ES Qm STME Kill U23 Sfc PUBLISHED BY THC ASSoaATit) STUDENTS Pt-j Of THE ASHLAND. OREGON. HIGH SOmLp, VOLUME XXIII ASHLAND. OREGON, MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1944 Wei come a Home, Champions i Ashland Boys Swamp Lava Bears In Final Clash cf State Tourney By Tommy Newton A vastly under-rated bunch of boys from Ashland figured to finish 6th or 7th in the 25th annual number e Oregon State High School Basketball Meet by the pre-tourney dopesters, roared over an outclassed Bend j team, 55-35, to capture the first state crown to come to I Ashland in 22 years. I The scarlet-shirted Grizzlies were really champ ions Saturday night, coming from behind in the second quarter and setting a pace that the Lava Bears were i unable to keep. It was Jay Samuelson who led the j fighting Ashland team with eight field buckets heaved in at the right time. Every time the Easterners started closing the gap, Samuelson would loop in a one-handcr from the side to keep the Grizzlies' lead safe. Then in the second quarter, Samuelson and Winnie Roberson got red-hot, scoring 16 points in five minutes. From there on the boys from Bend were never in the ball Ahland' Fighting tirizzlien Oregon's No. I Team. Bat-k Row - Kiggs, Q,uackenbuft, Bartelt, Kob erHon, Landing. Front Row - Garrett, Samuelson, Reedy, Kanniuito. Not In Picture - Waybrant, Jandreau. ' (Courtesy of Ashland Daily Tidings) Seniors Make Final Preparations For Gay Nineties Revue March 31 "Bertha the Beautiful Type- writer Girl" or "His Heart and Hand at Her Feet" ia gradually j shaping up as a show, in spite of tne lost practices which had to be cancelled due to the basket ball conferences. The success of the team, however, has been a stimulus to the cast, who are de termined to put on as food a show in their way as has the team on the basketball courts. WILLIAMS NEW TO CAST First casualty of tlje cast was Winiield Roberson, who was forced by the press of outside activities and his position on the first string to withdraw from the com pany. Don Williams has been as signed to the part of Bridget in his place. INVOLVED PLOT, HAPPY END The story tells of the lush and lovely Bertha (Betty Sue Reed), who is forced by circumstance to work as a typewriter girl for (Dirty) Daniel Desmond (Jack Newton); said circumstances be ing the death of her father (Bud Gettling) and the stealing of her fortune by aforemenUoned Dirty Dan. There to stand by her and 'to fall in love with her is young David Desmond (Jack Waybrant) whose nobility and goodness shine like a beacon throughout the play, He, however, is pursued by th possessive Clarice Claybourne (Bess Warren), and only escapes her clutches by chance. Skeets (Puss O'Harra) and Sally (Jeanne SUllman) bounce through the play as light comedy characters, al though at the end Skeets proves to have lived a double life. Brid get (Don Williams), an FBI man in disguise, hounds Dirty Dan re lentlessly, and brings him to Jus- tied, while Glenwood Garfield (Bob Hufman), aide-de-camp to Dirty Dan, repents in time to be forgiven instead of punished. Quiet little Mother Bancroft (Gemmy Lee Cooper) suffers throughout the play, but has her own surprise and happiness in the final scenes. In fact, all ends happily for everyone except Ber tha's pappy and the villain of the piece. CHILDREN'S SHOW WED. Children's performance of the play will take place at 3:00 p. m., when grade school and junior high school students will be admitted at a most of 13 cents each. This special performance will also con tain the same olio acts which will be featured during the evening adult performance. High school students are asked to attend the evening show on Friday evening. U. of 0. Symposium Presents Program j Two vivacious blondes and a pretty brunette representing the U. of O. spoke to the AHS assem bly, Monday, March 20, on the subject, "Juvenile Delinquency." Fay Pettis, freshman from Eu gene, Alice Harter, junior of Eu gene, ajid Louise Fletcher, fresh man front, Portland, introduced by Mr. R. B. Clark of the speech and dramatic department of the university, presented three phases of this very timely topic, how ex tensive is this problem, how Ore gon handles her cases, and how other communities are meeting lo cal situations. 