Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA)

 - Class of 1935

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Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 264 of the 1935 volume:

0 PASADENA CAMPUS PASADENA CAMPUS VOLUME SEVEN PASADENA JUNIOR COLLEGE PASADENA, CALIFORNIA ♦ PASADENA CAMPUS FOREWORD Outwardly visible by the projection of modern buildings, Pasadena Junior College is swing- ing into a new plane of development. In an attempt to meet the demands of an evolving social order, a revisualization of educational principles was initiated. Curricular and stu- dent programs completed the cycle offering to the participant a more flexible perceptive of living. The 1935 Campus presents this growing cycle boldly and in broad strokes. CONTEN TS ADMINISTRATION ACTIVITIES ORGANIZATIONS ATHLETICS GRADUATES NURSES EDITORIAL BOARD BENNET LUDDEN EDITOR-IN-CHIEF MARIORIE BARMETTLER ASSOCIATE EDITOR MARY LOU McCONNELLY ART EDITOR ELLSWORTH STEELE BUSINESS MANAGER INEZ ENDICOTT PHOTO EDITOR PASADENA CAMPUS ADMINISTRATION V ith his hand poised on the adjuster, the administrant regu- lates that delicate balance of forces in the unit which implies efficiency and rounded results. mmamm wm. SUPERINTENDENTS Entirely aware of discouraging opposition, the Board of Education not only reaffirmed community belief in the junior college as a four year educational unit, but also effected the passing of the $375,000.00 bond issue which assured adequate housing for the elaborate facilities necessary to the institution. Following the acceptance of the most advantageous bid, work was commenced on the old Jane Addams ' ' and Louis Agassiz buildings; at the same time ground v as broken for a new cafeteria adjoining the Student Union. Dr. John A. Sexson, superin- tendent of schools, and Mr. George H. Merideih, assistant superintendent, directed their attention to the maintaining of high standards within resirictions of a limited budget. BOARD O F E D U C A T I O SEXSON G. H. MERIDETH jf if Leil to right — Standing: Mr. Drummond J. McCunn. Mr. Courtenay Monsen, Secretary; Sit- ting: Dr. I. Tyler Parker Jr., Mr. Carl Z. Jackson, President; Mr. George H. Merideth, Mr. William L. Blair, Vice-President: Dr. John A. Sexson, Mr. Raymond G. Thompson, Mrs. Louise B. Hoblit. PAGE 8 ■H Introducing an integra- tion program affording students a broad edu- cation in humanities and sciences, Dr. John W. Harbeson also fos- tered more intimate and permanent community contacts. His persistent discretion has made this year comparable in many ways with those of less chaotic times. DR. JOHN W. HARBESON N IDA E. HAWES DEANS Alive to every need that might demand time, thought, or effort, the deans have responded with efficiency and tact to all calls upon them. Counsel- ing, due to the determined leadership of Miss Ida E. Hawes, Dean of Guidance, was uninterrupted, while vocational education and the introduction of an integration program advanced the effectuality of classroom routine. Mr. John A. Anderson, Dean of Records, centered his efforts m straightening, under strained conditions, the wealth of record material that comes to him with each new semester. Finding a place for the students on a campus with decreased accommodations fell to the lot of Dean of Men lames P. O ' Mara, who spent his summer executing the change of housing. Dean O ' Mara pushed ahead plans for new structures, revamped the school ' s athletic system, and directed SERA. Miss Catherine J. Robbins, Dean of Women, receiving the adviser- ship of the student body, responded to the task of arranging for social affairs with limited facilities. PAGE 10 JAMES P. O ' MARA C. J. ROBBINS mm m famm Left to right — Standing: Miss Kathleen Loly, Foreign Languages; Mr. Peter Stonor, Math.- matics; Mr. Waller Johnson, Technology; Mr. Roscoe Ashley, Social Science; Mr. Archibald Wedemeyer. Art; Silting: Miss Lula Parmley, Music; Mrs. Esther Tenison, Home Economics; Miss Winifred Skinner, Library; Mr. Murray Hill, English; Major Geoffrey Galwey, R.O.T.C; Mr. Bailey Howard, Physical Science; Mr. William Dunn, Physical Education; Additional members: Miss Mabel Peirson, Biological Science; Mr. Leland Pryor, Business Education. DEPARTMENT CHAIRMEN Moving constantly toward a central goal, the department chairmen massed their ef- forts in achieving a rounded program to benefit every student. Mr. Murray Hill re- vised the English curriculum emphasizing the need for students to read. Mr. Bailey Howard, Physical Science, and Miss Mabel Pierson, Biological Science, worked for a constructively practical science course. Miss Lula Parmley skillfully directed the Music Department; and Miss Kathleen Loly maintained a balanced Language lay-out. Mr. Peter Stoner and Mr. Walter Johnson, Mathematics and Technology, endeavored to apply practice to theory. Under Mr. Roscoe Ashley, the Social Sciences will include more three unit courses. Major Geoffrey Galwey and Mrs. Esther Tenison working m separate fields, achieved similar results in R.O.T.C. and Home Economics, while Mr. Archibald Wedemeyer fostered student exhibitions in Art. Mr. Leland Pryor worked for recognition of Business courses by higher colleges. Mr. William Dunn, Physical Education, aided in making changes in inter-school athletics while Miss Winifred Skinner directed the Library, un- fortunately housed on the crowded stage STUDENT BODY PRESIDENTS ELEANOR NORTHRUP PRESIDENT FIRST SEMESTER DAVID PATRICK PRESIDENT SECOND SEMESTER The first woman to accept the presi- dent ' s gavel in the history of the junior college, Eleanor Northrup accepted as well a campus torn asunder and a stu- dent body lethargic and disinterested. Faced with other problems of a sever- ity that would have taxed the ingenuity of the most efficient of her predecessors, Miss Northrup saw support given her seldom afforded women executives, di- rected the installation of a new student body office, realized her ambition to reestablish interest and enthusiasm in many of the student body activities. -¥■-¥• -¥■ Realizing that through actual contact with the student body lay the solution to the problem of a static interest in the affairs of the school, David Patrick began a semester fraught with changes both physical and abstract by writing for student publications and by creat- ing a spirit of friendliness in the student body office as well as throughout the entire campus. A projected honor sys- tem and a change m athletic policies saw their origin under Patrick ' s regime as well as the first actual revision of a quake-torn, disorganized school plan. PAGE 12 wmmn BOARD OF REPRESENTATIVES Loil to right— Top row: John Benton. Sophomore Representative I, II; Stuart McCullough, Junior Representative II; Lynn Smith. Clerk ol Board II; Phil Hawgood. Freshman Represent- ative I; Jack DeLonge. A.M.S. Representative I, I!; Front rov : Charles Braden, Freshman Representative II; Anona Alexander. A.W.S. Representative II; Bob Baker. Senior Repre- sentafve I. II; Pauline Stevens. A.W.S. Representative I; Don Starr. Junior Representalive 1; Additional member: Ruth Hagadorn. Clerk of Board I. Creating two new cabinet posi- tions in the metamorphosis of Publicity and Public Relations from mere committees to full fledged secretaryships, the Board saw the former put publicity in its rightful position on the cam- pus, the latter sponsor the radio programs begun a year ago and write student government arti- cles for local newspapers. The downward revision of the bud- get, the appointing of cabinet members, and the passing on PAGE 13 sub-committees, and other such purely routine duties which passed its way, took further time of the representative group. The new student adviser. Miss Cath- erine J. Bobbins, held the reins of faculty supervision and gave student body officials their first opportunity to actually officiate. A student union building, con- structed with student-appropri- ated funds, was dedicated No- vember 21, housing the book- store, fountam-lunch, and bank. CABINET Lelt 10 right— Top row: Cari Deisenrolh, Secretary oi Records I. II; Bud Paulson, Secretary of Publications I; Anna Marjorie Loomis. Clerk of Cabinet II; Dick Gorby, Secretary ol Athletics I; Second row: James Herbold. Secretary of Athletics II; Alta Paquette, Secretary o! Social Affairs II; Joe Phillips, Secretary of Oral Arts I; Ilo Smith, Clerk of Cabinet I; Bruce Winton, Secretary of Activities II; Katherine West, Secretary of Social Affairs I; Front row: Harold Berg, Secretary of Oral Arts II; Kathleen Cartwright, Secretary of Pubhcity II; Bill Moir, Secretary of Finance I. II; Mary Alice Gianelti. Secretary of Public Relations I, II; David Patrick, Secretary of Activities I; Pauline Stevens, Secretary of Publications II; Fred Good, Publicity I. With the two newly appointed secretaryships added to their midst, cabinet members func- tioned as usual, following, in each respective office, the prece- dent set by former secretaries. Meeting with the board at the beginning of each semester, cabinet members were informed of their duties. Joining with Principal John W. Harbeson for a pot-luck supper and discus- sion, officers were able to come closer than ever before possible with the administration and gen- eral feeling that, with conditions as they were, activity had been surprisingly high. Outstanding were Katherine West, Social Af- fairs, fulfilling the thankless du- ties of a social secretary in a junior college hoping for the semblance of a suitable social center, and Bill Moir, Finance, under whose eye funds were effectively revised, downwards. PAGE 14 COURT Lefl to right— Top row: Jack Keenan, Associate Justice II; Helen Morley, Clerk ol Court 11; Front row: Eloise Jones, Associate Justice I; Bill Lawson, Chief Justice I; Marjorie Bet ' .s, Clerk oi Court I. Associate Justice II; Trevor Gardner, Chief Justice II; Additional member: Alfred Einstein, Associate Justice I. Opening the year with the hope of eliminating fines and arrests, the court soon found matters slipping into the same old grooves. After numerous viola- tions of smoking and parking regulations, it was necessary to make arrests in order to enforce the campus laws. Following the usual procedure, fines in the ca.se ol the first offense were sus- pended, but with the second, the two dollars were collected and placed in the student fund. Polic- ing the campus, the Parking PAGE IS Commission, the Lancers, and the Spartans were endowed with power to pronounce charges on miscreants. Hailed into court session Friday morning, club pe- riod, were students guilty of such offenses as noise — radios and horns — smoking, stealing, profanity, and failure to regard the closed campus ruling. Be- sides acting in its capacity as a judicial body, the court with a board of thirty was again in charge of the student body elec- tion as well as class elections. SENIOR COUNCIL June Mathews, B Moir, Lynn Smith, Craig McLaughlin. Nancy Kellogg; Fourth .._..„ ..„.„.„„ , .„„, ,„„. uviQ rairicK. rtnna OTarjorie Loomis, Gordon Eby, Treasurer I- Bob Baker. President, I H; Miss Mary E. Davis. Mary Helen Johnston, Secretary I II- Frank Reichert, Treasurer II; Dean Griggs, Vice-President I; Bill Lawson; Additional members: Rose ' .yn Britt. Dick Gorby. Alan Hays. Merritt Hewitt, Leland Houghton. Barbara Lindsay Ihelma Lucas, Dick fiostron. Bob Scott, Joe Sprankle. Vice-President IL Bowing to the muse of Terpsi- chore, the upper classrren opened their class events v rith a dance held at the Civic in De- cember. Follov ing the election of officers, vaudeville held the major spotlight in the assemblies of the year. Bill Carey, singer extraordinary, regaled his audi- ence in a novel class meeting during the first semester. Doing their bit. Thanksgiving and Christmas seasons saw dona- tions to worthy causes. As the climax to the class activities of the year, the seniors attempted an entirely new idea in the spon- soring of an afternoon matmee dance at the Civic. In the timely atmosphere of Easter they jos- tled elbows m the Gold Room. With the middle of June ap- proaching, grads made their trek to the Rose Bowl, and promenaded in the ballrooms at the Hotel Vista del Arroyo. PAGE 16 JUNIOR COUNCIL Left ' o right — Top row: Bob Henderson, Edith Reynard, Marjorie Belts, Collette Verbeck, Harrison Breyer, Kathleen Carlwright; Third row: Bill Ruediger, Suzanne Hof, David Barry, Bertille Glanvillo. Eugene Schafier, Virginia Blackwood, Lyndon Vivretle; Second row: Alta Paquelte, Howard Hope. Marjorie Bettannier, Frank Holbrook, Ruth Jones, Bud Paulson, Kather.ne West; Front row: James Fergus, Fred Good, DeLeal Johnston, Vice-President II; Norman MacDonnell, Vice-President I; Stuart McCulIcugh, Treasurer I, President II; Don Starr, President I; Raymond Kahn. Secretary I. II; James Joyce. Treasurer II; Additional members: Bill Breyer, Ray Burby, Don Griffin, Francis Lucas, Earline Miller. Mabel Pierce, Betty Tyrrell, Bruce Winton. In order that efficiency might mark the policy of the junior class, only a small council was appointed the first semester and, since the experiment was suc- cessful, continued in the spring. Finances of the class were placed on a carefully planned basis to insure that an adequate gift would be forthcoming for their graduation in 1936. At Thanks- giving a dance in collaboration with the sophomore class cele- brated the holidays. Another dance was held in the ballroom of the Civic Auditorium on May 29. Joining further into the fes- tive spring atmosphere, the jun- iors entered a booth in the Mast and Dagger Carnival. Seeming- ly music-minded, the class pre- sented a dance ensemble at eoch of their three assemblies. One starring Bill Carey, crooner, was pronounced among the most popular assemblies of the year. BHffl SOPHOMORE COUNCIL Left to right— Tod row: Art McCurdy. Phil Monroe, Jim Herbold, Milton Wopschall, Phil Hawgood. J. D. Cason, Jack Goodell, Jack Osburn, Marybeth Sachse; Third row: Henry McCune, Bob Cott, Tom Stevens, Dick Lusk, John Burtt, Robert Hinshaw, Richard Burghley, Bob Ford, Thomas Sommerville, LeRoy Tyson; Second row: Carter Cordner, Morgan West, Anna Katherine Jones, Harry Sheldon, BiUie Grain, Bob Hurt, Evelyn Frederick, Thomas Fish, Lila Renner, Jim Couchman, Wilma Watt; Front row: Charlofe Blackstone. Kenneth Collins, Patty McCune, Bob Masoner, Vice-President I; Jane Hazenbush, Vice-President 11; Mr Edward Cornelison, Eleanor Roobicn, Secretary I; John Benton, President I, II; Patricia Nelson, Lloyd Breyer, Marjorie Server, Dick Reid; Additional members: Stephen Barber, Randolph Cofiman, Aubrey Davis, Margaret Davis, Helena deWaard, LaVonne Garber, Bill Hatch, Treasurer I, II; Eloise Jones, Irving Kornstein, Jack Lonzo, Bob Neill, John VanEtlen, Kathryn Veale, Lenore Wilcox, Secretary I, Marjorie Youngblood. Confronted as were all classes with the problem of an ever de- creasing .supply of finances and space, Sophomores held their meetings in conjunction with Seniors and Juniors, sacrificing, as a consequence, the spirit of unity and cohesion that might have resulted had facilities been more favorable. With the Juniors, the lower division graduates danced to the late November strains of a Thanksgiving Hop; and following the re-election of John Benton, a class meeting heard the dulcet tones of Mason Mallery ' s orchestra from Horrell field. An Easter hop at the Civic preceeded the Rose Bowl gradu- ation ceremony and the prom and buffet supper, customary send-offs for the June graduate. PAGE 18 FRESHMAN COUNCIL Lef! to right— Top row: Wilbur Antisdale. Diclt Reid, Albert Solnit, Russell lack, Duane Sewe ' l, Newton Partch, Charles Backus, Bill Grannis, Bob Truman; Fourth row: Milton Wopscha ' l, Bob Ford, Don Smith, Charlotte Blackstone, Randolph Coiiman, Esther Helen Johnson, Gardner Eikenbery, Bob Dunbar, Arthur Keene, Arthur Shipman, William Eisen; Ih rd row: Jane Harkins. Oscar Horn, Allison Stone, Shig Kunihiro, Barbara Milliken, Harold Landon, Margaret Miles, John Trowbridge, Bill Busik, Joe Clinch, Ivel Hammer; Second row: Bill Feasley. Mar ' ha Boeceman. Grenville Lansdell, Carol Anderson, Sam Luccfi. Prudence Lehrbach, Stuart Russel, Eleanor Cleland, Howard Harwell, Elsie Brocksieper. Bruce lessup, Barbara Blackwood; Front row: Ellen Lombard. Paul Tubman, Vice-President II, Patty McCune, Bob Bonthius, Treasurer II; Shirley Smith, Secretary I; Charles Braden, President II; M-. A. R. Baldwin. Phil awqood. Presiden ' I; Alberta Anderson, Treasurer I; Tom Stevens. Vice-President I; Rosalie Meub. Phil Carlwright, Secretary II; Arlene Sorecher; Additional members: Milton Davis, LeRoy Eraser, Eugene Kaynor, letsy Posthuma. With the placing of themselves at once in the midst of junior col- lege life and making novices feel at home m the bigness of a new situation, the Freshman class officers chose a council large enough to represent stu- dents from every incoming school. The annual first semester dance, held in the main dining room of the Maryland Hotel on November 16, flaunted gay yel- low and orange decorations Awhile the bids bore the elegance of white suede. On May 1 1 the Froshies danced in the ballroom of the Masonic Temple; a race- track theme characterized the dance. An assembly sponsored by the class included orchestra ramblings under the baton of Mason Mallory and his boys. PAGE 19 A. M. S. Leil to right-Ton row: Bill Feasley, II; James Herbold, I; Frank Holbrook, I; Bill Eorlhwick, I; Second row: James Couchman, I; Marshall Benedict, Publicity Manager I, II; Forest Newfon, 11- Frederic Parke, Chairman of Cabinet II; Jack DeMarais, Chairman of Cabniet I; Willard Olwin, II: Front row: Tom Stevens, Secretary II; Leroy Tyson, Secretary I; Edward Barker, Treasurer I. II Mr. James OMara; Jack DeLonge. President I, II; John McDonough, Vice- President I; Phil Hawgood, Vice-President II; Additional member: Bill Schuelke, I. To carry out a more encompass- ing contact with the men of the school, the Associated Men Stu- dents established a cabinet which handled all the business. Aside from the usual Friday morning meetings at which fac- ulty members, Coach Nixon of Pomona and well known ath- letes such as Jimmy Dykes, man- ager of the White Sox, spoke, three stags were featured as evening entertainment. At the first, September 26, Pat O ' Mara, Ellsworth Vines, and musicians from the Bulldog Band furnished the fun; at the second, January 3, Coach Pipal and Student Prexy Hammock of Oxy spoke; and the last, held in May, featured representatives from many dif- ferent fields of sports. A tennis match took the place of a regu- lar assembly. Matinee dances were given in conjunction with the A.W.S., while the annual boxing tournament swelled the general coffers. Father and Son banquet in the spring aroused its usual good fellowship. A. W. S. ¥ I - Left to right — Top row: Hazel loslin. II; Joan Mitchell, I, II; Helen Morley, I; Mabel Pierce, I; Char:ot:e Heath, I; Ellen Lombard, II; Annet e LaRue, I; Violet Jardine, I, II; Second row: June Mathews, II; Ruth Willard, I, II; Maxine Thompson, II; Kathleen Cartwright, I; Margare! Davis, I; Alberta Anderson, II; Barbara Milliken, II; Front row: Mary Marsh, Treasurer I, First Vice-President II; Alta Paquette, Second Vice-President I; Carolyn Munn, Second Vice-President II; Anona Alexander, Firs Vice-President I, Presiden ' II; Pauline Stevens, President I; Ruth Jones, Secretary I, II; Marjorie Bettannier. Treasurer II; Lila Renner, I; Additional members: Leora Luce, I; Eleanor Roobian, II; Eleanor Sisk, II. Taking their oalh of office in a simple, impressive ceremony, the Associated Women Student officers were installed by Miss Ida E. Hawes, and laid out their general plan of activities at a conference at Laguna Beach. Among the scheduled events were assemblies, banquets, par- ties, and open houses, the last being sponsored in an effort to bring about a wider acquaint- anceship among the women of the student body. The tradition of giving the Mother and Daugh- ter, Athletic, and Football ban- quets was followed. Girls who had shown outstanding service assisted at the latter. In a novel A.W.S. assembly during the first semester, several men students gave their conception of an ideal girl. Along the line of welfare work, baskets were distributed at Thanksgiving and money was given to the charity clear- ing house; Christmas stockings were filled for Mexican children. LANCERS if Leii to righ:— Top row: Jack Vibert. Vice-President II; Gordon Eby, Bob Becker, Charles Casserly, Newto.i Cox. James Herbold, Dick Lusk, Dexter Paddock, Jack Dreyer; Third row: David Patrick, Leroy Tyson, Ronald Swanson. Vice-President I; Franklin Holbrook, Bill Pepping. Fred Fitzpatrick, Crossan Hays; Second row: Bob Baker, Bud Paulson, James Couchman, Secretary-Treasurer II; Jack DeLonge, Sam Schwartz. Bob Rockwood, Richard McBride, Bill Lawson, James Parsons; Front row: Don Starr, Harrison Breyer. Norman MacDonnell. Mr. James OMara, Craig McLaughlin, President I. II; John Heckler, Keit.i Emberson, Ed Raymond; Additional members: John Benion, Trevor Gardner. Alan Hays, Scott McDonald. Berle Watson, Secretary-Treasurer I. Heeding the call for various odd jobs and general dirty work about the campus, the Lancers passed their fourth year as an honorary service organization. With a policeman ' s watchful eye they patrolled the campus for the maintenance of law and or- der — being empowered to give tickets to violators — and assisted in the handling of assembly pro- grams and nabbing all possible offenders of closed campus rul- ings. A regular Lancer com- mittee served at all of the junior college athletic contests, assist- ing as gatekeepers and guards. Playing the major part in the an- nual bonfire pep rally held before the traditional football game with Long Beach, the black sweatered organization collected and stacked the ma- terial for the pyre to say nothing of guarding it through the long cold night against pyromaniacs. PAGE 22 w mm mmmm m SPARTANS Le ' A to right — Top row: Judith Rooke. Olive Pupis, Sadie Sellars. Mary Alice Gianet:i. leanet ' .e Mogensen, Betly Lewis, Marjorie Server, Alia Paquette; Second row: Ruth Jones, Mary Marsh, Louise Jones, Katherine Butler, Treasurer II; Lila Renner, Marjorie Betts, Kathleen Cartwright; Front row: Nancy Kellogg, Eleanor Northrup, Anona Alexander, Vice- President, I; Joanna Pupis. President I, II; Maxine Thomoson. Vice-President I!; Pauline Stevens, Ruth Crawford, Helen Morley; Additional members: Marjorie Bettannier, Patricia Dewar, Treasurer I; Leora Luce, Secretary I, II. In the role of chief aides-de camp to the Dean of Women, the Spartans found numerous duties to occupy spare hours during the past year. Serving at teas, ushering at assemblies, and of- ficiating at open-houses were minor activities compared to the hundred-and-one other respons- ibilities thrust upon the rust- sweatered twenty-five. In ac- cordance with a newly passed ruling, Spartans now find them- selves at the beck and call ol needing instructors, ready at a word, to assist in any manner. Counselors were assisted during the mid-winter rush by Spar- tans, as were others officiating in the hustle and scurry of pro- gramming. In short, Spartans have proved themselves one of the most active of service groups, and certainly the most willing. Under the presidency of Joanna Pupis, they engaged in social work during the holidays, and arranged a St. Patrick ' s dance. PASADENA CAMPUS ACTIVITIES As a chess game stimulates mental alertness, so do activities compel the student to cope with imperative situations which par- allel those that are met in the business and the social worlds. pwm n tt. te. .. ... . PASADENA CAMPUS PUBLICATIONS U , !