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 y i2-  5   SV    '  , m M I El Rodeo COPYRIGHT 1 934 BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA H . DALE HI LTON Editor JACK ROSE Manager •   I E L RODEO 19 3 4 VOLUME XXIX Published by THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS of the UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA i ■Ak C J] ■ ■  £fe.: im ■fT-  ' i sii mmi ' i , % - ' yfm r o r e w o r d J his volume is a cultural effort in tke field of Graphic Art. We present a book, in contemporary style, that shows all that we know of the best that has been done in the past. We have tried to keep the arrangement simple and free the rococo and the bizarre. Pictor tally, we have elected classicism, rendered in a modern way, because we believe that never before has the taste of the living been so analogous to that of the ancient. This feeling we have tried to express graphically at every opportunity; it is the mark of our age; it will best give the future a true picture of ourselves, and of the year 1934. 3 - =«  fess  s  Dedication ' ism. TO THE PARENTS AND i  v5S Si; J- .J-  GUARDIANS OF THE W  m5 W GRADUATING CLASS WHO, THOUGH OPPRESS-  ' ' i ' Vi ED AND HARASSED BY ECONOMIC MISFORTUNE, l c m-y i M- HAVE STEADFASTLY MAINTAINED THEIR IN- TEREST AND SUPPORT OF HIGHER EDUCATION, WE RESPECTFULLY DEDI- CATE THIS VOLUME. N  jaiMr T  V, ?f1. ' «i m In M e m o r i a m FACULTY t   ' ' %. ' ' i-  , - ' ' W ' iih. -liJBM  J. TARBOTTON ARMSTRONG MARGARET GRAHAM BORTHWICK LEROY CRUMMER JAMES MAIN DIXON ANDREW C. LIFE THEODORE C. LYSTER EMIL RICHARD RUSSELL ERNEST P. CLARKE CHARLES F. HASKELL m _1 STUDENTS DORTHY BOYD FRANK BRADY WESTON DOTY W I N STON DOTY VIRGINIA JOHNSON KENNETH McKENZIE CAROBEL MURPHY JULIAN SHERMAN ?w  4 ' • ' ■  '  ' V-  ' li ' ? : ' '   yeK- ■ ' '   i ' gr '  t a f f ii y-- 5cJ? ■ 3  ■%=i '  5 H. DALE HILTON Editor-in-Chief GRACE EDICK Associate Editor PAUL BRYAN Assistant Editor FRANK BREESE Assistant Editor RALPH PARR Assistant Editor m, THOMAS LAWLESS Sports Editor 5;gl ROBERT RUSSELL Alley Rat Editor ,wv-. •- '  .,? p m:r, m THOMAS GOBEL Feature Editor JUNE HOLMAN Organizations Editor MAXINE ADAMS Women ' s Editor ' ' --i- ' -air  ' ERNEST FOSTER Special Writer m  Contents 11  ACADEM I C TROY iSf: rs? ' : .  ! ' V ! Vl STUDENT ACTI VITI ES TROJAN LIFE TROY I N ATHLETICS ORGAN I ZATIONS ALLEY RAT ,,,;  ;_: ' -  ' ;i rVj  Trojan Campus SHEER VERTICALITY SYMBOLIZING THE IDEAL OF THE UNIVERSITY, EVER TO REACH UPWARD TO A LOFTIER SPHERE, THESE TWIN SENTINELS CHALLENGE THOSE WHO APPROACH THE NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN PORTALS OF THE CAMPUS, SHEER VERTICALITY OF A GLEAMING LIMESTONE SHAFT, CUT OCTAGONAL AND HEWN IN THE MOD- ERN MOLD, ANNOUNCES THAT BEYOND THIS LANDMARK THE SPIRIT OF MOD- ERNITY RESIDES. THE ALUMNI MEMORIAL PYLON BETOKENS A ZEAL OF SCHOL- ARSHIP THAT IS ETERNALLY ALERT FOR WHAT IS BEST IN THE NEW. )UST AS THE OBELISK ON THE NORTHERN END OF THE CAMPUS MAY BE REGARDED AS EMBLEMATIC OF WHAT THE LEARNING OF TODAY GRANTS AND THAT OF TOMOR- ROW PROMISES, SO THE TOWERING CAMPANILE OF MUDD MEMORIAL HALL OF PHILOSOPHY, MOLDED IN THE FLORENTINE GRACE OF THE ROMANESQUE, EM- BODIES THE SPIRIT OF WHAT IS NOBLEST IN THE LORE OF THE PAST. COMPLE- MENTARY TO EACH OTHER, THE TWO SPAN THE DIAPASON FROM THE WISDOM OF THE ANCIENTS TO THE MARVELS OF MODERN SCIENCE, FROM ARISTOTLE TO EINSTEIN, IN THE SCALE OF HUMAN KNOWLEDGE. V V .. •. „ K if -. FLOWER OF FLORENTINE BEAUTY MIRROR OF MAJESTY SHELLEY AND KEATS IMMORTALIZED ABSTRACT BEAUTY IN VERSE, THE ARCH- ITECT OF MUDD MEMORIAL HALL OF PHILOSOPHY HAS BUILT A PERPETUAL MON- UMENT TO BEAUTY IN THE MATERIAL FORM. THE HOOSE LIBRARY READING ROOM BREATHES A SPIRITUALITY THAT INSPIRES REVERENTIAL AV E. ITS SUC- CESSION OF ARCHES MAY BE LIKENED TO THE MEASURED RHYTHM OF POETRY. THE SLENDER GRACE OF ITS COLUMNS AND THE EXQUISITE LACE-LIKE TRACERY OF THE INTAGLIO V ORK MAY BE COMPARED TO THE FIGURATIVE ORNAMEN- TATION OF VERSE. RICH OLD FURNITURE. INVITING ALCOVES LINED V ITH TEMPTING VOLUMES, ANTIQUE CHANDELIERS, MASSIVE CROSS-BEAMS IN THE CEILING, AND STAINED-GLASS V INDOV S THROUGH V HICH TRICKLE WARM-COL- ORED RAYS, GIVE A MELLOV NESS TO THE ROOM THA T IS ENCHANTING. IMPRES- SIVE BY VIRTUE OF ITS MASSIVENESS AS MUDD HALL IS BECAUSE OF ITS ETHER- AL BEAUTY, THE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING PICTURED ABOVE OFFERS THE HOS- PITALITY OF ITS SHELTERED ARCADE. THIS STRUCTURE ADDS TO THE IMPRESSION OF A CAMPUS OF SPIRES. POETIC RHYTHM OF GRACEFUL COLUMNS NOT A BO TREE THE SWEEPING EXPANSE OF GREENSWARD AND FORMAL LANDSCAPING BETWEEN THE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING AND THE DOHENY MEMORIAL LIBRARY GIVES A HINT OF SPACIOUSNESS HITHERTO LACKING ON THE UNIVERSITY GROUNDS. IT IS A MATERIALIZATION IN PART OF A LONG-CHERISHED DREAM OF A CAM- PUS BEAUTIFUL. THIS IS THE SOCIAL HALL  AL FRESCO  OF TROY, THE POPULAR MEETING PLACE WHERE FRIENDS CHAT AND MAKE APPOINTMENTS. THE VAST PILE THAT HOUSES THE UNIVERSITY ' S COLLECTION OF BOOKS IN THE BACK- GROUND IS A HAPPY ADAPTATION OF THE R OMANESQUE TO THE MODERN SPIRIT. THE WHITE STONE FILIGREED ORNAMENTATION OUTLINING THE WINDOWS AND DOORS OF THE LIBRARY ACCENTUATE THE PLEASING CURVES OF THE ARCHES, ONE OF THE PRINCIPAL MARKS OF BEAUTY OF THIS TYPE OF ARCHITECTURE. WITH ITS CROSSED WALKS, JEWELED WITH THE CIRCULAR POOL OF THE FOUN- TAIN, THE ALUMNI MEMORIAL PARK PROVIDES A GRACEFUL AND DIGNIFIED AP- PROACH TO THE LIBRARY ITSELF. THE SPARSE SHADE PROVIDED BY THE STRIP- LING SYCAMORE IN THE SMALLER VIEW IS A PROPHECY OF THE FUTURE USEFUL- NESS, COMFORT, AND BEAUTY OF THE TREE. TROY ' S SOCIAL HALL,  AL FRESCO  i  Academic Troy J ?f jPey|, ADMINISTRATION Sabbatical leaves took from the campus a number of its most pop- ular professors, but others, equally popular, returned to make the gaps less noticeable. In addition to dispensing from their stores of knowledge, the professors were always ready to be the best of friends and companions with the students. The close bonds thus knit between faculty and students cause the Seniors to leave the campus with much regret. 17 ' T ie Temptations Upward  • I deem U a real pleasure to present this brief statement for tke 1934  El Rodeo  . In the greeting this year  include tke parents, guardians, and friends whose generosity, and, in many instances, deeply sacri- ficial giving have made it possible for students to remain in the University. Those who make the largest investment have a right to expect the largest return from that investment. No longer do we look upon a university degree as merely a pass key to a remun- erative position. The college course offers that which one writer has called  the temptations upward  . May your appreciation of truth, goodness, and beauty be deepened, and may cultural and spiritual values become a part of your permanent possessions. R. B. von KleinSmid 18 RUFUS B. VON KLEINSMID President 0  tke UriLversLty • As President of the University of Southern California, Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid has rendered outstanding service to the University through administrative expansion and development during the past twelve years. 19 FRANK C. TOUTON Vice- President • Dr. Frank C. Teuton, Vice-President of the Univer- sity, has done much in promoting new methods of educational endeavor in this and other universities. Besides being Director of the Educational Program, he is Director of the newly established University Junior College. Dr. Touton directs the scholarship program including the awards of scholarships to high school and junior college graduates. He also serves as Dean of the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, and has written various textbooks and is the author of many magazine articles. 20 HENRY W. BRUCE Comptroller • Henry W. Bruce holds one of the most impor- tant administrative offices in the University as comp- troller and has a large force under him which handles registration funds, approves all requisitions made by the University, pays all University employees, and rents buildings. In 1922, Mr. Bruce received his A.B. degree from the University of Southern California and became general manager. Later he served as purchas- ing agent before becoming comptroller. He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence in 1929. 21 THERON CLARK Registrar Theron Clark has charge of a position which has many dufics attached to it. As Registrar of the University he has devoted over thirty years to a profes- sion of vital concern to stu- dents with regard to records and requirements. BRUCE BAXTER Chaplain Dr. Bruce Baxter has two ma- jor tasks which demand his time. One consists in serving as head of the newly-formed School of Religion, the other in acting as Chaplain of the Uni- versity. His philosophical talks given during Chapel have been packed with friendly advice and have served as inspirations to many students. 22 FRANCIS M. BACON Counselor of Men More than a counselor of men and a lecturer, Dr. Francis M. Bacon is an intimate friend of the University men. His keen insight into human nature and his sympathetic attitude make him the Ideal man to help stu- dents adjust their problems, scholastic, athletic and fraternal. MARY S. CRAWFORD Dean of Women Friendly advisor and able teach- er. Dean Mary Sinclair Craw- ford,  Dean Mary  to all the co-eds, has carved a deep niche in the University as an active worker in the interest of the women students. Sorority and independent organizations alike are recipients of her sincere advice and assistance. 23 Top Icff: Herbert Hoover and President von Klcin- Smid. Top right: Dean Paul S. McKibbcn, Center: Dean Rockwell Hunt. Lower left: Dr. A. C. LaTouche. Lower right: Dean Lewis E. Ford. Faculty Personal ' Lties • Noted among national educational figures is Troy ' s prexy, Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid, whose particular hob- by is his School of International Rela- tions. Dean Rockwell Hunt, Graduate School head, finds time to put his hand to writing and has several pub- lished volumes to his credit. To Paul S. McKibben, Dean of the Southern California School of Medicine, may be traced no little portion of the prominence which his school has at- tained. Dean Lewis E. Ford, at the helm of the College of Dentistry, has lifted the name of the University to a high position in the field of dental education. He has been ably assisted by Dr. A. C. LaTouche. These are but a few of the members of the Univer- sity faculty whose names are linked inseparably with the rise of the insti- tution to its enviable place among the universities of the nation. 24 FOUR YEARS With Seniors and Juniors looking on from the stands, the Freshmen won the traditional brawl from the Sophomores to put in full swing the class activities of the Trojans. The annual formals and benefits were successful to an un- precedented degree. At the close of the year, with members of other classes able to look forward to fu- ture comradeship, the Seniors said farewell, reminiscing of their first days on the Trojan campus. 25 ROBERT LOVE Senior Class President • Robert Love, a Senior in the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, was elected all- U Senior Class President following three years of activity in student body affairs. He is a member of Sigma Chi, the Trojan Knights, and has served on the Men ' s Coun- cil and the Interfraternity Council, In ad- dition, he has found time to participate in varsity football and to report for the Daily Trojan. • As June approaches each year, every Senior realizes that his college days soon will be only a memory, and because of this fact the traditional ceremonies of Senior week are looked upon as the culmination of four years of happiness. With Baccalaureate exercises opening the events of the final week, each Senior participates in the affairs of the week knowing that his college life will soon be over. 26 The Graduating Senior Class • One of the most impressive events of Senior week is Ivy Day, when the gowned graduates walk through an ivy chain held by Junior Class Amazons garbed in white. At this time, the traditional enmity between the junior and Senior Classes is wiped out with the smoking of the peace pipe, and the mystery bag is presented by the retiring Amazon President to her successor. Senior women are feted at the annual Pansy Break- fast given by Delta Delta Delta. At this time, engaged Senior women announce their betrothal by walking through the pansy ring. The women are also honored guests at a tea at the home of Mrs. von KleinSmid. While other students are doing last minute cramming for finals, the Seniors hold their annual Ditch Day at the beach. On this day, Juniors try to prevent outstanding members of the Senior class from attending the cele- bration, but their efforts usually meet with little success, since each year Seniors are on the lookout for any friendly arguments which may arise. The final, and most im- portant event of Senior week is graduation. The exercises are begun with the Seniors forming a procession in front of Bovard Auditorium and, led by the all-university Senior Class President, marching to the Coliseum, for the graduation program . Colorful and impressive are the graduation exercises held each year in the Coliseum. 27 19  CRADUATES 34 Edgar A. Ablowich Commerce Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Track  32,  33, ' 34; Co-Captain Track  34. Maxine Adams Letters. Art.s, Sciences Alpha Chi Omega; Zeta Phi Eta; Ama- zons; Legislative Council. William G. Ahrens Petroleum Engineering Ann S. Ander.son Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Kappa Delta. K-ARNA H. Anderson Education Lois E. Anderson Education Alpha Delta Pi. Mary B. Arne Education Clionian; Quill Club; Trojan Staff. Wilson E. Arthur Engineering Chairman ot American Society of Me- chanical Engineers. Gr- ce C. Baash Letters, Arts. Sciences Alpha Delta Pi; Alpha Eta Rho; Gam- ma Alpha Chi; Advertising Club. Irving N. Baer Medicine A.B. from U.S.C. in  30; Vice-Presi- dent of Medical Class. Helen M. Bailey Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Beta Kappa; Epsilon Phi; Phi Kappa Phi. Jack K. Baillie Commerce Kappa Alpha; Trojan Staff; Sophomore Football Manager, F. Carlton Ball Letters, Arts. Sciences Phi Omega; Delta Phi Delta; Phi Kap- pa; Outdoor Club. Evelyn D. Barton Education Ruth K. Bartow Music Delta Gamma; Phi Phi. Harold E, Bauer Letters, Arts, Sciences WiLMA BaZELL Commerce Delta Delta Delta; Phi Chi Theta; Sec- retarial Administration Club. Franziska B. Beesemyer Educatioji 28 DOROTHEE BeHLOW Letters. Arts. Sciences Alpha Gamma Delta: Delta Psi Kappa; W.A.A. Cabinet. Jean Bennett Letters, Arts, Sciences Terry C. Bennett Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa; Vice-Pres. and Pres., School of Medicine. Gertrude Bergin Letters, Arts, Sciences Delta Zeta. M.ARY Bergin Education Eleanor L. Berls Education Zeta Tau Alpha; Legislative Council; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet. W. Worth Bernard Letters. Arts. Sciences Pres. of L.A.S.; Legislative Council; Varsity Debate Manager. Everett V. Bertoia Architecture Captain of Fencing Team; Delta Phi Delta. Velma F. Bishop Letters, Arts, Sciences Otis Blackstone Commerce Delta Phi Epsilon. Carl C. Bland Commerce Phi Kappa Tau; Phi Alpha Delta; Male Chorus. Jeanne Blangy Merchandising George D. Blewitt Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Kappa Psi; Varsity Track. Mary C. Jeffries Block Letters, Arts, Sciences Lambda Kappa Sigma. Bertha H. Boetticher Letters. Arts, Sciences Pres. Pi Delta Phi. and German Club; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi. David R. Bole Letters, Arts, Sciences Pi Epsilon Theta; Varsity Debate Squad; Y.M.C.A. Janet E. Bolton Letters, Arts, Sciences Mu Phi Epsilon. Charles E. Bor- h Medicine Senior Class President. 19  CRADUATES 34 VT  29 19  CRADUATES 34 Sf  ' N. Randhlph Booth CoTTinierc ' e Delta Sigma Pi; Freshman Gym Team; American Management Association. Amelia C. Bottoms Letters. Arts. Sciences Mary L. Bouelle Letters. Arts. Sciences Kappa Alpha Theta. Dorothy E. Boyett Merchandisi ig Delta Delta Delta, Trojan Woman ' s Glee Cluh. June B. Bradford Letters. Arts, Sciences Pi Beta Phi. Ruth F. Bradford Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Alpha Theta. Norman Brand Letters. Arts, Sciences Kenneth T. Bright Commerce Sigma Nu; Varsity Football. J. Phillip Bromley Education Delta Sigma Pi. Bernice a. Bron.son Education Alpha Gamma Delta; Y.W.C.A. Charlotte Brown Letters, Arts. Sciences Epsilon Phi; Clionian; Quill Club. Delbert F. Brown Wercliandisi7ig Alpha Kappa Psi; Alpha Delta Sigma; Beta Gamma Sigma; Pres. Ad. Club. Elhabeth Helen Bro wn Letters. Art.s, Sciences Alpha Tau Delta. Emily A. Brown Education Miriam K. Brown Letters, Arts. Sciences Pres. Beta Sigma Omicron. Randall A. Bryden Education Co-Captain of Gym Team. Ted Buchalter Pharmacv Skull and Mortar; Treas. College of Pharmacy. Robert A. Burnight Letters. Arts. Sciences Phi Lambda Upsilon; Trojan Band. 30 I 19  CRADUATES 34 Walter W. Busby Letters, Arts, Sciences Chi Psi; Varsity Hockey Team. Chester P. Calhoun Education J. Beecher Callaghan Letters. Arts, Sciences Kappa Sigma; Basketball: Chain; Daily Trojan. Ball and M.- RjORiE E. Cameron Education and Music Alpha Chi Omega; Sigma Alpha Iota: Vice-Pres. School of Music. Joy Camp Letters, Arts, Sciences Amajons: Legislative Council; Pres. Kappa Delta; Alpha Chi Alpha. Bruce J. C. ' Vmpbell Commerce Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Omega; Beta Gam- ma Sigma: Track Manager. Elizabeth M. Campbell Pfiannacv Alice N. Carter Letters, Arts, Sciences Pres. Alpha Gamma Delta; Glee Club. Frank M. Carter £ngi7ieeri7ig Phi Sigma Kappa: Trojan Squires: Trojan Knights. Gene B. Carter Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Varsity Track. Ruth Casler Education David Bennett Cassell II Engijieering Eileen P. Christensen £diictitio7i Delta Gamma; Zeta Phi Eta. Annie G. Cl. rk Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Beta Kappa: Pi Delta Phi; Phi Kappa Phi; Pres. Friendship Club. Dorothy Clark Letters, Arts, Sciences Genevieve G. Cl.ark Social Welfare Alpha Kappa Delta; Lehavah Club. Gordon G. Clark Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Alpha: Sigma Sigma: Football  31, ' 32,  33, ' 34.  James F. Clark Cojnmerce Pres. Pi Kappa Alpha; Trojan Band: Ed. Comm. Inter-Frat. Council. 31 19  CRADUATES 34  5fS Laura Adell Clark Social Welfare Athena; Secretary, School of Welfare. Nadine Clark Letters, Arts, Sciences Paul M. Clark Commerce Theta Psi; Trojan Squire; Trojan Knights. Willis H. Clark Jr. Commerce Phi Kappa Tau; Vice-Pres. American Management Association. ESTELLE M, Cl. ' WTON University College BiLLiE Clifton Education Beta Sigma Omicron. DociA E. Clisbee Education RiCH. RD R. Cole Commerce Kappa Sigma; Beta Alpha Psi. Dorothy H. Collum Commerce Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi. Henry Colt Letters, Arts, Sciences Pi Kappa Alpha. H. BUNDY COLWELL Commerce Phi Kappa Tau; Alpha Kappa Psi; Phi Alpha Delta. Hugh G. Con ley Enginecritig Pres. Sigma Phi Delta; Pres. Chi Epsi- lon; Beta Pi; Male Chorus. Joseph Francis Conover Letters. Arts, Sciences Frank M. Conser Commerce Delta Sigma Pi; Alpha Eta Rho; Sigma B eta Chi. Charles H. Corwin Jr. Engineering Engineering Council; A.I.M.E.; Fresh- man Football. Florence P. Covey Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Epsilon Phi. Yvonne E. Crandall Education Alpha Gamma Delta; Pi Kappa Sigma; Clionian; Drama Shop. Fr. ' nklin F. Crosby Letters, Arts. Sciences Alpha Rho Chi; Masonic Club; Sopho- more Basketball Manager. 32 Betty M. Cr- nz Commerce Alpha Delta Pi. Richard H. Cullen Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Orchestra. Benj.amin H. Culley Letters. Arts. Sciences Phi Kappa Tau; Phi Kappa Phi. Francis M. Curran Letters, Arts. Sciences BiLLiE M. Cutler Physical Education Phi Beta; Amazons. Edward G. Cryer Letters, Arts, Sciences Dorothy Danner Education Pi Kappa Sigma; Woman ' s Glee Club. BiNDA C. Davis Education Dorothy M. D.wis Letters, Arts, Sciences Delta Gamma; Zeta Phi Eta; Pres. School of Speech; Y.M.C.A. Frederick L. Davis Commerce Delta Phi Epsilon; Pres. Delta Phi; Trojan Band. Marie Hills D.avis Education Julio de la Fuente Engineering Alpha Eta Rho; Latin American Club; A.S.M.E. Chris T. de la Portillo Commerce Latin American Club; Newman Club. Louis M. Dean Education Helena Dingle Letters. Arts, Sciences President, Pi Beta Phi; El Rodeo. Louis B. Dockweiler Letters, Arts, Sciences Sarah E. Donley Law Phi Delta Delta; Senior Vice-President. John Doubenmier Commerce Beta Alpha Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma. 19« CRADUATES 34 33 19  CRADUATES 34 Charles Dougherty Engineering Beta Pi. Daniel N. Dressler Education PrcMcdical Society; Dramatics; Frosh Track. Mary K. Duckw.- ll Letters. Arts, Sciences President Mortar Board; Amasons; Varsity Debate; Secretary L.A.S. H.XRVEY C. DURKEE journalism Kappa Sigma; Blue Key; Varsity Foot- hall ' 28,  29, ' 31; By-liners. Winifred Dutton Letters, Arts. Sciences Vice-President Alpha Delta Pi ' 3 3; Zeta Phi Eta; Quill Club. Grace L. Edick Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Delta Pi; Vice-President and Secretary Amaions. Dorothy V. Edmonds Commerce Kappa Alpha Theta; Pan-Hellenic. Dorothy M. Eells Letters, Arts, Sciences Delta Gamma. Donald C. Encoe Letters, Arts, Sciences President Spanish Club ' 31. Hyman Erlich Laiti School Lambda Gamma Phi; Blackstonian. Robert A. Erskine Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Sigma Kappa; Sigma Sigma; Foot- ball; Basketball. Walter S. Eachbach £ngineerijrg Sigma Phi Delta; Transfer from Washington University, St. Louis. Keith H. Evans Merchandising Delta Sigma Pi; Alpha Delta Sigma; Advertising Club. Florence E. Eymann Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Eta Rho; Advertising Club; Freshman Club. Agapito Q. Factora Graduate School A.B. and A.M. in Letters, Arts, Sci- ences in  33 and  34. Arthur N. Farnham Letters, Arts, Sciences Transfer from York College, York, Nebraska. Ralph Farnum, Jr. Merchandising Stephen M. Farr.and Laiv School Phi Delta Phi; A.B. Stanford; U.S.C. Law Review Board. 34 Jack H. Faucett Law School Alpha Delta Chi; B.A. from U.C.L.A, Morris R. Feder Medicine A.B. from U.S.C. in  31. Frances M. Fedick Music Sigma Alpha Iota; Honorary Music Club; Phi Phi; Orchestra. Caroline Ferrey Letters. Arts, Sciences Kappa Alpha Theta; Theta Sigma Phi; Wampus Staff; El Rodeo Staff. Herbert L. Fielding E7igineering Sigma Chi. Carl T. Fishel Education Phi Delta Kappa; Ice Hockey  32, ' 33,  34, Captain in  34. James G. Floyd Engineering Transfer Fresno State Teacher  s Col- lege; Eta Kappa Nu; Beta Pi. Ellora a. Fogle Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Beta, President  33; Apolliad Win- ner  33; Debate Squad; Scribe. Jennie M. Folkerts College of Pharmacy Lamda Kappa Sigma; Secretary, Col- lege of Pharmacy  34. Elizabeth J. Fornof Journalism Transfer Northwestern University; Theta Sigma Phi. Pauline Forsythe Merc idiidisnig Pasadena Junior College; Gamma Al- pha Chi; Phi Chi Theta. Ernest A. Foster journalism Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Managing Editor Daily Trojan  33. Christy Fox Letters. Arts. Sciences Pi Beta Phi; Amason;  Vice-Pres., A.S. U.S.C; Alpha Chi Alpha; Y.W.C.A. John H. Fox Commerce Radio Staff  33,  34; Transfer Univer- sity of Nebraska. Eugene H. Frank Letters, Arts. Sciences Transfer from U.C.L.A. Helen G. Fr. ' ser Letters, Arts. Sciences Alpha Chi Omega; Alpha Chi Alpha; El Rodeo. Arnold L. Freed Letters, Arts. Sciences Tau Epsilon Phi. Victor Leslie Frey Law 19  CRADUATES 34 1 12 35 19« GRADUATES 34 Yaeko F. Fujisato Japanese Trojan Club. En-Ichi Fukuzawa Letters, Arts, S  c ei ct% Mary Jane Fulmer Education Harry Fujiyoshi hetttrs Arts, Sciences Arthur M. Gameral CoTnmercc Tau Epsilon Phi; American Manage- ment Association. Haig G. Ganajian Pharmacy RoscoE A. Gandy Pharmacy Commissioner of Elections, College Pharmacy; Kappa Psi. Reuben Garfield Pharmacy Rho Pi Phi. April Garrison Letters, Am, Sciencti Epsilon Phi. June M. Gehan Delta Psi Kappa, Vice-President; W.A.A. Cabinet; Handball Manager. Don B. Gibboney Medicine Phi Rho Sigma. Edith C. Gibes hentrs. All!.. Sciences Kappa Delta; Pres. Y.W.C.A.; Phi Beta; Amazon; Mortar Board. Morley Stanton Gillan Commerce Beta Kappa; Varsity Swimming; Var- sity Water Polo. Betty Vee Gillen htUcys, Arts Sciences Zeta Tau Alpha; Amazons; Spooks and Spokes; Sigma Delta Pi. Donald Glaze Education Varsity Football; Track; Basketball. Donald F. Glaze Pharmacy Pharmacy Orchestra; Rho Chi; Skull and Mortar; Wampus. Sterling Gleason Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Theta Delta Phi. Thomas Goble Architecture Delta Sigma Phi. 36 Mark R. Goldman Commerce Phi Kappa Phi; Orchestra  3 3, ' 34; Transfer Chaffey Junior College. Jack M. Gorham EngineeriTig Gamma Epsilon. Leo a, Gordon Commerce Tau Epsilon Phi. Philip E. Graham Commerce Advertising Club. Robert K. Greenberg Law Zeta Beta Tau; A.B. in Letters, Arts, Saences. Homer O. Griffith fngineering Pres.. Phi Kappa Psi; Blue Key; Sigma Sigma; Varsity Football. Carl Frederick Grinnewold Medicine B.A. and B.S. from University of Illi- nois. Newlin F. Gruver Law and Commerce Theta Psi; Blue Key; Ball and Chain; Track Manager, Junior Football. Saul Gutterman Letters, Arts, Sciences Transfer from U.G.L.A. James B. H.aley Pharmacy Phi Delta Chi; Skull and Mortar; Squires; Pres., Pharmacy Freshman Class. George E. Hall Medicine A.B. from U.S.C; Phi Chi. Harold E. Hammack Letters. Arts, Sciences Kappa Sigma; Blue Key; Varsity Foot- ball 3 years. Ralph T. Kanson Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Gamma Epsilon. Earl H. Hardage Commerce Pi Kappa Alpha. BoRGNY Onora Harem Letters. Arts. Sciences Kappa Delta; Athena Literary Soc; President Sodalitas Classica. Irving M. Harris Law Zeta Beta Tau; Blue Key; Knights; Squires VicePres.; Varsity Debate. Richard S. Karris Law B.S., B.A. Degrees; Board of Gover- nors; Manager of El Rodeo. Mary Gene Hart Letters. Arts. Sciences Alpha Chi Omega. 19  CRADUATES«34 37 19  CRADUATES 34 Laurence A. Harvey Law Chad M. Harwood Medicine Chi Phi. Harold Hasuike Engineering Chi Epsilon; A.S.C.E.; Japanese Tro- jan Club. LaGrande Hatfield Pharmacy Kappa Psi, Secretary. Trevor L. Hawkins Letters, Arts, Sciences Debate Squad ' 32, ' 33; Bowen Cup Winner ' 33, ' 34. Carl J. Hawley Letters. Arts, Sciences A.B. from S.C; Phi Chi. Daniel B. Healy Engineering Mary L. Heath Commerce Phi Mu. Nicholas M. Heeres Pharmacy Kappa Psi; Pres., Skull and Mortar; Pres., College of Pharmacy. Albert M. Heintz Engineering Phi Gamma Delta; Pres., General En- gineering. Wendell W. Hellman Commerce President of Squires; Board of Man- agers; Senior Baseball Mgr. Mary Elizabeth Hendricks Letters, Arts, Sciences Zeta Phi Eta; Pres., Drama Shop; National Collegiate Players. Maurice E. Hibbert Commerce Delta Chi. Donald D. Hickman Letters, Arts, Sciences Trojan Band; Pi Sigma Alpha; Aris- totelian Literary Society. Thomas Lyle Higbee Law Sigma Phi Epsilon. John O. Hills Engineering Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi; Pres. of Beta Pi. Ada Jane Hilton Letters, Arts, Sciences George C. Hilty Engineering Sigma Gamma Epsilon: A.I.M.E. 38 I Leon Mar Hin Letters. Arts. Sciences Sigma Pi Alpha; Cosmopolitan Club; International Relations Club. Bernard M. Hirshfield Letters. Arts. Sciences Zeta Beta Tau; Pres., Ball and Chain; Business Mgr. Play Productions. Edg.ar F. Hirth Engineering Sigma Nu; American Society of Me- chanical Engineering; Swimming. D.AViD M Hoffman Law Zeta Beta Tau: A.B.. L.LB.; Black- stonian; Junior Basketball. William J. Hogan Medicine Phi Rho Sigma; Kappa Zeta; A.B. from S.C. June L. Holman Education Zeta Tau Alpha; Treas. of Amazons; El Rodeo Section Editor. Edward B. Holston Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sigma Alpha; Tro- jan Knights. Rita Holtzman Education Drama Shop. Wesley W. Hooder Education Sigma Chi; Sigma Alpha; Football ' 30,  31; Track  30. Robert E. Hopkins Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Optometry. Patrick M. Horgan Pharmacy Kappa Psi; Trojan Knights; Squires; Newman Club; Skull and Mortar. Samuel C. Horowitz Letters, Arts. Sciences Transfer from New York University. Patricia Hosford School of Social Welfare Chief Justice of Women ' s Judicial Court; Transfer from ChafFey J.C. Helen J. Houck Letters. Arts Sciences Treasurer of Mortar Board; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Delta Gamma; Tic-Toe. Howard P. House Medicine A.B. from Whittier College; Nu Sig- ma Nu. John W. Houser Lauj; Letters. Arts. Scier ces Beta Theta Pi; Transfer from U. of Colorado; Phi Alpha Delta. Sophie R. Howell Education John B. Hromadka Medicine Phi Rho Sigma. 19  CRADUATES 34 39 19  CRADUATES 34 IlHIl Roy M. Hudson Jouriuihsm Kappa Sigma; Varsity Baseball. Margaret E. Hufford Education Kappa Delta; Clionian; LaTertuila; Y.WC A. Marvin A. Hughes, Jr. Commerce Theta Xi; Transfer from University of Washington. Patrick C. Humphries Medicine A.B. from S.C. in ' 31. John L. Hutchinson Education William G. Hyberg Architecture Scarab. Thomas T. Inch Law A.B. from Stanford University: Chi Psi; Phi Delta Phi. Paul Andrew Janke Engineering Sigma Phi Delta; A.I.M.E. Sherman A. Jensen Commerce Pres., Phi Kappa Tau; Pres., College of Commerce. Ch. rles K. Jewell Pharmacy Betty N. Jones Letters, Arts, Sciences Delta Gamma; Sec. of A.S.U.S.C; Chief Justice of W.S.G.A. Court. Frances Jones Letters, Arts. Sciences Transfer from Pomona; Athena. Marion L. Johnston Education Mu Phi Epsilon; Phi Phi; Pres. of Women ' s Residence Hall. Robert C. Johnson Letters, Arts. Sciences Sigma Phi Epsilon; Alpha Delta Sig- ma; Trojan and Wampus Staffs. Roy W. Johnson Commerce Pres. of Sigma Nu; Pres. of Junior Class; Pres. of Knights. Ralph F. Kalbus Commerce Gamma Epsilon; Men ' s Glee Club. Thomas K. Kanase Commerce Transfer from Fresno State Teacher ' s College. Barney Katz Letters, Arts, Sciences Senior Class President of University College. 40 I KlYOTO ICawabe pharmacy Katsu K. Kaw ' agoe Pharmacy Japanese Students  Club. Bernice a. Keefe Education President of Phi Mu: Panhellenic Rep- resentative. Gordon B. Keim Engineering Gamma Epsilon; A.I.M.E.; Freshman Advisory Coram.; Flying Squadron. S.AMUEL Keller Letters, Arts, Sciences Optometry; Omega Delta. James F. Kemp Education Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Pres. of Sigma Alpha; Varsity Track. Willis M. Kenealy Letters, Arts Sciences Phi Delta Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa: Blackstonian; Pi Sigma Alpha. Robert A. Kennedy Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa; A.B. from Uni- versity of Southern California. Bruce Kidder Physical Education Swimming ' 32,  33, ' 34; Water Polo ' 32,  33, Captain ' 34. Willlam R. Kidder Commerce Transfer from Compton J.C., U.C.L.A. K. ' therine E. Kinzy Letters. Arts, Sciences Pres. of Cosmopolitan Club; Advisor of World Friendship Club. Hyman L. Klakoff Letters, Arts, Sciences Omega Delta; Alpha Omega; Alpha Tau Epsilon; Ice-Hockey. Martin Robert Klitten Merchandising Sigma Nu; Alpha Delta Sigma; Junior Varsity Track Manager. Phyllis Knorr Letters, Arts, Sciences Athena; World Friendship Club; Cos- mopolitan Club. Drexel R. Knowlton Petroleutn Engineering Sigma Gamma Epsilon; A. I. ME. Arthur L. Kobal Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Beta Pi; Kappa Sigma. Elmer H. Kogler Commerce Beta Alpha Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Transfer from Santa Ana Junior Col- lege. Robert E. Kurtlander Commerce Pi Kappa Alpha; Blue Key; A.LM.A.; Transfer from Grand Rapids J.C. 19« CRADUATES«34 41 Melvin R. Krumm Architecture lau Sigma Delta; Phi Kappa Phi. Frank M. Kumamoto Pharmacy Japanese Trojan Club. George M. Lamme Commerce Beta Alpha Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi. Aaron Land Pharmacy Rho Chi; College of Music. Eileen A. Landers Education K. ' THLEEN R. Lane Letters. Arts, Sciences Transfer from Santa Barbara State College. Mabel V. Langton Education Clionian; Drum Majorette; Trojan Band. Mary F. Largo Letters, Arts, Sciences Vice-Pres., Zeta Tau Alpha; Transfer from Santa Barbara State College. John M. Lassalette Commerce Beta Kappa. Anton Laubersheimer Medicine Nu Sigma Nu; A.B. from Stanford University. Carl E. Lautz Commerce Phi Kappa Psi; San Bernardino Junior College. Mrs. Marion Law Letters, Arts, Sciences Transfer from San Diego State Col- lege. John R. Le.ach International Relations Pres., Sigma Phi Epsilon; Pres., Inter- fraternity Council. Martha Allen Lee fditcation Beta Sigma Omicron; Y.W.C.A. Cab- inet; Panhellenic Representative. Paul F. Seitter Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa. William H. Leedke Music Phi Mu Alpha; Pres., College of Mu- MC; Orchestra Manager; Band. Ella A. Lehr Education Pi Kappa Sigma; Athena; Y.W.C.A.; Transfer from San Antonio, Texas. Elizabeth Se Nour Education 42 Josephine L. Leonard Letters, Arts. Sciences Cosmopolitan Club; World Friendship Club; Transfer from Nashville. N. Stanley Levine Law Zeta Beta Tau; Legislative Council; In- terfraternity Council. H. ' RVEY Alvin Lewis Letters. Arts. Sciences Trojan Knight; Chairman of Bonfire Rally; Elections Committee. Rosemary Lick Letters. Arts. Sciences Alpha Delta Pi; Clionian; Outdoor Club; Quill Club. Lois A. Lloyd Education Pi Kappa Sigma; Clionian; A.S.U.S.C.; Historical Chairman. Irwin L. Logan Commerce Ma.  L Lomas Medicine Phi Delta Epsilon; A.B. 1931. Frank L. Long Engineering Chairman of A.I.E.E.; Transfer from Pasadena Junior College. Charles J. Lopez Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa; A,B,. U.S.C. 1930. Roger A. Lovett Letters, Arts. Sciences Phi Lambda Upsilon; Honor Student 1933 and 1934. Willis S. Lowder Pharmacy Gr. ce L. Loye Letters. Arts, Sciences Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Sigma Alpha; Blackstonian. Doris M. Luellen Letters, Arts. Sciences Kappa Alpha Theta; Washburn Col- lege; University of Wisconsin. Alvin G. Lueschen Education Phi Mu Alpha; U.S.C. Orchestra. Gerald G. Luhm an Law Editorial staff, S.C. Law Review. Helen C. Lundell Education Pi Kappa Sigma; Y.W.C.A. Eugene P. Lynch Commerce Phi Kappa Tau; Pres., Beta Gamma Sigma; Beta Alpha Psi; Ice Hockey. Pauline Lynchick Letters, Arts, Sciences 19« CRADUATES 34  -fj 1 43 19 CRADUATES«34 J ' J]  Gordon A. MacDonald Enginct;nng Malcolm Richard MacDonald Letters, Arts. Sciences Sigma Phi Epsilon; Ball and Chain; Board of Managers. Lyle W. MacIntyre Letter.s-. Arts, Sciences Alpha Tau Delta. Gr.ace M. Mackenzie Letters, Arts, Sciences Trojan; Der Deutsche Verein; Episco- palean Club. Ann Hewitt McBeath Ediicdlion Delta Zeta; Athena; Pi Kappa Sigma. Frances A. McBeth Letters, Arts, Sciences Quill Club; Epsilon Phi; Alpha Gam- ma Delta. Catherine B. McBride Speech Kappa Delta; Phi Beta; Clionian; Y.W.C.A.; A.W.S. Lorna D. McCain Education Delta Psi Kappa; Vice-President, W.A.A.; Transfer, Univ. of Idaho. Robert S. McCaw Commerce Pres. Aristotelian Society; Production Manager, University Radio. Hazel M. McCord Education Phi Mu; Phi Chi Theta; Transfer from Ward Belmont. Jean D. McCullough Letters Arts, Sciences CuRTi.s N. McFadden Merclidndising Kappa Sigma; Track. Phillip D. McF. ' rland Architecture Transfer from University of Washing- ton. Virginia M. McGuire Letters Arts, Scieyices Alpha Delta Pi; Gamma Alpha Chi; Y.W.C.A.; Newman Club. Edna G. McGready Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Delta Pi; Transfer from Chaf- fey Junior College. Olivla McHugh Letters, Arts, Sciences Cosmopolitan Club; World Friendship Club; Outdoor Club. William L. McIntyre Commerce Trojan Band; Transfer from California Christian College. Alan M. McKenney Commerce Kappa Sigma; Sigma Beta Chi; Blue Key. 44 T. Kern McLaughlin Merchandising Delta Sigma Phi. Joan McMaster Letters. Arts, Sciences Delta Delta Delta; President of Ama- zons; Treasurer of W.A.A. Evelyn B. McPherson Letters. Arts, Sciences Pi Lambda Theta; Alpha Rho Theta. Bettie Maas Merchandising Pres., Alpha Delta Pi; Gamma Alpha Chi: Amazons; Vice-Pres., College of Commerce. Albert E. Madsen Commerce Kappa Alpha; Alpha Delta Sigma; Ad. Club; Wampus Staff; Leg. Council. Harold J. Magnuson Letters. Arts. Sciences Phi Beta Kappa; Pres. of Kappa Zeta; Phi Beta Pi; Y.M.C.A. Maxine R. Mandell Merchandising Sigma Delta Tau; Gamma Alpha Chi: Ad. Club; Y.W.C.A.: W.A.A. John E. M. rshall, Jr. Commerce Delta Chi: Delta Phi Epsilon: Long Beach Junior College. Albert Martin Law M.D. University of Frankfurt; Law Review. Ermin Martin Education Transfer from Visalia J.C. Victor J. M. rtin EngiTieering Beta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi; Transfer from U.C.L.A. Marguerite E. Marzano Education Sigma Delta Pi; Pi Delta Phi; Y.W. C.A.; Cosmopolitan Club. Melville Mathes Commerce Vice-Chancellor, Tau Epsilon Phi. David Arthur M.atlin Law B.A. from U.C.L.A.; Sigma Alpha Mu. Laura Catharine Mattison Letters, Arts, Sciences JULE MauREAUX Education Transfer from University of Wiscon- sin; Y.W.C.A. Shigeo Mayekawa pharmacy President of Japanese Trojan Club. Rich.ard L. Mayer Eiigineering A.S.M.E.; Stage Crew. 19« CRADUATES 34 45 19  CRADUATES 34 Charles L. Mead, Jr. Law Sigma Chi; Phi Delta Phi. Martha Melekov Letters, Arts, Sciences Mu Phi Epsilon; Pres. of Phi Phi; Ex- ecutive Council of Music. Leonard T. Mendelsohn Law Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Beta Delta; Pres., Senior Class. Robert A. Mendelson Law Phi Kappa Phi; Law Review; Barris- ters. Walter J. Michel Commerce Kappa Alpha; Newman Club; Transfer from St. Mary ' s College. Elmer J. Miller Architecture Alpha Rho Chi. George A. Miller Letters, Arts, Sciences Grace Z. Miller Education Norma E. Miller Social Welfare Transfer from University of Redlands. George Lee Millikan Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Kappa Tau; Pi Sigma Alpha; Blackstonian; Trojan Male Chorus. H. Allan Mitchell Education Phi Lambda Upsilon; Outdoor Club; Transfer from Cal. Tech. Irma Mitchell Education Alpha Chi Omega; La Tertulia; Y.W. C.A.; Transfer Simpson College. William J. Mitchell, Jr. Medicine A.B. from University of Arizona, Uni- versity of Chicago. EtoNALD W. Moff.att Medicine Delta Sigma Phi; Phi Rho Sigma; B.A. from U.S.C. Malcolm Moninger Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa; Eta Kappa Nu; A. LE.E.: Transfer from U. of N. Florence M. Moore Letters, Arts, Sciences Gamma Phi Beta from U.C.L.A. James P. Montague, Jr. Commerce Y.M.C.A.; Deputations Committee; Water Polo; Fencing. DoRRis L. Montgomery Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Beta; Trojan Concert Orchestra; Women ' s Glee Club. 46 Fr-ances E. Moore Commerce Transfer San Diego State. Ross R. Moore £7igineermg Sigma Phi Delta; A.I.E.E. Jacqueline A, Morehouse Letters, Arts. Sciences Alpha Gamma Delta; Phi Beta; Spooks and Spokes; Amaions. Phillia L. Morris Letters, Arts. Sciences Kappa Delta; Elections Commission; Choral Club of Y.W.C.A. Joseph A. Morrow Letters. Arts, Sciences Phi Kappa Psi. Maurine E. Mottinger Letters, Arts. Sciences Phi Mu; Panhellenic Rcpresentitive. Charlotte L. Mountjoy Letters, Arts. Sciences Phi Mu; Delta Phi Delta; Manager of Radio Office. Jay S. Munson Commerce Trojan Band; Y.M.C.A. William M. Muraoka Phdrmacv Japanese Trojan Band. David Miyamoto Pharmacy Grace Lillian Rider Myers L ' nirersitv College Zeta Phi Eta. ' Ida J. Neff Education Clye V. Nelson, Jr. Medicine Sigma Delta Psi; Phi Beta Pi; A.B. from U.S.C. Mary E. Nelson Letters. Arts, Sciences Delta Psi Kappa; W.A.A. Cabinet. Jerome J. Nemer Commerce Tau Epsilon Phi; Skull and Dagger; Tennis; Basketball Captain. Edward D. Neuhoff Laiu Phi Alpha Delta; Board of Governors. Olive Blanche Newlin Educdtion Milton Newman Medicine Phi Delta Epsilon; Tau Epsilon Phi; A.B. at S.C. ' 30. 19  CRADUATES 34 47 19  CRADUATES 34 Morris Neinmerow Pharmacy SCHEFE E. NiES Commerce Phi Sigma Kappa; A.M. A. Ernest T. Nishihara Engineering A.S.C.E.; Japanese Club; Trojan Band. Kenneth M. Nishimoto Architecture Japanese Trojan Club, President in ' 3 3. Russell A. Nixon Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Alpha; Varsity Debate; Pi Sig- ma Alpha; Phi Kappa Phi. John E. Nordbnson Commerce Alpha Delta Sigma; Advertising Club. Spencer P. Nordyke Law Sigma Chi; Phi Alpha Delta; Board of Governors; B.A., U. of Arizona. Dale Norman Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Nu; Men ' s Council; Varsity De- bate; Freshman Advisory. Jack H. Nutt Law Phi Alpha Delta; Skull and Scales; A.B. from Stanford University. Helen O ' Brien Education Alpha Delta Theta; W.A.A. Kenneth D. Olsen Commerce Pres., Phi Kappa Psi; Knights; Blue Key; Interfraternity Council. Nelda Olsen Letters. Arts, Sciences Drama Shop; Manager of Women ' s Glee Club. Evelyn G. Olson Commerce Alpha Gamma Delta; Secretarial Club. Helmer E. Olson Commerce Alpha Phi Omega; Aristotelian; Tro- jan Band; Ice Hockey; A.M. A. Sidney J. Olson Medicine A.B. from Stanford University. George E. Ordansky Letters. Arts. Sciences National Collegiate Players; Drama Shop. Chester C. Orton Commerce Phi Kappa Tau; Elections Commission- er; Track; E.xtravaganza. L. Bradford Ostrom Medicine Phi Beta Pi; Tau Kappa Epsilon; A.B. from U.S.C. 48 i Wright Edward Owen Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Lambda Upsilon. Leroy Pace Commerce Sigma Chi; Yell Leader: Squire; Swim- ming Team; Trojan Staff. Jay J. Palmer Medicine Phi Beta Pi; Kappa Zeta; A.B. from U.S.C. ' 32. Carl J, Paul Medicine Phi Rho Sigma; A.B. from Stanford University. George E. Peale Commerce Pres., Delta Sigma Pi; Blue Key; Beta Alpha Psi; Pres., Interfraternity. Nellie M. Pelton Commerce Virginia B. Perry Letters, Arts, Sciences Roberta Persinger Letters, Arts. Sciences John B. Petermann Commerce Glenn A. Ph.-kres Commerce Pi Kappa Alpha; Alpha Eta Rho; Blue Key; Gymnastics Team. James Richard Phares Engineering Varsity Swimming; Water Polo; Three Class Plays; Basketball. Eugene H. Phillips £ngi7ieering A.T.E.E. Wilbur L. Piguet Letters, Arts Sciences Sigma Nu; Pres., Gamma Beta Alpha; Radio Staff; Board of Publications, James A. Pike Law Kappa Alpha; Transfer from U.C.L.A, ' 33. Mildred R, Polep Letters, Arts, Sciences Pi Delta Phi; Le Cercle Francais; La Tertulia, Vera A. Popovsky Letters, Arts, Sciences Amasons; Alpha Chi Alpha; Clionion; Senior Editor of El Rodeo. Alfred E. Poulsen Commerce Interfraternity Council; Sigma Chi; Varsity Football. F. Pierce Powell Commerce Delta Sigma Phi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Pres., A.M.M.; Newman Club; Polo. 19  CRADUATES 34 49 19  CRADUATES 34 |H[ CTj IH I Harold Preston Letters, Arts, Sciences School of Religion; Transfer from Fresno State College. M.ARY Price Letters, Arts. Sciences Alpha Delta Pi; Y.W.C.A.: Secretarial Club; Hi-Jinks. Lawrence D. Pritchard Commerce Pres., A.S.U.S.C; Knights; Blue Key; Ames Cup; Bowen Cup; Debate. MlC HABL C. PURCELL Commerce A.M. A.; Transfer from Phoenix Junior College. Ferdinand A. Fust Letters, Arts, Sciences History Major. Bertha M. Quigley Education John G. Raiselis Letters, Arts, Sciences Theta Sigma Chi; Transfer from Conn. State College; Baseball. Theron a. Ramey Engineering Kappa Alpha; Football: A.LM.E.; Elec- tion Commissioner  3 3. Marie Ramsey Letters, Arts, Sciences Pres. Phi Mu; Amazon; Judicial Court; Panhellenic Representative. Audrey F. V. Raymer Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Delta; Pi Kappa Sigma; Epsilon Phi; Chonian; Quill Club. John J. Raymond Commerce Transfer from M.I.T.; Debate; Delta Sigma Rho; Newman Club. Frank A. Read P ldnT?dC7 Ethel L. Redfield Commerce Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Kappa Phi; Amason; Tic- Toe; Judicial C ourt. Robert P. Reed Coynmerce Phi Kappa Psi; Varsity Track. Fred C. Reese Pharmacy Phi Delta Chi. J.ACK ReMPEL Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Sigma. Barbara S. Reynolds Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Delta Phi; Phi Kappa Phi; Deusche Verein. Frank C. Reynolds Medicine Phi Beta Pi; Transfer from Stanford. i 50 Frederick G. Reynolds Medicine Margaret E. Reynolds Letters. Arts. Sciences Zeta Phi Eta; Drama Shop; World Friendship; Transfer Modesto J.C. Everett A. Rice Pharmacy Lisle F. Richards Architecture Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Scarab. Florence M. Richert Education Amazon; Delta Zeta; Athena; Pi Kap- pa Sigma; Iota Sigma Theta. Edward G. Rider Commerce Beta Alpha Psi. Betty Y. Ritchey Letters, Arts. Scierxces Delta Zeta; Pi Kappa Sigma; Vice- President of L.A.S.; El Rodeo. Lola May Ritchey Letters, Arts, Sciences Transfer from Butler University, In- diana. Lucille Ritter Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Delta; Pres. Pi Kappa Sigma; Pres. Professional Panhellenic. Nannette Rittler Speech Zeta Tau Alpha; Amaion; Y.W.C.A. Ca inet; Phi Beta Kappa; Drama. Mercedes Rivera Letters, Arts, Sciences Transfer from Immaculate Heart Col- lege  32. George S. Rives Engineering Eta Kappa Nu; Beta Pi; A.I.M.E.: Transfer El Centro J.C. William E. Rivinius Letters, Arts, Sciences Transfer from San Diego Army and Navy Academy ' 32. Kearney Roane Letters, Arts, Sciences Gamma Epsilon; Sigma Gamma Epsi- lon; Roger Williams Club. Easton R. Roberts Commerce Daily Trojan; Flying Squadron. Priscilla Roberts Merchandising Transfer from U. of New Hampshire, Pomona. Dorothy W. Roe Education Alpha Gamma Delta. William H. Roome Commerce Kappa Alpha; Ball and Chain. 