Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Rebel Because

Personification of the 50's


I was a troublesome little brat at the Castle and was involved in most of the uncivil behavior there from '53 to '56 but did manage to plea bargain with Mr. Elder to get my diploma.

My activities ran from Tiger Hi-Y to metal shop rowdie. I blew town with Ron Conley for a week's joy ride down South in my junior year and then did it again in my senior year with Gary Larson, Chuck Fay, and Richard Taylor. How my dad ever talked Mr. Christie into allowing me back in, I'll never know.

I think I finally grew up about 1980 and realize how lucky I was to have attended Stadium in its prime.

Chuck Fay and Gary Larson are history but I wonder about Dick Taylor. He transferred in from Franklin Pierce and his dad managed the Lucky Stores in town.

I've only missed one reunion and look forward to this one.

Dave Allard - 1956 (BY THE SKIN OF MY TEETH)


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Tuesday, April 25, 2006

The Bowl and the Babe

Legends


My Dad, and all the other Haleys in the early 1900's were all Stadium graduates.

My father, Frank, told us about watching Babe Ruth on a tour taking batting practice in the bowl and hitting one out of the east end of the bowl.

(Babe Ruth visited Tacoma, October 24, 1924)

A tidbit of history about a circa 1928 Stadium High School Graduate

******



"Also completed, after years of planning, is the new Robert A.L. Mortvedt Library.

To move the books to the new library from Xavier Hall, the library closes at noon on 2 December (a Friday). Student shelvers spend the weekend rubber-banding bundles of books together and labeling them.

On Monday, morning classes are canceled. Despite the rain, students and faculty carry bundles of books across and put them on the correct shelves.

Head librarian Frank Haley provides candy for all."

PLU 1965-1969





Frank H. Haley Information Center

"The Frank H. Haley Information Center provides access to librarians' expertise and workspace for individual and collaborative research in an electronic environment. The center, located on the first floor of the Robert A.L. Mortvedt Library, reflects the foresight of Frank H. Haley, the library’s director from 1951-1976."


******

Also in the late 50's the kids my age played summer baseball for a group called the Blue Bombers (can't remember the reason for the name), however, a large group of the business people made contributions to this group and through this group of people a portion of the bowl was fenced off and we began to practice Little League baseball at the bowl.

This was somewhat of the beginning of the restoration of the bowl as we know it now. .

Have a great time. I'll be in Italy, but see you again in 5 years.

Best regards,
Jonathan Haley '61

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Sunday, April 23, 2006

Sixty-five years of Blue and Gold

'06 to '71


I am also a third generation graduate from Stadium.

My maternal grandmother, Ellen (Nell) Sophia Carr (later Beardsley) was in the first graduating class, 1906.

My Aunt, Barbara Beardsley graduated in 1934.

My mother, Emily Lue Beardsley graduated, in 1939,

Many years passed before my siblings and I also graduated from Stadium.

My sister, Barbara Jones graduated in 1964,
My brother, Jim Jones in 1966,
Myself, (Nancy Jones) in 1969,
My brother, John Jones in 1971

Jim, John, and I were all members of the Madrigal singers and Jim was Yell King.
Barb was one of the top 5 students in her class.

Both Jim and Barb married Stadium grads –
Barb married Dan Brady ('64)
Jim married Polly Richardson ('67).

To make our connection with Stadium even stronger, our father, Frank Phillips (Phil) Jones began his teaching career there in 1946. He left to join Wilson's staff when it opened.

We all still have a strong connection to the castle although our legacy ended with John's graduation. It will always be a special place.

Nancy (Jones) Foote, class of 69


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Friday, April 21, 2006

Style Shows

Major activity


"The Gibson Girl of 1900 will be compared to the Glamour Girl of 1950 at an elaborate fashion show to be presented at 3 p.m. Tuesday, March 7, at Stadium High School Auditorium, under the sponsorship of the Tacoma Parent-Teacher Association."


(Anita (Roberts) Lagerberg - Glamour Girl - 1950,
Patricia A. (Poland-Bean) Cokeley Gibson Girl - 1900's)



This is one of my 1950 class memories.

Anita (Roberts) Lagerberg has been my friend-classmate since Mason Jr. High.
Close friends of the class of 1948 include:
Margaret (Hood) Olson, Marliss (McCann) Swayze, and Beverly (Hanson) Raines.
Also Wanda (Baldwin) Doran of the class of 1949


Patricia A. (Poland-Bean) Cokeley '50
Goleta, CA

******************
This was a major show. A one foot long column on page 13 of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer lists 144 of the people who put on the extravaganza.