• IB. ' i tm Left o righ — Top row: Roy Peterson, Cooy Edi+or; Sherwood Mark, Pho ographor; Vuno--- Elliot, Assistant Copy Editor; Second row: Ethyle Reed, Art Editor I; EUen Jones, Business Manager I; Winifred Walker. Assistant Feature Editor; Carter Cordner, Feature Editor II; Dorothy Bruce, Secretary; Helen Giere. Stenographer; Front row: Miss Harriet McCiay, Adviser; Kent CoUings, Publicity Manager II; Miss Jewel Bennett, Art Adviser; Dow Parkes, Associate Editor; Jean Backus, Editor-in-Chief; Mr, Ned Stirling, Typography Adviser; Mary Lou McConnelly, Art Editor II; Additional member: Bob Hanson, Feature Editor I. V O - M A G Realizing that the whole of education is aimed at the choosing and mastering of a vocation, Vo-Mag has striven to bring the stu- dents material concerning widely diversified fields. In seeking articles from authoritative sources, it has hoped to bring a keener insight into the prerequisites and trends which vocations are tak- ing. Rising above the high standard set last year, Jean Back us, editor, saw the completion of three issues with a secondary theme in each, featuring special essays and poems. With articles ranging from those of the most technical nature to essays to be read for sheer enjoyment, Vo-Mag met the challenge of universal appeal. Balancing the interest of the articles, outstanding pho- tography and make-up characterized the three numbers of the third year of the magazine. Under the sponsorship of Miss Ida Howes, Vo-Mag was published by the Department of Guidance. Leit to right— Top row; Mr. Ned Stirling, Typography Adviser; Mary Lou McConnelly, Art Editor; Ben Ludden, Editor-in-Chief; Front row: Ellsworth Stelle, Business Manager; Marjorie Barmettler, Associate Editor; Mr. John Ehlen, Adviser. CAMPUS BOARD Coinciding with a theme that shows the new cycle of develop- ment in recent educational trends, the 1935 Campus stresses accuracy in putting forth a record typical of the year it repre- sents. Under the direction of Ben Ludden, editor, and Marjorie Barmettler, associate editor, the book projects a true portrait of the school, reflecting a pervading spirit of optimism and achieve- ment in contrast with one of dejection and worry prevalent last year. Lay-outs by Mary Lou McConnelly, art editor, and unusual division page photographs by Sherwood Mark, staff photogra- pher, are the result of the editorial board ' s desire to produce a book illustrating the informal atmosphere on the campus. Though guided by a limited budget, the business manager, Ellsworth PAGE 28 wmnrmmm imn mm Left to right— Top row: Harriet Hills, Sophomore Editor; Charles Davis, Snapshot Editor; Lillian Singer, Photo Assistant; Sherwood Mark, Staff Photographer; Winifred Walker, Senior Editor; Second row: Patricia Lauder, Publications Editor; Carter Cordner, Student Administration; Virginia Bell, Honorary Clu bs Editor; Bob Cort, Athletics Editor; Margaret Davis, Photo Assistant; Front row: Norbet Duarte, Mens Sporis Editor; Jean Backus, Faculty Administration Editor; Inez Endicoti, Photo Editor; Bud Paulson, Copy Editor; Maxine Thompson, Restriclive Clubs Editor; Ruth Jones, Index Editor; Helena deWaard, Women ' s Sports Editor. Additional members: Frederic Warriner, Speech Arts Editor; George Beck, Non-Restrictive Club Editor; Virginia McCollister, Music Editor; Marshall Benedict, Assistant Business Manager; Ruth Elder, Nurses Editor. CAMPUS STAFF Stelle, distributed available funds in a way that permitted the book to retain all the features and dignity of former years. Pro- viding a major highlight of the year was the presentation of the California Press Association award, a large silver loving cup, which was won by the 1934 Campus under the editorship of Dick Dewey. The book was printed in the junior college printshop for the first time after an interlude of several years with a co- operation of departments that has been lacking before. Mr. John Ehlen and Mr. Ned Stirling, faculty advisers, provided the con- servative hand that guided the book to a successful conclusion. Leit to right— Top row: Carter Cordner, Feature Editor I; Bud Paulson, Secretary of Publi- cations I; Pauline Stevens. Secretary of Publications II; Gordon Eby, Sports Editor I, II; Art McCurdy, Make-up Editor I. Managing Editor 11; Second row; Patricia Lauder, Circu ' a- lion Manager II; Harry Sheldon, Copy Editor 1, News Edi ' or II; Virginia Bell, Feature Edi- tor II- Sam Hohri, Co-copy Editor I; Harriet Hills, Co-copy Editor II; Edwin LeBaker, Assistant Sports Editor II; Front row: Dr. Glenn Lembke, Betty Lewis, News Editor L Associate Editor II; James Parsons, Managing Editor I; Editor-in-Chief II; Maxine Thompson, Editor-in-Chief I; Mr. Ned Stirling; Additional members: Bill Hunter, Business Manager I; Margaret Thomas, Circulation Manager I; Irving Kornstein, Makeup Editor II. CHRONICLE BOARD Celebrating, this year, its twentieth anniversary, the Pasadena Junior College Chronicle looked in retrospection over two de- cades in which its columns have brought current news to the student body. Guided by a policy of constructive cooperation, the inquiring reporter has followed his nose for news. In an effort to bring the news hot off the press, publication date was changed this year from Friday to Wednesday. Keeping abreast with the times politically, the sheet sponsored a student vote campaign to incite the enthusiasm of the student body as well PAGE 30 mp mmm wmmmmmmm Leil to right — Top row: C.r-orge Eeck. He ' en Sperry, Sam Hohri. Virginia Bell, Bill Stecker, Inez Endicott. Mr. Ned Stirling, Harrie Hills: Second row: Jack Boaz, Eva Bennett, Taylor Green, Eleanor Spranger, Frank Murphy, Helen Br own, Bob Cort, Lillian Singer: Front row: Virginia Snipes, Hank McCune, Pat Lauder, Bud Paulson, Anona Alexander, Donald Downey, Dorothy Foster, Donald Hopkins. CHRONICLE STAFF as conducted a poll of campus opinion on the gubernatorial situation. An open forum initiated a more general expressing of collegiate thought than has hitherto been permitted on the editorial page of the sheet. Under the able editorship of Maxine Thompson, If This Be Treason, a general man about the campus column, by Carter B. Cordner was the outstanding feature of the first semester, while James Parsons ' editorials aroused considerable comment in the spring. Editorial positions were created and staff offices were revised to distribute the work more evenly and to allow a longer development period for potential editors to exercise their abilities. Dr. Glenn Lembke and Mr. Ned Stirling acted in advisory capacity to the paper. ♦ PASADENA CAMPUS SPEECH ARTS ONE-ACT PLAYS Can you imagine a husband taking friend wife ' s place m the home, working his fin- gers to the bone sewing and washing? Or a wife traveling to the office every day, writing the checks, and assuming family worries? The topsy-turvy world In 19C9 presents this picture in an amusing play which Players Guild staged with Roy Burr as the hubby who stayed home, Elinor Brown as friend wife and Doris Clark as the apex to a modern triangular situation. In the spring a young man ' s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love. She was a lovely book agent who found janitors difficult in the selling of her wares, and he was a young business man. She sold her book and he lost his heart. The janitor was just a janitor — tired of playing detective to keep out undesirable people. Bauble and Bells sponsored When It ' s Spring ; mem- bers of the double cast included: Natalie Graverson, Murray Huss, Kenneth Cartz- dafner, Peter Prouse and Bancroft Nelson. HUBBY IS FLOORED BY DEFIANCE MISS FORCYTHE SHOWS WARES . V- ' _  lit PLAY CONTEST A PARALYZED OLD VETERAN REMEMBERS GETTYSBURG Gettysburg, the historical battlefield of the Civil War, where men fought and died in the struggle for freedom. An old war veteran paralyzed in the melee surviving in the hope of once again hav- ing the full use of his lifeless legs. His young niece, her heart filled with pity for this helpless old man. Filled with the determi- nation to march with the boys once again in the Decoration Day parade, and asking the help of the Almighty, he goes to join the ranks of his old comrades. Using Gettysburg as their vehicle, Pasadena Junior College entered the one-act play contest at the Community Playhouse. Through the combined efforts of the cast, with Norbert Bundschuh as the disabled veteran and Severine Callahan as his niece, and Miss Elizabeth Keppie, director, this junior college entrant placed second in their division of the con- test. Norbert Bundschuh received honorable mention for acting. V V |;j||;M| igi DICKENS AND SHAKESPEARE SCENES At the request of the Dickens Fellowship oi Pasadena, three troups of players from Miss Katharine Kester ' s drama classes pre- sented scenes from the works of Charles Dickens. The scenes which were from The Old Curiosity Shop, Great Expectations, and Oliver Twist, were entitled Swivel- ler and the Marchioness, The Convict in the Churchyard, and Mr. Bumble ' s Courtship. Figuring in the excerpts were Francis Sinn ette, Gertrude Garrett, Leona des Plantes, Helen Fergueson, Gerard Janssen, Laura Longford, Anna Sussman, Newell Barrett, and Virginia Sydnor. Representing the junior college in the Shakespeare Festival held at Occidental College, nine of Miss Elizabeth Keppie ' s drama students enacted a scene from The Merry Wives of Windsor by the celebrated playwright. Participants included Nancie Allan, Helen Neubrand, Elinor Brown, Jack Swan, Bud Paulson, Ed Darnell, Eliza- beth Stephens, Roy Burr, and Tom Pollack. MR. BUMBLE COURTS MRS. CORNEY THE CONVICT LEERS AT UTTLE PIP PASSING OF THE THIRD FLOOR BACK ' I ' M HERE BECAUSE YOU NEED ME CAST OF CHARACTERS The Stranger Stacia Mrs. Sharps Major Tomkins Mrs. Tomkins Vivian Tomkins Jape Samuels Harry Larkcom Joey Wright Miss Kite Mrs. DeHooley Christopher Perry Frederic Warriner Katherine West Constance Johnston Norbert Bundschuh Helene Neubrand Elinor Brown Bill McGowan Don Mansfield Andrew Carnahan Beth Porter Mary Louise Perry Donald Neeley Acting as chairmen for the production were: Betty Bruner, costumes; Margaret Freeman and Elaine Heacock, makeup; Don Neeley, staging; Bud Paulson, public- ity; George Longworth, business man- ager; James Mathews, stage manager. STACIA CAUGHT IN THE SPELL CF THE KINDLY STRANGER WHO CHANGED SELFISH PUPPETS INTO HUMAN BEINGS Out of a misty square in old London, through the tawdriness of boarding house existence, a stranger quietly passes; but the boarders will never forget him, for the life of each is remodeled by his short visit. More than the others who feel the glow of the Stranger ' s magnetic individuality, Stacia, workhouse slavey, finds dormant qualities within her awakened; from a mean, snappy illiterate, she becomes a charming girl. Following in the wake of her transformation, others of the household change from shrews and cads to lovers and altruists. Responsible for the atmospheric development in Passing of the Third Floor Back, modern miracle play by Jerome K. Jerome, were Miss Elizabeth Keppie, adviser of Players Guild, and Nancie Jean Allen and Judith Gibson, student directors of Liie elaborate production. LEAVE IT TO PSMITH COOTES BREAKS UP SOFT MOMENT HER LADYSHIP FLAUNTS HER GEMS CAST OF CHARACTERS The Earl of Middlewick Bellows Freddie Bosham Rupert Baxter Phyllis Jackson Lady Middlewick Cynthia McTodd Eve Halliday Ronald Eustace Psmith Eddie Cootes Gladys Rumbelow Christopher Walderwick Stuart Russel Robert Meyers Harold London Peter Prouse Virginia Miller Natalie Graverson Hildegard Arens Helen Stone Thomas Stevens Don Schulze Ruthanna Marble Murray Huss Ralston McTodd Winthrop Thompson Agatha Crofton Rosalie Meub Ethelberta Fitzwiggin Carol Randolph Aileen Peavey Mary Jean Voseipka Viscount Chipstead Kenneth Cartzdafner Guests at Blanding ' s Castle: Lillian Wallis, John Farnsworth, Jimmie Cairns, Manon Harder, Bancroft Nelson, Loudelle Jacobs. k, ii . ik --k. AILEEN PEAVEY, CROOK. HOODWINKS HER UNSUSPECTING VICTIMS BENEATH A DISGUISE OF FEMININE FLUTTERY Psmith will do anything provided it has nothing to do with fishl Crime not objected to! Fleeing life in a fish factory, Psmith gams entrance into Blanding ' s Castle impersonating a poet. Under contract to Freddie Bosham to steal Lady Middlewick ' s famous diamonds, Psmith meets Eve Halliday. True love is almost stranded on the rocks when she penetrates his disguise. Another guest, Aileen Peavey, is revealed to the audience as a crook and Eddie Cootes as her dumb accomplice. Baxter, super- efficient secretary, turns detective and succeeds in proving — nothing. Taking matters into his own hands Psmith rescues the precious stones from the pair of crooks . . . and so the happy end- ing. From the pen of P. G. Wodehouse and under the direction of Miss Katharine Kester, Leave It to Psmith snapped and crackled with staccato repartee and a barrage of sharp puns. PAGE 39 VERSE SPEAKING CHOIR Left to right— Top row: Nancie Allen, Helene Neubrand. Jane Hutton; Second row: Mary Lou Perry, Donald Mansfield, Virginia Bell, Lawrence Paul, Betty Jean Hale, Janet Runck; Front row: Hugh Nelson, Kay West, Martin Silvola, Miss Elizabeth Keppie, Norbert Bund- schuh, Jean McEwen, Donald Neely; Additional members: Elsie Gaylord, Virginia Newhart. One-act plays dealing with Makers of the Modem World and those fostering the sight saving campaign were broadcast monthly during the year over the radio by different members of the Verse Speaking Choir constituting one of the important func- tions of the group. Directed by Miss Elizabeth Keppie, other endeavors included several selections from and about William Shakespeare, which were presented at the annual Pasadena Junior College Shakespeare Festival and at church and fraternal organizations m Pasadena. The scenes were When Shake- peare Laughed, The Greenwood Tree, Blow Winter Wind, When Icicles Hang, Spring, and When Burbage Played. PAGE 40 F O R E N S I C IS Leit to right— Top row: Franklin Patterson. loe Phillips, Dow Parkes, lack Keenaii; row: Carl Deisenroth. Jason Lee, Mary Grace McLean, Mr. Earl Davis. Harold Berg; tional members: Trevor Gardner, Lyndon Vivrette, Chester Radiord, Dillon Glendi Front Addi- Covering themselves with glory at the Pi Kappa Delta meet, three of junior college debate teams won twelve out oi the eight- een combats. These results automatically placed them among the highest competitors at Stockton February 28, March 1 and 2. The debate season formally opened with a meet held in Pasa- dena, Harold Berg and Dow Parkes placing second to Glendale m the final round. At Redlands February 9, Joe Phillips and Trevor Gardner were given highest rating. Mr. Davis coached the debate teams. Taking honors both in the Davis-Hall and Arnold Extemporaneous contests Carl Deisenroth placed first, leaving Jesse Harvey the lower division winner of the former. PAGE 41 PASADENA CAMPUS MUSIC GLORIA it HEAVEN ' S BRILLIANCE REFLECTS IN VISION OF CHRISTMAS With an atmosphere oi deep devotional uplift, the choral-drama Gloria was performed for a second season before two capacity audiences at the Civic Auditorium, constituting Pasadena ' s most elaborate Christmas production. The combined Glee Clubs, A Cappella Choir, Nysaeans, and Euterpeans composed the music ensembles under the direction of Miss Lula Parmley. Leading a cast of 400 persons, principal roles m the drama were played by Virginia Vail (Madonna), Pauline Stevens and Helen Stone (Heavenly Messengers), Stanley Meacham, Stanley Taft, and Charles Davis (Three Wise Men), Larkin Williams (Joseph), Win- throp Thompson (Judah), Frederic Warriner (Saraden), Natalie Theisen (Elizabeth), and Norbert Bundschuh (Prophet-Priest). Dramatic scenes were directed by Miss Katharine Kester, author of the play, which is popular with audiences in the Southland. PAGE 43 BULLDOG BAND el: Vinton Anderson, Harold Anqerhoter, Fred Bartik, Lee Barrel!. Marshall Benedict, Milto Isadore Bernoff, George Bessolo, Morris Bidwell, Bill Boland, Robert Bonthms, Bob Borden Joe Brady, Bob Brennan, Bob Brewer, Bill Breyer, Bob Bucknall, Glenard Burris, Peter Burrows, George Buxton, Hal Burt, Bill CaWwell, Phil cilahan, Gordon Cannon, Jack Carhcrl, Bill Cassell, John Carnot, Bill Clark, Russell Cochran, Bill Colfin, Raymond Courtney, Mark Cowdrey, Melvm Cundifl, Lauren( Borrow, Curtis Davis, Oron Davis, Frank Day, LeVerne Deight. Norbet Duarte, Gordon Duncan, Robert Eadie, Gardner Eikenl Lyle Fagan, Russell Failing, Edward Fay, Bill Feasley, Bernard Feldmc Robert Fromhold, Dale Fox, Gordon Feldmon, Dick Gall, Donald Goldthwail Frannie Graham, Baalis Grubbs, Harry Gruwell, Merle Hagemeyer, Ivel Hamr Hatley, Dick Hawkins, Bob Hiestand, Arthur Hill, John Hollowell, Thomas Hopkii Glen Hummer, Charles Hunter, Robert Ingram, Harry Jackson, Clair Jo Kenneth Kaler, Philip Karp, Bob Kimbrough, Dorian Kirk, Jimmy Kozlik, Walt Kr Keith Lane, Thomas Laursen, Jason Lee, David Lee, Bob Leonard, Virgil Leucl Lieben Fred Lindguist, Charles Love, James Lowe, Lloyd Lunham, Bob Lyon, Stuart McCullough, Johnny McDon ' ough Crashie Maker, Clark Mallery, Mason Mallery, David Mann, Sherwood Mark, Francis Marshall, James Martin, Elwood Martin, Jack Matteson, Stanley Meacham, Joseph Messinger, Howard Miller, Ty Miller, Robert Milliken, James Mitchell, William Moir, Fred Mortimer, Lewis Moore, Paul Mooseau, Edward Muriett. Melvin Nead, Arthur Neher, Bancrolt Nelson, Forest Newton, Everett Nicholson, Chester Nickum, David Ogilvie, Norman Oldson, John Overholtzer, Bill Pappan, Jack Philp, Wendell Pope, David Pugh, Dick Re aily, Henry Dake, John ernon Denny, Judson Dibble, aid Elger, Hugh Elkin, Glenn Embree, iman, Ted Fisher, Carlton Fromhold, Bob Gilford, Paul Goodrich, mer, Arthur Harward, Henry Holstein, Sam Horton, Marlowe Jones, Ray Jones, all, Jack Lake, George Lane, h. Randolph Lewis, Howard Rand, Frank Reichert, John Reilsteck, Ellsworth Replogle, George 1 Kenneth Rolf, Jack Rolph, Earl Roulac, Russell Snyder, George Sabin Charles Scotl, Horace Self, Henry Shaw, Frank Shipman, Gerald Sit Henry Smith, Richard Spahr, David Stacy, Edward Stewart, Gene SulH Henry Taylor, John Taylor, Howard Thames, Harry Thomas, John Th James Tucker, Randolph Twycross, Ted Tyler, Roy VanOrd Ridley, Cecil Robinson, ilford Sandusky, Delbert Sargent, , Ralph Slusser, Bradford Smith, Ronald Swanson, Richard Sweet, Wayne Thomas, Richard Trickey. rlelon VanSillert, Glenn VanWalbeck, George Vaughan, James Vorhis, John We Johnston Wiles, Ivan Wilson, Douglass Willi( ck Wile Forced to turn down numerous engagements in the face of a mounting activities calendar, the Bulldog band carried its stand- ards into new fields of triumph. Under the direction of Mr. Audre Stong, the official Tournament of Roses band represented Ala- bama at the New Year ' s game, and traveling to San Diego, opened the exposition in that city. Small instrumental and vocal groups added novelty and zest to the numbers of the group. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Personnel: John AshcrofI, Jane Bal er, William Isadore Bernolf, Dick Blodgett. Frederick Boersm Bob Borden, Winifred Bowerman, Bernard Boyer Patricia Campbell, William Carnol, Al Cartwi Clark, Oliver Compton, Al Cook, Henry Daks Deighlon, Evelyn Dill, Charlotte Doan, Marjc th Edwards, Barbara Eqg Marie Ford, Audrey Fox, Mary Gart; Gruwell, Edna Hamm, Arda Hanscoi Doris Henry, Bob Hiestand, Clair Hoagland, Doris Hold Jensen, Helen Johnson, Claire Jones, Elizabeth Jones, Har Keithley, Bob Kimbrough, Sheldon Kinney, Dorian Kirk, Jeai Laursen, Helen Lesh, Evelyn Lingle, Edward Lord, Jane Lyor Donald Mansiield, Sherwood Mark, Frances Marshall. Ev. Burney, Joseph Messinger, Howard Miller, George Moore, Le Musij, Don Neary, Everett Nicholson, Ruth Nickson, Robe Aletha Prall, John Preston, Carol Price, Leo Rand, Gl iayley, David Belilove. Marshall Benedict, Bryant Berkeley, I, Bill Boland, Cherie Broadbent, Patty Brown. Marjorie Brune, Linnea Burman, Virginia Burnham, Beth Bullard, May Camp, ighl. Bill Cassell, Margaret Chester, Andrew Clark, Carol , Orin Davis, Robert DeFord. Margaret DeHaan, LaVerne ' ton, Robert Earl, George Rettie, Nettie Ready, George Richardson, G Sacketl, Russell Schmidt. Faith Searle, Marjorie Sorv Skutt, Ted Smith, Dorothy Spencer, Cynthia Spurge Taylor. Vonnie Taylor, David Thomas, Mary Trout ' Anne Wallace. St. Claire Warren, Jack Wiles, Marga Helen Yost. ussell Failing, Paul Fancier, Robert Felby, Jane Flynn, Virginia Flynn, Hargaret Geddes, Isabel Goldie, Martha Groth, Baalis Grubbs. Harry Valera Hauck. Reginald Hawkins. Gordon Heald, Mary Hendrickson, Holton, Nancy Hughes, Robert Ingram, Frances et Jones. Jack Junklin. Philip Karp. Elizabeth Kirkpatrick. Ruth Kraft. Leonard Lane. Thomas Robert Lyons. Bill Maddison. Arlene Mansfield. ett Mathews, Forest Mathews, Catherine Mc- wis Moore, Cora Morgan, Charles Muck, William Oalesby, Olof Ohlsson, Bob Oulton, Beth Palmer, Robert Ro orge Ricketis, Marie Roberts, C r, Dore Seely, David SeLegue, L( n, David Slacv, Virginia Stone, ein, Richard Trickey, Bob Trur et Williams, Percy Williams, Eric 1, Ellsworth Reologle eorge Sabin, Virqinic raine Shipman, Fores John Sumner, I .an, William Wagner. Wilson. Grace Wood. rtha -f ¥ ¥ With Mr. Milton Mohs conducting, the Pasadena Junior College Symphony Orchestra presented three major concerts at the Civic Auditorium to complete its third season. Soloists who played concertos were Forest Mathews, piano; Evelyn Lingle, oboe; Bob Bordon, and Everett Nicholson, clarinet. Small instrumental com- binations composed of orchestra numbers entertained intermit- tently throughout the year at social gatherings and musicals. WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB Personnel: Alberta Anderson, Geraldine Anderson. June Anderson. Rosalie Ashton, Betty Barker. Mary Bennett. Klea Bissell. Maxine Bowman. Eleanor Boyle, Beatrice Bullock, Dorothy Alice Burley, Kathryn Byer. Celeste Callahan, Jane Cartzdafner, Verna Chapman, Caroline Childs, Carol Fay Clark, lean Cluif, Dorothy Coates, lane Curry, Lenore Dean. Dora Dikran, Virginia Donner, Carol Doutrick, Margaret Dressier, Virginia Dunton, Elenore Eich, Lola Eisenbise, Betty Emerson. Jean Everett, Hope Frechtman, Catherine Friedrichs, Frances Goodsell, Margaret Grubb, Edna Hamm, Pauline Harris, Virginia Hart, Betty Hatch, Vera Hawkins, Bemice Hodgin, Dorothy Holmes, Harriet Jarecki, Wanda Klaus, Moreland Kortcamp, Beth Lamb, Mary Larsen, Adeline La Voie. Merle La Rue. Ellen Lombard. Thelma Lucas. Lydia Lundstedl, Bernadine Martin, Dorothy Mays, Catherine McBurney, Genevieve McCaa, Elizabeth McGill, Barbara Miles, Dorothy Melendy, Dorothy Meyer, Elizabeth Moore, Jeanne Newman. Helen Nonam, Gertrude Ogdon, Constance Orozco, Catherine Pettit, Emily Ritchey, Caroline Rough, Marybeth Sachse, Hazel Sanders, Elsa Sauer, Marguerite Schmidt, Barbara Seidel, Judy Sked, Katherine Snider, Rebecca Sousley, Ruth Spencer, Jeanne Stolba, Allison Stone. Anne Stowe, Beverly Strongman, Eddie Trout, Virginia Vail, Winifred Van Gilluwe. Helen Vaughn, June Wheelock, Viola Wells, Margery Whitney, Eleanor Wilkinson. Louise Williams, Virginia Wilson, Rose Winkler, Dorothy Winslow. Recognized by their red neckerchiefs and white uniforms, the Women ' s Glee Club has filled numerous musical engagements at the junior college and in surrounding communities. Besides furnishing soloist material for Elijah and Gloria, this group was combined with the other musical organizations to aid in both productions. Miss Lula Parmley coached the glee club for public appearances as well as for its many school activities. PAGE 46 MEN ' S GLEE CLUB Personnel: Gene Arnone. Merle Bartoo, Jack Biren, Jack Boaz, Oliver Bowen. Dean Brack- enbury, Richard Burlingame, Ralph Butteriield, Glenard Burris, Bill Caldwell, Frederick Carpenter, Francis Carnahan, Andrew Clark, Harold Cleveland, Leon Cory, Charles Cord- ray, Bob Crimi, Charles Davis, Donald Douglass, David Eccles. Jack Farnsworth, William Fretter. Robert Fromhold, Rufus Gardner, Herbert Grammel, Howard Green. Bernard Hayes, Charles Henricks, Everett Hewitt, Charles Holsback, Robert Ingram, Hugh Jones, Ray Kuhn, Vernon Leif, Walter Lipke, Lee Loop, Leonard Marshall, Dwight Mayfield, Hal Mettler, Reid Moran, Stanley Meacham, Robert Oglesby, Bob Orozco, Dexter Paddock, Bob Perkins, John Phillips, Robert Potter. Wilson Powers, Thomas Prucha, Bob Porcupile. Robert Ryan, Board- man Reed, Frankhn Rykes, Don Schulze, Bruce Street, Gene Sullivan. Stanley Taft. Bill Tollack. James Vorhiss. Frank Wark. Fred Warriner. Douglas Williams, Larken Williams. John Wright. As mentors of song typical of male choruses, the Men ' s Glee Club entertained often outside of school in addition to regular assembly appearances. Among the engagements were those at junior high schools, the Masonic Temple and Monrovia. With Miss Carrie Sharp as leader and Priscilla Fox as accompanist, the club contributed its talents to Gloria, Christmas production, and Elijah, which was substituted for the usual spring opera. A CAPPELLA CHOIR Personnel: Georgia Adams, Geraldine Anderson, Nadine Arundell, Gene Arnone, Rosalie Ashton, Betty Barker, Klea Bissell, Oliver Bowen. Maxine Bowman, Eleanor Boyle, Dean Brackenbury, Ruth Ivonne Brown, Dorothy Burley, Allan Burt, Ralph Butterlield, Bill