19  CRADUATES«34 JP.f l  19  CRADUATES 34 m. f l.f Watson S. Rose Letters, Arts. Sciences Prcs.. Beta Kappa: Blackstunian; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi. Gordon Rosenblum Medicine Phi Delta Epsilon. David Rosenthal Education Assistant Band Manager; Chorus; Sym- phonic Orchestra. Gertrude G. Rudick Pharmacy Lambda Kappa Sigma; Rho Chi; Trans- fer Columbia U. Adele Rundstrom Speech Transfer from Long Beach J.C. Leslie A. Runyon Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa. Henry S. Rupp Letters. Arts, Sciences Delta Chi; Transfer from U.C.L.A. Robert Russell Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Sigma; Daily Trojan; Wampus; El Rodeo. Leon P. Saks Commerce Beta Alpha Pi. Peter L. Saltman Letters. Arts. Sciences Assistant Yell King; El Rodeo. Louis M. Samson Letters, Arts, Sciences Transfer from U.C.L.A. Joyce B. Samwell Education Alvin L. Sanborn Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Kappa Tau. RowE Sanderson, Jr. Commerce Sigma Alpha Epsilon; A.M. A.; Trojan Band. Clifford M. Sandland Enincering Kappa Alpha; Circulation Manager, Wampus; Transfer from Pasadena J.C. Fred J. Schambeck Engineering William W. Schnepple Pharmacy Pres., Junior Class of College of Phar- macy; Rho Chi. LiLAH SCHULTE Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Gamma Delta; Drama Shop. 52 Arthur L. Schultz Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa: Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Sigma. Edward D. Schwartz fngineering Delta Sigma Pi; Transfer from Pasa- dena J.C. Eleanor P. Scott Music Delta Delta Delta; Phi Beta; Secretary, School of Music. McDuFFiE Sealey Pharmacy Victor M. Seine Letters, Arts, Sciences Paul F. Seitter Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa. Frances O. Selby Education Zeta Tau Alpha; Pi Kappa Delta; Transfer Iowa Weslcyan and U.C.L.A. Herbert E. Seltzer Education Sigma Alpha; Sigma Delta Psi; Gym Team. Elizabeth Se Nour Education Wendell Sether Journalism Kappa Alpha; Editor-in-Chief of Daily Trojan; Knights; Sigma Sigma. Fanny N. Sh.- w Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Kappa Delta; Transfer from Pasadena J.C. Thomas H. Sherman Letters. Arts. Sciences Kappa Alpha; Football; Basketball; Baseball; Hockey. Martha Sherwin Letters, Arts, Sciences Amazons; El Rodeo; Trojan Staff; Theta Sigma Phi; Business Staff. Teruo Shiigi Pharmacy Japanese Trojan Club. Ludlow Shonnard Engineering Sigma Nu; Sigma Sigma; Blue Key; Ball and Chain; Football Manager. Rose A. Shuken Letters, Arts, Sciences Leo Siskin Law Tau Epsilon Phi; Trojan Band; Man- agement Club. Lawrence Sitkin Merchandising Phi Beta Delta; Ad. Club; Y.M.C.A.; La Tertulia; Interfraternity Council. 19« CRADUATES 34 I S 53 19  CRADUATES 34 Helen E. Slabaugh Education Alpha Chi Omega. Charlotte S. Smale Education Y.W.C.A.: Delta Zeta; Delta Psi Kap- pa; Recording Secretary of W.A.A. George T. Smisor Letters, Arts, Sciences Senior Committee at University Col- lege; Transfer from Pasadena J.C. Argyll L. Smith Commerce Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Delta Sigma; Polo. Ch. rles W. Smith Commerce Vice-President of Alpha Kappa Psi; Transfer from Compton J.C. Edward W. Smith Eitgineering I.- CK M. Smith Architecture Theta Psi; Blue Key; Pres., Sigma Sig- ma; Knights; Pres., Squires. K. Lorraine Smith Letters, Arts. Sciences Epsilon Psi; Clionian; Transfer from Pasadena J.C. Kenneth W. Smith Commerce Alpha Phi Omega; Organizations Committee; Community Chest Comm. Whitney R. Smith Architecture Pres., Alpha Rho Chi; Daily Trojan Art Editor; Wampus Staff. Frances L. Smithers Architecture George E. Solomon Letters, Arts, Sciences Law Major. Esther P. Sparks Letters, Arts, Sciences Phi Mu; Alpha Kappa Delta; Transfer from Hulmby College. Randolph J. Speck Engineering Sigma Phi Delta; Eta Kappa Nu; A.L E.E.; Transfer from Glendale J.C. E. Morgan Stanley Commerce Kappa Alpha; Alpha Eta Rho; Ball and Chain; Sigma Beta Chi. Martha S. Stanton Letteri, Arts, Sciences Audrey J. Stanwood Merchandising Election Commission; Delta Gamma. Harry S. St. Clair Commerce Delta Chi; Interfraternity Council; Law School. 54  I Oliver W. Ste.wman Law Transfer from U.C.L.A.; B.A. from U.S.C. Ernest R. Sternberg Engineering A.S.M.E. Member; Member, Southern California Engineer Board. Lawhence C. Stevens Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Chi; Football. Mary Jo Stimson Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Delta Pi; El Rodeo Staff.  3 2. Eleanor R. Stoller Law Lloyd S. Stone Mitsic School of Music Executive Committee. John F. Stroh Architecture Tau Sigma Delta; Scarab. Clara Strong Letters, Arts, Sciences Harriet F. Stryker Pharmacy Lambda Kappa Sigma; Freshman and Sophomore class secretary. Carl A. Stutsman Letters, Arts. Sciences Phi Kappa Tau; Ball and Chain; Junior Basketball Manager. GoLDA H. Sullivan Letters, Arts, Sciences Merle H. Swanson Medicine Phi Beta Pi; Kappa Zeta. Jack M. Swarthout Letters Arts. Sciences Kappa Alpha; Pi Sigma Alpha; Delta Phi Epsilon. Chase Sweetser Commerce President, American Management Asso- ciation. Ray J. Takahashi Pharmacy Japanese Trojan Club. SuMio Tanoue Pharmacy TOMOYUKI T.ATEYA Commerce Japanese Trojan Club. Harry H. Tatsuno Pharmacy Japanese Trojan Club. 19  CRADUATES 34 S ' tJ 55 19  CRADUATES 34 Raymdnd R. Tauber Letters, Arts, Sciencea Zcta Beta Tan; Ball and Chain; Senior Fencing Manager; Latin Club. RoSALEF, J. Te. ' KCH Commerce Phi Mu; Gamma Alpha Chi: Advertis- ing Club. Grace F. Thomas Medicine President, Nu Sigma Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. Margaret Elizabeth Thomas Letters. Arts. Sciences Alpha Gamma Delta; Drama Shop plays; Extravaganzas, ' 30, ' 3L Margaret Evelyn Thomas Letters, Arts. Scie7ices Delta Zeta; Theta Sigma Phi; Athena Literary Society. Robert H. Thomas Arthitectiire Scarab; Interfraternity Council. Val H. Thomas Letters. Arts, Scier ces Beta Kappa; El Rodeo Staff. Eloise Thompson Letters. Arts, Sciences Alpha Chi Omega; Tic-Toe. Chester R. Tienken Pharmacy Philip B. Tilden Commerce Gamma Epsilon; Aristotelian Society; Trojan Band. Shinobu Tofukuji Pharmacy Japanese Trojan Club; International Club; Cosmopolitan Club. Harriet Louise Touton Letters. Arts. Sciences President, Alpha Chi Omega; Phi Beta Kappa; President, Phi Beta. Vera E. Townsend Letters. Arts, Sciences Phi Sigma; Le Cercle Francais. SONIA TURNEY Letters, Arts. Sciences Alpha Gamma Delta; Alpha Chi Al- pha; Amaions; W.S.G.A. Cabinet. Howard A. Law Twitty Marian C. Tyler Letters, Arts, Sciences Mu Phi Epsilon; Phi Phi; Honorary Music Club. Rebecca Uhvits Pharmacy Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Iota Sigma Pi; Mortar Board. Rarter W. Urban Commerce 56 DONALDA M. UrQUHART Letters, Arts. Sciences Alpha Delta Pi; El Rodeo Staff. Irene F. Valeska Letters, Arts, Scier ces Athena Literary Society. Ramona R. Vandegrift Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Chi Omega. N.ATHANIEL VaN De VeRG Commerce Sigma Nu. Elizabeth Van Slyke Letters, Arts, Sciences Louis C. Viereck Law Phi Kappa Phi. Harold G. Vlcek Commerce President, Gamma Epsilon: Interfrater- nity Council; Ad. Club. Roberta Von Klein Smid Commerce Secretary, President, W.S.G.A.; Spooks and Spokes; Amazon. Jane Wall Letters. Arts, Sciences Pi Beta Phi; Tic-Toe. Nancy R. Wall Letters, Arts, Sciences Zeta Tau Alpha. Regina S. Wallenstein Letters, Arts, Sciences President. Alpha Epsilon Phi; Extrava- gansa. Margaret M. Walters Music President, Alpha Chi Alpha; Ama:on; Mu Phi Epsilon; Phi Phi. Marion Viola Walton Letters, Arts, Sciences Sylvan Brooks Walton £iigiiieeri7ig Phi Kappa Phi; Beta Pi. Lester D. W. rd iln iTieering Robert M. Wasserman Commerce Zeta Beta Tau; Daily Trojan. Edith M. Waterman Letters, Arts, Sciences John R. Weber Letters. Arts. Sciences Secretary, Sigma Alpha; Manager, Tro- jan Band; Captain, Varsity Gym. 19  CRADUATES 34 57 19 CRADUATES«34 Welton G. Wellington Engineering Sigma Phi Delta; A.S.M.E. Eleanor L. Wells Letters. Arts, Sciences Kappa Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Delta Phi. Mildred E. Wells Letters, Arts, Sciences Katherine C. Weiss Letters, Arts, Sciences President, Phi Beta; Panhellcnic Coun- cil: Freshman Debate Squad. Robert E. West Letters, Arts, Sciences Ralph E. Whistler Letters, Arts, Sciences Irene H. Bouldin Whitcomb Letters, Arts, Sciences Lawrence H. White Commerce Sigma Sigma; Phi Omega; Sigma Beta Chi; Men ' s Council; Student Welfare Committee. Mary Pauline White Letters, Arts, Sciences Alpha Chi Omega; Wampus; Trojan; Pigskin Review. Robert P. Whitten Letters, Arts, Sciences Treasurer, Drama Shop; Radio Club; Play Productions Manager. Leigh M. Whitsett Letters, Arts, Sciences Effa C. Wickman Letters, Arts, Sciences Keithia L. Wicks Letters Arts, Sciences Mortar Board; International Relations Committee. William J. Wieland Commerce Pi Kappa Alpha. Jack P. Wilder Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Alpha; Squires; Knights; Inter- fraternity Council. Dorothy C. Williams Letters, Arts, Sciences Herold E. Williams Comm€rce Kappa Sigma; Freshman Football; Base- ball. Gaiby S. Wilson Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Delta Pi: Phi Kappa Phi; Pi Delta Phi; Clionian. I 58 Margaret Fay Wilson Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Delta; W.A.A. Cabinet. Orville O. Witherbee, Jr. Medicine Kappa Sigma; Phi Rho Sigma. Herbert L. Witty Letters, Arts, Sciences Zeta Beta Tau; Ball and Chain; Fresh- man Tennis. KiEN Wong Letters. Arts, Sciences International Aviation Fraternity. Mathevv L. Wong Medicine Virginia H. Woodard Letters, Arts, Sciences Delta Delta Delta. Ruth E. Woodcock Letters. Arts. Sciences Alpha Gamma Theta. Alice W. Woolsey Letters, Arts, Sciences Epsilon Phi. J. Warren Wright Arthitecture Scarab. Richard K. Yeamans Letters, Arts, Sciences Kappa Sigma; Water Polo; Freshman Advisory Committee. Everett H. Yeo Commerce Gamma Epsilon; Trojan Band; Aristo- telian; Concert Orchestra. Curtis L. Youel Letters. Arts, Sciences Phi Kappa Tau; Sigma Alpha; Varsity Football and Baseball. Leo Zager pharmacy Rho Chi; Skull and Mortar; Vice- President of Pharmacy. R.AYMOND H. ZULLIG Commerce Treasurer, Alpha Kappa Psi. Arnold Zwibelman Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Alpha. Paul L. Bateman Letters, Arts, Sciences Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football; Track. David Miyamoto Pharmacy Wilson Arthur Engineering 19  CRADUATES 34 59 ROBERT HAUCH President Junior Class • With the experience of two years be- hind them, the Juniors entered into all the campus activities whole-heartedly, Knights, Mortar Board, Sigma Sigma, and Amazons. The Junior Promenade, gem of spring so- cial functions, was presented in the Bev- erly Wilshire Hotel early in the season. Tuxedoed youths and fashionably attired co-eds strolled glove-in-arm under the dimmed lights. Bob Haugh, member of Kappa Sigma, was All-U junior President. Bob Haugh, prominent in extra- curricular activities, served the past year as President of the Class of ' 35. He is a member of Trojan Knights, Kappa Sigma social fraternity, and Sigma Sigma. Junior honorary. ' 35 60 GILBERT KUHN President Sophomore Class • The strangeness of the new college world brushed aside, the Sophomores were well represented in all phases of activity. Varsity teams drew upon the second-year class for valuable material. The Squires, august Sophomore service group, per- formed the menial University tasks of ush- ering and patrolling rally groups. The first Sophomore Dance was held in the Knick- erbocker Hotel. Gil Kuhn, football player, was class President. ' 36 Gilbert Kuhn, dark-complex- ioned and heavily-built Sopho- more football player, was Presi- dent of the second-year class. He promoted the first annual Underclass Dance, a new cam- pus venture. 61 CLARKE STEVENS President Freshman Class • Shining like a pod of new peas, the un- initiated yearlings plunged into Trojan life able to do little more than grope around, subjected to the life of plebes in all their undertakings. Their principal group achievement was the aiding of the Sopho- mores in putting on the Underclass Dance. Clark Stevens, fancy-footing Phi Kappa Tau who won the dance trophy at the Soph Dance, was President of the Freshman class. « Clark Stevens, smiling young Freshman, was chosen to lead the class of ' 37 during the first yezr. He has aided University service groups and is a member of Phi Kappa Tau social frater- nity. ' 37 62 I CARL WIRSCHINC President Association. Alumni • Carl B. Wirsching, a member of the class of 1910, former President of the Los Angeles Board of Public Works and pres- ent Harbor Manager, was advanced a step in the Alumni roster of officers, leaving behind him his position of Vice-President of the Alumni Association to become Pres- ident. Clifford Hughes, graduate in 1921, succeeded Wirsching as Vice-President. Lewis Cough, Commerce ' 31, is the Ex- ecutive Director of the Association. ' 76 ' 23 ' 27 ' 22 ' 05 ' 07 ' 98 73 Under Carl Wirsching, general Alumni President, graduate of the class of 1910, and former Vice-President of the organi- zation, U.S.C. ' s Alumni Asso- ciation has been a very active one this past year. 63  LEWIS COUCH Executive Director Al umnL WATSON ROSE Student Chairman Homecoming RALPH WILCOX Field Secretary Alumni Association Board of Strategy at the Football Dinner. • The first week in December was devoted almost exclusivey by the University of South- ern California to the annual Homecoming Celebration, sponsored by the Alumni Associ- tion, and organized this year by Watson Rose, student chairman, and Eugene Biscailuz, gen- eral Alumni chairman. Outstanding among the events was the house decoration contest in which Kappa Sigma took first grand prize, with Kappa Alpha Theta second. Alpha Cam- ma Delta was first in the sorority division, and Sigma Nu headed the fraternity list. The first annual Homecoming Football Dance which featured Dorothy Dell, movie actress, and the music of the orchestras of jay Whidden and Sid Lippman, climaxed a week of gaiety and excitement. 64 I EUGENE BISCAILUZ General Chairman • The annual homecoming rally, one of the features of the  Big Week  , was held in Bovard Auditorium. Burdette Henney acted as general alumni chairman and Ralph Acton as student chairman. The entertainment fea- tured Leo Carillo as master of ceremonies. Ted Healy and his  Three Stooges  caused a mild eruption with their hilarious antics. The alumni were welcomed by the music of Hal Roberts and the Trojan Band. Homecoming was successfully completed with the men ' s and the women ' s football dinners, held in the gymnasium. Sherman Jensen, student chair- man, was primarily responsible for the success of the affair. With Mrs. R. B. von KleinSmid, toastmistress, the women ' s football banquet honored the mothers of football men. HomecomirLg They caused a mild eruption. Babe Ruth. Herbert Hoover and President von KleinSmid at the Homecoming game. 65 ARTHUR NEELEY Publisher Informant for one of the largest alumni groups in the west, the Alumni Review holds an envi- able position among graduate periodicals. AtunrLni Review • One of the best known college publica- tions is the reputation garnered by the Southern California Alumni Review, which is the official magazine of the general alumni, published monthly during the school year. Dr. James David McCoy, the current editor, graduated from the College of Dentistry in 1906. Arthur E. Neeley ' 30, a graduate of the College of Com- merce, holds the position of publisher, which includes the duties of business man- ager. Vivian Murphy ' 28 is the assistant editor. I DR. JAMES McCOY Editor VIVIAN MURPHY Assistant Editor 66 SCHOOLS OF TROY New innovations filling long-felt needs marked the past year in the Campus Colleges. First of its kind in the nation, the University Junior College attracted students from all parts of the United States, while, with its enrollment tripled in the past three years, Architec- ture and Fine Arts was raised to the College status. The setting of the other schools and colleges was made more truly scenic through the campus beautification program. 67 Dohcny Memorial Library from the main archway of the Administration Building. Graduate School ARNOLD TILDEN President • In 1933 was inaugurated the newest division of the Graduate School, the School of Research, of which Dean Hunt is Di- rector. The distinctive purpose of this school is to emphasize individual investi- gation and foster scholarly research among students who have already attained the master ' s degree and those in candidacy for the doctorate. • Among the numerous activities of the Associated Graduate Students the semi- monthly luncheons have held an import- ant place. Those who have attended have had the privilege of hearing such speakers as Upton Sinclair, Rupert Hughes, John Beardsley, Baron Friederich von Reichen- berg, and Oswald Villard. In addition to the regular teas and luncheons, a notable reception was given. f 68 Graduate students inspecting the President ' s study in Doheny Memorial Library. Graduate School • This affair, which was made possible by President von KleinSmid and the Council on Graduate Study and Research, present- ed President Herman Liu of the University of Shanghai as honored guest-speaker. • The members of the Associated Grad- uate Students of the University of South- ern California represent nearly all of the states in the Union and many foreign na- tions. In few universities is there to be found a truer international spirit than in Southern California. The Associated Grad- uate Student organization has done much to promote sociability and friendly inter- course on the campus, although it is rec- ognized that the dominant aim of its members is the pursuit of scholarship on the higher levels; in this respect the year of 1933-34 has been a fruitful one. ROCKWELL D. HUNT Dean 69 i The Admistration Building in the early morning sun- shine between classes. Letters, Arts and Sciences WORTH BERNARD President  One of the distinctive features of the University and one of the major interests of Dean Teuton is the well-planned, in- structional program in which students and instructors proceed together during the school year in an attempt to approach the clearly defined objectives set for each of the several courses. The interests and suc- cesses of their students are matters of ma- jor concern to staff members of the Col- lege of Letters, Arts and Sciences. • Under the leadership of Dr. Touton the University has developed the University Institute of Arts and Sciences which pre- sents on successive Friday evenings lec- tures and discussions by leading staff members of the University. Topics are se- lected from current problems in the social sciences, physical sciences, and the arts. I 70 The Administration Building lower from an interesting angle. • During the past two years the student body of the college has included each year students selected from secondary schools and colleges on a competitive scholarship basis. Competition for these twenty-five secondary school and ten Junior college scholarships has placed the University prominently and favorably before the schools of the nation. The winners of these scholarships have won distinction on our campus in their studies and in extra- curricular activities. • Staff members of the College of Let- ters, Arts and Sciences are stimulated to carry on research work in literature and in the social and natural sciences. • During the last year the student body activities have been directed by Worth Bernard, student President. Letters, Arts and Sciences FRANK C. TOUTON Dean 71 Old College radiates with the spirit Troy so proudly claims. Commerce • The College of Commerce has been pro- gressing rapidly under the leadership of Dean Reid L. McClung. This year under his auspices the Bureau of Business Re- search was established with Dr. Thurston H. Ross and Dr. John G. Schaffer as its directors. This bureau publishes a month- ly bulletin, The Southern California Busi- ness Review, which presents reports on Southern California business conditions, including special studies in real estate, the building trade, industry and finance. It is distributed to the business men of South- ern California. • The College of Commerce gives its stu- dents a background of basic business courses and intensive training in a special- ized field, both in theoretical and practical work, through the cooperation of some of the leading firms of Los Angeles. SHERMAN JENSEN President I 72 Lunch hour finds scattered groups on the walks of Old College. • An integral part of the College of Com- merce is the School of Merchandising un- der the direction of Dr. William Moriarty. The School of Merchandising is divided into several departments enabling a stu- dent to specialize in Advertising, Market- ing or Retailing. • The student body of the college is under the leadership of Sherman Jensen, Presi- dent; Bettie Maas, Vice-President; Eliza- beth Bastanchury, Secretary, and Elias Spilker, Treasurer. • The major social functions of the Col- lege of Commerce are the annual barn dance which was held last fall at Whit- ing ' s Ranch, and the Commerce Banquet which is held in the spring. Students and faculty of the University as well as busi- ness men of the community are invited to attend. Commerce REID L. McCLUNC Dean 73 Pharmacists in front of the Science Building on their way to laboratory. Pharmacy  Further progress was made this year by the College of Pharmacy in offering new courses in advanced fields of scientific re- search leading to the revision of formu- laries and prescription-compounding. • The College consists of a four year course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy, and graduate work towards a degree of Master of Science in Pharmacy. It is a member of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. Colleges holding membership in this association are recognized by the examining boards of nearly all the states. • Honorary societies for pharmacy stu- dents are Phi Kappa Phi, national all-Uni- versity scholarship society, Rho Chi, and Skull and Scales. NICHOLAS HEERES President LAIRD |. STAEBLER Dean 74 The Patio in the School of Architecture offers the life class an excellent spot for work. • Sensitive to the fact that a new era is opening in the field of architecture which will involve the problem of coping with an increased amount of leisure time as well as with greater demands for beauty, effi- ciency and comfort, the College of Archi- tecture and Fine Arts is preparing its stu- dents for the advent of a post-depression architecture. • The importance of the Fine Arts depart- ment in this endeavor has been recognized by changing the name of the College of Architecture to that of the College of Architecture and Fine Arts. Dean Weath- erhead ' s policies have been supported by the active fraternal organizations which include: Alpha Rho Chi, Tau Sigma Delta, Delta Phi Delta and Scarab. Architecture ARTHUR WEATHERHEAD MARGARET PHILLIPS Dean President 75 Two Co-cds, the morning sun and the beauty of Mudd Hall combine to form a pleasing picture. Philosophy • Located in the Seeley Wintersmith Mudd memorial building which was judged the most beautiful in the south- west, the School of Philosophy boasts of a collection of rare books of great value. The collection includes modern editions of all the classical philosophies as well as most of the philosophical periodicals. • Inspired by the literary activity of the school ' s staff, the editorial staff of the Personalist recently celebrated the fifteenth birthday of this publication. This magazine, which has won particular ac- claim for its book review section, goes to leading universities throughout the world. It was the first subscription periodical to appear on the campus with the exception of the Daily Trojan. It is an internationally famous  quarterly journal of philosophy, religion, and literature.  I I RALPH T. FLEWELLINC Director 76 The Periodical room of the Library is extensively used by students of the School of Social Welfare. • The Graduate School of Social Welfare that has been anticipated for some time became an actuality with the beginning of the spring semester this year. The degree of Master of Science is granted at the completion of the fifth year with the ful- fillment of the other necessary require- ments. • The school, with a steadily increasing enrollment, can boast that all of its gradu- ates for the past three years have received positions in the field of social welfare. Field work for practice training and exper- ience in the courses is carried on in the various settlement houses in Los Angeles. Each student is given a certain amount of case work to do with certain individuals or families. The School of Social Welfare is a member of the American Association of Training Schools of Social Work. Social Welfare EMERY S. BOCARDUS Director 77 Stagecraft offers interesting and practical work for speech majors. Speech • During a year marked by an intensity of student activity in many fields, the School of Speech has made very significant progress. Not only has the school aided those interested in speech as a profession, but it has accomplished a more widespread service in offering instruction in public speaking to the many students of the Uni- versity. In some of the professional col- leges the value of training in public speak- ing is appreciated to the extent that this course is required for graduation. • A course in stage setting, in which the students learn to create and build the set- tings for their plays, promises to be of great benefit in fostering finer dramatic productions, as those who saw  Death Takes a Holiday  can testify. DOROTHY DAVIS President RAY K. IMMEL Dean 78 Small classes in voice make possible an excellent oppor- tunity for training. • The School of Music, formerly located at the corner of Adams and Grand, moved to the University Park campus in 1933. ' The students in the school have entered into activities such as recitals which are given every Thursday, frequent radio pro- grams, and many social functions. • The school maintains the Trojan Band of one hundred and eighty pieces, a sym- phony orchestra and both a men ' s and women ' s Glee Club. These along with a number of other groups furnish much of the talent for assemblies. Professional or- ganizations which have contributed much to the life of the school are Mu Phi Epsi- lon, Phi Beta, Sigma Alpha lota. Phi Mu Alpha, Honorary Music Club, Phi Phi, Pi Kappa Lambda and the Windsor Club. Music MAX SWARTHOUT Dean WILLIAM LEEDKE President 79 The School provides training for those who expect to en- gage in educational work. Education • The School of Education, organized in 1918 and recognized as an individual school in 1931 , is still making rapid strides forward and occupies an important posi- tion in the University. The purpose of the School of Education is to provide training for those who expect to engage in educa- tional work as teachers or for administra- tive positions in the educational field. • Three national education fraternities have been established on this campus: Phi Delta Kappa for men, Pi Lambda Theta for women, and Pi Kappa Sigma, an under- graduate organization. Since the time of installation, these chapters have been very active and progressive. • The school has been under the direction of Dean Lester B. Rogers. ♦ LESTER B. ROGERS Dean 80 Indian relics explain ancient religious beliefs, a part of the School ' s program. • Represented by President von KleinSmid at the University Senate of Methodist Episcopal Schools, the University of South- ern California School of Religion was granted the status of a graduate theologi- cal school this year. This distinction is the culmination of Dean Bruce Baxter ' s splen- did work in developing the School of Re- ligion to its present standard. Also, the school is considered to be one of the five leading Methodist theological schools in the United States. • The School of Religion sponsors week- ly forums for those interested in the chal- lenge of our time to the churches of America. During the first semester a series of lectures was given by leading represen- tatives of organized religious groups. Religion BRUCE BAXTER Dean 81 The International Relations library is a feature of the Administration Building. International Relati Lons • Developing the brotherhood of man and uniting the nations in world peace is the objective of the Los Angeles University of International Relations. This aim is carried out in its training of students for consular and diplomatic service, for politicians for world service, for business men in com- merce and for teachers in departments pertaining to world affairs. • Every year an Institute of World Affairs is held at Riverside to study problems af- fecting world peace. The work is con- ducted through special lectures, daily round tables and general conferences. In addition there is a World Affairs Assem- bly which meets monthly and a Campus Interparliamentary Union which meets every week in the Hail of Nations. JACK SWARTHOUT President R. B. von KLEINSMID Chancellor 82 University College, located in downtown Los Angeles, offers opportunities to part- time students. • University College is an undergraduate division of the University planned for the purpose of giving fully and partially em- ployed students the opportunity for a uni- versity education on a part-time basis. This purpose is accomplished through the offering of courses in afternoon, evening, and Saturday morning hours. • The large student body of the college is a well organized unit, maintaining a weekly publication. The Trojan Owl, spon- soring radio broadcasts and holding regu- lar All-College dances. • The function of University College is especially attractive to those wishing training in professional and business fields as evidenced by the great majority of stu- dents taking these specialized courses. UnlversLty College ERNEST W. TIECS Dean ROSWELL STEARNS President 83 i The School of Covcrnmcnt, organized in 1 929. delves into civic and public admin- istration problems. Government • The School of Government program now includes the regular academic curricula leading to Bachelor ' s and Master ' s degree in Public Administration, a Civic Center Division with an after-hour professional training schedule, and an annual institute with 500 or 600 public officials in attend- ance. The school also sponsors a Women ' s Civic Conference representing more than 200 women ' s organization, a radio pro- gram dramatizing the facts of public ad- ministration, and a Civic Affairs Council. • Organized in 1929 under Emery E. Olson, the present dean, the fundamental purpose of the school is to provide a pro- fessional training curriculum in the field of government, and to relate the educa- tional program of the school to citizen groups interested in public affairs. I I ' EMERY E. OLSON Dean 84 The School of journalism li- brary has an attraction for students interested in news- paper work. • Distinguished as the only school of jour- nalism in California, this division of the University has grown from a small depart- ment, which was first established in 1928, to a full-fledged school, dignified by a di- rector, a teaching staff of experienced newspapermen, a laboratory and workshop and a library of publications. One hundred and twenty-three persons are enrolled as journalism majors. • In March, 1933, trustees created the present school with Roy L. French as di- rector. • Perhaps the most outstanding work done by the School of Journalism in the last year was the sponsoring of its Twelfth Annual Newspaper Day, attended by four hundred professional journalists and high school and junior college students. Journalism ROY L. FRENCH Director 85 The Junior College Day pro- cession files into the Doheny Memorial Library. Junior College • The University Junior College has been established as one of the several divisions of the University of Southern California. It is controlled by the Board of Trustees, the President, the Faculty of the College and the All-University committees in the same manner as are the other schools and Colleges of the University. The projected two-year Junior College division as a unit in University organization and administra- tion is in harmony with the forward-look- ing thought and plans in higher education today. Its scientific direction, its superior instruction, its emphasis on best methods of study and learning and its insistence on the maximum academic achievement of the individual students are the major fea- tures of the Junior College. FRANK C. TOUTON Dean 86 LAWYERS Increased prestige through contin- ued improvement of curricula and heightening of standards marked the scholastic year in the Law School. Service to thousands through the Legal Aid Clinic caused the University of Southern California Bar Association to be the salvation of countless impov- erished homes. Publication of the Law Review did much to crystal- lize local legal opinion on timely matter of jurisprudence. To round out the full program, a number of dances were held, bind- ing the group together in good fellowship. 87 I JOHN HOUSER Law School Student Body President • A score and ten years have passed since Southern California took over the Los An- geles College of Law. That period has been characterized by a steady recognition until today the Law School of the University of Southern California exists as an outstand- ing, nationally famous institution which is headed by Dean William Green Hale. • In 1908 the Law School became a mem- ber of the Association of American Law Schools. In 1929, to climax this steady scholastic progression of the Law School, a chapter of the Order of the Coif, the high- est legal honorary organization in existence, was founded. ■ Today the Law School at S.C. is definite- ly approving the importance of impressing upon a student the necessity of a thorough collegiate training as a preparation for the study of law. The curriculum follows the present tendency toward a very thorough legal education. The Legal Aid Clinic and the Practice Court acquaint the student with the practical side of law practice. 88 The University of Southern California Bar Association • In 1929 the student body form of gov- ernment was replaced by the Student Bar Association, the first of its kind, organized by Dean Justin Miller and Arthur Preston. The organization is in all respects patterned like the California Bar. Such a form of stu- dent government demonstrates the working of the great California Bar, and so fits the law student to occupy a useful position in the Bar after he has entered into the field of actual law practice. • The executive and legislative body of the Bar Association is the Board of Governors. This governing group handles necessary and advisable student functions in a systema- tized manner by means of the various sec- tions which were created for that purpose. • The Student Bar Association with a membership of over three hundred and fifty students, a fine building, housing a complete law library of some thirty-two thousand volumes, and a location in the heart of a great city combine to present a picture which makes possible the forecast- ing of an even greater future for this ex- panding institution. • Looking back one sees a steady growth and rise to prominence; looking to the fu- ture one sees the path winding forward to even greater prominence than that which the Southern California Law School enjoys today. HOWARD TWITTY Junior Vice-President SALLY DONLEY Senior Vice-President PAUL SCHREIBMAN Student Body Secretary-Treasurer 89 « LAW SCHOOL FACULTY First row: Jones, Kingsley, Hale, Cockerill, Carpenter. Second row: Cupp, David, Burby, Howell. WILLIAM CREEN HALE Dean Law School Faculty • A  faculty  is spoken of in common parlance as a spectacled group of absent-minded professors, but this cannot be said of the law school faculty in any respect. It is with pride and deference that their stu- dents point them out, for they are nationally recog- nized as authorities in their respective fields. • May their untiring and never-ending efforts, put forth in instructing the masses of material which stand upon the threshhold of the portals of an ancient profession seeking admission, be reimbursed some- what, by proving, once in practice, that they, too, may uphold the standards of the legal fraternity as has been so honestly exemplified for them. It is only by the achievements of their student charges in the world of law, that the achievements of the teachers are accomplished. Let us, the masses which are being molded, prove that their efforts were not valueless. 90 BOARD OF GOVERNORS Firsf row: Vandegrifi-, Schreibman, Donley, Houser, Hannin. Russell. Second row: W. T. Johnson, Nordyke, Wheeler, Twitty. Steadman, Nutt, Brown. Third row: Inch, Mendelsohn. Casey. Board of Governors • It is said of the members of the Board of Governors that they meet behind barred doors; perhaps the rea- son lies in the fact that the President, John Houser, wishes no member to escape his baleful eye when a negative vote is cast by some unfortunate who had courage enough to voice an objection to any proposal of the chief mogul of the Law student body. • However, from behind those portals have come some excellent work. Every program has been success- fully executed. For the second year, the board pub- lished the helpful student directory that has now be- come an established publication. • The primary purpose of the board is to operate in a representative capacity in behalf of the Bar Associa- tion. In this function the group has operated as an efficient and capable legislative group handling mat- ters only as a responsible body politic could do. Examination time in the Law Library. 91 EDWARD NEUHOFF Senior Class Governor Graduating Lawyers LEONARD MENDELSOHN Senior Class President • The class of ' 34 descended upon the S.C. Law School filled with confidence and en- thusiasm. If these harrowing years have some- what dimmed their confidence and lessened their zest for their chosen profession, those who have survived will look back after strug- gling with the modern world and realize these years were only a pleasant interlude. • Leonard Mendelsohn, President of this group, has proven himself a capable executive. To assist him were Virginia Johnson, Vice- President; Stanley Levine, Secretary-Treasurer; and Edward Neuhoff, Board of Governors. • Training and drilling in the intricate theo- ries of law have fitted these graduates for the work that is to come. May they succeed in be- ing an honor to their chosen profession, and to the school which prepared them for it. 92 ROY BROWN Junior Class Presidcnf • The class of ' 35 has passed the tirst year and has emerged  shock-proof  . Finding themselves upperclassmen. they have begun to be obnoxious: at least, the Seniors and Freshmen find that to be true. • The class wisely chose Roy Brown, Presi- dent; Mary Hannin, Vice-President; Burton Field, Secretary-Treasurer; and Joseph Wheel- er, Board of Governors. • The class of ' 36, not suspecting the pitfalls, has entered and found the way to be far from easy. Its officers were Robert Vandegrift, President; Esther Cragner, Vice-President; Ed- mund Carmody, Secretary-Treasurer; and Al- bert Casey, Board of Governors. • May this group hurdle the first obstacle successfully and carry on through the strenu- ous years ahead. ROBERT VANDEGRIFT Sophomore Class President Embryonic Lawyers 93 EDITORIAL BOARD Samuel Gates Robert Kingsley Steven Farrand LAW REVIEW STAFF First row: Luhman. Kingsley, Farrand, Hannin, Tyre, Geary. Second row: Rimel. Twitty, Bautzer, Brown, Ross, Hindin. Russell, Glouber. Third row: Martin, Berger, Mendelsohn, Garrett, Fetterly, Olson, Miller, Israel, Smith. Law Review • Published four times each year, the South- ern California Law Review is now in its sev- enth year. Each issue contains articles by rec- ognized authorities, book reviews, comments and case notes on recent decisions of inter- est, written by student editors. • The editorial board is composed of a faculty editor-in-chief, a comment editor, a student case note editor, and a staff of approximately twenty members selected from the group which during the second and third years have maintained the highest scholastic average.  Under the able guidance of Robert Kings- ley, the Southern California Law Review has gained a national reputation. The courts of the nation frequently cite the Law Review and recognize thereby its value as a legal pub- lication. 94 1 LEGAL AID OFFICIALS Leon T. David Edwin Franke Mrs. Bradford Doris Hefner One of the many cases Leon David and Edwin Franke have handled this year as a part of the work of the Legal Aid Clinic. • The Legal Aid Clinic was established by the Southern California Legal Aid Clinic Associa- tion in conjunction with the University of Southern California Law School. It is designed, as far as can be lawfully done, to give the third year law school student an introduction to the practical side of the administration of law. • The Legal Aid Clinic is also designed to provide legal counsel and services both in and out of court for impoverished people who do not have the means to pay an attorney for his services. • Under the leadership of Leon David, the Legal Aid Clinic has handled directly or indi- rectly several thousand cases. This service is of inestimable value to the community and greatly aids the bar. Legal Aid Clinic 95 The opening of the lounge in the Law School was one of fhe feature events of the past year. Legal Parties • During the fall, the Law School was host to the University at a very enjoyable dance held at the Shrine Auditorium. Instigated by the Board of Governors, the event proved to be a success. The proceeds were used to fur- nish the Law School lounge. • On December 8, 1933, the Law School held open house for its alumni and friends off- campus. The Spring Dance was held at the Biltmore Hotel. • Ditch Day, for Seniors only this year, was characterized by sighs of relief from the in- tensive and continuous preparation for classes. The Senior Breakfast, one of the most out- standing social traditions of the Law School, was held in June for the graduating Seniors, faculty members, and honored guests and friends of the Senior class. 96 DENT S T S Always ready to serve dentistry in any capacity in which he knew he could acquit himself with credit to his profession, to his co-workers and his friends; always the kind and considerate associate, it now becomes a source of gratification to the student body of the College of Dentistry to dedicate to Dr. Charles C. Rice the Dental Section of El Rodeo, 1934. 