully raung funds to put out 'fhe Parrot.
Sometime. we deplore the lack of sentiment in these practical·
minded days. Think of the sptrtt that must haw hecn alive m
the hearts of students who could write a piece ·uch as the fol·
lowing, found in the 1913 Annual:
ATHLETIC
Boost the paper, boost each teacher,
For athletics raise a cheer,
Lo\·e the High chool like they use·ter
Altogether' Up, we'll Boost her!
A DEFE
SE
I think that the fellov. who rails
At the "ght of girl ' red finger nails
Has a lot yet to learn,
For to fash10n we turn,
In spite of all wails from the males.
Marjorie Larsen
PY
1935
128
GARDE.' ING
We planted the ::inn1a' in two neat rows
Along the \I.all where the sun
Shmcs all afternoon from lunch till tea .
The glad10 1a hulbs were hard because
We didn't know which end was top,
And some. I ~now, were planted upside down
Perhaps they'll hloom somewhere 111 China!
I dug in the cool black earth Joyfully,
And warm peace sang in my heart.
"In two weeks or three the first green
Shoots will appear. That is faith," I thought.
And for the cy111c who he!teves that high school students are
purely selfish parasites, we pnnt the information that we sold
l 98) stamps for crippled children
IMPRESSIONS
A poplar tree
Youth ~sleep in the shade
Statue by Michael Angelo
An acolyte lighting white tapers
Lavender and old lace
A parade with hanncrs flying
A cameo, finely chi eled
Gil Thompson
Dale Anderson
Louis Frangelo
Matthew Andrea
Mildred Bloxdorf
Dale Blake
Miss Doherty
By the way. we hear that one of the student discovered the
"Appellation" mountains this year.
Graduates are the rec1p1ents of a bewildering amount of advice
concerning the future. A welcome change 1s President Roose·
velt 's motto for the present· "Do the best you can where you
are with what you have today"
H. C. C.
<Jathways of 73rade
I
Mae-whyte
.,
CoDtpany
NA HLEAD
WORLD IN
In Kenosha sin~e 1912
coming from
Coal City, Illinois,
Where it was established
in 1898
•
Manufactures
Wire rope - Galvanized Strand - Braided Slings
Lockwasher Wire - Aircraft Tie Rods and
Aircraft Strand and Cord
•
Geo. S. Whyte, Pres.
H. E. awyer, V. P. & Treas.
H. Gay, Sec'y
THE
MOTOR CAR VALUE
*
F
OR 19 years ash \1otors has grown teadily
-by building cars that have earned a world~i<le reputation for qualit}.
>\nd never before has the slogan " ash leads
the world in motor car value" meant o much as
it does today. For in the 1935 ash and the 1935
LaFayette, ash Motor has, emphatiC'ally, the
fine t cars it ha ever produC't>d.
*
Jessel
Whyte, V. P. & G. M.
R. B. Whyte, Gen. Supt.
M. A. Buntrock, Office Mgr
:\'ASH KE~OSHA
ALES CO~f PANY
Bth Arenue at 59th Street
PY
1935
1n
1
south port
JLU'J
JD
JD
JD
JD
~
83 years of Bank Service
To Kenosha
Milk Producers
Association
"A Complete Milk Service"
<Jhefll3§T
NATIONAL BANK
GOLDEN GUERNSEY
TIP TOP MILK
6813-29th Avenue
Compliments of
The Best of Everything in Fuel
INCORPORATE:D
•
Manufacturers of
UNDERWEAR
HOSIERY
SPORTSWEAR
FOR MEN
•
BRANCHES
NEW YORK - - LOS ANGELES - - SEATTLE
Me EIL FUEL CO.
6 3 37 · 1 4 th A ve.
Phone 7171
A LESSON IN T~RIFT
-
-
S~OP AT
PENNEY'S AND SAVE!
J.C. PENNEY CMQ
DEPARTMENT•
STORE
Corner Fifty - Eighth Street and Seventh Avenue - - Kenosha, Wisconsin
111
0
~UNION
'Il".WORks
We Have Served Kenoshans
For Over 30 Years
JO~N
ESTABLISHED 1905
CLEANERS AND DYERS
SPY
935
In the selection of employees for our most
responsible positions, Kenosha High School
graduates have been favored for thirty
years.
M. R~GN~R
flewel<:!r and eptometrist
........
5826 Sixth A venue
Compliments
of
The K no ha Ev ning
ew
Kenosha's Newspaper
I
THE
BROWN NATIONAL BANK
"The World's Best To Eat"
2216 - 63rd STREET
I
Telephone 6148
5804 - 7th Ave.