Cald- well, Celeste Callahan, Francis Carnahan, Frederic Carpenter. Carol Clapp, Andrew Clark, Carol Clark, Harold Cleveland, Leon Cory, Charles Davis, Lenore Dean, William De Rivere. Dora Dikran, Donald Douglass, Carol Doutrick, Jack Draper, Margaret Dressier, Virginia Dunton, Eleanor Eich, Betty Emerson, Inez Endicott, Margarette Freeman, Carlton Fromhold, Robert Fromhold, Peter Geddes, Frances Goodsell, Margaret Grubb, Pauline Harris, Betty Hatch, Barney Hayes, Everett Hewitt, Dorothy Holmes, Beth Lamb, Jason Lee, Thelma Lucas, Allen Lincoln, Leonard Marshall, Bernadine Martin, June Mathews, Forest Mathews, Dwight Mayfield, Dorothy Mays, Stanley Meacham, Hal Mettler, Elizabeth Moore, Helen Nonan, Robert Oglesby, Boz Orozco, Constance Orozco, Una Pierson, Bob Perkins, Catherine Pettit, Wilson Powers, Carol Price, Thomas Prucha, George Ricketts, Emily Ritchey, Carolyn Rough, Franklin Ryker, Elsa Sauer, Marybeth Sachse, Don Schulze, Treva Sco ' .t, Marjorie Seaver, Judy Sked, Barbara Snider, Louise Snortum, Florence Southworth, June Spear, Lucille Stover, Stanley Talt, Eunice Throne, Eddie Trout, Marion Shields, Virginia Vail, Frank Work, Viola Wells, Harper Welch, Marjorie Whitney, Grace Wilkins, Eleanor Wil- kinson, Virginia Wilson. Robed m purple gowns and white surplices, the A Cappella Choir filled its calendar with numerous engagements in nearby cities as well as over the radio. The chorus of 50 carefully chosen voices, trained by Miss Lula Parmley, sang in Gloria, the spring oratorio, Elijah, and entertained the Western Music Teachers Convention in a program broadcast over a national hook-up. ELIJAH Left to right — Top row: June Spear, Constance Orozco; Front row: Elsie Fredin. Stanley Tail, Eunice Throne. Varying from the usual procedure of presenting an operetta, the music department, under the guidance of Miss Lula Parmley, produced Mendelssohn ' s oratorio, Elijah, as its major project. Drawing from student talent with the exception of George Garner, guest artist, as Obadiah, leading roles were interpreted by Stanley Taft as Elijah, June Spear as an Angel, Elsie Fredin as the Widow, Constance Orozco as an Angel, Eunice Throne as an Angel, and Howard Christopher as the Youth. Making use of all the music students possible, supplementary groups includ- ing the A Cappella Choir, Men ' s and Women ' s Glee Clubs, and the Oratorio choruses were trained by Miss Carrie Sharp and Mr. John Lyons. Elijah, the most widely known of Felix Men- delssohn ' s oratorios, was written by request as the feature of a special music festival. The production was given May 24 at the Civic Auditorium with three hundred students participating. -¥- PASADENA CAMPUS LIFE SECTION REFLECTIONS Collegians filling out forty ' leven programs, dating up with new profs. Plunging into the year, a parade of class and club dances. Rushing and bidding of starry- eyed girls, and eager lads. You ' ve got to be a football hero — and all the mud that goes with it. Rain that drizzles on the tent tops and makes the sputtering radiator seem futile, and in the background bare bony ribs of buildings. Christmas — a mad whirl. Hopeful prayers fulfilled, and a sunny New Year ' s Day to exhibit the pride of college femininity. Back to school with a vengeance. More rain — rain and the War of 1812, rain and modes of social behavior, rain and chromatic scales in G minor, ram and the intricate anatomy of a fish eye. Groans, puzzled b rows and February finals. Tossing books in a corner — spring vacation. Lazy days of sun-tanning and some burning. Back brown as a gypsy with best of resolutions. Hard work and term reports for six weeks. Finals. Dream- ily we slip out for the joys of vacation. PAGE 51 REGROWTH CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1, SHE REGISTERS PERPLEXITY 2. GIMME 3, WHITHER AWAY MY PRETTY MAIDS? 4. GETTING A LINE ON J.C, 5 DID SOMEONE MENTION BULLDOGS? 6. THIS WAY, FROSH ¥ PAGE 52 CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1. SHOULD AULD ACQUAINT- ANCE ■ ' 2. AMPHITHEATER 3. PEACOCK ALLEY 4. CANVASING THE LOT 5. BARE AND BONY RIBS 6. MODERN ACROPOLIS 7. NEW DIMENSIONS PAGE S3 CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1, TOOTHPASTE PERSONALI- TIES 2 EXTRA-CURRICULAR ACTIV- ITY 3 ONE AND ONE MAKE TOO??? 4 SPECIAL TRAIN AND SPE- CIAL 5 VENTURA BOUND 6. VEHICLE DELUXE 7. TAKE CARE, CARETAKER 8. THE REIGN OF RAINS ' CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1. CONFIDENTIALLY SPEAKING 2. WHAT CHEER, LEADER? 3. IN A HUDDLE OVER A HURDLE 4. VERY LITTLE BARS HIS WAY 5. MAYBE HE WILL, MAYBE HE WONT 6. SISSY FOOTBALL 7. CALL OF THE WILD PAGE 55 CAMPUS REFLECTIONS SHAKESPEARE CONTEST 2. TAKING IT ON THE LAM 3. CHIP AHOY LISTEN MY CHILDREN— 5 TECHNICIANS STAGE AN ACT 6. CROSS PATTERNS 7. MARK THE SMILE COLLEGE JOES PAGE 56 CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1. SITTING PRETTY 2 HOLD IT lUST ONE MOMENT, ' PLEASE 3, WHERE ANYTHINGS A CAR 4. PEEPING THOMASINE 5 NO— IT DON ' T SEEM LIKE ENOUGH 6, EMBRYO ENGINEERS 7, LADIES IN WAITING CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1 S MATTA, GOTTA NO PUSH? 2. AND AFTER NEW YEAR ' S EVE 3. OUR BAND GOES ALPHA- BETICAL 4 PANDEMONIUM TROMBOSIS 5 THERE ' S SOMETHING ABOUT A SOLDIER 6. ANTS IN HIS PANTS 7. A MISS IS AS GOOD AS HER SMILE CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1. WALTZ ME AROUND AGAIN WILLIE 2 (LANCER AT WORK) 3. ADONIS 4. PADDLE YOUR OWN CANOE 5. FULLER BRUSH MEN 6. SAND GETS IN YOUR EYES PAGE 59 CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1. VAN AND THE KIDS 2. KEEPING HIM ON THE UP AND UP 3. WHAT JACOB DID NOT SEE 4. FAIR BATTING AVERAGE 5. V HERE ' S MY LITTLE GRASS SHACK? G, STUCK IN THE MUD 7 SET FOR THRILLS 8 ISN ' T THAT JUST DUCKY? PAGE 60 CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1 AN OLD SPANISH COSTUME 2. BOOKSTORE ' S BAPTISM 3- JOHNNY ' S AMARCHING 4. THE MIGHTY BARNUM 5. WILL WE OR WON ' T WE ? 6. SPEAK THE SPEECH 7. VALSE TRISTE 8. OUR FACULTY BANNED 9. TERPSICHORIA PEDAGOGIA 10. GLOCKENSPIEL CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1. CARNIVAL CUTIES 2. YE GODS AND LITTLE FISHES ' :M 3. VIGNETTES OF OLD CHINA V 4. MISSIE TLAKE A RIDEE? 5. NO TICKEE, NO WASHEE 6. DRAGON THE CARCASS AROUND 2 -¥- -f CAMPUS REFLECTIONS 1. OF COURSE IT AUTO SHOW! 2. MAKING STENOGRAPHERS 3. ' COME AWAY WITH ME LU- CILLE 4. ON HER HIGH-HORSE 5. BRUSHING UP A BIT 6 QUIET PLEASEI 7, ELECTION — A MERE RIPPLF 8, MAID TO ORDER 9, S ' NO LADY PASADENA CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS Group participation, whether it arises from recognition of abil- ity, mutual interests, or the de- sire for companionship, lends poise and unity to an other- wise incomplete personality. Jf -¥- PASADENA CAMPUS HONORARY CLUBS RECOGNITION As a nucleus of students tal- ented in the fine arts, exhi- biting a capacity for scholar- ship or R. O. T. C, and those who have given unselfish ser- vice to the school, the honorary clubs reward outstanding ac- complishment. With the forma- tion this spring of an honor so- ciety for technology students, Theta Gamma Sigma took its place along side of Alpha Gamma Sigma and C. S. F. in complimenting those who ex- cel in academic pursuits. Pi Delta Kappa and Beta Phi Gamma open their fraternal PAGE 67 doors to those who have distin- guished themselves by means of the pen. The R. O. T. C. con- fers honor by membership in Shield and Eagle, while Delta Psi Omega, Phi Rho Pi, and Zeta Gamma Phi respectively recognize students who have been picked for exceptional contributions m the fields of drama, speech, and art. Mast and Dagger, whose members have earned this highest recog- nition for service, sponsored a Chinese New Year ' s carnival on May 17, and in that festive dress, played host to the school. MAST AND DAGG ER i: A r Left to right — Top row; Dorris Green, Guilford Sandusky, Fred Warriner, James Martin; Second row: Ben Ludden, David Patrick, Maxine Thompson, Bud Paulson, Jean Backus, Bob Dawson; Front row: Anona Alexander, Leland Houghton, Mr. James O ' Mara, Dr. John Harbeson, Eleanor Norlhrup, Pauline Stevens; Additional member: Bill Payne. o I c Fall Semester Dr. John Harbeson Leland Houghton Anona Alexander Dorris Green Mr. James O ' Mara Honorary President President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 68 Spring Semester Dr. John Harbeson Eleanor Northrup Pauline Stevens Bill Payne Mr. James O ' Mara THETA GAMMA SIGMA Left to right: Top row — Shigeo Takayama. Melvin Snow, Lewis Minich, Charles Embree, Second row: Art Clark, Carroll L ' Ecluse, John Kirsch, Robert Bolster, Bill Lawson, Joe Rostron, Don Emberson; Front row: Oron Davis. Giraldo Ares, Bill Bouett, Mr. Walter Johnson, Charles Rostron, Albert Redding, Wayne Routh, Frank Shaffer; Additional members: Jack DeLonge, Jack Toothaker. o I C S Spring Semester President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser Charles Rostron Bill Bouett Albert Redding Giraldo Ares Mr. Walter lohnson ALPHA GAMMA SIGMA Left to right — Top row: C William Moir, Pauline Ste Dorothy Adams, Anona Al Barker, Adelle Barnelt, Lill Bettannier, Martha Birk, Kl. Gene Bunning, Dorothy Burley, Elizabeth B Cammack, Patricia Campbell, Helen Carriq Rough, Edison Montgomery, James Parsons. Robert Engle; Front row: Joe Phillips Miss Mildred Wellborn, Harold Berg; Additional members; er Gordon Atkins, Nellie Auld, Eleanor Bacon, Charlotte Bakkela, Isabel rron, Virginia Beaumont, Dulcie Beecrolt, Roy Bell, Louise Bennett, Marjorie =11 Kenneth Bodger, Lucile Boots, Stanley Bowen, Vera Boye, Elinor Brown, m, Allen Burt, Katherine Byer, Lorrayne Calkins, Elizabeth Robert Clark, Phyllis Cole, Dick Davidson, Thomas Davis, DeBoynton Margaret DeHaan, Carl Deisenroth, Florence Dickson, Frank Dische, Shirley Duncan, Everett Earl, John Eaton, Clark Edwards, Evelyn Ehlers, Raymond Elliott, John Eskijian, Elizabeth Ferguson Augusta Fink, Dorothy Flint, Evelyn Frederick, Cloudsly Frencl Gardner, Gena Gasponi, Robert Gerharl, Mary Alice Gianetti, J Grace, Frank Graham, Herbert Grammel, Dorothy Grc Naomi Haggard, Robert Hanson, Gordon Heald, Will: Horton. Munson Hovey, Mary Huthsing, Mary Joh Hasten, Barbara Kimball, Sam Ku Nina Liltleiield Willii tter, Shizuko Fujimoto, Trevo , Donald Goldthwaite, Virginia Green, Vernon Greenleaf, Agnes Hagan, Hewitt, Randall Hinshaw, Ruth Hoppock, Lyman ton, Wilson Jones, James Joyce, Raymond Kahn, Elaine to, Victor Lagrave, Donald Lang, Janice Earner, William Leichl, Marjorie Loomis, Robert Lowen, Ben Ludden, Frances Maugho McBurney, Maurice McCoy, Franklin McCurdy, Jean McEwen, Ji Priscilla Moerdyke, Cora Morgan, Elizabeth Morgan. Jessie Mowatt, Max Eleanor Northrup. Betty Over. Lillian Palmberg, David Patrick. Flaval P Maxine Peyton. Dorothy Pfeifler. Tom Pollock. Ralph Priddy. Joanna Pup Kathleen Roach, Valera Roach, Ruth Rockwood, John S Patricia Skinner, Robert Sloan, Dorothy Si Southworth, Robert Sparling, Dorothy Spei LeVern Swansen, Virginia Syd Turner, Wheelc McFarlane, Eleanor Mead, 3 Mulligan, Margaret Newlin, , Robert Perkins. Roy Petersen, Olive Pupis, Chester Radford, Schlater, Frank Shipman, Mary Skelton, Wayne Smith, Gertrude SoUoder, Helen Sommer, Florence Martha Stone, Gertrude Stoops, Christine Strickland. Helen Sophie Tajima. Eleanor Thompson. Eunice Throne. Donald Jean Tyrrell. Edward Varney, Winifred Walker. James Ware, Robert Wark, Jean Warren, Edwin , Ruth Willard, Evelyn Williams, Ivan Wilson. Lyllis Zahn. OFF Fall Semester Joe Phillips James Parsons Carolyn Rough William Moir Miss Mildred Wellborn President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 70 E R S Spring Semester Harold Berg Pauline Stevens Edison Montgomery Robert Engle Miss Mildred Wellborn C. S. F Left to right— Top row: Anna Kalherine Jones, Richard Burleigh, Helen Wadsworlh, George Todd: From row: Ray Gerharl, Miss Sara Talbott, Delos Flint; Additional members: Leroy Allen, Van Dyke Andrews, Robert Arens, Jack Benton, John Billheimer, Ruth Blodget, Lenore Bloom, Vaughn Burdick, Anne Casebeer, Lillian Cosier, Aubrey Davis, Milton Davis, Mildred Diener, Robert Dunbar, Keith Emberson, Evelyn Frederick, Jack Goodell, Michiye Hasama, Manor Harder, Sabrita Henderson, Dan Holtom, Kenyon Howard, Beulah Hughes, Arthur Keene, Flora Krauzer, Patricia Lauder, Marjorie Loos, Edward Maroder, Helen Mathewson, Barbara Milliken, Helen Merely, John Munson, Patricia Nelson, Don Nicholson, Jack Osburn, John Over holtzer, Jane Sanlord, Elsa Sauer, Frances Shaw, Florabel Sleath, Ilo Smith, Paul Smith, Marguerite Stough. Lorraine Ulrich, Takeko Wakili, Jimmio Watkins, Harriet Webb, Lenors Wilcox, Hester Wilkinson, Frank Wood. R Fall Semester Delos Flint Richard Burleigh Anna Katharine Jones Dan Holtom Miss Sara Talbott Miss Mildred Wellborn President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser Adviser PAGE 71 Spring Semester Richard Burleigh George Todd Helen Wadsworth Delos Flint Miss Sara Talbott Miss Mildred Wellborn SHIELD AND EAGLE Left to right — Top row: Hadley Eliker, David Allen, Arthur Heed, Billy Fry, Raymond Swen- son; Front row: Frank Kurokawa, Andrew Carnahan, Major Geoifrey Galwey, William Fretter, Robert Sloan, Frank Reichert; Additional members: Alfred Einstein, Robert Maddox. ¥ O F F I c E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester William Fretter President William Fretter Robert Sloan Vice-President Robert Sloan Andrew Carnahan Secretary Andrew Carnahan Andrew Carnahan Treasurer Andrew Carnahan Major Geoffrey Ga way Adviser PAGE 72 Maj or Geoffrey Galwey ZETA GAMMA PHI Leit to right — Top row: John deKramer, Frederick Jennison, Ralph Butlerfield; Second row; Mary Lou McConneUy, Marjorie Hill, Grace Mole, Beulah Cox; Front row: Mary Ellen Nickum, Mrs. He ' en Eifinger, Mr. Archibald Wedemeyer, Isabel Chapin, Dorris Green; Additional member; Bill Payne. o I C s Fall Semester Mary Ellen Nickum John deKramer Frederick Jennison Isabel Chapin Mr. Archibald V edemeyer Mrs, Helen Effinger President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser Adviser PAGE 73 Spring Semester Mary Ellen Nickum John deKramer Frederick Jennison Isabel Chapin Mr, Archibald V edemcycr Mrs. Helen Eflingcr BETA PHI GAMMA Left to right — Top row: Dow Parkes. Jean Backus, Fred Green, Marjorie Barmetiler, Art McCurdy, Bud Paulson; Second row: Taylor Green, Harry Sheldon, Dorris Green, Carter Cordner, Maxine Thompson, Ben Ludden, Peter Geddes, Bob Cort; Front row: Anona Alex- ander, Ellsworth Stelle, Alice Flynn, Jack DeMarais, Margaret Thomas, Gordon Eby, Betty Lewis, James Parsons, Virginia Bell; Additional members: Inez Endicott, Mary Alice Gianetti, Bill Hunter. O S i Fall Semester Spring Semester James Parsons President Gordon Eby Gordon Eby Vice-President Virginia Bell Bud Paulson Sec retary Betty Lewis Bud Paulson Treasurer Betty Lewis Miss Gladys Snyder Adviser M ss Gladys Snyder PAGE 74 i PI DELTA KAPPA Left to right — Top row: Hazel Joslin, Dow Parkes, Marjorie Ray: Second row: Carl Deisen- roth. lean Backus. Ivan Wilson, Marjorie Barmetller; Front row: Mary Alice Gianetti, Paul Monroe, Miss Harriet McClay, Carter Cordner, Kathleen Cartwright; Additional members: Howell Breece, Robert Engle, Frederick Jennison, Ben Ludden, Eileen MacMaster. o I c s Fall Semester Paul Monroe Ivan Wilson Mary Alice Gianetti Carter Cordner Miss Harriet McClay President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 75 Spring Semester Dovr Parkes Robert Engle Eileen MacMaster Carter Cordner Miss Harriet McClay DELTA PSI OMEGA Leit to right — Top row: Kancie Allan, Andrew Carnahan, Mary Lou Perry; Second row: Kay West, Donald Mansfield, Constance Johnston, Norbert Bundschuh; Front row: Fred War- riner, Helene Neubrand, Miss Elizabeth Keppie, Hadley Eliker; Additional member: Donald Neeley. -¥- ¥ O F F I c E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester Hadley Eliker President Hadley Eliker Andrew Carnahan Vice-President Helen Neubrand Andrew Carnahan Secretary Helene Neubrand Andrew Carnal.an Treasurer Helene Neubrand Mien Elizabeth Keppi 3 Adviser PAGE 76 M ss Elizabeth Keppie PHI R HO PI Left to right — Top row: Carl Deisenroth, Trevor Gardner, Joe Phillips; Front row: Chester Radford, Harold Berg, Mr. Earl Davis, Dow Parkes, Jason Lee. o I c s Fall Semester Harold Berg Chester Radford Dow Parkes Dow Parkes Mr. Earl Davis President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 77 Spring Semester Harold Berg Dow Parkes Chester Radford Chester Radford Mr. Earl Davis - PASADENA CAMPUS NON-RESTRICTIVE CLUBS Left to right — Top row: Hcirriet Westphaln, Barbara Bullock, Florence Dickson, Marie Phelan, Severine Bugge, Dorothy Barron; Second row: Dorothy Thomas, Ralph Poordee, Una Pier- son, Bob Waterman, Agnes Donovan, Victor Lagrave, Charlotte Aberle, Wynn Pearson; Front row: Yalette Counts, Joyce Weston, Evelyn Ehlers, Rosemary Sprangle, Miss Ruth Conrad, Betty Jane Knapp, Elizabeth Pottenger, Edith Bakke, Gary Straben; Additional members: Virginia Anderson, Jerry Barron, Francis Berry, Menton Brandt, Mary Dicks, Marjorie Dahlitz, Carl Feldmeth, Ed Furstman, Helen Green, John Henderson, Viola Hoff- man, Sam Kuramoto, Joan Mitchell, Phyllis Patchett, Ralph Priddy, Thelma Reynolds, Marion Simpson, Mary Stetton, Willard Smith, Carrie Strating, Phyllis Thorpe, Louise Warsaw, Jack Whieldon, Juanita Whiteside, Frank Wolven, Mabel Wooliscroft. AESCULAPIAN fraternizes future wielders of the scalpel and the forceps. Fall Semester Betty Jane Knapp Robert Waterman Evelyn Ehlers Sam Kuramoto Miss Ruth Conrad President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 79 Spring Semester Betty Jane Knapp Robert Waterman Evelyn Ehlers Wynn Pearson Miss Ruth Conrad ■ I I [ Personnel: Glen Amundsen, Grant Barker, Art Bailey, Kenneth Blain, Clurman Bibb, Jac ' .; B;ren, Don Chamberlain, Dale Chamblin. Dal Chamblin, George Cooper, Oron Davis, Everett Dewhurst, Bert Doi, Lane Dorr, Babe Duncan, John Elliot, Bert Estabrook, James Fergus, Dave Firman, Niel Ford, Dale Fox, Billy Frye. Eugene G!eason, Walter Hartnett. Hay Holtz, Bill Lawson, Bob Maltby, Ralph Mead, Bill Mann, John Mehl, Al Meldah!. Duane Olmore, Phil Oiler, Doug Parker, DeWitt Pyeatt, Bert Perry, Doug Reeder, Wayne Routh, Arakel Rejebian, James Reynolds, Gerald Slusser, Melvin Snow, Ed Spring, D:ck Smith, Clinton VaiiWest, Chester Walker, Harold Williams. AERO TECH are boys who lly through the air with the greatest of ease. Fall Semester Dale Fox Everett Dewhurst Jack Biren Chester Walker Mr. Glenn Warren President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 80 Spring Semester Clurman Bibb Billy Fry Bert Estabrook James Fergus Mr. Glenn Warren Left to right — Top row: Mary Beth Gunter, June Pearmaii, Flora Dunham, Gertrude Hogle, Betty Klepper; Second row; Nat Hughes, Lynn Smith, Robert Sloan, Helen Johnson, Richard Brown; Front row: Frank Pearman, Kay Butler, Boardman Reed, Betty Brown, Billy Fry; Additional members: Bill Bailie. Ray Carruthers, Don Edwin, Frances Goodsell, Bob Maddox, Jack Mather, Margaret Mulvaney, Bill Paine, Adrian Perry. Stanley Rishel. Bob Simpson, Jack Snipes. ATTICA unites collegians interested in our local men in Khaki. R Fall Semester Bob Maddox Kay Butler Betty Brown Boardman Reed Major Geoffrey Galwey President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 81 Spring Semester Stanley Rishel Kay Butler Betty Brown Boardman Reed Major Geoffrey Galwey Leit to right— Top row: Mary Beth Sachse, Miriam Rosen. Norman Stolba, Lillian Wallis, Vernon Leif, Rulhanna Marble; Third row: Winthrop Thompson, Loudelle Jacobs, Tom Stevens, Carol Handolpb. Don Shulze, Arlene Sprecher, Harold London; Second row: Glenn Serres. Anna Sussman. Stewart Russell, Rosalie Ashton, Kenneth Cartzdafner, Natalie Graverson, Jack Farnsworth, Helen Stone; Front row: Rosalie Mueb, Murry Huss, Miss Katharine Kesler, Peter Prouse, Virginia Miller, Jack Lonzo, Hildegrade Arens; Additional members: Eileen Green, Manon Harder, Barney Hayes. Kathrine Hibben, Dan Holton. Barbara McCollough, Bob Meyers. Bancroft Nelson. Robert Southworlh. Mary Jean Voseipka. Marion Youell. BAUBLE AN D BELLS tumbles and clowns each year m gay Thespian endeavor. OFF Fall Semester Jack Lonzo Barney Hayes Barbara McCullough Kenneth Cartzdafner Miss Katharine Kester Spring Semester President Peter Prouse ice-President Rosalie Meub Secretary Virginia Miller Treasurer Murray Huss Adviser Miss Katharine Kester PAGE 82 Left to right — Top row: Lucille Nevins, Linnea Burman, Taber Whittlesey, Gertrude Ogden, Eleanor Wilkinson. Betty Blaleck; Second row: Schuyler Aijian, Donna Ruth Raymond, Fred- erick Langlord, Winifred Bowerman. Jesse Harvey, Emily Pollgreen, Owen Cooper, Olive Branch; First row: George Ricketts, Grace Wilkins, Cornelius List, Vera Boye, Mr. Paul Billeter, Mrs. Lucille Barrington. Robert Hess. Virginia Chamberlain; Additional members: Nellie Auld, Mary Bennett, Severina Bugge, Vema Clark, Violet Eglund. Virginia Hersey, Opal Hester, Helen Johnson, Jean Kirkpatrick, Minerva Mount, Lillian Palmberg, Leo Rand, Betty Ufford, Corinna Wilson, George Vaughn. BIBLE members seek lo iollow that path which the Master trod. Fall Semester June Rose Winkler Vera Boye Virginia Chamberlain Virginia Chamberlain Mr. Paul Billeter Mrs. Lucille Barrington President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser Adviser PAGE 83 Spring Semester Vera Boye Cornelius List Virginia Chamberlain Virginia Chamberlain Mr. Paul Billeter Mrs. Lucille Barrington :?S t-t- ' i . Left to right — Top row: Carolyn Rough. Thelma Westling, Betty Ravey, Marjorie Betlannier, Eleanor Roobian. Patricia McGough; Third row: Nettie Ready, Eugenia Sanders, Ruth Willard, Kay Bowers, Helen Kallshian, Rosa deWaard. Betty Willmarth; Second row: Mary Alice Whieldon, Ann Simsarian, Marie Wansner, Kaye Bumstead, Charlotte Heath, Mary Hendrickson, Mary Alice Gianetti, Eleanor Northrup; Front row: Martha Larkin, Nancy Kellogg. Mary Marsh, Roberta Vail, Miss Elizabeth Jensen, Leora Luce, Helen Brice, Joanna Pupis, Ruth Crawford; Additional members: Stella Norton, Lucille Evans, Kathleen Weight, Margaret Wheeler. BIG P upholds true sportsmanship in life as well as on the field Fall Semester Leora Luce Stella Norton Joanna Pupis Mary Marsh Miss Elizabeth Jensen President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 84 Spring Semester Leora Luce Roberta Vail Helen Brice Mary Marsh Miss Elizabeth Jensen Le ' t to right — Top row: Jean Alexander, Betty Pease. Doris Holden, Betty Parker, Diana Devereaux; Second row: Donna Hancock, Marian Potter, Margaret Burkholder, Eileen Fish, Anne McGill, Marjorie Barhite; Front row: Maxine Bowman, Maureen Shanahan, Florence Dickson, Dorothy Thomas, Miss May Walmsley, Catharine Cauble, Teresa Juan, Ruth Rock- wood; Additional members: Lavinia Bartholomew, Janet Runck. BRYDDOFETH stirs companionship among women of quiet disposition. R Fall Semester Catharine Cauble Jane Miller Ruth Rockwood Teresa Juan Miss May Walmsley President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 85 Spring Semester Catharine Cauble Dorothy Thomas Florence Dickson Teresa Juan Miss May Walmsley Lelt to right — Top row: Harry Clalworthy. Franic Bioran, Albert Spehr, Jack Goodell, Glen Pettit, Bill Stecker, Ronald Matthews; Second row: John Kilgore. Arthur Brewer, Frank Wood, Glen Hummer, Gilbert Brown. Donald Carson; Front Row: Andrew Waltman, Stewart Madin, Ray Simpson, Mr. Frank Wood, Vernon Leif, Glen Serres; Additional memb Bill Cahoone, Owen Cooper. George Kronmiller, Arthur Keene, Bob Leonard ' Leonard, Bob Magnuson, Jim Mathews, Elmo Switzer, Bud Temte, George West. lers: Bob C. D. Y. centers its activities around trips and athletic competition. Fall Semester Vernon Leif Jack Goodell Ronald Matthews Ronald Matthews Mr. Frank Wood President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 86 Spring Semester Ray Simpson Glenn Serres Bob Leonard Stewart Madin Mr. Frank Wood Wk M ' ij Left to right — Top row: Don Turner, Perry CuUey. Francis Sinnette, Ed Sawyer, Chester Radford; Front row: Bob Shears, Don Campbell. Howard Hitchcock, Mr. Russell Guthridge. Sam Sussman, Bob Engle; Additional members: Herman Englander, Bob Hanson, Donlyn Vivretle, Lyndon Vivrette, Peter Hillier, Donald Erdman. Bruce Kelly, Carl Uibelhoer, Paul Smith. CHESS men pass hours piratically checking each others ' kings. Fall Semester Sam Sussman Robert Engle Herman Englander Herman Englander Mr. Russell Guthridge President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 87 Spring Semester Sam Sussman Robert Engle Howard Hitchcock Howard Hitchcock Mr. Russell Guthridge Lell to right — Top row: Shigo Takayama. Harry Thomas. Lewis Minich; Third row: Don Emberson, Holland Behncke, loe Roslron, Bill Mann, Vartan Malian, Keith Emberson; Second row: Richard Bruce, James Wright, Robert Bolster. Don Wheeler. Jack Toothaker. Bob Hart; Front row: Bill Bouetl, John Kirsch. Giraldo Ares, Mr. Edward Cornelison. Charles Rostron, Albert Redding, Kenyon DeVore; Additional member: Charles Embrte. CIVIL TECH holds an open house in the technical labs once each year. Fall Semester Charles Rostron Bill Bouett Kenyon Devore John Kirsch Mr. Edward Cornelison President Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer Adviser PAGE 88 Spring Semester Giraldo Ares Bill Bouett Albert Redding John Kirsch Mr. Edward Cornelison Left to right— Top row: Marlon Melzer. Robert Engle, Robert deFord, Carl Deisenroth, Edison Montgomery; Front rov : Bethany Todd. Priscilla Moerdyke. Miss Mabel Perry. F ederic Parke. Patricia Skinner. Robert Dickinson; Additional members: Nellie Auld Marjone Barmettler. Louanne Bartlette. Kathleen Cartwright, lean Darsie. Clark Edwards. Allison Folsom. Evelyn Frederick. Virginia Harding, Charles Manning. Jack DeMara.s. Mary Grace McLean Patricia Nelson. John Scales, Bertha Mae Speicher. Helen Weiss. Bob Gerhart. CLIO quirks a curious eyebrow over history in the making. R Fall Semester Frederic Parke Patricia Nelson Patricia Skinrer Charles Manning Miss Mabel Perry- President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 89 Spring Semester Priscilla Moerdyke Bertha Mae Speicher Bethany Todd Robert Dickinson Miss Mabel Perry Left to right — Top row: Frances Wright. Catherine Cauble, Kildegard Arens. Dorothy Handy, Margaret Lenington; Second row: Winiired Walker, Helga Severeniz, RuiuT Ga rd- ner, Shizuko Fujimoto, Mamerlo Gambito, Betty De Haan; Front row: Santiago Baggao, Frances Drew, Miss Florence Diment, Ivan Wilson, Helen Summers, Alice Archer; Addi- tional members: Nicholas Arski, Elsie Fredin, Gerda Seeger, Deios West. Jehim Wong. « COSMOPOLITAN ioin hands around the world in token of good fellowship. 