97 DR. LEWIS E. FORD Dean of the College of Dentistry • Twenty-nine years of achievement in ad- vancing the position of the College of Den- tistry constitute the record of Dr. Lewis E. Ford. When in 1905 Dr. Ford became Dean of the College, he immediately opened the program to advance and enlarge the scope of its activities. Under his supervision the present college was designed, erected and completed. It is through his untiring energy that the institution holds its present high rank. • Even more promising is the future fore- cast by the record of the College under Dr. Ford ' s leadership, for his is a thorough devotion to high ideals, to scholastic achievement, to the institution and to the community he serves. To the dean, Dr. Lewis E. Ford — pioneer educator, forceful executive, untiring worker — the graduat- ing class of 1934 extends its deepest admir- ation and respect and the wish for continu- ing success. 98 The UnlversLty of S College of • The College of Dentistry was founded in 1897 by Professor Henry C. Brainerd, emer- itus professor of the principles of medicine, and eighteen students were enrolled in the new three year course. At this time the college was located in the College of Medi- cine and many of the dental subjects were included in the medical course. Dr. Edgar Palmer, the first Dean, was succeeded in 1901 by Dr. Garret Newkirk, through whose vision the college was re-incorpo- rated as a strictly educational institution, controlled by a Board of Trustees. In 1905, Dr. Lewis E. Ford took over the office of Dean, and for twenty-nine years has held the position as head of the College. outkern California Dentistry • The years 1 9 1 2 and 1914 found Dr. A. C. LaTouche, professor of Operative Dentistry, and General and Special Histology, and Dr. Julio Endelman, professor of Dental Pathol- ogy, author and authority, associated with the college. The location of the college was changed three times before the present quarters were established — the clinic, at 16th and Los Angeles Streets, and the Sci- ence and Technic building on the campus. In 1917, the course of instruction was changed to four years with one year of pre- dental work preceding. The Dental Hy- giene division was added in 1929. It is evi- dent that the achievements of the college are demonstrative of its progress. DR. A. C. LaTOUCHE DR. JULIO ENDELMAN 99 MELVIN V. SAXMAN Secretary-Treasurer i Student Body Executives • Consistent with the glamour of a college education, but in full realization of the ardu- ous scholastic effort as part of their profes- sional course, the members of the student body are eligible for various extra-curricular activities in order that they may function in student affairs. It is to be realized that thru these channels they are offered an opportun- ity for student opinion and expression. Fred Ayres, whose college career has been identi- fied with enthusiastic student activity, be- came President of the Student Body. To com- pensate for the division of the Student Body, two Vice-Presidents are elected — one for each building — whose duties embrace that of sup- ervision of various activities, elections, and social functions. 100 THEODORE HASBROUCK Second Vice-President • John Westwood and Ted Hasbrouck as First and Second Vice-President, and Melvin Saxman as Treasurer were instrumental in leading the student body through its success- ful year. Among the social events sponsored by this group were the Field Day at Brookside Park and the Beach Day at Balboa, which pro- vided recreation, and semi-formal dances, which furnished entertainment. The activities of the Odonto club and the Ford-Palmer-New- kirk society were well supported by the mem- bers of the student body. Each year charitable dental work for orphanages is sponsored, by A.T.E. This year the work was particularly successful, many orphans receiving aid from the group. Cooperation and interest on the part of members and officers was evident. Student Body Executives 101 ARTHUR HUDSON President of the Senior Class • With the termination of their profes- sional education at hand, the Senior class of the College of Dentistry review their four eventful years at the University. • In the Freshman year, beginning in Sep- tember of 1930, ninety-five class members participated in the election to chose the first officers of the group. Fred Ayers was chosen President, Alfred Coleman was elected Vice-President, and Marian Van 102 Velzer was named Treasurer. The out- standing accomplishment of the year was the athletic meet at Brookside Park, in which the Freshman class tied for suprem- acy with the Senior class. • At the beginning of the Sophomore year. Robert Ewing was elected President, and Al Coleman and Marian Van Velzer re- tained their offices. Again the class tied with the Seniors for first place in athletics. Senior Class, College of Dentistry • With Galen Shaver performing the duties of President, and with James Fairchild as Vice-President and Charles McClean as Sec- retary-Treasurer, the Junior class partici- pated in an eventful year, entering for the first time the field of clinical dentistry. • Toward the end of the year several mem- bers of the class had distinguished them- selves in student body activities. The fol- lowing were chosen to lead their respective organizations: Fred Ayres, Student Body President; Robert Ewing, Alpha Tau Epsi- lon; Galen Shaver, Odonto Club; Mayo Sil- verman, Ford-Palmer-Newkirk Dental So- ciety. • Following a spirited election, the follow- ing men were successful in the Senior year of the class of ' 34: Art Hudson, President; Alfred Coleman, Vice-President; and James Tarver, Secretary-Treasurer. More work at the clinic for practical experience was in- cluded in the activities of the group. • In University activities the following men have achieved prominence the last few years; Bailey Edgerton, yell king; Barney Faubion and Steve Gunter, varsity water polo and swimming; Paul Weisbrod, ice hockey; and Bob Van Osdel, varsity track and a member of the 1932 Olympic team. • Realizing that, with graduation ap- proaching, diplomas are only a convention, members of the class awaited the oppor- tunity to prove that personal achievement and earnest endeavor were behind them. lAMES TARVER Secretary-Treasurer ALFRED COLEMAN Vice-President 103  19« ' CRADUATES 34 i: MM w -w  -m iBf  Jack. E. Ahlstram Dentistry Simeon K. Akaka Dentistrv Rillc Team; Glee Club. Arnold A. Ariaudo Dentistry Lambda Sigma Nu. LoLiis L. Armann Dentistry Psi Omega. George H. Ashm. n Dentistry Frederick V. Ayers Dentistry Xi Psi Phi; Alpha Tau Epsilon; Sigma Sigma; Pres. Stud. Body. Robert A. Barnett Dentistry Xi Psi Phi; Senior Athletic Manager. Robert H. Brown Dentistry Lambda Sigma Nu. Albert W. Bull • Dentistry Charles C. Caplan Deiitistry Alpha Omega. Hansel E. Carter Dentistry Alfred I. Coleman Dentistry Pres. Alpha Omega; Vice-Pres. Senior Class; Alpha Tau Epsilon. WiLLLAM L. Covey Dentistry Norman A. Day Denti ' strv Xi Psi Phi; Trojan Band; Senior Class Editor; Inter-Frat. Council. B.AiLEY E. Edgerton Dentistry Delta Sigma Delta; Yell King; Blue Key; Skull and Dagger. Robert E. Elston Dentistry J. Adrl n Esnard Dentistry Robert M, Ewing Dentistry Xi Psi Phi; Pres. Alpha Tau Epsilon; Squires ' 32; Golf ' 32. 104 James M. Fairchild Dentistry Pres. Lambda Sigma Nu; Alpha Tau Epsilon; Vice-Pres. Junior Class. Bernard H. Faubion Dentistry Pres. Xi Psi Phi; Alpha Tau Epsilon; Sigma Sigma; Water Polo ' 3 2. Newton Ferguson Dentistry Psi Omega. N.ATHANIEL J. FRUG Dentistry Joseph H. Gorman Dentistry Thomas J. Griffin Dentistry Alpha Phi Alpha; University of Wash- ington  21,  22. Stephen G. Gunter Dentistry  Varsity Swimming Team, Varsity Water Polo. Edwin W. Halvorson De7itistry Pres. Delta Sigma Delta; Blue Key; Sigma Sigma; A.T.E.  Walter Rae Hendrickson Dentistry Psi Omega. Edward K. Hertford Dentistry Delta Sigma Delta.  Virginia May Hill Dentistry President of Upsilon Alpha. HiLL.ARD M. Holmes Dentistry Arthur L. Hudson Dentistry Psi Omega; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; A.T.E. ; Pres. Senior Class. Richard J. Justice Dentistry Delta Sigma Delta; Trojan Knights. Alan R. Kelly Dentistry E. Lee Kurlander Dentistry Alpha Tau Epsilon; Pres. Trowel Fra- ternity ' 34. A. R. L.AWRENCE Dentistry Delta Sigma Delta; Dental Bus. Mgr., El Rodeo; Alpha Tau Epsilon. William D. Lee Dentistry Sigma Pi Alpha; Chinese Students Club. 19 CRADUATES 34 T  T?9 IB! 105 1 9 CRADUATES 34 Robert Lees Dentistry Sam a. Levine Dentistry Alpha Omega: Dental Soccer. Charles E. McClean Dentistry Trojan Band ' 31, ' 32, ' 33; Male Chorus. John H. McEachren Dentistry James H. Mahan Dentistry Psi Omega; Professional Inter-Frat. Council; Dental Soccer. Yasumi Mashimo Dentistry William F. Masters Dentistry Paul E. May Dentistry Xi Psi Phi; Odonto Club; Ford-Pal- mer-Newkirk Society. Matthew W. Medill . Dentistry Sigma Phi Epsilon. Joseph P. Merrigan Dentistry Brigham S. Miller Dentistry Julius C. Molina Dentistry Delta Sigma Delta; Editor Dental Sec- tion, El Rodeo; A.T.E. J. Clark Moore Dentistry Morton H. Mortonson Dentistry Pres. Psi Omega; Vice-Pres. Alpha Tau Epsilon ' 34. William G. Motley Dentistry Lambda Sigma Nu; Trojan Band. William B. Munn Dentistry A.B. Pomona College, ' 28. Charles I. Nedelman Dentistry Bert I. Raichart Dentistry Transfer from Kansas City Western Dental College. Vernon Robinson Dentistrv 106 Jack N. Ross Dentistry Stan W. Ruggles Dentistry Delta Sigma Delta; Trojan Squires; Mu Sigma Phi. Melvin V. Saxman Dentistry Lambda Sigma Nu: Alpha Tau Epsi- lon; Sec. Student Body. G.A.LEN R. Shaver Dentistry Psi Omega; Pres. Odonto Club; Sigma Sigma; Alpha Ta u Epsilon. ToYO Shimizu Dentistry S. Mayo Silverman Dentistry Alpha Omega; Pres. Ford-Palmer- Newkirk; Trowel; A.T.E. Chester L. Snyder Dentistry Vinson A. Soderberg Dentistry Delta Sigma Delta; Trojan Band; Odonto Club. Harold Stone Dentistry Xi Psi Phi; Pres. Professional Inter- Fraternity Council. James B. Tarver Dentistry Psi Omega; Delta Sigma Phi; Sec. Sen- ior Class; Squires; Track ' 29. Maurice O. Tyler Dentistry John H. Unland Dentistry Robert L. Van Osdel Dentistry Kappa Alpha; Varsity Track ' 31. ' 32.  33; A.T.E. ; Skull and Dagger. Morris Volat Dentistry Alpha Omega; Ford-Palmer-Newkirk; Odonto Club. Henri Horton Voss Dentistry Psi Omega; Alpha Tau Epsilon; Den- tal Ed. Daily Trojan, ' 3 3. Glade F. Wall Dentistry Xi Psi Phi; Sec. Ford-Palmer-Ncwkirk. Odonto Club. William Carter Wark Dentistry Xi Psi Phi.  Vice-Pres. ' 3 3; Ford-Pal- mer-Newkirk. Paul S. Weisbrod Dentistry Psi Omega; Ice Hockey ' 31, ' 32, and ' 33. Thomas F. Wright Dentistry Phi Mu Alpha; Trojan Band; Drum Major ' 34; Spartan Football ' 30. 19 CRADUATES«34 107  i First roir: Yosh. Dorshl.n.il, Iiuulm. Si,,il,. . il. i 1;,, i,. I I1..1. „.„,,].. Ua.va.,lu, li.uj.auuw «. ,.uiv . Stcond row: J. Hanson. Hoxie. Marshall. Mclvinnon. Scholl. Shorman. Wcckworth. L. Davis, Lascurain. Love, Reynolds. Third row: Bowles. Heitman. R. Hanson. Arikawa. Coates. Peterson. Leonard. Yoeman. Schne- burg. Whitaker. Rumack. Jones. • Entering their Junior year with the loyalty and clas  ; spirit resulting from their Freshmen and Sophomore years, the class of ' 35 prepared for the professional at- mosphere of the Dental Clinic, following the period of preparation on the Trojan campus. • After a period of reorganization, the class chose as its leaders ). Lorenz Jones as President, W. H. Marshall as Vice-President, and Jeanne Rosenthal as Treasurer, all of them serving an active period for their group. |. LORENZ lONES President JEANNE ROSENTHAL Treasurer Junior Class 108 First row: Fox. Way. Cutlt-r. Monell. Frush. Monek. R. Davis. Harradine. Silva. Standiee. Sicond ro-n- : Kaneo. Ridgeway. Kuwata. Hills. Evans. Lauiitzen. Rosenthal. R. Clark. Taylor. Aull. Tapper. Third row: Eckes. Fergus. Nakaji. Williams. Nelson. Clapp. Kramer. Cockett. Blair. Nowaki. Barthuli. • Student body officers filled by class elections were those of Editor of the Dental section of El Rodeo and of Business Manager. Lincoln A. Scholl and Bill Clark re- spectively, were chosen to fill these positions. Fred Laruitzen performed the duties of Athletic Manager of the group. With a notable record of activities behind them, and with the practical ability they have gained in their Junior year, members of the class are prepared to enter the Senior year and to take up the duties it offers. W. H. MARSHALL Vice-President LINCOLN SCHOLL El Rodeo Editor Junior Class 109 CORDON SPENCER Vice-President Sopkomore Class • In an endeavor to participate as widely as possible in the activities of both the College of Dentistry and the University as a whole, the Sophomore class inaugurated its second year of preparation for the dental profession with an enthusiasm and energetic spirit that surprised the other students and brought vic- tory to the class in the annual athletic field day. The Sophomores swept to victory in al- most every event. • Class President for year was Lester Little- john, who showed administrative ability. Other officers who helped in directing the class functions were Gordon Spencer, Vice- President; Peggy Christian, Treasurer; Duane Nelson, Athletic Manager; and Harry Cimr- ing, Class Editor. For next year ' s work at the clinic, continued enthusiasm is promised. 110 L • Inspired by a stirring address of welcome by Dean Lewis E. Ford, who urged the new students to redouble their efforts to obtain professional training in the light of chaotic economic conditions, the class of ' 37 soon or- ganized itself to cope with the problems of- fered both in the college and outside. • A profusion of social events marked the school year for the entering class. In addition a spirit of close cooperation welded the stu- dents into a single unit. • Harry Brooks served as the President of the class of ' 34, and Wayne Peterson and Les Saunders acted as Vice-President and Secre- tary-Treasurer, respectively. In their positions as Athletic Manager and Class Editor, Paul Fairbrothers and Reed Petty performed some hard work in the interests of their class. WAYNE PETERSON Vice-President Freshman. Class 111 112 CLARICE SANDS President fl ANNE LUTZ Vice-President RUBY FRALEY NORA CONROW Dental Hygiene • With the largest number ot women ever enrolled, in- struction for the 1935 class in dental hygiene in the college is drawing to a close. Growth in enrollment in this work is attributed to increased general interest in the whole field of oral hygiene. This year is the fifth that the class has been offered at the University.  Introduced as a course in the University of Minnesota in 1917, instruction in dental hygiene is a comparatively new and undeveloped field. Classes in the east and mid- dle west, as well as at S.C., have proved successful. • To administer the duties of the class, the following outstanding students were chosen as officers: Clarice Sands, President; Anne Lutz, Vice-President; Bette Buxton, Secretary-Treasurer; and Lynne Hutchinson, Publicity Manager. • In addition to their activities in the class directed to- ward the spreading of oral hygiene doctrines, several of the women at the same time became members of Alpha Kappa Gamma, national dental hygiene sorority, an or- ganization devoted to the furtherance of dental hygiene. L LYNNE HUTCHINSON Publicity Manager BETTE BUXTON Secretary-Treasurer Dental Hygiene • Because of its direct effect on the health and general welfare of the whole community, the field of dental hygiene assumes a vital importance to both members of the dental profession and the public as a whole. • Consisting of two classes, the Freshman year spent in gaining the fundamentals at the Science and Technic building, and the Senior year at the clinic, where the background of theory is made to fit practical applica- tion, the division of dental hygiene is a complete course. • Since the dental health of the child is considered an index to his general physical condition, the dental hy- gienist must be qualified to educate her patients as to the proper care of the mouth. In schools the work con- sists of mouth examinations, tooth-brush drill, and in- struction in oral habits. The Inygienist is offered un limited opportunity in the public schools both as pro- phylactic operator and as teacher of oral hygiene. • Throughout the school year the class in dental hy- giene has sponsored several social activities, which sup- plemented the routine clinical work. YVONNE CRADDY MIRIAM PRUESS 113 The Odonto Club CALEN SHAVER President • To give financial aid to less fortunate students is the raison d ' etre of the Odonto club. Founded in 1919 by Dr. Julio Endelman, the organization has assisted students who otherwise could not have completed their studies. The Pres- ident of Odonto club is appointed by Alpha Tau Epsilon, hon- orary dental fraternity. His is the job of supervising the or- ganization and planning fund-raising campaigns. Theater parties and dances have been the most lucrative sources of income to swell the loan fund. • Dr. Arthur C. LaTouche is the trustee of the fund. His ad- vice and assistance, given unselfishly, have served as corner- stones for the work of the group. • A true service organization, Odonto club rests its control entirely in the students of the College of Dentistry. Upon them depends the success of its future. Of its value in the past there is no doubt: the financial aid rendered has been the stepping stone to education for many worthy students. Ford Palmer Newklrk S. MAYO SILVERMAN President • One of the most active service organizations in the Univer- sity, the Ford-Palmer-Newkirk society has for its object the stimulation of interest among students in that phase of den- tistry to which they are especially attracted. In line with this policy, the society this year has presented interesting and in- structive clinics and talks by several prominent local special- ists. Their value was indicated by the large attendance and approval of both students and faculty. • The society also serves to familiarize its members with dental society procedures, including the reading of technical essays and the presentation of clinics. • For his cooperation and assistance in obtaining speakers, Dr. Frank Damron deserves full credit. • Originally organized as three separate organizations — the Palmer, Newkirk, and Ford dental societies — which were formed in 1923 at the suggestion of Dr. Julio Endelman, the societies amalgamated in 1929. 115 Psi Omega Faculty: Dr. S. W. Bowles. Dr. L. Felsenthal, Dr. S. T. Loop, Dr. |. E. Mauer, Dr. J. D. McCoy, Dr. R. P. McKee, Dr. J. W. Reeves, Dr. R. H. Reithmuller, Dr. C. N. Rice, Dr. R. H. Roberts, Dr. D. E. Smith, Dr. H. A. Stryker, Dr. E, F. Tholen, Dr. W. S. Thompson, Dr. M. V. Varian, Dr. J. Vincent, Dr. A. F. Wagner, Dr. William S. Warren. Seniors: Louis Armann, Newton Ferguson, Arthur Hudson, Harold Mahan, M. H. Mortonson, Calen Shaver, )ames Tarver. Juniors: Dwight Bowles, Robert Fergus, Howard Marshall, Owen Ridgeway, John Stephens. Sophomores: Clint Andree, Leonard Fairbanks, Darwin Harden, Ted Hasbrouck, John Hough, John Morrison. Pledges: Bruce Adams, Gail Curren, Roy Fetterman, Presley Lucas. Adams, Armann Bowles, Curren, Fairbanks. Ferprus Ferpuson, Fetterman, Hasbrouck, Houeh. Hudson Lucas, Mahan. Marshall. Morrison. Ridseway. Shaver. Steplitns. Tar er. Voss. Wiesbrod M. H. Mortonson President 16 Ed Halvorson President Chappell, Clapp. Edgerton. Gulbrandson, Hale Hertford, Jones. Justice, Kramer. Lawrence Littlejohn, McKinnon, Molina. Nelson. Palatay Rich. Rossit«r, Ruggles, Sewall, Soderberg Way. Wilkes. Wilkins, Work, Yeoman Faculty: Dr. Leo Baughman, Dr. E. W. Brownson. Dr. C. E. Calvin, Dr. J. S. Dillon, Dr. J. F. Christiansen. Dr. Julio Endelman, Dr. J. R. Feeney, Dean Lewis E. Ford, Dr. C. |. Clasier, Dr. Aldy Cray, Dr. J. Walter Cray, Dr. W. P. Harrison, Dr. E. E. Hogebaum, Dr. A. C. LaTouche. Dr. H. A. Linek, Dr. A. C. Prather. Dr. C. W. Ritter. Dr. R. A. Smith, Dr. ). O. Stoker. Dr. Verne C. Wilt. Seniors: Bailey Edgerton, Ed Halvorson, E. K. Hertford, |. R. Justice, A. R. Lawrence. J. C. Molina, Stan Ruggles, Vinson Soderberg. Juniors: Stacy Clapp, J. Howard Eckes, J. M. Lorenz Jones. Wendell R. Kramer, Jack Nelson, Floyd Way, Claude Yeoman. Sophomores: Lester Littlejohn, Larry Rossiter, Barney Wilkes. Pledges: Niels Boege. Winston Chappell, Ewayne Culbrandson, Jerry Hale, Dick Palatay, Odis Rich, Gilbert Sewall. Ralph Wilkins, Ceorge Work. Delta Slgnna Delta 117 Lambda Sigma Nu Faculty: Dr. A. O. Ward Seniors: Arnold Ariaudo, Robert Brown, James Fairchild, William Motley, Melvin Saxman, Jack Ross. Juniors: Harry Evans, Karl Stock, Merle Weckwerth. Sophomores: Horace Church, Douglas Meacham, Walter Meyenberg, Eugene Stephenson, John Tyler, George Vaughn, William Schmierer. Pledges: Richard Cassel, Ray Chamberlain, William Cooney, Jules Hammershmitf, Theodore Pilger, Malcolm Stewart, James Vernetti. Ariaudo. Brown. Chambt-i Iain Church, Cooney. Evans. Meacham Meyenberg:, Motley, Pilfer, Ross Saxman, Schmierer, Stephenson, Stewart Stock, Tyler, Vaughn, Wecliwerth James Fairchild President 118 Bernard Faubion President O D. O e  a P ' e  t   €  p iMtt df ffltfii Ayers, Browne Clark, Day. DeWoIf. Ewintr Franco. Frush. Heitman. Hubbard. Kalionzes Litt. May, Morrell. Nelson. Peter.s Peterson. Pftty. Stansburu. Stone. Thomason Wall, Webster, Westwood. Wark. Zemke Faculty: Dr. C. H. Collins, Dr. C. A. Davis, Dr. D. W. Dyer, Dr. H. Dameron, Dr. Harry Potter. Seniors; Fred Ayres, H. C. Carter, Norman Day, R. M. Ewing, B. H. Faubion, P. E. May, Harold Stone, Carter Wark, Frank Wall. Juniors: C. M. Clarke, Louis Franco, )ack Frush, F. W. Heitman, Robert X. Morrell, T. E. Peterson, H. J. Thomason, J. C. Westwood. Sophomores: John Crawford. A. Kalionzes, D. L. Nelson, W. R. Peters. Freshmen: I. J. Browne, C. B. Stansbury. Pledges: D. W. Barber, H. De Wolfe, R. L. Diegel. P. C. Fairbrothers, Clinton Hubbard, B. K. Litt, W. L. Peterson, R. C. Petty, R. 0. Stephens, Bill Webster. Xi Psi Phi 119 Alpha Omega Seniors: Charles C. Caplan, Alfred I. Coleman, Mayo Silverman, Joseph Gorman, Morris Volet, Sam Levine. Junior; Harry Cutler Sophomores: Philip Aslacan, William Goodstein, Emanuel Josell, Aaron Koran, Ralph Saylin. Pledges: Leonard Lyon, Max Gordon, Joe Lewisstein, Henry Rosenbloom. Caplan. Cutler Gorman, Levine Silverman, Volat Alfred I. Coleman President 120 Ayres, Bowles, Brooks, Clapp Clark, Coleman, Culter, Edgerton, Evans, Fairchild Faubion. Fer rus, Frush. Halvorson. Hasbrouck, Houuh Hudson, Jones, Kurlander, Lawrence, Littlejohn, Marshall Molina. Mortonson, Nelson. Peterson. Saxman, Scholl Shaver, Silverman, Stephens ' in, Van Osdel, Voss, Westwood Faculty: Dr. Lewis E. Ford, Dr. A. C. La Touche, Dr. Julio Endelman, Dr. A. C. Prather, Dr. J. P. Mauer. Dr. Donald Smith, Dr. C. W. Ritter, Dr. George M. Baughman, Dr. ). T. Vin- cent, Dr. Douglas Dyer, Dr. George Davis, Dr. Robert Feeney, Dr. W. P. Harrison, Dr. A. F. Wagner, Dr. J. Walter Reeves. Dr. R. E. Willey, Dr. Frank Damron. Seniors: Fred Ayres, Barney Faubion, Robert Ewing, Robert Hudson, Galen Shaver, A. R. Lawrence, |ames Fairchild, S. Mayo Silverman, E. L. Kurlander, Julius Molina, Morton Mor- tonson, Alfred Coleman, Melvin Saxman, Edward Halvorson, Bailey Edgerton, Robert Van Osdel, Henry Voss. Juniors: Ted Peterson, Paul Standlee, Dwight Bowles, John Westwood, Lincoln Scholl, J. Lorenz Jones, Howard Marshall, C. M. Clark, John Frush, Harry Evans, Robert Fergus. Stacy Clapp, John Nelson, Ned Aull, Harry Cutler. Sophomores: John Hough, Ted Hasbrouck, Lester Littlejohn, Louis Schoenfield, Eugene Stephenson. Freshmen: Harry Brooks, Paul Fairbrothers. Alpha Tau Epsilon 121 Upsllon Alpha JIUl. Christian Faculty; Dr. Clara A, Carbinier, Dr. Alice C. Mauer. Senior: Virginia May Hill Sophomore: Crietje Christian Trowel Faculty: Dr. Leo Baughman, Dr. E. M. Brownson, Dr. J. F. Christiansen, Dr. C. E. Colvin, Dr. E. L. Eames, Dr. J. Felsenthal, Dr. L. E. Ford, Dr. A. C. LaTouche, Dr. R. Proctor McKee, Dr. B. A. Olson, Dr. A. C. Prather, Dr. R. Reithmuller, Dr. C. E. Rice, Dr. R. H. Roberts, Dr. J. O. Stoker, Dr. E. F. Tholen, Dr A. F. Wagner, Dr. A. O. WarcJ, Dr. W. S. Warren, Dr. M. W. Wilkinson. Seniors: E. Lee Kurtlander, John M. McEachven, Mayo Silverman. Sophomore: Lester Littlejohn McEachren, Kurlander, Silverman, Littlejohn 122 DOCTORS Presenting the second graduating class since reorganization, the high standards maintained by the School of Medicine have caused it to be recognized as one of the best in the country. Its curricula, in- cluding two years of clinical work in the new Los Angeles County hospital, together with research  A  ' ork under leaders in the profes- sion, have made the S.C. medical degree a badge of quality. Stu- dents participate in few activities, but a number of medical fraterni- ties have local chapters. 123 PAUL S. MM B BEN Dean of tke School of Medicine • The School of Medicine presents a grad- uating class this year, the second since its reorganization in 1928. The excellent facil- ities of the Los Angeles County Hospital now housed in a magnificent new building, are used for clinical instruction in the last two years of the course. The Dean and Faculty sets high standards for its students 124 and the School of Medicine is now recog- nized as ranking with the best in the coun- try. Research by members of the Faculty of the School in Anatomy, Bacteriology, Biochemistry, Medicine, Pathology, Pharma- cology and Physiology brings the school constantly to the attention of those ac- quainted with medical science. i i The UnlversLty of Southern Calif ornia School of Medicine • The members of the School of Medicine Student Body get together once a year at the  opening lecture  , delivered last Sep- tember by Dr. William J. Kerrn, Professor of Medicine of the University of California. The character of the curriculum and the high standards maintained prevent medical students from participating in many activi- ties. Each class elects officers yearly. The Seniors chose Charles Borah, President; Irving Baer, Vice-President. The Juniors chose Cecil Hoff, President; Earl Gates, Vice-President. Sophomores support Rod- erick Thompson, President; Abraham Tur- kel, Vice-President. The Freshmen rally to Joseph Vickers, President; Eriing Naess, Vice-President. The ideals of Aesculapius are kept constantly before the medical stu- dents by the medical fraternities. Chapters of Alpha Kappa Kappa, Nu Sigma Nu, Nu Sigma Phi, Phi Beta Pi, Phi Chi, Phi Delta Epsilon and Phi Rho Sigma are active. EARL GATES Vice-President-, Student Body TERRY BENNETT President, Student Body 125 CHARLES BORAH Senior Class President IRVING BAER Senior Class Vice-President JOSEPH VICKERS Freshman Class President ri « 126 School of Medicine • The Medical student at the University of Southern California, while anxious to secure a good foundation and to satisfy the requirements of the Pre-clinical departments, looks forward to his clinical work at the County Hospital. Here in his Junior year he has an unusual opportunity to study sick people in the wards. In his Senior year he acquires his own patients in the Out-Patient Department. In his clinical hospital work the student is guided by experienced, alert and charitable instructors. When through with the clin- ical work, our medical student must still serve as an intern in an approved hospital for one year before receiving his degree. It is no  bed of roses  but an excellent training for the practice of medicine. All interested in the School look forward to better quar- ters, but cannot wish for better effort and cooperation on the part of the students. ' f 1 i ENGINEERS Engineering students kept abreast of the latest achievements in all branches of their future profession through frequent field trips, the most notable of which was that to Hoover Dam. To make available more news of specific interest, the  Southern California Engineer  was added to the list of S.C. pub- lications. As diversified as the types of engineering taught were the numerous social events which featured the school ' s program for the year. 127 i PHILIP S. BIEGLER Dean of tke College of Engineering • Another successful year for the School of Engineering has drawn to a close. Much of the success of the school must be credited to its efficient administrators, Dean Phillip S. Biegler and Thomas T, Eyre. Eyre was acting dean the second semester during the absence of Dean Biegler who is on sabbati- cal leave. 128 • Because the School of Engineering is comparatively small, it can give its students the advantage of individual attention by a recognized experienced faculty. A practical gauge of the merits of the Southern Cali- fornia School of Engineering lies in the fact that its graduates are very successful in competing with those of other schools. i 4 Tke UnLverslty of Soutkern California School of Engineering • The past year has been an interesting one for the members of the School of Engineer- ing Student Body. The year ' s social season was initiated by the Annual Engineer ' s Dance at the Brentwood Country Club. It was followed by an  athletic night  in the gym in which there was competition among the various departments in basketball and baseball. The Basketball League was won by the Civil Engineers, and the Baseball League was won by the Generals.  Much of the success of the year must be attributed to the student body officers, who were: Fred Williams, President; Jack Lambi, Vice-President; Albert Hanson, Treasurer; Andrew Rose, Secretary. • National honorary engineering fraterni- ties represented on the campus are: Beta Pi, all engineering fraternity; Phi Lambda Upsilon, chemical; Chi Epsilon, civil; Eta Kappa Nu, electrical; and Sigma Gamma Epsilon, petroleum. FREDERICK WILLIAMS President ALBERT HANSON Secretary 129 Hydraulics laboratory offers en- gineering students an oppor- tunity for practical experiments. Inspection Trips • The industrial activities of the Pacific Southwest are vividly brought before the students of engineering by a series of inspection trips. • One feature of this program is the annual excursion taken to Hoover Dam. Three days are spent en route: the first in visiting one of the large manufacturing cement plants at Victorville or Riverside; the second at the Black Canyon Project proper; and the third in returning to Los Angeles by way of Death Valley or other points of interest. • To the student, physical contact with actual con- struction work of the nature and extent of this one, crystallizes his understanding of the methods and de- tails of modern engineering practice, and induces a genuine enthusiasm in the profession that could not be created in any other way. 130 Bringing prominent engineers of the Pacific Southwest to the University and sponsoring bi- monthly trips to various engi- neering projects in Southern California, the School of Engi- neering places its student members in close contact with current activities in this field of endeavor. ± i SOUTHERN CKlFORl illA $I.OO-Year 25, Copy The Southern California Engi- neer is definite evidence of the fine progress of Southern Cali- fornia ' s most ambitious school. Quarterly Publ ' Lcatlon The Southern California Engi- neer forms a direct contact be- tween the School of Engineer- ing and the industrial activities of Southern California. The magazine is the brainchild of Fred Williams. President of the School, and his initiative in es- tablishing this publication is a definite step forward. • A newcomer on the campus this year is the  South- ern California Engineer  , quarterly publication of the School of Engineering Student Body. • The Governing Board, which exercises control in the matter of policy and circulation, is headed by Tom Barnard, Editor; Albert Hanson, Business Manager; Ernest Bernberg, Advertising Manager; Everett Spra- ker. Circulation Manager, and Nelson Bogart, Assist- ant. Faculty advisers are T. T. Eyre, ]. F. Dodge, S. F. Duncan, C. H. Dunstan. Fred Williams, Student Body President, who was largely responsible for the pub- lishing of this quarterly, is an ex-officio member. • The technical staff is composed of Albert Kent, Vincent Casey, Arnold Meyer, Harvey Brandt, joe Er- vin, John Hills, Dan Healy, Larry Canon and Warren Jessup. 131 Student Activities , , IP 1 1 EXECUTIVES Initiating a number of progressive steps in self-government, the As- sociated Students, through con- stant effort, brought about a ser- ies of momentous improvements on the campus this year. These in- cluded the creation of an all-Uni- versity loan fund, a campus beau- tification plan and a student for- um. The constitution was rewrit- ten, and several new committees were installed. Not so spectacular, but even more important, was the tireless activity of the legislative and administrative bodies in exe- cuting the business of the Asso- ciated Students. 133 LAWRENCE PRITCHARD W • Lawrence Pritchard, President of the As- sociated Students, has performed not only the routine duties of his office, but has en- deavore d to promote progressive steps in student government. Outstanding among his achievements was his 12-point plan of student and University improvement, which included many splendid features. He also initiated a campaign for a student loan fund, encouraged the planning of an associated student park, and developed the idea of Southern California colleges day, which was held at S.C. in the spring. Larry is enrolled in the College of Commerce and is a mem- ber of Alpha Kappa Psi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. 1 n II President of the Associated Students 134 Associated Students of the UniversLty of Soutkern California • Christy Fox, Vice-President of the stu- dent body, has filled most successfully the office of official hostess of Troy. She ar- ranged a series of enjoyable dances and oth- er social functions during the year and served as a charming hostess at all such events. In addition, she acted as chairman of the social committee and as advisor to Lawrence Pritchard. A member of Pi Beta Phi, her winning personality and earnest ability have made her one of the most pop- ular co-eds on the campus. • Betty Jones, Secretary of the student body, has dispatched the routine work of her office in an efficient and willing man- ner. Sending notices of all Legislative Coun- cil meetings to the members, attending such meetings, taking complete minutes of the proceedings of the Council, and filing them for future reference, are only a few of Betty ' s many duties. In addition, she is a member of Delta Camma, Trojan Amazons, and is an enthusiastic supporter of all cam- pus movements. CHRISTY FOX Vice-President BETTY JONES Secretary 135 ARNOLD EDDY • Arnold Eddy, a graduate of S.C. in 1924, is General Manager of the Associated Stu- dents. In this capacity he supervises all ac- tivities and finances of the student body and approves all student body affairs. He is also an ex-officio member of the Legislative Council, and, in addition, has charge of the sale and distribution of all tickets for foot- ball and basketball games. Mr. Eddy ' s major outside interest is amateur athletics, and he is Secretary-Treasurer of the Amateur Ath- letic Union of Southern California. He is a member of Sigma Nu, and during his uni- versity days was Manager of El Rodeo. Graduate Manager, Associated Students 136 Assistant G raduate Managers of the Associated Students • Leo Adams, who in his college days at S.C. was President of the student body, is the Assistant Graduate Manager of the As- sociated Students. Among his varied duties are the supervision of the budgeting of all athletic trips, the handling of Coliseum and Olympic Auditorium personnel during foot- ball and basketball seasons, and the techni- cal end of ticket distribution. He also schedules minor athletic events. Mr. Adams is a member of Kappa Sigma. • Kenneth K. Stonier, Manager of student publications, deserves great credit for the continuance of the high standard main- tained by student publications in the Uni- versity. He is financial advisor for all cam- pus publications and supervises their busi- ness affairs. In addition, he advises student editors and managers in determining the policies of the publications, draws up con- tracts and arranges publication budgets. Mr. Stonier is a member of Kappa Alpha. LEO ADAMS Assistant Graduate Manager KENNETH K. STONIER Manager, Student Pubications 137 I Associated Students LAWRENCE PRITCHARD President SW AKTHUIT I ' lllLLIPS LEACII KORITZ CAMP CISLINI LAVEAGA nAVlS RAYMOND (IBBS TWITTY JENSEN CHRISTENSEX VON KLEINSMID IIASBROUCK • The Legislative Council, governing body of the Associated Students, com- posed of direct representatives of all the schools and colleges in the Univer- sity, has been unusually active during the past year. Not only has it taken care of its routine duties of supervis- ing student affairs and insuring suc- cessful student government, but it has initiated many improvements for the Associated Students and the Univer- sity and has cooperated with the chair- man, Lawrence Pritchard, in his con- structive program. One of the Coun- cil ' s most important undertakings dur- ing the year was the rewriting and modernizing of the constitution of the Associated Students. • Faculty advisers for the Council have been Dean Francis Bacon and Dr. A. S. Raubenheimer. • I II 138 CHRISTY FOX Vice-President • Erma Eldridge and Eber Jacques have served as alumni advisory mem- bers. The body meets twice a month with the President of the student body as presiding officer. Elected members from the various colleges in the Uni- versity vote on motions, while ex- officio members, who are presidents of ail - University service organizations, all committee chairmen, and editorial and business managers of student pub- lications, may enter into discussions but have no power to vote. On this group, chosen for ability and success in respective endeavors on the campus, falls the duty of carefully conducting the business of the entire student body, and it is to their credit that the past year has been one of the most outstanding in the history of the Council and the University. Legislative Council r.EIiNARD WILLIAMS EDDV LINDSAY MCMASTER ADAMS JOHNSON HIRSMFIELD EDICK HEERES ROUSSO ROSE SET HER CHASE HILTON 139 Men ' s Council and Board of PubUcatlons Men ' s Council • The Men ' s Council was organized tive years ago by Dr. Francis M. Bacon, Dean of Men, for the purpose of bringing student body offenders before a student judiciary council. It is composed of five Senior mem- bers and three Junior members selected by Dean Bacon. BACON LOVE NORMAN H. UCH WHITE JONES PRITCHARD LEACH • The membership of the Board of Student Publications includes the editor and busi- ness manager of each campus publication, in addition to two Senior members and one Junior member selected by the Legislative Council. Three faculty members complete the group. Board of Publicafions SETHER HILTON KORITZ FUANKISH PIGUET FOSTER CISLINI ROSE MADSEN ADAMS FRENCH STONIER 140 . Committee Heads and Board of Managers BASTAXCirUrjY FOX PRlTCHAItU SMITH FIGUET JENSEN RAYMOND GUTHRIE • Other all-University committees include the National Students Federation Associa- tion, the Flying Squadron, and the Social, Constitutional, University Publications, Or- ganizations, University Relations, Deputa- tions, and the Religious Activities commit- tees. Committee Heads • The Board of Managers has the power to elect the managers of debate, drama, and all athletic teams. Membership on the board consists of a faculty member, the Graduate Manager, the student manager of each specified activity, and two other ap- pointees. Board of Managers SHONXARD HUNTER MCDONALD EDDY CAMPBELL ADAMS CHRISTENSEN HELLMAN HIRSHFIELD PRITCHARD STANLEY MONOSMITH 141 1 Student Connnn ' Lttees FRESHMAN ADVISORY ELECTIONS HIGH SCHOOL RELATIONS BASTANCHURV BRYAN LINDSAY BIXLER HAUGH BR VAX BROOMHELD KAHN JONES HUiSlinELU FOULKES ROCKWELL CAVANEY OLSEN MALCOLM RAYMOND ZULLIG WEBBER WEAVER TODD COMPERE EDICK SMITH MONOSMITH STAMPLEY HUFPINE CHASE WHITE ' I a] i I ri  I 142 I- HOMECOMING COMMITTEE Student ComnrLLttees I STUDENT UNION KOSE JONES MUCHMOKE FOX WILDER OREM LINDSAY CULLEXWARD JENSEN REYNOLDS LEACH BERLS BONNEY JONES JOHNSON CAVANEY POGGI HAUGH B[XLER JHCMASTER ROUSSO NAGEL OLSEN BERNARn PRITCHARD FOX EDDY ADAMS 143 Student ComnrLLttees STUDENT WELFARE • Student committees for the year had the following chairmen: High School Relations: Robert Lindsay; Elections: Bernard Hirsh- field; Freshman Advisory: James Guthrie and Grace Edick; Homecoming: Watson Rose; Rally: Roy Johnson; Student Union: Worth Bernard; Student Welfare: John Leach; International Relations: Jack Swarthout; University Social: Christy Fox; INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS University Publications: Betty Bastanchury; N. S. F. A.: Jack Smith; Religious Activi- ties: William Piguet; Deputations: Sherman Jensen; Flying Squadron: John Raymond. Elwood Jones was chairman of the Men ' s Council and Lawrence Pritchard acted as chairman of the Board of Publications and the Board of Managers, in addition to his duties as President. WHITE LEACH CR.WVrORD SWARTHOUT BKV. N WEAVER WHITE BACON ' CAVANEY JOIIXSOX KINZY KUSAYANACI 144 PUBLICISTS With the 1933 El Rodeo judged the best college annual in the na- tion, the 1934 staff attempted to repeat the honor for the Univer- sity by initiating novel ideas in lay- out and arrangement. The Daily Trojan was considered one of the most liberal and best-edited col- lege newspapers in the country, while the Wampus, working un- der budget difficulties, managed to maintain its past excellence. The business staffs on the various publications handled efficiently their various tasks. Other enter- prises were the Pigskin Review and the Frosh Bible. 145 KENNETH STONIER • Working in direct contact with student editors and business managers of campus publications, Kenneth K. Stonier is respon- sible for the efficiency and success shown by the campus publications during the past year. Under his supervision are El Rodeo, Daily Trojan, Wampus, Student Handbook, Pigskin Review and the Summer Trojan. Together with the Student Board of Publi- cations, Mr. Stonier supervises all business and editorial transactions and gives advice on financial arrangements. Graduate Manager, Student Publications 146 S out kern Calif ornia Pigskin Review • Southern California ' s official football magazine, called the Pigskin Review, has come to be regarded by fans as a necessary ingredient for a successful football season. Matthew E. Barr was editor-in-chief of the Review this year, and was assisted by Fran- cis Cislini. Kenneth K. Stonier had charge of the business affairs. • In the Pigskin Review was found data on teams, coaches and officials, that would have been difficult to find outside the Re- view ' s pages. The line-ups of both teams. a roster of players, pictures of the members of both teams in action, as well as photos of coaches, assistants and trainers were found in this magazine. • The University of Washington number, the annual Homecoming edition, featured pictures of Homecoming committees, pic- tures of the parade and of judges of the parade, and the list of floats entered. In addition, this issue devoted two pages to Harold William Roberts and the Musical Organizations department. It also paid tribute to Southern California ' s three popu- lar yell leaders. Bob Morrell, Mike Prisler, and Ed Hallock. • Pictures of the card stunts planned by Morrell for the rooting sections were used in the special issues of the Review, and just before the start of the games, copies of the magazine were sold at a small price. Southern California ' s football magaiine is capably edited by Matthew Barr and is considered one of the outstanding publications of its kind in the west. 147 DALE HILTON Editor • Editor-in-chief of El Rodeo this year was Dale Hilton. Beginning work with his large staff early in the fall, Dale endeavored to make this year-book the best ever edited by an S.C. staff. • Under his capable leadership, the book was planned and worked out with several new ideas never before attempted in college publications. • Besides holding one of the highest editorial positions at S. C, Dale is well-known in other activities. He is a member of Phi Sigma Kappa, na- tional social fraternity, Trojan Knights, honorary service organization, and the varsity golf team. • Former experience on El Rodeo as assistant editor last year has made Dale well qualified to act as the exec- utive and editorial head of the S. C. annual for 1933-34. m M The editor ' s office. El Rodeo I ' . It VAX I. A V LESS EDICK 148 JACK ROSE Business Manager El Rodeo • Financial problems of El Rodeo and all business matters concerning the publication were successfully handled by Jack Rose. • In this capacity, Jack formed all financial plans and took care of distri- bution of the yearbook. He solicited all the advertising and was largely re- sponsible for the many full-page ads which appear in the book. • Active in other departments of the University. Jack is a member of Inter- fraternity Council and of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, national social fraternity. He also has served on many of the Uni- versity student committees. He is a former assistant editor of El Rodeo. • Assisting jack with his duties as business manager of the annual were Betty Keeler, Bud Simon, Reginalda Bradshaw and Jack Lawrence. KELLI 1; DINGLE L.  