See a list of the names at:

1950 Style Show

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Thursday, April 13, 2006

An Essex to Seattle

Heed your parents


Hi, I'm Milt Thompson. I am the fourth in my family to graduate from Stadium. My mother, Lida Dale Pabst Thompson was in the very first graduating class in 1905 (that's when the "brown castle" was called Tacoma High School), both my sisters, Muriel and Lola Thompson graduated in 1930 and I, in 1939. Here is one memory I will never forget.

I was a member of the Stadium band for three years, as first chair clarinet; it meant that I was expected to play any solos written into the first chair's music. In those days, we didn't have any school buses, so when the band was asked to play for a function away from the school such as for a teacher's meeting in Seattle, our director, Mr. Fussell, had to determine whether there were enough private cars to carry everyone and their instruments to Seattle.

My father reluctantly agreed to let me take our 1929 Essex, cautioning:

"Don't push it too hard or it might throw a rod bearing."


We were 12 miles outside of Seattle when there was a loud clattering and the oil pressure gauge dropped to zero (of course, I wasn't pushing it too hard!).

To make a rather long story short, we were ultimately able to hail a passing bus. However, by the time we reached our destination, the first half of the program (the half in which I had several solos) was over.

My skiing buddy, who was second clarinet, still hasn't forgiven me for being late because he had to play two cadenza solos that he wasn't prepared for. I don't even need to describe what Mr. Fussell and my father had to say regarding that incident.

I'm happy and proud to be a member of the 100th Anniversary Celebration Committee and hope to see many of you at our exciting celebration in September.



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Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Stadium, Olympics, Hollywood

Herman Brix '24


Do either of these pictures look familiar?



AN INTERVIEW WITH HERMAN BRIX ('24) ON 2/13/04 as told to Marc Blau '69


I was born in Tacoma on May 19, 1906. I grew up at 646 South State Street in Tacoma and I have a dream to see my old home once again. My dad was kind of an entrepreneur and since there were five children in the family he built a house with five bedrooms, a furnace, hot water, and an indoor bathroom which was really considered a luxury. Our home was a real showpiece at the time.

The childhood environment that I grew up in always involved a group of kids playing games around the neighborhood and I started early playing softball and soccer in the vacant lots around the home. In high school I played in the midget program in football and basketball my first two years. I started out at under 125 pounds and then exploded to 145 pounds and finally to 180 pounds by my senior year. In college I hit 190 pounds and then 195-200.

Sports were natural for me. The interesting thing was that in high school I was always interested in the Glee Club and I got to play the lead in the Pirates of Penzance. We had an enterprising instructor and he talked me into playing the lead. Every year there seemed to be a contest between the music director and the coach of the sport that I was playing as to who would get me. So, I really got my start in performing in high school. Chief Carr was my football coach at Stadium and we ran up and down the stairs in the bowl just like they do today. He could not understand why I would opt to be on stage rather than playing football.

In college it was just athletics. What motivated me at the University of Washington was the fact that I had an older brother, Egbert, who was also on the football and track team and I was darn if he was going to be better than I was. My sophomore year he was a senior and that was one of the few times we got to play together. He only had sight in one eye so he had to play right guard in order to perform and therefore I played left tackle.

I'll never forget playing in the Rose Bowl my sophomore season in 1926 because that was my first big highlight in sports. We took the train down to Pasadena which took two or three days. Due to our failure to kick the extra point we lost 20-19 to Alabama. The next day we went over to the studios of Douglas Fairbanks and got a tour as well as had our picture taken with him.

I graduated from the University of Washington in 1928. I had been puting the shot put and had been undefeated in the U.S. for several years. I won the U.S. National Championships in the shot put that spring and then I won the Olympic Trials which qualified me for the Summer Olympics in Amsterdam. John Kuck, two Stanford boys, and myself were the weightmen for the U.S. track team and the U.S. team went over by boat. Eleanor Holm was a 14 year-old diver on the U.S. team and she was so small she would curl up into a ball and the four of us would get our exercise by throwing her from one to the other to get our practice in. When the shot put event was held I broke the world record and Olympic record on my first throw with a distance of 51' 8 1/4". Kuck always threw well in practice but not always in competitions so I told him to lay down and relax and close his eyes and imagine that he was at home in Kansas throwing in front of his parents. Well, on his next turn he three the shot 52' 3/4" to break the records that I had just set. I only had one throw left and couldn't beat him and settled for the Silver medal.

Douglas Fairbanks was really the person who got me started in the motion picture business. After the Olympics I came down to southern California to compete for the Los Angeles Athletic Club. Fairbanks was a great patron of the youth movement in athletics and since the Junior Olympics were being held one weekend at one of the universities they asked me to come out and give a demonstration which I was happy to do. Well, Fairbanks had come out to watch and afterwards he invited me to come over and train at the United Artists Studios. That offer sounded pretty good to me so I joined him for regular workouts and we became good friends. We would golf together, sun bathe, work out and then he would always have a big table set for lunch with sandwiches and all sorts of good food. Later on he would leave for dinner but I would stick around and finish the food which was great. That was quite the life!