4 I Fall Semester Frances Drew Ivan Wilson Helen Summers Alice Archer Mi.ss Florence Diment President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 90 Spring Semester Ivan Wilson Santiago Baggao Helen Summers Alice Archer Miss Florence Diment Letl lo right Top row: Thomas Davis, Jack Keenan, Trevor Gardner, Harlan Murray, Wilson loncs, Francis Carlisle- From row: Marvin Pearson, John Wilhelm, Willard Olwin, Mr. Arthur Gehrig, Fred Good, Fred Park- Additional members: Charles Adams, Norman Andrews, Ramsey Armstrong, Nicholas Arski, Frank Barkelew Phillip Barry, Richard Beattie, Charles Belts, Harvey Blanchard, Kenneth Bodger, Harry Boiler, L. G. Bcrgeson, Clark Bower, Robert Brandt, Francis Carlisle, Donald Carson, Bob Craighead, Theodore Davis Gordon Earl, Vernon Elliot, Burt Ellis, Lindsay Fancher, Paul Feist, Guilford Frolich, George Gale Trevor Gardner James Glassco, Donald Goldthwaite, Fred Good, Charles Hains, Henry Halminski, Morris Hannon Norman Harris, James Hawkins, Clarence Heinrich, Robert Henderson, Morton Hilbert, Howard Hitchcock, John Holden, Milton HoUingsworth, Stuart Hopkins, Donald Hudson, James Hughes, Charles Hunter, William Ingall, Wilson Jones, Jack Jordan, Jack Keenan, W. L, Kennicott, Charles Larson. Elmer Laws, Dale Ledyard, E. J. List, Edwin Lorton, Frank Lowe, Robert Maddox, Alexis Marmach, Stuart McCuUough, Winthrop McSparran, George Maguire, Hal Mettler, George Moore, Jack Moore, Harlan Murray, Willard Olwin Frederic Parke, William Patchett, Marvin Pearson, Hubert Popenoe, Gilbert Powers, Jack Pralher, Paul Reichert, Arthur Reinhardt, Elliot Riehl, James Riherd, Francis Robertson, R. A. Rosanofi. William Russell, John Scales, Rudolf Schott, David SeLegue, Henry Siewerl, George Spriesterbach, William Thomson, Arvid Townsend, Curtis Ulrich, Edward Versaw, Jack Vibert, lames Vivrette, Francis Vore, John Walker, Don Weitzel, Don Wheeler, H. A. White, John Wilhelm, Richard Wingren, Harvey Witz, Ming Shek Wong, William Yallalee. ENGINEERING projects the building of bridges and metropolitan towers. Fall Semester Willard Olwin John Wilhelm Marvin Pearson Jack Keenan Mr. Arthur Gehrig President Vice-President Secretary Editor Adviser PAGE 91 Spring Semester Fred Good Frederic Parke Francis Carlisle Trevor Gardner Mr. Arthur Gehrig Leit to right — Top row: Dorothy Barron, Aletha Courtney. Ruth Porter; Second row: Mabel Fitzpatrick. Julia Summers, Janet Szymanske, Constance Read, Carolyn Read, Evelyn Free- man; Front row: Emilie Childs. Lois Riser. June Mathews. Miss Cora Simpson. Dorothy Wright, Gertrude Garrett. Virginia Hart. Marion Slater; Additional members: Yalette Counts, Opal Hester, Mildred Kime, Mary Springsted, Irene Wilson. Georgianna Brown. EPICOMEGA fosters an appreciation of the might of skillet and ladle. Fall Semester June Mathews Gerry Williams Georgianna Brown Lois Riser Miss Cora Simpson President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 92 R S Spring Semester Dorothy Wright Gertrude Garrett Virginia Hart Marion Slater Miss Cora Simpson I I Leit to right — Top row: Thomas Prucha, Weldon Powers, Larkin Williams, Andrew Clark. Frederic Carpenter; Second row: Frank Ryker, Harold Cleveland, Peter Geddes, Leonard Marshall, Bob Fromhold, Carlton Fromhold; Front row: Bill Caldwell, Hal Metiler, Bill Fretie:. Harper Welch, Ralph Butteriield, Bob Orozco, George Ricketts; Additional members: Chuck Davis, Dwight Moyfield. Frank Wark. EUTERPEANS sing for their supper and garner widespread applau.se. R Fall Semester Harper Welch Frank Ryker Larkin Williams Larkin Williams Andrew Clark Miss Carrie Sharp President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Manager Adviser PAGE 93 Spring Semester Frank Ryker Andrew Clark Harold Cleveland Harold Cleveland Andrew Clark Miss Carrie Sharp Left to right — Top row: Bob Robinson, Estel Sitze, Herbert Gage. Jedd Farr, Horace McBumie, Jack Pickup, Walter Edwards; Third row; Dan Fleming, Harold West, Cloudsly French, Walter Meyer, Bob Wagar, Jack Snipes, Harry Dering, Clarence Hoornbeek; Second row: Virgil Shoemaker, Everett Hewitt, Royce Lang, Art Lusher, Stanley Rishel, Murlin Carruthers, Ross Lewis; Front row: Don Barnes, John Senour, Lloyd Hargreaves, Horace Self, Mr. William Kohner, Bill Lowe, Don Frank, Raymond Swenson; Additional member. Walter Edgeworth. FOR E STRY club promotes interest m our woodland conservation. Fall Semester Horace Self Estel Sitze Horace McBurnie Cloudsly French Mr. William Kohner President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 94 Spring Semester Horace Self Estel Sitze Horace McBurnie Cloudsly French Mr. William Kohner ft -ft Leil to right — Top row; Kenneth Harter, Orval Larkey. Charles Cordray; Second row: Jack Neary, Kenneth Clark, John Manley, Jim Bruce, Lloyd VanBuskirk; Front row: Lawrence Gray, Don Miller, Leonard McGee, Gilbert Higbee, Homer McDowell, Al Kuhn; Additional members: Ed Boykin, Dick Bruce, Kenneth Gray, Frank Hillier, Lunsford Jones, Myers Jones. Lindley Macey, Bill McCallum, Jim Miller, Edwin Osborn, Kermit Rima, Bill Wa ' ser, Jim Carpenter. JUNIOR LIONS integrates the student with the city ' s business world. R Fall Semester Gilbert I-[igbee BUI McCallum Homer McDowell Len McGee Mr. Virgil Truman President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 95 Spring Semester Gilbert Higbee Bill McCallum Homer McDowell Len McGee Mr. Virgil Truman L-il to right— Top row: Karcelo Ordones. Sabino Pradas. Norberlo Oalin. Aliredo Galez; Front row: Mamerto Gambito, Giraldo Ares, Mr. Archie Turrell, Santiago Baggao, Vicente Bugayong. LA F I L I P I N A touches the Filipino ' s heart as a reminder of home. Fall Semester Giraldo Ares Santiago Baggao Vicente Bugayong Vicente Bugayong Mr. Archie Turrell President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 96 R S Spring Semester Giraldo Ares Santiago Baggao Vicente Bugayong Vicente Bugayong Mr. Archie Turrell L Left to right — Top row: Dick Behm, Joe Phillips, Leonard Rhone; Second row: Robert Linnan. Forrest Grube, Leroy Petersen. Guy Martin, Bill Stitt; Front Row: Robert J. Smith, Herbert Radcmacher, Forrest Brooks, David Patrick, Bert McCandless, Ned Vessey; Additional mem- be.s: McFadden Parker. Allan Chambers. MAGNATURA mixes business and pleasure at their auto show de luxe. Fall Semester David Patrick Bert McCandless Allan Chambers Forrest Brooks Mr. Charles Sydnor President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 97 Spring Semester David Patrick Joe Pliillips Bert McCandless Forrest Brooks Mr. Charles Sydnor Per lames Anderson, Jean Bailomeau, Dave Barry, Nancy Beck, Georqe Beck, Tom Beckett, Theresa ckett Aqnes Begley, Margaret Begley, Dorothy Bidwell, Jack Bruce, Milton Benzick, Al Casale, Lucy Castro, ' veland, Eleanor Comeau, Virginia Comeau, Mary Lou Curry, Elizabeth Doyle, Agnes Donovan, Carl Bernard Feldman, Joe Fischer, Paul Fischer, Cecilia Maria Fisher, Flint, Virginia Flynn, Jane Flynn, Margaret Frindt, Gena Gasponi, Ma jnter, Mary Beth Gunter, Louise Halstead, Irene Hanson, Ed Hart, Mary Ho Jack Jordan, Theresa Juan, Margaret Kaa, Larry Kelly, John Kirsch, Ir Edith CI Detzell, Mary Emery, Dorothy Flint, Delores Ralph Green, Frank G Hughes, Don Jordan, Bob Lii Mabel Fitzpatrick, jebel, irothy eille, Jane Mangan, Mildred Mangan, Molly Miltmore, Charles Muck, Anne Muck. Mulligan, Frank Murphy, Ann Murphy, Jean Newman, Mr. James O ' Mara, Phyllis Palchett, Maria Peters, Mary Phelan, Theresa Porter, Frank Reichert, Paul Reichert, Gorris Reese, Beatrice Reidel, George Rettie, Mary Jane Robinson, Virginia Rogers, Janet Runck, Delbert Sargent, Russell Schmidt, Eileen Shackelton, Maureen Shanahan, John Shanahan, Edward Sweeney, Carl Uibelhoer, Jeanne Vaillancourt, Gregory Van- Brunt, Natalie VanKoon, Joan Voikavich, Howard Weakley, Marion Weakley, Robert Wegqe, Helen Whalen, George Wilbur, John Winkler, Agnes Zbornick. NEWMAN preserves m fellowship the name of a religious man. Fall Semester Jack Jordan Virginia Flynn Dorothy Bidwell Mary Beth Gunter Frank Murphy Miss Lois Glidden President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 98 Spring Semester Jack Jordan Frank Murphy Dorothy Bidwell Mary Beth Gunter George Rettie Miss Lois Glidden Left to right — Top row: Carter Cordner, Bud Paulson, Robert Engle; Second row: Paul Monroe, Ben Ludden, Marjorie Barmettler, Donald Hopkins; Front row: Chester Radford. Taylor Green, Miss Mae Walmsley, Jean Backus, Peter Prouse; Additional members: Dick Demorest, Mary Alice Gianetti, Eileen Green, Hazel loslin, Dow Parkes, Florabel Sleath, Pauline Stevens, Maxine Thompson, Fred Warriner. NOM DE PLUME spurs the romantic scribe to deeds of literary rambling. O F Fall Semester Jean Backus Taylor Green Peter Prouse Peter Prouse Miss Mae Walmsley President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 99 Spring Semester Jean Backus Taylor Green Peter Prouse Peter Prouse Miss Mae Walmsley Left to right— Top row: George Matthews, Harry Ihan, Leon Paradee, George Cooper, Arvid Townsend, Elton Stirling, Phillip Mishler; Second row: Thomas Hamilton. lack Andersou. Robert Palmer, Al Goeppinger, Boardman Reed, Frank Pearman, William Hatch, Horace McBumie, James Barry; Front row: John Reifsteck, Harry Findley, Melvin Cundiff, Rudolf Schott, Sergeant William Morgan. Don WeitzeL Gurney Paule, Clurman Bibb, Rush Blodgett; Additional members: Robert Cromwell, Nat Hughes, Robert Leigh, Wilson Powers. Paul Reichert, Henry Shaw. N O N C O M S encourages the maintenance of honorable military tradition. Fall Semester Hadley Eliker Don Weitzel George Card George Card Sergeant William Morgan President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 100 Spring Semester Frank Pearman Don Weitzel Gurney Paule Gurney Paule Sergeant William Morgan Left to right — Top row: Ivoiine Brown, Betty Emerson, Margarette Freeman, Consance Orozco, Elsa Sauer; Second row: Carol Clapp, Eunice Throne, Treva Scott, Miss Lula Parmley, Lois Wilson, Virginia Vail; Front row: Beth Lamb, Kay Pet ' it, Frances Goodsell, Dorothy Holmes, Thelma Lucas, Marybeth Sachse. NYSAEAN SINGERS sing a song of six pence and charm with sweet music. Fall Semester Spring Semester Dorothy Holmes President Dorothy Holmes Kay Pettit Vice-President Marybeth Sachse Beth Lamb Secretary Thelma Lucas Beth Lamb Treasurer Thelma Lucas Miss Lula Parmley Adviser PAGE 101 Miss Lula Parmley Left to right — Top row: John Overholtzer, Spencer Derby, Herbert Lilly, LeRoy Lusher; Front row: Glen Hummer, Bill Weil, Mr. Edwin VanAmringe, Bob Brown, Edward Maroder; Additional members: Harvey Eaton, Phil Griegen, Howard Hitchcock, Nat Hughes, Frank Reichert, Don Wood. PHILATELIC sets no limit upon the nature of miscellanea collected. Fall Semester Bob Brown Bill Weil Edward Maroder Edward Maroder Mr. E. V. Von Amringe President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 102 Spring Semester Bob Brown Bill Weil Edward Maroder Edward Maroder Mr. E. V. Van Amringe Left to right — Top row: Kay West, Ray Burr, Elizabeth Stephens, Eldon Gordon, Doris Clarke, Bud Paulson; Third row: Jane Louise Clary, James Ross, Patricia Denslow, Elaine Heacock, Had ' .ey Eliker, Elinor Brown, Edward Darnell, Natalie Theisen; Second row: Helene Neu- brand. Jack Swan, Bet y Bruner, Donald Mansfield, Severene Callahan, George Longworth, Barbara Barnett, Tom Pollock; Front row: Donald Neely, Constance Johnston, Bill McGowan. Mary Lou Perry, Miss Elizabeth Keppie, Norbert Bundschuh, Nancie Allan, Andrew Carna- han, Patricia Skinner; Additional members: George Bessolo, Harold Cleveland, Margaret Greeman, Esther Shafer, Carrol Tainter, Fred Warriner, Pauline Stevens, Louise Stevens, Newell Barett. PLAYERS GUILD dons greasepaint annually and cavorts behind footlights. Fall Semester Norbert Bundschuh Constance Johnston Patricia Skinner George Longworth Miss Elizabeth Keppie President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 103 Spring Semester Norbert Bundschuh Mary Lou Perry Nancie Allan Bill McGowan Miss Elizabeth Keppie Left to right— Top row: Jean McEuen. Betty Jane Knapp; Second row William Pearson, James Lawless, Bob Brown, William Fretter, Robert Nadey; Front row: Fred Good, Ralph Haver, Dorothy Fretter. Mr. Chalmer Shaver, Miss Ruth Conrad, Mr. Arthur Gehrig; Additional members: John Allan, Norman Andrew, Sara Ellen Andrew, Nell Auld, William Bentley, Charles Belts, John Billheimer, Rush Blodget, Kenneth Bodger, William Borders, Albert Broderick, Miss Cora Brooks, D. H. Downdes, Eleanor Downer, Mr. O. G. Dressier, Marjorie Bunting, Miss A. S. Butler, Robert Clark, Mr. Glen Cline, Leon Coates, Lena Contino, Mr. L. G. Damsgard, Mr. E. V. Davis, Thomas Davis, Miss N. E. Denning, Frank Dische, Jack Garrison, Shirley Duncan, William Dunham, Mr. C. F. Eckels, Spencer Edwards, Herman Englander, Donald Erdman, Mary Field, Dorothy Flint Mr. G. E. Forster, James Hughes, Raymond Hunter, Miss Adelaide Jameson, Wesley Jenson, Mr. G. W. Josten Elizabeth Junker, Mr. W. G. Kohner, Sam Kuramato, Miss R. Lewis, Miss Mabel lien, Mr. O. Lilliland, MisE M. B. Pierson, Miss Edna Plummer, Thomas Pollock, Gilbert Powers, Vernon Greenleaf, Mr. R. M. Guthridge Edward Hall, George Hatch, James Hawkes, Mr, Harry Haworth, Howard Hitchcock, Kenyon Howard, Mr, Arthur Howells, Duncan MacArthur, Miss J. I. Meikle, Dale Miller, Verne Mitchell, Mr. Paul Motsinger Miss E. B. Mundy, Mr. F. L. Newgarl, Charles Niswander, Martha Oliphant, W. A. Olwin, Mr. D. M. Spaulding George Spriestersbach, Miss Margaret Stason, Mr. P. W. Stoner, Ruth Townsend, Mr. E. V. Van Amringe, Bernard Rosenberg, Kenji Sameshima, Elsa Sauer, Miss Pearle Shewman, Henry Siewert, Mr. Russell Skeelers Mary Skelton, Betty Southern, Peter VanEtten, George Vauahan, Jean Warren, Miss Grace Webster, John Wennerberg, Harriet Westphaln, Helen Whalen, Isabel White, Norman Williams, Mr. G. E. Wilson, Paul Wilson, Joel Winans. S C I - M A T H drav s upon the scientist and mathematician of tomorrow. R Fall Semester James Lawless Bstty Jane Knapp Robert Nadey William Fretter Mr. Chalmer Shaver President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 104 Spring Semester James Lawless Betty Jane Knapp Robert Nadey William Fretter Mr. Chalmer Shaver leye Gardner SILVER SCREEN manipulates stage devices and the score board for games. Fall Semester Norman Williams President Lyndon Vivrette Secretary Lyndon Vivrette Treasurer Jim Mathews Stage Manager Mr. Francis McGough Adviser Mr, Archibald Wedemeye r Adviser PAGE 105 Spring Semester Norman Williams Donlyn Vivrette Donlyn Vivrette Jim Mathews Mr. Francis McGough Mr, Archibald Wedemeyer Left to right — Top row: Randall Hinshaw, John Cooney; Second row; George Beck, Jean Slolba, Rufus Gardner, Merritt Hewitt, James Joyce; Front row: Jean Smith, Helen Buob, Mrs. John Berryman, Blanche Lunk, Mildred Kime, Esther Gray; Additional members: Howell Breece, Robert Engle, Margaret Huckett, Geraldine Williams. TOME ponders over many a curious volume of forgotten lore. Fall Semester Mildred Kime Blanche L.unk Geraldine Williams Geraldine Williams Miss Eleanor Homer Mrs. John Berryman President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser Adviser PAGE 106 Spring Semester Blanche Lunk Howell Breece Helen Buob Helen Buob Miss Eleanor Homer Mrs. John Berryman Leit to right— Top row: Misa Kondo, Bert Doi. Haruko Shimamoto, Jessie Koyama; Third row: Joe Mimake. Kimi Tomoyasu, Hughes Tsuneishi, Takao Noguchi, Yoneko Aisawa. Maisuo Kunihiro. Grace Watanabe; Second row: John Takeshige, Helen Kako, Kilaoo Yamada, Anna Sato. Kaye Mikuriya. Yoshiko Homma, Mitsuo Kunihiro, Yuriko Ikeda; Front row; Shig Kawai. Manabu Tcnaka. Sophie Tajima, Dr. Henry VVeitzel, Hideo Takayama. Emily Uchiyama. Henry Suenaga; Additional members: Shizuko Fujimoto, Saeko Hohn, Lorna Kato. Shizuo Kunihiro, Yuriko Koyama, Arinori Komore, Sam Kuramato, Chiyeko Mikuriya. Mitsuo Nomura, Sho Nomura, Yumi Ogura, Fumiko Sameshima, Walter Suda, William Takahashi. Tomoye Takasugi. Frank Tanaka. Takeko Wakiji. Masato Munekiyo. TRIPLE J draws closer students from the land of the rising sun. Fall Semester Frank Tanaka Sam Kuramato Sophie Tajima Henry Suenaga Dr. Henry Weitzel President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 107 Spring Semester Frank Tanaka Hideo Takayama Sophie Tajima Shig Kawai Dr. Henry Weitzel Left to right — Top row: Virginia Sydnor. Edison Montgomery, Bertha Mae Soeicher, Clark Edwards. Mary Helen Johnston. Jean Darsie; Front row; Virginia Harding, Bethany Todd, Carl Deisenroth. Miss Elizabeth McKinney, Priscilla Moerdyke, Helen Brown, Elizabeth Stephens; Additional members: Patricia Skinner. Darlene Andrus, Rita Stough, Jean Stewart, Fred Parke, Paul Munroe, TRIPLE S is named from Alice ' s ships and shoes and sealing-wax. Fall Semester Carl Deisenroth President Patricia Nelson Vice-President Patricia Skinner Secretary Clark Edwards Treasurer Miss Elizabeth McK inney Adviser PAGE 1 Spring Semester Carl Deisenroth Bertha Mae Speicher Priscilla Moerdyke Bethany Todd Miss Elizabeth McKinney Left to right — Top row: Ralph Haver. Alex Goldie, John Schofield, Howard Morgridge; Sec- ond row: Walt Scott, bates Elliot ' , Ito Isuke, Normland Kemper, Bill Lovatt; Front row: LaVern Swansen. Mr. William Stone, C. B. Morris, William McCoy, George Mathews. Addi- tional members: Bill Cahoone, John Daniell, Jack DeLonge, Bob Dickinson, J. C. Hardy. John Kinch. Lenore Vivian. Beverly Morant. Leroy Noher. Emmet Ries. Bernard Rosenberg. Gertrude Stoops. Hickeo Takayama. Del West. George West, Julia Stucky, Alice Lembke, Ralph Minnick, Luther Eskijian. T SQUARE stimulates an eye for beauty among engineering students. Fall Semester John Schoiield Luther Eskijian Ralph Minnick Alice Lembke Brooke Ivlorris Mr. V illiam Stone President Vice-President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 109 Spring Semester Brooke Morris LaVern Swansen Maurice McCoy Alice Lembke Julia Stucky Mr. William Stone Hulh Willard, Patr: Left to right — Top row: Eugenia Sanders Marjorie Bellannier, Betty Ravey, Eleanor Elizabeth Willmarth. Thelma Westling, Mis Additional members: Flora Allen, Saraelli Natalie Bestaqne, Rita Brant, Madelene Browi Cerny, Ruth Crawford. Marqaret Dorsey, Jean Mary Lou Dougan, Alberta English, Lucille Eva Frederick, Yvette Gaige, Gertrude Garret, Dolo Wilma Hatch, Charlotte Heath, Julia Heinemar Kading, Helen Kallshian, Joan Kellogg, Barbai Molho, Mary Martha Moreland, Helen Morley, Lorraine Parrish, Oquilla Newfield Read, Nettie Ready, Eleanor Roobian, Carolyn Rough, Retha Rousseau, Elsa Sauer, Dorothy Sibley, Gertrude Stoops, Mildred Stoner, Madeline Stouqh, Rita Stouqh, May Swanstrom, Mary Tamer, Marie Wansner, Barbara Ward, Dora Weaver, Mary Alice Whieldon, Mary Alice Wright. Winifred VanGilluwe, Barbara Butteriield. Betty Carter, Dorothy Chamberlain, Lois Chisholm, Carol Daufrick, Violette Deley, Claire Fish, Natalie Graverson, Lucille Henry, Marion Home, Marjorie McMillen, Jetsy Posthuma, Marcia Quick, Marie Roberts, Ann Simsarian, Eleanor Spranqer, Helen Thomas, Virginia Throop, St. Claire Warren, Phoebe Howell. McGough; Second row. Northrup. Helen Brice, Martha Larkin. Leora Luce; Front row: Mildred Margadant, Nancy Kellogq, Joanna Pupis, Mary Marsh; 1 Andrews, Edith Bakke, Bernice Beaumont, Martha Bestaqne, own, Elisabeth Budd, Kaye Bumstead, Dorothy Carroll, Evelyn nn Darsie, Margaret DeHaan, Helena deWaard, Rosa deWaard, V, Catherine Forsythe, Dorothy Foster, Evelyn or Gehrig, Alyss Greer, Marquerite Haskins, kson, Catherine Heller, Harriette Jones, Lena IS, Moya Filde es Gates, Elec Mary Hendri 3 Landis, Edn W. A. A. unites Amazons to exhibit their prowess in athletics. Fall Semester Nancy Kellogg Thelma Westling Joanna Pupis Mary Marsh Miss Mildred Margadant President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 110 Spring Semester Nancy Kellogg Thelma Westling Joanna Pupis Leora Luce Miss Mildred Margadant Left to right — Top row: Darline Andrus, Bill Mann, Lucille Simpson, Jessie Mowatt, Bette Bennett, Charles Embree; Second row: Chester Radford, Beatrice BuUock, Robert Bream, Sarah Mowatt, Charles Rostron, Lyllis Zahn, Carol Clark; Front row: Patricia Skinner, Morton Dryden, Mr. Frank Baker, Helen Buob, Ruth Johnson, Joe Rostron, Mary Bennett; Additional members: Wilma Baldwin, Kathleen Beirdsall, Reginald Bailey, Barbara Butler- field, Ruby Ferris, Howard Hillis, Emily Krulish, Bob Reece, Jean Warren. WESTMINSTER binds in camaraderie young people of Presbyterian faith. Fall Semester Morton Dryden Darline Andrus Helen Buob Chester Radford Mr. Frank Baker President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 111 Spring Semester Morton Dryden Helen Buob Ruth Johnson Joe Rostron Mr. Frank Baker Lelt to right— Top row: Milton Davis, Lenn Seers, Edison Monl Bob Dicltinson, Paul Smith, Ed Brinley, Ray Simpson, Milton V alo Brown, Don Speer; Additional members; Norman Getz, Milton B deFord, J. C. Hardy, Jack Keenan, Dale Ledyard, Don Ma Roberts, LaVern Swansen, Tohn Whieldon, Bill Sleeker, Eugene F Wachtel, Archie Murphy, Matthew Slavin, Wilmarlh Suderman, L Bill Wilson, Carl Shaner, Wilbur Antisdale, John Dibbern, Will: Shizuo Kunihiro, James Moilat, Ronald Pulling, George Waltman, Arthur Brewer, Donald Carson, Glen Hummer, Re Serres, Al Spehr, Ed lohnson. Gene Anderson, Frank Goddc Nelson Price, George Sabin, Robert Truman. roni row: Kenneth Cartzdainer, Leif, Mr. O. G. Dressier, Gilbert Imer Anderson, Ray Christ, Bob Id, George Mathews, Don Packard, Morris Fisher, Gordon Goble, Peter Hillier, Francis sy Weber, Byron Williams, Robert Felby, John Hopkins, bert L Albert SoHit, John Goodell, rd, Stewart Madin, Glen Pettit, Gle Harry Gruwell, Bill McArlhur, Al Petravi( Y. M. C. A. projects deveiopment of character m its widest sense. Fall Semester Spring Semester Edison Montgomery Gerry Montjoy Gilbert Brown Paul Smith Mi-. Paul Somers Mr. O. G. Dressier President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser Adviser Vernon Leif Milton Valois Gilbert Brown Paul Smith Mr. Paul Somers Mr. O. G. Dressier Leil to right— Top row: Helen Phillips, Alice Archer, Dora Weaver; Second row: Dorothy Handy, Alberta Buhse Aline Clark, Dorothy Flint, Barbara Kimball; Front row: Mary Alice Whieldon, Helen McManus, Lee laynes Margaret Munn, Miss Mary Smyer, Violet Jardine; Additional members: Harriet