HENCE 149 • With the large staff combining ef- forts, this year ' s El Rodeo is one of the most interesting ever put out by a stu- dent staff. Copy space has been cut down, and photographs, with campus life predominating, has been featured. • Paul Bryan, assistant editor, has aided greatly in the editing of the an- nual. With Grace Edick as associate editor, Paul supervised picture-taking and helped with page make-up. • Ralph Parr, assistant editor, had charge of all picture panels, including trimming and mounting, and spent much time on other editorial duties. • The women ' s section was edited by Maxine Adams. Tom Lawless was in charge of sports, with Frank Breese assisting. Sororities and fraternities were under the supervision of Betty Lee Bonner and Peggy Chase. Senior editor was Vera Popovsky. -m i i COINE TURKEY BREESE PRANKISH HIRSHFIELD TYLER SNYDER FERREY URQUHART FOSTER TODD WEST CULLENWARD RUSSELL El Rodeo KKOOMFIELD POPOVSKY A|t. MS MAAS 150 urru ENYEART HOLMAN EENNISON BUCHARD FRtlbEL KING BONNER STAMPLEY TRBNGOVE ALLEN SHERWIN H ALLEY CHASE STECKLE • News of S.C. publications was edited by Shirley Sanford. Marthael- len Broomfield was supervisor of pic- tures for the entire book. Deserving credit for their work as office secre- taries and general assistants are Lee Diamant and Dale Eddy. • Other organization heads were Ruth Coine, Junior college; Bettie Maas, honorary and professional; Tom Coble, art; Martha Sherwin, student adminis- tration; June Holman, organizations; Bob West, faculty; Stan Gushing, campus colleges; Polly White, drama; Jane Tyler, alumni; Margaret Snyder, debate; Caroline Ferrey, dances; Robert Halley, musical organizations; and Margaret King, publicity. Elaine En- yeart and Ernest Foster were copy- readers. The members of the advisory board were Walt Roberts and Clarke Cosgrove. El Rodeo SANFOliU EDDY HAN A WALT WHITE 151 WENDELL SETHER Editor • One of the most liberal and best- edited college newspapers in the coun- try has been the Daily Trojan under Wendell Sether, who has given the paper life and vigor too often lacking in undergraduate publications. • He conducted faculty and student symposiums on the war question, sug- gested and campaigned for the first interfraternity sing held on the cam- pus, brought about improvements in drama through encouragement of play productions, and even used his edi- torial column to bring aid to needy foreign students. • Under his leadership, the Daily Tro- jan has definitely molded campus opinion. • Sether is a member of the Trojan Knights, Blue Key, By-Liners, Sigma Sigma, and Kappa Alpha fraternity. ■■ HHHH|  '  dH 1 •,  w d The editorial room. Dally Trojan FRANlvlSlI B REESE FUSTEi; LLOYD 152 FRANCIS CISLINI Business Manager The business office. Dally Trojan • Francis Cislini holds the unique distinction of serving as business man- ager of the Daily TrO|an for a longer period than any other person in that position. • For three consecutive semesters, he directed the business activities of the newspaper, in addition to managing the summer edition of the Trojan. • His achievements on the staff in- clude the first cigarette advertising in the paper, and a study in the organiza- tion of the business staffs of leading newspapers throughout the state that resulted in a reorganization of the business and advertising staff of the Daily Trojan. • Cislini is a member of the Blue Key, honorary society. Alpha Delta Sigma, the Advertising club, and Phi Kappa Tau, national social fraternity. IlKOWN PAVIES PAKKER BONNEY 153 • Liberal, cooperative and able, the editorial staff of the Daily Trojan aid- ed in carrying out the progressive poli- cies, both in campus and national af- fairs. • Managing Editor Ernest Foster and Assistant Editor Jack Prankish super- vised the gathering of news, editing of copy and makeup. A staff of five day editors. Bill Piguet, George Robert, Tom Lawless, Hal Kleinschmidt and Dale Frady, had charge of daily edi- tions. Students in the journalism re- porting and copyreading classes covered news beats and did desk work. • For the first time all co-eds on the staff were placed under the women ' s editor, Margaret Lloyd. Assisted by Betty Lee Bonner, society editor, and Margaret Thomas, fashions editor, and their staff, they put out the weekly women ' s page. • As sports editor, Frank Breese su- pervised the third page. His assistants were Day Hodges, Roland Applegate, Dick Nash, Francis Benavidez, and Nelson Cullenward. HUTTON HAYNES KIFKIN MCPHEE FREIDEL KING ENYEART CAMP WOOLNER JONES SMITH ROSS Daily Trojan KOTHMAN TURNEY EFFINGER LAWLESS 154 KLEINSCHMIDT OREM CULLENWABD KORITZ SANPORD NASH ROBERT SHERWIN FRADV MUCH MORE JUERGENS GOODHEART • Outstanding among college dailies for liberal expression and variety of material, page two was edited by Elsie Rothman. • Personal, local, and light humor col- umns were Jack Baillie ' s  So What  in the first semester and jack Frank- ish ' s  Mud in Your Eye  in the sec- ond. Ernest Foster ' s  Political Obser- ver  expressed liberal comment on politics and economics. Intelligent lit- erary discussions filled Les Koritz '  Browsings.  Carrie Newkirk delved into campus social life for her  Troy by Night.  The weekly literary page was edited by Inez Effinger and Velma Bishop. Other regular contributors were Humorists juergens and Marshall, Sob-sister Polly White, Biographer Joe Berthelet, and Radio-columnist Martha Sherwin. Harry Kelso and Whitney Smith made daily cartoons. • Business staff members were Jay Orem and Norman Parker, advertising; Jack Privett and Thomas Bonney, copy; and Russell Nixon, circulation. Dally Trojan PBIVETT PIGUET NIXON SCHMIDT 155 LES KORITZ Editor • The career of the Wampus this year has been one of starting from scratch with a brand new staff, launching a small first issue, and, fighting against money troubles and censorship all the way, gradually building up to a point of quality and popularity that equalled, if not exceeded, that of the halcyon pre- ' 29 days. Tobacco adver- tising, permitted for the first time, helped the magazine to hurdle finan- cial hedges, and business and editorial staffs cooperated handsomely in a suc- cessful campaign to set the best finan- cial record in Tommy Wamp ' s fifteen lives. • Business Manager Madsen ' s ad-get- ting labors were aided by Simeon Bald- win, assistant business manager; Ted Jack, office manager; Cliff Sandland, Six of a kind. Wampus BItEESE DAVIES WOOI.XEIC liOBKRTS 156 ALBERT MADSEN Business Manager Full house. Wampus circulation manager; Norm Parker, ad- vertising manager. Virginia Williams handled the exchanges. Barbara Ger- ardi, Martha Ellis and Kay Woolner were also on the staff. • Bill Roberts, whimsical satirist of collegiate foibles; Frank Breese, sports expert; and Bill Whitney, Freshman poet and humorist — all associate edi- tors — were the chief writing props of Editor Les Koritz. Associate editor Eilert Richstein contributed copious cartoons. Max Knepper and Sidney Goldman served as assistants. • Tom Goble and Whit Smith, art edi- tors, were prolific cartoonists and il- lustrators, and Roy Rydell, jack Law- rence, Harry Fujiyoshi, and James Ap- pleby and Harry Kelso were repre- sented by frequent drawings. JAt ' K BALDWIN nOBLE SMITH 157 Freshman Handbook • The Student Handbook, better known to S.C. students as the  Frosh bible  , was edited by Matthew E. Barr. Francis Cislini was as- sistant editor and had charge of all business transactions. • Contained in the small, pocket edition, was all the information a new student would need about the campus: faculty, clubs, sororities, fraternities and other campus extra-curricular activities. • A complete calendar of events for the en- tire school year was printed on the last pages of the little book so that every student, old or new, would know what special affair was on the University program. • Several pages of campus advertising, which was solicited by the business manager, com- pleted the Handbook. • Bound in an imitation leather cover, the  Bible  is a student necessity. MATTHEW BARR Editor FRANCIS CISLINI Business Manager 158 D E B A T O R S Victorious in every endeavor, the debate squad culminated the most successful forensics season in the history of S.C. by winning the mythical national champion- ship at the University of Wiscon- sin Delta Sigma Rho tournament. The two touring teams consisting of Celeste Strack and Phyllis Nor- ton, and Martyn Agens and James Jacobs joined together to compete for the honors. Meanwhile Troy placed high in Pacific Coast com- petition through the combined ef- forts of Howard Patrick and Homer Bell and took part in sev- eral nation-wide debates over the radio. 159 HOWARD PATRICK WORTH BERNARD Varsity Debaters MARTIN ACENS 160 JACK LAYNC Men ' s Debate Manager ALAN NICHOLS Coach Varsity Debaters HOMER BELL 161 Mens Debate • The varsity debate squad has completed one of the finest and fullest seasons pos- sible. The question was  Resolved: That the Powers of the President Should be Substantially Increased as a Settled Pol- icy  . S.C. teams debated this subject some fifty times with thirty-five universities. • The team of Martyn Agens and James Kirkwood was sent on a tour which em- braced fifteen universities in New Mexico, Texas, Missouri, Nevada, Illinois, Utah, Wisconsin, and Colorado. They won the Wisconsin Delta Sigma Rho tournament. • Homer Bell and Howard Patrick traveled to the Pacific Forensic Meet at Stanford. • The University has been well represent- ed by Martyn Agens, James Kirkwood, Homer Bell, and Howard Patrick. Other men who have participated in inter-colle- giate debates are Worth Bernard, Sam Col- ton, Fred Conrad, Arthur Groman, Roy Johnston, Jack Layng, Russ Nixon, Thome Ragsdale, John Raymond, and Philip Shack- nove. COLTON JOHXSOX RAGSDALE R AYMOND Cr.OMAN NIXON CON HAD SHACKNOVE CRAWFORD KIRKWOOD 162 Womens Debate STPvACK TODD NORTON- HAXAWALT BEX BOW HITCHCOCK FRAIDE FRANK THURLOW SNYDER • The first forensic encounter of the year was the Redland ' s Invitational Tourna- ment. Phyllis Norton and Celeste Strack tied for first with College of Pacific. • Four teams participated in the Southern California Tournament. Celeste Strack and Phyllis Norton defeated U.C.L.A. to cap- ture first place. The sub-tournament was won by Ruth Frank, Betty Hitchcock, Mary Todd, and Margaret Snyder. • Five teams were sent to the Pi Kappa Delta Tournament. Margaret Snyder and Jane Reynolds reached the semi-final round in debate. Marjorie Benbow placed second in oratory. In the final round of extemporaneous speaking Margaret Snyder was third. • Phyllis Norton and Celeste Strack made an extensive debate tour. They encoun- tered eighteen universities and won every debate. • Phyllis Norton managed the squad and scheduled some forty meets. Celeste Strack led the team as captain. 163 Freshman Debate • The Trojan Men ' s Freshman Debate Squad has concluded the most successful season in the history of the University. The question debated was,  Resolved: That the Powers of the President Should Be Substantially Increased as a Settled Pol- icy  . • Members of the squad have found activ- ity in forty debates. They have defeated teams from Utah, Oregon, University of California, Stanford, and Loyola. The team has been successful in debates with vari- ous junior colleges. • The achievements of the Freshmen can be traced to the fine coaching of Ames Crawford, last year ' s varsity debate cap- tain. He has spent endless amounts of time developing a strong group of speak- ers. ELBERT BERRY GEORGE HILL BOB TRAPP 164 MUSICIANS  Fight on For Old S.C.  the Tro- jan band boomed as it marched down the football field, and amidst reverberations of laughter and applause from the crowds an- other band stunt won fame. No less popular and impressive were the symphony orchestra and chor- uses which appeared frequently throughout the academic year. The annual spring tours of the band and glee clubs were the most successful in several years. 165 H. W. Roberts began work at the University as a Freshman, later becoming the first Band Manager. Since that time he has cre- ated a fine department gov- erning the activities of the campus music groups. HAROLD WILLIAM ROBERTS Director, Musical Organizations • The Department of Musical Organiza- tions embodies the Trojan Band, Women ' s Glee Club, Male Chorus, Concert Orchestra and University Chorus. This department ranks with the Athletic Department as one of the University ' s best advertising me- diums. The music groups in this depart- ment are constantly serving the University by making contacts in the city, throughout the State, and, by means of chain radio broadcasts, throughout the Nation. ALEXANDER STEWART Orchestra Instructor lOHN T. BOUDREAU Band Instructor 166 The band ' s flashy drills be- tween halves at the football games are the result of much preliminary planning and gruelling drills from early in the morning until game time. ..fj .-,. . I LmA  e se; rf ' The Trojan Band marches en masse between halves. J. ARTHUR LEWIS Director, Male Chorus ALTA M. STRONG Department Secretary • To quote Harold William Roberts, the Director of the Department of Musical Or- ganizations,  Nothing comes out, boys, un- less you blow it in the other end.  In order to attain the high standards demanded by Mr. Roberts, much time and effort is in- vested by the participating student, more so than the general public or the student body realizes. This concerted effort is the reason for the enviable success of each group. 167 Trojan Band • The Trojan Band has its year of activity di- vided into two seasons. The initial activity is ushered in with the football season; during this period of the year the band work is con- fined to the preparation of the fast moving drills which are presented between halves at the games. The second season begins at the close of the football schedule and continues to the end of the school year. During this period the Band makes varied contacts, in the form of radio programs, an annual spring tour and concert programs as well as seasonal ath- letic events. The success of all the engage- ments made by the Band may be measured by the fact that the group is one of the best known in collegiate circles. i LESLIE HOACLAND Manager First row: Webster, Holmes, Rosenthal, Kipp, Fisher, Flournoy, BusH, Calvert, Lewis, Roberts, Santiln, Hoagland, Boudreau, Heinz, Baron, Polzin, Temple- man, Sanderson, Berry, Baker, Blumc. Akaka. Second row: Heinzman, Martin, Clodfclter, Parness, Lowe, Cambier, A. M. Rosen, Lipman, Theno, Munson. Thompson, Buck, A. Rosen, White, Hardman, |. Clark, Croal, Hiestand, Young, Patterson, Schmidt, Humphreys. Third row: Dumpf, Meeker, Kaneen, Pilmer, Perrin, Elliot, Houghten, Warren, Van Kleek, Ferlazzo, Hinshaw, Woodbury, Brockett, Diner, Mil- ikan, Eubanks, Karnes, Boege, Bennett. Fourth row: Bartle, 168 J Trojan Band • Besides a good time, the Band gives to its members companionship and practice. After long drill sessions, having subordinated their own desires for a common goal, the men ex- perience the thrill of group cooperation and attainment of the objective. • The heavy managerial duties connected with the successful movements of the Trojan Band were assumed the first semester by Les Hoag- land, student drum-major; during the second semester the Band was managed by Dick Weber. Under the manager is a host of as- sistants, all of whom lighten the manager ' s burden. • John T. Boudreau is the director of the famous Trojan Band. DICK WEBER Manager Maimes, Gilbert, Burnight, Sing- er, Piatt, Harris, Shaw, Rollins, Kaufman, Pearce, Rogers. Work, Bruce, H ll. Macker. Fifth row: Smith, Moir, Irwin, Munsey, Wright, Wyman, H udd leston , Snyder, Biggy, Lccdke, Astrican, Cooper, Silva, Duffin, Davis. Mc- Clean, Thurber. Sixth row: Hay- ward, Pelzel, Macatee, La France, Baum, Duffield, O ' Haver, Yarak, Nichols, Wellington, Meadows, Carter, Himovitz. Seventh row: Conrad, Fulton, Richardson, Hub- bell, Boyd, Barton, Tolden, Stall- cup, Elder, Patzner, Mullins, Johnson, Griffith, High, Slonaker. Eighth row: Rinnan, Phelps, Dunn, Williams, Randall, Bagley, Barber, Searls. Polakof, Skeeters, Brown, Jewef-t, Halley. 169 Male Chorus • The Trojan Male Chorus has been function- ing in two capacities the past four or five years. In combination with the Band it is fea- tured as the singing unit during the football drills. The Department arranger, Mr. Cus Cuentzel, has written several special arrange- ments combining the Male Chorus with the Band, which initiated the present popularity of the combined groups. The Male Chorus is not confined to work with the Band, however, but is capable of providing a formal concert to compare with the best of other such groups Credit for the versatility and quality of the music produced by the Male Chorus is due in no small part to the leader, J. Arthur Lewis. )AMES FULTON Manager First row: McNeil, Hinshaw, Pcarcc, Hciniman, Lewis, Akaka, Wye, Murrcll. Second row: Young, Mlllikan, Schmidt, Siggins, Winslow, Phelps, Moir. Third row: Baker, Singer, Elliot, Ecks, White, Smith. Fourth row: Dumpf, MeLean, Work, Fulton, Pat- terson, Brown, Irwin, I 170 Women ' s Glee Club • The Women ' s Glee Club does its share of work for the University along with the other groups in the Musical Organization Depart- ment. Membership in this organization is steadily increasing, although membership is given only after a satisfactory audition. The quality of the group is also increasing, making possible the presentation of the highest type of music. • Under the direction of J Arthur Lewis, the Women ' s Glee Club has presented radio pro- grams and concert programs in and about Los Angeles and throughout Southern California, and participated in two of the Band stunts during the football season. MARY WALDORF Manager Seated: Denny, Elliot, Betx, Tuttle, Price, Huffine, Fraley, Hutchinson, Notridge, Immel, Belshe, Cuy, Gates. Standing: Ruppe, Camp, Walton, Montgomery, Orvis, Hoetzell, Tondro, Waldorf, Kendricks, Williams, Douglas, Tyler, Davis, Johnson, Nyland. 171 Orchestra • The Concert Orchestra is rapidly gaining an enviable position in the minds of southland music lovers. In its various concert programs and radio contacts, the Orchestra has received the highest of praise from well known and reputable musicians. One of the features of the year ' s activity was a series of educational broadcasts pointing out the growth and de- velopment of the waltz, the march and class- ical music. • The serious-minded music student plays in ideal circumstances when with the Orchestra. He is with other musicians, each an expert, and all under the direction of Alexander Stewart, whose background and interpretation prove extremely valuable in symphony routine. ROBERT McCAW Manager First row: Patzner, Crimi, Click, Smith, Goldman, Stevenson, D. Montgomery, V. Montgomery, Preston, Zimmerman, J. Rosen. Second row: Blake, Newton. Schroeder, Marks, Sanford, Norconk, Kimber, Lueschen, Bird. Hosford. Third row: Nancarrow. Howard, Presnell, Leedke, Manager McCaw, Whistler. Griffith, A. Rosen, Yeo, Man- ley, Hinshaw. Fourth row: Bush, White, Smith, Kircher. 172 M . I ' m I DRAMATISTS All-University Play productions, in expanding to incorporate every branch of dramatics, gave S.C. a memorable series of presenta- tions. Hailed as the greatest suc- cess in four years, enthusiastic students demanded that  The Tavern  be repeated.  Death Takes a Holiday  was also widely acclaimed. Winning high honors in a one-act play competition,  Hyacinths  brought much credit to its cast and author. Creative ac- tivities sponsored included the Drama Shop, Poetry Playhouse, radio dramatizations and puppet shows. 173 FLORENCE HUBBARD Play Productions Director Play ProductLons • Under a new policy, the All-University Play Productions have been expanded this year to incorporate every branch of University drama- tics. The policy is to include comedies and tragedies representative of all time and under the direction of both Miss Cloyde D. Dalzell and Miss Florence B. Hubbard. The increased merit in presentations this year has been rec- ognized throughout the University. • In addition to major productions in Bovard, Play Productions now include the Drama Work Shop, a laboratory to aid in the develop- ment of student talent in acting, directing and playwriting. Drama Shop, whose presi- dent is Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, has pre- sented several creditable one-act plays. • Under the direction of R. B. von Weisslin- ger, the technical side of dramatic productions has represented the interest and participation of the allied arts of Architecture, Music and Stage-craft. MARY ELIZABETH HENDRICKS President, Drama Shop CLOYDE DALZELL Dramatics Director ROBERT WHITTEN Student Manager 174 Tak Death. Holiday es a • When the campus intelligencia learned that Play Productions was to undertake such a difficult drama as  Death Takes a Holiday  , the sages wagged their heads and predicted a sure flop. Surprisingly, however, the play when produced was hailed as the best yet seen in Bovard. • Maurice Lui, though he lacked the suave dignity of Death, was effective in the macabre role because of his strange, un-English accent. While a trace of the coyness of a Booth Tarkington heroine was discernable in Cracia as portrayed by Haila Cude, she was daintily pleasing, if not etherial. • Richard Salisian as Duke Lambert reg- istered good hysteria when he announced to his guests that Sirki was Death. Eliza- beth Bower, as Princess of San Luca gave an excellent performance. J. T. Berthe- let was impressive as the Baron Cesara. Praise for able acting goes to Murrow McCurrin as Rhoda Fenton; Margaret Thomas as Alda; Jack Swarthout as Car- rado; Helen Houghen, Dutchess Steph- anie; Fred Snyder as Eric Fenton; Thomas King as Fedle; Jane Tylor as Cora; George Ordansky as Major Whitehead. ' Death Takes a Holiday  typified in random shots of the successful Trojan production. 175 Peggy Barton, Bert Kalmar, and Bess Mathews from the cast of  Michael and Mary  , Drama Shop production. Mickael and Mary • With Touchstone as the uninviting the- ater in which the play was given, A. A. Milne ' s sentimental but charming three- act comedy,  Michael and Mary  , pre- sented by Drama Shop, received a great deal of criticism. The entire cast was play-acting and incidentally acting on a stage that was too small and cramped. • Honors went to Fred Hamilton whose naturalness was  like a breath of cool air in Touchstone  . Bert Kalmar (Michael) sounded much too bookish until he said,  you would  with the modern connota- tion and that was even worse. Ken Mur- phy (Harry Price) was melodramatic where he should have been smooth. Mar- garet Reynolds, at least, as Miss Welby, was convincing. Peggy Barton did well as the forlorn and deserted Mary Weston. Bess Matthews was David ' s Sweetheart. Completing the cast were: Robert Hoyt, Sergeant Cuff; Marian Bills, Mrs. Tulli- vant, Nannette Rittler, Violet Cunliffe; Arthur Wisner, Rev. Simon Rowe; Ger- ald Allaben, Dr. Roberts; Melvin Schu- bert, inspector. 176 Mi . The Tavern • So smoothly ran the performance of  The Tavern  , that except for a few min- or oversights it might have been mistak- en for a professional production. George Ordansky, the lead, who was alternately the Broadway gangster, commentator on the dramatic action, and ego-maniac, swaggered breezily throughout the play. Jack Swarthout achieved a real middle- aged man with some of the most con- vincing acting of the evening. True to character as the gawky, slow-witted son of a tavern keeper. Bill Hoppe shared comedy honors with Walter Prill, as the hired man. Both were the stimuli for a good many laughs. Ann Hunger, the mystery lady, succeeded in keeping the audience guessing for at least three- fourths of the play. Joseph Berthelet managed to dignify the role of governor by playing with restraint, and his daugh- ter, acted by Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, was demure and comely. Other credible performances were given by Thomas King, Kenneth Murphy, Dick Bare, Gene Car- ter, Lynn Nearpass and Robert Norton. Ordansky and Hoppe (ear in character portrayals from the outstanding play of the year,  The Tavern  . 177 Hyacinths The three feminine leads take the stage in the prize- winning show,  Hyacinths  . 178 • Drama Shop brought glory to S.C. and to Mrs. Tacie Hanna Rew in March when with  Hyacinths  , one-act play written by Mrs. Rew, it won second place and an award of twenty-five dollars in the annual Los Angeles County Drama Association Tournament, entered by ten organizations. • Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, President of Drama Shop, whose ability as an actress, has been evidenced in campus produc- tions during the past four years, was given honorable mention. Besides direct- ing  Hyacinths  . Miss Hendricks played the part of Jane, the older daughter, who tried to teach her flippant young sister (Peggy Barton) economy. Margaret Rey- nolds, a transfer from Modesto Junior College, was the Mother upon whom the task of squeezing the pennies fell most heavily. y The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife • What promises to be one of the most outstanding dramatic achievements of the year is the production of Anatole France ' s famous comedy,  The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife  , by the School of Speech. Due to the fact that the play will not be presented until after El Rodeo has ap- peared, a critical writeup cannot be made. However, from all advance indications, it is evident that the production will be one of the most colorful and impressive of the year. Miss Florence Hubbard, direc- tor, is employing brilliant costuming, mu- sical accompaniment, and a broad, farce type of acting as the principal features of this novel production. • Those having important roles will be: Joseph Berthelet, Haila Cude, Maurice Luis, Walter Prill, Peggy Barton, Ken- neth Murphy, Ralph Parr, Robert Norton, and Virginia King. Peggy Barton, |oc Berthelet. and Haila Cude, leading characters in the spring production,  The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife  . 179 Radi The radio players indulge in a little throat cleaning be- fore the microphone. LO •  We now present students of the School of Speech, University of Southern California, in their Friday afternoon drama program, ' Fiction Favorites ' .  • Again student radio artists go on the air over K.F.I, with their dramatizations of the old classics. Weekly programs this spring have included  The Lady of the Lake  ,  Adam Bede  ,  Dr. Luke of the Labrador  ,  The Prisoner of Zenda  ,  The Scarlet Letter  and  Jane Eyre  . • Under the supervision of Tacie Hanna Rew, parts have been interpreted by Mar- garet Reynolds, Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, Doris King, Winifred Dutton, Maxine Glass, Marjory Malloy, Nelda Olsen, Lor- raine Smith, Phyllis Hight, Murrow McCurnin, Mable Pruitt, Harriet Louise Touton, Dorothy Martin, Fred Dodge, Fred Snyder, Bert Kalmar Jr., Joseph Ber- thelet, Richard Salisian, Thomas King, Ralph Parr, James Fish, Paul Randall, Bill Piguet, Carl Blume, and George Lawson. 180 TROJAN MISSES Extra-curricular events of all types and descriptions were made avail- able to the women of S.C. through the three main women ' s organiza- tions, the W.S.C.A., the Y.W. C.A., and the W.A.A. Women en- tered enthusiastically into the As- sociated Student work, were staff- members on the several publica- tions, took part in problem discus- sion groups, and vigorously pur- sued intramural athletics. Al- though entertainment was the im- mediate end, self-improvement was the ultimate goal toward which the women of Troy strived. 181 MARTHAELLEN BROOMFIELD Secretary ROBERTA von KLEINSMID President JONES MCM ASTER CHRISTOPHERSON DUCKWALL BENNISON CAIN Associated Women Students • Every women on the campus is a mem- ber of the Women ' s Self Government As- sociation. All the major women ' s organi- zations are represented on the W.S.C.A. council. The council holds weekly meet- ings to discuss the problems of each group and to further mutual interests. Funda- mental objectives remain the same from year to year, but this year W.S.C.A. has more than ably fulfilled its duties and has introduced several new ideas. • The women ' s monthly assemblies are one of the innovations meeting with a great deal of student approval and have become especially popular among new students. ■ ' , 182 II BARBARA CERARDI Treasurer ■J I HiM  VIRGINIA DANIEL Vice-President Associated Women Students • Another one of this year ' s accomplish- ments is the compiling and publishing of the W.S.C.A. Activity Book. This booklet contains specific information concerning all campus organizations and the activi- ties in which points can be earned for Amazon and other honorary groups. Blank sheets in the back of the book have been provided on which each student can keep a permanent activity record. • The semester Freshman teas were well attended and the inter-sorority song-fest held in the social hall met with the usual enthusiasm of the sororities. Taxi Day and the Wampus sales are also managed by W.S.C.A. I  mf FOX nOSFORD LAVEACA MONROE GIBBS LLOTO 183 K BASTANCHURV NEFT DUCKWALL PETERSON CHASE KING LiAI iEL PATRICIA HOSFORD Chief Justice Judicial Court • Outstanding among the organizations of the campus is the Women ' s Judicial Court of the W.S.C.A. This is the only disciplinary group on the campus that acts for the entire group of campus women. The duties of the Court are to regulate and enforce house rules and to penalize offenders. One of the definite aims of the Court this year was a revision of house rules, which was effected. The organi- zation endeavors to perform its duties effi- ciently at all times. The members of the court make an effort to judge all disciplinary prob- lems with fair and unbiased judgment. This organization is of definite campus value. 184 _L BEVERLY CAIN President Womens Atkletic AssodatLon • Members in the Women ' s Athletic Associa- tion number all girls in the University. Active members are those who actually take part in the different sports. The cabinet and officers who are the primary leaders are: President, Beverly Cain; Vice-President, Lorna McCain; Secretary, Mary Nelson; Treasurer, Margaret Grey; and Activity Recorder, Enola Campbell. Through competitive efforts, women of Troy may be accorded W.A.A. awards. Included in the sports are: tennis, volleyball, field hockey, golf, and handball. A definite program, em- bracing all of these sports, is carried out each year by the Association. GIEEY WHITEHORN MCCAIN CAMPBELL BE H LOW GERARDI HAUBER CADY 185 MCC LEAKY UKYNOLDS LAVEAGA NOKTON MCCliRNlN MATHAV AY BOOKSE DEKRUIF MONKOE OTTO CLAHK lOfTOX EDITH GIBBS President y. w. c. A. • National publicity came to Troy as a result of the sixth annual women ' s All- University Hi-jinks held December 5, un- der the direction of Dean Pearle Aikin- Smith. With Jane Reynolds as the tradi- tional Helen of Troy and Edith C. Cibbs presiding as Queen Elizabeth, the theme of  Shakespearean Women  was carried through the skits presented. • Of particular service to the campus is the clubhouse maintained at the  Sign of the Blue Triangle  , 674 Thirty-sixth Street, where students may study and rest, and where numerous organization meet- ings are held. 186 PEARLE AIKIN-SMITH Associate Dean of Women y. w. c. A. • Outstanding activities sponsored by the Y.W.C.A. this year include the All-Univer- sity entertainment presented at the Orth- opedic hospital, which featured prominent students and famous athletes; the annual exchange cabinet meeting and dinner with the Y.W.C.A. of U.C.L.A.; the Leadership Training course for which certificates were awarded; the placing of co-eds in ex- tra-curricular activities through the Fresh- man and Sophomore clubs, the Choral, Drama, Etiquette, Social Service, and World Friendship groups. Recognition serv- ice for the 700 members, of all races and creeds, was an innovation. HARRIS RITTLER ELLIOT BOCARDUS MCBRIDE PETERSON ' TREXUOVE DUCIvWALL MURPHY FOLSOM HUFFINE KINZY 187 Trojan women practice correct leg movemenl- in the beautiful new pool. 188 Troy ' s coeds take up the Sport of Kings. Women ' s Athletics • The annual tennis tournament became a double battle with a single outcome when the Dean twins, Patricia and Elizabeth, met in the finals. It was a close match with Pat capturing the crown. Other participants were: Gladys Horwitz, Dorothy Nichols, June Cehan, Virginia Steve, Joan McMas- ter, Nancy Monroe and Annette Padway. • Dolores Itria, as manager of one of the most strenuous and exciting of girl ' s sports, namely hockey, congratulates her team- mates upon their winning of the annual tournament. Members of this victorious team were: Leslie, Cowgill, Wilson, Mc- Master, Cain, Itria, Cehan, Dodge, White- horn, Rayner and Hauber. Just before the battle. Mother. Trojan mermaids by the dozen. 189 Going up in the air with a racket to smash one over. Eight girls and a target full of bull ' s-eyes and arrows. • In interclass volleyball this year the Jun- ior class came out winners. Entering the competition were the following five teams: Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, Senior and a Graduate-Faculty team, which, however, was not official and could not have its ef- forts counted in the actual scoring. It was a round robin tournament, each team play- ing four games. The total scoring result was Juniors 139, Seniors 120, Freshmen 89, Sophomores 83. • Archery, another of the sports partici- pated in by Trojan women, offers each year an inter-class contest. An accurate aim, a strong-arm, and a good eye are prerequisites for this sport. Bovard field is the site for tournament practice in which each girl at- tempts to develop her potentialities. Women s Atkletlcs 190 Christopherson swings a wicked right at the volleyball. A mirror and a few girls improve dancing. • Manager Helen Cady makes the an- nouncement that as usual, at least in re- cent years, June Cehan ranks first in hand- ball competition. Her closest competitor was Enola Campbell. Included also in the play were: Beverly Cain, Dolores Itria, Margaret Wilson and Dorothy Wilson. Women s Athletics • Inter-mural basketball was won by Delta Delta Delta. Others entered in the compe- tition were the Spartans, Creeks and Rom- ans. The members of the winning team were Dorothy Cowgill, Barbara Evans, Eileen Cannon, Margaret Cannon, Betty Long, Jo May Lawshe, Joan McMaster, Nancy Mon- roe. The final outcome was Tri-Delta, 3 won, lost, Spartans, 2 won, 1 lost. Creeks, 1 won, 2 lost, Romans, won, 3 lost. Bar- bara Cerardi was the active manager. 191 ! Trojan Life ' 4 -  ' I VV i   V j-««S S55i ' •? ' ;;?«  ' !  ;■   SATELLITES Satellites are those myriads of ce- lestial bodies which make up the many constellations in the starlit heavens. Similarly does each cam- pus have its collections of satel- lites whose constant activities make the pulseof college life throb vibrantly. The word  satellite  has often been misconstrued to connote important personages, but in its true sense it represents each individual, the scholar, the social- ite, the athlete, the Greek, all who partake generously of this pleasant four-year life banquet. In the fol- lowing pages Trojans are caught in their varying moods, from candid snapshots of Balboa beachcombers to carefully drawn portraits of se- date Helens of Troy. 193 Helens of Troy  Not- because they are sorority women, not be- cause they stand high in scholarship, not because they are endowed with a touch of beauty, nor be- cause they are gifted with personality; not be- cause they are inclined toward athletics, nor because they devote their interests to extra-cur- ricular activities, but because they combine these qualities, six co-eds stand out as exemplars of Trojan woma nhood and have been portrayed in their pictorial loveliness as Helens of Troy.  Tradition has decreed that a section shall be devoted each year to the portraits of the six Senior co-eds deemed most meritorious of the honor. Selection is not based on any such tangi- ble standard as a point system, for this grouping defies the mechanical stiffness of a catalogue. T ;i Hi Christy Fox !■ Betty Jones ' it m f Roberta von KleinSmid )V7 ■=  Joan McMaster Grace Edick Maxine Adams Personalities Inaugurated this year as a medium for honoring those Seniors whose services have benefited their fellow students and the University, but who would ordinarily be passed by casually, a section has been set aside to present a select galley of de- serving graduates. This display is by no means complete, for others have received recognition elsewhere in El Rodeo for their work. HARRIET LOUISE TOUTON FRED AYRES 202 BETTY LEE CILLEN JACQUELINE MOREHOUSE WENDELL SETHER 203 EDGAR ABLOWICH BERNARD HIRSHFIELD CATHERINE McBRIDE ■ 204 J 1 LARRY STEVENS lOHN LEACH BETTIE MAAS 205 SHERMAN JENSEN ROY lOHNSON MARY K. DUCKWALL 206 FRED ROBINSON ROBERT ERSKINE )0Y CAMP 207 208 CRACK A BOOK FOR DEAR OLD TROY! • The book in this particular instance happens to be the Diary of Thomas Trojan, Esquire. Tommy lurked in all sorts of places during the 1933-34 academic year with his candid camera on his hip, and by special permission of the copyright owner. El Rodeo is able to present for the first time on any screen, or anywhere else, for that matter, the pic- torial meanderings of young Tommy. On the fol- lowing pages are some of his choicest morsels, gathered together with the help of Cod and a long- handled rake. We hope you like it! 209 Back to back Troy! With these words on their lips, thousands of loyal Trojan alumni returned to their old stamping ground and saw the home eleven defeat the University of Washington Huskies in the Coliseum. Using winter sports as their main theme, the numerous fraternities and sororities ransacked their attics and basements and put up some natty igloos. The Husky special is inviting all the loyal Alpha Camma Delta members home. The Thetas go western and  head for the last roundup  . Don ' t those furry Alpha Chis look icy? And here ' s the winner of the grand prize, the Kappa Sigma shack — class! The D. C ' s and their fishy new pledges. And an ice time was had by all (until the sun came out!). Back to Back Troy it I! I I love a parade! So sang everyone as the Trojan fraternities and sororities turned out to bedeck the Coliseum with some plain and fancy floats. The Delta Sigma Phis got inspired and walked off with first honors with their Helen in Troyland extravaganza — sorta colossal. And there ' s King Football on his throne. That girl looking like a butterfly caught in the rain is a budding young Pi Phi. Then of course there was the usual profusion of flowery wooden horses, etc., etc. Just three boys on two bicycles out for no good. And everybody enjoyed things immensely except the judges.  Love a Parade You Bring tke Ducks Joe Penner gefs in everybody ' s hair and everything becomes ducky. Harold Roberts ' pride, the Trojan Band, gets in formation and charges through the greensward. And there ' s Prexy escorting Mrs. Herbert Hoover (the one wearing the big daisy) around the stadium. And there is the duckiest of them all! Two national luminaries stop the show — Babe and Herbie. And of course the three little pigs and that super cinematic snake, the B.B.W., had to be there. The rooting section sends out its cordial invitation to a duck dinner. The band looking more vigorous than ever. All of this hap- pened at the Stanford game — in case you don ' t remember that event. ' Jli • ■ 1 ...J  '  . I Ship ahoy! S.C. takes to the water! The student body trekked to the Cal game, and as for those who went via the sea — a swell (ing) time was had by all. That trio draped around the life preserver is not the three she sells — or Rhythemettes either. It was a night on the water. And as for the fellow in the very unbecoming position — well, maybe he just couldn ' t wait (for the game, of course!) And there ' s Barnacle Bill — blow me down! Arf, arf! Editor Hilton in one of his lesser moments seems to be enjoying the sea air. And the only thing everybody missed was a good old-fashioned shipwreck. Skip Ahoy with Troy Smoke Gets in Their Eyes Smoke got in their eyes — and in their hair, and teeth, and mouths, and noses, and — the day after — the classroom. The Kappa Alpha Creek lunch outfit turned out — piecemeal — and slept through the whole thing. And of course the Phi Psis were well represented — the man with the big flash is Mr. Nagel who worked laboriously to make the party a success. An Indian and a Trojan in a preliminary bout. Fire away! Building the dang thing. And here are the Phi Sig night owls grinning from smear to smear. More Phi Psis with some strange feminine visitor. The Sig Chis also came and in the middle of their bull session sits Mr. Chadil with oh, such a contented, sleepy gaze. Shades of Smoky Joe! N S.C. sent a delegation to Yosemite for the Winter Sports Carnival and the boys tried their hands at skiing, sledding, slipping, etc. That big, bad man all wrapped up like a Christmas package is none other than Mr. Arnold Eddy, patiently waiting for a blixzard. And now my foreign frands. gaie upon the mighty Yosemite! Despite the fact that he probably has on his winter underwear. Cotton still looks cold. The i ce hockey team with only forty-four miles to go. And that little bug in a rug is Morgan Stanley, icy manager. And Lil ' Audrey laughed and laughed cause she knew they ' d all freeze to death! A Snowbird Carnival Troy at Play, Night and Day When the day ' s work is done, the weary students spread far and wide in search of diversion. Due to the superabundance of money on the campus, barn dancing became exceeding popular. Everybody turned rustic and came to the dances with straw dripping from their clothes and corn-cob pipes drooling from their mouths. Some people delight in frying themselves. And of course, each school has its group of would-be Rocky Mountain goats. And this would seem to indicate that an Armistice had been agreed upon by Pritchard and U.C.L.A. ' s football playing prexy. Sleeping beauty — modern version. Polo made its bow this season. And then came the fire — the Sigma Nus despondently wade through the carnage. And a good time was had by all. [ The A.S.U.S.C. legislaHve council, afl-er toiling so diligenl-ly and struggling so valiantly with Prexy Pritchard ' s twelve point brain child, decides to break loose and Betty Jones invites the motley crowd to her shack at La Coon by the sea. And the first thing that greets our eyes is the dainty hostess flln;;ing horsss!ioes. And here is the entire conglomeration — en masse! Max Adams seems to wield a mean ping pong paddle. Worth and Arnold pitch in. And this sweet young thing will probably get hit In the eye by a stray ping pong ball. Adams and Bernard take time out from their arduous pleasure seeking. Campus Tycoons off Duty Ckerchez La Femme And we respectfully devote this page to the women of Troy — the life of the campus and the banc of our lives. The turbanned twins in a hurry, as usual. The Alpha Chis gather in the patio and pose — sorta sweet! All the hot air in the patio is not confined to these balloons. The tradi- tional pansy ring. |ust two babes in the brushes. And here we have a very informal shot of the Pi Phis at dinner — and Lil ' Bernice laughed and laughed cause she knew all the time she was being shot. Well, cherchez la femme — or something. ' m The football banquet was attended by celebs from far and near. The Misses Fox and Jones were conspicuous. The funny man behind the ball is Editor Hilton. It seems that every year someone in the Delta Zeta house gets hitched so they make an annual event of it. And here we have sort of a hefty replica of Mae West. Since this page is the editor ' s brain child we will have to put in a few more golfers to keep him company. Some- body turned the tables and here we have Cibby and Mingo, photographers de luxe, off duty. The Pi Phis have tea as regularly as — well — as regularly as the Pi Phis should have. Around Campus with Candid Camera I ' m Working My way Through. College When the football boys aren ' t playing they ' re working — we hope. All work and no play make Inky and Cal dull boys, so they take time out from their arduous duties and try fence walking with cans of paint as an added handicap. The Kappa Sigs are a bunch of curb-stone sitters during chapel hour. Hueston Harper builds buildings in his spare time. The Three HatwcM Sisters. Bescos and McNeish digging their way through school, lohnny Scixas seems to enjoy his labor. And here vfc have a bird ' s-eye view of our idea of Bedlam — registration. Bob Erskine turns piano-mover when not occupied otherw ise — he looks rather bored by it all. :Z7J  The high spots of the football season for the players are the several train trips. And this close-up reveals All American Rosy. All the noise made by the cheering senders-offers is music to Bob Morrell ' s ears. Art Dittber- ner seems to be waiting for somebody to come and kiss him farewell.  