Mostly about Lakewood and Lakes High
6/28/2022 from Tim Marsh
Here’s a compilation of mostly things I wrote
related to Lakewood and Lakes. For the most part, photos which accompanied text
not included. Saving this as a PDF, but same text is posted here at one of my
blogs …
https://taxioffduty.blogspot.com/2022/06/mostly-about-lakewood-and-lakes-hig.html
…. If there are links in stories and if the links
are not dead you can click on the link(s) and read/ see more.
::::::::::
August
1968: Hemion brothers, Whit and Dave, members of Western Washington U men’s
basketball team which toured/played games for six weeks
…..
=Whit died (plane crash) in 1978 at age 31.
=Dave died (heart attack) in 2020 at age 62.
In
August 1968 the Western Washington U (Bellingham, Wash.) Vikings men's
basketball team went on a six-week tour of the Far East and Australia. Whit
Hemion and brother Dave Hemion, both Lakes High School
grads and former basketball players for the Lakes Lancers, were players on the WWU
team.
Team
wearing sports coats -- Front Row (L-R): Assistant coach Marv Ainsworth, Ben
Smith, Ron Caderette, Dave Hemion, Mike Clayton, Neal Larson,
Doris Randall. Back Row (L-R): Whit Hemion, Blaine Johnson, Ed
Monk, Gary Reiersgard, John Reed, Jimmy Jones, Paul Hallgrimson, Head Coach
Chuck Randall.
Team
wearing game uniforms -- 1968 WWU Australasia Team (L-R): Ron Caderette, Mike
Clayton, Jimmy Jones, Whit Hemion, Gary Reiersgard, John Reed,
Ed Monk, Paul Hallgrimson, Dave Hemion, Neal Larson, Ben Smith.
Kneeling (L-R): Assistant Coach Marv Ainsworth, Head Coach Chuck Randall.
Black
& white action photo with photo corners cropped -- Dave Hemion,
Jimmy Jones and Ed Monk.
Small
color photo -- Paul Hallgrimson, Ed Monk, Whit Hemion (with
yellow scarf), Dave Hemion (light blue shirt) and Gary
Reiersgard.
Large
color photo -- Dave Hemion, John Reed, Whit Hemion, Gary
Reiersgard and Mike Clayton
Story
text included: In Taipei, Taiwan, WWU played and won four games. The players
did a lot of shopping. "… Whit (Hemion) bought 19 (music
on phonograph records) albums for eight dollars (pirated copies). He thought he
had (the albums) concealed but when he went through customs they found them. He
was a little worried but they let him keep them with no penalty."
::::
LAKEWOOD’S ROUNDABOUTS AND LAKEWOOD SATURDAY
OAK LEAVES MEMORIES
How old are you? Do you remember Lakewood
before roundabouts? Am told by a Lakewood resident on 10/4/2021 that
roundabouts are being put in/installed/built on Gravelly Lake Drive, one each
at Nyanza Park Drive, Veterans Drive and Washington Boulevard intersections.
Wow!
Speaking of, "How old are you?,"
are you so old you remember fall Saturdays in Lakewood when oak leaves that
fell from trees were raked into piles, not "pushed" into piles with
noisy leaf blowers? And, do you recall the smell of those oak leaves when
homeowners burned them? It was, at least to some memories, a sweet scent even
though it was polluting the air and a health hazard.
::::
"Lipstick On Your Collar" was a
hit single by Connie Francis in 1959. In the 1962-1963 school year at Iva Alice
Mann Junior High, an 8th grade student -- she went on to graduate in 1966 from
Lakes High School -- performed a fabulous lip sync of the song (played on a
record player) on stage in the Mann gym during a talent show.
:::
Originally
posted 2/14/2018
First
photo credit: Whit Hemion playing Western Washington State College (now Western
Washington University) Vikings basketball during the 1968-1969 season. During
that season, his fourth and final year on the team, he was its captain. Photo
from Western's Klipsun student yearbook. Western is located in
Bellingham.
By
Tim Marsh, Lakes High School Class of 1966
Whit.
Many people reading
or hearing “Whit” know it’s a first name followed by the last name of “Hemion.”
Whit
Hemion.
To be specific
Whittaker Moss Hemion Junior, not to be confused with his father with the same
name except Senior at the end.
This is a story about
Lakewood’s Whit Hemion Jr., a larger than life person. Tall (6-foot-2),
“studly,” sincere, determined, dedicated, friendly, likeable, enthusiastic, he
was all of that and more.
At Lakes High School,
he was an outstanding football and basketball player for the Lancers and a
member of Lakes second graduating class in 1965.
As a junior, he was a
member of the Lakes 1963-1964 boys’ basketball team which upset favored Renton
for the Puget Sound League championship and the Lakes 1964 football team which
had an undefeated season.
He went on to play
four years of basketball at WWU/Western Washington University (then Western
Washington State College) in Bellingham. Whit lettered all four years he played
and was the WWU Vikings men’s basketball team captain his senior season,
1968-1969.
After Bellingham, he
returned to Lakewood and taught history and p.e. and coached at both Woodbrook
Junior High (four school years) and Clover Park High School (one school year).
Born in Seattle on
Dec. 22, 1946, this story should be about Whit at age 71, looking back at his
long life of sports and service. Tragically, Whit’s life was too short. He died
at age 31 in a plane crash on Aug. 18, 1978.
The Hemion family…
--Patriarch Whitaker
Moss Hemion Sr., born in Iowa, died at age 99 in 2017 in Lakewood.
--Matriarch Shirley
A. Stocker Hemion, born in Illinois, died at age 92 in 2016 in
Lakewood.
…and their children …
--Whit
Jr., Lakes
Class of 1965, WWU Class of 1970. Also earned a teaching certificate from WWU.
--Dave, Lakes Class of 1966,
attended Peninsula College in Port Angeles and WWU, died of a heart attack at
age 62 in 2010.
--Jack, Lakes Class of 1968.
--Kathy, Lakes Class of
1970, WWU 1974 and master’s degree 1982.
… deserves a book. If
a book is written, let this story be part of it.
In 2017, Whit Sr. and
Shirley were honored with a Meritorious Service Award from the Tacoma-Pierce
County Old-Timers Baseball-Softball Assn. Text for that award reads:
“Think of a couple
with a passion for competition --- be it golf, bowling, tennis or bridge. Add
four children who grew into multi-sport athletes with boundless appetites for
achievement. Stir in a large helping of hospitality, a yearning to bond with
others involved in games regardless of allegiance, and leaven with a tincture
of even-handed temperament, and what you have is Whit and Shirley Hemion.
“Through decades of
following their children to literally hundreds of competitions in all parts of
the country they earned reputations as supportive fixtures in the athletic
community. For their efforts they have earned” the award.
“Both came from
hearty Midwest stock and lived into their 90s. Shirley was born in Hinsdale,
Illinois, while Whit was a native of Algona, Iowa. Both spent some of their
early years on Mercer Island. They married and started their family shortly
after the end of World War II, and they moved to Lakewood in 1961.
“That’s where their
children, Whit, Dave, Jack and Kathy, excelled in high school sports and moved
on to other levels of competition.
“Mom and Dad were
behind them at every step, always offering encouragement. On the sidelines they
could be forceful advocates for their children, though officials never had to
ask them to leave. After games, they played host to “tailgate” parties where
both teams were welcome. Whit always brought a cooler of beer, and he also had
a travel case with contents to help boost the spirits of guests.
“Newcomers were
warned that Whit’s mixtures could be a bit stiff.
“From innumerable
trips up and down the I-5 corridor, to cross-country trips to such places as
Marietta, Georgia; Pensacola, Florida; Austin, Minnesota, and back to their
native Heartland in Springfield, Illinois, the Hemions were a ubiquitous and
welcome presence at their children’s competitions.”
……………………………
Whit Jr.’s biography
as a member of the association’s hall of fame says:
“Whit Hemion Sr. and
wife Shirley enjoyed a long relationship with slowpitch, watching sons Whit
Jr., Jack, and David and daughter Kathy all play on top local ball clubs over
the years.
“Whit Jr. played for
the Tacoma Merchants, Dean’s Tavern, Hi Hat and the Outfitters in the 1970s.
Among the top honors he received was the MVP Award at the Third Annual Jerry
Bassett Invitational in 1978. That same year, a tragic airplane crash en route
to the regional championships in Montana took the life of Whit Jr. one of the
Pacific Northwest’s most-feared long-ball softball players of his era.”
(The crash took the
lives of Whit, four softball team teammates and the plane’s pilot.)
……………………………
Although the crash
happened nearly 40 years ago, it is still a “painful memory for me as Whit and
I were very close friends,” said Doug Cowan, formerly of
Lakewood, who now lives in Port Orchard.
Doug began his
teaching/coaching career at Woodbrook a year after Whit started doing the same
in 1973.
Whit was a world and
U.S. history teacher, head boys’ basketball coach (two league titles) and 8th grade
football and girls’ track & field assistant coach.
“When I started at
Woodbrook, Whit and I had classrooms next to each other and we coached the 8th
grade football team together for three years. We became very close friends in
the process. Whit left Woodbrook for Clover Park High as the new boys’ head
basketball coach and history and p.e. teacher for 1977-1978. In the same school
year I was Clover Park’s assistant wrestling coach,” said Doug.
“Though Whit and I
didn't see each other on a daily basis except for the high school winter sports
season that year, the strong bonds of friendship continued. As part of that, to
my surprise, Whit told me ‘you're the only
one I can confide in.’ Though honored as his friend, I found that surprising
with his close family ties.”
That friendship was
reflected in the fact Whit was a groomsman at
the November 1977 wedding of Doug and his wife, Gail.
“Whit and I both
played for local softball teams that competed at the national championship
level. He would support my team and I supported his,” Doug said. “One of Whit’s
slowpitch quotes was ‘Forget the grass cutters. Let's rattle some light poles!’
He did the latter with regularity. Whit was a pure athlete who could compete
and perform with excellence at every sport he pursued.”
Doug and friend and
life insurance agent Levi Edgecombe played in a slowpitch
softball game in Spanaway for the People’s Church of Tacoma team on Thursday,
Aug. 17, 1978. Watching the game were Whit; his girlfriend, Pat; and
Gail, Doug’s wife.
“After the game we
all went to dinner at Angelo’s Italian Restaurant in Spanaway and Whit jokingly
told Levi, ‘he had made a lot of money insuring the two of us and it would be
appropriate for him to take us all to dinner and pay for it’ Doug said. “That's
exactly what happened. Levi covered the entire bill.”
Over dinner they
talked about leaving for post-season slowpitch play. Whit's team, Tacoma Slow
Pitch Incorporated, was off to Butte, Montana, for regional play and Doug’s
team to Oklahoma City for the National Championships.
Also over dinner it
was decided Whit would meet up with Doug and Gail early the next morning
(Friday, Aug. 18, 1978) at Tacoma’s Meadow Park Golf Course for a Whit-led golf
lesson before Whit started the long drive from the Tacoma area to Butte.
But late that
Thursday night, Aug. 17, Whit called to tell the Cowans he had to “cancel the
golf date as he and several teammates had chartered a twin-engine plane to fly
to Butte Friday. It would take the plane just two hours or so to fly from the
Puget Sound area to Butte compared to about 10 hours to drive in a car.
Doug can’t remember
exactly when – perhaps the morning of Saturday, Aug. 19 --- Whit’s
dad called Doug with heartbreaking news. “Inconsolably his dad told me about
the plane crash in the hills near Anaconda, Montana,” Doug said. “It was the
first I’d heard of the crash and I still hurt to recall it and its aftermath.”
“Through the tears Whit’s dad asked if I could
arrange a memorial for Whit in Tacoma at People’s Church, which Gail and I
attended,” said Doug.
Doug and Gail met
with the Hemion family and Owen Shackett, the church’s lead
pastor, to plan the memorial service which was held sometime early the
following week.
In the service the
pastor introduced Doug to talk about Whit “the man.” In his talk Doug spoke
through “uncontrollable emotion.” He concluded by reading a poem, “What is A
Friend.” (The poem appears later in this story.)
More than 1,000
people packed the church during the service. A piece of irony was shared by
Pastor Shackett. Whit once told the pastor, ‘Don't be surprised when I come
through the doors of this church one day,’ ” said Doug.
There was another
memorial service at Trinity Lutheran Church in Parkland. During it Whit and the
other softball players killed in the crash were eulogized. Delivering the
eulogy was Jerry Henderson, their softball teammate. He talked
about the five teammates “in terms of life,” reported the Tacoma News
Tribune. “We played hard and laughed together. We loved to get
together for a few beers. We were men, but still boys … Brothers until the end
and beyond.”
Mark
Sivara, Whit’s
top player on the Clover Park 1977-1978 boys’ basketball teams told the News
Tribune that he and other players on the team respected Whit as a
coach because “he treated you like a person, and not just a player. He gave me
confidence .. he was a really good guy.”
Cheri
(Deyton) Arkel and
her husband, Mike Arkel, of Lakewood were long-time Woodbrook
teachers. Whit was a “wonderful man,” she said. “He was truly bigger than life
... he filled any room with positive energy. He was a terrific history teacher.
Mike and I have nothing but fond memories of him.”
……………………………
The year after Whit
died, Doug helped start an annual end-of-the-year award deserving Woodbrook
Junior High (now a middle school) students who exemplified the outstanding
qualities Whit demonstrated on a daily basis. Doug Cowan wrote the text
for The Whit Hemion Award:
The award was given
to the outstanding boy and girl Woodbrook Junior High 9th grade
student-athletes demonstrating exemplary athletic ability, scholarship, and
citizenship. (As a middle school it goes to 8th grade
student-athletes.)
Its genesis was the
“What is A Friend,” a poem he read for the first time at Whit’s memorial
service.
(Author of the poem
might be Dr. Frank M. Crane. However, its authorship has been
debated over the years. While attending the UW, Doug read the poem for a first
time in an old book in a bookstore. “The poem perfectly describes that coveted
relationship and emotions experienced between friends,” said Doug.)