Aldrich, Geraldme Anderson Jean Alexander, Nellie Auld, Betty Backus, Betty Blalock, Mary Buckner, Mary Camp, Dorothy Chamberlain, Emilie Childs, Ruth Crawford, Frances Curry, Mary Lou Curry, Margaret DeHaan, Diana Devereaux, Eileen Dougherty, Virginia Dean, Evelyn Ehlers, Mary Emery, Mary Ella Fahrmeyer, Mary Garlz, LaVonne Garber, Carol Getty, Orpha Gooden, Virginia Grace, Miss Eleanor Homer, Cynthia Hull, Margaret Kaa, Miss Kath Eleanor Kollard, Barbara Landis, Margaret Lenington, Betty Le Meverden, Ruth Michal, Elizabeth Parker, Miss Lula Parmle Rockwood, Pauline Russell, Elsie Sawyer, loan Schaupp, Jean Florence Slater, Louise Snorlum, Jean Smith, Grace Sp) Thompson, Virginia Throop, Emma Jean Topping, Valeria Lenore Wilcox, Grace Wood, Lyllis Zahn. e Kester, Bertha King, Mary Ellen King, Louise McLane, June Mathews, Katherine liss Mabel Perry. Emily Rettchey, Ruth an ' Scoll, Patty Skinner, Miss Winilred Skinner, nkle, Georgianna Stacy, lean Teller, Eleanor VanWye, Grace Webster, Alice May Wheeler, Y. W. C. A. centers attention on fellowship and the hope of world peace. R Fall Semester Ruth Crawlord Violet Jardine LaVonne Garber Lee Joyner Miss Mary Smyer President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 113 Spring Semester Ruth Crawford Violet Jardine LaVonne Garber Lee Joyner Miss Mary Smyer PASADENA CAMPUS RESTRICTIVE CLUBS RESTRICTIVE CLUB COUNCIL Left to right — Top row: Mary Beth Gunter. Phrenocosmia; Lloyd Howard, Roslrum; Betty Brown, Philothian; John Grund, XXVI; Ruth Schlendering, Sorelle; Glenard Burns, Zama; Betly Tyrrell, One Club; Fourth row: Forest Newton, Zyro; Valoris Layne, Abracadabra- lames Hawkins, Rostrum; Caryl Moon, Pamphile; Bill Macbeth, Zama; Jacqueline TulL Philothian; Maxine Ward, Abracadabra; Betty Berquist, Pamphile; Third row: Helen Wadsworth, Aeolian; William Bowling, Zyro; Alice Flynn, Albibetes; Winston Shacklelord, XXVI; Margaret Newlin, Albibetes; Miles Kingsley, O. S. F.; Lucille Spelts, Phenix; Rosa deWaard, Filogian; Mary Marsh, Filogian; Second row: Bertille Glanville, Alphometa; Jerry Robinson, Phrenocosmia; Jane Hazenbush, One Club; Jack Keenan, Phatian; Eloise Jones, Aeolian; Herbert Lilly, Phatian; Dorothy Sayers, Tioga; Bill Lawson, Areopagite; Janet Meub, Tioga; Front row: Dee Johnson, Areopagite; Roselyn Britt, Phenix; Bill Haskins, O. S. F.; Arlene Wopschall, Alphometa, Vice-President II; Philip Storm, Baccalaureate, President II; Ed Raymond, Baccalaureate, President I; Barbara Wade, The Club, Secre- tary II; Charles Casserly, M. O. S., Treasurer II; Barbara O ' Neill, The Club; Charles Love, Amph on; Additional officers: Kay Butler. Vice-President I; Virginia Petrequin, Secretary I; Alan Hays, Treasurer I. Restrictive clubs improved their general character on the cam- pus and within the city by pro- moting a much friendlier feeling between club members and non-organization students; En- forcement of the no freshman rushing rule and the abolition of downtown newspaper pub- PAGE 115 licity were factors contributing toward this end. Through their efforts to develop social poise and discretion they offered com- panionship of undisputed value. This year, more than ever be- fore, outside activities endorsed by the junior college experi- enced the support of the clubs. ABRACADABRA f Ch ( Left to right — Top row: Virginia Lovelady, Betty June Ward, Roberta LaRue, Ellen Jones; Second row: Ivonne Brown, Muriel Cowan, Catherine McFarland, Lillian Sandstrom. Margaret Frindt. Dorothy Walsworth; Front row: Christel Sharp, Maxine Ward, Mary Bull. Miss Muriel Emerson. Valoris Layne, Eleanor Roobian; Additional members: Eloise Brest, Connie Drayer, Leslie Hemler, Merle LaRue, Gladys Morris. o I c s Fall Semester Connie Drayer Mary Bull Eloise Brest Gladys Morris Valoris Layne Miss Muriel Emerson President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 116 Spring Semester Mary Bull Maxine Ward Valoris Layne Christel Sharp Eleanor Roobian Miss Muriel Emerson AEOLIAN O ► A 4i aEl Mi ■W ' ■ m ■ 1 K ' . B|1 B ' - ' l 1 5 m 4 J M m f y- • v ' Leil to right- Top row: Betty Hatch, Anna Katherine Jones, Barbara Henry , Virginia Greene, Dorothy Brow er. Marietta Sprankle; Second row: Maxine Heard, Helen Cochran, Natalie White, Helen Wadsworth Margery Reibold, Ho berta Wilson, Charlotte Blackston e, Betty Leach; Front row: Virginia Snipes, Marjorie S rver, Marjorie Belts, Alta Paquette, Miss Myrna Wilson, Eloise Jones, Edith Reynard, Gla dys Jones 1 ¥ ¥ I C E R s Fall Semester Virginia Davis Eloise Jones Gladys Jones Marjorie Betis Virginia Snipes Miss Myrna Wilson President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 117 Spring Semester Eloise Jones Aha Paquette Marjorie Betts Edith Reynard Marjorie Sorver Miss Myina Wilson ALBIBETES Leit to right — Top row: Marlowe Giles, Betty Burton, Elinor Randall, Margaret Davis; Third row: Evelyn Bean, Barbara Holtzman, Dorothy Shoebridge, Lucile Stover, lean Harris; Second row: Priscilla Moerdyke, Mary Helen Johnston, Ruth Crawford, Virginia Harl, Patricia Ingham, Jane Jessamine; Front row; Carolyn Munn, Barbara Bushnell, Alice Fiynn, M S3 Edith Wilherell, Margaret Newlin, Jean Darsie; Additional members: Helen Brown, Virginia Cromwell, Sarita Henderson. O S Fall Semester Margaret Newlin Helen Brown Jarita Henderson Carolyn Munn Barbara Bushnell Miss Edith Witherell President Vice-President Secretary- Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 118 Spring Semester Alice Flynn Helen Brown Patricia Ingham Carolyn Munn Margaret Newlin Miss Edith Witherell ALPHOMETA Leil to right — Top row: Jean Scott. Maxine Washburn, Beulah Cox, Merrie Booth, Shirley Williams, Jean Sieghold, Lydelte Everard; Second row: Polly Clapp, Jeannelte Moore, Ruth Snead, Carol Crum, Phyllis Barlo, Virginia Crandall, Kay lames; Front row: Marjorie Bettannier, Mary Lou McConnelly, Carol Clapp, Arlene Wopschall, Miss Jewel Bennett, Berlille Glanville, Emily Bettannier. Suzanne Hot; Additional members: E dith Kuhlman, Mary Shepard, Betty Stillwell, Natalie Theisen. O S Fall Semester BertiUe Glanville Sue Hof Lydette Everard Emily Bettannier Jean Sieghold Mi.ss Jewel Bennett President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 119 Spring Semester Arlene V opschall Carol Clapp Mary Lou McConnelly Mary Shepard Marjorie Bettannier Miss Jewel Bennett A M P H I O N B i-S t_JL Loi. to right — Top rovr. Bill Cofiin, Guillord Sandusky, Bob Borden, Ken Kaler, Arthur Harwood, Everett Nicho ' son; Third row: Marlowe Jones, John HoUowell, Charles Scott, Curtis Davis. John Reifsteck, Stanley Smith, Kenneth Wells; Second row: Edward Murfelt, Howard Miller. Bill Molr, Lewis Moore, Jason Lee, James Martin, Russell Snyder, Stanley Meacham; F.ont row: Henry Dake, Laurence Daily, Baalis Grubbs, Charles Lowe, Mr. Audre Stong, Merle Hagemeyer, Russell Cochran, Bill Boland, Ted Fisher; Additional members: Jack Carhait, Ellsworth Replogle. ¥ O F F I C E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester Merle Hagemeyer President Charles Love Charles Love Vice-President Baalis Grubbs Laurence Daily Secretary Laurence Daily Ru.s.sell Cochran Treasurer Russell Cochran Mr. Audre Stong Adviser PAGE 120 Mr. Audre Stong AREOPAGITES ft ft Left to righl— Top row: Ray Burby, Dean Griggs, Bruce Winton, Bob Scott; Second row: Nat Calhoun. Wilbur Aikin, Joe Phillips. Stuart McCuUough, John Sandidge. Bob Cort; Front row: Craig McLaughlin. DeLeal Johnston. Bill Lawson. Mr Earl Davis. J.rn Parsons. Bob Baker. Gordon Eby; Additional members: Trevor Gardner. Fred Good. Arnold Hansen. Phil Hawgood. Hal Mettler. ]im Ross, Clili Ward. Morris Hannon. ¥ O F F I c E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester James Parsons President Bill Lawson Bob Baker Vice-President DeLeal Johnston Gordon Eby Secretary Bob Cort Bill Lawson Treasurer Ciaig McLaughlin Mr. Earl Davis Adviser PAGE 121 Mr Earl Davis BACCALAUREATE L3:t to righ; — Top row: Richard McBride, Don Edwin, George McCord, Francis McEachen; Second row: Bob Galbraith, Don Blush, Elliott Riehl, Fred Wickman, Alan Burke; Front row; Barney McCoy, Fred Fisher, Philip Storm, Norman Buck, Ed Raymond; Additional members: Fletcher Haight, Robert Rockwood, Burl Watson, George Wilber. o F ' I R S Fall Semester Edwin Raymond Burl Watson Fred Wickman Richard McBride Major Geoffrey Galwey President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 122 Spring Semester Philip Storm Norman Buck Barney McCay Fred Fisher Major Geoffrey Galwey D. S. R Leit to riqht-Top row: Sam Foster. Robert Ford, Tom Sommerville; Second row: Alfred Hass ' er, ames Srafford. Elmer Mortor,. John Mulvaney. Keith Cave: Front row: Jack V ber . SexferPaddock, Howard Gwynn, lames Couchman. Leroy Tyson, Ronald Swanson.Addi- UonLTr embe ' .s Ray Kuhn, Harold Rice. Earl Schroeder. Joe Starbuck, Ke.th VanPatten. o I c S Fall Semester Ronald Swanson Elmer Morton Jim Couchman James Stafford Dr, Glenn Lembke President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 123 Spring Semester Jim Couchman Howard Gwynn Leroy Tyson Earl Schroeder Dr. Glenn Lembke F I L O G I A N Lei! to right — Top row: Carolyn Farris, Eleanor Fowls. Helena deWaard, Jane Hare, Betty Berry. Lorene Whiltemore, Ruth Meverden. Barbara Welch; Second row: Frances Brockhaus, More ' and Kortkamp, Ruth Jones. Lorraine Petsel. Helen Morley. Marion Dilworth, Edith Knopf. Leora Luce; Front row: Margaret Dorsey. Sue Sullivan, Maxine Thompson, Virginia Blackwood, Mary Marsh. Rosa deWaard, Nancy Kellogg, Mary Mapp, Anona Alexander; Additional members: Lucille Thorpe, Helen Vaughn, Lillian Wallis. O 4 I C S Fall Semester Rosa deWaard Mary Marsh Maxine Thompson Helen Morley Anona Alexander Miss Elizabeth Turner President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 124 Spring Semester Rosa deWaard Nancy Kellogg Mary Mapp Virginia Blackwood Anona Alexander Miss Elizabeth Turner G U N A I K E Left to right — Top row: Barbara HoUingsworth, Barbara McCuUough. Ada Mae Shell, Mary LeBaron; Second row: Dorothy Barnard, Ehzabeth Coseboom, Kay Fordyce, lane Ross, Ada Nichols; Front row: Phyllis Lieohart, Mudge Tindall, Bet ' y Carter, Joanna Pupis, Madeline Hills, Dorothy Ellison; Additional members: Virginia Daly, Myrian Edminston, Dorothy Greeves. Rae Henrietta, Mary Kingston, Beatrice Linne. O S Fall Semester Betty Carter Beatrice Linne Mudge Tindall Virginia Daly Myrian Edminston Mrs. Amy Grau Miller President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 125 Spring Semester Joanna Pupis Madeline Hillis Phyliss Liephart Dorothy Ellison Myrian Edminston Mrs. Amy Grau Miller M. O. S. Leit to right — Top row: Bob Riddell, Eberle Espey. Russell Jack, Bob Neale; Second row: Phil Monroe. Andy Bird, Crossan Hays, Herb Hughes, Alan Hays; Front row: Harris McDonald. Bob Thomas. Newton Cox. Charles Casserly. Jim Herbold, Holy Wood; Additional members: Don Bennett, Jack Creamer, Bill Duncan, John Heckler, Tim Holabird, Jack Stermer, Ed Vines, Bob Shacklelord, Sam Olmstead. O F Fall Semester Alan Hays Newton Cox John Heckler Roland Wood Mr, Fred Young ¥ I c E R S Spring Semester President Charles Casserly ice-President Jim Herbold Secretary- Newton Cox Treasurer Roland Wood Adviser Mr. Fred Young PAGE 126 ONE CLUB 9 9 1 n My S. Left to right — Top row: Wilma Watt, Shirley Lewis, Alice Blossom, Barbara Slingmeyer, Ruth Nickson, Dorothy Kline, Alice Mayer; Second row: Geraldine Kadel, Margaret Hall, Evelyn Hansen, Annette LaRue, Betty Martens, Helen Stone, Helen Thomas; Front row: Louise Staunton, Billie Grain, Jane Hazenbush, Betty Tyrrell, Josephine Tryon. Esther Lambert, Barbara Hadfield. Additional member: Bet ' y Maher. ¥ OFF I c E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester Betty Maher President Betty Tyrrell Betty Tyrrell Vice-President Jane Hazenbush Margaret Hall Secretary Billie Grain Esther Lambert Secretary Esther Lambert Dorothy Cordray Treasurer Josephine Tryon Miss Grace Wickham Adviser PAGE 127 Miss Grace Wickham O. S. F Left to right — Top row: William Murphy. Robert McAdams. John Hall; Third row: Joe Putnam. Jack AUin. George Slingmeyer. John Scales, Dave Patrick. Bob Chambers; Second row: Dan Babcock, Ted Eastman, Vernon Lief, Preston Locke, Bob Benedict, Glenn Serres, Bernard Hayes; Fiont row: Rupert Cummings, Linn Eastman, Myles Kingsley, Mr. Chalmer Shaver, Bill Ha3kins, Fred Isslieb; Additional members: Steve Barber, Bill Barlholomev , Bob Hiesland, Frank McCann, Willard Olwin, John Walker, Milton Wopschall. ¥ ¥ ■¥■ O F F I C E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester Myles Kingsley President Bill Haskms Lynn Eastman Vice-President Fred Isslieb Ted Eastman Secretary John Hall Rupert Cummings Treasurer Linn Eastman Mr. Chalmer Shaver Adviser PAGE 128 Mr. Chalmer Shaver P A M P H I L E ( JRy ■ ft Left to right — Top row; Virginia Munger, Katharine Clay, Pauline S ' evens, LaVaun Hanson. Caryl Moon, Betty Berquisl; Third row: Severine Callahan, Josephine Rendall, Dorothy Shule, Gertrude Kogle, Virginia Miller, Flora Dunham, Celeste Callahan; Second row; Kay West, Virginia Currie, layne Bloss, Jacqueline Gilbert. Phoebe Frye. Margaret Mulvaney. Audrey Bunnell. Shirley Chamberlain; Front row; Olive Pupis, Judy Rooke, Sadie Sellers, Miss Winnified Millspaugh, Peggy Wilson, Jeanne Halverson, Betty Klepper; Additional member: Mary Morgan. o I C s Fall Semester Sadie Sellars Olive Pupis Virginia Currie Betty Klepper Dorothy Shute Miss Winnifred Millspaugh President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 129 Spring Semester Sadie Sellars Peggy Wilson Jeanne Halverson Betty Klepper Judith Rooke Miss Winnifred Millspaugh P H A T I A N Left to right— Top row: Glenn Peters, Clark Bower; Second row: Dale Ledyard, Marvin Pearson, Bob Dickenson. lack Whieldon; Front row: Jack Keenan, Jack Prather, Mr. Everett Niday, Herbert Lilly, Milton Valois; Additional members: Gerald Dow, Donald Mansfield, Payton Jordan. ■¥- O F F I C E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester Marvin Pearson President Herbert Lilly Donald Mansfield Vice-President Payton Jordan Gerald Dow- Secretary- Milton Valois Gerald Dow Treasurer Milton Valois Mr Everett Niday Adviser PAGE 130 Mr. Everett Niday P H E N I X Left to right — Top row: Ruth Hagadorn, Betty Packer, Katherine Veale. Helen Shaw, DeGoha Earl; Third row: Ruth Bishop, Gail Hammond, Billie Boynton, LaVane Helferty, Jessica MacMaster, Georgina Marvin. Anne Fetzer, Jeane Cortner; Second row: Gladys Davies, Patty McCune, Ieanett3 Mogensen, Charlotte Hall, Mabel Pierce, Collette Verbeck. Eileen MacMaster; Front row: Helen Spelts, Eleanor Norlhrup, Lucille Spelts. Roselyn BritI, Miss Rofena Lewis. Virginia Petrequin. Julie Domine. Betty Lewis. O S Fall Semester Virginia Petrequin Julie Domine Betty Lewis Katherine Veale Roselyn Britt Miss Rofena Lewis President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 131 Spring Semester Roselyn Britt Lucille Spelts Helen Spelts Eleanor Northrup Betty Lewis Miss Rofena Lewis PHILOTHIAN Left to right — Top row: Elaine Heacock, Mildred Mangan, Evelyn Laybourne, Barbara Whitney. Marian Goebel, Gladys Hungerford; Second row: Valera Roach, Kathleen Roach, Beveriy Higbey. Catherine Heller, Agnes Hagen, Jane Mangan. Gladys Kohler. Grace Getzin; Front row: Cecile Kingman, Marie Budke. Alice Williams. Evelyn Kingman. Betty Crown Jacqueline Tull. Earline Miller. Bette Lipscomb; Additional member: Petronella Ro ' .lins. 4 o I C S Fall Semester Spring Semester Betty Brown President Betty BroviTn Evelyn Kingman Vice-President Jacqueline Tull Alice Williams Secretary Alice Williams Petronella Rollins Treasurer Earline Miller Miss Jane Meikle Adviser PAGE 132 Miss Jane Meikle PHRENOCOSMIA f q M o Left to right — Top row: Elizabeth Searles, Virginia Gordon, Leonard Marsha ' l, Lily Kirk. Charles Davis. Imogene Matticks. Wilbur Mitchell. Hazel Wright; Second row: Raymond Arnold. Marjorie Barmettler. Charles Earr, Virginia Flynn, Morris Brov n. Mar;orie Allan, Bill Fry. Nancie Jean Allan; Front row: Joan Dawson, Beverley Morant, Bemad ne Linnan, Robert Linnan, Mary Beth Gunter. Mr. Milton Mohs, Edna Sandstrom. Jerry Robinson. Dorothy Britsch. O I c s Fall Semester Jerry Robinson Joan Dawson Dot Britsch Edna Sandstrom Morris Brown Mr. Milton Mohs President Vice-President Secretary Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 133 Spring Semester Jerry Robinson Mary Beth Gunter Bernadine Linnan Beverley Morant Robert Linnan Mr. Milton Mohs ROSTRUM Left to r ' .ght— Top row: Dwight Mayiield. Bob Potter, Wilbur Kennicott, Chesney Carver: Second row: Theodore Kirk, Johnston Wiles, Kendall Hubner. Harry Hepler, Carleton Van Sittert, Jack Coombes; Front row: Cecil Howard, Gar English, James Hawkins, Lloyd Howard, Jack Gibson, George Eble; Additional members: James Harrington, George Long- worth. O S Fall Semester Lloyd Howard James Borrington James Hawkins Gar English Mr. William Stone President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 134 Spring Semester James Hawkins Gar English Cecil Howard Jack Gibson Mr. William Stone SEQUOIA Left to righ . — Top row: Harry Sheldon, Morgan West, Jack Jensen, Bill Breyer, Bud Paulson, Dick Lusk, Bob Becker; Second row: Roy Littlejohn, Henry MacDonald, Bob Masoner, Harrison Breyer, Don Starr, Fred Fitzpatrick, Bill Stitt, J. D. Cason; Front row: John Benton, Bob Clark, Len Emery, Mr. Russell Guthridge, Dick Gorby, Frank Holbrook, Bruce Mansfield; Additional members: Harvey Johnson. Bill McKesson, Ned Vessey, Fred Warriner. O I C Fall Semester Dick Gorby Frank Holbrook Ned Vessey John Benton Mr, Russell Guthridge President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 135 Spring Semester Len Emery Bruce Mansfield Bob Clark John Benton Mr. Russell Guthridge S O R E L L E Left to right — Top row: Flora Allen, Rebecca Sousley, Wanda Kumle, Catharine Friedrichs. Dorothy Pardee; Second row: Valerie Johnson. Maxine Stuart, Madeline Orr, Margaret Bell. Ruth Schlendering. Nadine Arundell; Front row: Barbara Barnett, Janette Heald. Mis3 Irma Graham. Anna Marjorie Loomis. Dorothijane Swinson. Gertrude Solleder. Margaret Ella Anderson. o s Fall Semester Anna Marjorie Loomis Janette Heald Dorothijane Swinson Dorothijane Swinson Miss Irma Graham President Vice-President Secretary Secretary- Adviser PAGE 136 Spring Semester Anna Marjorie Loomis Janette Heald Dorothijane Swinson Dorothijane Swinson Miss Irma Graham THE CLUB Left to right — Top row: Betty Wangerien, Alice Bulloch. Mary Cook, Allison Stone, E ' inor Beckett; Second row: Gloria Morton, Coline Upshaw, Ann McGee, lennelte Pageler, Jane Walker, Frances Walker; Front row: Jane McCallum, Barbara Wade. Barbara O ' Neill, Gabrielle Halsted. Barbara Pond. Helen Sperry. Bett Houghton; Additional members: Alice Blacker. Josephine Collins, Betty Hotaling, Betty Olmsted, Joan Parker, Virginia Rose, Louise Wood, Lois Jones. Elsa Melhorn. Dorothy Bonner. 4 o S Fall Semester Lois Jones Gloria Morton Elsa Melhorn Dorothy Bonner Mrs. Carolyn Powell President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 137 Spring Semester Gabrielle Halsted Barbara O ' Neill Barbara Pond Barbara Wade Mrs. Carolyn Powell 1 1 1 U i li ■9j o i A ■J , w V K Left to right — Top row: Dorothy Jackson. Florence Cushman, Vivian Scott, Audrey Nalewaja, Marjorie Pursell. Elizabeth McCoy, Jean Brown; Second row: Betty Anne Guenther, Janet Meub. Gretna Williams, Elma Hosmer, Lenore Bloom. Ethyle Reed, Lois Wiederanders; Front row: Joan Mitchell, Marie Hahn. Lucille Hahn, Corene Graves. Barbara Allen, Dorothy Sayers, Helen Lesh, Vivian Steele; Additional member: Ruth Potter. ■¥ O F F I C E R S Fall Semester Spring Semester Barbara Allen President Barbara Allen Vivian Steele Vice-President Dorothy Sayers Marie Hahn Secretary Helen Lesh Elizabeth McCoy Secretary Corene Graves Lucille Hahn Treasurer Lucille Hahn Miss Adelaide Jameson Adviser Miss Adelaide Jameson PAGE 138 XXVI Left to right— Top row: Jack Coats. Don Neary, Bill Ruediger, Art Erickson, Bob McConneliy; Second row; Karl Van Kuran, Harry Ross. John Merkel, Charles Peterson. lack Berry. Ray Caruthers; Front row: Gene Gormely. John Grund. Winston Shackelford. Shuman Trow- bridge. Wendell Hicks. John Lingenfelter. O F F I C Fall Semester John Grund President Shuman Trowbridge Vice-President Jack Coats Secretary Winston Shackelford Treasurer Mr. Norwood Jaqua Adviser PAGE 139 R S Spring Semester Winston Shackelford Shuman Trowbridge Arthur Erickson Wendell Hicks Mr, Norwood Jaqua Z A M A Left to right — Top row: Alfred Gardner. Lee Houghton, Morris Finley. Clarence Harris. Jack Page; Second row: Noibert Duarte. Arthur Schlendering. Jack Boaz. Herschel Howard, Russell Smith. William Pepping; Front row: Maurice Romick. Glenard Burris, John McDon- ough. Mr. Arthur Wiley Jay Forrester, John Busik. Bob Kaufman; Additional members: Jimmie Dodd. Clarence Howard. Louis LaLonde. Bill MacBeth. Phil Pastre. O s Fall Semester Lee Houghton Johnny McDonough Bill Pepping Louis LaLonde Mr Arthur Wiley President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 140 Spring Semester BUI MacBeth Glenard Burris Jay Forrester John Busik Mr. Arthur Wiley Z Y R O Left to right — Top row: Gordon Heald, Robert Lowen, Allan Robertson, Carl Deisenroth, Robert Henderson; Second row: Chartes Holsback, Robert Sparling, Jack Delonge, Marshall Benedict, Fred Parke; Front row: Emmet Ries. Forest Newton, Bill Bowling, Mr. Edward Cor- nelison, Edwin Hoyt, Edward Barker; Additional members: Dave Barry, Bill deRevere, John McAtee, Ira Smith. O I C S Fall Semester Ira Smith John McAtee Jack DeLonge Edward Barker Mr. Edward Cornelison President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser PAGE 141 Spring Semester William Bowling Edwin Hoyt Forest Newton Edward Barker Mr. Edward Cornelison PASADENA CAMPUS ATHLETICS Sustained physical vigor, need- ed by men who reach for su- perior attainment, springs from sports habitually enjoyed in team competition or single play. PASADENA CAMPUS MEN ' S SPORTS Left to right Top row Louie Vincenti coach John L )vp, Alex Miller, John Heckler. Wendall Hicks. Tim Holabiid. Charles Casserly. Bill Duin- .i. Joe Kievit, John Eikenbery, manager. James Tucker, manager. Frank Baker, coach; Second row: Duane Harris, manager, Arnold Abajian, Jack Jensen. David Orozco, Scotty IVIcDonald. Bruce Winton. Gregory Sherman, Shuman Trowbridge, Bob Becker. Benny Van Me ' er, Harold Hammock, coach; Front row: Frederick Brown. Fred Taylor, Clarence Ward. George V ilbur. Gordon GIroerer. Orv Erickson, John Sandidge; Additional members: Alfred Eins ' ein. James Gabriel. Gordon Kelly, James Lamb. Stephen Mooney. manager. UPPER DIVISION FOOTBALL CAPT. TIM HOLABIRD Coach Frank Baker ' s upper division gridders, although manag- ing to tie v Aith Long Beach, Santa Monica, and Ventura for the nether position, could not cope with the heavier, faster, and more powerful teams from Glendale, Compton, and Los Angeles. Except for a few bursts of spirit and badly needed fight, the upper division did not have the ambition of former years. The Long Beach skirmish furnished the needed enthusiasm which enabled the locals to tie the traditional game 6-6. Bowing to the Mastiffs, Santa Monica fell 6-2 and Fullerton 3-0. Teeny Casserly drop-kicked a field goal m the closing minutes of play to beat the Yellowjackets, and Duncan caught a pass from Erick- son for the other last minute score to beat the Beachers from Santa Monica. Captain-elect Duncan was the mainstay of the Baker eleven with Captain Holabird and Burby being picked for important all-conference teams. Coach Frank Baker and his squad are given credit for the most flashy and consistent scoring play of the conference. Reverses to Ward on receiving kick-offs accounted for touchdowns against Long Beach and Fullerton. Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena 3 Fullerton 6 Santa Monica 2 Glendale 26 Los Angeles 16 Pasadena Compton 20 Pasadena 6 Long Beach 6 Pasadena 13 Fullerton 33 PIGSKIN PACKER IS ENGULFED BY RISING TARTAR TIDE PAGE 146 PIRATE MENACE HAS EYE PEELED FOR BULLDOG fflDE WALTZING TARTARS PUT ORV ERICKSON ON THE SPOT PAGE 147 f LETTERMEN Heckler .... Guard Sherman . . . Guard Van Meter . . Quarter Trowbridge . . Guard Casserly End Ward Quarter Lamb Tackle Burby Guard Kelly End Mooney Mgr. Tucker Mgr. D. Harris .... Mgr. PAGE 148 ■ ■ i-rf, ' ' . .J . iM-V -f -¥■ LETTERMEN .