'Less than 2 of American school children become delin quents", stated Miss Pettis, "but of this group 75 become adult criminals." She continued by stat ing that it is a misconception to game. The second half was, all Ash- - land, with Bend's biggest threat, j tower jig Howie Smead, being -ompletely smothered by Jim Bar telt, Ashland's ball-hawking cen ter. Bartelt, who scored 8 points, turned in one of the neatest per formances of the entire, tourna ment. The Grizzlies really poured it on in the last two stanzas and proceeded to break the scoring record set by Klamath Falls last year. Though the Bears were a rugged bunch, with 6 ft. 3 in. Smead and a pair of 6 ft. 1 in. forwards .they were no match in the roughing department for Bar ney Riggs and Del Landing, who along with keeping Bend's big boys in line, collected 10 and 6 points respectively. LiO.VS NEARLY TIP AHS Though it was all As t land in the championship tussle, the job of getting to finals was not so easy. The Grizzlies opened their tournament play on Thursday af ternoon against a tough St. Hel ens outfit. The underdog Lions fought hard and or a while it looked as though the Ashland boys would be eliminated before they got started, but they managed to keep in the ball game and the regular playing time ended 28-28. In the overtime Del Landing sank a lay- in to give the game to the future champs. - PORTLAND TEAM FAVORED The next night the Ljthians met (Continued on page 4) AIIS Opsns Yearly Red Cress Drive When every student in Ashland Hi is seen wearing the lapel but ton which designates him as a contributor to the Red Cross, AHS will have done its part in filling the quota of $8,000 set for the city of Ashland in this campaign, the greatest in the history of the or ganization. The drive was officially opened at the student body meeting on March 17, when the ASB pledged $50.00 to the cause, and will con tinue until March 24. Acting-President Bob Hufman named Barbara Helm general chairman and ajipohued JHntityn Young and Dick Memman to sist her. This committee has set up an attractive tally sheet on which the donations will be record ed according to homeroom quotas. Juniors Decide Upon Exclusive 1944 Prom After much discussion and con troversy, it has been decided that the annual junior-senior prom will be exclusively for iipporclass men of Ashland Hi. This event, scheduled for April 21, is the out standing affair of the year, and the juniors are working hard to make it the best in the history of AHS. Our Coach- Air Corps Examiners Interview Enrollees Captain Allshouse and Sgt. Prouty representing the Aviation Cadet Examining Board of Port land interviewed the high school I boys now enrolled in the army air corps reserve about the formation of a "Silver Wings Club." These clubs are being organized through out, the state. Each school in the county belongs to a Wing, such as, the Jackson Wing. Each high school constitutes a Flight with its local officers. There are two purposes of this organization, the paramount de sire and need for increasing the number of aviation cadet enroll ments and the passing on to these cadets of information and advice that will benefit them during their coming training period. zlies. Out of a school with a Student Body of only 263 students, Simp son has molded a team that has taken just about every honor possible. think of delinquents coming from press releases from Port below average groups of young j tand paperg had the Griz people. They do tend to come from j zea marked down for poorer homes as is shown by the defeat When the final numbers in the detention home in Woodburn, not because the poor are delinquent but because pover ty lends itself to delinquency. War and" poverty aggravate but do not cause this situation." Oregon's lack of facilities in court procedures, in providing ad equately trained personnel, and in planning for segregation of new and old offenders was criticized by Miss Harter. Other states have gone for ahead of Oregon In esta blishing rehabilitation programs rather than detention or punish ment programs for young people. From Ashland this symposium team is going to Grants Pass and then to Medford. Nearly all sec tions of Oregon have been includ ed in their itinerary. They have spoken before high school groups in Seaside, Salem, Portland, Bend, Klamath Falls, and in the Coos Bay area. "Render unto Caesar, therefore, the things that are Caesar's - - -" To Coach Jumbo Simpson goes much of tha credit for the winning ways of the 1944 Griz- blow had been struck and the smoke had cleared, Al and his boys were State Champions. r Schools like Washington jL, Hi of Portland with 1440 students fell to the Griz- P zies as neatly as did Though the Oregonian I and its able sportswrit- I ers didn't seem to think t much of this feat, the f fact remains that two of the largest schools in Oregon have felt the I cuff of the Grizzly and I both the squad and the Coach are to be t highly praised for doing so well. State Champion are such because of the b o v s themselves, but without the guidance of coaches like Al Simpson, teams would nevr reach the heights of success that the 1944 Grizzlies have.