Yssuh, Mlstuh Beahd, you ' s sho some playeh, he, he!  Coach Jones is supposed to be looking down at the Grand Canyon in this one, but it looks like an ordinary piece of pi pe to us. Captain Palmer and his most ardent admirer, his father. Ward Browning gets off to stretch those legs. All aboard, there goes the Trojan Special. All Aboard for Far Away Campus Events and People People come and people go but nothing ever happens — nuts! Under the shade of a spreading beach umbrella the Wampus seller stands — and stands — and stands, and still nothing happens. Editor Sether looking most in- telligent and dignified. Something gets in Inky ' s eye and |oan patiently waits. And this, my friends, is Speciman No. 1 — Haila Cude having hys- terics and looking very lovely about it, too. The Delta Zeta mascot poses well, lust folks. And after months of patient waiting the female greenies hang up this nasty old arm bands, and the head Amazon, |oan McMaster supervises. Oh, hum! And still nothing ever happens. i -•1 lay Whidden and entertainers smile condescendingly. The Trojan Squires assemble in loyal array. Arnold Eddy and Art Neeley sit this one out — either Arnold is afraid of something or else he ' s making a darn good imi- tation of Eddie Cantor. More Homecoming floats. No, it ' s not Blind Man ' s Buff — just the Alpha Eta Rho initiation. This high-flyer is going places — ail we hope is that he ' s got something or somebody soft to land on. John Leach takes time out from the struggle. Miss McCurnin in a characteristic pose. Now there ' s a real dance program for some aspiring feminine poli- tician. Bits from the band. More later! Things and Stuff and. Suck Men and Maids of Troy Peggy Barfon flashes thaf old smile and do we love It! Pritchard looks worried — he should be. Another bird-like gymnast — they probably do this in their sleep. Nobody believes in signs — most especially girls! We sin- cerely hope it ' s good news — letters from home are always looked forward to. Inky and |oan at it again. People and more people — that ' s what makes the campus go around. SOCIALITES Rhythmic melody, the sliding of countless feet, gayly bedecked ballrooms, beautiful gowns, mer- riment, and suppressed excite- ment. These are the poignant memories of never-to-be-forgotten evenings that rush back to the mind at the mention of University dances. Attended by the majority of the students on the campus, the All-U dances were truly represent- ative affairs, varying in attire and entertainment from the punctili- ously correct formals to the barn dances and Monday evening digs. 225 Mr. and Mrs. Adams, Betty Wathey and Bob Haugh lead the |unior Prom Grand March. Bill Baxter and his lady friend surprise the cameraman. Junior Prom. • To the strains of  Easter Parade  over two hundred couples joined in a Grand March to start the 1934 Junior Prom, which was after- wards hailed as the outstanding social event of the year. Dancing continued to the music of Hal Grayson ' s orchestra, and as an added feature Carol Lofner and his band of enter- tainers did several dance and intermission numbers. • The Prom was held in the beautiful Vene- tian room of the Beverly Wilshire hotel. White suede bill-folds, especially designed for the af- fair by Balfour, were given as favors to the guests. The traditional promenade was inaug- urated and met with favor. 226 Elwood Jones. Marge Cameron, Mickey Lat- on and Rod Dedcaux between dances. Junior Prom • Much of the credit for the success of the 1934 Prom goes to Bob Haugh, Junior class President, who was in charge of all arrange- ments. He was assisted in carrying out his plans by the following committees: Pete Cav- eney, finance; Fred Nagel, tickets: Paul Rous- so, orchestra; Buzz Ellis, location; Raoul De- deaux, decorations; Bob Lindsay, refresh- ments; Elwood Jones, bids and favors; Bob McNeil, entertainment; B. W. Bixler and Tur- ner McLeod, reception; and Dale Hilton, pub- licity. Patrons and Patronesses for the affair were: Dr. and Mrs. Alan Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Silke, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Leo Adams, and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Eddy. Betty Wathey and Bob Haugh drink to the success of the Prom. 227 M M  Sf  ■ J m   Ll B H.  m 1 •   v '  I The formal effort gets under way. Lucy Ann and little Nell with mouth agape. 228 Inter fraternity • The Interfraternity formal, May 29, brought to a grand climax the 1934 S.C. social season. Held in the new Biltmore Bowl, the formal proved to be as popular and well attended as in former years. Music and entertainment for the evening were furnished by Jimmie Crier and his band of Biltmore entertainers. • Ed Jones headed the committee in charge of the affair and was assisted by the following: Francis Cislini, finances; Fred Nagel, tickets; jack Frankish, publicity; Paul Rousso, orches- tra; Dick Parker, bids and favors; Phil Cannell and Harold VIcek, assistant tickets; Dale Frady and Tom Bonney, assistant publicity; Howard Patrick, assistant orchestra. The Ambassador was crowded with Panhellenites. Pantiellenlc • The winter Panhellenic formal, held in the Fiesta room at the Ambassador, was, as al- ways, one of the the most popular and well- attended dances of the year. Music for the dance was played by Orville Knapp and his or- chestra, and Ted Fio Rite and his entertainers presented several intermission numbers. • The proceeds from the dance went to bene- fit the Panhellenic Loan Fund. Ruth Laveaga, President of Panhellenic, was in charge of ar- rangements. She was assisted by Mabel Alice Hachten, Vice-President, and a committee of representatives from the sororities. The soror- ity house mothers were honor guests of the evening. A large evening is in order for Nagel and Rousso, or is it the girls. 229 The Sophomore dance was a success. Sophomore Dance • For the first time in several years the Sophomores sponsored an informal dance. The affair, which was held in the Lido room of the Hollywood Knicker- bocker Hotel, proved to be a very popular addition to the year ' s social calendar. Arrangements for the dance were made by Gil Kuhn, Sophomore President. Jack Dunn ' s band furnished the music for the evening. Nelson Cullenward, Lucy Ann MacLean and Cil Kuhn in the mirror 230 r  o A merry group takes time out. • The Spring Sports dance, held this year in the Fiesta room of the Ambassador, attracted a large and curious crowd, for during the evening the new A.S.U.S.C. can- didates were presented. Christy Fox and the All-U social committee were in charge of the affair. Gene Quaw ' s orchestra played the dance numbers, and Ted Fio Rito was featured during the intermissions. Spring Sports Dance lack Wilder, Kay Moss, Christy Fox and Mort Morehouse at the fountain 231 George Ordansky and Bernice Foulkes look elegant. 6am Dance •  The Farmer ' s Frolic  , as the Commerce Barn Dance has come to be known, was held this year at Whiting ' s ranch amid the proper rustic setting. Gaiety and informal- ity prevailed to the rustic tunes of Hal Stearns and his music, with the regular dance program interspersed with a few  square dances  and  Grand Marches  . The refresh- ments for the affair proved to be most popular as forty gallons of cid- er and twelve hundred doughnuts were consumed by the hungry far- mers. Randy Booth and John Web- ber were co-chairmen for the dance, Just a good old-fashioned get-together ! 232 6am Dance and to them is due most of the credit for the affair. • Whiting ' s Ranch was decorated with all the farm implements from rakes to hay wagons that the enter- prising decorations committee could collect. Prizes were awarded for the best rustic costumes, the first prize going to Bernice Foulkes, who per- fectly impersonated a farm maid. Over 300 couples attended. • The committee which worked un- der the co-chairmen included: Bet- ty Bastanchury, Bettie Maas, Eugene Lynch, Bud Madsen, Wendell Hell- man, Mary Dyer, and Edward Jones. Sherman Jensen, the head farmer, and Mrs. Farmer. Another couple of farmers out for no good 233 Al Hanson. Prexy Williams and the lady friends between dances. Engineering Dance • This year the All-University dance sponsored by the College of Engi- neering loomed larger on the social horizon than ever before. The dance, an annual affair, was held at the Brentwood Country Club. Paul Pee- ves and his Embassy Club orchestra furnished the music for the occa- sion. • Fred Williams, President of the Engineers, deserved special credit for the excellent social calender the college enjoyed this year. Williams received splended cooperation from Jack Lambi and Al Hanson, Vice- President and Secretary respectively. lack Lambi takes a turn for the worse at the Engineers ' big party 234 Other Dances • S.C ' s. social calendar contained many other dances too numerous to mention. Christy Fox and her All- University social committee were responsible for many of the popular  digs  in the women ' s gymnasium. Decorations for the New Year ' s  dig  in the form of large posters bearing S.C. resolutions attracted special attention. • The Fiesta room was also the scene of two more school dances: the Spring Revel, March 23, spon- sored by the Law School, and the annual Winter Sports dance put on by the All-U social committee. Intermission finds impromptu gatherings such as these. Charles Caspar, Betty )ones, Joan McMastcr and Julie Bescos were there 235 ' ' Troy In Atkletlcs $fi  ... -  ' s .  ' i4 9 Athletic Director • Willis O.  Bill  Hunter, Director of Ath- letics, came to S.C. in 1919. He was named Director of Intra-Mural sports and chief as- sistant coach to Jones in 1924. The follow- ing year he was appointed Director of Ath- letics, which post he has held ever since. Bill is the Trojan representative in the Pa- cific Coast Conference and is a member of the National Football Rules Committee. Miss Marguerite Flock is Bill ' s secretary. WfULIS O. HUNTER At-hletic Director N i c h e I i n i, St. Mary ' s star, and Julie Bescos, Trojan wing, tangle over the possession of an S.C. pass, one of the highspots of the encounter. 237 JUSTIN M. BARRY Varsity Basketb all, Baseball • With one decade of his illustrious ca- reer spent as the Headman of Trojan foot- ball destinies, Howard Jones has estab- lished himself as one of the most success- ful coaches in the nation and the peer of Pacific coast mentors. He is from Iowa. • Sam Barry, although only a Californian of four years ' standing, has shaken off all the Iowa clods and is devoting his efforts to rearing champs in his adopted homeland. • Forrest Twogood, versatile athlete, and Aubrey Devine, former All-American, com- plete the quartet of Iowa coaches at S.C. Devine is an assistant football coach and chief scout. Twogood concentrates on Frosh basketball and baseball. HOWARD JONES Varsity Football Athletic Coaches FORREST TVi ' OCOOD Freshman Coach AUBREY DEVINE Assistant Coach 238 DEAN CROMWELL Varsity Track Atkletlc Coach.es EDDIE LEAHY Freshman Coach ERNIE SMITH Freshman Coach CLIFF HERD Assistant- Coach • Twenty-five years as head track coach, Dean Cromwell has become a landmark of Troy and an idol of the youths of the coun- try. His efforts are bent toward producing clean sports and champions. • Cliff hHerd, former gridder, has become a prominent member of Jones ' staff of as- sistants. Ernie Smith, ' 33, All-American tackle, aided in coaching the Freshman football buckos. • Eddie Leahy, the fieriest of them all, earned letters while at Troy in football, baseball, and track. Later he took his de- gree in law and then reverted to coaching track. As yearling mentor he turns out powerful teams each spring. 239 JOHN LEHNERS Assistant Athletic Director Coaching Staff Assistants ; Freshman Coach ORVILLE MOHLER HAROLD HAMMACK Freshman Coach 240 ROBERT MORRELL Yell King Tke King and kls Henchmen EDWARD HALLOCK Assistant Yell King MICHAEL PRISLER Assistant Yell King 241 LUDLOW SHONNARD Varsity Football Manager BRUCE CAMPBELL Varsity Track Manager Atkletlc Managers CARL STUTZMAN Gym Team Manager OTTO CHRISTIANSON Tennis Manager HERBERT WITTY Fencing Manager 242 RICHARD McDonald Varsity Basketball Manager WENDELL HELLMAN Varsity Baseball Manager Athletic Managers NEIL WHITE Coif Manager NEWLAND CRUVER Swimming Manager MORGAN STANLEY Ice Hockey 243 PACKARD THURBER Medical Staff WALTER FIESLER Medical Staff Medical Staff and News Purveyors • Al Wesson is the purveyor of news of Troy ' s athletic conquests in his official capacity as director of the University athletic news bureau. Assisting him in a most capable man- ner is Matt Barr, who is also in charge of the picture library for University publications. • The bumps and bruises of Troy ' s aspiring athletes are well taken care of by the medical staff headed by Dr. Packard Thurber. Assist- ing him are Dr. Walter Fiesler, medical advisor for the athletes of Troy, and Nils Althin, who has the official title of trainer and masseuse. • It is almost impossible to imagine just how many yards of tape these men have strapped on the athletes who compete for Troy. • The credit for the splendid physical condi- tion of the men on the championship Trojan teams can be given to this excellent group of individuals on the University of Southern Cal- ifornia medical staff who are ready to treat every injury, slight or serious. 244 TOUCHDOWN After a successful beginning, Troy ' s valiant football team, tied by the University of Oregon and defeated by Stanford, brilliantly fought its way back to the top. Particularly decisive were its vic- tories over its inter-sectional rivals, Georgia and Notre Dame. It crossed and re-crossed its op- ponents ' goal lines until it was rated, at the season ' s end, as one of the foremost contenders for the national championship. 245 ' V« ; «iS At fop: Bescos grabs a long pass. Below: Howard looks for a receiver. On down: Sleeve less Georgian stops Griffith as team- mate makes three-point land- ing. Bottom: Rosy plugs up the Trojan line. Saturdays Summary • Not the greatest team in S.C. grid history by any means, but outstanding in the nation never- theless, the Trojans again rested at the top of the conference at the conclusion of the season, tied with Stanford and Oregon. The great intersectional record which S.C. has compiled under Coach Jones ' tutelage was im- proved by spectacular wins over Notre Dame and Georgia. The stalwart defense revealed last season again featured the play of the Trojans, only Stanford, St. Mary ' s and Washington being able to score touchdowns, the Indians making the only one through the line. • In respectively tying and de- feating S.C, Oregon State and Stanford played the best games in their individual seasons, the Indians winning for the first time since 192 6. California, 246 HOWARD HARDING JONES Varsity Foofball Coach Thousands of spectators cheered the great Herd as week after week the Joncsmen trotted onto the field and dem- onstrated that they could play consist- ently superior football. Washington and St. Mary ' s were subdued after impressive comebacks. Oxy, Whit- tier, Loyola, Oregon, and Washington State were the other victims of the Thundering Herd. • The addition of Warburton and Rosen- berg swells the list of Ail-Americans un- der Jones in his years as grid coach at S.C. to ten. Stevens, Palmer, Bescos, Griffith, and McNeish received mention on many all-coast teams. Eighty-four wins, three ties, eleven losses is now Jones ' nine-year record at S.C. • Julie Bescos was chosen captain for the 1934 season at the conclusion of the year. Top: With a clear field ahead, a step out of bounds keeps Scooter from another history-mak- ing dash. Below: On a reverse, Clemens packs the ball for a long gain. Bottom: Captain Palmer gets credit for an assist as Julie Bescos reaches for a Galloping Gael. 247 CO-CHAMPION )F First row: Coach Hunter, Coach Jones. Stevens. Williamson. Rosenberg, CrKfith, Bcscos, YoucI, Wotkyns, Clemens. Captain Palmer. Warburton, McNeish. Browning. Bright, Lady. Clark, Coach Campbell, Coach Herd, Manager Shonnard. Second row: Ridings, Reboin, 248 OF THE COAST Knocking down the overhead, with Cap- tain Palmer in the role of the efficiency ex- pert and Buchard o( Loyola reaching for ,i share in the proceed- ings. Palmer, in addi- tion to being one of the most popular cap- tains in Trojan history, has warranted much acclaim for his stel- lar playing ability. SlcitiflYouel, Williamson, Bright :s SeiiJUnnon, Griffith, Clark, McNeish Poulson, Dittberner, McCinley, Howard, Tatsch, Hall, Bishop, Propst, Shannon, Holgatc, Burchard, Cameron, Fuhrer, Bardin, C. Mathews, Beard. Third row: Ostling, Seixas, Webb, Hurst, Davis, Hoy, Harlan, R. Mathews, Dye, Coughlin, Harper, Larrabec, Wilbur. 249 ■ii:v«S::i-?f: - , v-:-  ' -Ar. -:::  M  At fop: All-Amcrican Cotton Warburton in a characteristic action shot. Below: Trojans move fast in the Georgia game. At bottom: Rosenberg, Troy ' s other 1933 Ail-American grid star, makes a spirited charge. Cotton Up 72 Points • Two more all-Americans were added to the list of Trojans on the annual honor roll of Ameri- can football players, as Irvine  Cotton  Warburton and Aaron  Rosie  Rosenberg were named the best of 1933 at their respec- tive positions.  Cotton  reached a new high in 1933, being placed on every important ail- American selection in the coun- try, and running up an individ- ual scoring total of 72 points. Warburton ' s spectacular broken field running, coupled with his fine passing, blocking, kicking and tackling stamped Troy ' s platinum blond as one of the best backfield men in the nation. • The spearpoint of the Trojan offense and ace of defense play- ers,  Rosie  Rosenberg has for three years been one of the country ' s leading guards, and in his last year at S.C. he was awarded justly deserved national honors. 250 I FORD T. PALMER Varsity Football Captain Troy adds two more all-Americans to its list of gridiron great as almost a score of stellar athletes graduate. • Probably the greatest group of foot- ball players to be together through three years of college football is the S.C. class of 1 934. They have won thirty con- tests, lost two and tied one, capturing two national championships, a pair of undisputed coast titles and a tie for a third crown. The sixteen men who leave Troy after three great years are Captain Ford Palmer, Aaron Rosenberg, Larry Stevens, Homer Griffith, Bob McNeish, Bob Erskine, Curt Youel, Cordon Clark, Johnny Seixas, Kenneth Bright, Ken Shannon, Johnny Dye, Frank Williamson, Kenny Fay, Tony Beard and Gene Ridings. ■ ■ k ■ ' - At top: Trojans bring down a galloping Gael. Center: A mass meeting is required to stop a trav- elling Trojan. At bottom: Griffith shows them his heels. 251 Clemens scatters Poets as Howard cracks off tackle for a nice gain • As a tune-up for the stiff 19ii schedule the Trojan gridders trounced Occidental and Whittier in the open- ing double-header, September 23. The Poets were dumped 51 -0 after Oxy had succumbed 39-0. The first team of S.C. saw no action in the Bengal skirmish, but played considerable time in the nightcap. • Bill Howard shoved himself to the fore as a star quar- terback with three touchdowns in the afternoon ' s play.  Cotton  Warburton received a nose injury in the Poet clash which forced him to wear a mask for most of the season. U A R D S U OLIVER BARDIN FRANCIS McCINLEY KING HALL Troy Topples Two 252 Griffith smashes through to a touchdown against the Loyola Lions u A R D • Tom Lieb once more brought onto the Coliseum turf a Loyola team which displayed astounding defensive strength, and the Trojans had a decidedly tough time winning 18-0 after a scoreless first half. • The first thirty minutes of play on that September 30 afternoon were quite reminiscent of the 1932 meeting of the Lions and Trojans, but in the third quarter Grif- fith scored after a penalty had given 5.C. the ball on the 2-yard line. Later a pass, Griffith to Clark, was good for 47 yards and a touchdown. Howard made the final score. LARRY STEVENS FRANK WILLIAMSON GUARDS AARON ROSENBERG Lieb ' s Lions Laid Low 253 Bcscos gets his Gael with Rosy, Palmer, and Stevens to supervise • Homer Griffith led his Trojan teammates in a 1 4 to 7 avenging of that 1931 upset by St. Mary ' s, when he smashed and plowed his way through the Gaels, scoring one touchdown and making possible the other. • A crowd of 85,000 in the coliseum on October 14 saw the Trojan quarterback play his best game of the year as S.C. kept intact its lengthy winning streak. • The battle started out to be a replica of that ill-fated contest when the Trojans scored first and then one of the Canrinus brothers again slipped past the Trojan safe- K K HERB TATSCH ART DITTBERNER HUESTON HARPER Troy Tallies Twice 254 1 Lone Moragan braces to meet Trojan onslaught in Coliseum classic TACKLES ty man to give the Gaels a touchdown. This time, how- ever. Griffith saw to it that S.C. and not the Marauders gained the final and deciding tally. • On the second Griffith-conducted touchdown march, Homer was apparently stopped on the Gael three-yard line after having crashed the length of the field on a sustained drive, but with three St. Mary ' s men trying to drag him down, he drove over the winning score. A 15-yard penalty when a Gael substitute, Ed Gilbert, talked before a play had been run off, aided the march. ALVIN COUCHLIN CEORCE LADY K ROBERT ERSKINE Mo rag arts Mastered 255 Cougar ' s grip gripes Griffith N •  Cotton  Warburton turned a fiercely contested game in which Washington State had a decided edge over the Trojans into a 33-0 rout in favor of S.C. when he ran 80 and 75 yards for touchdowns an d plunged over for a third. • Jones sent Warburton in at the start of the second period and he promptly stepped 80 yards for the first score. He tallied again after a series of short runs and then climaxed his great performance with another long sprint for his third score the first time he carried the ball in the third period. Howard and Clemens also scored. N JOSEPH HURST DUANE LARRABEE WARD BROWNING Cougar Claws Clipped 256 i Battling Brick Bright cruises around end N • Eleven Oregon State  Ironmen,  playing through sixty minutes of hard football without a single substitution, halted the Trojan winning streak at twenty-five straight, when they battled S.C. to a 0-0 deadlock on October 21 . • The Cardinal and Cold gridde rs outgained the Beav- ers, playing on their home field, but the scores necessary to victory were lacking and the Troymen were blanked for the first time since the final game of the 1930 sea- son. Norm Franklin and Woody Joslin starred on de- fense for Oregon State. Criffith and Stevens played best for S.C. lOHN SEIXAS ROBERT LOVE N JULIUS BESCOS Staters Supply Surprise 257 tT '  ■■  .  % W  .  ,  Troy ' s Homer hits snag t  ¥ Towkead Takes Trick CENTER CURTIS YOUEL • Eight minutes to play, Cal- ifornia leading 3-0 on a field goal registered by Arleigh Williams two minutes after the start of the game, S.C. in possession of the ball on its own 40-yard line and the Troy offense going no place in particular. • Then a team that refused to accept defeat broke  Cot- ton  Warburton out into the open. He darted over the right side of the California line, eluded the secondary and stepped 60 yards to a touchdown for S.C. • But even that 6-3 lead did not assure the Troy eleven of a victory on that rainy October 8 afternoon. Soon afterward  Cotton  mis- judged a rolling punt and fumbled. Three Bears and one Trojan scrambled for the loose ball and Bob McNeish, the lone S.C. man, recovered the pigskin on the Troy 5- yard marker. • Cal Clemens was rushed on his kick from behind the goal and the ball sailed out of bounds on the 1 6. The Bears lost 4 yards on two line plays and then Williams 258 tried for another field goal. The kick went wide and the Bears ' cause was lost. • It was only a lack of speed on the part of Chuck Stew- art, Bear quarter, that de- prived the Berkeleymen of a touchdown on the opening kickoff. Stewart took the kick on his own 10 and be- hind fine interference was in the clear headed for a score. Larry Stevens, fleet S.C. guard, set out in pur- suit and, overtaking the slow-footed Cal man at the 1 8 -yard line, was ready to down him. Stewart, how- ever, slumped to the rain- soaked turf without Stevens laying a hand on him. • Two line plays netted the Bears 5 yards and then Coach Ingram sent in Arleigh Wil- liams. There was no doubt in the minds of the 75,000 spectators as to what he was going to do — and he did just what they expected. • A placement that went over the crossbar for three points sent the Bears into a lead that they stubbornly defended until Warburton ' s game-saving sprint.  !   t.« v --- ,r Bears rush Trojan kick Berkeley Bears Set Three CENTER ALFRED POULSEN 259 1-  ji f -f f Jr,   P Lone Indian trips Trojan Redskins Run Riot QUARTERBACK IRVINE WARBURTON • A tribe of Indians whose caravan had been delayed before it could cross the Te- hachapi, a tribe whose ranks had been upset by injuries and wounds sustained in previous scrapes, a tribe whose chief had been ailing many moons, wandered into Los Angeles one Armistice Day morning to clash with a Trojan force on the Coli- seum greensward. • Crave critics ordained that the Trojans would ex- tinguish the Palo Alto Indi- ans. These seers had not reckoned with the power of which the medicine-man was capable. Corbus, the medicine-man, had brewed a campaign steeped in the ex- perience of gridlore. When the Trojans had been al- lowed to spend their energy on an opening sally, the In- dians struck suddenly and swiftly. These sixteen Stan- ford Sophomores, headed by an old hand, all-American Bill Corbus, determined to fulfill a vow that they had made in declaring that they would never lose to the sons of Troy. ' ■ I 260 They held back while Cot- ton Warburton scampered 43 yards to a tally. Then they unleashed an aerial at- tack which disintegrated the S.C. ranks, and swept to a touchdown, tying the score at 7-7. In the second half Corbus assumed a pose in the backfield within 20 yards of the Trojan strong- hold. On two occasions he swung his leg, like a pendu- lum, and on each swing the ball was rocketed between the uprights adding three points to the mounting score which ended 13-7. • When the dust had set- tled on the turf, the remain- ing Trojans gazed mournful- ly around, surveying the damage. The Trojans ' string of twenty-six successive vic- tories had been snapped. Hopes for a national and a coast championship were shattered. Visions of playing in the Rose Bowl on New Year ' s Day for the third straight season were washed away. Stanford ' s Sophomore braves had put the first check on their three-year pact never to lose to Troy. Ready or not, here I come Herd Stampeded QUARTERBACK WILLIAM HOWARD 261 HALFBACKS AL REBOIN KENNETH FAY One down and one to go • Bouncing back after the upset by Stanford, the Thundering Herd swamped the Oregon Webfeet, 26-0 on November 1 8, employing both power and finesse. The Oregonians, led by Mighty Mike Mik- ulak, came south as the only unbeaten team on the coast, but the Trojans soon took care of that. • Mighty Mike looked mighty impotent as S.C, using straight power, sent Cliff Propst over the line in the first half and then made the beating decisive in the final periods when Wotkyns anci Howard tallied on plunges and Warburton ran 53 yards with a pass. CAL CLEMENS CORDON CLARK Ducks Defeated 262 IV HALFBACKS Irish luck fails GERARD BURCHARD KENNETH SHANNON • Troy became the only team in modern football to boast three consecutive wins over the famed Ram- blers of Notre Dame when they trekked to South Bend, Indiana, and trounced the much-beaten 1933 version of the Fighting Irish by a 19-0 score on November 25. • Once more it was Warburton who provided the victory spark as he crossed the Notre Dame line for two touchdowns, one of them after a 35-yard run through a broken field. Stevens and Clemens stood out for their defense play as the series between the two intersectional foes was tied at four wins apiece. ROBERT McNEISH KENNETH BRIGHT Ramblers Routed 263 And that ' s how fumbles arc made Herd Humbles Huskies QUARTERBACK ROD CAMERON • Fighting to retain at least a share of their coast con- ference title, the Trojans went on the field against Washington in the season ' s finale on December 9 deter- mined to massacre the Hus- kies. • But Jimmy Phelan ' s boys, winners over Stanford, had a different idea and it was only by a desperate third quarter drive that S.C. took a 1 3-7 victory. • The Husky second-string started the contest and twice repulsed would - be touch- down excursions at the very start. • After taking the ball on the 1 3 - yard marker. Art Ahonen produced a tremen- dous punt that traveled to the Trojan 10. S.C. was forced to kick back and the northerners took the ball on the Trojan 4 8. They smashed their way to the 6- inch line where Muczynski fumbled, Propst recovering, • Soon afterward came the greatest play of the after- noon when Bill Smith made a spectacular catch of Han- son ' s long pass and then ' 4  264 i outran Propst to send the Huskies into the lead. With the half nearly over S.C. put on a spirited scoring drive that just failed to connect. • In the first minutes of the second half, Troy set out to score but was apparently halted when Warburton ' s pass was intercepted. Offi- cials, however, ruled that Smith had interfered with the  Cottontop  and S.C. was given a first down on the 5. On the third play Warburton bounced off right end to score. Stevens ' kick was blocked. • Sulkosky fumbled the en- suing kickoff and Rosenberg recovered. Warburton made 9 yards, Wotkyns 2, and then Clemens on a reverse tossed the ball far out to the left where  Cotton  took it, scoring unmolested. This time Stevens converted. • That ended the scoring for the day although the Trojans almost tallied again midway in the final period when Bob McNeish dropped a short pass in the end zone, after he had seemingly caught it. Clemens catapults through Husky line Troy Takes Tough. Tussle QUARTERBACK GARLAND MATTHEWS 265 1 FULL A C K S HOMER GRIFFITH HASKELL WOTKYNS Marching through Georgia • Lots of things may be forgotten in the space of two years, but not a 60-0 pasting in a football game. And so the Georgia Bulldogs came west on Decem- ber 2 determined to gain revenge for that field day indulged in by the Jonesmen of 1931. • But about all they could do was cut the S.C. mar- gin of victory in half as Julie Bescos led his mates to a 31-0 win. Held to a single tally in the first half, the Trojans, with Griffith, Wotkyns, and Bescos starring, turned on the heat and scored almost at will in the final periods. CLIFFORD PROPST FRANCIS BEARD BuUdogs Baffled i 266 11 T I P I N Evenly matched with the Califor- nia and the Stanford quintets, Southern California ' s basketball team maneuvered its way through a season of thrilling games to cap- ture the Southern Division crown. Meeting the northern champions, the University of Washington, in three breath-taking contests in Los Angeles, the Trojans barely failed to take the Pacific Coast Conference title. 267 lUSTIN M. BARRY Varsity Basketball Coach At fop: A fast-moving Trojan comes in under the basket for a short shot. At bottom: A long-armed forward goes up for the tip-in. Night Court • With nine lettermen on hand when basketball season opened, Coach Sam Barry might have predicted the suc- cessful season that was Troy ' s in the cage sport this year. • A loss to Stanford and two defeats by California almost cost the local five the championship of the southern di- vision, but opportune victories by Stanford and U.C.L.A. over the Bears eventually brought S.C. the right to meet Washington in the play-off, con- tested in Los Angeles at the end of the regular playing season. 268 I SAX ELLIOT Varsity Basketball Captain Decision to Troy • Washington took the series from the Trojans in three close games, one of which went into an extra period of play. • Lee Cuttero ' s high total of 140 points for actual league play was di- rectly responsible for his selection on the official all-conference team. Julie Bescos, guard, also received this honor, while Ernie Holbrook, forward, and Joe Kelly, guard, received mention. • Kelly and Ward Browning, forward, were named co-captains for 1935 by their team-mates at the season ' s end. At top: A Trojan guard goes up (or the ball as it comes off the backboard. At bottom: Defensive men gather under the basket for the rebound. 269 VARSITY BASKETBALL SQUAD First row: Halpcrn, Kelly, Muth, Capt-ain Elliot, Holbrook, Findlay, Bcscos. Second row: McDonald, Cuttcro, Foss, Hupp, Fuhrer, Browning, Coach Barry. • Washington ' s last-half spurts to victory and Lee Cut- tero ' s individual high scoring spree were the features of the divisional basketball play-off, held in Los Angeles March 9-12 and won by the Huskies, two games to one. This was the first time that a team from the north had won a title series played in California. Troy gained the lead in the first half of every game but only in the first tilt, won 27-23, was S.C. able to withstand the Husky drive. The second game, an overtime battle, saw Wash- ington win 43-41, while the deciding contest ended with the score 34-30 in favor of the Seattle quintet. Cuttero scored 45 points for Troy during the series. ERNIE HOLBROOK Forward LAWRENCE FINDLAY Guard HAROLD FOSS Center Troy Drops Title 270 On an offensive charge under the basket, Cuttcro attempts a tip-in with Fuhrsr closely guarding him, and Elliot, Findlay. Holbrook and Browning in on the play. • Troy ' s varsity cagers, led by Captain Sax Elliot on a barnstorming tour, served notice during the Christmas holidays that they would be serious contenders for the conference title. Playing eight practice tilts, the Troy- men emerged victorious in five, losing one of three games with Firestone and dropping two tussles to the United Milk quintet by 29-31 and 34-35 scores. On the tour the S.C. basketball men also met and defeated San Francisco Y.M.I 28-24, the Utah Agricultural College 42-35 and Brigham Young University 38-33. Lee Gut- tero and Ernie Holbrook led the Trojan quintet in scor- ing during these games. WARD BROWNING Forward )0E KELLY Guard LEE CUTTERO Center NorL-Conference Games 271 • Southern California ' s southern division champs opened the 1934 season in de- fense of their crown against the Califor- nia Golden Bears before 8,000 howling fans in the Berkeley gym. • California was the favorite up to game- time to defeat El Trojan. The Bears start- ed auspiciously by annexing the first game, 36-30. Lee Guttero, Captain Sax Elliot and Ernie Holbrook, Trojan sharp- shooters, aided their Berkeley opponents by sloppy passing and inability to hit the hoop. Englehardt, eagle-eye for the Bears, netted 12 points to take first scoring honors. • Taking the floor the next night with everything to win and nothing to lose, S.C. made basketball history. Scoring 24 points in the first half while the Bears were able to garner but a lone foul toss, the Trojans coasted through the second half to win easily, 42-19. • When the two quintets met again in the south, California needed one victory over S.C. to cinch the crown, providing they won the rest of their games. S.C. needed to take both games to stay in the race. Troy annexed the first  titanic  in a thrilling 41 -34 contest. With the Barry system, an airtight defense, working per- fectly, the Trojans won handily. Julie Bescos and Joe Kelly were outstanding. • The final contest was a Trojan de- bacle. Guttero, Elliot, and Holbrook all fouled themselves out of the game, Elliot leaving after only ten minutes had been played. The Bears forged into the lead after Elliot left, winning 37-28. 272 Kelly gives Captain Elliot a sample of his stellar guarding. Berkeley Bows to Troy NATHAN HALPERN Forward I Browning and Bcscos indulge in a practice warm-up. Stanford Falls Before Trojans ROBERT MUTH For ward • El Trojan ' s southern division cage champs took three out of four tilts from the Stanford Redshirts. Stanford, always a dangerous foe, clicked twice; once over S.C., and once over California. The first defeat seemed to ruin Troy ' s chances for the crown, but the second cinched it as S.C. trimmed U.C.L.A. in the final game of the series. • The first two Stanford games, played in Los Angeles, found the honors divided. Troy won the first game, 36-24, and Stanford the second, 35-31. • The first clash was all S.C. Coach Barry ' s boys, under the leadership of Cap- tain Elliott, got away to a fast start and were never headed. The sterling play of Guttero, Bescos and Kelly heralded a good year for Troy ' s cage hopes. Guttero was high-point man with 13 markers. The next night a determined Stanford team took the floor and handed the Tro- jans a 35-31 setback, with Anderson swishing the bucket for 13 points. Hol- brook and Browning led a bogged Trojan attack with eight points apiece. The half found the Redshirts leading, 17-13. ' Two weeks later El Trojan journeyed to the Farm and handed Stanford two losses. S.C. won the first fracas 28-22, in a sparkling game which saw Bunn ' s men erase Troy ' s 17-8 half-time lead only to lose in the closing minutes. Gut- tero starred with 10 digits. Holbrook, with 10 points, led as Troy nabbed the last tilt 33-22. As in the preceding game, S.C. got away fast and coasted in to win, Stanford failing to rally. 273 • Winning all four basketball contests with U.C L.A.. the Trojans made it eight straight over the Westwood team. None of the games might be termed difficult — rather, they might be declared inter- esting. • Lee Cuttero with 17 points was the individual scoring star of the opening game of the series, which ended 39-26 in Troy ' s favor. The local team forged in- to an early lead which was held with ease, the Uclans never threatening. Hol- brook ' s seven digits presented him with runner-up honors for the Trojans. • The second victory, this time by the score of 39-22, presented Ward Brown- ROBERT FUHRER Guard ing as the scoring ace with 1 I points. This contest, like the preceding one, showed an absolutely superior S.C. team. • Ernie Holbrook ' s high-scoring spree of 24 points featured the third game, won with ease, 46-21. The Bruins made but five field goals. • Closing the season with a 32-23 vic- tory, Troy again won after a rather slow start. Cuttero ' s 1 5 points were high total. 274 Warburton and the gang watch the action on the court. Troy Takes Four From Bruin Foes JACK HUPP Forward i P o N T S E T Bringing the first Pacific Coast tennis championship to Troy in the history of the school, Coach Harold Codshall ' s brilliant sextet brushed aside all foes to complete a season unblighted by defeat. A major sport of but three years, tennis has gained a new mark of prestige at S.C. and has added many followers to the popular na- tional diversion, stimulating its growth in Southern California. 275 PHIL CASTLEN Captain Bob Rowley puts effort and expression in his serve. Trojan Tennis Men • Without the loss of a single con- ference match, the Trojan tennis team closed its 1934 season as Pacific Coast champions for the first time in his- tory. Led by Captain Phil Castlen and with Gene Mako, national-ranking Sophomore flash, playing first man, the squad was by far the strongest ever developed at S.C. and one of the most powerful ever seen on the coast. Cali- fornia was second in the standings, Stanford third, and U.C.L.A. fourth. The Trojans were under the tutelage of Coach Harold Godshall. 276 HAROLD CODSHALL Coach Capture Coast Crown • Gene Mako, playing his first year of varsity competition, was the outstand- ing collegiate player on the coast. Jess Millman, a mainstay of the team for the past three years, was as steady and reliable as ever. Captain Phil Cast- len set the team an example by win- ning every singles match in which he pl ayed. Phil Wooledge, a Junior, showed great improvement over last year, and Vernon John and Bob Row- ley, Sophomores, proved steady point- winners. Les Harris and Kenny Hughes were the utility men. Kenny Hughes leaps high on an overhead smash. 277 Nimble Phil Woolcdgc picks up a low one on the run. • Impressive victories over pre-season opponents revealed the strength of the S.C. squad and indicated its potential championship caliber. Redlands, Occi- dental, Caltech, and Arizona were de- feated without the loss of a single match. • The first match of the season was played against the Redlands varsity, which took a 9-0 drubbing at the hands of the Trojans. Larry Spears, Bulldog first man, was powerless against Mako ' s brilliant playing and lost 6-1, 6-1. Mill- man was forced to three sets by Captain Pratt, but won out 6-3, 2-6, 6-3. Wool- edge and Rowley also showed well for Southern California. KENNETH HUGHES • Occidental, the next opponent, was beaten 6-0 without the loss of a set. Mako defeated Patchel 7-5, 6-0, and Millman defeated Whitley 6-1, 6-2 in a pair of exhibition matches. In the rest of the matches, only one set went to deuce, and five sets were won at love. The S.C. doubles combinations all played beauti- ful tennis and allowed their opponents but ten games in six sets. 278 Racqueteers Trounce All Compet ' LtLon. VERNON JOHN National claycourt- titlist Mako leans into a backhand. • Caltech was snowed under 10-0, de- spite the absence of Mako from the line- up. Millman, playing first man, beat Cap- tain Crimes of the Engineers 7-5, 6-1; and Captain Castlen trounced Cay 6-2, 6-2. John, Wooledge, Rowley, Harris, and Hughes all disposed of their oppo- nents in short order. The doubles com- binations continued to play superb ten- nis, and had no trouble winning every set. • The five-man University of Arizona team proved no match for the powerful Trojans, and went down to defeat 7-0. Mako easily vanquished Hudson 6-1, 6-3, and Captain Castlen defeated Biggs 6-0, 6-0. Non-Conference Record Untarnished PHIL WOOLEDCE CENE MAKO • Trojans reaped high honors in the an- nual Ojai Tournament. Gene Mako de- feated lack Tidball, U.C.L.A. star, 6-1, 7-5 to win the intercollegiate singles crown, and teamed with Phil Castlen to go to the finals in doubles, where they were beaten in a sensational three-set match by Tidball and Myers of U.C.L.A. Chuck Carr, an S.C. junior College stu- dent, was runner up in the men ' s singles. 