- - ._ Gfroerer End Winton End Kievit Tackle Miller Tackle Wilbur Full Duncan Half Hicks Full Erickson . . . Quarter McDonald .... Full Baker Coach Eickenbery . . . Mgr. Vincenti .... Coach PAGE 149 If Lefl to right — Top row: John Overholtzer, Clarence Heinrich. James Armstrong, Leo Strelsky, Thomas Bennett, Wilbur Ocheltree. Tom Sommerville, Phil Pasire, John Bustard, Russell Jack, William Phelps, John Praigg; Second row: Hub Crehan, Don Dougall, Eberle Espey, Bill Schuelke, Leroy Tyson, Elwood Martin, Warren Finley, Bill Papoas, Neil Provine, James Couchman, Shig Kawaii, Dwight McCallum, Marvin Wright; Front row: Kenneth Pagan, manager. Jack Goodell, Bill Tobias, John Sumner, Ray Courtney, Johnny McDonough, Hal Burt, Ralph Riddle, Don Breshears, Jack Osborne; Additional members: Lorn Black, Dick Ellingwood, Ray Kuhn, Gilbert Jansen, Ira Dunlap, Bob Perkins, Arthur Ritlerralh, Ted Fisher, Leroy Norman, Burton Smallwood, Richy Bucheister, manager, Fred Fitzpatrick, manager. LOWER DIVISION FOOTBALL Lower division football prospects appeared promising at the beginning of the season for Coaches John Thurman and Carl Metten due to the fact that six returning lettermen, a number of outstanding gridders, and a wealth of material from junior highs were on hand. As the fatal season drew on, the Bulldogs did not seem to click, winning one, tying one, and losing eight games in the season. The South Pasadena Tigers, habitual football ene- mies, tied the lower division 12-12 in their first game of the sea- son. y lthough outmaneuvering the Glendale Dynamiters, first downs being in the Bulldogs ' favor 13-1, the game was lost 9-6 CAPT. McDONOUGH PAGE 150 -f BULLDOG MAKES FLYING LEAP FOR A CHARGING RABBIT by Pasadena. A blocked punt by Ralph Riddle and a safety were the only scores made by Pasadena when they lost their second league encounter 21-9 to Alhambra. Walt McGowen and his Southern California champions from Long Beach were the next to spell disaster for the locals when the long-hated Jack- rabbits won 26-6, For the mythical city championship with Muir Tech there was a hectic battle with many long passes and runs. The Northside Terriers finally licked the Bulldogs 15-13 after two disputed scoring plunges by huge Wright. This was the only time in the entire season that Pasadena seemed to find itself Long runs and kicks by Schindler accounted for the 27-0 defeat by San Diego and although the Bulldogs again reaped more first downs, they suffered their worst defeat of the season. Santa Ana won the most spectacular game by a score of 18-14. Hawkins feaUired in all the Saints ' scores, running for two and passing for the others. Passes from Wright to Lansdell and Wright to PAGE 151 Riddle scored for the Pasadenans. Riddle made both conversions. A practice tilt with Lincoln High ended in the win for the local aggregation, the score being 16-13. Riddle was unanimously nominated the most valuable member of the team and received the Elks ' trophy while Captain McDonough, Pastre and Wright were the other outstanding players for the Crimson squad. South Pasadena .... 12 Lincoln 13 Cathedral 13 Chaffey 12 Glendale 9 Alhambra 21 Long Beach 26 Muir Tech 19 San Diego 27 Santa Ana 18 Pasadena . . . ... 12 Pasadena ... 15 Pasadena . . . ... 6 Pasadena . . . . . . Pasadena . . . . 6 Pasadena . . . ... 9 Pasadena . . . . 6 Pasadena . . . ... 13 Pasadena . . . . . . Pasadena . . . ... 14 PASADENA GALLOPS EN MASSE AROUND SAINT FLANK PAGE 152 DO YOU SEE WHAT THE REFEREE DOESN ' T ALWAYS SEE? CARRER PRANCES AS BLOCKER BUTTS BEACH GRIDDcR PAGE 153 Min t f LETTERM E N Pappas Guard Dougall Half Tyson Tackle Espey End Jansen Tackle Wright Full Courtney .... Guard Schuelke . . . Quarter Breshears .... Full Metten Coach Armstrong .... End Thurman .... Coach PAGE 154 Quarter Quarter Guard Mgr. u ' ■ ' 1°?. ' X ' ' - ° Stirling, Frank Goddard, Nelson Price, Jack Matteson Bob itZ R ' - ° ' ' n ' ' ' ° ■- ' ' ' ° ' ' ' - N- ' ° -- -°-h, kji Cma Ronald vnit R„ %, T ' . ' p° ' ' r ' ?? ' ° ' ' ' °- ' ' B -- ' ' -« Green. Bob Sommer row Glenn ° ' ' ' ' °!i ' ' ' ' Hawgood, L. C, McAuley, coach; SecTd row. Glenn Serres, manager. Howard Hetcher. Oscar Horn. Jimmie Kirita. Don BosweU James F.sherJarries Turner. Lowell Weldy, John Trowbridge. Cliff Ward. Bill Alex3er RaTph WhiL Ma, ' f ' -J ' ' ' i -i ' ° ° - ' ° °5-- f- ' -w: John Mantr ' Jllt Wh..e Malsuo Kun.h.ro, Al red Gardner. Bob Cort. George Matsumo.o. Dave Crater. Woodrcw Cobb, Joe Clinch, James Asakura, Don Schulz, Shig Kunihiro. I G H F O O w I G H T B A L The pre-season outlook of Coaches Leland McAuley and Nor Jaqua was depressing this year but it didn ' t brighten up as it has in previous years. Busik and Tajima were the only letter- men lo return, yet out of nearly fifty green but willing gridders, the coaches developed an eleven that lost two and tied two Coast League encounters. The Bullpups outplayed both Glendale and Long Beach only to lose 7-6 and 6-0 respectively. Glendale pulled the old but workable hide-out play and the Long Beach Bunnies won on a lone pass. Alhambra and Santa Ana gave the Pasadenans their toughest battles but both tilts ended in ties PAGE 156 CAPT. BOB CORT BEACH BUNNIES BITTERLY BATTLE BATTERED BULLPUP Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena El Monte 6 Monrovia 7 Muir Tech 13 Jordan Alhambra 6 Glendale 7 Long Beach 6 Muir Tech 15 6 Santa Ana 6 of 0-0 and 6-6. Muir Tech handed the BuUpups their worst defeats, 13-7 and 15-0. Yuji Tajima averted possible defeat at the hands of Santa Ana when he blocked a punt, picked it up and scooted the remaining 35 yards to a touchdown. The line with Tajima, Fricke, Gardner, Cort, Paquette, Fletcher, and Wing was the outstanding section of the local eleven. An inadequate pass defense may be blamed for most of the defeats of this season. MATSUMOTO HAUNTS HIS FOES WITH AN IRON MASK COBE HEADS TOwAHD LLASTER BABE ' S PROMISED LAND PAGE 158 ESCAPING TAJIMA STAGES A GRUNT AND SNARL ACT LETTERME N T h Wing End Cobb . . . Jaqua Coach Matsumoto Full Fricke . Half McAuley Tackle Coach _. ' ■ Mt m sir  . _ lY- k. ' ' W- . B. _ LETTERMEN Evkhanian . . . Tackle Paquette .... Guard Tajima End Fletcher .... Tackle Gardner .... Guard Busik Full White Half Kunihiro Tackle Green .... Quarter C. Harris Mgr. Schulz End Serres Mgr. PAGE 160 Left to right — Top row: John Eikenbery, manager; Jack Jensen, Dave Orozco, Bob Perkins, Charles Tinkle, Dale Babcock, Bob Becker, Elv ood Temte, Jack Anderson, Herbert Grubbs, manager; Front row: Harvey Johnson, Peter Geddes, Charles Adams, Bill Stidham, David McNeil, Merle Shirar, Henry Halminski, Jack Folsom. UPPER DIVISION BASKETBALL CAPT. DAVE McNEIL After winning and losing spasmodically, Coach Frank Baker ' s upper division basketeers ended the 1935 campaign in a two way tie lor fifth place with Long Beach. With forty-three men answering the first call, the upper division began an intensive practice season which gained only fair results. In the confer- ence opener the Samojacs from Santa Monica sunk a 31-22 vic- tory over the locals, but the following evening a vastly improved Pasadena five managed to eke out a 29-27 win over the loudly touted Glendale Buccaneers. The locals went under both Los Angeles and Compton ' s Terrible Tartars with 35-25 and 25-21 scores. Long Beach was the next in line for the Bulldogs and lost 39-30. The Ventura Pirates finished the first round of con- ference play with a 44-39 win over the uppers. Santa Monica and Compton were the only teams to make double wins while the Bulldogs pulled a surprise in an overtime game with L. A. J. C. Cubs and took a 28-27 win. The Ventura defeat was also re- venged in a decisive manner as the weak sister of the Western Pasadena 32 Pasadena 21 Pasadena 28 Pasadena 26 Pasadena 31 Pasadena 29 Pasadena 29 Pasadena 22 Pasadena 39 Pasadena 18 Pasadena 39 Pasadena 44 Pasadena 24 Pasadena 52 Pasadena 33 Pasadena 43 Pasadena 41 Pasadena 32 Pasadena 36 Pasadena 52 Compton 38 Compton 25 Los Angeles 27 Los Angeles 35 Glendale 33 Glendale 27 Santa Monica 41 Santa Monica 3,1 Long Beach 30 Long Beach 42 Ventura 44 Ventura 26 Pomona J. C 33 Pomona J. C 47 Fullerton 24 Fullerton ... .... 36 Citrus 40 U. S. C. Dental College . . 31 Woodbury 22 Loyola 24 PAGE 162 ¥ LETTERMEN Becker . , Forward Folsom Guard Geddes . . . Forward Stidhom . . . Center J. Johnson Halminski Guard Guard H. Johnson . Forward Conference was downed 44-26. Compton emerged conference champion and beating out the FuUerton cagers, went into the State Championship race with San Mateo J. C. Dave McNeil, all-conference forward, headed Mastiff stars in all-round playing. PAGE 163 4-M ' ' !-sM «l Left to right— Top row: Basil Hendncl -son. manager; Grenville Lansdell, George Boden- schot, Dave Siewerl, Marvin Wright, Dick Blodgett, JacU Osborne, Ray Kuhn. Bill Dunn, coach; Second row: Bill Bartholomew, John Taylor, Ralph Riddle, Shig Kawaii, Crossan Hays, Richy Bucheister, Jim Herbold, Sid Johnson; Front row: Tom Sommerville, Stan Schuster, Fred Fitzpatrick, Ray Courtney, Phil Monroe. LOWER D I V I S I O N BASKETBALL With a team composed of four returning lettermen from the lower division and three lettermen from the lightweights, Coach William Dunn molded a casaba squad which gave all oppo- nents a hectic battle and ended the season in a second place tie with the strong Long Beach five. Opening the season to the tune of a 29-20 win over the Glendale Buccaneers, the Bulldogs began their climb for titular honors; but the Alhambra Moors proved to be the proverbial monkey wrench when they downed the locals 32-24. Coach Dunn ' s squad shared top hon- ors with the Moors, who wound up the season as Coast League PAGE 164 CAPT. C. HAYS champions for one night, but failed in a desperate last minute rally during the second Long Beach game to hold the coveted first spot. The Long Beach Jackrabbits, under the smooth- working forward, Captain Maher, proved the real undoing of the Pasadena quintet. Captain Crossan Hays, Sid Johnson, Ralph Riddle and Bill Bartholomew were returning lettermen with Rich Bucheister, Fred Fitzpatrick and Johnny Taylor, all members of last year ' s Coast League champion lightweights. Sharing first string honors with the veterans, Johnson led the herd of league sharpshooters by 26 points to take the top rung of the scoring ladder, with Hays and Bucheister also high. In the San Diego tilt they won 50-31, but they seemed to draw their off nights against such teams as Alhambra and Long Beach. Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena Pasadena 33 36 37 50 29 24 34 24 29 41 35 19 41 24 44 Santa Ana Santa Ana San Diego 24 31 40 San Diego 31 Alhambra 24 Alhambra 32 Long Beach 37 Long Beach 49 Glendale 20 Glendale 36 South Pasadena .... 32 South Pasadena .... 26 Muir Tech 27 Muir Tech 36 Monrovia 38 Caltech 19 PAGE 165 LETTERME N Hawaii . . . Forward Taylor Guard Fitzpatrick . . . Guard Bartholomew . Forward Sommerville . Forward Johnson .... Forward Bucheister . Forward Riddle Guard Courtney ... Guard Under the unsatisfactory but necessary building conditions all three Bulldog casaba teams were forced to share the one and only available court for practice sessions. Such conditions laid waste to possibly one of the flashiest quintets to perform locally. PAGE 166 f f Left to right— Top row: Bill Feasley. Dick Lusk, Phil Cartwright, Oliver Compton, Archie Murphy. Robert Brown. Lowell Weldy, Wilbur Jacobs, Howard Bailly. manager; Front row: Don Schulze. James Lindberg, Johnny Trowbridge. Morgan West. Leland McAuley. coach; Al Wing, Jack Page. Hank McCune, Howard McKesson. I G H W I G H BASKETBALL CAPT. AL WING Unlike their brother lightweights during football season, the Bull- pup cagers, under the guiding hand of Coach Leland Mac Mc- Auley lost two league games, reaching the Coast League play- off with Long Beach only to be humbled by a 44-33 defeat. In the first league encounter with the Glendale Firecrackers the Bullpups met a superior early season squad and lost by the de- cisive margin of eight points, the final score being 29-21. From then until the return game played on the local floor with Long Beach Bunnies, the Macmen went on a scoring spree. After losing the first game 21-19 in a see-saw battle, the Beachers PAGE 167 came to life and sent a much improved team to nose out the Pas- adenans 32-29. With only these two defeats on their record ihe Pups went into the play-offs, which were held on the neutral court at Whittier College only to lose again clinching their place at second spot. The Pasadenans won the city championship from Muir Tech in a two-ga me series with the scores of 22-20 and 37-8. Al Wing, elected honorary captain at the end of the season. Jack Page, Morgan West and late in the season, Dick Lusk were the lettermen returning from last year ' s more suc- cessful team of Coast League champs. Bill Feasley, Don Schulze, Jimmie Lindberg and Hank McCune were the others Pasadena 33 Pasadena 19 Pasadena .... .21 Pasadena 40 Pasadena 34 Pasadena 28 Pasadena 33 Pasadena 25 Pasadena 21 Pasadena 21 Pasadena 22 Pasadena 37 Pasadena 27 Pasadena 29 Pasadena 26 Pasadena 35 Long Beach 43 Long Beach 22 Long Beach 19 Santa Ana 23 Santa Ana 12 Alhambra 22 Alhambra 15 Glendale 22 Glendale 29 Muir Tech 24 Muir Tech 20 Muir Tech 8 South Pasadena .... 23 South Pasadena .... 23 Hoover 15 Monrovia 24 PAGE 168 LETTERMEN Lindberg Center McCune West Center Schulze Feasley Guard Brown . Guard McKesson . , . Forward . Guard Page .... Forward Forward Lusk Guard who Stood out during the season. Captain Al V ing and Jack Page, both holding down forward positions on the local quintet and possessing rare ability to sink the hard ones, climbed high to the first two rungs on the Coast League scoring ladder. PAGE 169 Lcil to right— Top row: Jimmy Mathews, Homer Pownall, John Elliott, David Mendeiihall. Bill Lowe, Kenneth Austin, Augustus Shaw, Allen Casale, Jack Niday, coach; Second row: George Wilbur, manager; Arnold Hansen, Elwood Temte, Sam Schwartz, Art Clark, Edwin Scott, Francis Sinnette, Richard Abbey. Donald Green; Front row: Carl Uibelhoer, manager; John Callier. Clarence Ward, James Lamb, Douglas Kise. Bob Gerhart. UPPER R DIVISION K Although the upper division track team under the captaincy of Francis Sinnette did not place high in the Western Conference, lohnny Callier, Al Casale, Art Clark, Richard Abbey and Sin- nette, the five man Bulldog track team, placed third in the South- ern California junior college track fest held at Glendale. In competition with the cream of California junior college track stars, Callier, who has run the century in 9.6, lost by a close mar- gin to the winner who ran the distance in 9.7. Humphries of Sacramento ]. C. nosed out Sinnette in the 120-yard high hurdles to win the event in 14.7. Pasadena grabbed a second place in PAGE 170 CAPT. SINNETTE ¥ - LETTERMEN Lamb Javelin Mendenhall 440 Schwartz , . Pole Vault Craddock . . Pole Vault Austin ... High Jump Scott Shot Put a three-way meet witli Glendale and Long Beach in the first meet of the season. The Buccaneers tallied 77 points. Pasadena collected 45 points and the Beachers a bare 19. In their second triangular meet the Mastiffs beat Santa Monica to place second to Compton. Ventura was slaughtered by the Mastiffs who amassed 111 points to beat the Pirates with 20, Collier again starred, collecting two firsts and a second as the Nidaymen lost the final dual meet to Los Angeles 82 2-3 to 48 1-3. Captain Sinnette established a new meet record by running the 120-yard high hurdles in 14.9. Pasadena took third in the annual Southern California junior college trackfest, placing high in many events. PAGE 171 ilJ V ■•4 nr ' ' N ■¥• Jf -¥• LETTERMEN Pownall Abbey . Winn . Two Mile Callier . Two Mile Casale . . . Mile Gerhart Temte Mile Smith . Sprints Clark Weights . Sprints Ward Javelin Two Mile Green Javelin Two Mile Behm Mile PAGE 172 Leit to right Top row: Nathan Mears, manager; Bill GrnnniG, Howard Bachn.an. IViyicn Jordan; Johnny Van Etten, David Ballantine, Bill Lewis, Phil Hawgood Brll Phelps, man- ager Second row: Marvin Wright, Richard Bagnard, Howard Lee, John Eikenbery. Carl Metten, coach; Lyle Fagan. John Bustard. Robert White, manager; Front row: Loroy Fraser. Hubert Crehan, Henry Bent. LOWER T R D I V I S I O N A K CAPT. VAN ETTEN Coach Carl Metten pushed his lower division track team to a third place in the Coast League finals held at Glendale, although the Bulldogs did not fare so well in dual meets. The Pasadenans started with wins in their practice meets, but fell before Glen- dale, their first conference foe, 721 2-421 2- Tommy Nelson scooted the century in 9.9 to win his favorite race. Alhambra lost the second cinderfest and Long Beach won the final track contest between the schools by the fairly close score of 62-51. San Diego won a lopsided 711 2-411 2 score over Pasadena. The 1935 dual season was wound up with a win for the locals when PAGE 173 they beat Santa Ana. For the city championship the Bulldogs lost 52 2-3-48 1-3, although Tommy Nelson, who has not been beaten, ran the 100-yard dash in 9.8, and Captain John Van Etten heaved the shot 51 feet 4 in. While waiting for the league meets to start, the Bulldogs grabbed fourth place in the San Bernardino Orange Show relays. Five lower division cinder- men placed in the Coast League finals to put Pasadena in third place. Clark Mallery pulled a surprise in winning the high jump, Nelson won the 100-yard dash, Payton Jordan placed second in both the 100 and 220-yard dashes, Johnny Eikenbery nabbed a second in the half-mile, Howard Bachman, rejuvenated sprint man, got a second in the 440, and Van Etten heaved the shot put 51 ft. 11 m. to win his event. Out of the five Pasadena trackers to place in the Southern California prelims, only two men won places in the finals held in the Coliseum. Nelson, Captain Van Etten, Bachman, Jordan, Eikenbery and Mallery were the Bull- dogs to shine in the prelims. Nelson won the 100-yard dash from his local rival, the highly touted Brainard Worrell, from Muir Tech, in a 9.8 race. Howard Bachman, former 100 and 220- yard dashman, who has made the most marked progress of the lower division track squad, won fifth spot in the 440-yard dash. PAGE 174 - ■¥■ LETTERMEN i - ' w mmm Nelson Sprints Eikenbery 880 Bachman 440 Truman . , , Pole Vault Lee Hurdles Wright Weights Fraser 440 Goble Pole Vault Mallery . . . High Jump Bustard Hurdles Jordan Sprints Bagnard Hurdles PAGE 175 6 J f f ,ft Left to right — Top row: Bill Phelps, manager; Jimmy Langaii, Dick Pardridge, Earl Roulac. Howard Greene, Dave Ballantine, Ray Richter, Albert Sauer, Carl Schaner, Robert White, manager; Second row: Bill Dell, Dan Curry, Bill Busik, John Madison, Carl Metten, coach; Fred Lindquisl. Johnny Breyer, Ye Nuno, John Phillips; Front row: Walter Reed, Edward Held, Johnny Trowbridge, Clarence Wells, Yozzo Kurokawa. I G H W R A I G H K With a squad built of such timber as Captain Wells, Nuno, Pard- ridge, Green, Ballantme, and Schaner, Coach Carl Metten coached his lightweight track squad to third place in the Coast League standings and two places in the C. I. F. finals held at the Coliseum. Wells ' win in the 100-yard dash, Ballantme in the 220 and broad-jump, Partridge ' s unexpected placement in the 660, and Green ' s second place in the 1320 were the winners in the Coast League confab. Ahhough five men qualified in the pre- liminaries of the Southern California meet, only Wells and Bal- lantine won places. The 660-yard relay team, composed of CAPT. C. WELLS Ballentme, Schaner, Nuno and Wells, placed fourth in the qual- ifying trials but lost in the finals. Ballentme, sprint star from Mc- Kinley Junior High, running second in the 220, and Green, finish- ing fourth in the 1320-yard run were the only other Bullpups to enter the C. I. F. finals. Wells, in competition with tracksters from every Southern California school, placed third in the 100- yard dash with Dave Ballentine winning fourth in the furlong. Clarence Wells ' win over the flashy Muir Tech sprinter, Eddie Arnold, was the most brilliant performance as the Bullpups won the mythical class B track titles 53-41. Wells ' time was 10.1. Long Beach was lucky to win its dual meet from the locals. Had the Bullpups not dropped the baton in the relay, which was the deciding event, the Bunnies would no t have won 49V2 o 45V2- In the Glendale meet the locals, by not placing in the discus throw lost the meet 55-49. Second and third place points won the Santa Ana meet for the locals, although they won five first places. The lightweights were completely lacking in discus and shot put material, which may account for the fairly low standing in the Coast League and Southern California finals. Johnny Breyer, pole vaulter, and Johnny Trowbridge, pole vaulter and shot putter, were the only Cee tracksters to make their letters; Breyer tied for fourth to place in the Coast League pole vault. PAGE 177 •¥- ¥ LETTERMEN Richter Shot Put Green 1320 latum Hurdles Reed Shot Put Kurakowa . , . Hurdles Ballentine .... Sprints Curry Hurdles Partridge 660 Lindquist . . Pole Vault Nunc Sprints Held Hurdles Busik Hurdles ■V . ' - T te c. ' V T. J.c, y J. A, L 1 -, ' ■ s - ' i ' ■ it ' - ' i-h Left to right— Top row: Ed Van Der Veen, manager; Shig Takayama. George Card, Frank Reed. Ray Stockman, Augie Hess, Richard Puglisi. Hal Burt, manager; Front row: Nat More- land, Joe Takayama, Benny Van Meter, Coach John Thurman, Bill Bouett, Bill Pepping, Walt Sefton. UPPER DIVISION BASEBALL W CAPT. BILL ht BOUETT With Benny Van Meter, diminutive upper division outfielder hitting the highest average of the team at .410, and Caotain Bill Bouett collecting the highest number of runs, scoring 14, Coach John McGrav Thurman ' s team ended just a fairly good sea- son. Ineligibility played havoc with the Mastiff nine and as the middle of the season rolled around only a lew more than a full squad were able to finish the conference. Coach Thurman had a highly successful practice campaign with wins over such teams as Citrus J. C, San Bernardino J. C, under the new Bull- dog varsity football coach, and Whittier College, losing only to PAGE 179 a strong Occidental nine. By cashing in on the errors made by the Mastiffs, Santa Monica scored a 2-1 win. Augie Hess pitched a four-hit game, fanning 15 men. Fourteen errors were totaled by both teams as the uppers won 14-12 over the Glendale Buc- caneers at Brookside Park. Augie Hess again stood out for the locals, getting three hits at four times at bat. Compton handed Pasadena 10 Pasadena 1 Pasadena 4 Pasadena 6 Pasadena 7 Pasadena 3 Pasadena 5 Pasadena 5 Pasadena 3 Pasadena 7 Pasadena 7 Pasadena 7 Pasadena 7 Pasadena 14 Pasadena 2 Pasadena 1 Pasadena 1 Pasadena 10 Pasadena 5 Pasadena 2 Pasadena 3 Pasadena 6 Pasadena 2 Alhambra 1 Loyola 6 Caltech 4 Whittier College .... 4 FuUerton 3 All Stars 9 Woodbury College ... Occidental 12 Citrus 2 Whittier College .... 1 San Bernardino .... 5. Caltech 1 Santa Monica 2 Glendale 12 Occidental 5 Chapman 4 Compton 14 Fullerton 9 Long Beach IS Chapman 5 Fullerton 7 Los Angeles 5 Ventura 6 PAGE 180 -s 9% « i«h. LETTERMEN Hess Pitcher Reed K. Emberson . . Pitcher t IHm . .0 mm Outfield Stockman .... Catcher S. Takayama . Outfield the uppers thei r worst licking, walloping the Pasadenans 14-2 in the third Western Division starting. Coach Thurman scored the biggest upset of the season when his nine won a surprising 6-5 win over the Los Angeles Junior College Cubs. The Angelenos opened the game with three runs in the first inning, then added two more in the fifth, but a splurge in the fifth credited the Mas- tiffs with five runs, sewing up the ball game. Benny Van Meter, after being benched with a broken finger, stole batting honors of the day by piling up three hits in three times at bat. Ventura took the final game of the season, 6-2. Although 17 errors were made in the loosely played affair, only eight runs were scored. i . U ' . . fK ' 1 rr, LETTERMEN Shirar Outfield Van Meter . . 2n d Base Mansfield . - . Outfield Jones Pitcher J. Takayama . 