I
C E L E 8 RAT I N G
100
Y EA R S 0 F P R 0 G R E S S
K
ENOSHA this year is celebrating its lOOth Anniversary - 100 years of growth and
progress. Kenosha's educational institutions - particularly the High School - have
played a prominent part in this development. Congratulations to the school executives, to the instructing personnel, and to the Class of 1935 !
. . . . . . . . .
BARD EN'
K enos h a's Form ost
tore Sioee 1889.
PORTRAIT
Our New Home Washer Service Will Interest Yo u
COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
Remer's Laundry
KODAK FINISHING AND ENLARGING
Open
Even ings
•
Priddis
614 Fifty-Eighth Street
By
I
Appo intment
tudio
Phone 5751
H. E. Remer - Phone 9114 - A. Fransway
C@e take this opportunity of extending
our heartiest congratulations to all
members of the (!]lass of 1935.
3r{anufacturers
of
SnaJl .. OD
l""TLRC'HAXGLABl.L
Socket Wrenches
and
P-0
ftlue-~oint
TOOL , Ine.
M ech anic Toole
L
---
·-
-
Shoe Repairing while you wait
PHOTOGRAPHS
Haubrich'
hoe hop
you like <ind your friends admire
SYDN~Y STUDIO
Always that "Right Now" Service
Call and Deliver
Oscar Haubrich
Phone 2-2224
517 Fifty-seventh
'tr~
5919 - 6th Ave.
•
Kenosha, Wis.
1935
..
-
Compliments
of
Wisconsin Gas ~ Electric Co.
-
-
620 - 58th Street
Telephone 2-2924
Kenosha Clinic
Compliments
of
723 Fifty -Eighth Street
cBchuler's Cf3akery
m
"25 years of good ervice"
I
-~-
I
I
I
I
Dial 6151
--
-
--- ~ ----
- -- --- ~, --
--
-
ANAt&~oA
[; - '-'--1..
from mine to consunK:•
;~
K_.nosha Dran«•h
Ahead of the Parade
with
LANDGREN 'S DAIRY
•
D-X
Properly Pasteurized Datry Products
Lubricating Motor Fuel
D. B. Pedley &
-·-
on.
Dial 30 I J
-
---
I
•
Phone 5612
Kenosha, Wis.
PY
1935
A Life Income Policy will Relieve your Economic Worries for all time.
Phone us or call at our office.
Ci-IAS.
A.
L~ONARD,
JR.,
"class of 1887"
Bonding & Insurance
Phone 4:-J23,
Kenosha, Wis.
Dale Block,
628-56 th St.
FUEL
GILBERT J .SCHWARTZ M .D .
HARRY F . SCHWARTZ M .D .
Handled With Care and Courte y
•
-sp
1935
U.S. National
Bank Building
BADGER
FUEL &
UPPL
CO.
S~V~N LONG Y~ARS AGO
_,,,4. Kenosha g{igh c)chool graduate of a score of years
ago, class of '15, established a bu iness in this c<Jentury Gld CJity of
Kenosha and thru the faith of the people, it still endures.
C• • IIUBBARD
705 - 58th Street
JEWELER & E~GRAVER
"Meet me at H urd's"
I
HURD DRUG CO.
I THE
REX ALL
STORE
5800 SIXTH AVENUE
DlAL 3171
II -
TEXT BOOKS
I
Kenosha, vViscon in
SUPPLIES FOR SCHOOL
Mansfield Office Supply Co.
635 Fifty-Eight , treet
The store that has e1ved you well smce 1910.
PRINTERS
I
I
STATIONERS
-
!
SP
935
peeialty Brass Co1Dpany
Kenosha, Wisconsin
ro
Manufacturers of Dairy Equipment, Brass & Aluminum Castings
1907
1935
66 years of dependable service
Modernly Equipped
GOLDE~L DAIRY
Baldwin Coal Co.
11
•
"Kenosha's Largest and Oldest"
I
I
at your service
Phone 8011
2103 - 56 th St.
·-
GRADUATION - - Then
either college or work.
Part of the success
of life depends on your being well dressed. We
can help you attain that state. . . . . .
BELL CLOTHING HOUSE
"A FRIENDLY STORE"
I
r
<3ompliments
You can always buy with Confidence
of
at
Holm' Manufacturing
Compitn)·
KORF'S SIXT~ AVtNUt INC.