279 Phil CasMcn returns a shot from deep court. ROBERT ROWLEY Netters Down Indians • Although nearly as strong as last year when they won the champion- ship, the Stanford Indians furnished little competition for the powerful Trojan squad, losing SVz-lVz at S.C. and 6-3 at Palo Alto. At S.C. Sammy Lee, Stanford first man, was beaten in straight sets by Mako 6-3, 6-2; Captain Chuck Otis of the northerners defeated Millman in a torrid battle 7-5, 3-6, 7-5; while Castien turned back John Law 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. Rowley and John won their matches, but Wooledge was defeated by Reed. Mako and Castien defeated the highly-touted team of Otis and Lee 6-4, 8-6. Second doubles went to S.C. and third doubles were called off. • At Palo Alto the Trojans took five out of the six singles matches and first doubles. Mako was forced to play superb tennis to beat Otis 9-7, 8-6. Castien, John, Wooledge, and Rowley won their matches. 280 t The indifferent-appear- ing Jess Millman slaps back a forehand drive. JESS MILLMAN Berkeley Bears Beaten  Avenging last year ' s double defeat, S.C. turned the tables on the Cali- fornia Bears and trounced them twice, 8-1 at home and 5-4 at Berkeley. The home match saw the Trojans playing their best tennis of the year. Mako performed brilliantly in beating Carl Holmes, number one man for the Bears, 6-4, 6-4, Vern John, in number two spot, found Captain Gene Smith too much for him and lost after a hard fight 7-5, 2-6, 6-3. S.C. won the rest of the singles and all three doubles without much effort. • Playing on their home courts, the Berkeleyites put up a much tougher fight. Holmes carried Mako to three sets before losing 6-4, 4-6, 6-2. Castlen defeated Brown 6-1, 3-6, 6-1 ; John defeated Bakulich 6-1, 6-4; and the other singles went to Cal. With the score standing at three points each, the S.C. doubles team came through to win two of the three matches, giving them a bare 5-4 victory. 281 w Flannel John, southpaw ace, whips into a service. LESTER HARRIS Bruins Battered • It was only after a stubborn fight that the strong U.C.L.A. Bruins were subdued 6-3 on the Westwood courts. In the feature match, Gene Mako defeated Captain Jack Tidball, Bruin ace, in three sizzling sets 3-6, 6-1 , 6-4, but the team of Tidball and Myers upset the dope by beat- ing Mako and Castlen 0-6, 6-3, 7-5. Millman played well in beating Briggs 7-5, 6-4. Castlen and Wooledge also won their singles matches, and S.C. took second and third doubles. • In the return match, U.C.L.A. was again defeated 6-3. Mako had lit- tle trouble subduing Tidball 7-5, 6-1 ; Millman defeated Myers 8-6, 8-6: Castlen won an uphill battle from Briggs 7-9, 6-1, 8-6; and Rowley trimmed Stanford 6-2, 6-0. U.C.L.A. won the other two singles matches. Mako and Castlen gained revenge on Tidball and Myers, beating them 6-1, 6-8, 6-4. 282 BASE H T Thwarted out of a league cham- pionship by a superior University of California team, the Trojan baseball nine, nevertheless, made a prominent showing in California baseball circles by placing second in the conference. Coach Sam Barry, the strategian of sport, de- veloped some new stars and laid a foundation for what should be a strong 1935 aggregation. 283 Strong Trojan Nine Rod Dcdeaux slides into home only to find Roberts with the ball. JUSTIN BARRY Coach Dedeaux slides again with better luck as he beats the ball to the plate. • Coach Sam Barry will face next year ' s baseball season without the ser- vices of six valuable 1934 regulars who will graduate in June. Heading this list is Captain Bob Allaire, pep- pery third-sacker. Outfielders Julie Bescos, Ernie Stewart and Dick Mina- sian, Catcher Gene Bankston, and Charlie Upton, pitcher, will also grad- uate. • Captain Bob Allaire proved to be a mainstay of the nine. He was a con- stant threat to opposing pitchers and his playing around the hot corner was far above the average for collegians. 284 ROBERT ALLAIRE Captain • The season was a success as Coach Barry ' s men came through to take sec- ond in the California Intercollegiate League championship race. California was the only team to win more than one game from Troy, as St. Mary ' s, Stanford and U.C.L.A. all bowed be- fore the Trojan swatsmiths. • Rod Dedeaux and Johnny Morrow led the Trojans at the plate. The pitching staff composed of three Sophomores, Jim Appleby, Clyde Baker, and George Pabst, two Juniors, Hal Forney and Joel Evans, and Charlie Upton, the Senior, proved capable. Takes Second Spot Kenny Peters connects while Roberts holds an empty glove. Ernie Holbrook does a despair-act as Captain Allaire holds the rock on him. 285 First row: Franklin. Hanlon, Stewart. Captain Allaire, Morrow. Evans. Baker. Minasian, Pabst. Second row: Manager Hellman, Bracht. Cullenward, Lueke. Bescos, Upton. Appleby, Holbrook, Peters, Dcdeaux, Coach Barry. • Although the coach wasn ' t able to supervise person- ally the pre-season baseball games because he was busy with the basketball team, Troy ' s horsehiders. under the tutelage of  Smiley  Smith, a former professional catcher, won eleven and lost four out of the fifteen prac- tice games played against such strong teams as Loyola, Whittier. Crowley ' s All-Stars, Adelphus Club and the Movie Operators. Crowley ' s team of professional play- ers was the only nine to win more than one game from S.C. Raoul Dedeaux led the batting for the pre-season games. FRANK ROBERTS Catcher RICHARD MINASIAN Utility CLYDE BAKER Pitcher Practice Season Successful 286 John Morrow fans the ozone as one of Pabst ' s blue ribbons goes sailing by. • The St. Mary ' s series resulted in a complete rout of the Gael forces by S.C. While winning five straight games, Troy ' s swatsmiths pounded out 49 runs and the Moragans scored 17. On April 5 the Trojans took both ends of a double header at Moraga, 7-5, and 10-3. Rod Dedeaux, with four hits, led the Trojans at the plate.  Pappy  Bankston broke a two-year batting slump with two safeties. St. Mary ' s came south to play S.C. on April 15, 16, and 17 and met defeat by scores of 10-1 , 1 1 -2, and 1 1 -6. Captain Allaire hit a long home run in the last game. CENE BANKSTON Catcher RAOUL DEDEAUX Shortstop JOEL EVANS Pitcher Gaels Roundly Thumped 287  Fireplug  Allaire gets his five-foot- six into the air to pull down a lab- led base-hit. CHARLES UPTON Pitcher JOHN MORROW Outfield CEORCE PABST Pitcher Barrymen Beat Reds • The Indian ball squad wasn ' t able to cope with the power of the S.C. batters as the Trojans won four and tied one in a six-game series played with Stanford. • Coach Harry Wolter ' s squad came to Los Angeles on March 24, 26, 27 and returned to the Farm with three losses against them. Jim Appleby won the first game 3-2 in twelve innings, Kenny Peters supplying the power to drive across the winning run. Clyde Baker turned in an excellent relief effort to win the third game 7-6. On the trip north Troy broke even, win- ning 3-1, tying 5-5 and losing the play-off 7-6. Morrow did the hitting for Troy. I 288 KENNETH PETERS Second Base But Bow to Bears • A jinx that Bear baseball teams seem to hold over Trojan nines once more prevailed as S.C. horsehiders lost four out five games with the Califor- nians. The Bears opened the season by defeating Troy 5-3 on March 17. jim Appleby, v ith the aid of Kenny Peter ' s home run, pitched Troy to its only victory 4-3, on March 19. On the next day, Trojan errors allovi ed the Berkeley boys to win 5-4. • Appleby suffered his only defeats of the season on April 6 and 7 at Berkeley, the Bear forces clubbing 1 1 - 1 and 6-3 victories off the southpaw to cinch the pennant. Allaire garnered a homer in the first local game and Dedeaux led Troy batters in the north. Julie Bescos golfs one out of the park, but It looks like a batting practice wallop. CLIFF REUMAN Utility NELSON CULLENWARD First base 289 Ernie Holbrook, Troy ' s cican-up hitter, cuts at a bad ball and dribbles one down the first base line. • After a year ' s layoff, the U.C.L.A. and Trojan base- ballers once more held a City Championship series, Troy winning two out of three games. Appleby won both his starts by scores of 9-1 and 6-2 on April 22 and 29. Baker held the Bruins to five hits but lost the April 25 contest 5-3 due to S.C. errors. • Two new faces appeared in the last game, Bill Hanlon and Bob Fuhrer both breaking into the lineup. Julie Bescos did the heavy stickwork for the Trojans in this series, with Frank Roberts and Fuhrer aiding the S.C. cause at the plate. BILL HANLON Utility HAL FORNEY Pitcher JIM APPLEBY Pitcher City Series to Troy 290 •  FIRST PLACE Capped by a stunning victory over Stanford University, Coach Dean Cromwell led his track and field team through a season marked by successive triumphs both in dual and combined competition. The National Collegiate Amateur Ath- letic meet was destined to attract the spotlight June 22, 23, in Los Angeles for the first time in the career of the historic athletic convention. 291 Wykoff comes out of retirement to show the boys his heels. • Sophomore Bob Lyon in the high hurdles was the only Trojan to win an individual first in the 1933 I.C.4A. meet, but the strength of the S.C. representatives was sustaining enough to keep the trophy west of the Mis- sissippi for the tenth time in eleven years. The rivalry with Stanford was so intense that the score was tied when the starter called the 200-meter men to their marks in the last event. With an insolent flourish, Charlie Parsons sped to a third place and stored the huge cup in the trophy room of Troy for its sixth year. BOB LYON High Hurdles FOY DRAPER Sprints JOHN McCarthy Quarter-mile TrojansWin 1933 I.C.A.A.A.A. 292 Estel Johnson hits his stride in the S.F.U. meet to shcde 1 :55 in the half. • Later a decision was reversed in the 100-meter dash and three more S.C. points were added making the final count for Troy 47, five more than the Stanford total. Versatile Norm Paul was the individual leader for S.C, getting silver medals in both the broad jump and the low hurdles. Bill Craber tied for first in the pole vault, while second places were taken by Bob Van Osdel in the high jump, Frank Williamson in the javelin, and Les Ball and Parsons, who tied for second in the 100. Ablo- wich, Tompkins, McNaughton, and Gilbert scored. HUESTON HARPER Shotput ESTEL JOHNSON Half-mile |IM ABBOTT Sprints Third National Title to Troy 293 • To stimulate interest in the N.C.A.A. meet to be held in Los Angeles this year, one of the most extensive local schedules in recent years has been undertaken. The Long Beach Relays opened the season with Troy capturing three of the four re- lays. • A 95-45 victory over Occidental in the yearly handicap meet followed, with Estel Johnson establishing himself as a half-miler by a 1 :55.6 race. • The University of San Francisco visi- ted the Coliseum on March 31, taking home 22 points and leaving 109 with the CURTIS McFADDEN Broadjump Trojans. These all furnished a build-up for the California, U.C.L.A. and Stan- ford meets. • Following the Stanford dual meet, Troy sought to defend its Fresno State Relay crown. • The Trojan tracksters passed up the I.e. A. A. A. A. championships this year, due to the fact that the University was staging the 1934 N.C.A.A. meet. I Freddie Lantz captures a two-mile thriller in fast time. Foes Bow to Troy In Cinder Openers lAMES GUTHRIE Quarter, Relay 294 Benavidez breaks the tape in a 4:25 mile on the Coliseum track. Team Strength Nets Second • Midget Matt Cordy, who had never bettered 13 feet before, vaulted 13 feet 11 1 16 inches to tie Bill Craber of S.C. and earn enough points for  unknown  Louisiana State to stage one of the most startling track upsets in history. The Baton Rouge boys, with Olympic man Glenn Hardin winning the 440 and the low hurdles, and Jack Torrance, premier shot putter, as the mainstays, outpointed Troy 58-54 to win the National Collegl- ates held in Chicago in 1933. • Duncan McNaughton and Craber brought the only firsts when they tied FRANCIS BENAVIDEZ Mile EDWARD HALL Low Hurdles in their events. Ball and Parsons in the sprints, Ablowich and Tompkins in the quarter, Webster, in the half, Paul in the low hurdles. Harper in the shot, and Williamson in the javelin brought the other S.C. points. Five new world ' s re- cords were set and two were tied in ad- dition to numerous meet and American records in what is recognized as one of the greatest meets of all times. 295 • Celebrating his silver anniversary as an active Trojan mentor, genial Dean Cromwell is engaged in drilling a force of cindermen to regain the N.C.A.A. title lost last year to Louisiana State. His suc- cess is based on practical psychology and a sympathetic attitude toward his ath- letes, innate factors developed only by time The amazing defeat of Stanford by Troy this year is indicative of his coach- ing ability. VARSITY TRACK SQUAD First row: Draper, Tompkins, McCarthy, Webster, Johnson. Culp, Hall, Kerr, Winn, Lantz, Benavidez, Itria, Crawford, Parsons, McFad- den, Jungkeit, Reed, Berry. 296  Teammates and fraternity brothers for three years, Ed Ablowich and Hueston Harper have demonstrated the practi- cability of a co-captaincy in track. Ori- ginally a hurdler, Ed, who competed on the 1 932 Olympic team as a 400 meter man, has divided his time between the low hurdles and the 440 this season. Hueston, an all-round weightman who has placed well up in all the leading col- legiate meets, specializes in the shot put. HUESTON HARPER Co-Captain ED ABLOWICH Co-Captain VARSITY TRACK SQUAD Back row: Coach Cromwell, Coach Leahy, Carter, Cutler, Osburn, Guthrie, R. Olson, Brannan, Ablowich, Harper, Carpenter, Strother, Abbott, Fitch, Monroe, King, Fimple, Smith, Olson, Gregory, Baker, Barnes, Manager Campbell. 297 Tompkins has his tongue in his work as Fitch passes him the stick. • Not only did California halt the Trojans in their efforts to continue the scoring splurges prevalent in re- cent years, but almost won the meet when the Bear thinclads high-pressured Troy all the way before the Trojans finally managed to squeeze out a 69-62 victory. Two unexpected places, first in the javelin by Bob Quinn and second in the highs by Clarence Berry, brought vic- tory. • Four meet marks fell as the Bears and Trojans split the first places. Johnson ' s 1 :53.5 half was the S.C. high spot while the failure of the pole vaulters to score was the low. FERRIS WEBSTER HaK-mile BOB REED Quarter, Relay FRED LANTZ Two mile Bears Bow in. ThrllUng Meet 298 I Draper, the pleasing surprise of the year, comes through in the century. • Stepping out in the first 200 yards to take such a lead that Johnny McCarthy was unable to catch him, dusky Jimmy LuValle won the feature race, the 440 yard dash, as the Trojans and Bruins met for the first time in dual track competition April 21. • S.C. took the meet 87-44, as the Uclans offered un- expected opposition in several events, notably the dashes and half mile. Hall of S.C. skimmed the lows in 23.8 seconds. The Trojans were strong in the field events and the sprints. Winn and Lantz captured their custo- mary one-two in the two-mile grind. The Trojan relay team was an easy winner. CLARENCE BARRY High Hurdles AL OLSON Broadjump EVERETT WINN Two Mile Bruins Lose in First Affair 299 f ■■ m John McCarthy brings home fhc bacon and the baton in a mile relay. Bury Hatchet In Indians • The firebrands of the hos- tile Indians from tribe Palo Alto were effectively squel- ched as the antagonized Tro- jan cindermen rose to unpar- alleled heights to stage sur- prise after surprise in build- ing up 82 2 3 points to 48- 1 3. • Ferris Webster, bridegroom for a week, began with a sur- prise second in the mile be- hind Chuck Nimmo of Stan- ford; later he placed behind Johnson in the 880. Jimmy Fimple tied Bud Deacon in the pole vault and S.C. swept the broad jump. Hueston Har- per broke up the invincible one-two Stanford combine in the shot put. I ' CHARLES PARSONS Sprints HARRY TOMKINS Quarfer-mile 300 The field en masse takes off on the first flight of highs. • Four new meet records were established as miniature Foy Draper erased Charlie Paddock ' s 220 mark by run- ning 20.9s. He was the only double-winner, picking up the gold medal in the 100. Everett Winn leather-lunged his way to a new mark in the two- mile run at 9:41 .1 . • John Lyman, Indian giant, eclipsed his record in the shot by two feet at 54 ft. 3 4 in. John Mottram sailed the jave- lin 212 ft. 3in. for the fourth new mark. • Curt McFadden ' s leap of 24ft. 5in. in the broad jump and Will Brannan ' s 6 ft. 4 in. tie in the high jump were good for blue ribbons. Inspired Team. Turns Trick AL FITCH Sprints ROBERT QUINN Javelin 301 Blackman, McCarfhy, and Tompkins battle in the closing yards of the 440 in the Stanford meet. KENNY CARPENTER Discus WILL BRANNON Highjump JOHN CHRiSMAN Weights • After Troy had tanned the Bearskin, the barking Bulldogs of Fresno State came south for the first dual meet between the two schools. Unassuming Walt Marty, holder of the world high jump record, was the individual star of the meet, jumping 6 feet 7% inches, a dash shy of his world mark. • None of the Trojans were impressive in the 1 02 2 3 to 28 1 3 victory as the competi- tion lacked the spirit necessary to bring out the best effort. Fresno State Conquered 302 ' 37 SPORTS Being the transitory period be- tween high school and actual uni- versity life, the Freshman year is used as the training period for the scores of Trobabes who plan to carry on for Troy during their var- sity years. A well-balanced staff of coaches has produced some out- standing teams in all phases of athletics. These same teams will have some valuable men to con- tribute to S.C. for the ensuing three years. 303 Dave Davi!: packs the ball around end in a Frosh workout. Freshman Football • Under the coaching of Jeff Cravath, Var- sity grid captain in 1926, the S.C. Frosh football team won the  Little Three  cham- pionship by conquering both the California and Stanford first-year elevens. In three other games played, the Trobabes won two, tying the third contest. • Santa Ana J.C. held the S.C. men, 6-6, in the season opener, a night game, held on foreign soil. Poor choice of plays by S.C. offered the Dons their scoring opportunity. The next two weeks saw the Trobabes beat I Coach Cravath ' s champion tirst-ycar grid artists run signals on the Coliseum turf. 304 I George McNeish, pcagreen cen- ter, charges for the benefit of the cameraman. Freshman Football Compton and Chaffey Jaysees by scores of 20-0 and 14-6 respectively, in games fea- tured by some sparkling ball-carrying by Dave Davis, quarterback  find  . • Lady Luck smiled favorably in Troy ' s di- rection in the Stanford tilt when S.C. put over a last-minute lengthy pass for a touch- down to win 6-3. Davis ' sensational 65- yard run for a score featured the 7-0 vic- tory over California in the north. • Davis was honored at the conclusion of the season by being elected Captain. This time the Frosh gridders charge the camera. Lynch carrying the ball. 305 Frosh basketball Capfain. Wayne Garrison, smiles (or the photographer. Freshman Basketball • Composed of a group of former prep stars from schools throughout the nation, Troy ' s Frosh basketball team went through a lengthy schedule, losing but two games. The Trobabes came out on the long end of the series played against U.C.L.A.. taking three out of four games. The win over Los Angeles ].C., league champions, was out- standing. At the conclusion of the season Wayne Garrison, forward, was named hon- orary Captain. Rodeen, Gracin, Norman and Thorpe usually completed the line-up for Coach Twogood ' s team. i First row: Coach Twoogood, Jackson, Garrison, Thorpe. Standing: Rodeen, Beiko, Schwarts, Norman. 306 Joe Gonzales, frosh hurling ace, hides a fast one as he warms up on Bovard field. Freshman Baseball • Troy ' s Frosh baseball team turned in a fine record of 22 wins and only 2 losses for the season. The team, coached by Jim De- lany, had joe Gonzales, Richard Herzog, and Dave Schwarts, who are leading candidates for next year ' s varsity. • Numeral men include; Schwarts, Johnny Olhasso, Ted Rafolovich, Homer Beatty, and Kenny Kirkpatrick, infielders; Paul Harde- man, Harry Simmons, Carl Longley, Chuck Cascalles, and Herzog, outfielders; Frank Kidder and Pat Wood, catchers; and Ro- deen, MacDonald and Gonzales, pitchers. First row: Walker, Kidder, Gonzales, Longley, Rafolovitch, Herzog, Simmons, Cascalles. Second row: Coach Delaney, Beatty, Hardeman, Burlison, Kirkpatrick, Olhasso, Woods, Rodeen. Schwarts. Manager Kempley. 307 Ross Bush, yearling middle-dis- tance runner, coasts down the home stretch in an 880. Freshman Track • Coach Eddie Leahy ' s 1934 yearling track squad did not quite match the unbeaten record of his 1933 aggregation, but it was a powerful team. The only defeat of the season was at the hands of Compton J.C, 75 to 52. A partial list of its victories in- cluded decisions over Poly, Hoover, Holly- wood, Santa Monica, and Washington high schools, as well as Chaffey and Los Angeles junior colleges. An invitational meet at Taft resulted in additional laurels for the Fresh. The yearling team did not compete in the Fresno relays. Front row: Boone, Sloan, Hitt, Coates, Roulac. Hanshaw, Payne, Latimer, Meadows. Back row: Manning, Cope, Kingsley, Bumstead. Sefton, Staley, Cindick, Manager Lambie. 308 Phil Cope, world prep record- holder in the high hurdles, clips a barrier. Freshman Track • What the Freshman track squad lacked in team strength, it made up for in individ- ual stars. Several of the squad show great promise for the future on the varsity. Phil Cope and Roy Staley are capable of shading fifteen seconds in the highs, Ross Bush shows considerable promise as a half-miler, and Bill Sefton of the Junior college has re- peatedly cleared 14 feet in the pole vault. • Ray Cartwright, Slim Watson, Chuck Hanshaw, Marv Kingsley, and George Boone are all potential champions for coming years. Coach Leahy ' s hurdling quartet makes faces on the way over: Cope, Staley, Bumstead and Watson. 309 Other Freshman Athletics • Bill Van was the outstanding Frosh golfer, winning the annual Southern Cali- fornia tournament and taking medal honors with a brilliant 149. Forrest Shannon aided in the dual victories. • Stanford, U.C.L.A., and Redlands were all defeated by the Trobabe tennis team, led by Jack Knemeyer and George Burroughs, making the season successful. • The Frosh ice hockey team defeated U.C. L.A. 9-1, while peagreen athletes in other sports were content to train for their varsity careers. l  FRESHMAN ICE HOCKEY TEAM First row: Morrow, Steinman, Smith, Kadrey, McNeil. Second row: Eddy, Mehas, Am, Johnson, Coach Seixas. 310 I MINOR SPORTS Second to Major Sports from the standpoint of prestige only, Minor Sports have a following on the Campus that rivals that of the Ma- jors for the competition is just as keen and the ability of the partici- pants just as high. No Minor Sports Carnival was held this spring for the first time in years, but S.C. triumphed in the majority of the dual contests held through- out the season. 311 I m 312 First row: Day, Seixas, Lynch, Roberts, Campbell, Fishel. Second row: Coach Hartley, Busby. Olson, Crider, Hohn, Smith, Sherman, Coach Eddy. Ice Hockey • Although hard hit by a series of injuries and ineligibilities, Troy ' s ice hockey sextet walked off with the league title and the Hoover trophy. The season record included eleven wins, three losses and a tie. • Joe Sullivan captained the six until he left school, Carl Fishel being named to suc- ceed him. Carl took the scoring crown and was named all-league, as was Walt Busby. Bud Lynch, Johnny Seixas, Ted Hohn, Al Campbell, Joe Roberts, and Frank Smith were outstanding. The team was coached by Graduate Manager Arnold Eddy and Dr. Charles C. Hartley. ARNOLD EDDY Coach CARL FISHEL Captain DR. CHARLES C. HARTLEY Coach 313 Swimming • Swimming to a strong second in the Na- tional Collegiates held in Columbus, Ohio, March 30 and 31, the Trojan natators cli- maxed the most successful season in S.C. swimming history. Weakened by the in- eligibility of John Paulsen, the Troymen nevertheless scored 19 points to 30 for the victorious University of Michigan Wolver- ines team. • World record-holder Jack Medica of Washington eclipsed Jimmy Cilhula ' s glory somewhat, but the Trojan champion placed second to the Husky in a pair of races to lead his mates in the eastern invasion. ..♦  - Captain Buddy Browne waits for the starter ' s gun. Cilhula, Warner, Browne, Paulsen, Kidder, Fletcher, Kaye, Kurtz, Coach Cady. 314 Olympic competitor )immy Cllhula poises on the brink of the pool. h ater Polo • Aiding Cilhula in point gathering were johnny Kaye, second in the backstroke; Gene Fletcher, fourth in the 50 and 100; Cordon Warner, fifth in the breaststroke; and Frankie Kurtz, fifth in the diving. Troy took second in the medley relay with Kaye, Captain Buddy Browne, and Warner finish- ing behind Yale, as the sprint quartet of Fletcher. Cilhula, Browne and Kidder was third to Michigan. • A pair of decisions over UCLA, and one over an all-star aggregation completed the swimming season, while the water polo out- fit lost twice to the Bruin splashers. Fletcher and Browne leap out at the start of the fifty. 315 National Gymnastic champs. Doig and Brydcn, Co-Captain tiic S.C. team. GymnastLCS • Only cancellation of the national colle- giate meet prevented the Southern Califor- nia gym team, coached by Charles Craves, from winning the U.S. title in the sport, according to critics who followed the Tro- jan stars. • Co-captains Randall Bryden, holder of the world ' s record in the rope climb, and Frank Doig, all-around star, led the team to a dual victory over U.C.L.A. 47-34. Doig accumulated 21 points, while Newell, Cal- vert, and Fisher aided in piling up the vic- torious margin. Prospects for a strong team next year are bright. Manager Stutzman. Coach Craves, Fisher, Newell, Weber, Smith, Doig, Calvert. Bochlcrt, Brydcn. 316 Dale Hilton. Captain of the Varsity golf team, raps into a tee-shot. Golf • Minus the services of several stars who had been expected to form the nucleus of the v arsity golf team, practically a Sopho- more aggregation formed the squad. After succumbing to U.C.L.A. 18-0, a spirited group managed to turn the tables with a 10-8 win. Trailing a strong Stanford team, the S.C. squad placed second in the Cali- fornia Intercollegiates at Pebble Beach. In the Southern California Intercollegiates Charles Archibald reached the semi-finals. Dale Hilton captained the team with John Stevenson, Willis Iseminger, Bill Burke, and Bill Thornquest completing the squad. Manager Cannell, Burke, Archibald, Thornquist, Hilton, Stevenson, Iseminger, Director of Athletics Hunter. 317 Fencing • Winning of the Conference championship in the all-around, and saber, epee, and foil divisions, was the high point in the Trojan varsity fencing season. U.C.L.A. was downed 20-7 in the opening match of the tourney. Stanford and California were beaten by respective scores of 17-10 and 20 ' , ' 2-6 ' ' 2. Captain John Webber and Ever- ett Bertoia won individual titles. • Other lettermen of the squad were Rob- ert Webber, Roland Gish, Andy Rose. Joshua Peterfreund, Albert Travis, and J. Parke Montague. Captain Everett Bcrl-oia pre- pares for the combat. M,;njgcr Twitty, Peterfreund, ). Webber. Bertoia, Rose. Montague, R. Webber. 318 Captain Evan Shaw consoles his equine mount with some sug- ary words. Po ( • Introducing polo as an intercollegiate sport on the Trojan athletic calendar, sev- eral ardent followers of the pastime teamed together to form a quartet which was able to defeat California 7-6 after losing a game to the Bears previously. An experienced Stanford four won easily. • Beckley, Shaw, Guthrie, Spiers, Smith, Aitken, and Franklin formed the squad which was coached by Lionel Pedley, rank- ing national player. • Other games were played against local independent teams and colleges. A. Smith, Johnson, Cuthric, Bcdely, Spiers. Aitkin, Captain Shaw, Franklin, L. Smith, Coach Pedley. Assistant Coach Edmunds, Manager Monosmith. 319 CIcnn Lcdingham. outstanding rugby player, tries a conversion. Rugby • In its first attempt at Rugby. Troy came through with a strong fifteen, accredited as Southern California champions at the end of the season. • The outstanding victory was that over U.C.L.A. Al Reboin ' s drop-kick gave S.C. the 4-0 victory. Four other games were won while one tilt was lost. • The team was built around a nucleus of the members of the S.C. American football team. Millard Peterson coached while Clen Ledingham acted as captain. Eleven Tro- jans made the all-star honor team. Coach Peterson urges his ruggers on as they pound along the Coliseum turf. 320 I N T R A-MU R AL It is the objective of Intramural sports at Troy to place the hun- dreds of students who are unable to represent S.C. in intercollegiate competition but who wish to take part in athletics. With this goal in mind, Director H. W. Anderson has devoted his energy to building up a complete program that has attracted Trojans from all walks of campus life and has reached a new success this last season. 321 PHI PSI TRACK CHAMPIONS First row: Blewitt, Propst, Olsen, Fisher Second row: Thurlow, W. Thornquist, L. Thornquist, Walker, Lautz, Lancaster, Davis s H. W. ANDERSON Director, Intramural Athletics Intra-Mural Athletics • By winning the golf and track titles, taking second in the swimming meet, and reaching the baseball playoffs, in addition to points picked up in other sports. Phi Kappa Psi has a total of points sufficient to cinch the Inter- fraternity athletic championship for 1934. • The competition between the Creek houses is the feature part of the University intra- mural program under the direction of genial  Andy  Anderson, who has been director of the department for many years. • Phi Kappa Psi ' s track and field aggregation outclassed every other Creek organization in the annual meet when, led by footballer Cliff Propst and Eddie Hall, it piled up 39 points to ISVi for Sigma Alpha Epsilon and 21 for Phi Kappa Tau. Propst tied the meet record as he took the century sprint in 10.2 seconds and then tied for first in the pole vault. Hall, who later was developed into Troy ' s best low hur- 322 DAILY TROIAN INDOOR BASEBALL CHAMPIONS First row: Lawless, |uergens, Frady. Van Deerlin. Second row: Cullenward, Robert, Petit, Nash. Applegate, Payette. Intra-Mural Athletics dier by Coach Cromwell, captured both barrier events in addition to placing second in the broad jump. • The outstanding feature of the Creek league ' s activities for the year was the stellar playing of the Pi Kappa Alpha basketball team which swept through all competition without being seriously threatened by anyone. With such stars as Cracin, Beiko, Fimple and Kelly, the Pikers had a team that, according to  Andy  , was undoubtedly the best interfra- ternity basketball team ever seen at S.C. • In the Independent league only two sports, basketball and volleyball, were contested with baseball being dropped because of a lack of space. The Japanese club took the volleyball crown for the third consecutive year. • With a championship plaque to be award- ed to the winner, a new league was formed this year by the College of Engineering, with INTERFRATERNITY Basketball - - - Pi Kappa Alpha Tennis ------ In Process Track ----- Phi Kappa Psi Swimming . - - - - Kappa Alpha Golf ------ Phi Kappa Psi Volleyball - - - - Kappa Sigma Handball .- - - - Tau Epsilon Phi Indoor Baseball - - - In Process ALL-UNIVERSITY Tennis _ - - - George Burroughs Handball, singles - Marvin Crawford Handball (doublesi - - Sonny Brouse ----- Joe Wheeler Golf -------In Process Squash ------ In Process PingPong -.._-- Witty Horseshoes . - - - Charles Dean Fencing ----- Al Stephens Rifle Shoot - - - - Bob Webber INDEPENDENT LEAGUE Basketball - - - University Church Volleyball - _ _ _ Japanese Club 323 PI KAPPA ALPHA BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS Frist row: Watlett, Butcher. Clark. Fimple. Hardage. Second row: Herbert, Phares. Faught, Kelly. Intra-Mural Athletics six departmental teams contesting in basketball, volleyball, and in- door baseball. • Crowing out of a challenge made between Delta Chi and Kappa Sigma, a hard-ball winter league was formed by the baseballers who were too impatient to wait for the regular season. Other teams in the loop were Bankston ' s Freshmen and Allaire ' s All-Stars. • And continuing along the challenge line the sports staff of the 324 I N T E R F R A T E R N I T Y TRACK MEET TRACK EVENTS 50-yard dash — Rebom IPKTI, Bal- lew IKS), Wells (TP), B. Mathews (KA). Time 5.5s. Ties record. 100-yard dash — Propst IPKP), Wells (TPl, Ballew (KS), Mandelbaum (PBDi. Time 10.2s. Ties record. 220-yard dash — Wells (TP), Man- delbaum (PBD), Webber (PKTl, Cigh- lia (PKTl . Time 23. s. Mile— Ball (PKTl. Young (SAE), Lantz (PKPI, Burroughs (SX) Time 4m. 53s. 440-yard dash — Thornquist (PKP), Wooledge (SXI. Time 53.8s. 880-yard run — Olson (KA), Manning (KSi, Franklin IDXl, Young (SAE). Time 2m. 4.8s. 70-yard high hurdles — Hall (PKP), Jones (SAE), Larrabee (KA), Berry I SAE I . Time 9.6s. 120-yard low hurdles — Hall (PKP), Brouse (SX), Rebom (PKT). Stevens (PKT). Time 13.6s. Four-man 880-yard relay — Phi Kap- pa Tau, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kappa Sig- ma, Pi Kappa Alpha. (No time. Phi Kap- pa Psi, winner, disqualified) PHI PSI COLF CHAMPIONS Blewitt, F. Thornquist. Olsen. W. Thornquist, Walker. Intra-Mural Atkletlcs Daily Trojan dared the rest of the publications ' staff to contest it in a game of indoor ball. The defi was accepted and the game was won by the sportsters when they came from behind in the 6th to score 10 runs, winning 20-1 1. • Sigma Delta Psi, national honorary athletic fraternity, initiated seven new members in February and since then three more have qual- fied for membership. I N T E R F R AT E R N I T Y TRACK MEET FIELD EVENTS Shot — Thurlow IPKP), Palmer (SXl, Brown (KAI, Erskine (PSK). Distance 51ft. 3in. lavelin — Wall IPKP), Brouse (SX), Ostling (SXl, Hopkins (SAEl. Distance 154 ft. High lump — Hitt iSN), Heinze (KSl, Fuhrer (KSl, Smith (PKAL Height. 5ft. 9in. Broad )ump — Hood iSAE), Hall (PKPI, Smith (PKAI, Wotkyns (SXl. Distance 21ft. 434in. Dicus — Carter (PSKl,Ceiger (TEP), Brown (KAI, Kraintz (PKPI. Distance 127ft. 4in. Hop, step, and jump — Wallett, (PKAi, B. Mathews (KA), Hood (SAE), Clark (KAI. Distance 41ft. 7i2in. Pole V a u 1 1 — T ie between Propst (PKPI and Henderson ( DX I , tie for third between Bennett (SAEl and Burns (PSKI . Height 10ft. 3in. Phi Kappa Psi, 39; Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon, 23 ' 2 ; Phi Kappa Tau, 21; Kappa Alpha, 16; Kappa Sigma, 16; Sigma Chi 14; Pi Kappa Alpha, 1 1 ; Theta Psi, 10 Phi Sigma Kappa, 7I2; Delta Chi, 6 Sigma Nu, 5; Phi Beta Delta, 4; Tau Epsilon Phi, 3. 325 f OrganizatlorLS ll i ■ ' i i FRATERNITIES Filling out the curricular and sports program of University men was the full social life afforded them by the fraternities. Satisfy- ing a genuine need in the student life they broughtaboutwarm com- radeship where most needed. Out- standing events were the rush par- ties,  hell week  , and house dances. Bound together into one large, sympathetic group by the Interfraternity Council, the fra- ternities cooperated with each other to the fullest extent. Cli- max of the year was the Interfra- ternity Formal. 327 Inter fraternity Council Alpha Epsilon Pi: Samuel Carshofsky. Beta Kappa: Thomas Bonney, Watson Rose. Chi Phi: Buzz Ellis, Duncan Puett. Delta Chi: Raoul Dedeaux, Spencer St. Clair. Delta Sigma Phi: William Lewis, Kern McLaughlin. Gamma Epsilon: Howard Alley. Harold VIcek, Kappa Alpha: Russell Nixon. )ack Wilder. Kappa Sigma: Robert Haugh, Herbert Tatsch. Phi Beta Delta: Howard Rosenberg. Phi Kappa Psi: Homer Griffith, Kenneth Olsen. Phi Kappa Tau: Francis Cislini, Sherman Jensen. Phi Sigma Kappa: Oliver Bardin, Edward L. Jones. Pi Kappa Alpha: James F. Clark, Wallace Hatverson. Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Paul Bryan, Jack Rose, Sigma Chi: Robert Love, Lawrence Stevens. Sigma Nu: Phil Cannell, Roy Johnson. Sigma Phi Epsilon: Thomas Kidd, John Leach. Tau Delta Chi: Manuel Chlavin, Ben F. Fremer. Tau Epsilon Phi: Sid Levine, Harry Matlaf. Theta Psi: Newlin Cruver. Jack Smith. Zeta Beta Tau: Bernard Hirshfield, Paul Rousso. Stray Greeks: A. M. Heintz. Bonney W. Rose, Dedeaux, St. Clair. Lewis. McLauRhlin Alley. Vleck. Nixon. Wilder. Hau.i;h. Tatsch Griffith. OlsLn. Cislini. Jensen, Bardin, Jones Clark, Halverson, Bryan, J. Rose. Love. Stevens Cannell. Johnson. Kidd. Ellis. Puett. Levine Matlaf. Gruver. Smith, Hirshfield, Rousso, Heintz John Leach President 328 f 5 f f % r  Umi E . L  Jack Wilder President Baillie. Baldwin. Berninsr. Berry. Boone. Brown. Campbell Clark. Danz, Deerins. En,u;lish. Fitch, Foss. Giddinss Hallock. Hanson. Hohn. Hur.saker. Kingsley. Kreuuer. Lambi Larrabee. Madsen. Malcom. Martin. G. Matthews. .1. Matthews. P. Matthews McFarland. McLeod. McMann. Michel. Miller. Moore. Morris Moss. Nisbett. Nixon. Nowlen. Parker, Petit. Phares Pike. RawlinjiS. Reed. Roome. Sandland. Sether. Seixas Sherman. Stanley. Staub, Swarthout. Van Landinuham. Varnum. Walker Faculty: Henry Bruce, Dean Fiske, W. Ralph LaPorte, Roy Malcom, Emory Olson, Harold Roberts, Harry Silke, |r., Kenneth Stonier, Grafton Tanquary, Hugh Willett. Seniors: )ack Baillie, Cordon Clark, Edward English, Albert Madsen, Walter Michel, Earl Morris, Russell Nixon, Richard Phares, |ames Pile, William Rome, Clifford Sandland, Wendell Sether, Herbert Sherman, Morgan Stanley, Jack Swarthout. Juniors: Bryon Covey, Harold Foss, jack Lambi, Albert Hanson, Theodore Hohn, Roy Mal- com, Albert Martin, Claude Matthews, Garland Matthews, Turner McLeod, Jack Reid, John Seixas, Robert Van Landingham. Sophomores: Simeon Baldwin, George Brown, Jack Danz, Dick Peering, Alfred Fitch, Richard Ciddings, Henry Maynard, William Junsaker, Duane Larrabee, Robert Matthews, Arlo Munch, Robert Petit, Harvey Rawlings, Kenneth Staub, Harvey Varnum. Pledges: Bernard Berning, Henry Berry, William Boone, Alexander Campbell, Edward Hal- lock, Marvin Kingsley, James Fruger, Peter Long. John McFarland, Jack McMann, Delos Moore, Wayne Morns, Stanley Moss, William Nisbett, Ralph Nowlen, Norman Parker, Myron Prisler, Fred Walker. Kappa Alpha 329 Phi Sigma Kappa Seniors: Frank Carter, Robert Erskine, David Mackenzie, Scheff Nies. James Waggoner. Juniors: Robert Allaire, Ward Browning, Gerald Clement, Alvln Coughlln, Lawrence Findlay, Jay Richard Foster, Dale Hilton, Edward Jones, Kenneth Polzin, William Schloen. Sophomores: Arthur DIttberner, Robert Muth, Robert Pollard, William Smith. Pledges: Homer Beatty, Jim Burns, Ross Bush. Charles Cascales, Dick Corey, Walter Doyle, Charles Evans, Glen Gill, Frank Hansen, Glen Hoffman, Robert Hoffman, Joe Hurst, Bert Kal- mar, Holcomb Kempley, Al Kerr, Guy Kilgore. Worth Larkin, Ray Loar, Roger Lyon, Ray McManus, Vincent Miles, Ralph Parr, Earl Schofleld, Bill Seward, Jack Thorpe, Leo Viault. Beatty. Allaire. Adams Browninp:. Burns. Bush, Carter. Cascales Clement. Cory. Cross. Doyle. Erskine, Findlay Foster. Gill. Hansen. Hilton. Jones, Kalmar Kemidey. Kerr, Kilpfore. Kitchen. Larkin, McManus Miles, Nies. Parr, Pollard, Polzin, Schloen Scofield. Seward, Smith, Thorpe. Viault. Wagner % Oliver Bardin President 330 mnMs  Larry Stevens President ' ■ Jm mm Abbott, Applegate. Bescos, Breese. Brouse Burroughs, Carr, Chadil, Clemens. Cleverdon, Colej rove, Cope Crabbe. Everett, Fielding. Fletcher, Gibson, Glassco, Hardeman Hart, Hinesiy, Holiday, Hooker. Hooper. Houlj rate. Howell Hupp. Isemin!?er. John. Joy. Kidder. Kovac. Lewis Love. McGinley, G. McNeish. R. McNeish. Norene. Ostling. Pace Palmer, Polhemus, Poulsen. Rorison, Sanders. Shillinglaw. Smith Spicer, Stevenson, Thompson. Webb. Wilbur, Wooledge. Wotkyns Faculty: Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid Seniors: )ulie Bescos. Willard Brouse, Robbins Chadil, Robert Love, Robert McNeish, LeRoy Pace, Ford Palmer, Alfred Poulsen, Larry Stevens, Frank Williamson. Juniors: Cal Clemens, Joe Cleverdon, Bill Knowles, Frank Kurtz, George Lady, Jeff Nibley, Bob Norene, Don Spiers, Jim Webb, Ferris Webster, Phil Wooledge. Sophomores: Jim Abbott, Frank Breese, Barron Everett, Bill Holiday, Jack Houlgate Hupp. Willis Iseminger, Vernon John, |ed Ostling, George McNeish, Lawrence Schultz dall Spicer, Gene Fletcher, John Stevenson, Willard Thompson. Freshmen: Dick Applegate, George Buroughs, Charles Carr, James Cassin, PhilCope Jack Ran- rresnmen : uick Appiegaifc;, oeurgt; Duruugns, i neji it    ii , jdmci i aaani, wp , Alan Colegrove, Seymour Crabbe, Charles Gibson, Charles Hart, John Hooker, Joe Joy, Peter Kovac, Cy Polhemus, Bob Sanders, Dave Shillinglavi , Howard Smith. Pledges: Ancil Adkins, Bill Burke, Curt Cummmgs, Kenneth Carpenter, James Doolittle, Max Glassco, Paul Hardeman, Gene Hibbs, Douglas Hinesly, Morgan Hofer, Benson Howell, Dick Kadrey, Allan Kidder, Victor King, Chalmers Lones, Jack Hall, Gene Mako, Allan Moore, jim Rorison, Dave Taylor, Robert Williams, Michael Winters. Sigma Ckl 331 Chi Phi Seniors: Wilbur Brown. )ohn Burby, Paul Clark, Newlin Cruder, Bob Morrell, Cliff Orbeson, Duncan Puett, Marshall Wells. juniors: Buzz Ellis, William Hays Hammond, Frank Karmelich, Joe Schott, Ed Stones. . Sophomores: Allen Cooperider, Ted Gardner, Sam Mitchell, Charles Spear, William Stuart. Freshmen: Phil Daniel, |ack Dewar, Ed Evans, Wood Harryman, Chester Roberts. Pledges: Homer Bell, Warren Christian, James Clay, Al Gherke, Robert Gould, Willis Hunt, William Kimbell, Stewart McLeod, William Sefton, Edward Smith. Bell, Brown, Burby. Christian Clark, Clay, Cooperider. Daniel. Dewar Ellis. Evans. Gardner. Gherke. Gould. Gruver Hammond. Harryman. Hunt. Karmelich. Kimbell. McLeod Mitchell. Morrell. Orbeson. Puett. Roberts. Schott Sefton. Smith. Spear. Stones. Stuart. Wells P e  P _P l l Clifford Orbeson President 332 Ablowic-h. A!chit)nl(l. Arthur. Ashcialt. Bakir, Ban-. Bt-nmtt Berry. Bothweil, Brewer. Brockett, Bryan. Burchard. Garner Carter, Couch. Cullen, Kishcr. Gillett, Goudy. Hall Hamilton. Hanson. Hooil, Houghton. E. Jones. M. Jones. Lawrence Lynch. Mitchell. Pendleton. Pritchard. Randall. Richards. Rockwell Sanderson. Shaw. Slonaker. A. Smith. R. Smith, Spraker. Sutherland Taecker. Van Leuven. Warburton. Warner. White. Williams. Young Faculty; O. J. Marston, |. C. Schaffer. Seniors; Gene Carter, Richard Cullen, Ralph Hanson, James Kemp, Lawrence Pritchard. Rowe Sanderson. )udson Slonaker, Argyle Smith, Roland Smith, Roger Taecker, William Van Leuvan. Juniors; Edgar Ablowich, Granville Ashcraft, Paul Bryan, Hueston Harper, Lonnie Hood, Don Houghton, Elwood Jones, James Keller, Paul Randall, Frederick Richards, Thomas Rockwell, Evan Shaw, Everett Spraker, Irvine Warburton. Sophomores; Charles Archibald, John Arthur, Albert Bennett, Douglas Bothweil, King Hall, Thomas Hamilton, John Hewson. Pledges; Glen Baker, Dick Bare, Robert Beauchamp, Elbert Berry, Fred Breiver, Sheldon Brockett, Gerald Burchard, Pat Carney, Ray Cartwright, Winston Chick, John Couch, Merril Dixon, Jotty Falvo, Bill Fisher, Myrel Gillett, Howard Goudy, Don Hutchinson, Mark Jones, John Lawrence, Ford Lynch, Larry McMannus, Otis Mitchel, Walter Pendleton, Jim