3rd Base Moreland . . .1st Base Pepping .... Outfield D. Emberson . Outfield Keith Emberson with .311 and Ray Stockman, catcher, with .308, followed Van Meter for batting honors. Nat Moreland, big third sacker, played the most innings of anyone on the local squad. Jones displayed World Series chucking throughout the season. Left to right— Top row: Carl Fricke, manager; Dave Jacobsen, George Bodenschot, Vern.. Lief, Shig Kawaii, George Matsumoto. Bob Cort, manager; Second row: Art Keene, Don Schulze, Clarence Harris. Coach Nor Jaqua. Bill Schuelke. Dick Blodgett, Ralph Prickett. lim Herbold; Front row: Bill Feasley, Paul Goodrich, Philip Callahan, Joe Clinch, Bob Ocheltree. LOWER D I V I S I O N BASEBALL 1 4 CAP T. C. HARRIS Coach Nor Jaqua ' s lower division baseball team, composed in part of five veteran diamondeers, v as on the up and dov n all through a mediocre season. Captain Swede Harris, first base- man, headed the returning list made up of Ski Herbold, 2nd base, Shig Kawaii, shortstop and 2nd base, Vernon Lief, and George Bodenschot, southpaw outfielders, and Bill Schuelke, shortstop and pitcher. Promising junior high stars filled other positions. After winning over Muir Tech, finalists m the Pomona 20-30 Club Tourney, Cathedral, South Pasadena, Monrovia, and Oxy Frosh, and winning their league opener against Glendale ' s Dynamiters PAGE 183 4-3, the Bulldogs hit a slump that stayed with them until the final against Santa Ana, with a short rise while at the Pomona baseball confab. Schuelke ' s home run with the bases full v as not enough to beat the Alhambra Moors in the second game. With the aid of costly errors the Moors won, 8-5. For the third tilt the lowers traveled all the way to Long Beach only to take a 16-3 shellacking. Ocheltree, southpaw chucker for the locals, was the victim of bats swung by the San Diegans in the next encounter, which was dropped by the locals 7-0. Bodenschot copped individual batting honors with three hits as Coach Jaqua pushed his nine back to early season form to blank Santa Ana 8-0 in the final game. Schulze, regular Pasadena hurler, gave the Saints four scattered hits. The wrong-armed outfield squad which was composed of Vernon Lief, George Bodenschot and Bill Feasley, proved itself to be the strongest section of the local team of nine and gave them the opportunity to reach the quarter- finals of the 20-30 Club Tournament. Exeter High was squashed as the first victim of the local boys by a 6-2 score and Pomona dropped the next game with a goose egg, 7-0. Long Beach again eliminated decisively the hard lighting Bulldogs, 9-3. Some say practice makes perlect but as far as the lower divi- sion baseball squad goes it did not make perfect — only caused the Bulldogs to go stale. Coach Nor Jaqua, team-driver Jaqua, as he might easily be called, had the boys playing ball every day of the week but Sunday and during Easter vacation when a lew of the team would rather have slept. Although practice is what has been badly missing from most of the local teams, P. J. C. will probably need to be initiated to it little by little. Pasadena 6 Pasadena 4 Pasadena 5 Pasadena 2 Pasadena 6 Pasadena 7 Pasadena 3 Pasadena Pasadena 8 Pasadena 17 Pasadena 2 Pasadena 4 Monrovia 5 Glendale 3 Alhambra 8 Long Beach 16 Excelsior 2 Pomona Long Beach 9 San Diego 7 Santa Ana Muir Tech 3 Muir Tech 1 Muir Tech 7 LETTERMEN Pnckett Pitcher Ocheltree , . , Outfield Blodgett Catcher PAGE 185 Jf .)•• % y m i i ««■ «1 r _■ ■ -I ' . . f «. ¥ - LETTERMEN V MA Liei Outfield Goodrich . Third Base Schuelke . . . Shortstop Feasley Outfield Matsumoto . . . Catcher Bodenschot . Outfield Hawaii . . Second Base Schulze Pitcher Clinch Catcher Herbold . . Second Base Keene Pitcher Burris . . . Second Base GOLF Left to right: Elmer Enstrom, Marshall Benedict, Bruce Wylie. Everett Earl. Palmer Rise. Although losing three valuable men through ineligibility at the first of the season, a well bal- anced upper division team of pill-chasers under Coach Frank Baker went through the season defeating Compton Junior Col- lege on the home course and Glendale Junior College at Glendale. However, the local divot-diggers dropped tilts to Santa Monica, Ventura and a strong Long Beach team. The first week m June the team played in the inter-collegiate golf tournament at the Fox Hills Country Club in Los Angeles. Outstanding among the mem- bers of the team were Palmer Kise playing in first position, Elmer Enstrom, manager, play- ing in second position, and Mar- shall Benedict, who played in the third position. Completing the remainder of the team were Bruce Wylie and Everett Earl. PAGE 187 U. D. TENNIS Left to right: Ed Barker, Barney McCay, George Johnson, Dave Gillam, Jack Creamer, Bill Hull. Jack De Marais, manager. To open both upper and lower division tennis seasons, Coach Francis Hardey staged an all- school tennis tournament, won by Dave Gillam over Norman Buck. Bringing home the bacon, the upper division racqueteers copped the Western title. Santa Monica, the strongest contender for conference honors, was the first to fall before the Mastiff on- slaught. Los Angeles Junior Col- lege was the next to lose to the local aggregation, 15-8. Bill Bailey, former Bulldog, defeated Norman Buck, local first man, with Ed Barker and Bill Hull los- ing their first intercollegiate match. Hardey ' s proteges blank- ed the Compton Tartars with 23-0 for their one-sided score. Glendale was humbled 21-2. With Long Beach also put out of the way, the Mastiffs defeated Ventura, cinching the Western honors for the second year. L. D. TENNIS Lell to right-Back row: Freeman Ingledew, Kenneth Dauble. Dick Carhart Bob Pilletreau. dIcI Jones, manager; Front row: Harry Hergert. Charles Melhorn. Kenneth Wells, I.mmy Halverson. A green and inexperienced low- er division tennis team, tutored by the tennis playing maestro, Francis Hardey, represented the Pasadena Junior College during the 1935 season. The lower divi- sion team wound up the oppo- site of the crack upper squad, landing close to the bottom of the pile when the season drew to a close. The Bulldogs, how- ever, pulled an upset to win over the Franklin High School Printers, 7-4. The absence of Bobby Riggs, former national boys ' singles champion, and Roy Clark, his doubles partner, somewhat weakened the Ange- lenos, both competing in the Ojai tourney. With many match- es lost by default the San Diego Hilltoppers won 8-3 over the Hardeymen. All other Coast League matches were won and lost depending greatly on the current ambition of the players. PAGE 189 U. D. CROSS COUNTRY f f f f. Left to right — Top row: Elmer Anderson. Elwood Temte, Ted Smith. Bob Gerhart, Al Hall- quist. managaer; Front row: Homer Pownall. Leslie Green. Running through rain and mud, handicapped with a cold, Cap- tain Homer Pownall, veteran and rated foremost in the West- ern Division cross-country rac- ing, ran in fifth place during the Western Division championship meet on the three-mile course at Westwood. Compton junior col- lege ' s Tartar leather lungers re- tained the championship with Captain Rice, Zamperini, and Mounday finishing for Compton in a three-way tie. Acevido of Los Angeles junior college was fourth. Homer Pownall and Claude Joiner were the only let- termen to return to Coach Niday with the resultant green squad of harriers. Pownall set a new record for the Altadena course with the fast time of 15.44.5. Al- though Coach Everett Niday had a wealth of material to work with, the harriers could not com- pete with the classier squads. L. D. CROSS COUNTRY n Left to right: Earl Roulac. Leroy Fraser, John Eikenbery. Frank Pearman. Howard Bachman, Al Hallquist, manager. After completing only a fair sea- son of dual meets, the lower di- vision cross country track team came back to win a third place in the Southern California C.l.F. championships held at Long Beach. Besides this third place, the Bulldog leather lung runners won the city championship, de- feating Muir Tech. Montebello was the other victim of the Pas- adena team. Close matches were lost to Pomona and the first meet with Montebello. This year ' s team was handicapped a great deal with nothing but green material. However, with the fine tutoring of Coach Jack Niday the team came along in great style to finish the season with a good all-round team. John Winn proved directly re- sponsible for the winning of the third place in the Southern Cali- fornia meet by placing third over a host of good runners. SWIMMING Left to right — Top row: Bob Becker, Dick Barbar, Burl Johnson, Crossan Hays, Zee Vee Shaw, Pat Paddock, Arby Gadomski; Front row: Bill Hatch, Hank McCune. George Moore, Jack Vibert. Upsetting the annals of school history, the upper division nata- tors defeated the Long Beach team. The score of 50-30 proved the prowess of the Bullfrog team. Glendale fell next victim to the Pasadena mermen, losing 48-27. Santa Monica journeyed to the local school for the sole home meet of the season, only to have the P. J. C. paddlers splash their way to the long end of 49-29. Came the downfall in which the Cubs of L. A. J. C. easily walked off with the dual meet cham- pionship, 52-27. The lower divi- sion lost all of its meets with some of the strongest teams in the Southland as its foes. Fuller- ton, Long Beach Poly and Po- mona freshmen were the teams that proved too strong for the Bullfrog squad. Many meets have been scheduled as the Campus goes to press, with hopes for a successful season. PAGE 192 WATER POLO f li.. ' ! Left to right— Top row; Hank McCune, Crossan Hays, Zee Vee Shaw, Kenneth Neill, Bill Hatch, Don Campbell. Sheldon Kinney, Ned Simpson; Front row: Jack Paschall. Norman Stolba, Gordon Hill. Handicapped by a closed swim- ming pool during the entire sea- son, Pasadena was forced to play on enemy territory; and because of the number of teams dropping out of the league, they staged a return act in every case. In the first contest the local mermen made the poorest show- ing of the season, falling before the Los Angeles Poly seven 14-2, but in the return game the local team completely surprised itself by taking a 6-2 lead at half time. Rising to the challenge, how- ever, the Romans nipped the in- vading squad 9-6. Long Beach easily won the first contest 13-4 and rang the gong a second time, 10-3. FuUerton, the league winner, climbed over the Bull- frogs 10-4 and 9-3. Long Beach Wilson won both games, 8-4 and 7-4, proving Pasadena ' s closest tussles. Inglewood tore into the Bulldogs 9-3 and 8-4. RUGBY Left to right— Top row: Bill Pappas, Frank Hart, Phil Pastre, Alfred Gardner. Harold Bownes, Leo Strelsky. Stilman Nichols, Bill Borthwick; Front row: John Burley, John Heckler, Johnny McDonough, Herschel Howard, coach, Clarence Ward, James Lamb, Ed Furstman, Dwain Marsh. Revealing marked improvement in playing ability over previous years, Pasadena Junior Col- lege ' s R.O.T.C. rugby football team made an excellent show- ing during the 1935 season by turning in four wins, one tie and five defeats against strong op- position. Under the able cap- tain-coaching of Herschel How- ard, the Majors defeated Holly- wood in the season opener, 5-0, but dropped the sec ond conflict to Santa Barbara, 5-11. The ini- tial game with Santa Monica ended m a 3-3 deadlock, how- ever, the beach city ruggers swamped the locals 11-0 in their second appearance. The army fifteen ' s most creditable victor- ies were a 9-0 walloping hand- ed to the battling U.S.C. Spar- tans, a decisive 15-0 victory to scallop the Vandals, and a 12-3 licking which they gave to the the Golden State team. RIFLE A t Left to right— Top row: Paul Reicharl, Gurney Paule, Frank Reichart, Jim Moiiatt; Front row: Rudolf Schott, Harry Findley. With an altogether new squad in 1935, the Pasadena Junior College R.O.T.C. rifle team was unable to uphold the old-time record of winning the Hearst National R.O.T.C. championship shield, but made a good bid for the distinction considering the circumstances. No last yea r ' s riflemen taking the gun up again, Sergeant Morgan ' s squad finished approximately one-third of the way down the PAGE 195 list of 55 secondary school en- tered in the Western sector of the tournament to drop back of its usual mark. It was to the credit of the high scores of Frank and Paul Reichert and Alfred Einstein that the local sharp- shooting unit placed as near to the top as it did. The Pasadena riflemen were captained by Alfred Einstein through 1935. Returning members expect to recapture the old standard. INTRA-MURAL Athletes, with competitive ambi- tion, find a special interest in their school and educational ratings which results, in a large measure, are responsible for the maintenance of public standards. School athletics, however, are taken by the stu- dents during their free time and many of the athletic type stu- dents are not able to practice after school hours. The many not ables are forgotten; those remembered are the compara- tively few seen each day prac- ticing their respective games and events. These are accept- ed as the whole number of school athletes. Since the incep- tion of intra-mural sports, there has existed a strong bond of common interest, effective coop- eration, and strengthened com- radeship between club-mem- bers and other organized play- ing groups of students unable to take advantage of school ath- letics. Because the school has taken the interest to establish mtra-mural sports there exists a keener interest in school, and higher standards are estab- lished. The proper function of in- tra-mural sports is to embed high ideals of sportsmanship and play m student minds. Since these teams do not have the assistance of faculty coaches another important function l ays the foundation for intelligent, independent thinking in clean competition, which in turn re- sults in freedom of individual judgment as well as team play. PAGE 196 O. S. F. WINNERS Left to right — Top row: Glenn Serres, Frank McCann. Jack AUin, Bob McAdams; Front row: Myles Kingsley. Dan Babcock. Linn Eastman, Rupert Cummings, Ted Eastman. By defeating the Forestry, C. D. Y., and Areopagites, the O. S. F. team annexed the football, bas- ketball, and volleyball intra- mural championships. For the first title they defeated the Areops in the 3 o ' clock division to go into the playoffs with the highly touted Forestry team. The score was tied 0-0 until the last four minutes when the O. S. F. gang completed a 20-yard pass for the winning touchdown. They battled it out with C. D. Y. to win the basketball title 54-6. Although the score would indi- cate a lopsided game, it had its tight spots. By defeating the Areopagites the O. S. F. an- nexed the third title to their string. With the help of the East- man brothers they defeated the Areopagites in two straight sets 21-7, 21-16. Next intra-mural sea- son the O. S. F. will badly need the outstanding Eastman twins. DECATHLON •■4. « .  «. Left to right — Front row: Nat Moreland, Frank Holbrook. Johnny Sandidge, Dean Griggs. Ralph Haver, Art Curry. Coach Jack Niday ' s track brain- storm for this season consisted of a decathlon. Husky Dean Griggs totaled 779 points to win the individual blue-ribbon and aid his brother Areopagites to win the club track honors with 3430 points. Bunny Hanson, 7611 4,- Ralph Haver, 766; Nat Moreland, 728; Orv Erickson, 713 1-3; Johnny Sandidge, 71072; Bob Hanson, 709; Frank Hol- brook, 704; Art Curry, 677 2-3; and Gordon Eby, 666V2; fol- lowed the winner to take other ribbons. The Areop five was composed of Griggs, Sandidge, Eby, Parsons, and Winton. Such events as the javelin, foot- ball, and baseball throws for accuracy substituted stock track events in order to give more fel- lows a chance. Lettermen were not allowed to participate as usual this year, opening chances of competition for more men. PAGE 198 TENNIS m ¥ : f ' f ■ I Leit to right: John Eikenbery, James Halverson. Mamerto Gambito. Bob Hinshaw. Jack Prather. Elwood Temte. To win the all-campus tennis championship, Jimmy Halver- son upset the pre-season favor- ite, Bob Hmshaw, 8-6, 8-6. Hal- verson, only an eleventh grader, displayed some fine tennis to win the singles championship. Freeman Ingledew defeated Henry Gregor 6-4, 6-1, to cod the consolation tourney finals. Up- per division cross country run- ners were fronted at the tape by Elwood Temte, leather-lunged PAGE 199 upper division harrier, who won the upper division intra-mural race. Temte covered the two- mile distance in fourteen min- utes and twenty-one seconds. Coach Metten ' s lower division distance pet, Johnny Eikenbery, won the lower cross country. Eikenbery ran the distance in fourteen minutes and forty-two seconds. Eighteen teams were entered in the tennis doubles, which was won by the Phatians. PASADENA CAMPUS WOMEN ' S SPORTS ATTAINMENT All women students whose inter- est turns to athletics strive for the attainment of membership in the Women ' s Athletic Associa- tion, open to those who have participated in one after-school sport, and Big P, selected group of PJ.C. ' s finest women athletes. Seven hundred W.A.A. points, which may be earned by par- ticipating in after school sports, are necessary for election into Big P. Trophies for prowess in sports — letters, pins and blan- kets are presented at an annual PAGE 201 spring banquet. Sports for aftor- school recreation include bas- ketball, archery, speedball, hoc- key, swimming, rifle, baseball, riding and tennis. Competition, although mostly between the class teams, features playoffs for individuals, novices, and a series of Saturday playdays with neighboring schools. Stu- dent coaches, elected by the popular vote of fellow teamsters, assist faculty leaders in shaping raw early season material into form for active competition. p ■ £sk 1 A ¥ -¥■ VARSITY Sanders Tennis Ready Hockey Ravey , , . Swimming Luce . Baseball Leveille . Tennis Hendrickson . . . Tennis Pupis Baseball Miss Young Coach Willmarth . . Speedball Miss Henrichs . . Coach Miss Jensen . . Coach PAGE 202 I VARSITY A i ' k Heath Basketball Bumstead . , . Baseball deHaan . . Basketball R. deWaard . . . Tennis Bowers Hockey Kallshian ... Archery Rousseau . . Speedball Miss Graham . , Coach Larkin Baseball Miss Margadant, Coach Miss Turner .... Coach HOCKEY WILL IT BE THE BALL THEY WIN OR A FEW SORE SHINS? In spite of the contact between the shins and hockey sticks, P. J. C. had a large turnout for shinny. Although being a popu- lar sport during the winter sea- son, there were no inter-school games played this year. Martha Larkin, Thelma Westling, Mary Hendrickson and Helena de- Waard were selected by the various classes to instruct par- ticipants on the points of hockey and to help choose the class teams. Hockey practice was under the direction of Miss Jean Young and the supervision of Leora Luce as student coach. Girls who proved themselves able to guide the hockey ball and stick down the field to win varsity awards were Nettie Ready, Kathleen Bowers, Betty Willmarth and Stella Norton. Honors went to the Seniors who put a successful snatch on the extremely elusive top slot. PAGE 204 SPEEDBALL PLAYERS PLUNGE FOR CONTROL OF FAST MOVING SPHERE Soccer, fieldball and basketball continue to make the popular game of speedball played by the girls during the fall sport season. Old man winter played havoc with the weather, conse- quently speedball season was short with no inter-school games. The Juniors surprised the speed- ball enthusiasts by winning over the Seniors in the inter- class games. The Sophomores beat the Freshmen in a close game. Head coach for speedball was Miss Mildred Margadant, student coach, Kathleen Bowers. Varsity winners were Sara Ellen Andrews, Kathleen Bow- ers, Evelyn Cerney, Mary Hen- drickson, Martha Larkin, Retha Rousseau, Roberta Vail, and Betty Willmarth. Pupis and Fil- dew grabbed honorable men- tion. Managers for speedball this season were Pupis, Will- marth, Morley and Swanstrom. BASKETBALL COEDS REACH HIGH TO SWAT AT FLOATING CASABA BALL Casaba ball proved a popular sport at P.J.C. when 136 enthusi- asts turned out. Whipping the raw material into shape, Pasa- dena met FuUerton lor a hard- won fight, taking the large end of a 34-21 score. L.A.J.C, how- ever, knocked the locals off their pedestal with a sweeping win. Within the school, the Senior first team walked off with first place, leaving second and third to the Senior second team and Junior first team. With Stella Norton, Tubby Sanders, and Retha Rousseau, and Alyss Greer as managers, the sport was directed by Miss Elizabeth Jensen, and Marjorie Bettannier, co-ed coach. Varsity winners were Kathleen Bowers, Mar- garet deHaan, Charlotte Heath, Mary Hendrickson, Stella Nor- ton, Nettie Ready and Carolyn Rough. Larkin, Rousseau and WiUmarth took honor mentions. PAGE 206 TENNIS Left to right— Top row: Alyss Greer, Oquilla Newfield, Mary Hendrickson, Ellen Lombard. Bobs Ward, Jean Darsie. Frances Culver, Marion Miller, Alice Sivaslian; Front row: Betty Ravey, Elizabeth Wheeler. Dorothy Wenz. Lenore Wilcox, Tubby Sanders, Palncia McGough, Edna Leveille, Irene Levcille; Additional members: Rosa dcWaard, Helena dcWaard. Swinging a mean racquet, femi- nine jayseeites strove to emu- late the form and tecfinique of Queen Helen. Dividing up the co-eds with Rosa deWaard as manager for upper division, and Alyss Greer leading the lowers, tennis thrived as an after-school sport. Directing the would-be net champions in the intricacies of lobbing and backhand drive, Miss Elizabeth Jensen was aid- ed and abetted by Eugena San- PAGE 207 ders, student coach who super- vised the play. Rosa deWaard and Eugena Sanders, doubles combination, kept up a barrage of shots that won them second place among the Southern Cali- fornia junior colleges. Those Amazons who clambered the rungs to varsity standing were Hendrickson, Parrish, Sanders, Rosa deWaard, and Wenz. lean Darsie and Carolyn Rough placed with honorable mention. BASEBALL Left to right — Top row; Evelyn Cerney, Joanna Pupis. Rosa deWaard, Nancy Kellogg, Kay Bumstead, Margaret Dorsey, Gertrude Stoops, Mary Marsh; Front row: Kathleen Bowers, Nettie Ready, Martha Larkin, Leora Luce, Helen Kallshian. The hard and consistent batting of the seniors kept all other team scores down to a miserable low. Seniors captured first place among the team ratings by win- ning from the Sophomores 18-3 and forcing the Frosh scores downward with a 21-6 plaster- ing. Juniors were not far behind the Seniors to capture second, Sophomores third, with Frosh bringing up fourth place. Miss Loreta Henrichs coached, as- sisted by Martha Larkin, student mentor. Varsity awards went to Bowers, Bumstead, Hendrickson, Larkm, Luce, Martin, Pupis and Ready. Andrews, Deley, West- ling and Willmarth received honorable mention. Although being an inter-school sport at P. J. C, baseball was only played among the classes and not among rival schools as in pre- vious years. Temporary dia- monds handicapped players. RIDING EQUESTRIENNES ENJOY COOL SHADE OF THE EUCALYPTUS Under the coaching of Miss Proud, riding instructor, the junior collegians were initiated into the mysteries of the sport of kings, and spent their after- noons in mastering the tech- nique of mounting, dismounting, trotting, and cantering as well as some simple drill formations. Five of the thirty equestriennes were girls who took the sport to swell their W. A. A. points; while the remaining horsewomen came from physical education classes. With the Altadena Riding Academy and its trails as the scene, the enthusiasts came out Tuesdays and Wed- nesdays after school. Late in the semester a horse show was held, giving this group an op- portunity to put their mounts through their paces, over hur- dles and hedges, besides trying for the two prizes offered for fine display of horsemanship. PAGE 209 SWIMMING Left to right — Top row: Elizabeth Wheeler, Louanne Bartletl, Dorothy Sibley. Ruth Craw- ford, Lois Chisholm, Constance Reed, Phylis Gillice, Natalie Wheeler. Marie Salsbury, Marguerite Haskins; Front row: Lucille Hensey. Beckie Bradford, Betty Moore, Jean Pullin, Betty Ravey, Martha Larkin, Natalie Graverson. Fifty girls flocked to the call of King Neptune, who was imper- sonated by Miss Elizabeth Tur- ner. Pasadena, turning out some real material, captured second place at the upper division play- day swimming meet against L. A. J. C, Kellogg taking first place for the side form, Larkin third place, racing back. Diving was won by Sibley placing sec- ond for P. J. C. Larkin, Kall- shian, Sibley and Gillice were the mermaids who swept L.A.J. C. off her feet by capturing first place in the relays. Student head for the successful season was Betty Ravey. Varsity win- ners for swimming were Sibley, Ravey and Larkin. The novice meet was held at P. J. C. be- tween classes, with seniors win- ning with a score of 26. Diving exhibitions were also staged as an added attraction with Ravey and Sibley taking first places. ARCHERY 1 Left to right: Alyss Greer, Helen Kallshian, Kathleen Bowers. Martha Larkin. Moya Fildew. Giving William