Here is the Whit
Hemion Memorial text from the 1978-79 Woodbrook Yearbook
By Doug Cowan (fellow
teacher, coach, and friend)
There will always be
many good memories engraved upon the hearts and minds of those who had the
privilege of knowing Whit Hemion. For those who loved and admired him, Whit was
the personification of three lofty qualities essential in a true teacher:
Achievement, Leadership, and a Servant’s Heart. He loved helping people attain
their goals, and for himself always strove to be the best, anything less being
unacceptable.
He had the ability to
see the consequences of our actions further in the future than those around us
could. He was a true leader. Many, many times he would become overjoyed about
making someone successful, granting that person a most valuable gift, high
self-esteem. Indeed, he had a true servant’s heart.
The above qualities
are admirable without question, but for me and many others Whit was more. He
was a friend. What is a friend? The following anonymous poem will aptly
describe this cherished possession.
WHAT IS A FRIEND?
It is a person with
whom you dare to be yourself.
Your soul can be
naked with him.
He seeks to ask of
you to put on nothing, only to be what you are.
He does not want you
to be better or worse.
When you are with him
you feel as a prisoner feels who has just been declared innocent.
You do not have to be
on your guard.
You can say what you
think so long as it is genuinely you.
He understands those
contradictions in your nature that lead others to midjudge you.
With him you breathe
freely.
You can follow your
little vanities and envies, and hates and vicious spurts, your meanness
and absurdities and, in opening them up to him, they are lost, dissolved
on the white ocean of his loyalty.
He understands.
You do not have to be
careful.
You can abuse him,
neglect him, tolerate him.
Best of all, you can
keep still with him.
It makes no matter,
he likes you.
He’s like a fire that
purges to the bone.
He understands.
He understands.
You can weep with
him, pray with him.
Through it all and
underneath he sees, knows, and loves you.
A friend?
What is a friend?
Just one, I repeat,
with whom you dare to be yourself.
Doug said he “began a
personal tradition that concluded every semester from 1978 to my retirement in
2011 with a variety of poems I read as a farewell to my students. As a tribute
to Whit, I always concluded with imparting the value of true friendships and
how quickly they can slip away with the poem ‘What is A Friend?’ ”
……………………………
A tribute page in the
1979 Clover Park High School Klahowya student yearbook said
Whit was a “man with numerous well-rounded qualities.
“A servant at heart,
he became excited about making someone successful, valuing punctuality, he
showed high esteem for others and their time; he practiced achievement, helped
one discover one’s needs then helped find the best way to get them; he reached
the goal of leadership, seeing the consequences of people’s actions further in
the future that those around him could. He had a lifestyle admitted and desired
by many.”
The tribute said,
“Sports played an extremely significant role in Whit Hemion’s life. He excelled
in every aspect of athletics he was an outstanding participate and also an
excellent coach.”
The tribute said,
“Whit Hemion was a person with whom one dared to be one’s self.”
Whit Hemion Jr.is
gone, but not forgotten.
POSTSCRIPTS
--Whit never married
and had no children.
--Whit, Dave and Jack
all played boys basketball at Lakes. Kathy didn’t play girls’ basketball at
Lakes because, as a 1970 Lakes grad, she attended Lakes before it had girls’
basketball. The 1972 federal Title IX expanded athletic opportunities to
include girls. Whit, Dave and Kathy all played basketball at WWU.
-- In
August-September 1968, brothers Whit and Dave Hemion played on a 10-member
Western Washington University men’s basketball team, coached by WWU’s Chuck
Randall. The team won 15 of 21 games in Asia and Australia playing
under auspices of the U.S. Department of State’s People-to-People program.
--Whit’s 1972-1975
Woodbrook boys basketball team was the school’s first undefeated team. It its
12 victories versus no losses season it averaged 65 points a game. In one of
those games it set a school game scoring record with 90 points over its
opponent’s 42. In another game it won 84-48. The 1975 Woodbrook Wildcats
yearbook said, “Not only did this remarkable team prove to be great basketball
players but they also had the quality of superior sportsmanship. Woodbrook has
also been very fortunate to have such a super coach, Mr. Hemion, on the side of
the Wildcats.”
= In 1966-1967
Peninsula College (Port Angeles, Wash.,) Pirates men’s basketball team photo
are two 1966 grads of Lakes High School. Back row, third from the left, Dave
Hemion. Front row, second from the left, Bill Weinman. Dave’s
write-up reads, “Dave is the kind of guy that makes a kangaroo look like a
lead-footed mouse, as he can stuff the bail from his 6 foot 1 frame. He can be
the spark plug in this year’s hopes for Peninsular. He’s tough on defense, can
rebound with the best this league has, and when he’s hoot, can really carry the
team. Dave comes from Lakes, Tacoma where he played forward and guard. He
didn’t limit his efforts to basketball, but can boast of holding the school
high-jump record at 6 foot 3 inches. Dave has a good attitude toward the game
and works hard to improve himself. As a physical education major, Dave hopes to
come back to Peninsula next year.” Bill Weinman’s write-up reads, "A 6-5
performer from Lakes in Tacoma. Bill could be a leading rebounder. His defense
needs work and he must adjust to the move of his mates. He's pretty fast for
his size." In the 1966-1976 season, Dave was a starter for Peninsula and
Bill started some of the games that season. Thus, at times two Lakes Lancers,
both members of its Class of 1966, were in the Peninsula College Pirates men’s
basketball starting lineup. A sports column in a January 1968 edition of
the Port Angeles Evening News said, "At 6-2 Dave is
sometimes overwhelmed by the bigger boys in the conference, but he has the
knack of knowing where the ball is coming down and he is strong enough to
muscle the ball back up when he gets a rebound."
=A 2016 story about
Western Washington University women’s basketball features and quotes Kathy
Hemion, a 1974 WWU grad. She was a 5-foot-9 forward on the university’s women’s
basketball team and “perhaps Western's best athlete of that period.” Playing in
the 1972-1973 season, the team had a 24-2 record, losing only to eventual
Canadian collegiate national champ University of British Columbia and to
eventual U.S. collegiate nat’l titlist Immaculata of Pennsylvania. A member of
the WWU Athletics Hall of Fame, she played basketball, volleyball and tennis
for WWU and led its basketball teams to regional titles and national tournament
appearances in 1973 and 1974. She set WWU basketball records for most rebounds
in game and season.
=Now retired, Kathy
Hemion was a special education teacher for Tacoma Public Schools for nearly 30
years and for 10 years taught and coached basketball and volleyball at Pacific
Lutheran University in Parkland.
=A member of the
Tacoma-Pierce County Sports Hall of Fame, Kathy Hemion is honored her for
softball, basketball and volleyball. One of her accomplishments was trying out
for a spot on the U.S. women’s basketball Pan American Games team.
--Photos here from
yearbooks Lakes High School Legend, Clover Park High Klahowya, Western
Washington University Klipsun, and Woodbrook Junior High
School Wildcats, and Doug and Gail Cowan.
--Special thanks to
Doug Cowan, Cheri (Deyton) Arkel and Mike Arkel, Marc Blau of
Tacoma-Pierce County Baseball-Softball Oldtimers Assn., Ilona
Perry of Tacoma Public Library, Paul Madison of WWU
and Tim Williams and Amy McClain of Peninsula
College Library.
--Sources
include Tacoma News Tribune, Seattle Times, Port Angeles Evening News,
The Montana Standard (Butte) and Anaconda Standard, Des
Moines, Iowa, Register and Tribune (cartoon advertisement about Whit
Hemion Sr.).
--This story lacks
info on Jack. If you are Jack or have Jack info to add please e-mail this
story’s author, Tim Marsh, Lakes High School Class of 1966, at wildcatville@gmail.com. Please also make contact
if you have corrections. In either case, the story will be updated.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Photo below includes Whit Hemion Jr. (front
row, far left) in Seattle Times Oct. 26, 1958, page 39, with
headline "Lambro Wins Ossie (football contest) Title, Bowl Trips."
During the The Times-Park Board Greater Seattle Old Ossie
championship at Lower Woodland Park Playfield, Whit Hemion of Island Park
Elementary School (of Mercer Island) placed sixth with 40 points.
..................................
Lakes High boys' basketball
1963-1964.
Whit Hemion #41
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
RESPONSE
TO STORY/STORIES POSTED ABOUT WHIT HEMION
Date:
Wed, Jun 23, 2021 at 1:32 PM
Dear Sirs:
Mr. Hemion was my basketball coach at Woodbrook Junior High in 1972-73.
He was a great coach. I played football, basketball and baseball at
Woodbrook and went on to play the same sports at Charles Wright Academy.
I was invited to walk on Northwestern University’s football team as a freshman
in 1976 where I played backup QB and wide receiver on their JV squad. I
quit football to concentrate on my academic career, but many years later had
the opportunity to coach my 3 sons - football, basketball and baseball - when
they were growing up. All 3 of our sons have gone onto play competitively
in college (baseball) - 2 at the Division 1 level (University of Illinois at
Chicago and Sienna College). Our youngest son plays for Oakton College (Junior
college) which played in the Junior College Division III world series this past
Spring.
I learned a LOT from Coach Hemion that 1 year at Woodbrook. Thank you for
writing this excellent article!
Do you know the day Coach Hemion was born?
Sincerely,
Fred Smart
Evanston IL
fred.k.smart@gmail.com
:::::::
Info
below added 5/21/2022
--Whit
Junior died (plane crash) in 1978 at age 31.
--Whit
Senior died in 2017 at age 99.
READ
MORE:
Lakewood’s
Whit Hemion Jr.: Gone, but not forgotten
https://lakes-1966-50-year-reunion.blogspot.com/2021/06/lakewoods-whit-hemion-jr-gone-but-not.html
“””
https://thesubtimes.com/2020/01/13/my-used-eyeglasses-will-help-others-see-better
Jan 13, 2020 in The Suburban Times of Lakewood (Pierce
County, Wash.)
By Tim Marsh
Some people toss more than they keep. That’s not me. Ask my
wife.
I’m among others. We keep or try to keep everything. Even scraps
of paper hold memories for us.
I’m not a Lions Club member. But, I appreciate Lions Clubs
International collecting used eyeglasses. According to one Lions site, “Most of
the recycled glasses are distributed to people in need in developing countries where
they will have the greatest impact.”
After noticing Lions used glasses donation boxes for years,
I was finally compelled now, in 2020, to donate some of my used glasses.
My first glasses — when I was attending Park Lodge School in
Lakewood — are no longer in my possession. But, they are memorialized in my
third grade black & white school photo. That was one of the few times I
wore them.
I got my second pair of glasses from Columbia Optical
(that’s what it says on the eyeglass case) in Lakewood (Tacoma?). Rarely wore
them in high school.
And, I have a third pair, too. After graduating from Lakes
High School in 1966 it was off to Linfield College in McMinnville, Ore. I know
these are my third pair because inside the glass case I wrote my name, the
college’s name and the phone number of the college dorm in which I was living.
Hardly wore them.
Soon after graduating from college, wearing glasses was a
necessity, not an option. Most of the glasses I’m donating are from my need to
wear them time of life. I’m keeping the Park Lodge and Linfield-related
glasses. Can’t bear to donate them. Too many memories.
Giving away my used glasses was the right thing to do.
Thanks to the Lions I know my glasses will help people around the world to see
better and, as a result, have an improved life.
Postscript — Have used eyeglasses to donate to the Lions?
Click here to see a list of Lions Eyeglass Recycling Centers dropoff locations
in Lakewood and elsewhere in the area.
COMMENT by Mike Brandstetter on January 14, 2020 at 9:18 am
Thanks Tim for the kudos. One of the main focus areas for
Lions is sight and hearing and recycling used eyeglasses is one of many
functions we do in this regard.
Here is a more localized list of eyeglass recycling
locations.
Lobby of St Clare Hospital by main entrance
Parking lot of the Lakewood Water District (Drive up
location drop box)Lobby of Heritage Bank on Gravelly Lake Drive
Glasses Shop at the VA American Lake Hospital
Optometry Clinic at The VA American Lake Hospital
Lobby of the Bates Technical College on 78th Street
Madigan Medical Center Ophthalmology Clinic
McChord Field Exchange Eye Clinic/Store
McChord Field 62d Medical Clinic Eye Clinic
Walmart Vision Center 7001 Bridgeport
Little Church on the Prairie (in office)
Ardesson’s Shoe Repair on Gravelly Lake Drive
Eye Physicians of Lakewood 5920 100th Street SW
South Sound Eye Care 8520 Steilacoom Blvd SW
Christ Lutheran Church 8211 112th St SW
Dropping off your used eyeglasses starts them on a journey
that provides the joy of better vision to someone in the world. Lions also
collect and recycle hearing aids.
;:::
::::
PHOTO: Lakes High students (l-r) Rick Hahn, Greg Saxton and
Ann Harris in June 1965 at Union (train) station, downtown Tacoma. They were
respective Lakes High 1965-1966 student body president, student body vice
president, and student senator. At the station, they were waiting to board a
passenger train for trip to attend the National Association of Student Councils
(NASC) convention, June 21-24, 1965, in Lexington, Kentucky. Key reason for
their trip was to help them prepare for the 30th annual NASC convention at
Lakes High School, June 26-30, 1966. During the Lexington convention, Hahn was
elected NASC for 1965-1966.
:::::::::::::::::::
Conference at Lakes High Wins Praise From Across the Nation
Lakes High School was sponsor of the 30th annual National
Association of Student Councils Conference held June 26-30, 1966.
By D. C. MOLNARFFY
The writer is a 1966 Lakes High School grad. This story
appeared in the Aug. 14, 1966, Sunday
Tacoma News-Tribune’s ‘Teen-Age Tribune.’
DENVER Public Schools called it, “One of the best jobs ever
done.” Dale Stein of the Illinois Association of Student Councils called it,
“... the highlight of my high school career.” The North Carolina Student Council
Congress called it,” a most interesting and successful conference.” And Susan
Grunenfelder, Tumwater High School said, “As a resident of Washington I
couldn’t help but be proud of the first NASC conference held in Washington.”