~
p
935
-l
With Best Wishes
KENOSHA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
-
-
E tablished 1880
muoma.s J!>ansrn anb i1>ons <tr:ompanp
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Sheridan Road Gara~e Co111pa11y
Sheridan Road at 59th St.
Telephone 6181
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN
I Alwin T. Hansen
]. Mark Hansen
1
IIn 18 74 the name lsermann first entered the Kenosha ret ail busi ness. A nthony lsermann founoed
and maintained a store till 1892 when M. J. lsermonn was mode o partner and the firm name
become lsermann & Son. In 1895 M. J. lsermonn and Geo. S. lsermonn purchased the busi ness,
chang ng the name to lsermann Brothers and opening a department store on the corner of Main and
Market streets. The old building was made a warehouse and flour and feed store. In 1898 an
e,clusove mens and boys clothing store was opened.
In 191 4 the business was incorporated with the following stockholders: M. J. lsermonn, President·
George S. lsermann V1ce·presiden · A. A . lsermonn, Treasurer· F. C. lsermann. Secretory.
The same year a modern, attractive haberdashery was built at 21 4-216 Market Square. There
lsermann 's has been located since June 20, 1914.
The present stockholders and officers of the lsermann Brot hers Co r po ration are M. J sernain,
President· A . A. lsermann, V'ce president and Treasurer· and F C lserrnann Secre'ary.
IS~RMANN
BROTH~RS
I
I
KE:NOSHA'S FORE:MOST
STORE: FOR ME:N AND
BOYS
6 14 - 6 16
56th Street
TURNER'S FLOWERS
..Artistic ability a1td skill combined to make
beautiful effects in flowers f ur you
Phone 5174
Table Favors
and
" ·eets
~gnrs ;ilask Qranbp ~bop
c:Rome .5'r(ade rJandies
I
Regner Building
Phone 7841
SPY
1935
_. ..___.
ln
southport
JLU:H
]01
JD
JD
JD
CONGRATULATIONS !
To the 1935 graduating cl~ss
Von B. McCarty
~
Dr. A. E. Paccetti
£.ife Insurance And _Annuities
DENTIST
Phone 3322
Room 304
DO
)00
100
LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Compliments of
MAYTAG SALES
OF MILWA UKEE, WI CONSIN
House of Electrical Appliance
Cor. 1 th & 57th
=10
~D
1935
611 -56th Street
Epstein Building
THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL
DD
PY
•
11
Telephone 9241
- ··-
Girls! Whe n You Entertain Remember
Andrea's Fresh Frozen Ice Cream
Boys! After The Show o r Dance Treat Her At
Est. In 1911
Phone 77 32
Our study of the eye and its need
for better sight, places us in a position to render a useful ervice to
those who require eyesight attention.
E. D. NEWMAN, OPT. D.
2401 60th Street
Optometrist
I
II
Compliments of
I
J · T. Sullivan
Kenosha's Foremost Optometrists
Chief of Police
i
EH . ·sy·s HOOK STOIC E
Books , Stationery , and Office Supplies
Kodak and Kodak Hni~hmg
Graduation Books and Gifts
616 Fifty-E ighth ">t
Kenosha Optical Co.
Dial 8-l 4 l
I
I
I
I
Orpheum
Bu1Jdmg
Telephone 4441
OFFICE H8URS
8 : 30 A. M. to 6. P M.
EVENINGS : Tue day and Saturday
OF BOSTON, M ASSACHUSETTS
Out of School
and
On Your Way!
Some day you young graduates
will arrive both in years and in income. In the meantime, Life Insurance will guarantee your plans,
for tho e you must make good for.
Let us end you our booklet telling how.
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
Suite 19
1
Dale Building
-Compliments of
Nehlsen's Sporting Goods Store
5829-6th Ave
Orpheum Budding
Kenosha Wisconsin
Compliments
628 - 56th Street
of
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN
Lewis W. Powell
l
r
We are specialists in correct haircutting for modern
young men and women.
The Allen-A Company l
Andrea's Barber . hop
63rd
tree t
I
Compliments of
BROSK'S
Reliable Laundry
5812-23 Ave.
Printer , tationer , office outfitters, janitor upplie
Whole ale and Retail
I
Phone 8614
5800 Seventh Ave.
Compliments of
Pianos Radios Combinations
All Musical Instruments and Accessories
H. C. Laughlin
BIDI1 "'"GER'
I
Fveryth in g i n M u s ic
Cit:y Manager
630 - 56
5821
SIXTH
AVE:NUE:
PHONE:
5723
I
T R EET
Dia l 4932
When in need of a Loan
The best place to go is to the
Kenosha Citizens Loan & Investment Co.