Suther- land, James Ward, Dudley Warner, Norman White, Carlton Wiliams. Sigma Alpha Eps ' don 333 Zeta Beta Tau Faculty: Lynn Clark Seniors: Robert Brilliant, Bernard Hirshfield, Harvey Lewis. Aaron Rosenberg, Ray Tauber, Robert Wasserman. luniors: Harold Cordon, George Kaplin, Morris Parness, Elias Spilker, Albert Rosen, Paul Rousso, Jack Sepman, Harry Shifman, Herbert Witty, Allen Zeigler. Sophomores: Isadore Kahn, Phillipp Shackmore, Lawrence Simon, David Weisbart. Freshmen: Oscar Hart, Edward Tauber. Pledges: William Asher, Sam Atlea, Norman Glickman, Lester Creenberg, Harry Leddel, Robert Maimes, Dave Neimety, Jerome Sugarman, Joseph Wilensky. Asher. Atlas, Gordon, Haft Hart, Hattenbach, Himovitz. Hirshfield. Kahn Kantro. Kaplan, Leddell, Lewis, Lipman Maimes, Parness. Rosen. Rubin. Shackmore Shifman. Simon. Spilker, E. Tauber. R. Tauber Wasserman, Weisbart. Wilensky, Witty. Ziegler Paul Rousso President 334 It Alw-nrth. Bensintrer. Bickel. Bollin. Brij, ' ht. Bushnell. Cannell Carrinprton. Clark. Culltn var  i. Duntlt-y. Frankish. Gardner, Greening Hamilton. Hirth. Hitt. Howell, Hutton, M. Johnson. R, Johnson Klitten. Koch, Knox, Lawless, Lee. Lefevre, Martin Mills, Mohr, Muchmore, Nittinger, Parker, Petzelt, Philip PitOiet, Ramsey, Rodeen. Sackett, Schmidt, Shafer, Shannon Shonnard, A. Smith, C. Smith, Stampley, Stephen, Van de Verg, White Faculty; Ivan Benson. Bates Booth, Aubrey Devin , Seniors: Kenneth Bright. Albert Casey. Herbert Fox, Ed Norman, Wilbur Piguet. James Rickard. Kenneth Shannon, De Verg. Juniors: Otto Bollin, Phillip Cannell. Richard Carrmgton, J gers Johnson, Elwood Lawless, Worth Martin, Dave Mohr, man Shafer. Claude Smith. Burdette Stam Sophomores: Nelson Cullenward. Martin Mills. Richard Widney. Pledges: Thomas Alworth, Robert Bensinger, James Bickel, Sherman Clark, Robert Duntley, Gordon Greening, Frank H William Hutton, DeWitt Knox, Gene Koch, Gilbert Kuhn, Muchmore, Chris Petzelt. Gilbert Philip. Don Rodeen, Pa Stevens. Marc Goodnow, P. A. Libby. ward Hirth, Robert Klitten, Dale Ludlow Shonnard, Nathaniel Van ack Frankish, Jack Gardner. Rod- Don Nittinger. Joe Ramsey, Nor- pley. Neil White. Parker. Leiand Schmidt. William Marvin Busby, William Bushnell, amilton, Robert Hitt, Bud Howell, Robert LeFevre, Jerry Lee. Gareth ul Sackett. Allen Smith, Harrison Sigma Nu 335 I Sigma Phi Epsilon Seniors: Bill Danziger, Ed Holston, Bob Johnson, |ohrj Leach, Willis Lowder, Dick MacDon- ald, Spence Tryon. juniors: John Cooper, Hal Forney, Lee Cuttero, Tom Kidd, Bill Tomin. ' Sophomores: Don Blanchard, Max Kistler, Vic Reid. Richard Ulrey, Morrie Westberg. Freshman: Rex Rosenburger. Pledges: Fred Adams, George Barber, Bill Berry, Fred Cadwallader, Ralph Ferrell, Dale Frady, John Heinz, Norm Johnson, Don McKellar, Evert Rose, Forrest Shannon, James Smith, Al Scowcroft, Rendall Terrell. Adams. Barber. Berry, Blanchard. Cadwallader Cooper. Frady, Heinz. Holston. N. Johnson R. Johnson. Kidd, Kistler. Lowder, MacDonald McKellar. Rtid. Rose, Rosenber er. Scowcroft Smith. Terrell. Tomin, Ulrey, Westberp John Leach President 336 I Baker. Hall. Bank. Bland. Bracht. Burrill Christensen, Cislini. Clark, Colwell. Dodge. Duffin. Gardiner Ghiglia. Griffith. C. Hart, G. Hart, Hogan, Howell. Hoyt Jackson. Jeffries. Jones. Lynch, MacLeod, Manning, Martin McKnight. McNeil, Millikan, Orton, Park, Privett, Radeck Reneck, Rose, Sanborn, Scannel, Shackelton, Stanford, A. Stephens O. Stephens. Stewart, Stinson, Stirrett, J. Weber, R. Webber, Wright Faculty: Dr. Duncan, Prof. Groves, Dr. Touton, Dr. Tieje. Seniors: Carlton Ball, Carl Bland, Willis Clark, Bundy Coswell, Leslie Hogan, )ohn Cooch, E. P. Lynch, George Millikan, Chester Orton, Curtis Youel, Alvin Sandborn. Juniors: Vernon Bank, Otto Christensen, Francis Cislini, Fred Dodge, Al Loerch, Bob McNeil, Frank Park, Patrick Scannel, John Stinson, Bob Webber, John Webber, Ed Wheeler. Sophomores: Philip Jones, Amy Rose, Albert Lee Stephens, Jr. Pledges: Cal Baker, Fred Burrell, Charles Gardiner, Frank Ghiglia, Stebbins Griffith, Sammy Brock, Russell Harriss, Chandler Hart, George Hart, Darwin Howell, Brook Hoyt, George Jack- son, Willard Jeffries, Ed Koopman, Lowell Martin, Bob McKnight, Norman McCleod, Ham Pearce, Jack Privett, Justin Radick, Harry Renick, Al Reboin, Wally Stanford, Lloyd Sterrett, Harry Shackelton, Charles Stuart, Clark Stephens, Everett Winn, Ed Wright, Tom Duffin, Rudy Shifman, Paul Manning. Phi Kappa Tau 337 Delta Chi Faculty: O. P. Cockerill Seniors; Cavm Craig. Rollin Cish. Maurice Hibbert, Edward Marshal, Easton Roberts, Joseph Sullivan. Juniors; Raoul Dedeaux, Day Hodges. Hal Kleinschmidt, Ross Miller, Cliff Reuman. Sophomores; James Beatson. Joel Evans, Benjamin Franklin, Jack Whitworth. Pledges: James Appleby, William Balbach, Paul Chandler, John Day, John Duzik, Roscoe Egan, Bartlett Henderson, Ted Jack, Norman Jacot, Kenneth Johnson, Bill McCuire, Kenneth Murphy, Lloyd Ostergard. Burton Roberts, Henry Rupp. Charles Warren, Henry Weir. Appleby. Balbach. Beatson, Chandler Dedeaux, Duzik, Evans. Franklin. Gish Henderson. Hibbert. Hodges, Jack, Johnson Kleinschmidt. Marshall. McGuire. Miller. Murphy Ostergard. B. R..).rrts, E Roljerts. Weir. Whitworth Spencer St. Clair President 338 t . p a p p o Abbott. Baker. Bishop. Blewitt Buckley. Bumstead. D, Davis. G. Davis. Fislier Fob s. Freeman. Gates, Gattman. Graber. Gray, Hall Hellman. Kins. Kraintz. Lancaster. Lautz. Millea. Melrose Morrow. Nagel. Norton. Olsen. Pabst. Paul, Propst Reed, Reid, Rice, Rounsavelle. Sedgwick. Stutsman. F. Thorn  iuist W. L. Thornquist. Thurlow, Vignolo, C. Walker, T. Walker, Wall, Williams Faculty: Dr. Benjamin, Willis O. Hunter. Seniors: George Blewitt, Bill Craber, Wendell Hellman. Carl Lautz, Joe Morrow, Kenneth Olsen, Bob Reed, Carl Stutzman, Charles Walker. Juniors: John Casper, Reed Gattman, Ed Hall, Fred Nagel, Bill Thornquist, Leavitt Thurlow, Ellerton Wall. Sophomores: Clyde Baker, Eames Bishop, Richard Buckley, George Davis, Robert Fahy, Claude Fisher, Fransic Fobes, Val Hoy, George Lancaster, George Pabst. Cliff Propst, John Rounsavelle, Allan Sedgwick, Robert Vignola. Freshmen; Ed Abbott, Henry Bumstead, David Davis, Thomas King, Robert Norton, Clifford Reid, Frank Thornquist, Theodore Walker. Pledges: Ray Burlison, Aldo Casseretto, Don Freeman, William Gaisford, Brooks Cray, Rudy Kraintz, Charles Latermer, Richard Melrose, Vaughn Paul, Leeland Rise, Charles Young. Phi Kappa Psl 339 Gamma Epsdon Faculty: Dr. John Eugene Harley, Earl Welch. Howard Alley, Jack Corham, Leslie Hoagland, Ralph Kalbus, Cordon Keim, Robert McCaw, Philip Tilden, Everett Yeo. Ona Conrad, Carry Cook, John Gilbert, Orval Stout. Sophomores; Ellis Dungan, Henry Pergrin. Seniors Juniors: Pledges: Louis Dreyer Ceorge Hill, Wesley Holzinger, Max Knepper, R. Moody, James Rogers, William Steepleton, Rudy Yarak. AMey. Conrad. Cook. Dreyer Duntran. Gilbert, Gorham. Hill Hoagland. Holtzinger. Kalbu.s. Keim Knepi  er. McCaw, Roane, Ropers Steepleton, Tilden, Yarak, Yeo Harold VIcek President 340 Robert Haugh President mml m M Amundson, Bauphn, Ballew CallaKhan, Cole. DeWolf, Durkee, Ga}j« Graves. Hammack, Hanlon, Henderson. Hosking, Hustead. IngersoU Kerr. Kirkpatrick, Litt. Louprhbourgh. Manning. Mason. McDonald McFadden, McKenney. McWood. Moore. P ' atterson. Patrick, Parry Peters. Pugh. Ralston. Scott. Setman. Searls. Trapp Tatsch. H. Tatsch. Turner. Wiley. H. Williams. M. Williams. Woodling Seniors: James Bermingham, Walt Bermingham. Theodore Dierks. Harvey Durkee. Sax Elliot. Ray Hudson, Herbert Johnson, Curtis McF adden, Alen McKenney, George Moore, Paul Norman, Harold Wiliams, Richard Yeamans. Juniors: Howard Bagley, Al Baughn, Crahm Berry, Beacher Callaghan, Richard Cole, Robert Haugh, Joe Kelly, Jack Layng, Evan Manning, Frank Tatsch, Herbert Tatsch, Homer Wood- ling, Thomas Young. Sophomores: Bill McWood, Harold Newell, Kenneth Peters, Robert Ralston, James Randack, Joe Wiley, Marsh V illiams. Pledges: Marty Agens, Raol Amundson, Bill Bailey, Herb Ballew, George Boone, Rod Cam- eron, Gene Culp, Alton Gage, Robert Guhres, Robert Graves, Scott Cunn, Bill Hanlan, Robert Heinze, Sewall Henderson, Ernest Holbrook, Everett Hosking, Lavern Hustead, Howard In- gersoll. John Kerr, Kenneth Kirkpatrick, Sheldon Loughbourgh, William Mason, Jack Mc- Donald, Dave C. Moore, Howard Patrick, Lawrence Patterson, Herb Perry, Robert Pugh, Bill Scott, Phillip Searls, Marsh Setman, Robert Trapp, Art Turner. Kappa Sigma 341 I Delta Sigma Pi Faculty: Ford K. Edwards, Dr. Earl Hill. Seniors: Mel Duryee, Pierce Powell. Juniors: Ernest Christenson, John Funk, Jay Hunt, William Lewis, Alfred Lindsay, Robert Lindsay. Edmundo Madrid, Ray Myers, Dave Osburn, Fred Schmandel, Fred Schroeder, Henry Sweetland. Sophomores: Joe Huskie, Joe Webber Freshmen: Clive Dawson, Herbert Linden, Henry Lindsey, Robert Mayo, Cordon Yarlot. Pledges: Vance Anderson, William Ross. Campbell, Dawson. Funk Hill, Huskie, Lewis, Linden A. Lindsay, R. Lind. ay. Lindsey, Mayo Myers. Osbum, Powell, Ros.s Schmandel. Schroeder. Weiier YHr)i  tt Kern McLaughlin President 342 1 gpjm  Baeder. Belko, Bixler Booth. Butcher. Cary, Clark. Coldren Colt. Cramer. Eubanks. Fimple, Gracin. Graham. Green Halverson. Haworth. Henninpr. Herbert. Hoyt. Hubbard. Jennings Kaniman. Keliey. Kortlander, Moir. Moore. Oakley. P ' ace Phares, Preston. Richardson. Schmitt. Scott. Smith, Spicer Stair, Stroup, Tejada, Van Steenwyk. Wattelet. White, Wieland Graduates: |ames Booth, Gardner McCartney, Edward Neuhoff. Faculty: Frank Nagely Seniors: James Clark, Henry Colt, Philip Graham, Earl Hardage, John Haworth, Robert Kort- lander, Glenn Phares, W. Wieland, Juniors: B. W. Bixler, John Coldren, James Fimple, Warren Green, Wallace Halverson, Park- man Moore, Charles Preston, Howard Scott. Sophomores: George Butcher, Ralph Cramer, R. Van Steenwyck. Pledges: Charles Baeder, Max Belko, Len Cary, Richard Eubanks, Jerry Gracin, Arthur Hen- ning, Paul Herbert, Robert Hoyt, Frank Jennings, Thomas Keliey, Henry Kamman, James McMunn, Dan Moir, Albert Oakley, Paul Pace, Spencer Richardson, H. Schmitt, Cecil Smith. Leslie Spicer, Jack Stair, R. Stroup, ). Tajada, Ross Wattelet, John White. PI Kappa Alpha 343 Beta Kappa Faculty: Harry Reed Seniors: Leo Hunter, John Lassalette. Walter R. Powers, Val H. Thomas. Juniors: Thomas Bonney, )oe Briggs. John Hoover, |ames B. Lauderdale, Jay Orem, Donald Painter, Eugene Rodriguez. Sophomore: Woodrow W. Crank Freshman: Harry Nolder Pledges: Umbest Anz, Robert Dixon, Herman Tejada. Bonney, Brings, Dixon, Gross Hoover, Hunter, Lassalette, Lauderdale Nolder, Orem, Painter, Powers Sellers, Tejada. Thomas. Traxler Watson Rose President 344 Blumenthal. Coates, Cohen Finkel, Gameral. Geizer, Goldstein Gordon. Hirshberjr. Horwitz, Kates, Lande Marcus, Mathes, Matlaf, Mizrack, Nanas Nemer, Newman, Rappaport. Riehbart, Roberts Rosen, Schulman, Siskin. Steinman, Weinberger Faculty: William E. Burby Graduates: Harold N. Finkel, Shurley M. Hirshberg, Nathan Kates, Herbert Lande, Sid B. Levine, Milton Newman, Julius Siegel, Leo Siskin. Seniors: Arthur M. Cameral, Leo A. Cordon, Menville Mathes, |erry Nemer, Samuel S. Riehbart, Joseph Rosen. Juniors: Gabriel S. Blumenthal, Harry Goldstein, Harry Matlaf. Sophomores: Joseph L. Roberts. Victor Schulman. Pledges: Charles Coates. Abraham Cohen. George Geizer. Lawrence Horwitz. Murry Marcus. Lawrence Mizrack. Fred M. Nanas, Marvin Rappaport, Elliott M. Steinman, Williard Weinberger. Tau Epsilon Phi 345 Outstanding Greeks Phi Sigma Kappa: Ward Browning, Frank Carter, Edward Jones. Sigma Chi: Julius Bescos, Robbins Chadil, Robert Love. Delta Chi: Rod Dedeaux, Hal Kleinschmidt. Kappa Sigma; Robert Haugh, Herbert Tatsch, Hal Williams. Phi Kappa Psi : Fred Nagel, Kenneth Olsen, Robert Reid. Phi Kappa Tau: Otto Christensen, Francis Cislini, Sherman Jensen. Sigma Nu: Jack Frankish, Roy Johnson. Ludlow Shonnard. Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Paul Bryan, Mark Jones, Irvine Warburton. Kappa Alpha: Garland Matthews, Russell Nixon, John Seixas. Delta Sigma Phi: William Lewis, Robert Lindsay. Pi Kappa Alpha; B. W. Bixler, James Clark. Sigma Phi Epsilon: John Leach, Victor Reid. Camma Epsilon: Les Hoagland, Harold VIcek. Tau Epsilon Phi: Sid Levine, Harry Matlaf. Beta Kappa; Thomas Bonney, Watson Rose. Chi Phi: Buzz Ellis, Duncan Puett. Zeta Beta Tau: Paul Rousso, Bud Simon. Bescos, Bixler. Bonney, Browning, Bi-yan, Carter Chadil, Christensen, Cislini, Clark, Dedeau, Ellis Frankish, Haugh, Hoagland, Jensen. Johnson, E. Jones M. Jones, Kleinschmidt, Leach. Levine. Lewis. Lindsay Love. Matlaf. Matthews. Nagel. Nixon. Olsen Puett. R. Reid. V. Reid. Rose. Rousso. SeLxas Shonnard. Simon. Tatsch. Vlcek. Warburton. Williams Lawrence Pritchard Outstanding Creek 346 ; i SORORITIES From the rushing tea at the start of the fall term for entering Fresh- men to final sorrowful farewells paid Seniors during commence- ment week, the teas, dinners, dances and dates of every sorority woman made for her a year full of thrilling experiences. In the truest sense of the word the sororities were sisterly organizations, band- ing together for mutual festivities and for mutual assistance. A fall formal and a spring sports dance were sponsored by the Panhellenic Council. 347 Pankellenic Council Alpha Chi Omega: Virginia Adams. Helen Allis. Alpha Delta Pi: Rosemary Lick, Mary Todd. Alpha Delta Theta: Eloise Steckel. Alpha Epsilon Phi: Wilma Cordon, Eleanor Neft. Alpha Camma Delta: Barbara Anderson, Kathryn Kleiber. Beta Sigma Omicron: Norma Jones, Mary Ellen Miller. Delta Delta Delta: Elizabeth Bastanchury, Betty De Kruif. Delta Camma: Rose- mary Arena, Margaret Ellis. Delta Zeta: Nadine Coodheart, Rowena Ingold. Kappa Alpha Theta: Audrey Austin, Dorothy Edmunds. Kappa Delta: Virginia Huffine, Marjorie Malloy. Phi Mu: Jane Essick, Doris Lapham. Pi Beta Phi: Kathryn Moss. Zeta Tau Alpha: Mary Frances Allen, Virginia Daniel. Adams. Allis. Lick. Todd. Steckel Gordon. Neft, Kleiber, Anderson, Jones Miller, Bastanchury. DeKruif. Arena. Ellis Goodheart. Hachten. Austin Edmunds. Huffine Malloy, Lapham, Moss, Allen, Daniel f.   S . Ruth Laveaga President 348 Harriet Louise Teuton President A -i mLB..Wm J 7 M. Adams. V. Adams. D. Allis. H. Allis. Anderson. Belshe. Bernai-din Bierlich. Bogardus. Bonner. Bowel!. Bower. Brown. Bryant Cameron. Currey. Dunlap. Dunn. Dyer. Farmer. Folsom Fraser, Hart. Jackson. Jess. Johantpen. Johnson. Jones King. Knopsnyder. Laton, Leidholt. Levins. Lytie. MacGinnis McCIure. McDoniel. McPhee. Norton. Olson. Otto. Perry Pierce, Ridenour. Roberts. Slabauch. Taylor. Thompson, Tribit R. Vandesrift. V. Vanileerift. Weiss. D. White. P. White, Williamson, Wilson Faculty: Clara Stevenson Graduates; Margaret Bryant, Myra Jane McClung, Adele Stanley. Seniors: Maxine Adams, Marjorie Cameron, B. Virginia Dunn, Helen Fraser, Mary Gene Hart, Priscila Roberts, Helen Slabaugh, Harriet Louise Touton, Ramona Vandegrift, Kathryn Weiss, Polly White. Juniors: Virginia Adams, Helen Anderson, Helen Allis, Betty Lee Bonner, Elizabeth Bower, Corinne Currey, Jane Johantgen, Mary Lou Johnson, Eleanor Levins, Phyllis Norton, Sally Ride- nour, Eloise Thompson. Sophomores: Dorothy Allis, Joy Bierlich, Ruth Bogardus, Frances Brown, Mary Bernice Dun- lap, Mary Dyer, Louise Farmer, Frances Folsom, Winifred Jones, Janet King, Rosine Leidholt, Jane McPhee, Genevieve Olson, Phyllis Otto, Virginia Bowker Perry. Pledges: Maxine Belshe, Ernestine Bernardin, Betty Bowell, Betty Jackson, Eleanor Jess, Lois Knopsnyder, Letitia Lytle, Mercedes MacGinnis, Patricia McCIure, Velma McDoniel, Patricia Pierce, Marjorie Taylor, Helen Tribit, Dolland White, Helena Williamson, Helen Wilson, Alpha Chi Omega 349 Kappa Delta Faculty: Dr. Faye Adams, Beth Tibbet. Seniors: )oy Camp, Edith Cibbs. Margaret Hufford, Catherine McBride, Phyllis Morris, Mable Pruitt, Audrey Raymer. Lucille Ritter, Eleanor Wells, Margaret Wilson. Juniors: Virginia Huffine, Lenore Hunt, LaVeryne Kerr, Betty Price. Sophomores: Mary Jane Allen, Roberta Board, Aileen Brown, Eloise McClary, Marjone Mal- lory, jean Sheldon, Catherine Tuttle, Virginia Weatherby. Pledges: Jean Cortese, Dorothy Dutcher, Mae Egland, Borgny Harem, Virginia Hagan, Beat- rice Hayes, Helen Listerud, Maxine Rose, Verna Nelson, Barbara Ward, Mildred Wells, Rip- ples von Reutepohler. Allen. Board, Brown. Cortese Dutcher, Egland. Gibbs, Harem, Hayes Hagan. Huffine. Hufford, Hunt. Kerr. Listel-ud McBride. McClary, Nelson, Mallory. Morris. Price Pruitt. Raymer, Ritter. Rose. Sheldon, Tuttle Von Reutepohler. Ward, Weatherby, E. Wells. M. Wells. Wilson FM4. I ' Joy Camp President 350 I  ' W  iM Mary Louise Boueile President ■f-- 0  A. Allen, L. Allen. Arneil, Austin, Baitiie, Baird. Barnard Baxter, Bradford. Broomfield, Chase, Clarke, Conner. Cravath Dacin. Davies, Edmunds, Ferrey, Fletcher, Frailey, Gripsby Harsrave, Harris, Holdridge, B. Hostettler, M. Hostettler, Jackson, Lewis Luellen, Martin, G. Mayson, N. Mayson, McKay. Newkirk. Norris Phillips, Putnam. Raney. Redfield. Rockwell. Rogers, Shaw Pea Shepherd, Marj. Shepherd, Sides, Smith, D. Stephens, M. Stephens. Stevens Townsend. Wallis, Wathey, Weaver, Williams, Wilson, Wirsching Faculty: Ruth R. Brown Seniors: Mary Louise Boueile, Ruth Bradford, Dorothy Clarke, Madeline Cravath, Dorothy Edmunds, Caroline Ferrey, Mary Hargrave, Dons Luellen, Ethel Redfield. Juniors: Annabelle Allen, Lois Allen, Audrey Austin, Marjorie Baillie, Jana Barnard, Marthael- len Broomfield, Margaret Chase, Marion Davies, Hope Lewis, Peggy Phillips, Dorothy Stephens, Margaret Stephens, Ellen Stevens, Virginia Williams. Sophomores: Gladys Harris, Stacy Hill, Betty |ackson, Margaret McKay, Margaret Shepherd, Frances Townsend, Rosemary Weaver, Margaret Wirsching. Freshmen: Martha Baird, Carrie Louise Newkirk, Edith Mae Raney. Pledges: Nancy Arneil, Aline Baxter, Pauline Conner, Virginia Dacon, Betty Fletcher, Dorothy Frailey, Mary Crigsby, jaydeen Holdridge, Bessie Hostettler, Billie Hostettler, Carolyn Martin, Grace Mayson, Nellie Mayson, Margaret Norris, Betty Putnam, Helen Rockwell, Margaret Rog- ers, Marjorie Shepherd, Jane Sides, Janet Smith, Geraldine Wallis, Betty Wathey, Betty Wilso-  Kappa Alpha Tketa 351 Delta Zeta Graduate: Lyda-Blithe Richman Seniors: Ann Hewitt McBeath, Charlotte Smale, Florence Richert, Betty Ritchie, Margaret Thomas, Florence Witter. Juniors: Hazele Fargo. Nadine Coodheart, Mabelalice Hachton, Edythe Kaneen, Dorothy Landine. Sophomores; Alma Drexler, Sally Griffiths, Rowena ingold. Pledges: Mary Benjamin, Gertrude Mergin, Marjorie Brock, Ruth Close, Anna May George, Marguerite Immel, Eleanor Lewis, Patricia Mathias. Verna McConnell, Alize Parie, Jane Fran- cis Reed, Helen Scouller, Alice Stephenson, Alice Turner, Irene Valeska, Patricia Van Norden. Benjamin. Berlin. Brock, Close, Drexler FarK   . Georpe. Goodheart. Grifl ' ith.s. Hachton Immel. Inpold. Kaneen. Landine, Lewis Mathias, McBeath, McConnell, Parle, Reed Richert. Ritchie. Scouller. Smale. Stephenson Thomas. Turner. Valeska, Van Norden. Witter f©a £J Lyda-Blithe Richman President 352 I Bettie Maas President Alfs. Anderson. Atlce. Baash Bawden. Blow. Boos. Booth. Bushard Cranz. DeBIois. dei ' Eau. Dorn. Dutton. Edick. Eymann Hanawalt, Henderson. Hill. HotTman. Hopkins, Intrebrand. Kent Kroeprer. Leinau. Lick. MacKenzie. Martin. McCulloch. McGuire Merriman. Murphy. O ' Connor. Preston. Price. Redden. Robbins Skaggs, Stafford. Stark. Steere. Stimson. Stockwell. Thatcher Todd. Urquhart. Waddell, Welch. WiUianr.s. Wiley. Woods Seniors: Grace Baash. Betty Cranz, Winifred Dutton, Grace Edick, Florence Eymann, Rose- mary Lick, Bettie Maas, jean McCulloch, Virginia McCuire, Grace Mackenzie, Marion Rob- bins, Mary Jo Stimpson, Betty Stockwell, Donalda Urquhart. luniors: Margaret Bawden, Catherine Bushard, Carlotta Dodge, Bernice Hoffman, May Kroe- ger, Esther Merriman, Betty Preston, Mary Price, Mary Jane Thatcher, Martha Williams. Sophomores: Marion de Blois, Edith Dorn, Phyllis Hill, Frances Leinau, Kathleen Murphy, Aileen O ' Connor, Mary Todd, Ernestine Welch. Freshman: Virginia Steere Pledges: Barbara Alfs, Brenda Jane Boos, Mary Jane Booth, Jacqueline D ' Leau, Eugenia Ford, Isabel Hanawalt, Betty Henderson, Barbara Hopkins, Josephine Kent. Mary Ingebrand. Mary Ellen Stark, Helen Waddell. Jean Woods. Alpha Delta Pi 353 Zeta Tau Alpha Faculty: Lillian Backstrand, Helen Moreland. Seniors: Eleanor Berls, Dana Charles, Betty Cillen, June Holman, Eileen Landers, Mary Larc, Nannette Rittler, Nancy Wall. Juniors: Virginia Daniel, Thelma Peterson, Helen Marie Ross. Sophomores: Mary Frances Allen, Ida Mae Compere, Marjorie Casey, Virginia Crewell, Hen- ryta Hermsen. Pledges: Dorothy Abraham, Marian Allum, Letitia Bartlett, Martha Cloive, Betty Edwards, Dorothy Franks, Louise Greenwood, Jesslyn Hair, Nell ie Long, Mary Moncrief, Mary O ' Sulli- van, Lee Powell, Margaret Snyder. Abraham, Allen, Allum Bartlett. Berls. Casey. Cloive. Compere Daniel, Edwards, Franks. Greenwood, Grewell Hair, Hermsen, Holman, Landers, Larco Lonjf, Monerielf. O ' SulIivan, Peterson. Powell Rittler, Ross. Snyder, Tondro, Wall Betty Lee Cillen President 354 Jane Wall President Ayara, Blake. Boorse Boynton, Bradford. Cahoon. Colyear. Craw-forf E. Dean, P. Dean. Dinsle. Ellis. Foulkes. Fox. Gude Herbei-ts. Johnson. Jones. KaulTman. Killgore, King. Klitten Lane. Lee. Lippitt. Livingstone, MacLean. McGee. McNeil Moss. Nims. Orr. Randack, Reid. Reynolds, Rockwell Roth, Schneider, Siegmund, Smith. Sterry. Thompson. Tuttle Tyner. Vance, voii KleinSmid. Waggoner. Wheeler. Williams, V. Williams Faculty: Cloyde Dalzell, Pearl Aikin-Smith. Seniors: June Bradford, Helena Dingle, Christy Fox, Roberta von KleinSmid. Jane Wall. Juniors: Alice Aya rs, Marguerite Blake, Betty Colyear. Bernice Foulkes, Margaret Johnson, Dorothy Klllgore, Nancy Klllgore, Grace McGee, Joan McNeil, Kathryn Moss, Lemore Randack, Jane Reynolds, Jane Schneider, Marian Siegmund, Jean Williams. Sophomores: Edith Crawford, Elizabeth Kean, Patricia Dean, Haila Gude, Evelyn Herberts, Betty Klitten, Dicksy Lane, Barbara Lee, Jane Lippitt, Phyllis Livingston, Marguerite Reid, Marjorie Roth, Margaret Thompson, Shirley Vance. Pledges: Cerda Boorse, Lois Boynton, Virginia Cahoon, Martha Ellis, Dickey Jones, Barbara Nims, Doris King, Annetta Kauffman, Merabeth Orr, Lucy Ann MacLean, Ruth Rockwell, Betty Smith, Louise Sterry, Virginia Tyner, Jane Tuttle, Helen Waggoner, Dorothy Wheeler, Virginia Williams. Pi Beta Phi 355 Pki Mu Faculty: Miss Edith Weir Seniors: Dorothy Dice, Mary Lou Heath, Bernice Keefe, Jule Maureaux, Hazel McCord, Mau- rene Mottinger, Charlotte Mountjoy, Mane Ramsey, Esther Sparks, Rosa Lee Teach. Juniors: Mary K. Cam, Doris Lapham. Sophomores: Cwen Bailey, Marjorie English. Pledges: Victorine Addison, Reginalds Bradshaw, Mirian Cameron, Eleanor Friend, Dorothy Cilstrop, Betty Keekr, Camella Janke, Isabel Rawley, Helene Raynor, Kathleen Wright. Addison. Bailey, Bradshaw Cain. Enslish. Friend. Gilstrap. Heath Janke. Keefe. Keeler. Knappen. Lapham Maureaux. McCord. Mottinser, Mountjoy. Rowley Rayner. Sparks. Tearh. Willinms. WriL ' ht Marie Rams3y President 356 I Harricff McMarfin President  k MJ ) J .ii  ' • V, Adams. Arena. Banks Bartow, Bennison. Bergey. Bevis Beymer, BieK. Bohlinirer. Carpenter. Christenson. Cockerill Davis. Eel.s. Ellis, Elvad. Fislier. Gardner Hanna. Hathaway. Holme, G. Houck, H. Houck, Hunt Jarecki, Jones, Lembka. Lox-ell, L. Naepele, V. Naegele Persinprer, Russell, Scott. Sin;; er. Speare. Stanwood Trengove, Warner. Warner. Weymouth, Whitehorn, Wright Seniors; Eileen Christenson, Dorothy Davis, Dorothy Eels, Helen Houck, Betty Jones, Roberta Persinger, Audrey Stanwood. Juniors: Rosemarie Arena, Jane Bennison, Murietta Bergey, Louise Hathaway, Dorothea Jarecki, Harriett McMartin, Lorraine Naegele, Ruth Russell, Diane Wagner. Sophomors: Lucile Behlinger, Betty Cockerill, Margaret Ellis, Grace Houck, Sheila Hunt, Har- riet Lembka, Draxy Trengove, Donna Whitehorn. Freshman: Margaret Holme. Pledges: Priscilla Adams. Carol Banks, Jennie Bevis. Margaret Beymer, Earlene Bilg, Claire Carpenter, Marjorie Elvad, Louise Fisher, Clarice Lee Gardner, Betty Hanna, Irene Lovell. Vivian Naegele, Margaret Carol Scott, Lorraine Singer, Joy Speare, Carol Warner, Carol Wey- mouth, Eloise Wright. Delta Gamma 357 Alpha Epsilon Phi Graduate: Edythe Lee Brown Seniors: Eleanor Stoller, Regina Wallenstein. Juniors; Ruth Markowitz, Eleanor Neft, Helen M. Stern, Gwendolyn Wolf. Sophomores: Wilma Gordon, Sydell Weinstein. Freshman: Regina Colton Pledges: |ane Cassell. Goldie Cohen, Jane Hartzell, Gladys Horowitz, Louise Kaufman, Rose- line Keen, Ann Levitt, Lenore Primock, Ruth Rowe, Sybil Silberstein, Dorothy Spier, Virginia Smith, Vivian Wolf. Brown, Cassell, Cohen Colton, Gordon, Hartzell, Horowitz Kaufman, Keen, Levitt, Markowitz, Neft Primock, Rowe, Silberstein, Smith, Spier Stoller, Stern, Weinstein, G. Wolf, V. Wolf Regina Wallenstein President OfA i 358 Alice Carter President Anderson, Behlow. Bell, Bronson, Brown, Christopherson Crandall, Detweiler. Punn, Fennessy, Gates. Gluck Graham, Guy, HayneB, Hebert, Hitchcock, Johnson A. Jones, H. Jones, Kleiber, Knipht, Kriewitz, Laveaga Lawson, Marks, Marsden, McBeth, McKelvey, Moore Morehouse, Morse, E. Olsen, N. Olsen. Schmidt, Schulte Sinclair, Slemmons, Smith, Thomas, Turney, Walton Seniors; Dorothy Behiow, Bernice Bronson, Alice Carter, Selma Clothier. Yvonne Crandall, Marcia Fennessey. Frances Ann McBeth, Jacqueline Morehouse, Evelyn Olsen. Nelda Olsen, Lilah Schulte, Marjorie Thomas, Sonia Turney. )uniors: )ane Alvies, Barbara Anderson, Virginia Christopherson. Irene Gluck, Evelyn Johnson. Aileen Jones. Kathryn Kleiber. Flora Knight. Ruth Laveaga, Lillian Marks, Mar)orie McKelvey, Dorothy Slemmons. Sophomores; Marion Graham. Betty Hitchcock. Pledges; Raynelle Bell, Calista Brown. Helen Detweiler, Charlotte Dunn, Suzanne Gates, Helen Guy, Myra Haynes. Louise Hebert. Helen Jones, Louis Kriewitz, Lucille Lawson, Gretchen Marsden, Marjorie Moore, Margaret Morse, Bernice Pointer, Caroline Schmidt, Ruth Sinclair, Alene Smith, Mary Walton. Alpha Gamma Delta 359 Beta Sigina OmLcron Faculty: Dr. Mildred Struble Graduates: Dorothy Campbell. Kathenne Cox, Mariorle Craford, Marion Darlington, Frances Eckstrom, Pauline Gastrich, Blanche Hughes, Edna Hughes, Doris Kirkeby, Edith Maxam, Helen Osgood. Seniors: Miriam Brown, Billie Clifton, Dorothy Gordon, Evelyn Kircher, Martha Allen Lee, Nellie Pelton. Juniors: Norma Jones, Mary Ellen Miller, Dorothy Segar. Sophomores: Virginia Christie, Lois Paxton. Pledges: Mary Bergin, Jeanette Lefener. Mary Jakes. Berffin, Christie. Clifton Eckstrom, Jones, Lee Miller, Pelton, Segal- Miriam Brown President 360 Margaret Cannon President Badhatn. Banta. Bastanchury. Bazell Beaudine, Blake, Boyett, Brown. Butler, Cowgill Davidson, DeKruif, Dunham, Edwards, Elliott. A. E ans B. E  ' ans, Fisher. Gannon. Gerardi. Gray. Graniper Lawshe. Lazar. Libby. McMaster. Michener. Miller Monroe, Moore. Morgan. Nelson, Prichard, Scott Sullivan, Taylor, Webb, Whitelaw, Wicks. Wood Seniors; Wilma Bazell, Dorothy Boyett, Joan McMaster, Frances Moore, Eleanor Scott, Dylene Tarchone, Keithia Wicks. luniors: Kleva Badham, Elizabeth Bastanchury, Margaret Cannon. Barbara Cerardi. Margaret Cray, Cwendolyn Wood. Sophomores: Emily Butler, Betty De Kruif, Jeanne Dunham. Eileen Cannon. Nancy Monroe, Virginia Webb. Pledges: Lois Banta. Helen Beaudine, Ann Blake, Alys Ruth Brown. Dorothy Cowgill. Cladius Davidson, Judy Elliott, Enid Edwards, Anne Evans, Barbara Evans. Fay Fisher, Patricia Crani- ger. Johanna May Lawshe, Kathleen Lazar, Crace Estelle Libby, Peggy Long, Betty Michener. Barbara Miller, Mary Morgan, Rosemary Nelson, Alicia Prichard, Nancy Sullivan. Ruth White- law, Delta Delta Delta 361 Alpha Delta Theta Faculty; Margaret Airston Graduates: Edith Eyre, Bessie McCollum. Senior: Helen O ' Brien juniors; Charlotte Kimber, Shirley Sanford, Eloise Steckel. Pledges; Margaret Airston, Sara Anson, Zena Arnold, Alice Denny. Airston, Anson Denny, Eyre, McCollum O ' Brien, Sanford, Steckel Charlotte Kimber President 362 I SOCIETIES High standards of service, honor and scholarship maintained by the large number of honorary organ- izations at Southern California augmented their already rich tra- ditions. New ones were built up through their many activities planned for the further better- ment of Troy. Social events as well as the other functions figured im- portantly in the program of the professional and honorary organ- izations. Their members, together with those of the purely service groups, worked harmoniously to- ward an even more glorious future for S.C. 363 Beta Gamma Sigma Faculty; H. Dean Campbell, Dean Rockwell D. Hunt, Dr. )oy L. Leonard, Dean Reid L. McClung. Dr. Wm. D. Moriarty, Dean Emery E. Olson, Prof. Rex Ragan, Prof. Thurston H. Ross, Dr. John C. Schaffer, Prof. Frank W. Woodbridge. Members: Irving S. Baum, Bruce J. Campbell, Wilbur Ray Garrett, Eugene P. Lynch. Dan McNamara, Morton McQueen Morehouse, D ' Alton B. Myers, Aloys Nicholson, Harper C. Olmstead, F. Pierce Powell, William Harry Silke, Ralph E. Snyder, LeRoy William Stoebe, Roberta von KleinSmid, )ames N. Wagner, Jose Zazueta. Baum. Brown D. Campbell. B. Campbell. Collum. Doubenmier Kagler. McClung. Powell. Reilfield Ragan. von KlpinSmiil, Wagner, Wtnnlbridge Eugene P. Lynch President 364 lames V. Cuthric President Baash, Bryan, Butcher, Campbell. Conser, De la Fuente Dunn, Eymann, Ferraris, Gish, Hill, Hoyt Johnson. Jones. Kerr. Kleib;r. Lawson, McCuUoch McClunji, Morehouse. Nozaki. Patterson. Phares. Preston Rockwell. Rose. Shaw. Smith. Stanley. Stcckel Thatcher. Thurlow, Turncy. Warner. Weiph. Zucco Faculty: H. Dean Campbell, John F. B. Carruthers, Mary L. Fossler, Earl W. Hill. Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid, Dr. O. J. Marston. Dr. Reld L. McClung, Dr. Frank C. Teuton. Actives: Grace Baash. Paul Bryan. Ralph Butcher. )r.. Frank Conser, Charles A. Cooper. Jr., Charlotte Dunn. Richard E. Echeverria. Florence Eymann, Velma Ferraris. Julio de la Fuente, Elmer Gorman, James Guthrie, H. Howard Hill. Robert Hoyt. Rodgers P. Johnson. Aileen Jones. Alexander H. Kerr, William Kerr, Katheryn Kleiber, Louise Kreiwitz, Frank Kurtz, Frederick Lantz, Lucile Lawson. Catherine S. Lea. Stewart Moody. Jacqueline Morehouse, Masao Nozaki. Inez Oelwine, Betty Preston. Charles Preston, Thomas A. Rockwell. Evan K. Shaw, Morgan E. Stanley, Argyle Smith, Elouise Steckel, Mary Jane Thatcher, Leavitt Thur- low, Jr., Soma Turney. Dudley A. Warner. John Weigh. Kein Wong. Clyde Zucco. Pledges: Lillian Gaines, Jack Rose, Walter Patterson. Alpha Eta Rho 365 Phi Chi Theta Members: Thelma Barton, Jane Barwick, Wilma Bazell, Ruth Evans, Pauline Forsythe, Dorothy Cnzzle, Lona Hamilton, Doris Lapham, Bettie Maas, Reid McClung, Hazel McCord. Frances Moore, Nellie Pelton, Dorothy Segar. Barton, Barwick Boyett, Evans. Forsythe, Grizzle Hamilton, Lapham, Maas, McClung McCord. Moore, Pelton, Segar Wilma Bazen President 366 Bailie, Bixler. Carter Caveney. Clarice, Christeriben, Dedeaux, Ellis, Haugh Hilton, Holston, Horgran. Jones. Justice, Lewis Lindsay, Leach. Love, McLeod, McNeil, Morrell Nagel, Nelson. Olsen. Popgri. Pritchard, Robinson Rousso, Sether, Shafer, Smith, Tienken, Wilder Members: William Bailie, B. W. Bixler, lames Booth, Frank Carter, Edward Caveney, Otto Christensen, Paul Clarke, Charles Clay, Raoul Dedeaux, Elbert Ellis, Robert Gardner, Robert Haugh, Dale Hilton, Edward Holston, Patrick Horgan, Roy Johnson, Elwood lones, Richard Justice, Harvey Lewis, )ohn Leach, Robert Lindsay, Robert Love, Turner McLeod, Robert McNeil, Robert Morrell, Fred Nagel, Jack Nelson, Kenneth Olson, Ernest Oswald, Richard Poggi, Lawrence Pritchard, Frederic Robinson, Paul Rousso, Wendell Sether, Norman Shafer, Chester Tienken, Jack Wilder. Trojan Knights 367 Alpha Chi Alpha Faculty: Elizabeth Jones, juIia McCorkle. Actives: Elsa Blow. Christy Fox, Jane Corham, Aiteen Jones, Sonia Turney, Margaret Walters. Pledges: Ruth Come, Kay Moss, Mabel Alice Hachten, Vera Popovsky. Blow, Camp Coine, Fox, Fraser Goodheart, Hachten, Haynes, Jones Kinjj, Moss, Popovsky, Turney fl Ch  Margaret- Walters President 368 ii Joan McMaster President %i.  Adams. Camp, Christopherson Cutler. Duckwall. Edick. Fox Gerardi, Gibbs, Gillen. Hachten, Hathaway, Holman Jones, Laton. Lloyd, Maas, McCuIloch. Morehouse Popovsky. Ramsey. Reynolds. Richert, Redfield. Rittler Sherwin. Teuton. Turney,  ' on KleinSmid, Walters, White Members: Maxine Adams, Joy Camp. Virginia Christopherson, Billie Cutler, Mary Kay Duck- wall, Grace Edick, Christy Fox, Barbara Gerardi, Edith Gibbs, Betty Gillen, Mabel Alice Hachten, Louise Hathaway, )une Holman, Betty Jones, Marga et Llcyd. Betti3 Maas, Jean McCullouch, Joan McMaster, Jackie Morehouse, Eleanor Neft, Vera Popopsky, Mane Ramsey, Ethel Redfield, Jane Reynolds, Florence Richert, Nannette Rittler, Billie Rogers, Martha Sher- win, Harriet Louise Touton, Sonia Turney, Roberta von KleinSmid, Margaret Walters, Mary Elizabeth White. Amazons 369 Gamma Beta Alpha Faculty; Dean Ray Immel. Mulvey White, Active: Kleva Badham, Richard L. Bare. Reginald Bradshaw, Marjorie English, John Fox, Ana May George, Nadine Coodheart, John Hoover, Richard Huddleston, Marian Hughes, F. Clinton )ones, Doris Lapham, Thomas Lawless, Helen Listerud, Dorothy Martin, Bess Mat- thew, Robert McCaw, Harry Matlaf, Paul Randall, Margaret Reynolds, Claude C. Smith, Jr., Cecille Thurlow, Shirley Vance. Badham, Bare English. Hoover. Lapham Martin. Matthew. McCaw. Mountjoy Randall. Reynolds. Smith. Vance W. L. Piguet President 370 I I Bernic Hirshfield President Breese, Callatzhan. Campbell Cannell, Christensen. Gruver, Hellman, Kahn Lambi, Lewis. MacDonald. Matthews, Petit Reid, Rockwell. Roome. Schloen. Sedgwick Shipman. Shonnard. Spraker, Stanley. Stones Stutzman. Tauher. Westberg. Witty. Woodling Members: Frank Breese. John Callaghan. Bruce Campbell. Phil Cannell. Otto Christensen. Newlin Cruver. Wendell Hellman. Bernie Hirshfield. Isador Kahn. )ack Lambi, William Lewis. Richard MacDonald. Pat Matthews, Bob Petit. Victor Reid, Thomas Rockwell. William Roome. William Schloen, David Sedgwick, Harry Shipman, Ludlow Shonnard, Everett Spraker, Morgan Stanley, Eddie Stones, Carl Stutzman. Raymond Tauber. Morns Westberg, Herbert Witty, Homer Woodling. Ball and Chain 371 Honorary Music Club Faculty: Paulir.e Alderman, )ulia Hawell, Pearl Alice Macloskey, Mable Woodworth. Actives: Mildred Carrico, Lotus Hawland, Edith Motridge, Verna McConnell, Eleanor Neft, Hazel Targo, Marion Tyler, Mary Elizabeth Waldorf, Margaret Walters, Mary Elizabeth White ' . Pledges: Mariam Cameron, Martha Davis, Alice Stevenson, Celeste Temple, Martha Thomp- son, Mariorie Volkele, Ruth Watanabe. Camnron, Davis Motridge, McConnell, Neft Stevenson, Targo, Temple, Tyler Volkele, Walters. Watanabe. White Marian Tyler President 372 Hugh Conley President Beck, Beanfield. Birch, Chamberlain, Dona Douglas, Eichler. Erven, Eschbach, Fellows Fennell, Hall. Janke, Kupfer, Marsh Miller, Moore, Nettle, Speck, Stancliff Stanley. Stinson, Wellington, Williams, York Faculty; William G. Angermann, Phillip S. Biegler, Loren T. Clark, )ohn F. Dodge, Thomas .T. Eyre, Robert M. Fox, Gilbert H. Dunstan, Fmley F. Neal, Arthur W. Nye, Frank ). Smith, D. Victor Steed, Hugh C. Willett, David M. Wilson. Members: Byron G. Beanfield, R. Donald Beck, Hugh C. Conley, William Eichler, Walter Eschbach, Ralph E. Hall, Paul Janke, Donald C. Marsh, George L. Miller, Randolph J. Speck, Ross Moore, Gilbert Stancliff, Willis B. Stanley, Lyall J. Stinson, Welton Wellington, Fred B. Williams, Lawrence York. Pledges; William Birch. Charles Chamberlain, Ted Dona, Courtney Douglas, Joe Erven, Wil- liam Fellows, John Fennell, Robert Kupfer, James Nettle. Sigma Phi Delta 373 Zeta Phi Eta Facuify ; Cloyde Dalzell, Tacie Hannah Rew, Florence Hubbard. Actives: Kleva A. Badham, Margaret Barton, Elizabeth Bower, Dorothy Davis, Winifred Dut- ton, Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, Jane Johantgen, Jane Welton. Pledges; Elaine Christianson, Mary Isabel Hanawalt, Helen Hougen, Bess Mathews, Mabel Pruitt, Margaret Reynolds, Helen M, Stern. Adams, Badham Bower, Davis. Button Hanawalt. Houcen. Hendricks. Johantgen Matthew, Pruitt, Reynolds. St rn Margaret Barton President 374 Edith Kennerd President Bo)?ardus. Brown. Crandall, Duckwall Eddy. Elliot. Gluck. Hitchcock. Hufford Jotfee. Lick. Lloyd. McBride. Marsden Popovsky. Raymer. Redden. Reed. Hitter Smith. Walters, Weatherby. Wells. Wilson Faculty: Adele Jallade. Dean Pearl Aiken Smith. Actives: Margaret Anderson, Ruth Bogardus, Adele Blackman. Mary Kay Duckwall, Dale Eddy, Helen Elliott, Ruth Frankel, Irene Cluck, Betty Hitchcock, Pat Hosford, Margaret Huf- ford, Edith Kennerd. Mable Langton, Lois Lloyd. Cretchen Marsden, Catherine McBride. Vera Popovsky, Winifred Redden, Jane Reed, Lorraine Smith. Mary Thompson, Virginia V eather- by, Eleanor Wells, Carby Wilson. Pledges: Margaret Clark. Carmen Fraide. CiLoman. 375 Phi Beta Kappa Faculty: L. Ames, H. D. Austin, F. M. Bacon, B. R. Baxter. K. M. Bissell, E. S. Bogardus, R. W. Brown, L. E. Burmeister, O. C. Burns, C. M. Case, O. W. E. Cook, J. D. Cooke, J. M. Cormack, L. Custard, R. B. Day, D. T. Early, P. J. Ewart, R. T. Flewelling, W. S. Ford, B. A. C. Fuller, A. Caw, C. V. Gilliland, J. E. Harley, ). G. Hill, R. D. Hunt, R. K. Immel, R. Kings- ley, C. S. Knopf, W. R. LaPorte, B. A. McLenahan, ). N. McCorkle, P. S. McKibben, R. Mal- com, C. B. Mangold, V. R. Mason. W. D. Moriarty, ). E. Nordskog, H. W. Patmore, L. M. Riddle, E. D. Starbuck. D. V. Steed, K. H. Stilwell, C. H. Thienes, W. Tilroe, F. C. Touton, E. R. Vollrath, R. B. von KleinSmid, L. Wann, H. C. Willett, E. F. Young. F. C. S. Schiller. Graduate Members: Winifred Biegler. Joseph B. Bobbitt, Margaret E. Bryant, Agnes D. Charles, Theron Freese, Dorothy E. Gathright, Barbara Hansen, Caroline E. Hodgdon, Irma G. Leamon. Verner L. Montgomery, Alexander Monteith, Mildred Pomeroy, Russell H. Sanborn, Helen H. Sanz. Charles Spaulding, Edith M. Taylor, Veryl Throckmorton, DeLoss Williams. Undergraduate Members: Bertha H. Boetticher, Willis Kenealy, Margaret Lloyd, Grace L. Love, Harold J. Magnuson, Harriet L. Touton, Rebecca Uhvits. Boetticher. Bryant. Charles Gleason, Kenealy, Reynolds, Roberts Rose. Touton, Uhvits, Wells 376 t liaitu s. Baum. Boetticher Campbell. Charles. CoUum. Conley. Gleason Harem. Hills. HutTord. Martin. Pelton Redfield. Reynolds. Rittler. Rives. Rose Touton. Uhvits, Walters, Wells. Wilson Members: Ruth Bartow, Irving Baum, Bertha Boetticher, Bruce Campbell, Dana Charles, Dorothy Collum, Hugh Conley, Clayton Cleason, Borgney Harem, |ohn Hills, Margaret Huf- ford, Victor Martin, Nellie Pelton, Ethel Redfield. Barbara Reynolds, Nannette Rittler, George Rives, Watson Rose, Harriet Louise Touton, Rebecca Uhvits, Margaret Walters, Eleanor Wells, Caiby Wilson. Pki Kappa Phi ill I Aristotelian Members; Leon Baron, Worth Bernard, Ellis Dungan. Donald Hickman, John Hoover, Robert McCaw, Frederick Schroeder, Claude Smith, Philip Tilden, Richard Weber, Everett Yeo, Baron, Bernar d Dungan, Hoover. McCaw, Schroeder Smith, Tilden. Weber, Yeo Donald Hickman President 378 Eugene Lynch President Bushard, Cislini, I etieaux. Doyle Guthrie, Hess. Hopkins. Horpan, Inp:ebrand McGinley. McGuire. Michel, Moore, Mustard O ' Sullivan. Parr, D. Powell, P. Powell, Robinson Rossiter, Scannell, Stewart. Valeska, Wall Actives; Catherine Bushard, Francis Cislini, Raoul Dedeaux, James Guthrie, Josephine Hess, Barbara Hopkins, Charles Herbst, Patrick Horgan, Mary Ingebrand, Geraldine Leslie, Eugene Lynch, ). Cordon Macker, Gene Mako, Virginia McCuire, Francis McGinley, John C. McKean, James McMunn, Lucille Moore, Jean Mustard, Pierce Powell, John Raymond, Fred Robinson, Patrick Scannell, Charles Stewart, Mary O ' Sullivan, Irene Valeska, Nancy V all. Pledge: Katherine Pavell Newman Club 379 Beta Alpka Psi Faculty: F. W. Woodbridge, R. Ragan, H. Dean Campbell, R. ). Burby. Actives: Richard Cole, |ohn Daubenmier, Clyde Johnson, Elmer Koyler, George Lamme, Eugene P. Lynch, William Parsons. George Peale. Edward C. Rider, Leon P. Saks. Camjibell, Daubenmier. Koyler Lynch. Peale, Rider Rap:an. Saks, Woodbridge Richard Cole President 380 ii Nelson Cullenward President Archibald, Beatson. Blanchard, Butcher Cooperider, Cramer. Dungan. Gardner. Ghiglia Hasbrouck. Isaac. Jones, Miles. Lancaster Littlejohn. Parker. RaUton. Rawlincs. Rossiter Simon. Spicer. Varnum. Weisbart, Weber Members; Charles Archibald, James Beatson, Don Blanchard, Ralph Butcher, Alan Cooperid- er, George Cramer, Ellis Dungan, Ted Gardner, Frank Ghiglia, Ted Hasbrouck, John Isaac, Philip Jones, Vincent Miles, George Lancaster, Lester Little|ohn, Richard Parker, Bob Ralston, Harvey Rawlings, Larry Rossiter, Lawrence Simon, Randall Spirer, Harvey Varnum, David Weisbart, Joseph Weber. Trojan Squires 381 Beta Pi Faculty: Dean P. S. Biegler, Prof. N. C. Clark, T. T. Eyre, Prof. A. B. Stevens. Prof. D. M. Wilson. Actives; Hugh C. Conley, Charles Dougherty, Rollin Gish, )ohn O. Hills, Louis Walstrom. Pledges: James Floyd, Roy |ohnston, Victor Martin, George Rives, Fred Williams. Conley. Dougherty Floyd. Gish. .Johnston Martin, Uivas, Williams John O. Hills President 382 Edward L. Jones President Brown. Bryan, took Enyeart. Ghiylia. Hill. Jones. Lindsay McClunc:. McEwen. Miles. Mustoe, Pritchard Rockwell. Rose. Schloen. Scott. Claude Smith Charles Smith. Tanner. Wagner. Webber. Zullig Faculty: Oliver Chatburn, Earl Hill, Oliver Marston, Dean Reid L. McClung, Frank Nagley. John Nordskog, Thurston Ross, Walter L. Sykes. Actives: Delbert Brown, Paul C. Bryan, Bundy Colwell. James Cook, Allen C. Enyeart. Frank Chiglia, Ed L. Jones, Phillip Jones, Robert Lindsay, Harold C. Mustoe, Paul McEwen, Vin- cent Miles, Jack Parker, Lawrence Pritchard, Thomas Rockwell, Jack Rose, William Schloen, Howard Scott, Claude Smith, Chas W. Smith, James Wagner, Raymond Zullig. Pledges: Leslie Tanner Alpha Kappa Psl 383 Lambda Kappa Sigma Faculty: Margaret Airston Actives: Mary C. Block, Jennie Folkers. Raia joffe, Gertrude Ruddick, Alice Slaughter, Har- riet Stryker, Helen Townsend. Pledges: Elsie Carrier, Mildred Sprinkle, Clarice Wood. Airston. Block Carrier. Folkers. Ruddick Sprinkle. Stiyker, Wood Raia Joffe President 384 Whitney R. Smith President Button, Comb, Cook Crosby. Davis, Garner. Garton George, Heaton. Indies, Kalionzes, Kline Klineerman. Mann. Mastnijietro. McBride, MeCall Miller, Slinkard. Tanner. Wea   er. Williamson Faculty: Verle L. Annis. Clayton M. Baldwin, Merrell Cage, Arthur Weatherhead. Actives: Robert H. Button, John Cook, Franklin F. Crosby. Rodney R. Garner, Culver Heaton, J. Ingels, Cus Kalionzes, Charles A. Klingerman, Denver D. Markwith, Carl L. Mastopietro, Lester F. McBride. Alexander ). McCall, Elmer J. Miller, Whitney R. Smith, Leslie S. Tanner. Alpha Rho Chi 385 Spooks and Spokes Actives: Elizabeth Bower, Margaret Chase. Corrine Currey, Barbara Gerardi, Mable Alice Hachten, Louise Hathaway. Margaret La ton, Phyllis Norton. Bower, Currey Gerardi. Hachten, Hathaway Norton, Strack, von KleinSmid f? -   m Iki ' iiiiii Margaret A. Chase President 386 Bettie Mass President Baash. Bai-ton Barwick, Davies. DeBlois, Essick Eyniann, Forsythe, Grizzle. Hill. Kroe er Mandell. McGuire, Presnell. Pelton, Raney Redden, Segar, Stephens, Teach, Walton Members; Grace Baash, Thelma Barton, Jane Barwick, Eloise Davies, Marian DeBlois, Jane Essick, Florence Eymann, Pauline Forsythe, Dorothy Grizzle, Phyllis Hill, May Kroeger, Maxine Mandell, Virginia McCuire, Lillian Presnell, Nellie Pelton, Edith May Raney, Wini- fred Redden, Dorothy Segar, Dorothy Stephens, Rosa Lee Teach, Mary Walton. Gamma Alpha Chi 387 Ma Phi Epsilon Members: Janef Bolton, Marion Johnston, Martha Melekov, Betty B. Moore, Marian Tyler, Mary Elizabeth Waldorf. Margaret Walters, Mary E. White. Faculty: Dr. Fay Adams Graduates: Helen Meadows Members: Yvonne Crandall. Dorothy Danner, Edith Cibbs, Audrey Rayner. Florence Richert, Betty Ritcher, Lucille Ritter. Pledges: Anna May George, Rowena Inoold, Ella Lear, Lois Lloyd, Mary Ellen Miller, Mable Pruitt nntor Johnston. Melekov, Tyler Waldorf, Walterd. White Betty Moore President 388 Lucille Ritfcr President I Crandall. Danner Elliott. Eymann, Georjie, Gibbs Hoelzel. Inuold. Lehr, Lloyd, Lundell Mathias, McBeath. Miller, Morris. P ' aull Potter, Rayiner, Richtrt, Ritchey. Warren Faculty: Dr. Fay Adams Actives: Yvonne Crandall. Dorothy Danner, Edith Cibbs, Helen Meadows. Audrey Raymer, Florence Richert, Betty Ritchey. Lucille Ritter. Pledges ' . Anna May George. Rowena Ingold, Ella Lear. Lois Lloyd, Mary Ellen Miller, Mable Pruitt. Pi Kappa Sigma 389 Phi Phi Faculty: Pauline Alderman, Dorothy Bishop, Leila Ellis, Julia Howell, Pearl Alice MacCloskey, C. E, Pemberton, Mrs. Adelaide Trowbridge Perry, Davol Sanders, Dean Walter F. Skeele, Alexander Stewart, Dean Swarthout, Dr. Arnold Wagner. Actives: Ruth Bartow, Orest Cianfoni, Marguerite Bitter-Clayton, John Ferguson, Clenna Could, Marion Johnston, Martha Melckov, Eleanor Neft, Mary Sousa, Adelaide Steward, Ma- rian Tyler, Mary Elizabeth Waldorf, Margaret Walters, Margaret Louise Warnecke, Mary Elizabeth White. Bartow Johnston. Neft, Tyler Waldorf, Walters. White Martha Melekov President 390 Edith Cibbs President Cain, Culler, Fogle. Funk Hoyt. Kaneen, Lovell. McBride Montgomery, Morehouse. Olsen, Pearce Prichard. Schulte. Scott. Strack Thomas, Tondro, Touton. Weiss i Members: Mary Cain, Billie Cutler, Ellora Fogle, Mary Funk, Mar|orie Hoyt, Edythe Kaneen, Irene Lovell, Catherine McBride, Dorris Montgomery, Jacqueline Morehouse, Nelda Olsen, Merlyn Pearce, Alicia Prichard, Lilah Schulte, Eleanor Scott, Celeste Strack, Margaret Thomas, Barbara Tondro, Harriet L. Touton, Kathryn Weiss. Pkl Beta 391 Eta Kappa Nu Faculty: Prof. Wm. Angermann, Dean P. S. Biegler, Prof. Nathan C. Clark. Prof. Gilbert H. Dunstan, Actives: Pliny M. Barnes, A. Wilton Chalfant, J. Glenn Floyd, M anuel de Lascurain, Malcolm Moninger, George S. Rives. Randolph Speck, Lawrence York. Floyd, de Lascurain Moninger, Rice Speck, York A. W. Chalfant President 392 Ella Lehr President Hiuck. Chl•i tie. C It.ik Crumrine. Goodheart. Harem. King Landine. Lea. McBeath. Morris Murphy. Nelson, Prnitt. Richer! Targo. Vaieska. Van Norden. Woolner Faculty: Dean Mary Sinclair Crawford Actives: Marjorie Brock, Virginia Christie, Adell Clark, Eugenie Crumrine, Borgney Harem. Mary Parker Lea, Margaret King, Ella Lehr, Ann McBeath, Muriel Morris, S. Elizabeth Mur- phy, Verna Nelson, Florence Richert, Patricia Van Norden, Irene Vaieska, Katherine V oolner. Athena 393 Mortar Board Faculty: Dean Mary Sinclair Crawford, Mrs. Ada Collins Holme, Miss Clara Stevenson. Actives: Mary Kathryn Duckwall, Edith Gibbs, Helen Houck, Betty Sargent, Harriet Louise Touton, Rebecca Uhvits, Roberta von KleinSmid, Keitha Wicks. Gibbs Houck. Touton Uhvits, Von KleinSmid Mary Kathryn Duckwall President 394 i Harold Stone President Cook, Heaton. Fai-mer Stephenson, Halvorson, Littlejohn, Wilkes Yeoman, Clay, Hibbard. Isaac P ' eale, Evans, Tienken, Fairbanks Hasbrouck. Mahan. Finish, Kalionzes Members: Herbert Clay, John Cooke, Harry Evans, Leonard Fairbanks, Jack Frush, Edwin Hal- vorson, Theodore Hasbrouck, Culver Heaton, William Hibbard, |ohn Isaac, Alex Kalionzes, Lester Littlejohn, James Mohan, George Peale, Eugene Stephenson, Harold Stone, Leslie Tan- ner, Chester Tienken, Alfred Wilkes, Claude Yeoman. Professional Inter fraternity Council 395 I skull and Dagger Actives: Ames Crawford. Bailey Edgerton, Lawrence Pritchard, Walter Roberts, Jack Smith. Crawford Edserton. Nem- r Pritchard, Smith Walter Roberts President 396 George Peale President Akins. Booth Bromley. Campbell, Clay. Conser C. Evans. K. Evans. Griffith. Hayvvaid Hibbartl. Isaac. Morris. Paj;re Parker. Ragan, Sadler. Schwartz Faculty: Rex Ragan, H- Dean Campbell, Dr. Carus, Emery Olson. Members: Randolph Booth, Phil Bromley, Frank Conser, Keith Evans, jack Griffith, Stanley Hayward, William Hibbard, )ohn Issac, Walter Morris, George Peale, Carl Evans, Shirl Sad- ler, Harvey Akms, |ohn Parker, Edward Swartz, Hero Clay, Jack Page. Delta Sigma Phi 397 Chi Eps ' don Faculty: Prof. Gilbert H. Dunstan, Prof. Robert M. Fox, Prof. David M. Wilson. Actives: Hugh C. Conley, Harold Hasuike. Pledges: Edward Hall. Roy Johnston, Jack Lambie. Hall, Ha.suike Johnston, Lambie Hugh C. Conley President 398 I Otfo Christensen President P £ Ayres. Bescos Cislini, Clark. Erskine, Faubion Graber, Griffith. Halverson, Halvorson Johnson. Leach. Love. Palmer Sether, Shaver, Shonnard. Smith Members: Frederick Ayres, Julie Bescos, Francis Cislini, Cordon Clark, Robert Erskine, Ber- nard Faubion, William Craber, Homer Cnffith. Wallace Halverson, Edwin Halvorson, Ray Johnson, John Leach, Bob Love, Ford Palmer, Wendell Sether. Calen Shaver, Ludlow Shonnard. Jack Smith. Sigma Sigma 399 Blue Key Faculty: Francis M. Bacon, H. Dean Campbell, Dean B. Cromwell, C. La Touche. Dr. Alan Nichols, Dr. A. Actives: Ralph Acton, Julie Bescos, lames Booth, Robbins Chadil, Albert Campbell, Francis Cislini, Harvey Durkee, Rollin Gish, James Graham. Homer Griffith, Bailey Edgerton. Edwin Halvorson, Wallace Halverson, Harold Hammack. Sherman Jensen, Roy Johnson, John Leach, Garland Matthews. Alan McKinney, Ross Miller, Kenneth Olsen, Ford Palmer, George Peale, Lawrence Pritchard, Glenn Phares, Dick Poggi, Duncan Puett, Fred Robinson, Edward Stones, Wendell Sether, Ludlow Shonnard, Joseph Shott, Joe Sullivan, Robert Wilcox, Jack Wilder, Hal Williams. Decor, Boot?!, Cami.bll. ' ' ha: ' .