These and many other complimentary comments exemplify the
common reaction held by administrators, teachers and students throughout the
nation who attended the 30th Annual National Conference of the National
Association of Student Councils June 26-30 at Lakes Senior High School.
In theory, the NASC conference brings together the youth
leaders of America for the primary purpose of interchanging ideas and opinions;
thus when delegates return to their respective high schools and communities a
new enrichment in concepts has been gained and can be passed on.
Sponsor’s Role
The role of the sponsoring high school in such a conference
is to apply the necessary theme, program, accomodationols, and recreation.
Serving as the theme for the 1966 meeting was “Twenty-0four Hour Leadership”
representing the necessity for complete dedication in the service of others.
The outstanding organization of the_ conference reflected
three years of earnest planning by Lakes administrators.
Seven general sessions represented the bulk of activity,
with discussion groups relating to business of the general sessions and other
topics.
Adding inspiration to the conference were speeches by
prominent Washingtonians and top high school administrators.
In the initial speech of the conclave Gov. Dan Evans
welcomed all delegates to the Northwest — later Jim Whittaker, first American
to conquer Mt. Everest, delivered a speech concerning mountain climbing and his
personal philosophy relating not only to mountain climbing but to all other
endeavors. Lakes ASB president and NASC president Rick delivered the keynote
address, and the rest of the conference was filled with many worthwhile
speeches.
Recreation, Too
On a lighter note delegates were provided with an assortment
of recreational facilities and refreshments; the making of friends throughout
the Lakewood community was the most pleasing pastime for the delegates.
General chairman, Arthur H. Stolz, Lakes senior dean and
assistant principal, introduced the beauty of the Northwest to the delegates
stating, ‘‘This vacationland extends from the Pacific Ocean to the top of
snow-capped Mount Rainier—and beyond. Whether your interests lead you to
undersea diving or to mountain climbing, you can find the best kind of
recreation, challenging recreation, here.”
The spirit of the NASC Conference is best illustrated by the
words of President Johnson to the delegates, ‘‘Few lessons in the educational
process are more important than those you learn as student leaders. Few
experiences are more gratify-ing than the familiarity you have gained with the
spirit and method of democracy.’’
:::
This was originally posted July 11, 2015. It was updated May
20, 2019, and May 11, 2022.
After Lakes' 1965-1966 school year, a national convention
took place at Lakes High. Prior to it, Clover Park School District paid minimal
attention to Lakes campus grounds. But, with visitors coming from 49 of 50
states (which state was missing?) for the convention, the district spiffed up
the grounds.
It was the 30th annual National Association of Student
Councils convention held June 26-30, 1966, at Lakes High School.
=Executive-Type Youth
Leads Student Council
And Plans for Future
Lawrence (Kansas) Journal-World - Nov 2, 1965
TACOMA, Wash. -- Rick Hahn is the executive type. And,
students from all over the country recognized that when they chose him this
year's president of the National Association of Student Councils.
This means that while he is engrossed in his senior year
school work, and his post as president of the Lakes High School Student Council
here, he'll also be preparing for the 1966 national convention of the
Association, which will be held at his own school next summer.
Read entire story here (link below):
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2199&dat=19651102&id=Sk4xAAAAIBAJ&sjid=FeYFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5069,3426541&hl=en
.......
=Student at parley
Oneonta (New York) Star - June 30, 1966
SOUTH KORTRIGHT -- Gray Sturgess, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth
Sturgess, South Kortright, and president-elect of the South Kortright Central
School Student Council, flew from New York City to Tacoma, Washington Sunday,
June 26 to attend the 30th Annual National Conference of the National
Association of Student Councils.
As one of three representatives from New York State, she
represented District 8 of the New York State Association of Student Councils.
While attending the Conference at Lakes High School, Tacoma, Gray was the guest
of one of the students of this school.
Participants at the Conference heard Richard N. Hann,
president, NASC, speak on "Twenty - Four Hour Leadership"; Donald I.
Wood, Head of the Department of Education, Rice University, whose topic was
"The Case of the Twilight Council"; and Gerald M. Van Pool, Director
of Student Activities, National Association of Secondary School Principals,
moderating a panel discussion on "What Student Council Has Meant to
Me."
No link to story available.
.......
=NASC Conference Stresses "Twenty-Four Hour
Leadership"
“The Reporter” of
Illinois Assn. of Student Councils - Nov. 1, 1966
Story says "Delegates from all but one of the 50 states
converged on Lakes High School, located in an outlying suburb of Tacoma,
Washington, for the conference."
In his keynote address, National Association of Student
Councils (NASC) president Richard Hahn set forth the qualities of a leader as
1-dependability, 2-initative, 3-personal integrity, 4-flexibility, 5-open
mindedness and 6-the courage to respect the minority.
"In conclusion, he asserted we must lead not by words,
but by deeds, all the time as twenty-four hour leaders."
Read entire story (link below) here from the Nov. 1 1966,
“The Reporter” of the Illinois Association of Student Councils:
https://illinoisstuco.org/Content/Reporter/196611_vol21no2.pdf
:::::
Thompson Field. Lakewood Stadium. Harry Lang Stadium.
Three names, one football venue in Lakewood at Clover Park
High School.
The Clover Park School District was created in 1928. Ten
years later, due to the rapid expansion of Fort Lewis, Clover Park High School
was established with the cornerstone of the original school laid June 28, 1938.
PHOTO From left, Clover Park superintendent A.G. Hudtloff,
Lakewood visionary Walter Thompson, Mrs. A.S. Black and Thompson’s son, Ray.
Photo courtesy Images of America – Lakewood by Walter Neary and Steve
Dunkelburger.
A photo (above) taken in 1939 on the Clover Park campus
shows four people, including Walter J. Thompson and Arthur Hudtloff, district
superintendent.
Thompson holds a copy of the notes he will use to deliver a
speech on May 17, 1939, when the athletic field at Clover Park High School is
dedicated in his name.
According to information with the photo, Thompson donated
the initial $1,000 to get the field project started. The field was completed as
a project of WPA, an acronym for the federal Works Progress Administration, a
Depression era work-relief program.
One source says the field was a memorial to Thompson. In
reality, it was dedicated in honor of Thompson, not in memory of him. He was
still alive. However, just a bit more than 14 months after the dedication, on
Aug. 3, 1940, he died at age 87 in Lakewood.
Who was Walter James Thompson?
PHOTO Record setting pole vault at Thompson Field as shown
in the 1957 Clover Park High School Klahowya yearbook. Photo courtesy Lakewood
Historical Society.
He was a social and civic leader, Lakewood visionary, Tacoma
banker, financier, Gravelly Lake pioneer, philanthropists, and, according to
Legendary Locals of Lakewood, an “audacious businessman.”
Born in Spring Prairie, Wisc., in 1853, he was a successful
banker and attorney in Nebraska before coming to the Tacoma in 1884. He bought
the Bank of New Tacoma and changed its name to Merchants National Bank. He also
founded Tacoma Savings Bank.
He had a home in Tacoma and homes in Lakewood. One source
says he eventually moved out of the Tacoma house to one on Gravelly Lake. He
also was owner of the historic Boatman-Ainsworth, the oldest private structure
in Lakewood.
According to the History of Tacoma, the Tacoma home of
Thompson and his wife, Amaryllis Thompson (1850-1933), was frequented by
intellectuals and progressives including Julia Ward Howe, who wrote the “Battle
Hymn of the Republic,” and Susan B. Anthony, social reformer and women’s rights
advocate.
The Thompsons were known for their personal library and
collection of paintings.
Thompson owned the Boatman–Ainsworth house from 1889-1939.
He donated a portion property on which the house was located to Clover Park.
The portion is the location of Thompson Field, today’s Harry Lang Stadium.
A Lakewood historical marker – placed by the Lakewood
Historical Society, the Lakewood Landmarks & Heritage Board and the City of
Lakewood – is near the house which is near Harry Lang Stadium.
PHOTO An undated photo of Thompson Field. Photo courtesy of
Lakewood Historical Society.
Thompson served a variety social and civic roles. He was a
benefactor and key player in the newly established Tacoma Public Library and,
in the 1880s, its president for several years.
In 1888, he was a delegate to the Republican national
convention and went on to serve in Washington Territorial lower house and
Senate, where he was an active promoter of progressive agenda items including
women’s suffrage.
In 1912, he quit the Republican party and joined the
Progressive party — nicknamed the “Bull Moose Party” — created by former U.S.
President Theodore Roosevelt.
The Spokane Chronicle in 1916 said he was a “well-known bull
moose” of Pierce County. In that year, he ran for the U.S. Senate as the
Progressive candidate.
So, in 1939 Thompson Field was built and dedicated at Clover
Park High School. It was the home venue of Clover Park varsity football games.
When Lakes High School opened in 1962, it became the venue of Lakes varsity
football home games, too.
PHOTO Known today as Harry Lang Stadium, the former Thompson
Field was rebuilt in recent years by Landscape Architect RW Droll. Photo
courtesy of Robert W. Droll, Landscape Architect of Lacey, Washington.
But, time marched on and eventually there was need for a
modernized stadium. That resulted with upgrading in about 1984-1985 of Thompson
Field and renaming it Lakewood Stadium.
On Aug. 21, 2001, Harry E. Lang died at age 83. He was a
dedicated coach, teacher, principal, administrator and later a school-board
member and board president in the Clover Park School District. He served the
community for more than 50 years.
In September 2001, the Clover Park School Board approved a
resolution to rename the facility to Harry E. Lang Stadium, said the TNT.
On Oct. 26, 2001, before a Clover Park vs. Lakes football
game, Lakewood Stadium was renamed and dedicated in honor of Lang.
FOOTNOTES:
–Thompson’s business dealings included selling homes on Lake
Steilacoom and Gravelly Lake.
–According to the Seattle Times, the change of the stadium
name from Lakewood to Harry Lange “reduced confusion with the 2A school north
of Everett named Lakewood.” In the late 1950s (early 1960s?), Pacific Northwest
Bell Telephone changed Lakewood’s telephone prefix from LAkewood to JUniper.
One of the reasons? Because there was sometimes confusion between Lakewood
(Pierce Co.) and Lakewood (north of Everett in Snohomish Co.)
–Before Clover Park High School existed, students from
Lakewood apparently attended Tacoma’s Stadium High School.
–This story focuses on football. But the field featured has
been and is the home of track & field, too. Thompson Field (with real
grass) had a five laps to a mile cinder track. Today’s Harry Lang Stadium has
an artificial turf football field and a four laps to 400m synthetic all-weather
track.
–During the author’s years (1963-1966) as a Lakes High
student, initially when the Lancers played football on Clover Park’s Thompson
Field, scoreboard signage proclaimed the field “Home of the Warriors.” Thanks
to a sign maker grandfather of a Lakes student, a “Home of the Lancers” sign
was made. It was displayed over the Warriors sign during Lakes home football
games.
–Sources for this story include first and foremost the
amazing Lakewood history books by Steve Dunkelberger and Walter Neary: “Images
of America: Lakewood” (2005) and “Legendary Locals of Lakewood” (2014). Other
sources include, but are not limited to, liquidsearch.com, Seattle Times,
Seattle P-I, gridironbeez.proboards.com, Wikipedia, historylink.com, Longview
Daily News, TNT/Tacoma News Tribune, Southsoundtalk.com and Spokane Daily
Chronicle, Tacoma Public Library, the Lakewood Log , a National Register of
Historic Places nomination form, “History of Tacoma” and politicalgraveyard.com
–Errors in story? If so, please send corrections to author
at wildcatville@gmail.com
By Tim Marsh, Lakes High School Class of 1966
Oct. 4, 2016, Suburban Times
:::::::::::::::::
Links:
--Photo: 1972 Lakes vs. Clover Park varsity football game
http://lakes-1966-50-year-reunion.blogspot.com/2018/01/photo-thompson-field-during-1972-lakes.html
--Lakewood football field has had three names; here’s
history about the first
http://lakes-1966-50-year-reunion.blogspot.com/2018/01/lakewood-football-field-has-had-three.html
https://thesubtimes.com/2016/10/04/lakewood-football-field-has-had-three-names-heres-history-about-the-first/
--Are CP, Lakes Varsity Football Games Played on Thompson
Field?
http://lakes-1966-50-year-reunion.blogspot.com/2018/01/are-cp-lakes-varsity-football-games.html
https://thesubtimes.com/2017/11/13/are-cp-lakes-varsity-football-games-played-on-thompson-field/
:::
1964: NO LAKES ALMA MATER FOR PUGET SOUND LEAGUE
CHAMPIONSHIP BASKETBALL GAME
Posted Dec. 18, 2017
Late in the Puget Sound League (PSL) boys’ basketball championship game March
6, 1964, in the Highline High School gym (neutral court) in Burien -- Lakes won
in an upset, 47-46 -- the game's public address announcer said fans of the
winning team could sing its school alma mater at the game’s conclusion. Lakes
won. There was momentary silence, no alma mater. That was followed by the
Lancer team players, coaches and fans cheering. Lakes was in its second school
year, it did not have an alma mater or fight song. (Later that school year
student-written music and words for the alma mater and fight song were
composed/written and adopted.)
Read more here:
http://lakes-1966-50-year-reunion.blogspot.com/2017/12/is-there-page-missing-in-your-life.html
::::
Both Lakes and Clover Park Fight Songs say their schools are
"Best in the West." Which is the best?
Answer: Lakes
Lakes: "All will know that Lakes is the Best in all the
West..."
CP: "Best in the West, you know we'll all do our
best."
;::::
June 6, 2010, The Suburban Times
By Tim Marsh, Lakes High School Class of 1966
Here’s a musical postscript to “Story behind Lakes burnt
orange and royal blue colors” article in The Suburban Times of June 1, 2010.
The article mentions a 1963-1964 Lakes boys’ basketball game. After the Lancers
won the game, Lakes fans were supposed to sing the Lakes Alma Mater. But, there
was no alma mater at that point. “Later that school year student-written music
and words for the Alma Mater and Fight Song were composed/written and adopted,”
the story says.