Tell some keen competition, forty-one girls took up bows and arrows to test their skill at archery. Running Bill a close second by shooting a score of 374, Stella Norton won the gold arrow and the title of the best marksman in form and in the piercing of ye olde bull ' s eye. Helen Kallshian, last year ' s winner, carried off the blue arrow with a score of 323 while the red arrow was presented to PAGE 211 Kathleen Bowers for scoring 345 points. Managers were selected, as customary by popular vote and included this season: Ruth Willard, Evelyn Cerney, Eleanor Roobian and Alyss Greer lead- ing the frosh. Coaching was done by Miss Elizabeth Turner and the student coach, Norton. Those girls who proved their superiority by copping varsity awards were the leaders, Nor- ton, Kallshian and Bowers. PASADENA CAMPU GRADUATE A momentary pause — gradua- tion affords the student a hasty retrospect of his scholastic ac- complishment and a working estimate of his potentialities. M SENIORS DOROTHY ADAMS HARRIET ALDRICH ANONA ALEXANDER EDWIN ALEXANDER JACK ALLIN DOROTHY ALISON MARGARET ANDERSON ALICE ARCHER GIRALDO ARES GENE ARNONE GILBERT ASADOORIAN NELL AULD ROBERT BAKER EDWARD BAKER MARJORIE BARMETTLER JAMES BARRY EUGENE BEAN VIRGINIA BEAUMONT ROHLAND BEHNCKE VICTOR BELL VIRGINIA M. BELL ROBERT BENEDICT LOUISE BENNETT HAROLD BERG BETTY BERRY FRANCES BERRY EMILY BETTANNIER JACK BIREN PAGE 214 SENIORS RUTH BISHOP KLEA BISSELL KENNETH BLAIN WILLIAM BOLAND LUCILLE BOOTS LAWRENCE BORGESON CLARK BOWER WILLIAM BOWLING OLIVE BRANCH ROBERT BREAM ROSELYN BRITT BETTY BROWN GEORGE BROWN MORRIS BROWN ROBERT M. BROWN RUTH IVONNE BROWN DOROTHY BRUCE ELIZABETH BUCKINGHAM VINCENTE BUGAYONG ALBERTA BUHSE HELEN BUOB DOROTHY BURLEY ELIZABETH BURMAN ALLAN BURT BARBARA BUTTERFIELD RALPH BUTTERFIELD KATHRYN BYER LORRAYNE CALKINS iifc um li iliil PAGE 215 4 iiA 1 g SENIORS ROBERT CALVERT MABEL CAMPBELL PATRICIA CAMPBELL SYBIL CARNAHAN ELIZABETH CARTER GERALDINE CARTER LORRAINE CARTER CAROL CLAPP ALINE CLARK CHARLOTTE CLINTON ROBERTA COATES ERNEST COCKS MARGARET COX BETTY CRAIG LEROY CRAMER RUTH CRAWFORD RICHARD CROCKETT RUPERT CUMMINGS COLENE CURDIE MARIANE DAILY CHARLES DAVIS THOMAS DAVIS VIRGINIA DAVIS JOAN DAV SON ROBERT DAWSON ELAINE DEBOYNTON BETTY DEHAAN KENYON DEVORE ■¥■ PAGE 216 SENIORS DONALD DOUGLASS FERN DRAGE SHIRLEY DUNCAN FLORA DUNHAM LINN EASTMAN TED EASTMAN HARRY EATON CLARK EDWARDS EVELYN EHLERS ALFRED EINSTEIN ROBERT ELLIS LEONARD EMERY LOUISE ERWIN GEORGE ESTABROOK CARL FELDMETH AUGUSTA FINK RUTH FINK DAVID FIRMAN DOROTHY FLINT VIRGINIA FLYNN NEIL FORD ELEANOR FOWLS DALE FOX MAX FRENCH WILLIAM FRETTER MARY FROWNFELTER BILLY FRY EDWARD FURSTMAN 9 i SENIORS GENA GASPONI PETER GEDDES MARY ALICE GIANETTI HELEN GIERE DONALD GOLDTHWAITE RICHARD GORBY LORETTA GORDEN VIRGINIA GRACE DORRIS GREEN GROVER GREENING SARA GRIEBENOW BETTY GROVES RUTH HAGADORN MARIE HAHN FRANK HAINES CHARLES HAINS MARGARET HALDEMAN MORRIS HANNON V ILLIAM HASKINS MARGARET HAUBRICH GORDON HEALD BARBARA HENDERSON ROBERT HESS ROBERT HIESTAND JAMES HOOPER CLARENCE HOORNBECK ALBERT HORTON ELMA HOSMER SENIORS LELAND HOUGHTON EDWIN HOYT MARGUERITE HUCKETT JAMES HUGHES NATHANIEL HUGHES CYNTHIA HULL SIDNEY HUMPHREY MARY LOUISE HUTHSING DOROTHY JACKSON VIOLET JARDINE EDNA JENSEN HELEN JOHNSON MARY HELEN JOHNSTON LUNSFORD JONES JACK JORDON LEE JOYNER TERESA JUAN LENA KADING ELAINE KASTEN LORNA KATO SAM KELLOGG MADELINE KIEHL ELLSWORTH KIERSEY JOSEPH KIEVIT BARBARA KIMBALL LOIS KING MARGARET KING CECILE KINGMAN PAGE 219 w SENIORS EVELYN KINGMAN MARJORIE KINZER LILLY KIRK THELMA KITZMILLER WANDA KUMLE VICTOR LA GRAVE LOUIS LA LONDE JAMES LAWLESS DALE LEDYARD DELV IN LEHMANN WILLIAM LEICHT HELEN LESH EDNA LEVEILLE BERNADINE LINNAN ROBERT LINNAN WALTER LIPKE NINA MARIE LITTLEFIELD ANNA MARJORIE LOOMIS CHARLES LOVE JOHN LOVE JAMES LOV E ROBERT LOWEN LEORA LUCE BEN LUDDEN BLANCHE LUNK ROBERT McCANDLESS ELIZABETH McCOY MAURICE McCOY -¥■ ■¥■ PAGE 220 SENIORS FRANKLIN McCURDY MILDRED McCUTCHEON VIVIAN McCUTCHEON HENRY McDonald JEAN McEWEN ANN McGEE ROBERT MADDOX VARTAN MALIAN BRUCE MANSFIELD SHERWOOD MARK MARY MARSH FRANCIS MARTIN JAMES MARTIN JUNE MATHEWS FLORENCE MEEK JOSEPH MESSINGER CECILIA MICHELI LEWIS MINICH JAMES MITCHELL JOAN MITCHELL ROBERT MITCHELL JEANETTE MOGENSEN WILLIAM MOIR DEAN MONROE PAUL MONROE STEPHEN MOONEY GRACE MOTE HELENE NEUBRAND SENIORS VIOLET NEWHOUSE MARGARET NEWLIN MARTHA NEWTON ELEANOR NORTHRUxD JANET NOWLIN PHILIP OILER BARBARA O ' NEILL ESTHER OSBORN JUANITA OTT BETTY OVER VIRGINIA PAMPAYAN JAMES PARSONS DAVID PATRICK DOUGLAS PENNY ROBERT PERKINS LEROY PETERSEN MONA PETERSON MAXINE PEYTON HELEN PHILLIPS JOE PHILLIPS MARIAN PICTON THOMAS POLLOCK THERESA PORTER ELIZABETH POTTENGER FELICE POWERS RALPH PRIDDY THOMAS PRUCHA CHESTER RADFORD PAGE 222 SENIORS MARJORIE RAY NETTIE READY ALBERT REDDING ARTHUR REED FRANK REICHERT ARTHUR REINHARDT ARAKEL REJEBIAN CRAIGIE REPLOGLE JAMES REYNOLDS TED RICHARDSON GEORGE RICKETTS GERALDINE RIGGS LEONARD RHONE CAROLYN ROUGH ED SAWYER JOHN SCALES MAURICE SCHLATTER PHYLLIS SCHLICHTING DOROTHY SCHMIDT OTTO SCHOENBERG MYRELLA SCHOENLEBER JOHN SCHOFIELD RUDOLF SEHRING LINCOLN SERVICE ESTHER SHACKELFORD LINCOLN SHEKERJIAN FRANK SHIPMAN MERLE SHIRAR f SENIORS VIRGIL SHOEMAKER VIVIAN SHORE JEAN SIEGHOLD LILLIAN SINGER MARY SKELTON PATRICIA SKINNER DOROTHY SKRABEL ELEANOR SLOSS HENRY T. SMITH HOBART SMITH lEAN SMITH LOTHROP SMITH LYNN SMITH MALCOLM SMITH ROBERT J. SMITH TED SMITH Vi AYNE SMITH EVELYN SOLOMON FLORENCE SOUTHWORTH JOE SPRANKLE JUNE SPEAR ELWYNE STEINACKER MAURICE STEINACKER ELLSWORTH STEELE PAULINE STEVENS MARTHA-LEE STONE ANN STOW CHRISTINE STRICKLAND PAGE 224 SENIORS HELEN SUMMERS SAM SUSSMAN RONALD SWANSON DOROTHIJANE SWINSON RALPH SYVERTSEN STANLEY TAFT GARROL TAINTER JOHN B. THOMPSON MAXINE THOMPSON JOHN A. THOMPSON JAMES TUCKER JACQUELINE TULL FRANCES TURMAN LORRAINE TWOGOOD PETER VAN ETTEN BENJAMIN VAN METER NED VESSEY WINIFRED WALKER JACK WALLING MAXINE WARD JEAN WARREN ARDELL WHEELER OLIVE WHEELER WALTER WHITE LOIS WIEDERANDERS EILEEN WILLIAMS IVAN WILSON JUNE ROSE WINKLER ' mMMs Alk.i l PAGE 225 f .mk SENIORS GEORGE WILSON FRANK WOLVEN ARLENE WOPSCHALL LYLLIS ZAHN AGNES ZBORNIK DON FOWBLE LILLIAN BARRON CRAIG McLaughlin ADDITIONAL GRADUATES JAMES AMEND ROBERT AMESBURY VINTON ANDERSON MARY ARCHER DOROTHY ARTZ JOHN ATKINSON VIRGINIA BAILEY BETTIE BARNES MERLE BARTOO CHARLES BEHM GEORGE BELLIS REGINALD BENNETT CLUBMAN BIBB HARVEY BLANCHARD IRMA LEE BOV LING ROBERT BRANDT HARRISON BREYER KAY BROW KATHRYN BUMSTEAD KARL BURGHARDT JOHN CAHOON CHARLES CASSERLY JEAN COLLISTER GEORGE COOPER BEULAH COX JULIAN CRYSTAL DOROTHY CUTLER MARGARET DACHTLER KATHLEEN DEXTER FRANK DISCHE MARY LOU DOUGAN DOROTHY DOWNING JOSEPH DUNCAN CONSTANCE ELLISON DONALD EMBERSON ROBERT ENGLE ALBERTA ENGLISH RUTH ETIENNE MARGARET EVANS HENRY FETZER DANIEL FLEMING MARIE FORD PRISCII.LA FOX CATHERINE FRIEDERICHS ALBERT GADOMSKI TREVOR GARDNER PHYLIS GILLICE ISOBELL GOLDIE FRANCES GOODSELL REESE GORRIS OPAL GRAY LESLIE GREEN TAYLOR GREEN DEAN GRIGGS JOHN HALL MAENARD HALL MARJORIE HELMS HOWARD HILLIS BETTE HOOD THOMAS HOPKINS HELEN HOUSTON CATHERINE HOWELL HARVEY JOHNSON WILSON JONES BETTY KERR MYLES KINGSLEY JOHN KIRSCH WILLIAM KORELL COURTNEY LACEY GLADYS LAFLAM STANTON LANGSDORF MARTHA LARKIN JANICE EARNER HAROLD LARSON WILLIAM LAV SON EDNA LEAVITT BETTY LESLIE ROBERT LIECHTI lEFFREY LITTLEBOY WILLIAM MacBETH EILEEN MacMASTER WILLIAM MANN FERN MARTIN HORACE McBURNIE I.UDWIG McCREA scoTTY McDonald WINTHROP MrSPARRAN IRENE MEGINNES FRANK MERRY 1AN ' IARIE MORRISON WALLACE NAU HUGH NELSON EVERETT NICHOLSON STELLA NORTON ALLEN O ' BRIEN WILLIAM PAYNE MARVIN PEARSON HUBERT POPENOE HOMER POWNALL RICHARD PUGLESI JOE PUTNAM lOSEPH RABB MARJORIE RAND PAUL REICHERT EMMET RIES LOIS ROBBINS RUTH ROCKWOOD FUMIKO SAMESHIMA HARRY SCOTT TERESITA SELMA HENRY SIEWERT ESTEL SITZE MARJORIE SMITH STANLEY SMITH WILLARD SMITH HELEN SOMMER HELEN SPELTS VIVIAN STEELE RAY STOCKMAN MILDRED STONER MANAHU TANAKA HARRY THOMAS MARGARET THOMAS 1ARY TINDALL VERNE TIPTON CURTIS ULRICH JAMES VIVRETTE JAMES WARE FRANK WARK ROBERT WATERMAN KATHALEEN WEIGHT DONALD WHYTE RUTH WILLIARD GORDON WILLIAMS LARKIN WILLIAMS RACHEL WILLIAMS BETTY WILSON RICHARD WINDER RICHARD WINGREN GERTRUDE WOOD CLAIRE YEGGE SOPHOMORES JEANNETTE ADAMS LUELLA AKINS MARCELLA AKINS CATHERINE ALLEN RUTH ALLEN KATHERINE ALLEY JACK ANDERSON HAROLD ANGERHOFFER HILDEGARD ARENS El ' HEL ARMOUR JEAN ATTRILL CHARLES AVERILL THOMAS AYERS HOWARD BACHMAN WILMA BALDWIN ETHEL BARHITE CATHERINE BARNGROVER MARION BARR BILL BARTHOLOMEW DAVID BATTERSON BETTY BEERS JOHN BENTON MILTON BENZICK RUBY BERGSTROM GRACE BERKA MARY BERRY ELEANOR BIBRA FRANK BIORN mst i 2kii A fit € ' ii ' ( 9 w ' W i 3L5 1 SOPHOMORES AGNES BLAYNEY ALICE BLOSSOM DON BLUSH HAROLD BOWNESS NAOMI BOYER ELEANOR BOYLE JOE BRADY LLOYD BRANSTITER HARRIET BRASS ARTHUR BREWER LLOYD BREYER FRANCES BROCKHAUS GILBERT BROWN MADELENE BROWN PAUL BROWN ROBERT BROWN RICHARD BUCHEISTER VAUGHN BURDICK KATHLEEN BURDSALL JOHN BUSIK SEVERINE CALLAHAN JOHN CALLIER EVELYN CALVERT BOB CAMPBELL DON CAMPBELL MAXINE CAMPBELL GORDON CANNON VIOLET CAPELLI PAGE 228 SOPHOMORES JACK CARHART DONALD CARSON KENNETH CARTZDAFNER ANNE BELLE CASEBEER LUELLA CASEY J. D CASON LOIS CHISHOLM KENNETH COLLINS ROBERT CORT RAYMOND COURTNEY ALLYN COWLEY GENEVIEVE CREVl ' S PERRY CULLEY MELVIN CUNDIFF BARBARA CURTIS NELLIE DANIELS ROBERT DAVIES AUBREY DAVIS BARBARA DAVIS MARGARET DAVIS MARION DAVIS MEREDITH DAVIS LENORA DEAN BEVERLY DERKSEN JAMES DEVONSHIRE HELEN DIEMER DORA DIKRAN MONA DONLEY .11:41 PAGE 229 SOPHOMORES HORTENSE DOUGLAS GERALDINE DOWNEY KAY DRINKWATER MARJORIE DRIVER VIOLET DUNLAP LOCY DUTTON MARGARET ELLERTON DAVID ELLIS DOROTHY ELLISON ANNA ENGSTROM KENNETH PAGAN CAROLYN FARRIS MARGARET FENLEY HELEN FERGUSON MILDRED FERRY MORRIS FINLEY PAUL FISCHER CLAIRE FISH THOMAS FISH CECELIA MARIA FISHER TED FISHER FRED FITZPATRICK MABEL FITZPATRICK DELOS FLINT WILLIAM FLINT JOHN FLOCKEN JAY FORRESTER ROSEMARIE FORRESTER PAGE 230 SOPHOMORES GORDON FOSTER HOPE FRECHTMAN EVELYN FREDERICK MARIAN FRYE LOUIE GALLEGOS LAVONNE GARBER JOSEPHINE GARDINER ALFRED GARDNER FRANKLYN GARDNER MARGARET GEDDES ELEANOR GEHRIG HELEN GEORGE RAY GERHART LUCY GERTMENIAN NORMAN GETZ GRACE GETZIN ROBERT GINN FRANK GOBLE WILMA GODSEY WYNNE GOING JACK GOODELL VIRGINIA GORDON ALLAN GOTTLIEB VIRGINIA GOWLAND NELLIE GRAY JAMES GREENE LEONA GRIFFIN HENRY GREGER SOPHOMORES CORENE GRAVES MARTHA GROTH MARGARET GRUBB JANE HADDOCK LEE HALL MARCUS HALL MARGARET HALL MARIAN HAMMOND JOSEPHINE HARDY JANE HARE ALMA HARRIS CHARLES HARRIS CLARENCE HARRIS MARODIENE HARRIS ALICE HARTUNG WILLIAM HATCH VERA HAWKINS JANE HAZENBUSH ALBERT HENDERSON SARITA HENDERSON JAMES HERBOLD VIOLA HERRERA BARBARA HILL LILLA HILLER MADELINE HILLIS HORACE HILLMAN ROMAINE HIXSON GERTRUDE HUFF PAGE 232 SOPHOMORES BEULAH HUGHES HELEN HULTMAN CATHERINE HUNTER BOB HURT LAVERNE HURTER PATRICIA INGHAM ADELYNE JAFFE VIRGINIA JAGGER GILBERT JANSEN NONA JENNINGS SIDNOR JOHNSON BURL JOHNSON FRANCES JOHNSON HELEN C. JOHNSON ROBERT M. JOHNSON VERA JOHNSON ANNA KATHARINE JONE S EDITH JONES ELOISE JONES GLADYS JONES DONALD JORDAN GERALDINE KADEL ELIZABETH KAMINSKY STANLEY KANEEN ROSA KARPF CLAIRE KEEFE MARION KIMBALL MARGARET KIMMEL ¥ 4 PAGE 233 SOPHOMORES MARY KING THEODORE KIRK PAUL KLEIN MORELAND KORTCAMP DERWOOD KRAUSE RAY KUHN MATSUO KUNIHIRO MARY LANE MARY LOUISE LARSEN ADELINE LAVOIE ALICE LEMBKE IRENE LEVEILLE PHYLLIS LIEPHART MARY LOUISE LINDLEY JANE LINGENFELTER DONALD LINGREN GEORGE LINK CARLOTTA LIPKE BETTY LLOYD LOGAN LOCKE JACK LONZO EARL LORD VIRGINIA LOVE VIRGINIA LOVELADY HAROLD LUNDSTEDT MARION LUNDSTEDT MILDRED LUNDSTEDT DICK LUSK 4 PAGE 234 SOPHOMORES ROBERT H. LYON BOB McCONNELLY BARBARA McCULLOUGH JOHN McDONOUGH HELEN McMANUS CHARLOTTE MADISON ROBERT MAGNUSON JANIE MANGAN ROBERT MANNELL ROBERT MAPLE ED MARODER ELWOOD MARTIN BOB MASONER JACK MAXWELL DOROTHY MAYS MARIAN MAYS MARY MEHERS DOROTHY MELENDY CAROLYN MERRICK LOUISE MERRICK BERT MEYER ALBERTINE MILLER VIRGINIA MILLER MYRON MINICH PHIL MISHLER PHIL MONROE THOMAS MONTGOMERY ROBERT MOORE PAGE 235 SOPHOMORES LAURA MORTON MARY-MARTHA MORELAND HELEN MORLEY MARY MORRIS ELMER MORTON ARCHIE MURPHY FRANK MURPHY MELVIN NEAD ROBERT NEALE ARTHUR NEHER BETTY ANN NEHER KENNETH NEILL LEE NELSON PATRICIA NELSON RUTH NELSON DOROTHY NEMEYER LUCILLE NEVINS FERN NEWCOME OQUILLA NEWFIELD CATHRYN NOBLES ROBERT OGLESBY OLAF OHLSSON NORMAN OLDSON JACK OSBORN ROXIE OTTO JOHN OVERHOLTZER HELEN PADGHAM lACKSON PAGE PAGE 236 SOPHOMORES BETH PALMER lEAN PALMER MARJORIE PALMER RICHARD PALMER ROBERT PALMER BILL PAPPAS FRANCES PARKER GENELLE PASCHALL MARIE PETERS HELEN PETERSON LORRAINE PETSEL GLEN PETTIT JULIE PHAIR MARION PHILLIPS LESLIE POLLIARD LOUISE POSPISIL DORIS POTTER RUTH POUDER MARGUERITE RAMAGE ELINOR RANDALL DONNA RAYMOND MILDRED REED POLLIE REED DICK REINEMAN EDITH REYNARD JAMES REYNOLDS AMALIA RIASSETTO CECILE RICHARDSON n ra SOPHOMORES ELLIOTT RIEHL NORRIS ROBERTS BARBARA ROBERTSON HARRY ROBERTSON ELEANOR ROOBIAN NEWELL ROWRAY MARYBETH SACHSE ERNEST SAILER ROBERT SCHAETZEL MURIEL SCHEELE ALBERTA SCHERFF MABEL SCHLINGER RUTH SCHUSTER STANLEY SCHUSTER SAM SCHWARTZ ROBERT H. SCOTT CHARLES SCOTT JEAN A. SCOTT JEAN F. SCOTT WALTER SCOTT ANNA SEIKI GLENN SERRES CRISTEL SHARP AUGUSTUS SHAW HENRY SHAW ZEE VEE SHAW HARRY SHELDON MARY SHERIFF PAGE 238 SOPHOMORES ADA SHILEY DOROTHY SHOEBRIDGE RAYMOND SHUSTER FORREST SKUTT MATTHEW SLAVIN FLORABEL SLEETH MAIDA SLEIGHT BERTON SMALLWOOD DOLSON SMITH ILO SMITH PAUL SMITH MARTIN SNELL VIRGINIA SNIPES RUTH SOETENS THOMAS SOMMERVILLE MARJORIE SORVER ARZELIA SPENCER RUTH SPENCER ELEANOR SPRANGER LOUISE STAMER ERNESTINE STANSBURY LOUISE STAUNTON WILLIAM STECKER HAL STEWART ELTON STIRLING JEANNE STOLBA HELEN STONE VIRGINIA STONE 4 f ' i i ' lPlk Ot r ; 9 i-% PAGE 239 f5 SOPHOMORES MADELEINE STOUGH BRUCE STREET LEO STRELSKY BEVERLY STRONGMAN PHYLLIS STRUTHERS WALTER SUDA SUE SULLIVAN JULIA SUMMERS FERN SWANSON JOHN TAYLOR MARGARET THODE DAVID THOMAS ISABELLE THOMAS JOE THOMPSON BILLIE THOMSON BETTY THORNTON LUCILLE THORPE MARGARET TIESSON KIMI TOMOYASU EMMA-JEAN TOPPING KATHERINE TOWNSLEY BILL TRERISE JOSEPHINE TRYON RANDOLPH TWYCROSS GEORGE TYLER J. L. TYSON SETSUKO UCHIDA EMILY UCHIYAMA PAGE 240 SOPHOMORES LORRAINE ULRICH JOHN UNCLES MARY VAN DUZER ELEANOR VAN GRUNDY MURIEL VAN PATTEN ROSE VAN VRANKEY KATHRYN VEALE FRANCIS WACHTEL BARBARA WADE HELEN WADSWORTH JANE WALKER ANDREW WALTMAN BETTY WANGERIAN BARBARA WARD CHARLES WARD SARAH WARE MURIEL WARREN BERTHELLE WEAVER DORA WEAVER HARRIET WEBB WILLIAM WEIL BARBARA WELCH GEORGE WEST MORGAN WEST THELMA WESTLING MARY HELEN WHALEN CAROL WHEELER ELIZABETH WHEELER 1 ' B II PAGE 241 SOPHOMORES MARY ALICE WHIELDON NATALIE WHITE BARBARA WHITNEY MARGARET WHITNEY SARAH WIEGEL LENORE WILCOX BYRON WILLIAMS MIRIAM WILLIAMS CASTLEMAN WILSON CORINNA WILSON IRENE WILSON ROBERTA WILSON BARBARA WINCHESTER JOHN WINN HERBERT WINSLOW FRANK V OOD HAZEL WRIGHT RAYMOND YEARICK MARJORIE YOUNGBLOOD BETTY LEE YOST CATHERINE BARNGROVER KATHRYN BARTLETT MARGARET BECKFORD HARRY CLATWORTHY BETTY JANE COOPER BOB LEONARD EDNA SUMMERS (m i: PAGE 242 ADDITIONAL GRADUATES WILBUR AIKIN FLORA ALLEN ALBERT ALLEY JAMES ARMSTRONG JEAN ATTRILL GRACE BAILEY BLANCHE BAIR STEPHEN BARKER LAVINA BARTHOLOMEV KATHRYN BARTLETT AGNES BASORE GEORGE BECK MARJQRIE BENTON BOB BEVIS CHARMAINE BLISS FRANK BOWLAND BERNARD BOYER HENRY BRAUN CHERIE BROADBENT RICHARD BURLEIGH JOHN BURTT MARTHA CALVERT DONALD CAMPBELL WILLIAM CASEBEER WESLEY CATLIN HARRY CLATWORTHY BILL COFFIN DONALD COOK BETTY JANE COOPER CHARLES CORDRAY DOROTHY CORDRAY EUGENE COX JACK CREAMER HUBERT CREHAN MARY ELIZABETH CROFT BOB CROMWELL PATRICIA DEWAR JULIET DOMINE DORIS DONALDSON DOROTHY DONALDSON LANE DORR EILEEN DOUGHERTY IRA DUNLAP LILLIAN EDGERLY GERALDINE EDMISTON DELOSS EDWARDS lACK EISEN GERALD ELGER HUGH ELKIN WALTER ELLIOTT HERMAN ENGLANDER ROBERT EQUI JOHN ESPEY FRANK FEY MIRIAM FISHER CHARLES FINLEY HOWARD FLETCHER ALLISON FOLSOM RAY FOX CARL FRICKE PHOEBE FRYE LYLE GASH KENYON GEORGE JACK GIBSON MANUEL GISWEIN ROBERT GLASSCO DORIS GOSHORN JOYCE GRIMES BAALIS GRUBBS JOHN GRUND IRWIN GUIHAN HOWARD GWYNN BARBARA HADFIELD JEANNE HALVERSON HOWARD HANES JANE HARRIS BARBARA HATCH BILL HATCH CROSSAN HAYS CLARENCE HEINRICH ROBERT HEMMINGS CHARLES HENNICK THORTON HILBORN PETER HILLIER ROBERT HINSHAW MARY HOWE HERBERT HUGHES LARS JACOBSEN RUBY JENSEN ROBERT E, JOHNSON VALERIE JOHNSON PERLE JOHNSTON HUGH JONES WILLIAM KAPIC ELLSWORTH KIERSEY YURI KONDO MARTIN KORNGIEBEL IRVING KORNSTEIN FLORA KRAUZER GEORGE KRONMILLER MAJORIE LAIRD FRANCES LAND LAURA LANKFORD VERNA LANKFORD JOHN LARSEN EDWIN LEBAKER KENDALL LINNE EDWARD LORD ROBERT MALSBY DAVID MANN CHARLES MANNING RONALD MATTHEWS HENRY McCUNE PATRICIA McGOUGH LEWIS McKESSON EARL McKINLEY LOIS MELIN CHIYEKO MIKURIYA SHIRLEY MILKER GENEVA MILLER ARTHUR MOODIE ROBERT MOORE CHARLES MORELAND MARY MORGAN ORLETHA MUNTZ WILLIAM MURPHY MELVIN NEAD FOREST NELSON LLOYD NELSON EDWIN NEWBOLD SHO NOMURA GURNEY PAULE GRACE PITCAITHLEY PETRUSIA POLLGREEN LUCIA POWNALL WILLIAM RAPP GLENN RANDALL ETHOLA REEDER RALPH RIDDLE BILLY ROHRER ANNE RONNIE RETHA ROUSSEAU DICK ROWLEY ERNEST SAILER ELSA SAUER BOB SHAETZEL RANDOLPH SERVICE ROBERT SHEARS DAVID SIEWERT BARBARA SLINGMEYER RALPH SLUSSER JOHN SMITH JAMES SOFTENS VICTORIA SOLANI ROBERT SOMMERVILLE ALBERT SPEHR EVANGELINE STONE EDNA SUMMERS THURSTON SYDNOR HANAKO TAGASHIRA DAVID THOMAS YUJI TAJIMA KINGO TAKASUGI JOHN TAKESHIGE JOHN THOMAS ROBERT THOMAS WILFRED THOMAS JAMES THOMPSON BILLIE THOMSON JACK TOLLEFSEN GEORGE TRIMBLE MILTON VALOIS JOHN VAN ETTEN DAVID WARK BILL WATSON DON WEITZEL SCOTT WHISTLER ALBERT WING ARTHUR WILSON LOUISE WOOD LEWIS WOODCOCK PAGE 243 PASADENA CAMPUS NURSES r DIRECTORS Left to right: Mrs. D. D. Sledge. Miss Ethelyn Peterson. Miss Alice Henniger, Miss Lorena Craig. 1 Forward always is the key- note of the curriculum for nurses. The completion of a year of sci- entific background at Pasadena Junior College is but the first step in an increasingly well- rounded program of classes which run parallel with the practical experience obtained at the Pasadena Hospital. The basic course covers 28 months, individualized for each student, including service in medical, surgical and obstetrical wards and general nursing care; for three valuable months the ope- rating room is the focal point. In the diet-kitchen, the nurses plan and prepare special diets; and in the surgical dressing rooms, v ound dressings receive atten- tion. An introduction to public- health nursing is experienced at the Pasadena Dispensary, ex- perience in communicable dis- eases at the Los Angeles Gen- eral Hospital, and in pediatrics at the Hospital for Children. STUDENT COUNCIL Loft to right — Top row: Helen leiirey, Maybelle Johnston, Mildred Washburn, Mrc Sledge; Front rov : Nevart Re. ' obian, Leila Froct, Medele.io Barker. Dulh Elder. Off duty, Student nurces discard cap and uniform and turn to lighter pleasures. Early fall brought a jolly treasure hunt with ingenious clues and hiding places. While ghosts walked abroad, popcorn and apple- ducking held sway at a fireside Hallowe ' en party; after sewing and shopping for a needy fam- ily, the nurses gather on Christ- mas Eve around their own tree to watch for the visit of St. Nick. In January, at a candle-light ser- vice, the probies made their cus- tomary pledges and recieved their caps. St Valeniine ' s day v as the occasion for a spring formal and with June came the usual series of social affairs which culminated in the solemn ceremonies of commencement. NURSE S ' LIFE 1. THE ANATOMY OF STUDY 2. NURSES GATHER IN A SPARE MOMENT 3. GOING ON DUTY 4. TWO FRIENDS OF CHILDREN 5. PROBIES DON THEIR CAPS 6. ALMA MATER ' S ENTRANCE PAGE 247 CLASSES ' -f Left to right — Top row: Frances Cadwell, Wilma Schroeder, Mildred Washburn, Frances Seyler; Front row: Madelene Barker, Ruth Elder, Evelyn Groves, Leila Frost, Marjorie McOuat. 41 .y Left to right — Top row: lone Kamann, Winifred Wilcox. Katherine Taylor, Marcia Groch, Maybelle Johnston, Roberta Freeman, Lilla Neubrand; Second row: Maxine Quent, Helen Seulke, Betty Reed, Avis Reich, Betty Honsberger, Dorothy Sprague, Ingrid Hansen; Front row: Elnora Wright, Florence Stone, Anna Shiells, Naomi Prigmore, Carrie Sidwell, Frances Purdy, Betty Weston, Vera Thurman; Additional member: Ruby Sitze. PAGE 248 GRADUATES JULIA ANDERSON JANE ARMSTRONG INA BACH Q C i LENORA BENEDICT MAY DAVIDSON ALTA ELIASON RUTH GUSTAFSON BEATRICE LIVINGSTON MARY NEWCOMER ALBERTA PARKINS NEVART REJEBIAN DOROTHY SLOSS W E REMEMBER Miss Alice Hastings Agnes Sousley Geraldine Williams September 20, 1934 December 22, 1934 January 20. 1935 V w u hr ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The staff of the 1935 Campus wishes to thank the following persons for the part they played m solving many of the problems encountered during the publi- cation of volume seven: Mr. Ralph Bergsten, Times-Mirror Publishing Company; Mr. L. W. Gentry, Mr. James Hewlett, and Miss Kathenne Novak, Hewlett Studios; Mr. Walter Hubbell and Mr. Frank Scott, Photo Engrav- ers; Mr. Roy Botsford, Zellerbach Paper Company; Sherwood PAGE 253 Mark, Photographer; and to Dr. John W. Harbeson, Principal- Mr. James P. O ' Mara, Mr. John Anderson, Miss Catherine J. Robbms, and Miss Ida E. Hawes, Deans; Mr. Walter E. Wilcox, Financial Adviser; Mrs. Mabel White, Messages; Mrs. Lucille Barrington, Graduate Records; Mr. Earl Holder, for courtesies m regard to bookstore space; and Mr. William Kingan, Mr. Charles Ray, and Mr. Robert Scheewe, Pasadena Junior College Press. N D X Abracadabra A Cappella Choir Acknowledgment Activities Administration Aeolian . Aesculapian . Albibetes Alpha Gamma Sig Alphometa Amphion A. M, S. . Archery Areopagites Aero Tech Athletics Attica A. W. S. . 116 48 252 24 6 117 79 118 70 119 120 20 211 121 80 142 81 21 Clio Contents Cosmopolitan Court Cross Country C. S. F. . Deans Department Chairmen Delta Psi Omega . D. S. R. . Elijah Engineering Epicomega Euterpeans 190- 5 90 15 191 71 10 11 76 123 49 91 92 93 6 Baccalaureate Band Baseball Lower Division Upper Division Women ' s Basketball Light Weights Lower Division Upper Division Women ' s Bauble and Bells Beta Phi Gamma Bible Big P . Board of Education Board oi Representatives Bryddofeth Cabinet Campus Campus Reflections C. D. Y. - Chess Chronicle Civil Tech 122 44 183 179 208 167 164 161 206 82 74 83 13 85 14 28 50 86 87 30 Filogian Football Intra-mural Light Weights Lower Division Upper Division Forensics Forestry Foreword Freshman Council Gloria Golf Graduates Nurses Seniors Sophomores Gunaike H Harbeson, Dr. John W. High Point Winner Hockey Honorary Clubs . I Intra-Mural Winners 124 195 156 150 145 41 94 4 19 43 187 212 249 214 227 125 9 201 204 66 196-199 Junior Council Junior Lions La Filipino Lancers Leave It to Psmith Life Section M Magnatura Mast and Dagger Men ' s Glee Men ' s Sports M.O.S. Music 17 95 96 22 50 97 68 47 144 126 42 Sci-Math Senior Council Senior Graduates Sequoia Shield and Eagle . Silver Screen . Sophomore Council Sophomore Graduates . Sorelle .... Spartans Speech Arts . Speedboll Student Body Presidents Superintendents Swimming Men ' s V omon ' s . 104 . 16 214-226 . 135 72 . 105 18 227-243 . 136 23 32 . 205 12 192 210 N Nev man ... 98 Norn de Plume ... 99 Non-Commissioned Officers . .100 Non-Restrictive Clubs ... 78 Nurses 244-249 Nysaeans 101 One Club 127 One-Act Plays .... 33 Orchestra . . . . .45 Organizations . . 64 O. S, F 128 Tennis Men ' s Women ' s The Club Theta Gamma Sigma Tioga Tome Track Light Weights Lower Division Upper Division Triple J . Triple S T-Square XXVI -189 209 137 69 138 106 175 173 170 107 108 109 139 Pamphile .... Passing of the Third Floor Back Phatian . Phenix Phi Rho Pi Philatelic Philothian Phrenocosmia Pi Delta Kappa Players Guild Publications 129 36 130 131 77 102 132 133 75 103 26 Verse Choir . Vo-Mag w W. A. A. Water Polo . We Remember V estminster Women ' s Glee Club Women ' s Sports Women ' s Varsity . 40 27 110 193 251 111 46 200 202-203 Restrictive Clubs .114 Restrictive Interclub Council 115 Riding 207 Rifle Men ' s 195 Women ' s 209 Rostrum 134 Rugby 194 Y. M. C. A. Y. W. C. A. Zama Zeta Gamma Phi Zyro 112 113 140 73 141 PRINTED PASADENA COLLEGE BY THE JUNIOR PRESS pgiiiliiiiSi


Suggestions in the Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) collection:

Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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