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Page 32 text:
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Tyj c and Copy By fruitless hope inspired First :■ ' .. ■ ' Smith, B. Scott, J. Moss, B. Hoban. P. De Armond. j. Martyr. Second row: L. McArthur, E. Saylor, M. Atkinson, K. Miller, D. Tobin, P. Teschke. Third row: D. Walker, L. Proctor, J. Quayle, K. Elliott, F. Rusk, B. Wilson. Tong ' s annual fall football daiKc was held at the ' illa Riviera the night of the Glendale game. Bids were in the shape of footballs and each dance was named in football terminology. Type and Copy, journalistic club, held their first fall semester meeting and elected officers. Those chosen were: Don Tobin, presi- dent; Jack Y. Quayle, Jr., vice-president; chubby, freckled Paul Pudge Teschke, secretary; and demure Frances Nelson, treasurer. Melvin Kennedy ' s interview with Joe Savoldi, the wrestler, gained more than campus notoriety when Art Cohn, of the Press- Telegram, roasted him in his column. Starting his interview with, Before me stood my idol, a towering mass of muscle, the perfect example of cleanliness, of sportsmanship, and yet the possessor of that humility which we all admire so much in men, the astute Ken- nedy asked Jumping Joe such sporting questions as Should we recognize Russia? and What is the responsibility of the I ' nited States in international afifairs? Cohn caustically voiced his opinion of a journalistic confrere being taken in by a rassler . Kennedy ' s idealism was hurt to the quick, and he paid Cohn a back-handed compliment by saying that Cohn was not an ossified worm. Scorn- fully Art thanked him for the defense. . lel wrote no more inter- views. Chalking up two touchdowns with intercepted passes in the last three minutes of play, Los Angeles Junior College turned an other- 28
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Page 31 text:
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. Vo Band St( bi)iiig ■icit i p»(icticcd iJichiiic wly ' V .1- ' First row: A. Miner, D. Armin, J. Hata. F. Scudder, E. Baty. R. Colburn. R. Linnell, A. Lowery, B. Nehes, M. Carr. Second row: P. Noble, M. Caton, G. Schuler, E. Weikel, C. Heier, B. Gowen, C. Welty, M. Kriebel, J. Klingaman, R. Kramer, Mr. Moore. Honoring members of the student bod}- cabinet, the A.W.S. gave an informal tea at the East Branch Y.M.C.A. A novel feature of the affair was the chance given students to meet cabinet ofificers, who were in the receiving line. Friday, the thirteenth . . . night . . . pajama rally . . . yells . . . songs . . . discordant noises . . . Engineers . . . Way Middough . . , loud speakers . . . crooner Acorn Smith . . . Sweet Sue . . . colifee and doughnuts . . . Bob Dumm ' s orchestra . . . Captain Jimmie Campbell and scout Scrubby Elliot . . . glowing cigarette tips . . . trench coats . . . cold feet . . . mufflers . . . red noses . . . Almighty Lord ' s new yell . . . Two-four-six-eight; who do we appreciate? Lord! Lord! Lord! Despite the spirit generated at the rally, Long Beach lost a hard- fought game the next afternoon to Glendale. The final score was 6-0. Jack Prima Donna Moss was the Viking star of the day. He was a consistent ground gainer, and late in the second quarter slammed through left tackle for a thirty-yard gain. When Scrubby Elliot had the bad luck to let a punt roll out of bounds on our one-yard line, Moss booted out of danger. The Buccaneers scored in the fourth quarter when George Smith took the ball over after a series of line plunges.
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Page 33 text:
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Rallv Cu))inuttee Leave the fire ashes First row: K. Miller. B Rope, D. Williams, B. Sutherland, E. Burnham. Second row: D. Dean, O. Smith, T. Westergard, A. Tindall, J. Lord, W. Booher. wise close battle into a nuit when they beat the Vikings 22-0. The Cubs ' first score came in the opening quarter. Long Beach played a fumbling, wild passing game that was powerless against the well- drilled Cubs. Xight school students elected Kenneth Smith president; sturdy, serious Bill Quackenbush. vice-president; and personable Helen Buttoph, secretary and treasurer. Long Beach dropped the third league tilt of the season to Comp- ton, 6-0. Cecil Metzger, of the Tartars, and Charles Woodard, Vik- ing, fought a punter ' s duel throughout the game. In the third quarter, Compton recovered a fumble by Woodard on the Viking twenty- yard line, passed to the ten-yard marker, and then Metzger plunged over the goal line after two unsuccessful tries. Compton stopped a Long Beach drive on the one-yard line late in the fourth quarter. Brilliant passing by Selwyn Yancy and Jack Moss had brought the ball down the field from the center stripe. Facultv members v ere entertained at a tea in the i !a;t Branch Y.M.C.A. by the Associated Women Students, October 25. Each member of A.W.S. committees served as hostess to one faculty mem- ber. In charge of the event was Doris Pickling, assisted by Clarene George, Pauline des Granges, Evelyn Best, Miriam Cone, and Louise Rehbock. 29
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