Lakes students – now Lakes grads — who get credit for the
songs:
“Lakes Alma Mater”
Music by Ron Relaford, Class of 1964
Lyrics by Evelyne Hendricks, Class of 1965, and Tim Marsh,
Class of 1966.
“Lakes Fight Song”
Music by Richard "Dick" Rossiter, Class of 1964
Lyrics by Caryl Schumacher, Class of 1965
Anna LaLande, Class of 1965, played the piano for Dick and
Caryl to practice and work out the final "Lakes Fight Song," also
known as "Victory."
From the Tacoma News Tribune (Thursday, May 28, 1964)
CP’s Lakes High Will Hold First Commencement
Lakes High School in the Clover Park district is preparing
for graduation of the first senior class in its two-year history. A senior
awards assembly will be held at 8:30 a.m. Monday. The commencement will take
place at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The school’s first alma mater has been written by
Ron Relaford, music theory student. It was chosen from among several entries.
Lyrics were written by Evelyne Hendricks of the choir and Tim Marsh of the
concert band.
:::
Story behind Lakes burnt orange and royal blue
colors
June 1, 2010 The Suburban Times
By Tim Marsh, Lakes High School Class of 1966
There are “givens” concerning Lakes High School. Colors for the school are
burnt orange and royal blue. Lakes teams are called the Lancers. In fact, even
before Lakes opened in September 1962, the school colors were selected. But,
when classes began in the 1962-1963 school year, there was not a nickname for
Lakes teams. Nor was there a fight song or alma mater. For that matter, there
was not a senior class either.
Lakes Colors
Lakes 1965 grad Rick Austin, 63, Kansas City, Mo., has first-hand knowledge of
selection of the school colors and in the selection of the Lancers nickname,
too. His father, the late Gerry Austin, was Lakes’ first athletic director and
head football coach after serving as the successful head football coach at
Clover Park High. Rick was starting quarterback for his father’s first three
Lakes teams – the 1962, 1963 and 1964 seasons – and also played basketball and
was a baseball pitcher for the Lancers.
“Dad was instrumental in the choice of colors at Lakes, with administration approval
of course. The main need was to order the football uniforms for the first
season,” said Rick.
Why burnt orange? Gerry Austin thought Darrell Royal was a great football
coach. Royal gained his fame as coach (1957–1976) of the University of Texas Longhorns.
According to the University of Texas at Austin website, Royal chose the burnt
orange color for the Longhorns’ football jerseys. (By the way, before Royal
joined Texas in 1957 as its coach, he coached one season, 1956, for the
University of Washington, Gerry’s alma mater.)
Another reason for burnt orange and royal blue color scheme, said Rick, was
because it was not used by other schools in the Puget Sound League or used by
many high school teams in the state.
Rick remembers before the football season began when his father brought all the
Lakes football jerseys – they were burnt orange with white numerals – to the
Austin home not far from the northern shore of American Lake. “We had the
jerseys spread out all over the family room floor and I got to pick my own
number by ‘coach’s son privilege,’ Rick said. “The jersey manufacturer only put
lower numbers on smaller jerseys. I needed a larger jersey, so that’s why I
picked number 42,” he said.
Lancers nickname
Lancers was one of the several nicknames names suggested by Lakes students
during the 1962-1963 school year. Rick Austin was one of the students casting a
vote in favor of the winning “Lancers.” During that first school year, Lakes
teams played varsity teams from smaller schools and junior varsity teams from
larger schools. Thus, until that vote, those Lakes teams in early games of the
first year wore burnt orange and royal blue, but they did not have a nickname.
In the 1963-1964 school year, Lakes began playing full varsity schedules as a
member of the Puget Sound League. League members included Clover Park, Franklin
Pierce, Puyallup, Auburn and others.
An interesting sideline to Lakes not having a senior class in 1962-1963
concerns the classes housed in the then new Lakes High School. Sophomores used
the school’s sophomore wing. Juniors used the junior wing. However, seventh
graders were housed in the senior wing. Many of those students would return to
Lakes in the 1965-1966 school year as sophomores. Consequently, as seniors
during the 1967-1968 school year they were in the senior wing for a second
time.
::::
=Lakes Fight Song:
Fight, fight, fight for victory
Orange and Blue with courage true
Win the battle and with honor reign
All will know that Lakes is the best in all the West so
Fight, fight, fight with colors high
Mighty Lancers, Lakes will do or die
Let this song forever be our cry
Victory Lakes High
Victory! Victory! Go Lakes High!
=Lakes Alma Mater:
Lakes High we salute you
Pride to us you bring
For Friendships true and victories won
Your praise we sing
We honor orange and blue as days go by
And give our heart’s devotion to Lakes High
:::
Nov. 15, 2016
By Tim Marsh, Lakes High School Class of 1966
During the Lakes High School Class of 1966 50-year reunion
in September 2016, I used my iPhone and Skype so class member Derrel von
Molnarffy, now living in Germany, could “attend” activities. During a Skype
session, I gave my phone to classmate Patrik Lynch so he could chat with
Derrel. Both were born in Germany and came to the U.S. as children from that
country. Listening in on the conversation, I heard how they learned English
after arriving in the States. That’s the genesis of Pat’s story and Derrel’s
Q&A. Enjoy.
From Germany to the U.S.: Pat Lynch, Lakes High School Class
of 1966
We know him, our Lakes 1966 classmate, as Pat Lynch.
But, he was born Patrik Wilhelm Zierbock in post-World War
II Münich, Germany, on July 29, 1947.
That explains his faint accented English. “People hear me
talk and ask me where I’m from? That’s my German accent they hear,” said Pat in
an October 2016 interview.
……
PHOTO CUTLINE: At the controls of a John Deere 110 Tractor
Loader Backhoe is Pat Lynch, Lakes High School Class of 1966.
……
Pat lived in Munich from birth before moving in 1961, with
his mother and father to the U.S.”
“The reason my first
name is spelled Patrik is because those in the nunnery, where I was born,
didn’t know how to spell Patrick,” Pat said.
He remembers a childhood in a Germany still showing signs of
war. “My friends and I played in a bombed out building with three walls and no
roof,” he said.
Entertainment growing up in Germany included going to a
movie theater.
“You’d buy a ticket
and get to watch movies for six hours! My favorite movies were of ‘Dick und
Dof,’ ” filmed in the U.S. and dubbed from English to German, he said. (‘Dick
and Dof’ translated into English are ‘Fat and Stupid’ or ‘Fat and Dumb.’)
Pat’s mother, Adelheid “Heidi” (Zierbock) Lynch, who
celebrated her 90th birthday on November 25, 2016, spoke and read German and
English.
“She was 17-years-old
when she escaped from East Germany. Got a job with the German telephone
company. Because her English was so good, she was assigned to handle phone
calls by U.S. soldiers calling from Germany to the States.” In those days you
had to use a long-distance operator to make those international calls.
Speaking English helped her meet a U.S. solider named George
Patrick “Pat” Lynch, a West Point grad and U.S. Army major from North Carolina,
who lived his last 40 years in Lakewood.
In 1961, Heidi and George married in Germany and he adopted
Pat. “It was difficult for German citizens to immigrate to the U.S. then.
Adopting me assured my immigration because I got a green card” issued by the
U.S. federal government to those who are lawful residents, he said.
“My dad is my
biological father,” said Pat. “My dad and mom married after they’d been in a
living together relationship. The marriage made it easier for her to emigrate
to the U.S. from Germany. My dad had been trying for several years to move all
three of us to the U.S. So, both my mom and I had green cards. She passed her
test for U.S. citizenship in the mid-1960s and became a naturalized citizen.”
While Heidi Lynch was fluent in English, Pat was not. “Well,
I knew some of the basics, ‘hello’ and ‘goodbye’, from English class in
Germany, but that was about it,” he said.
In October 1961, the Lynch family – Pat was 14-years-old –
flew from Münich to Sea-Tac airport. They drove to Lakewood to live, because
George’s last military assignment was Fort Lewis before he retired as a U.S.
Army brigadier general. After that, George worked many years in both Germany
and the Tacoma area in life insurance sales for United Services Life Insurance
Co. He died at age 91 in 1991.
Their new home was a unit in Thunderbird Apartments on
Steilacoom Boulevard across the street from Thunderbird Shopping Center. “For
three months we were there, then we bought a house on Lake Steilacoom and moved
into it. My mother is still there in the same house,” said Pat. She takes
advantage of the lake and still rides a jet ski on it. “At age 90, she is
probably one of the oldest persons still riding a jet ski,” he said.
When the move from Germany to the U.S. happened, Pat was in
the eighth grade. “The school year started in the fall, like here. So, I
transferred to Hudtloff Junior High (not too far from Thunderbird Apartments
and the Lake Steilacoom house) as an eighth grader.
“At Hudtloff, I was
put in all eighth grade classes except for a 7th grade English class. There was
a German girl in that class. She spoke English and German. That helped me a
lot. By 9th grade I’d caught up and could easily talk and write in English,”
said Pat.
When not in school, watching television was fun for Pat.
And, it helped him with learning English.
“The one sport I was
good at was soccer. But, there was no soccer at Hudtloff or Lakes at that time.
I tried my luck at Lakes with track and tennis. After about three months, I
decided track was not for me. I tried out for the tennis team and was the last
cut,” said Pat.
“In Germany, there
were two TV channels. I came over here and had more channels and more to
watch. It was a treat to watch the Walt
Disney show in color. Roy Rogers western TV show was fun. Really surprising was
that I saw “Dick und Dof” again. I learned their real names were Laurel and
Hardy and I heard them speaking English.”
Pat and his wife, Diane Rhoades, married in 1994. They live
in Orting (Pierce County), Wash. She works as a CPA.
They visit Pat’s mother often. Heidi Lynch has kept herself
on a diet (breads, sausages etc.) common in Germany and bought at a German deli
in Lakewood. Pat often eats German meals with her in the Lake Steilacoom home.
They talk in German to each other.
She’s an artist (both oil and water colors) and paints
scenery and works in the part of the annual Puyallup Fair where paintings are
displayed and sold.
After Pat graduated from Lakes High in 1966, he studied at
Tacoma Community College. But, in 1969 he was not taking enough hours at TCC to
be a full time student. He was taking night classes at the college and working
full time in the Auburn State Game Farm, helping raise pheasants for release
for bird hunters.
“The Draft Board told
me if I didn’t join the Army, I’d lose my green card and be deported since I
was still a German citizen. But, if I joined the Army they’d expedite things
and I’d become a U.S. citizen. That’s what happened. While in Army basic
training at Fort Lewis he was pulled out briefly, to take and pass a
naturalization test and be sworn in as U.S. citizen.
In the Army he got his security clearance while serving at
Fort Lewis and then went to Fort Benning, Georgia, and took drill instructor
training. He was a sergeant assistant drill instructor. From Georgia, he was
transferred to South Korea, where he served 10 months before being discharged
as a buck sergeant (E-5) when his two-year military hitch was completed.
As a civilian, Pat’s work life has included 33 years as a
log truck driver. He has his own shop and garage and for two years hauls things
for hire. As a low boy driver, he hauled equipment such as dozers, excavators
and fork lifts and such for Valley Equipment out of Pacific (King and Pierce
Counties), Wash. “I finally got a friend of mine to take over my Valley
Equipment job, so I could retire in December 2015,” said Pat.
Looking back on his life, Pat says he has never wished he’d
stayed in Germany. “It’s a nice country to visit, but I’m not interested in
living there again.
“Diane and I made a
brief visit to Germany in 1992. We rented an economy car, a German Ford, and
darn near got run over on the Autobahn, Germany’s freeway system, traveling
from Frankfurt to Bayreuth. The next day we traded in that car for a more
powerful Audi, which could keep up the traffic which goes about 120-140 km/
75-85 mph.”
Pat said those who have only lived in the U.S. “can’t
appreciate what we have in America. In Germany you can’t hunt or fish unless
you are very wealthy and belong to an exclusive club of nobility. In the
States, you can own lots of acres, with open land, to do with as you please. In
Germany, the upper class has houses with tiny lots, all fenced in and gated.
Those in the middle class live in apartments and condos. I’ve mentioned ‘class’
several times because it’s still prevalent in Europe. People are judged by
where they’re from and how wealthy they are.”
Q&A with Derrel von Molnarffy, Lakes High School Class
of 1966
Q&A: Derrel von Molnarffy’s answers in response to
questions from Tim Marsh, both Lakes High School Class of 1966. Q&A took
place in October 2016.
What’s your name now and what was it while you were in Lakes
Class of 1966? Why did it change?
“Derrel von Molnarffy has always been my legal name. I used
‘Darrel’ in the States for easier pronunciation. The non-usage of my ‘von’
nobility title was a gesture of American integration.”
Where do you live and what do you do for a living?
“Heide in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, close to the North
Sea coast. A national survey shows for the fourth consecutive year those living
here are the happiest of people living anywhere in Germany. I’m retired but
continue to do things in fields of my interest: mentor and guide students in
thesis papers; give individual training in English, especially executives weak
therein; do translations, mostly legal or business related; give critique on
film scripts for those I know working in the industry; also am active promoting
artists in various fields. I’ve done this for the past 25 years; before that I
was actively involved in Christian Mission and Development work, concentrated
mainly in Eastern Europe and, for a time, India.”
Where were you born? Where did you grow up before coming to
the U.S.?
“Münich, Germany on 9/25/1948. Lived and went to school in
Switzerland and Bavaria as a child. Post-war conditions prevailed but I had a
very happy childhood playing along the Danube River, along the banks of
Straubing, Bavaria, in wide fields that had not long before been scenes of
battles. Europe offers many mystical surroundings
that can translate you back many centuries…as if experiencing them in the now.
Love Switzerland and it remains a second home to me always.”
When did you come to the U.S. and why?
“I came to the U.S. in 1956 with my family upon invitation
of a close Hungarian family friend, Dalma Hunyadi, a professor of English at
the University of Chicago and well known not only for her cultural TV show but
also in becoming a leading worldwide literature expert on Thornton Wilder.”
How old were you when you came to the US and in what grade
in school?