I was on top of the world in the shot put and there was a big meet going on up in Vancouver, British Columbia and I was invited to come up and participate. The AAU said that the outstanding athletes at the meet were going to be sent to Europe on tour and even though I was working for a telephone company at the time I told my boss that I was quitting because I figured I would be going to Europe. Well, I went up to Vancouver and won the shot put and set a record in the process but then the AAU changed their mind and decided to cancel the European tour. I had to rely on friends in Seattle to loan me enough money to get back to LA. I was without a job but because the LA Athletic Club had sponsored me in the past I had made a few friends who were well-known citizens. They were well acquainted with me and so the club put me up for a short while until I got a job.

Shortly thereafter I started my career in the motion picture business but it wasn't a fast start. I was a glorified extra at the beginning and would do anything that would pay a little extra. One day Sam Wood, a motion picture producer and director who was one of the directors for Gone with the Wind, called me over to ask why I was volunteering to do stunt roles. I just told him that I needed the money and needed to do what I could to work, even if it meant jumping off balconies into swimming pools which I had already done.

He asked me how much I needed to live on and then offered to pay me that amount as long as I agreed to let him guide my career. He was a big sports fan and even arranged for me to take dramatic lessons. Sam Wood supported me this way for about a year. I was at MGM when I got my first speaking line. I played a cashier and a woman came in, gave me some money for me to put in her account. I was so damn nervous I could hardly talk, but my career mushroomed from there.

I guess the one thing I really learned from participating in sports was to just never say "no", never stop trying, and to always believe that you can do better than the next fellow. I tried to follow this throughout my life, but I always tried to be respectful about it.

Herman Brix/Bruce Bennett

Please Don't Call Me Tarzan





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Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Sweet and Sad

Just yesterday


I am Ruth (Wood) Cragun and I feel I 'must' put in my 2 cents regarding memories of my 1941-1944 years at 'The Brown Castle'. So much has changed, but the memories will linger on...memories such as. . .

The fire escape. The metal spiral escape we practiced fire drills on. It hung outside on the side of the 'castle'...maybe it still does! And memories of the boys who threw firecrackers down it during Study Hall...and scared the bejeebers out of EVERYONE?

Memories of running up and down the steps of the bowl?
(I don't run ANYWHERE any more. 'Walk' is good!)

The special memory of the 12 trees planted outside the 'court'. Each tree had been placed in honor 1 of the 12 former students killed during WWI.

On the day closest to Memorial Day, 24 girls from the graduating class were chosen by the teachers and staff, to walk in pairs. Each pair carried a white wreath to be placed at the base of one of the trees.


"Memorial Day in 1941 a ceremony to pay tribune to the eleven Stadium High alumni who lost their lives in World War I.
Jane (Welch) Junge '41, and Grace (Blangy) Kipp '41.
" TPL



It was a very special experience in my life, to have been chosen to be one of those carrying a wreath my graduating year. Janet (Watts) McLennan was my partner.

There were always 12 servicemen standing quietly at the event, and that year they were from the Navy. Other years there had been those from Army, Army Air Corps, Coast Guard or Marines.

They were dressed in full uniform and stood on the sidewalk at the end of the 'court'. There was complete SILENCE... as a drummer from the honor guard played a dirge for us to walk to.

A 12 gun salute was offered when all the wreaths had been placed.


"A squad of R.O.T.C. cadets from Bellarmine High School fired three volleys with their rifles at the Memorial Day service held in May of 1941" TPL



My father had drowned in Puget Sound (after having fallen overboard from his sailboat) 2 months before the event that year. His body was never recovered and as I marched in the memorial it was almost as if I was placing the only wreath I would ever be able to place...at my father's grave. My mother attended the event and, as we drove home we realized we'd BOTH had the same feelings.

My husband (Howard Cragun) and I will have been married 62 years this October. We now live about an hours drive North of Las Vegas, NV. (in Overton, NV), near The Valley of Fire and what is 'left' of Lake Meade.

I have continued to enjoy the friendships of 9 girls ('our group') which began with some of us in Lowell school and all of us through Jason Lee and Stadium.

'Gone but not forgotten' are:
Jane (Nelson) Kornegay, Betty (Larsen) Morrow, Janette (Johnson) Parrot, Diane (Johnson) Jones , and Sherley (Jackson) Ford.