515 Fi tty-Sixth Street
]
PY
1935
Chas. H. Pfenning, Inc.
LAW
Real E:state-lnsurance-Loans
BAKE:R, JULIAN!, & BAKE:R
7th Avenue at 57 Street
Keno ha, Wisconsin
G
Moose Building
Ul.'
of
Phone 8511
Compliments of
Hohh•r11Pss f 'oal f~o1111tany
Sportswear
PY
1935
{;(
Smart Fashions
{;(
Moderate Pnces
A. F. QUICK, Jeweler
KUBE C'S
ORPHEUM BUILDING
624 Fifty-sixth Street
•
The Shop
for Men
Women
and
Childen
Keno ha, Wi.
Compliment
READY-TO-WEAR
FOR Tl-IE ENTIRE FAMILY
5810-6th Ave.
OFFICES
OF'
9Veumode
Hosiery
Repair
606 58th Street
Service
19 cents
Insist
Upon
.In
bottles
I
r
Hammond and Jones
Con9ratuiat1onsto the 88th graduot ng class of Kenosha High
I
Clough Shoe Store
ATTORNEYS - AT - LAW
Next to HJo Drug
- -
SEC• AL'
filraduafion
5.95
10.95
5709 - 6th A venue
815 - S7t'1 ~ treet
Telephone 3136
Compl iments of
S. W. MURP~Y M. D.
U. S. National Bank Building
•
-
I
11
'
FRED P. R l ; D
nr(•ss .. s
7.9S
I
Bleicher & Thomey
l
I
" Smart Shoe Shop"
6216-22nd Ave.
p
1935
MAYE R DRUG COMPANY
THREE STORES
•
•
5537 ·6th Avenue
4926 ·7th Avenue
•
5548 - 22nd Avenue
TUDIO
PRE T
5400 Twenty-Second Avenue
ART~UR B. AMr;;S
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
Kenosha, Wisconsin
702 · 57 th St.
Phone 3721
FOR QUALITY DRUGS
Roo evelt Dru~ (~o.
2900 Roosevelt Road
Phone 8313
Compliments of
JNiscbler~'
COl-tN'S Sl-tOt STORt
~ome for funerals
I
5806 S ixth Avenue
708 57
t.
Phone 3811
I
Compliments
of
-spy
935
Dr. H. M. Ripley
Phone
3175
JiSpecialize inliunifyJKrs/Jntt
2727 _64 th
· IKENOSHA,
.: Street
. . .AUNDRV
I
C~AS. T. WJ::RNl::R, PROP.
Josephson & Zimmerman Hardware Co
Kilkelly Drug Co.
PLUMBING AND HEATING
ELECTRIC CONTRACTORS
6104 - 22nd Avenue
Kenosha, Wisconsin
7505 Sheridan Road
We Deliver
Compliments
Phone 8413
RANDALL
of
CAVANAGH
J · P. Mcr;..voy
STEPHENSON &
District-Attorney
MITTELSTAED
ATTORNEYS -AT - LAW
B. SPALDING l-llLL M. D.
You Want Fine Photographs
by
Eye, ear, nose, & throat
U. S. BANK BLDG.
NEWELL
DeVry Motion Picture Projectors and Cameras, both Silent and Talking
After High School
Courtesy
19tn "\Jot?
Tre11ary's
ehool of Busines~
~tn bt'rt on our ba!'
FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG.
of
THE KENOSHA REALTY CO.
618 -56th St.
Phone 2-1914
SPY
935
"JAHN AND
OLLI ER AGAIN "
Sound mdndgerial policies and long, successful experience have provided
us with sufficient equipment, adequate personnel, and ample resources to
render dependable service as artists of fine printing plates to publishers
:JO
DD
DO
=10
=10
=10
of America's leading yearbooks. That you will be secure from chdnce, 1s
our first promise
JAHN
a n d
-
-
We do not sublet any Art or Engraving
OLLI ER
ENGRAVING
COMPANY
P H 0 T 0 G R A P H E R S, A R T I S T S, M A K E RS of F I N E P R I N T I N G P L A T E S for B L A C K or C 0 L 0 RS
817
W. WASHINGTON
BOULEVARD
-
CHICAGO
-
TELEPHONE MONROE 1080
AUTOGRAP~S
Union
trcct 1880 (now Eighth Avenue)