“I emigrated from Europe at 7-years-old and entered grade
school in Chicago.”
Where did you live in the States?
“Chicago 1956-57; Sunnyvale, California 1958-59 and in the
Lakewood area 1960 to 1969 where I attended DuPont and Clover Park district
schools. I had a great time at DuPont in the seventh through early part of
ninth grade when I transferred to Mann Junior High. Then, I went to Lakes High
and graduated and eventually studied at PLU. Looking back my American school experience was very
positive and enriching. There was a good ethnic mix, especially with African
and Asian Americans.”
……
PHOTO CUTLINE: Derrel von Molnarffy, Lakes High School Class
of 1966, at the center of where he lives and works, Heide in
Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Behind him is the St. Jurgens Lutheran town chapel
and the well-known St. George slaying the Dragon Monument next to him. On the
horizon in the photo are town house tops in typical north European style.
……
How did you learn English?
“My family (Austro-Hungarian mainly) has a strong connection
to English in that our heredity lines go back also to England and Scotland. I
am related to Winston Spencer Churchill. Grandfather Bela was fluent in
English. He lectured for a time at Columbia University in New York on the
military concept of the Hungarian Hussars, the model for all other national
Hussars. Once I moved with my family to America, English was always spoken,
Hungarian on occasion and German not at all…although I showed interest to speak
such with my Grandmother, Alice Grace.
She had been quite ingenious in taking me to see matinee movies nearly
every day (in those huge Chicago palace theaters of the time). It was marvelous
learning American English that way. Plus, we always had a lot of books around
to read. I still had an accent with the ‘th’ Dental Fricative sound in the
fifth grade in Sunnyvale (California) but, sessions with a speech therapist
helped eliminate that.”
These days, in Germany, when you speak English do you do so
with an American accent?
“I’ve got a bit of an American accent. However, having lived
in Canada and India and many years abroad, most people think I’m English or
Dutch.”
How long did you live in the U.S.?
“About 16 to 17 years. I arrived 4/30/1956 and departed
12/24/1973, principally to be a non-violent freedom fighter for Hungary.”
What memories do you have from living in the U.S., from
sports to friends and everything in between?
“Living in Chicago, New York and on the West Coast gave me
amazing positive big city experiences. I acquired some American smart street
toughness in Chicago, fighting off bullies every day, walking to and from
school.
“In Sunnyvale (California) our neighbor, Harvey Moon, was an
airline pilot. He had flown us from Chicago to San Francisco. The Moons were an
all-American family who invited me, an only child, along on camping trips up in
the Redwood Forest area. It was great American style fun with the kind of
neighbors that make America great.
“I loved and still love baseball. I played it well in my
early States-side times, later giving it up and at Lakes running cross-country
and track in hopes of improving my
speed. That kind of running experience teaches you to never give up, to carry
on regardless of the pain and always give all to cross the finish line. In
Europe school athletic programs are kept to a minimum.”
“Another school highlight was after overcoming my accent,
winning an all-school speech competition at DuPont and being master of
ceremonies for the talent show. I was presented the DP Award, given out to only
a handful of students each year….a kind of citizenship civil excellence
award-although I never became a US citizen.”
“My time at Lakes was absolutely grand. Few students in
Europe have as much fun in school as do American kids. Friendships from that
time mean a lot to me…and that through all these years they still remain. Often
more to their credit than mine. I’m thinking of one classmate in particular.”
After Lakes, what did you do? You mentioned attending PLU.
“I had a couple of jobs earning money to attend PLU. In
downtown Tacoma, I handled the shipping department for Tacoma Rubber Stamp.
After that I sold shoes on commission for Leeds. It paid better. Though
Catholic, my PLU experience was the catalyst that brought me into a Christ
Jesus Bible foundational relationship and not long later on to front line
mission work principally East Bloc orientated. I’m a college dropout but
somehow have managed to work academically…’a man’s gift maketh room for him’….”
Any American food favorites you don’t get in Germany?
“There’s a long list. It includes beef jerky, root beer,
Coke floats, ice cream sundaes, pizza with hot pepperoni sausage, original
subway sandwiches and thick milk shakes. None of which I would make a habit of
chowing down on now…..well …beef jerky is an exception.”
You were drafted for U.S. military duty?
“Yes. But, being a staunch anti-Communist, I volunteered
instead. However, during my junior year at Lakes during PE playing baseball, I
had a knee and thigh injury. I had surgery at Lakewood General Hospital.
Because of that, I was later classified 1-Y and exempted from military. But, I
fought in another way by leading a highly dangerous, but fruitful underground
Christian mission project reaching into all of communist Eastern Europe
including Russia. This was an activity of non-violent militancy. I retired from
that 20-year work a couple of years after the Iron Curtain came down.”
Any concluding thoughts?
“Through marriage to an American I took on six very young
kids that were not my own biologically and raised them all. They live in the US
today: Chicago, Los Angeles and on the Big Island in Hawaii. All are US
citizens. I’ve fathered three sons and a daughter, the youngest. Two of whom
are American citizens and two are German.”
“Although I never
became a US a citizen and in spite of the brevity of my years living in the
States, I have pretty much remained American all my life. American English is
my principal language and orientation.”
“My spiritual mentor
since 1991 has been an American Franciscan priest Fr. Richard Rohr. I highly
recommend his writings and Center for Action and Contemplation based in New
Mexico.”
“The world sees the
US quite critically these days. But, one thing should never be forgotten.
Nowhere is there as much free access to information, freedom of press and
expression as in America. Vittorio Hösle, the great German-Italian philosopher
of Notre Dame reminds also that, contrary to general opinion, America also
provides the greatest cultural reservoirs and most excellent universities. What
this produces in such innovative places as Silicon Valley and the Puget Sound
area speaks for itself.”
Note: This story was originally posted Nov. 15, 2016, at the
website of The Suburban Times, Lakewood’s online newspaper with headline,
“Lakes alums from Germany re-connect at 50th Reunion.” URL for that posting:
http://thesubtimes.com/2016/11/15/lakes-alums-from-germany-re-connect-at-50th-reunion
::::
In the 1963-1964 season, Lakes boys varsity basketball team
won the 1964 Puget Sound League championship.
But, during the season it lost its PSL game on Fri., Jan.
10, 1964, in Auburn to the Auburn High School Trojans. This photo was taken
during that game.
Lancer Bill Saxton (#33) at the free throw line. To the far
right Whit Hemion (#41) and near right Rick Austin (#43). On the far left Gary
Larsen (#45).
On the wall of the Auburn gym in all capital letters was
“EVERY SPORTS IS A GOOD ONE IF YOU ARE.”
In the PSL title game on Friday, March, 6, 1964, played in
the Highline High School gym, Lakes beat Renton, 47-46.
By winning the title, Lakes had a chance to play in the 40th
annual (1964) Class AA State High School Basketball Tournament in Hec Edmundson
Pavilion on the campus of the University of Washington in Seattle.
For the first time, the tourney was split into two parts,
regional and finals. Four districts each held their own tournaments with four
teams in each. Winners advanced to the state tournament. Thus, 16 teams
competed to be the final eight to win the state 1964 tournament.
In Region 2, Lakes, Renton, Cleveland of Seattle and Lincoln
of Tacoma competed in the Puyallup High School gym.:
· Friday, March
13, 1964, Lakes lost, 89-48 to Cleveland.
· Saturday.,
March 14, 1964, Lakes beat Lincoln, 49-39.
Seasons over for Lakes and Lincoln. Renton advanced to the
state tournament where it lost in the championship game.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Story updated and new photos added 9/2/2015
Charles Watson Croasdill III, 80, died May 12, 1997, in
Tacoma, Wash.
Born in Seattle on Jan. 1, 1917, he graduated in June 1935
from Seattle's Roosevelt High School.
He studied at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Very athletic and extremely competitive, while a UW student,
he completed and lettered in cross-country and was a miler for the track &
field UW Huskies. He was a UW team captain. And, he played varsity tennis, too.
The 1938 UW “Tyee” yearbook, covering the 1937-1938 academic
year when he was a junior, said his 3.9 grade point helped improve his Phi
Kappa Sigma fraternity house's member grade average.
Although one “Tyee” item called him "Chuck," he
was usually known as Charles or "Charlie." His students called him
"Mr. Croasdill" or "Mr. C."
After graduating in June 1940 with a bachelor of arts degree
from the UW College of Arts and Sciences, he taught at Columbia Union High
School in Wallula (Walla Walla Co.), Wash., before joining the military during
World War II.
Charles and Walter, his younger brother, a 1939 Roosevelt
High grad, served in the U.S. Army.
A story in the July 4, 1944, Seattle Times says, “Pvt.
Charles W. Croasdill, Jr., has returned to duty in Juneau after a furlough. He
is with the Alaska Communication System, and has spent the last 15 months in
the Aleutians. He is a graduate of the University of Washington and was
teaching at Columbia before enlistment. Pfc. J. Walter Croasdill is stationed
at Pecos Army Air Field, Texs., where he is a Link trainer instructor. He attended
the University of Washington before entering the Army. Both boys, sons of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles W. Croasdill …. Seattle are graduates of Roosevelt High School
and members of Phi Kappa Sigma.”
A Seattle Times Nov 12, 1945, story lists Charles as among 90
Seattle soldiers honorably discharged from the military at the Separation
Center at U.S. Army Fort Lewis, Wash.
Following military service, Charles moved to Aberdeen (Grays
Harbor Co.), Wash., where, over nine years, he worked first for Grays Harbor
(junior) College and later for Aberdeen (Weatherwax) High School.
At the college, his duties included serving as an adviser of
the "Timber Line" student newspaper. At the high school, he taught
English and journalism and was adviser of the “Ocean Breeze” student newspaper.
From Aberdeen, he moved to Lakewood (suburban Tacoma, Pierce
Co.) and was a high school teacher and adviser for 23 years in the Clover Park
School District.
Initially, he taught English and journalism at Clover Park
High School and advised the "Clover Leaves" student newspaper.
During three consecutive summers in the early 1960s, the
Croasdill family lived in Provo, Utah, while Charles attended and taught
journalism classes at Brigham Young University. He was among a select number of
high school journalism teachers from across the nation awarded fellowships from
The Newspaper Fund, Inc., made possible by grants from the Wall Street
Journal. The fellowships were designed
to "encourage more talented young people to choose journalism as a career
by assisting high school newspaper advisers and journalism teachers, according
to an Associated Press story in May 1960.
In 1962 the Clover Park District's new Lakes High School
opened. Starting in the 1963-1964 academic year, Charles continued at Clover Park,
but added teaching journalism at Lakes and advising the "Lakes
Ledger" student newspaper to his duties.
Following his 1978 retirement from the Clover Park District,
he taught English for seven years (1979-1986) at Fort Steilacoom Community
College which today is called Pierce College.
After his second retirement in 1986, he and his wife, Ruth,
enjoyed traveling.
He was an avid sports fan, loved to play golf, including
with fellow teachers, and solving crossword puzzles.
At his passing, survivors included Ruth, his wife of 51
years; daughters Helen Montfort (Ed), Carolyn Hill (Rick) and son Charles
Watson Croasdill (Kristine); sister Kit Hall; brother Walter Croasdill; six
grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
A memorial service was held May 16, 1997, at Little Church
on the Prairie in Lakewood.
A Croasdill family member, the John Spellman Library at
Grays Harbor College (GHC) and Special Collections of the University of
Washington Libraries provided information.
Also, info came from University of Washington “Tyee,” GHC “Nautilus” and
Aberdeen (Weatherwax) High School “Quinault.” Photos from Lakes High School
1964 “Legend” yearbook and Seattle Times
July 4, 1944.
::::
In May
2015, Helen Croasdill Monfort posted this photo of her father, Charles
W. Croasdill, on Facebook. She said it was taken while he served in
the U.S. Army. He was drafted after earning a degree in education from the
University of Washington and teaching in eastern Washington in Wallula, Wash.,
near the Washington-Oregon border, the "Army sent him to the Aleutian
Islands and he was trained as a radio operator," she said. "There was
a very small base and because of the brutal weather, not much to do. The
Army supplied the men with cigarettes and playing cards. He smoked until the
day he passed away of a stroke at age 80. As many of you know, he was a
much-loved man and educator. He was a great father."
;:::
Our Lakes Class of 1966
graduation party took place cruising at night (June 8) and early morning (June
9) around Puget Sound in a State of Washington ferry boat with the band "The Surprise Package."
Party followed our 8 p.m. Wed. June 8, 1966, graduation ceremony in the Lakes
High gym.
We took school buses from Lakes to ferry dock and the buses drove onto the
ferry.::::
Added 7/6/2019
MV Kickitat and Kingston terminal (dock)
According to classmate Jim Nichols (James H. Nichols
III) in 2019, the Lakes Class of 1966 graduation party boat in June 1966 was
the MV Klickitat which departed from and returned to the Kingston (Kitsap
County) terminal (dock). Most likely, the school buses transporting class
members traveled the approximately 62 miles from Lakes High, across the Narrows
Bridge and on to Kingston (Kitsap County). Reversed the route after the party
concluded.
Added 6/30/2019:
Like Lakes High School Class of 1966 trivia?
Hop on board.
After the Lakes High School Class of 1966
graduation starting at 8 p.m. Wed., June 8, 1966, in the Lakes Gymnasium,
(many/most?) classmates turned in their caps and gowns and boarded Clover Park
School District school buses to the graduation party.
That destination was (which Washington State
Ferries dock?).
The buses drove onto a ferry. Graduates left
the bus and partied the rest of the night and into the morning of June 9. On
board the ferry providing live music was the band Surprise Package, previously
called the Viceroys and later American Eagle.
Below is a presumably accurate list of boats
the Washington State Ferries had in operation in 1966. Which ferry was “ours?”
What the dock onto which the school buses drove on and off?