And, loving every minute of life, the remainder of us: Gerrie (Farrar) Zeratsky, Dorothy (Peterson) Jarmon, Peggy (Erickson) Kunigk, and me...have remained in touch with one another through the years. Everyone but me has remained in the Tacoma area and when I'm in town 'we do lunch' together.

Howard has 'always' played the guitar and we've sung together ever since we began dating (when I was 15 and just starting Stadium). In recent years we've 'jammed' a lot and still play at dances ...at the Senior Center. WOW! that sounds OLD!


At age 68 I began playing a bass...go figure! I still haven't mastered it but we continue to have fun together...and with the other NUTZ who we get together with.

Having been voted the 'Wittiest Girl' in the Senior class (my 15 minutes of fame) I've kept myself laughing...and hopefully others around me. I just KNOW that laughter IS 'good for the soul'!
.
God bless each of you....have a WONDERFUL time...AND a WONDERFUL life!!!

Ruth (Wood) Cragun

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Sunday, April 09, 2006

Royal Aspirations

Festival memories


Since I was a little girl I had always dreamed of being a princess. But, in 1962 when I was a senior at Stadium I lacked the self-confidence to try and fulfill that dream. I always regretted that decision.

Our princess that year was Robin Holmes and she represented Stadium very well.

Being in Tigerannas meant I could be in the parade but I wasn't on a float or the back of a Corvette.

I vowed someday to be affiliated in some way with the festival. Years went by, marriage and children. In 1994 I finally saw an open door and I entered it.

I was very fortunate to be a chaperone with the girls for three years and then in 1997 was so honored to be the festival's Queen Mother.

In those years, in my capacity of being involved with the festival, I was able to tell my story and encourage these lovely young ladies to never give up on a dream. I witnessed the dreams of many girls come true. I am so happy that Stadium has continued all these years to participate in the Daffodil Festival.

Good luck to Ali Ciarochi this year.

Charlene (Miller) Kosche 1962



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Daffodilia

Queen #1



I graduated from Stadium in 1956 and was a classmate of Tacoma's first Daffodil Queen, Margaret Strachan.

I don't know who was more excited, Margaret or her classmates.

That was back in the days when our terrific band in full dress uniforms and the Tigerannas Drill Team were so excited to escort the Queen's float through the long parade which went from 15th and Broadway to 9th and down the hill to Pacific and then to 19th and Pacific. Then we proceeded on to Puyallup and Sumner.

We were a very proud school to have been able to have the first Queen from Tacoma and she represented us very well.

Judy (Ness) Hellstrom Class of 1956 (Celebrating our 50th Reunion on 9-15-06)

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Thursday, April 06, 2006

April Showers Bring

Daffodil Queens


It’s April. It’s Spring. We are getting a few of those glorious days where the Mountains and Sound and the daffodils are in their full glory. And it’s time for the Daffodil Festival!


The Daffodil Festival is entering its 73rd year.

The Grand Floral Parade tradition began in 1934 along with the selection of a Queen to rule over the events. Originally the Queen was selected from Puyallup or Sumner High School. It eventually grew to include more schools from Tacoma, the Valley and the Peninsula.

Stadium’s first queen was Margaret Strachen Williams in 1956. The second was Gretchen Brockhoff in 1958 and then we had a long drought till 1968 when Cheryl Lamka ruled over the event.

I was in school when Cheryl Lamka was Queen. It was exciting. Our high school band followed the Queen’s float in the parade. Lots of students and family lined the streets to glimpse Cheryl as well as our terrific band.

Cheryl was an officer in the Girl’s Club, heading one of the departments. At one meeting, she taught us the “daffodil wave”! That’s not standing up and down at an athletic event. It’s waving your hand in the official way! And of course, you wore gloves!

Our Daffodil Princess for 2006 is Ali Ciarochi. Ali has a 3.97 GPA. Her activities and include the Reign City All Stars cheer squad, Key Club, honor roll, student of the month, Metro Parks volunteer, assists with cheer and dance. Ali plans to attend PLU and major in law.

Congratulations, Ali!

The 2006 Floral Parade is April 22! Don’t miss it!

Kathleen Monahan



Daffodil Festival Home page



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Sunday, April 02, 2006

The Birth of Rock n' Roll?

Hanging on


When we had that Big Earthquake, I was standing in Mr. Streeter's room. Mr. Streeter was the boys' counselor and I was his secretary for one period a day.

The hardwood floor began to ripple and it was difficult to keep one's feet on the floor.

Mr. Streeter was out of his office at this moment…Jack Day, however, was standing near me. We held on to one another for dear life.

How could I ever forget hanging on to that good-looking senior high school boy?

Memory from Mary Ann (Norton) Puterbaugh '51

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