Ferry
Name: Year ferry went into service as part of Washington State Ferries system,
Year ferry retired
MV Leschi: 1951, 1967
SS San Mateo: 1951, 1969
MV Crosline: 1951, 1967
MV Kehloken:
1951, 1972
MV Kalakala:
1951, 1967
MV Enetai: 1951, 1967
MV Willapa: 1951, 1967
MV Chetzemoka: 1951,
1973
MV Quinault:
1951, 2007
MV Illahee:
1951, 2007
MV Nisqually: 1951, 2007
MV Klickitat: 1951, 2007
MV Klahanie:
1951, 1972
MV Skansonia:
1951, 1969
MV Vashon: 1951, 1980
MV Olympic:
1954, 1993
MV Rhododendron: 1954, 2002
MV Evergreen State: 1954, 2016
MV Klahowya: 1958, 2017
(MV =
Motor Vessel, SS= Steam Ship)
#
http://www.evergreenfleet.com/retired.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_State_Ferries
By Tim Marsh, Lakes High School Class of 1966
Gerry Austin is best known for the
outstanding football teams he coached at Clover Park and Lakes High Schools.
In addition to being a Clover Park Warrior and Lakes
Lancer, he was also a Kelso Hilander and Washington Husky.
Although his signature was “Gerry D. Austin,”
his full name was Gerald Dewey Austin.
His middle name came from the S.S. Admiral
Dewey, an American-flagged cargo and passenger steamship on which he was born
Aug. 19, 1923, as it was cruising on the Pacific Ocean.
Gerry was born while his mother, Mary, a ship
passenger, was traveling to San Francisco to meet up with Edward, her
husband/Gerry’s father.
GREW UP IN KELSO
He grew up in Kelso (Cowlitz Co.), Wash., a
lumber town named for Kelso, Scotland, the hometown of the town’s Scottish
founder.
Gerry was a Hilander (spelling is correct)
because Hilanders (spelling is correct) is the nickname of Kelso High School
teams on which he played.
Before high school, Gerry excelled in a
variety of sports and also in the classroom. Later, being a scholar-athlete
served him well at Kelso High and in college. It explains why his career was
not only as a successful coach and administrator but also as an excellent
mathematics teacher.
At Kelso High, Gerry and Lillian Lorraine Filla
were sweethearts. Both 1942 Kelso High
graduates, they married March 2, 1944, in San Francisco.
LILLIAN WORKED IN CLOVER PARK SCHOOL DISTRICT
Lillian worked for more than 20 years in the
Clover Park School District mostly at Carter Lake Elementary School as
secretary to the principal.
They were married was for almost 50 years
before Gerry died at age 70 on Jan. 28, 1994. Lillian passed away at
age 82 on June 18, 2006.
Because Gerry was born at sea and he and Lillian enjoyed
vacationing on Washington ocean beaches, they had a wish. It was fulfilled when
their cremated ashes were scattered on the ocean off the Washington state
coast.
COWLITZ COUNTY ‘ATHLETE OF THE YEAR’
As a Kelso High Hilander athlete, Gerry
played football, basketball and baseball and competed in track. As a senior, he
was named Cowlitz County “Athlete of the Year.”
His athletic ability for the Hilanders caught
the attention of the University of Washington. He received an athletic
scholarship to play football for the UW Huskies.
The success Gerry would have with the UW varsity as
quarterback/punter was foreshadowed in 1941 when he played for the Husky Pups
freshman team. The Longview,
Wash., Daily News sports editor wrote in a column that year: “Kelso’s Gerry
Austin is going to town in a big way and Washington coaches are high on the
lad. He’s been doing the kicking for the (freshman team) and a darn capable job
of it, too.”
According to the column, the UW freshman
football coach said about Gerry it was “one of the smartest games against
Oregon of any quarterback we’ve ever had here. What’s more his kicking was
tops.” The freshman coach “intended to play (Gerry) only part of the time, but
when that kid started to move there wasn’t anything else to do. That boy is
going far, just watch.”
Furthermore, according to the column, the freshman coach “seldom enthuses about
his frosh gridders so when he goes overboard on Austin, it shows just how well
Gerry is booming them” for the UW.
GERRY WAS A ‘TRIPLE THREAT’ QUARTERBACK
A newspaper preview of UW’s 1943 Homecoming
football game said Gerry was a “triple threat at the quarterback position” with
his “speed, passing and punting” making him “a natural.”
Gerry played Husky varsity football in the
1942, 1943, 1946 and 1947 seasons. In 1944-1945 during World War II, he served
in the U.S. Navy on a minesweeper.
As a member of the 1943 UW team, he was the
Husky quarterback and punter in the Rose Bowl game vs. the University of
Southern California on Jan. 1, 1944. Because of World War II travel
restrictions, the game in Pasadena. Calif., had two teams from the Pacific
Coast Conference competing. USC won, 29-0.
The 1947 “Apple Cup,” UW versus Washington
State football game, had a Kelso highlight. Played at UW’s Husky Stadium in
Seattle, it pitted former Kelso Hilander teammates as the starting
quarterbacks, Gerry for the UW and Tiz Miller for Washington State. UW won,
20-0. At Kelso, Gerry was QB and Tiz halfback. Both played in the 1947 game
after World War II military service.
1949: BECAME CLOVER PARK FOOTBALL COACH
Graduating from the UW in 1948, Gerry was an
assistant coach on the UW Pups football team that year and became Clover Park’s
head football coach starting with the 1949 season.
He coached Clover Park Warriors football for
13 seasons, 1949-1961. He was also Clover Park’s golf coach and taught math.
In the days before high school football
playoffs for state titles, special post-season “Turkey Day” games on
Thanksgiving were the pinnacle of success.
The most important high school Turkey Day
game in the state of Washington was in Seattle with the Seattle City League
champion playing a top-ranked opponent.
According
to the Seattle Times, the annual Turkey Day game was “one of
the biggest sporting events in Seattle in its heyday, and we're not just
talking high-school sports.” There were games from 1947-71, all but one in
Seattle Memorial Stadium. Thousands of fans attended each game.
Victory was elusive for Gerry Austin’s Puget
Sound League champ Warriors, who traveled to Seattle and played in three
“Turkey Day” games.
In 1956, 11,000 fans saw Ballard defeat Clover Park, 37-7. In
1957, Clover Park was rated #1 in the Associated
Press prep poll, but lost, 6-0, to Garfield. It was the Warriors’ only loss of
the season. In 1959, Clover Park and Garfield played again with the Warriors
losing, 13-7.
Gerry was president of the Washington State
Coaches Association, 1958-59.
1962: MOVED TO NEW LAKES HIGH SCHOOL
When Lakes High School opened in fall 1962,
Gerry moved from Clover Park as the Lancers’ first football coach and athletic
director, and he taught math. Quarterback on his first three Lakes teams (1962,
1963, and 1964) was his son, Rick (full name Rick Gerald Austin. The 1962 team
played as an independent. The 1963 and 1964 football teams competed in the
Puget Sound League.)
Gerry coached Lakes football for six seasons
(1962-1967) and retired for the first time from coaching.
One result of a Clover Park School District levy failure was staff
cutbacks. Because of that, Gerry returned to Lakes football in 1970 as an
assistant coach. In that season, he was in charge of backs, and Lakes head
football coach Andy Pazaruski (Lakes head football coach 1968-1970) handled
the line.
After the 1970 season Pazaruski was promoted to a district
administrative post and Gerry became Lakes head football coach in 1971. Then,
he retired from coaching the second and final time.
In Gerry’s 20 seasons as a high school head
football coach, he compiled an 118-53-8 win-loss-tie record and Warrior teams
he coached won four PSL titles.
Bob Haney was Lakes head football coach 1972-1976. Don McPherson,
a player for Gerry’s Lancers, was football coach 1977-1983. Although no longer coaching, Gerry enjoyed discussing Lancer
game strategies with McPherson, a Lakes 1965 grad.
Gerry stepped down as Lakes athletic director
and as a teacher in 1974 when he became the Clover Park School District
athletic director in 1975. He retired in 1981.
ENSHRINED IN HALL OF FAME
Gerry was enshrined in the Washington
State Football Coaches Hall of Fame in 1986.
He was
posthumously enshrined in 1996 as a member of the Kelso High Hilander Hall of
Fame inaugural class. Representing him at the enshrinement event in Kelso were
Lillian along with son Rick (Lakes Class of 1965) and Cathy (Lakes 1967) and
Joan (Lakes 1971).
“In addition to being a tremendously successful athlete and high
school football coach, my Dad was a good man,” said Rick Austin.” He was kind,
fair and honest, and he made everyone around him a better person. Dad worked
very hard to be the best athlete and coach he could be, and he led by example.
“We all knew that we had to earn the right to be respected or to
make the starting lineup. There were no favors given to individuals, even to
me, his son, on the playing field.
“His positive manner of coaching taught us all many of life's
lessons. Dad’s numerous accolades were well deserved, but none of that
recognition ever changed his humble, thankful nature. He was the rock of the
Austin family, and he and Mom had a wonderful, supporting relationship.”
PHOTOS: Clover Park Coach Gerry Austin from Clover Park High
Klahowya yearbook. Lakes Coach Gerry Austin (center) with assistants (l-r) Don
Rarey and Chuck Forsland from Lakes High Legend yearbook.
SLIDESHOW: Gerry Austin slideshow – running 5 minutes and 20
seconds -- posted at YouTube accompanies this story. See it here:
https://youtu.be/C35Qv3JiOhw
SEE
Gerry Austin mention in the “Story behind Lakes burnt orange and royal blue
colors” from The Suburban Times’ June 1, 2010, edition:
http://thesubtimes.com/2010/06/01/story-behind-lakes-burnt-orange-and-royal-blue-colors
SOURCES for this story and sidebar “Lakes 1964 season bittersweet
include the TNT/Tacoma News Tribune, Seattle Times, Longview Daily News, Clover
Park High Klahowya, Lakes Highs Legend and Kelso High Tamahnawus yearbooks and an article
in the Cowlitz Historical Quarterly by its editor, Bob Gaston. As a part of
research, visits were made to the Lakewood Historical Society Museum and the
Longview Public Library. The assistance of Rick Austin was invaluable
:::
Lakes High School band, directed by Gerald Pepos, marched in
the Saturday, April 11, 1964, Puyallup Valley Daffodil Festival parade.
Lakes band was one of 20 which marched through Tacoma, Puyallup
and Sumner during the parade.
Some floats in the parade reflected the 1964 parade’s theme,
“Nations on Parade.”
Some saluted the 75th anniversary of Washington State's
statehood. (Washington was admitted to the union on Nov. 11, 1889.)
Photo shows Lakes band marching on Tacoma’s Pacific Avenue
in the 1964 parade.
Note (at bottom of photo) Lakes drum majorette and
cheerleaders leading the band and (at top of photo) Lakes Drill Team members
following band.
Other photo shows example of the uniforms worn by the Lakes
band in the 1964 parade.
Weather during the parade was breezy with temperature in the
mid-50 degree temperature. “The start of the parade saw temperatures of 42
degrees and blustery, cloudy weather. By noon, the clouds had parted and April sunshine
had appeared,” says one source.
“Go! Twist!” was the song the Lakes band played exclusively
over and over and over in the parade. Mr. Pepos had band members memorize the
song so they didn’t have to use read music while they marched.
::::
:::::
Suburban Times
Letter: Lakewood’s Roundabouts and Lakewood Saturday
Oak Leaves Memories
:::
Siblings share Puyallup Fair memories
https://thesubtimes.com/2021/08/31/siblings-share-puyallup-fair-memories/
:::
Halloween trick or treating in Lakewood in mid to late 1950s
Halloween trick or treating in Lakewood in mid to late 1950s
| The Suburban Times
THESUBTIMES.COM
Halloween trick or treating in Lakewood in mid to late 1950s
| The Suburban Times
By Tim Marsh, Lakes High Class of 1966 I enjoyed Halloween
trick or treating in Lakewood in the mid to late 1950s when we lived on
Bridgeport Way.
::::
Tim Marsh
October 28, 2020 ·
What are your favorite steps/moves in the Madison line
dance? Mine, based on learning the Madison in Saturday morning dance classes
led by Russ and Jean Saltmarsh in the Lakewood Terrace 'York Room' room in
Lakewood Colonial Center:
IT'S MADISON TIME
2:03 "Now, when I said 'hit it!' I want the big strong
basketball with the Wilt Chamberlain hook. (pause) Hit it! Two points!"
2:17 "Now this time, when I say 'hit it!' I want the
big strong Jackie Gleason and back to the Madison. (pause) Hit it! (pause).
And, a-w-w-w-way we go!"
"You're looking good!"
https://youtu.be/GPQmwPLOmZY
(Skip the ad.)
:::::
Tim Marsh
June 9, 2015 ·
“World Famous" Tom Murphy (photo) of Seattle's KJR
Radio talked at our senior breakfast in the cafetorium. Arthur Stolz, senior
dean, revealed there that a member of our class - who was it? - placed a
classified ad in TNT (Tacoma News Tribune) advertising a VW at a great price.
Listed the Stolz family home phone number. Phone "rang off the hook."
;:::
May 17 ·
In 1966, “World Famous” Tom Murphy of Seattle’s
KJR radio (“Channel 95”) was surprise guest speaker at Lakes High School Class
of 1966 “Senior Breakfast” in the LHS Cafetorium.
(Rick
Hill has a special VW memory from this event. Did anyone take photos at this
event?)
::::
Tim Marsh
May 13 ·
(Bill Lemmon was father of Pat Lemmon (Lakes Class of 1966)
and Dennis Lemmon (Clover Park Class of 1962.)
Bill Lemmon coached boys’ basketball at Bellfountain,
Eatonville, Clover Park and Stadium
(There is no claim of originality in this article. it was
pieced together using info found on the Internet.)
In 1936-1937 season, the boys’ basketball team at
Bellfountain High School won the Oregon state championship. (Bellfountain is in
Benton County, about 18 miles from Corvallis, home of Oregon State University).
Burton "Bill" Lemmon (a graduate of Tacoma’s
Stadium High School and Willamette University in Salem) was the coach.
Bellfountain High had a total of 27 students, its basketball team had eight
boys, none over 6-foot tall.
At that time Oregon had two classifications for high school
athletic teams. Enrollment numbers determined if a school was Class A (larger)
or Class B (smaller). Uniquely, if a basketball team won the B championship it
could challenge the Class A teams to play for the Class A title in basketball.
In 1937, Bellfountain did that: It won the B championship and then won the A
title.
Playing at Willamette U in Salem, Oregon’s capital city, the
Bellfountain “Bells” won the Class B Championship. Then, in the A competition
it beat Portland's Franklin High School in the semi-finals, then, for the Class
A title, defeated Lincoln High School of Portland by 14 points – Bellfountain’s
closest game of the season. For the season, the Bells had a 24-2 win-loss
record.
To realize the size differential between the two contenders,
consider that Lincoln High in 1937 had almost twice as many teachers as
Bellfountain had students.
In his education career Bill Lemmon would go on to coach
boys’ basketball at Stadium of Tacoma and Clover Park of Lakewood. He didn’t
coach his children in high school, but sons Dennis (Class of 1962), and Pat
(Class of 1966), played high school basketball at Clover Park High and Lakes
High respectively.
::::
BELLFOUNTAIN, EATONVILLE, CLOVER PARK, STADIUM
After the 1937 school year Bill Lemmon left Bellfountain to
be head boys’ basketball coach at Eatonville, Washington. After three years
with Eatonville he went on to Clover Park, where he stayed five years and where
one of his players later coached Lemmon's sons at the same school, From Clover
Park, Lemmon moved to Stadium High in Tacoma, where in 1931 he was a member of
the Washington state champions playing March 11-14, 1931, in U of W Pavilion
(later named for Hec Edmundson) in Seattle. He coached for 12 years at Stadium.
:::
BURTON C. LEMMON
TNT/Tacoma News Tribune Aug. 17, 1999 with editing and
additional info added in 2022
Burton Carlyle (Bill) Lemmon, age 87, went to be with the
Lord, August 11, 1999. Born in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada, April 9, 1912, he
spent most of his childhood years in Tacoma, Washington, where he died.
Always a diligent student and inspiring athlete, he helped
lead the Stadium High School in Tacoma boys’ basketball team to a Washington
state championship, completed college at Willamette University with a degree in
teaching foreign languages, married the love of his life, Isobel M. Morehouse,
and began a lifelong career as father, teacher, coach and community leader.
Bill carried the ability to motivate and inspire
academically, athletically and morally to all who touched his life.
In his first school year of teaching, 1936-1937, he led
Bellfountain, a small B school basketball team, to win the all schools Oregon
State Championship. He continued to coach and teach at Eatonville, Stadium,
Clover Park and Mt. Tahoma high schools in Washington.
Family was paramount in his life, and he worked several jobs
to provide a great home and environment on Steilacoom Lake for his wife and
five children.
With amazing energy, he always spent time building personal
relationships with his children, working, coaching, and maintaining a home, yet
never abandoning his many other interests which included reading, prolific
writing, humor, all manner of music and dance, philosophy, poetry, languages
and travel.
He took his family with him when he traveled overseas to
teach in Cardiff, Wales, Madrid, Spain and Puerto Rico, and an additional year
each in Torremolinos (Spain) and the Philippines, once the family was grown.
Bill was always much more than a tourist, because he mixed right in with the
people, communicating, learning and sharing.
Everywhere he went, people asked him to be the master of
ceremonies, to speak of his travels, of living life to the full, and of sound
character. This he did well, lifting spirits with his beautiful singing and
speaking voice, his crisp sense of humor, dramatic presentations and
intelligent dialogue. His speeches carried the theme of God is love and power,
the blessing of freedom of speech, thought and will, sportsmanship, strong
moral character, thankfulness, optimism, spontaneity, and generous living.
These qualities he demonstrated by his life.
Burton C. Lemmon was a remarkable man with a tremendous
contribution. Those who knew him will be saddened by his departure, but will
understand and appreciate how their lives were enriched by his lively presence
and outstanding character.
As Bill joins Izzy (Isobel M. Morehouse) in heaven, his five
children, Michael, Rosemary, Dennis. Patrick and Sally, their spouses, 12
grandchildren, 7 great grandchildren and many friends will miss him. The family
is holding a private memorial service.
Izzy and Bill met at Willamette U. They married in 1936 in
Salem, Oregon. Isobel Montague Morehouse Lemmon was born May 3, 1912, Snohomish
County, Wash. She died at age 66 on Aug. 12, 1978, in Tacoma, Pierce County, Wash.
PHOTOS
=Coach Bill Lemmon on the far left with his 1937 Oregon
state high school championship “Bells” boys’ basketball team of Bellfountain,
Oregon.
=Bill Lemmon photo from his 1999 obituary in the TNT/Tacoma
News Tribune.
= Newspaper "clippings."
:::
Tim Marsh
June 8, 2015 ·
Lakes Class of 1966 graduation party -- sailing at night and
early morning around Puget Sound in a State of Washington ferry boat with the
band "The Surprise Package" -- was great.
The party was held after our 8 p.m. Wed. June 8, 1966,
graduation ceremony in the Lakes High gym. We took school buses from Lakes to
the ferry dock and the buses drove onto the ferry.
What class of 1966 party could have been better?
Here's one candidate, Clover Park. Its party was on
Tanglewood Island in Puget Sound with "Merrilee Rush and the
Turnabouts."
Note: Photo of The Surprise Package is cover of a 45 record
sleeve for its 1966 hit “Out of My Mind.” B-side of record was “Everything
Fine.” While the photo might have been taken and the songs recorded before
graduation, the record was issued Nov. 21, 1966.
:::
Tim Marsh
May 21 ·
August 1968: Hemion brothers, Whit and Dave, members of
Western Washington U men’s basketball team which toured/played games for six
weeks
=WHIT DIED (PLANE CRASH) IN 1978 AT AGE 31.
=DAVE DIED (HEART ATTACK) IN 2020 AT AGE 62.
In August 1968 the Western Washington U (Bellingham, Wash.)
Vikings men's basketball team went on a six-week tour of the Far East and
Australia. Whit Hemion and brother Dave Hemion, both Lakes High School grads
and former basketball players for the Lakes Lancers, were players on the WWU
team.
Team wearing sports coats -- Front Row (L-R): Assistant
coach Marv Ainsworth, Ben Smith, Ron Caderette, Dave Hemion, Mike Clayton, Neal
Larson, Doris Randall. Back Row (L-R): Whit Hemion, Blaine Johnson, Ed Monk,
Gary Reiersgard, John Reed, Jimmy Jones, Paul Hallgrimson, Head Coach Chuck
Randall.
Team wearing game uniforms -- 1968 WWU Australasia Team
(L-R): Ron Caderette, Mike Clayton, Jimmy Jones, Whit Hemion,Gary Reiersgard,
John Reed, Ed Monk, Paul Hallgrimson, Dave Hemion, Neal Larson, Ben Smith.
Kneeling (L-R): Assistant Coach Marv Ainsworth, Head Coach Chuck Randall.
Black & white action photo with photo corners cropped
--Dave Hemion, Jimmy Jones and Ed Monk.
Small color photo -- Paul Hallgrimson, Ed Monk, Whit Hemion
(with yellow scarf), Dave Hemion (light blue shirt) and Gary Reiersgard.
Large color photo --Dave Hemion, John Reed, Whit Hemion,
Gary Reiersgard and Mike Clayton
Story text included: In Taipei, Taiwan, WWU played and won
four games. The players did a lot of shopping. "…Whit (Hemion) bought 19
(music on phonograph records) albums for eight dollars (pirated copies). He
thought he had (the albums) concealed but when he went through customs they found
them. He was a little worried but they let him keep them with no penalty."
::::
Halloween
trick or treating in Lakewood in mid to late 1950s
OCTOBER 29, 2020 BY THE SUBURBAN TIMES LEAVE A COMMENT
By Tim Marsh, Lakes
High Class of 1966
I enjoyed Halloween trick or treating in Lakewood in the mid
to late 1950s when we lived on Bridgeport Way.
Mom’s artistic creativity took care of my costume. I was a
pirate with a red bandana headpiece and something smudged on my face giving the
appearance of a beard.
Going house-to-house to get gifted candy was, indeed, a
treat for my sister and me.
Halloween was not a major annual marketing push as it is
today. There were no giant bags of candy on sale to give away the contents
piece by piece to treaters.
When I trick or treated, only treats were my aim. No tricks.
I hoped to hit the jackpot in our neighborhood. There were maybe one or two
houses which gave away full sized candy bars. Wow!
My dentist father was not thrilled with the candy I got and
ate. But, he never prohibited me from doing it. But, as the son of a dentist, I
always brushed my teeth after candy gorging and, of course, after meals at
breakfast, lunch and dinner.
The best Lakewood trick or treat stop for me was a
substantial house on Bridgeport set back from the street on a large bit of
property. No candy. Instead, each treater was served hot apple cider ladled
from a glass punch bowl into glass punch cup with a handle. Memorable!
Trick or treating in Lakewood in the mid to late 1950s was
an innocent time when a kid could trick or treat on his own (no parents along)
and write positively about it in 2020.
Suburban Times sports columns (June,
July 1966) by Tim Marsh, Phil Nesse
Sports columns in The
Suburban Times (Lakewood, Pierce County, Wash.) June and July 1966. Written by
Tim Marsh and Phil Nesse, sports editors of the Lakes (High School) Ledger
student newspaper during their Lakes senior year, 1965-1966. These appeared in
print during the summer after they had graduated June 8, 1966, from Lakes in
the Class of 1966. What follows are columns in this order: June 16, 1966; June 23, 1966; June 30, 1966;
July 7, 1966; July 14, 1966; and July 21, 1966.
May 17 ·
In 1966, “World Famous” Tom Murphy of Seattle’s
KJR radio (“Channel 95”) was surprise guest speaker at Lakes High School Class
of 1966 “Senior Breakfast” in the LHS Cafetorium.
(Rick Hill has a special VW memory from this event. Did anyone
take photos at this event?)
"World Famous" Tom Murphy of Seattle's KJR Radio was
surprise guest speaker at our Lakes Class of 1966 senior breakfast held a
school day morning in LHS Cafetorium. Our baccalaureate was Sun. June 5, 1966,
and our graduation Wed. June 8, 1966, both starting 8 p.m. in LHS Gym.
Shakey's at the 100th and Bristol Entrance to Villa Plaza.
High school football printed program: Clover Park vs Lakes Sept.
11,1965, on Thompson Field, home field for both schools.
FOOTBALL:
LAKES BEAT CLOVER PARK, 13-7,
ON SEPT. 11, 1965…
Prior to Lakes Class of 1966 10-year reunion in 1976.
Story behind Lakes burnt orange and royal blue colors
Originally posted June 1, 2010, The Suburban Times
There are “givens” concerning Lakes High School. Colors for the
school are burnt orange and royal blue. Lakes teams are called the Lancers. In
fact, even before Lakes opened in September 1962, the school colors were
selected. But, when classes began in the 1962-1963 school year, there was not a
nickname for Lakes teams. Nor was there a fight song or alma mater. For that
matter, there was not a senior class either.
Lakes Colors
Lakes 1965 grad Rick Austin, 63, Kansas City, Mo., has
first-hand knowledge of selection of the school colors and in the selection of
the Lancers nickname, too. His father, the late Gerry Austin, was Lakes’ first
athletic director and head football coach after serving as the successful head
football coach at Clover Park High. Rick was starting quarterback for his
father’s first three Lakes teams – the 1962, 1963 and 1964 seasons – and also
played basketball and was a baseball pitcher for the Lancers.
“Dad was instrumental in the choice of colors at Lakes, with
administration approval of course. The main need was to order the football
uniforms for the first season,” said Rick.
Why burnt orange? Gerry Austin thought Darrell Royal was a great
football coach. Royal gained his fame as coach (1957–1976) of the University of
Texas Longhorns. According to the University of Texas at Austin website, Royal
chose the burnt orange color for the Longhorns’ football jerseys. (By the way,
before Royal joined Texas in 1957 as its coach, he coached one season, 1956,
for the University of Washington, Gerry’s alma mater.)
Another reason for burnt orange and royal blue color scheme,
said Rick, was because it was not used by other schools in the Puget Sound
League or used by many high school teams in the state.
Rick remembers before the football season began when his father
brought all the Lakes football jerseys – they were burnt orange with white
numerals – to the Austin home not far from the northern shore of American Lake.
“We had the jerseys spread out all over the family room floor and I got to pick
my own number by ‘coach’s son privilege,’ Rick said. “The jersey manufacturer
only put lower numbers on smaller jerseys. I needed a larger jersey, so that’s
why I picked number 42,” he said.
Lancers nickname
Lancers was one of the several nicknames names suggested by
Lakes students during the 1962-1963 school year. Rick Austin was one of the
students casting a vote in favor of the winning “Lancers.” During that first
school year, Lakes teams played varsity teams from smaller schools and junior
varsity teams from larger schools. Thus, until that vote, those Lakes teams in
early games of the first year wore burnt orange and royal blue, but they did
not have a nickname. In the 1963-1964 school year, Lakes began playing full
varsity schedules as a member of the Puget Sound League. League members
included Clover Park, Franklin Pierce, Puyallup, Auburn and others.
An interesting sideline to Lakes not having a senior class in
1962-1963 concerns the classes housed in the then new Lakes High School.
Sophomores used the school’s sophomore wing. Juniors used the junior wing.
However, seventh graders were housed in the senior wing. Many of those students
would return to Lakes in the 1965-1966 school year as sophomores. Consequently,
as seniors during the 1967-1968 school year they were in the senior wing for a
second time.
::::
Tim Marsh
June 7 at 6:55 AM ·
Used some of a paper grocery sack to cover a book. Is making a
book cover from sack an almost lost art?
::::
Tim Marsh
June 7 at 6:55 AM ·
Used some of a paper grocery sack to cover a book. Is making a
book cover from sack an almost lost art?
Tim Marsh
::::
Oct. 23, 1965, TNT/Tacoma News Tribune, Lakes vs. Clover Park
football game:
=Banner headline
=Game story
Tim Marsh
September 2, 2015 ·
Story updated and new photos added 9/2/2015
Charles Watson Croasdill III, 80, died May 12, 1997, in Tacoma,
Wash.
Born in Seattle on Jan. 1, 1917, he graduated in June 1935 from
Seattle's Roosevelt High School.
He studied at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Very athletic and extremely competitive, while a UW student, he
completed and lettered in cross-country and was a miler for the track &
field UW Huskies. He was a UW team captain. And, he played varsity tennis, too.
The 1938 UW “Tyee” yearbook, covering the 1937-1938 academic
year when he was a junior, said his 3.9 grade point helped improve his Phi
Kappa Sigma fraternity house's member grade average.
Although one “Tyee” item called him "Chuck," he was usually
known as Charles or "Charlie." His students called him "Mr.
Croasdill" or "Mr. C."
After graduating in June 1940 with a bachelor of arts degree
from the UW College of Arts and Sciences, he taught at Columbia Union High
School in Wallula (Walla Walla Co.), Wash., before joining the military during
World War II.
Charles and Walter, his younger brother, a 1939 Roosevelt High
grad, served in the U.S. Army.
A story in the July 4, 1944, Seattle Times says, “Pvt. Charles
W. Croasdill, Jr., has returned to duty in Juneau after a furlough. He is with
the Alaska Communication System, and has spent the last 15 months in the
Aleutians. He is a graduate of the University of Washington and was teaching at
Columbia before enlistment. Pfc. J. Walter Croasdill is stationed at Pecos Army
Air Field, Texs., where he is a Link trainer instructor. He attended the
University of Washington before entering the Army. Both boys, sons of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles W. Croasdill …. Seattle are graduates of Roosevelt High School and
members of Phi Kappa Sigma.”
A Seattle Times Nov 12, 1945, story lists Charles as among 90
Seattle soldiers honorably discharged from the military at the Separation
Center at U.S. Army Fort Lewis, Wash.
Following military service, Charles moved to Aberdeen (Grays
Harbor Co.), Wash., where, over nine years, he worked first for Grays Harbor
(junior) College and later for Aberdeen (Weatherwax) High School.
At the college, his duties included serving as an adviser of the
"Timber Line" student newspaper. At the high school, he taught
English and journalism and was adviser of the “Ocean Breeze” student newspaper.
From Aberdeen, he moved to Lakewood (suburban Tacoma, Pierce
Co.) and was a high school teacher and adviser for 23 years in the Clover Park
School District.
Initially, he taught English and journalism at Clover Park High
School and advised the "Clover Leaves" student newspaper.
During three consecutive summers in the early 1960s, the
Croasdill family lived in Provo, Utah, while Charles attended and taught journalism
classes at Brigham Young University. He was among a select number of high
school journalism teachers from across the nation awarded fellowships from The
Newspaper Fund, Inc., made possible by grants from the Wall Street Journal. The fellowships were designed to
"encourage more talented young people to choose journalism as a career by
assisting high school newspaper advisers and journalism teachers, according to
an Associated Press story in May 1960.
In 1962 the Clover Park District's new Lakes High School opened.
Starting in the 1963-1964 academic year, Charles continued at Clover Park, but
added teaching journalism at Lakes and advising the "Lakes Ledger"
student newspaper to his duties.
Following his 1978 retirement from the Clover Park District, he
taught English for seven years (1979-1986) at Fort Steilacoom Community College
which today is called Pierce College.
After his second retirement in 1986, he and his wife, Ruth,
enjoyed traveling.
He was an avid sports fan, loved to play golf, including with
fellow teachers, and solving crossword puzzles.
At his passing, survivors included Ruth, his wife of 51 years;
daughters Helen Montfort (Ed), Carolyn Hill (Rick) and son Charles Watson
Croasdill (Kristine); sister Kit Hall; brother Walter Croasdill; six
grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
A memorial service was held May 16, 1997, at Little Church on
the Prairie in Lakewood.
A Croasdill family member, the John Spellman Library at Grays
Harbor College (GHC) and Special Collections of the University of Washington
Libraries provided information. Also,
info came from University of Washington “Tyee,” GHC “Nautilus” and Aberdeen
(Weatherwax) High School “Quinault.” Photos from Lakes High School 1964
“Legend” yearbook and Seattle Times July
4, 1944.
;:::
May 17 ·
In 1966, “World Famous” Tom Murphy of Seattle’s
KJR radio (“Channel 95”) was surprise guest speaker at Lakes High School Class
of 1966 “Senior Breakfast” in the LHS Cafetorium.
(Rick Hill has a special VW memory from this event. Did anyone
take photos at this event?)
May 13 ·
(Bill Lemmon was father of Pat Lemmon (Lakes Class of 1966) and
Dennis Lemmon (Clover Park Class of 1962.)
Bill
Lemmon coached boys’ basketball at Bellfountain, Eatonville, Clover Park and
Stadium
(There is no claim of originality in this article. it was pieced
together using info found on the Internet.)
In 1936-1937 season, the boys’ basketball team at Bellfountain
High School won the Oregon state championship. (Bellfountain is in Benton
County, about 18 miles from Corvallis, h…
See
more
May 13 ·
Oct 30, 1965 – TNT/Tacoma News Tribune, Franklin
Pierce beats Lakes in football in Parkland
--
Game story
--
Game photo
May 13 ·
Oct. 23, 1965, TNT/Tacoma News Tribune, Lakes vs. Clover Park
football game:
=Banner
headline
=Game
story
·
May 12 ·
Dec 16, 1965 – TNT/Tacoma News Tribune boys’
basketball preview for Clover Park and Lakes
May 11 ·
Conference at Lakes High Wins Praise From Across the Nation
Lakes High School was sponsor of the 30th annual National
Association of Student Councils Conference held June 26-30, 1966.
By D. C. MOLNARFFY
The writer is a 1966 Lakes High School grad. This story appeared
in the Aug. 14, 1966, Sunday Tacoma News-Tribune’s ‘Teen-Age Tribune.’
DENVER Public Schools called it, “One of the best jobs ever
done.” Dale Stein of the Illinois Association of Student Councils called it,
“... the highlight of my high school career.” The North Carolina Student
Council Congress called it,” a most interesting and successful conference.” And
Susan Grunenfelder, Tumwater High School said, “As a resident of Washington I
couldn’t help but be proud of the first NASC conference held in Washington.”
These and many other complimentary comments exemplify the common
reaction held by administrators, teachers and students throughout the nation
who attended the 30th Annual National Conference of the National Association of
Student Councils June 26-30 at Lakes Senior High School.
In theory, the NASC conference brings together the youth leaders
of America for the primary purpose of interchanging ideas and opinions; thus
when delegates return to their respective high schools and communities a new
enrichment in concepts has been gained and can be passed on.
Sponsor’s Role
The role of the sponsoring high school in such a conference is
to apply the necessary theme, program, accomodationols, and recreation. Serving
as the theme for the 1966 meeting was “Twenty-0four Hour Leadership”
representing the necessity for complete dedication in the service of others.
The outstanding organization of the_ conference reflected three
years of earnest planning by Lakes administrators.
Seven general sessions represented the bulk of activity, with
discussion groups relating to business of the general sessions and other
topics.
Adding inspiration to the conference were speeches by prominent
Washingtonians and top high school administrators.
In the initial speech of the conclave Gov. Dan Evans welcomed
all delegates to the Northwest — later Jim Whittaker, first American to conquer
Mt. Everest, delivered a speech concerning mountain climbing and his personal
philosophy relating not only to mountain climbing but to all other endeavors.
Lakes ASB president and NASC president Rick delivered the keynote address, and
the rest of the conference was filled with many worthwhile speeches.
Recreation, Too
On a lighter note delegates were provided with an assortment of
recreational facilities and refreshments; the making of friends throughout the
Lakewood community was the most pleasing pastime for the delegates.
General chairman, Arthur H. Stolz, Lakes senior dean and
assistant principal, introduced the beauty of the Northwest to the delegates
stating, ‘‘This vacationland extends from the Pacific Ocean to the top of
snow-capped Mount Rainier—and beyond. Whether your interests lead you to
undersea diving or to mountain climbing, you can find the best kind of
recreation, challenging recreation, here.”
The spirit of the NASC Conference is best illustrated by the
words of President Johnson to the delegates, ‘‘Few lessons in the educational
process are more important than those you learn as student leaders. Few
experiences are more gratify-ing than the familiarity you have gained with the
spirit and method of democracy.’’
#
:::::
It's
the 1965-1966 academic year, probably December 1965. Lakes High's DECA
(Distributive Education Clubs of America) is having a fundraiser. Pay to have
your photo taken with Santa (Jim Olsen, he's there, but can only see his
boots), Mrs. Claus (Sue Collins) and two elves (can you identify them?). Paying
customers in photo (left to right) Mike Hanlon, Tim Marsh and Derrel von
Molnarffy (then known as Darrel Molnarffy), who appears to be eating a muffin,
not an apple.
:::
Tim Marsh shared a link.Lakes High School Class of 1966 -
Lakewood Washington
September 30, 2021 ·
"Lipstick On Your Collar" was a hit single by Connie
Francis in 1959. In the 1962-1963 school year at Iva Alice Mann Junior High, an
8th grade student -- she went on to graduate in 1966 from Lakes High School --
performed a fabulous lip sync of the song (played on a record player) on stage
in the Mann gym during a talent show.
::::
LAKEWOOD’S ROUNDABOUTS AND LAKEWOOD SATURDAY OAK LEAVES MEMORIES
How old are you? Do you remember Lakewood before roundabouts? Am
told by a Lakewood resident on 10/4/2021 that roundabouts are being put
in/installed/built on Gravelly Lake Drive, one each at Nyanza Park Drive,
Veterans Drive and Washington Boulevard intersections. Wow!
Speaking of, "How old are you?," are you so old you
remember fall Saturdays in Lakewood when oak leaves that fell from trees were
raked into pile…
Sorry, no more text after this, But, the complete piece elsewhere
Photo from fall 2021 by Phil Nesse, Lakes Class of 1966, taken
on hill down which you drive to get to Tetlin, Alaska. Photo posted with his
permission.
Lakewood Chamber Bringing Back Tradition of Blue Lights for the
Holidays
https://thesubtimes.com/.../lakewood-chamber-bringing.../
Tim Marsh shared
a link.Lakes High School Class of 1966 - Lakewood Washington
"Lipstick On Your Collar" was a hit single by Connie
Francis in 1959. In the 1962-1963 school year at Iva Alice Mann Junior High, an
8th grade student -- she went on to graduate in 1966 from Lakes High School --
performed a fabulous lip sync of the song (played on a record player) on stage
in the Mann gym during a talent show.
https://youtu.be/PKOVDQNelgo
DONALD R. RAREY
Published in the TNT/Tacoma News Tribune on 10/18/2007
Donald R. Rarey 2/8/1931 to 10/15/2007
After a courageous 11-month battle with Lou Gehrig's Disease,
Don passed away on October 15 at home.
He was surrounded by his wife Bev, stepchildren Teri and Bernie,
and Dr. David Kennel, his wife Peggy, and their daughter Kristen.
Don was born in Tillamook, Oregon. He attended Tillamook High
School, where he was captain of the basketball team and Student Body President.
He graduated from Oregon State University and began his teaching
career in Orting in 1954. He joined the Clover Park District in 1959, where he
taught and coached at Mann Junior High. He helped open Lakes High School in
1962 and remained there, teaching, coaching, and, eventually, head of the
counseling department until his retirement in 1992. He loved going to school
every day and working with students!
After retirement, Don enjoyed playing the stock market on his
computer, traveling to see the Mariners at spring training, exercising every
day, doing yard work, and playing bridge.
Don was preceded in death by his parents Russell and Charollotte
Rarey, twin brothers who died at birth, and daughter Janet Rarey.
He is survived by his wife Bev, brother David Rarey of Bothell,
daughters Dyan Simmons, Judy Gilmore (Scott) and son Scott Rarey (Patti), all
of Arizona, stepdaughter Teri Kindsfather and stepson Bernie Williamson
(Kendra) of Spanaway, grandchildren Gavin and Jocelyn of Arizona, and Cody,
Tayler, Baylie and Brooks of Spanaway.
He was a kind and gentle man who loved his family
unconditionally and was a loyal friend to many.
Funeral services will be at Fir Lane Funeral Home in Spanaway on
Saturday, October 20, 2007 at 10am. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made
to Retired Women in Education, 719 N. 3rd St., Apt 201, Tacoma, WA 98403, or a
charity of your choice.
…
==March 19, 1949, Portland Oregonian. In a boys’ state high
school basketball tournament game played at McArthur Court on the University of
Oregon campus in Eugene, Don Rarey scored nine points (four field goals and a
free throw) to help the Tillamook High School Cheesemakers team beat the
Central Catholic (Portland) High School Rams, 47-38.
==Jan. 6, 1950. Oregonian. Story with Corvallis, Ore., dateline
and Oregon State College Rook (freshman) men’s basketball practice. Among 60
trying out for the team is Don Rarey of Tillamook.
==Story
in June 7, 2005, Tillamook Headlight-Herald weekly newspaper: "The annual
Russ and Charlotte Rarey Memorial Award and Scholarship, which includes a
financial scholarship worth $2,600, was presented to senior Andrew Nieman, a
three-sport athlete the past two years at Tillamook." (Research indicates
Russ Rarey was the boys’ basketball and football coach of Tillamook High
School.)
::::
Tim Marsh
June 12, 2015 ·
"Soap and water" men's saddle shoes purchased in
mid-1960s at JP Penney, Villa Plaza. Worn by a Lakes Class of 1966 member.
They're resoled and "slightly" worn, but are still worn now and then
on special occasions. Recollection is that Lakes boys wore soap and water
saddles and Clover Park boys wore black and white saddles.
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This
full page photo ad from of the 1966 Lakes Legend yearbook sports staff appears
in 1973 Legend. Why? The staff sought to pay personally for the ad in 1966
edition, but yearbook advisor Rita Van Pevenage said “no.” But, the 1973 Legend
said “yes.”
“”””