-! Cislini, Durkee, Edgerton, Gish. Griffith, G:-uver Halversen. Halvorson, Hani- lack, Jensen, . ' ohnsoi. Ko:tIander LeacVi. McKinney, Matthews, Miller. Olsen, Palmer Fcale. Pharos, PoKsi. Puett. Rolj-nson. Schott Sether, Shonnard, Smith, Stones. Wilder, Williams Robbins Chadil Vice-President 400 TROJAN CROUPS Existing for self-betterment as well as for entertainment purposes, Trojan organizations ranged in di- versity from professional groups and foreign student organizations to Aeneas hall members. Through- out the academic year, the groups met regularly, carrying out their aims along definite lines. No mat- ter what the club ' s purpose might be, it was invariably combined with a constant exemplification of the Trojan spirit in its highest form. These characteristics made the organizations one of the most significant campus functions. 401 First row: Beckwith, Naegley, Barton, Kroeger. Pugh, Segar, Maas. Second row; Schmidt, Madsen. Evans, Klit- ten. Cislini, Davies, Newton, Grizzle, Baash. Third row: McElroy, Essick, Morse, Cist, Nordenson, Presnell, Nasbaum, Hill, Graham, McCuire, Gushing, Eyeman, Moore. Advertising Club • Membership in the University Advertising Club is open to all students who show an interest in the organization ' s objectives — that of obtaining a practical knowledge of the profession of advertising. During the past year, the Ad Club arranged a program of regular monthly meettings at which many who are prominent in the advertising field have spoken. The club also cooperated with other campus organizations in solving advertising prob- lems . Officers during the past year were Delbert Brown, president: May Kroeger, vice-president; Ceraldine Barton, secretary; Charles Pugh, treas- urer; and Robert Klitten, business manager. Faculty members are Dr. W. D. Moriarty, Dr. Florence M. Morse, and Professor Frank A. Nagley. Stu- dent members are Grace Baash, Ceraldine Barton, Jim Beatson, Tom Beck- with, Fred Bliss, Sim Baldwin, Delbert Brown, )ane Barwick, Francis Cislini, Stanley Cushing, Eloise Davies, Marion de Blois, Helen Dunlap, Jane Essick, Ruth Evans, Keith Evans, Florence Eyeman, Pauline Forsythe, Jack Griffith, Phil Graham, Dorothy Grizzle, Louis Hebert, Lillian Heron, Phyllis Hill, Leo Hunter, Ed Jack, Bob Johnson, Bob Klitten, May Kroeger, Bob Lindsay, Bet- tie Maas, Bud Madsen, Ben McElroy, Mavine Mandell, Virginia McGuire, Lucille Moore, Marjorie Moore, Harold Mustoe, Louise Newton, John Nor- denson, Jay Orem, Norm Parker, Nellie Pelton, Lillian Presnell, Charles Pugh, Edith Mae Raney, Bob Ralston, Winifred Redden, Leiand Schmidt, Eric Smi th, Dorothy Segar, Dorothy Stephens, Rosa Lee Teach, and Mary Walton. 402 First row; Ross, Livingston, Andler, Zullig, Heistand, Brown, Toskushiga, Whistler. Second row; Parrill, Moore, Ellman, Hebert, Buell, Massey, Olson, Bean, Starbuck, Tonnenbaum, McEven. Third row; Clark, Fisher, Wild- man, Edwards, Croal, Leschke. Manning, Dickson, McClure, Koch, Yarlott, Reardon. Fourth row: Roland, E. Smith, Hart, Kilbourne, Carr, Sanders, Huber. Holms. Nunez, Fennell, Bittell. Fifth row; Carton, Peters, Schmidt, Green, Lohman, Gill, Vernetti, Barrett. Aeneas Hall • Aeneas Hall is the dormitory for men which is maintained by the admin- istration of the University of Southern California. Besides furnishing living quarters and dining facilities for all of the out-of-town students who do not live in fraternity houses, it also furnishes opportunities for recreational ac- tivities. For the benefit of the residents, a number of social entertain- ments are carried out during the year. Mrs. Ella )o Massy is house-mother and manager, and Dean Francis Bacon acts as faculty supervisor. Officers of the hall for the past year were Walter Buel, president; Walton Bean, vice-president; and John Sprengler, secretary-treasurer. Members of Aeneas Hall for the past year included: Mathew Afric, Pedro Adi, Max Andler, Manuel Agarteche, Walton Bean, E. Bickerdike, Leo Bittell, Gerald Brown, Walter Buel, Hernan Bedoya, Wm. Calhoun, John Carr, Jack Casner, George Chan, John Chapman, Arthur Conner, jim Cook, Lloyd Cooper, Dr. A. Cot- ter, Andrew Croal, James Daniels, Oliver Day, Thomas Edwards, Erwin Ell- man, Curtis Fisher, judd Goldman, Pearre Gill, Abner Greene, Jack Grier, Joseph Hackett, Bud Hebert, R. Heistand, D. Hinesley. E. Holmes, Rudolph Huber, George Jacobson, H. Jennings, A! Kidder, E. Kilbourne, Hector Koch, Fred Linkmeyer, Arthur Livingston, Phillip Lohman, Carl Longley, Adrian McClure, Gene McCoy, John McKean, Joe Ma, H. J. Massy, R. Mandalbaum. Wallace Monroe, Clyde Moslander, Ray Morrow, E. Newhnan, G. Nunez, Helmer Olsen, I. Perrill, Henry Peterson, Al Reboin, Robert Reardon, Verne Roland, Eugene Rubin, Hal Rugel, Allen Schmidt, Kenneth Smith, Robert Smith, Leslie Spicer, ]. Sprengler, B. Stampley, Dr. E. Starbuck, James Stev- enson, G. Stuckey, D. Sweet, L. Sweet, J. Vernetti, Manuel Uganteche, Robert Watt, R. Wileman, C. Winebright, Everett Winn, and Marshal Wells. 403 First row: Sein, Harley, Yong, Marzano, VanBuskirk, Montaya, Barbone, Lvova, Kinzy, Bastanchury, Bogardus, Laveaga, Clark, Shigekawa, Bogardus. Second row: Bacon, Griffiths, Carruthers, Niese, Hill, Leonard, Moss, Cis- lini, Molme, Landro, Tibbet, Smith. Third row: Kusayanagi, Freidel, Koritz, Desmond, Van Deerling, Sargent. Fourth row: Ancheta, Hirshfield, Perry, Needle, McHugh, Dorio, Bryan. Fifth row: Davidson, Hallock, Norton, Sixth row: Cill, Poppe, Hammond, Rousso, Ahn, Haugh. Cosmopolitan Club • Officers during the past year were Katherine Kinzy, President; Vera Popovsky, first vice-president; Hans Poppe, second vice-president; Jose- phine Leonard, recording secretary; Betty Lvova, corresponding secretary; Victor Seine, treasurer; and Genevieve Jasaitis, journalist. Faculty counsel- lors are Dean Francis Bacon, Dr. Emory Bogardus, Dr. C. M. Case, Dr. John Carruthers, Dean M. S. Crawford, Professor John Griffiths, Dr. John Hill, Dr. Boris Morkovin, Dr. E. T. Mohme, Dr. Ken Nakazawa, Miss Florence Scott, Dean Pearl Aiken-Smith, and Miss Beth Tibbet. Members of the Club are Philip Ahn, Don Alameda, Celedonio Ancheta, Helen Bailey, Pedro Baldoria, Lucia Barbone, Worth Bernard, Ruth Bogardus, Mary Susan Browne, Kingsbury Burnett, Charles Catt, Emma Carter, Y. Chiu, Annie G. Clark, Mamo Clark, Lois Curry, Dr. George Curti, Mrs. Ruth Day, Margaret de Jong, Nelvia de Jong, Lee Diamant, Evelyn Dorio, Dr. George Doty, Rose Risch, Francisco Floreza, Ruth Frankel, Mary Funk, Piara Gill, Margaret Halff, Takeshi Haruki, Bob Haugh, Mar Hin, Betty Hitchcock, James Kado- tani, Mr. Kawachi, Katherine Kinzy, Iwao Kumabe, Masako Kusayanagi, P. Lam, Manuel Lascurain, James Lee, Norma Levenson, Josephine Leonard, Pei Yu Li, Betty Lvova, Pauline Lynchick, Maria Maldonado, Dimitri Mark- ovin, Olga Marquez, Marguerita Marzano, Olivia McHugh, Trinidad Mina, David Mohr, Consuelo Montoya, Edith Neidle, Dr. and Mrs. Martin Neu- meyer, Russell Nixon, Dr. Henry Niese, Helen Parrish, Olive Parrish, Vera Popovsky, Hans Poppe, Beth Phillips, Betty Sargent, Victor Seine, Sakaye Shigekawa, Martha Shimizu, Kazo Shimizu, Y. F. Sung, Thomas Tatia, Herman Tejada, Josephine Teplichkova, Dr. Clinton Thienes, Fania Uhvits, Rebecca Uhvits, Betty Wang, Pauline Watkins, John Weigh, George Wu, John Wu. Wilfred Williams, Soo Yong, Elvira Zigmandovitch. 404 First row: Nishimota, Takata, Wadtani, Kusayanagi, Mayekawa, Kawagoe, Hasuike, Kawachika, Tateya. Second row: Toniqoshi, Murooka, Shinno, Tahahashi, Yamagushi, Kumamoto, Masuoka, Tofuku|i. Third row; Inouye, Tatsuno, Tada, Shiigi. Hashimoto. Onaki, Inouye. Japanese Students Club • The Japanese Trojan Club is one of the several foreign students ' clubs found on the University of Southern California campus. This organization offers to the Japanese students of the University a program of business and social activities. During the past year, the Club has taken an active part in international affairs that v ere sponsored by various organizations upon the campus. During this past year, the Club has been under the leadership of Shigeo Mayekawa, president; George Shinno, first vice-president; Shinobu Tofukuji, second vice-president; Masako Kusayanagi, secretary; Teruo Shiigi, treasurer; Katao Hayashi, literary director; and Kenneth Nishimoto, member-at-large. Members of the organization are: Yoshitake Ando, Florence Fujisato, Komao Goto, James Goto, Ernest Hara, Harold Hasuike, Gerald Hashimoto, Katao Hayashi, Wattow Higashida, Jun Inouye, Kay Inouye, Kazuo Kadotani, Shinzo Kagawa, Norman Kaneo, Kay Kawagoe, Shinichi Kawachika, Frank Kumamoto, Masako Kusayanagi, Kenneth Kusata, Y. Mashimo, Masura Masuoka, Shigeo Mayekawa, T. Mayekawa, Dave Miyamoto, John Morooka, William Muraoka, Lois Naito, Tom Nishida, Kenneth Nishimoto, Kenneth Nowaki, Elsie Ozaki, Martha Shimizu, Kazu Shimizu, Teruo Shiigi, George Shinno, George Sonada, Don Tade, Yoshio Taira, Ray Takahashi, Elmer Tanigoshi, Ellsworth Takata, Harry Tatsuno, Shinobu Tofukuji, Susumu Yamagata, Ernest Yamafuchi, and Kimi Yamasaki. 405 First row: Murray, Kemp, Youel, LaPorte, Webster, Roberts, Anderson, Holston. Second row: Seixas, Zwibel- man, Polhemus, Seltzer, Doeg, Morrow, Weber. Third row: Kidder, Bescos, Hooper, Castien, Buss, Penner, Arch- er, Foster, Scainell, Minasian. Sigma Alpha • Sigma Alpha was established at the University of Southern California in 1929. It is a western honorary fraternity in physical education whose mem- bership is limited to male students majoring in Physical Education. The selec- tion of members is based upon activity, good fellowship, and scholarship. The chapter at this university has the following honorary members: C. L. Glenn, N. P. Neilson, Mr. Henderson, and Dr. j. F. Williams. The faculty members, who have greatly aided the fraternity this year, are: Harry Anderson, Charles Graves, William Robert LaPorte, Eugene L. Roberts, Lloyd E. Webster. The past year the organization was headed by Ed Holston as President. Richard Minasian was Vice-President and Frank Doeg filled the office of Secretary. The members of this fraternity represent all branches of sport and athletics and are known on campus as all-around athletes. The active members are: Alva Archer, Eugene Bankston, Julius Bescos, Al Buss, Frank Doig, J. Foster, Phil Castien, Lee Guttero, Edward Holston, James Kemp, Bruce Kidder, Har- old Margadant, Robert McNeish, John Morrow, Al Murray, Richard Mina- sian, Ross LaViolet, Cy Polhemus, John Seixas, Pat Scannell, Al Renner, J. I. Winfield, Frank Williamson, Curtis L. Youel, and Arnold Zwibleman. Sigma Alpha was brought to Southern California primarily through the efforts of Eugene L. Roberts, who was elected National President in 1931, along with Lee Hanson as Secretary. At the present time Ernie Payne, who was a great track star at this University, is now National President. Every large univer- sity on the coast has a chapter of Sigma Alpha. 406 First row: Strathern, Lundeil, Masterson, Johnson, Cols, Bullock. Hume, Rudick. Second row: Swanson, Thomas, Hotchkiss, Arthur, Hosford, Clark, McCready, Murphy. Third row: Shreve, Stratton, Reed, Newton, Morgan. Women ' s Residence Hall • Having the reputation of being the most completely equipped building of its kind in Southern California, the Women ' s Residence Hall has com- pleted an active year by serving a greater number of women ' s students than it has any time in the past. The Hall is maintained and managed by the uni- versity administration for women students who do not reside in sorority houses or at home. During the year the social life of the residents was en- hanced by a number of entertainments and recreational activities. For the second year Patricia Hosford served as president of the group; she was aided by vice-president Myra Hotchkiss and Beatrice Codie, who performed the duties of secretary. Members of the Hall for the past year included: Jane Arthur, Eva Bailey, Dorothy Bartels, Ruth Blankenship, Dolores Bullock, Mrs. La Verta Burns, Genevieve Clark, Docia Clisbee, Ruth Close, Beatrice Codie, Ceraldine Cole, Myra Dixon, Mora Katherine Douglass, Alma Drexler, Helen Estock, Inez Flagg, Betty Fornof, Louise Foster, Elizabeth Griffith, Sally Griffith, Borgny Harem, Patricia Hosford, Myra Hotchkiss, Margaret Huffman, Jessie Hume, Dorothy Johnson, Marion Johnston, Selma Kattner, Wilhelmina Kurtz, Ella Lehr, Helen Lundeil, Lorene Masterson, Teddy Measday, Barbara Meier, Violet Mergel, Dorothy Miller, Betty Lou Morgan, Elizabeth Murphy, Isabel Morris, Louise Newton, Frances Parsons, Miriam Pruess, Anita Reed, Isabel Roeder, Sophia Rogoski, Gertrude Rudick, Doro- thy Rust, Doris Schulman, Almeda Scott, Alice Shreve, Isabel Smith, Celeste Strack, Frances Strathern, Isabel Stratton, Virginia Swanson, Josephine Tep- lickova, Mary Helen Thomas, Jean Travers, Erica Weary, Jean Williams, Peggy Wood, Aileen Murray. 407 Alley Rat ■ o ' •ji  !— 1- 3  fT s  '   X  A  Wit is established as existing amongst the ancients by Homer. Achilles is quoted as saying to Agamemnon, ' Aw, can ' tcha take a joke!  This puzzled archeologists until Ethiopian sandstone tablets were discovered which showed the early-Aegean  belly-laugh  in crude inscrip- tions. fl  ._ ' i  ' A  lt was understood then definitely that laughter was known to the old Trojans, even though it was only Ethiopian sandstone laughter. Achilles ' distress with the stoical Creeks also is shown in Homer:  ..the long-faced Creeks, a witless race..  I Book XVI) Hector himself is said to have convulsed the gay Achilles by referring to him as  a heel.  •Priam ' s men were prone to take the war lightly, sit- ting astride the Trojan walls and hurling puns at the Creeks, whom Helen had labeled  The Sour-pusses of the Mediterranean  . The irrepressible Trojan wit came out in the last of the Trojans to walk the gangplank into the rendering-vat, who shouted delightedly,  Any- way, we won the war!  Y  And so, today, we have this same situation. The col- lateral library sounds like a theatre-lobby between acts. Ceology professors keep their classes in stitches with quips about rocks. Commencement is an hysteria of laughter. University avenue looks and sounds like the hyena department of a zoo. it is all that the adminstra- tlon can do to keep this funny little student-body down to a steady chuckle.  I ' ?-  ymmm s i i ' m LW A ' 410 THE JOLLY PROFESSOR i • That there is not a Gilbert and Sullivan opera about professors is indeed a pity. It would be so pretty to see the chorus of pro- fessors, in cap and gown, come whirling on- to the scene dancing a sailors ' hornpipe and singing some melody, such as  Heave ho, m ' lads, the hour is free — Let ' s go up-cam- pus for some tea !  • Professors, in addition to being jolly fel- lows, are incurably romantic. Hardly a one in any typical faculty is there who does not dream of some day arriving at school with a police escort just as classes are passing. The tutorial satellites who whirl around the professors in electronic fury delude them into the happy fancy that these are gang- ster henchmen looking into and around doorways for the threatened ambush by rival mobmen from another university fac- ulty. Who knows how many professors sec- retly practice shadow-boxing before their shaving-mirrors? • Professors are particularly addicted to toying with transmigration notions. One in our own faculty experiments with growing a short beard each summer (in a mountain hideaway) , in the belief that he is the rein- carnation of Leonardo da Vinci. Another endures his narrow sphere with the convic- tion that what Charles Lamb got from life is enough for anybody. Or too much. But the real pride which we may take in our faculty is that in the professor who reads  Alice in Wonderland  with the uncom- fortable feeling that, somehow, he belongs back in that irrational world of white rab- bits and flamingoes. • Perhaps, however, it is unfair to speak with such ill-concealed levity of this aspect of the faculty when the men students all believe themselves the modern torch-bear- ers for Don juan and Robin Hood, while the women stroll the campus in only too-evi- dent simulation of Greta Carbo. Katy Hep- burn, and other delicious cinematic morsels.  The professors, indeed, have another, if less successful, side. In their contacts with the external world, they show a certain misgiving, a rare timidity, which is most charming in those minutes when they hang breathlessly on the strange words of an un- dergraduate revealing the world outside the cloisters, the hard world in which men stalk one another. The class, in turn, hangs breathlessly upon the chance descriptions by the professors of trouble with refriger- ators or autos, or gay ventures into their own undergraduate days and the mad pranks that distinguished an era long ended. With the class grinning in happy incredulity that a professor could once have been different, the mentor snaps out of it with,  Carumph, Miss Fishface, read the next paragraph.   Groups of professors eating (What do professors eat? ' ) in the Student Union look like hard and impenetrable social masses. One would suppose that the liberals are grouped together in symbolic opposition to the reactionaries. As they sit at the little tables smoking pipes and sipping tea, they are more apt to be grouped by the golf- courses they play than by the intellectual differences they champion. • No respectable broker or captain-of-in- dustry would be such without his secret cache of South Sea travel-folders. Nor would a professor be dear to his students who did not burrow daily, in the sanctity of his boudoir, into the gossip columns of the Daily Trojan. Their lectures are dry only because of the bridges burnt behind them in imagination. 411 II 412 CONTROVERSY • With what little ripples of delight the undergraduate hears the explanation of a direct cut administered one student by an- other because he was a  Cestaltist  or a  Pragmatist  . How thrilling to see students come to blows at a Pan-Hel formal over our government ' s policy in the Far East! Where once the sleepy afternoons went by in quiet lolling under the campus trees, now the students must needs be opinionated. Even the most extreme light-weights in the stu- dent-body contend over questions of cloth- ing, food, and the relative merits of other light-weights. The loft, or fresh-air-and- sunshine side of classrooms will have no traffic with the right, or diffused-light-and- stale-air, side of the room. When a Left (origin of the term) makes a silly remark in class, the Rights bellow with laughter. • Foremost exponents of controversy on any campus are the debaters. Ranging from swarthy greasy bombasters to gaunt, eagle- beaked spell-binders, this forensic elect stands out of the mob in sour-faced pro- test against passivity and agreement. These apostles of discord stir up dissension amongst the cooks (indigestion), the pro- fessors (rancor) , and students (stupidity). • A debater never recognizes defeat. When a decision is given against one of them, he immediately goes over and dashes a glass of nitric acid in the face of the winner, who may well expect it under the  code d ' hon- neur  . Generally this results in open war- fare in the audience, oftentimes in the com- plete demolition of the hall. The story is told of a zealous partisan in an audience who happened to be wearing the fraternity pin (if such a thing be possible) of one of the defeated men in a debate featured by the one-sided activity of the organist, who played Wagner throughout the affirmative speeches. During the little formalities of presenting a trophy and shaking hands all around (during which the defeated man- aged to slip an adder into the pocket of the victor) , this girl took offense at the sophis- tic arguments of the supercilious winner. She particularly disliked his taking advan- tage of the geographical ignorance of his listeners to say,  Ha-ha, but then, even such a paltry intellect as my honorable op- ponent will not try to make an audience of such caliber as this one believe that Sing Sing is not the capital of China!  The girl stormed on the platform and bit off his ear, which was later exhibited irr the headquar- ters of the National Geographic Society as definite proof that Sing Sing was not the capital of China. • Debaters are forced to rely upon the bias of the public, which is effected by lobbying such central propagandic points as the offices of the Daily Trojan. It is well-known that more debates are won by ice-cream soda-ing the editor than by hurling verbal thunder-bolts on the rostrum. The editor, between gulps on the straws, jots down notes for his attacks on the opposition. If the question is vivisection (which it is not) , the editor runs eulogies on Man ' s Best Friend and stories of dog heroism, even re- minders that it is not news when a dog bites a man, but it is when a man bites a dog. • All of this comes about through the pe- culiar quirk in the mind of the controver- sialist which makes him confuse gilding the lily with looking at the world through rose- colored glasses, and that in turn with paint- ing the town red. 413 414 THE ARNICA MEN • Every obscure student has had that little tingle of pleasure which goes with being greeted by a Great Athlete. Passing on the street, the athlete may discern some faint, supposed trace of familiarity in the face of the man who is studying him with wonder- filled eyes. At any rate, he nods or says  Hello!  The student stammers a return of the greeting, his throat chokes up, and he blushes with happy awe. His feet may become paralyzed, so that he can do noth- ing but look after the Great Athlete. As he hurries to class, the man thus made great himself is smitten by the fear that his voice trembled, that his essay in deep bass was not sufficiently disguised. • The presence wherever he goes of tiny athletes of great accomplishment makes life very miserable for the ineffectual giant who can do nothing athletic except play pool. He is suspicious of the midget who may any minute just idly pick up an orange and throw it out of sight just to show him up before a female who adores him. • Most athletes, fortunately, run to the overstuffed. These boys are easier to cope with. They get hot and sweaty on warm days, fall over things once in a while, and are generally more hog-like than heroic. This is a great comfort to the poor fellow who believes that all people have faults as well as virtues. He can get downright satisfaction from growling,  How ' re ya, Butch ' '  out of the corner of his mouth to a thick-necked giant who will genially re- ply,  O.K., fella.  (Athletes call everybody  fella  ). • The athlete is known as a  real man  . More often than not he is a 100% con- formist, prefering the easy life by the fire- side with a group of slaves to flatter and serve him than the uncertain life of the hunger-paraders. He adores the opposing sex just as any one else would admire a rare species of angora yak. The neat little ges- ture with which he tucks in his hanker- chief and the humming noise he emits while smoothing his hair into place are in- dicative of his delight in the social life which he augments so beautifully. As he takes the last survey of himself before the mirror, drawing his coat tightly into place, he might just as well givs his thoughts sound by saying,  Dern you, Gus McHooli- hanty, you are an estimable creation and a pillar of our society!  • The long, tense weeks of the Fall bring out the serious side of the athlete. Leaping from training-table to player ' s bench makes him grim and speculative.  I tell you, fella,  he will say,  the Headman didn ' t put me on the third-string because I looked like a duffer.  At times like this, a book of poems is a great solace. • There is nothing like an athlete to keep a scholar pondering, admiring, musing. MONARCH LAUNDRY 3 6 12 C R E N S H A V  BLVD. LOSANCELES | Phone PArk way 9 1 1 8 1 415 416 THE SOCIAL LIFE • Four years of college life is sufficient for a person to give 36,000 perfunctory greetings, figuring a conservative fifty per day and not counting Saturdays and boat trips. For 7,000 students, this amounts to 252,000,000. Sup- posing that each perfunctory greeting is the energy equivalent to a shovel filled with one- quarter cubic foot of dirt (and it certainly is, when you consider all the nervous tension bound in with hoping you will get by each other without saying  hello  ). Why then you have the equivalent of an excavation 63,000,- 000 cubic feet, or 2,333,333 cubic yards. Needless to say, this is breath-taking, even tremendous. • The thing to do, then, is to pass a rule and have the Trojan Squires enforce it, whereby anyone feeling that he has to say,  H ' are Ya?  out of the corner of his mouth, must instead scoop out of a certain area one-quarter cubic foot of dirt. In the event that the party does utter the filthy words, he will have to dig out two scoops. Saying  Hozzit goin ' ?  brings an additional penalty of a third scoop. Students wishing to speak their minds whenever they feel like it (debaters, law students, etc.) may go to the pit the first thing in the morning and dig fifty scoopfuls, which will probably make them so tired that they will keep their mouths shut anyway, which won ' t hurt any- thing. • Anyway, the silly habit of saying  Hello there, y ' little rat !  ( in substance) to the same people every day for four years will be ended in one simple ruling. If it isn ' t ended, the university will have a magnificent pit and 2,333,333 cubic yards of excavated dirt. The pit, which would probably be on the library lawn, could be used for burying things in, and a university can collect a lot of things in four years that could well be buried. Possibly they could bury the 7,000 students in it. • Imagine the pleasure of studying under primitive conditions; nobody saying  hello  to you because you sat next to him two years ago in a course; nobody nodding at you or waving frantically at you because you know his sister! The whole student-body would get fat just because of the relief from the strain of studying people you know, to see if there is going to be an exchange of greetings. With everybody getting fat, outsiders will think the Student Union fountain is putting out espe- cially fine food, so they will flock here from everywhere and make the Associated Students very wealthy, which will provide enough money to hire a man with a steam-shovel to fill up the excavation while the students gath- er around and give him cheers. • With everybody fat, dancing will become less enjoyable, if not impossible. This will eliminate Digs, which in turn eliminates a lot of other things which we can ' t go into in a short treatise like this. Anyway, eliminating Digs eliminates wallflowers, which is a happy thought, isn ' t itr ' No wallflowers being around, the females of the world will hear of this phe- nomenon and rush hither, thus booming the enrollment and causing the hiring of more pro- fessors, which helps to eliminate unemploy- ment. In other words, it is this  Hello and Smile  business that is holding back recovery, causing everybody a lot of sleepless nights, and making it necessary for the university to burn all its old trash, instead of being able to bury it on the library lawn. 417 . . . may be the name of just another sweater to you, but just ask any Letter- man who owns a genuine Wil Wite Award ! ♦Product of OLYMPIA KNITTING MILLS, INC. Olympia, Washington AUTHORIZED AGENTS SIXTH AND BROADWAY 5522 WILSHIRE BOULEVARD 6555 HOLLYWOOD BLVD. 3409 UNIVERSITY AVENUE TEN O ' CLOCK SCHOLAR • The average person looking at Troy would get the idea that all we did was go to classes and holler at football games. Such is not the case, for we are faced with a series of double- barreled dilemmae which would choke a fair- sized horse. But not us. No sir, even the greatest of all our problems — whether to be a hot-cha (campus cut-up) or a serious schol- ar — takes many hours of each day alone. This big conflict in the student is never settled one way or the other, except in the case of occa- sional complete extroverts and Phi Beta Kap- pas (both of which classes are supposed to have their wavering moments). The stupid looks on the faces at Commencement may be the remains of the old battle of the soul con- cerning the choice between the library and the soda-fountain. The library crowd thinks the soda-fountain is symbolic of the decay of our civilization. • This book-spurning crowd has developed one fine species of student, known hereabouts as the  Ten o ' clock Scholar  from his strange conduct of appearing only at chapel-time and then disappearing completely, except for sporadic appearances in night-clubs. 1 choose a simple mediocri ty to live For four long years my life to give Unto whatever chance may somehow send. Wasi ing it out in gestures without end; And then 1 choose to toil at night, hlopi ng for a little flash of 1 ight That having come, again is gone. Even as comes and goes the dawn. 418 • What the Ten o ' clock Scholar does when he is not loafing on the curb-stone ogling the sorority girls, is not definitely known. An in- vestigation made by a sociologist indicated that the breed lived in disreputable circum- stances in fraternity houses, coming out only for this daily contact with its kind. • The ideal arrangement would seem to be to have a Coggle-Cuy (library frequenter) room with a Ten o ' clock scholar. Each would then derive some benefit; the former would do the studying for both and answer all roll-calls, while the latter would charm him in turn by teaching him argot and talking for hours about headaches and cover-charges. • Such a situation is impossible, however, for the Coggle-Cuy begins to get hot-cha himself, swears a good deal, and deserts the library for the easy life of the curb-stone and fountain stool. This, of course, means that the room- mate begins to flunk and has to do some work himself, which brings him in contact with the classroom and the demoralizing influence of education, so that he turns introvert and loses all of his swell friends in hotel wash-rooms. • This confusing situation brings such inter- esting phenomenon as the attempt to order ginger-ale at seminar tables and the sudden rise of the question of Plato ' s Ideas during an otherwise innocent game of bridge. Clean Linen Al ways Is a Necessity Required By Doctors, Dentist ' s Druggists • Telephone ANgelus 0187 For INDIVIDUAL STERILIZED GOWN SERVICE TABLE CLOTHS — NAPKINS — TOV ELS FOR RESTAURANTS — SODA FOUNTAINS OFFICES — FACTORIES UNION TOWEL  CASE CO. 125 NORTH MISSION ROAD LOS ANGELES 419 TICKETS For SPORTS EVENTS — FOOTBALL — TRACK BASKETBALL — AUDITORIUM — DRAMATICS MUSICALES — DANCES SCHOOL PLAYS — SCHOOL ACTIVITIES FOOD CONTROL — LOCKER ROOMS DILLINGHAM PRINTING CO., INC. 4837 Huntington Drive LOS ANGELES Telephone CApital 130)2 ROOTER REVOLUTION • Practically all the unrest in collegiate circles in the last fifty years has developed in root- ing sections. There seems to be nothing more provocative of bomb-throwing in the student so much as sitting under the blazing sun with head swathed in felt. We must, however, ad- mit that the Russians have leapt with delight on the idea of having thousands of youths do flag-waving or card-flipping all at once, in or- der to form galloping horses or leaping Stal- ins. • But our revolt in the rooting-section is a more sinister sort. Ours has to do with secret resolutions to murder whole dr oves of those shrieking automatons known as yell-leaders. The mere idea that thousands of great intel- lects should be held at the whimsical beck- and-call of a cubistic artist and conductor de- voted to purely chauvinistic ends seems to in- furiate the coralled beasts in the stockade. • While Squires and Knights hover around Strike up the band for song Lcf ' s make if fast and strong; We want an echo all around Bringing back our booming song With the speed of its rebound Proving that we sang it strong; Give it loud unto the town Sing it fast and let ' s sit down. pointing menacing fingers and sprinkling the hosts with colored cards, seething hatred grows and grows amongst the lowly. 420 •  We can ' t of course, go on forever,  con- fided one leader once to a group of superior students who had threatened him after a game.  Someday the masses will revolt. When they become class-conscious, they will sweep down from the stands and kill us, and all the players. And probably they will perform all sorts of obscenities, such as pulling up the goal-posts and tearing up handfuls of grass.  • Just how this revolt will begin, only the event itself will be able to show us. Possibly the collapse of an overheated rooter will pre- cipitate the cataclysm. Perhaps some overseer, such as a Squire, will pass the bounds of human endurance and goad some luckless wretch, such as a Pharmacy student, to make • Perhaps that will never happen. Who some overt act. When that happens, the end knows but that it will be made unnecessary will be in sight for all of the rooting-section because the rooters will learn to answer back nobility. Class distinction will be forgotten; by spelling out insults to the yell-leaders and all will unite to crush the oppressor. the bosses. A new day may dawn. SERVICE ALUMNI STUDENT ■— . FRIEND We are prepared to serve you thru our Trade book, Text book. School Supply, Jewelry, Speciality or Photo Departments. Write, Phone or come-in-person to the UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE 3601 University Ave. LOCATED IN THE STUDENTS UNION 421 ORDEAL BY PEDAGOGY • Nothing is quite so pleasant as to slip into a seat in a classroom just as a strange profes- sor enters and speaks the words,  This is no cinch course.  Part of the time he is just fool- ing — it is a cinch course. But more than likely he is speaking truth. • The first thing is the heaping-up of a lot of collateral assignments. This is all done amidst chuckles and threats to the general key,  You can ' t win!  Having fixed the undergraduates with enough work to keep them out of the movie palaces of an evening, the professor then steps out and returns with a half-dozen graduate students who are specialists in the subject, in order that no undergraduate can rate anything better than a  C  . All that is missing is the birch-whip. • These same masters of the pop-quiz will be just the ones to have pictures of junior on a Shetland pony on their desks. One would im- agine that the professors who torture their classes with humorous anecdotes would go home only to tease bottled spiders. • It is outside the classroom that the student has his revenge. The professor can whirl on the student in class with his  How about Whenever mouths are opened in this class The dust floats out in choking mass; The warm, stale learning of the ages Rises from the textbooks ' yellow pages. And all the scholars lounge and yawn Without a thought of pregnant sessions gone In tribute to the learned ghoulish dead Whose mundane maxims monks have read. this?  , but he can only itch with desire for whirling on the happy undergraduate when he is sunning himself outside between admiring females, all beautiful. Many a professor has twitched himself to death watching the care- free scholars frolicking without control after classes. • There will ever be that great distance be- tween teacher and him who is taught. Each suspects the other both of being what he ap- pears to be and of not being what he appears to be. The professors who try to gain the con- fidences of students by remarking about sports only receive mild returns for their efforts. The student wonders if the professor can be so dull as to be amused by such silly activities, while the professor wonders just what it is that in- terests these hard-shelled little morons. The only solution for the prof is to clamp down on his charges with more collateral and stand before the battery of frozen faces each morn- ing prepared to give them all they have com- ing to them. • Try sneaking up behind a hard-boiled pro- fessor to watch the guilty look when you bel- low  Fore!  422 cw RITTER RittcrModel  B  X-Ray.1005g safe. Unusual fleKibility at any angle. . Ritter Model  D  Unit. Fingcr- ' tipcontrolof ALL operating es- sentials and instruments. Shown here with Dualite and Fan. Ritter Four Cluster Light. 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Y. Ritter 423 MODES AND MANNERS • Among the institutions which have almost passed away during the era now ending is the old tradition of sloppy wear for college folk. Was a time when you told the approach of a college boy by the swish of his garments, but that soft melody no longer disturbs the mid- night air. The corduroys went from bad to worse. They fell in with the younger set and became debauched in every association. • Blue-jeans, moleskins, the ephemeral sopho- more blues — all have passed to other patron- age. The college boy began to imagine that overalls belonged in the grease-pit and loco- motive cab. Today we are in the early stages of a new period. The collegiate fancy has turned to modish attire. The women have forsaken the loose draperies of the blue-stock- ing for furs and fancy trappings. Co-eds don ' t want to look like school girls or poetesses, but like film-queens and actresses. The men want to look like successful gangsters or foreign diplomats. • It is very distressing to come upon some dainty bit of fluff done up in gay Parisian abandon and topped off by a pert hat which parodies usefulness, sitting in the library with a stern volume before her grinding away at a weighty problem. Equally upsetting is the ap- parition of a fashion-plate in tailored worsted striding along with not one, or two, but many You it was who killed Cock-Robin. Who smashed up Leda and her Swan, Toppled Rhodes ' Collosus, Babylon, And sacked the march of Kublai Khan; You it was who did all this, Laughing through the changing ages. You who dressed in gold and silk To pawn your wisdom with the sages. books under his arm. This sort of thing reached dizzy heights last winter when a grad- uate student appeared at the Student Union fountain several days in a row in spats. His explanation, when embarrassed by the jeers of several commoners standing nearby, was,  I ran outa clean socks and had to cast around for something until my laundry got back.  • A student standing in anachronistically dirty cords on a corner of the campus at ten-o ' clock would see a grand panorama of style. Here and there would be a girl in a leather jacket and a fellow in a sweater, but the ruffles and plumes of the smart shops and fussy tailoring of the haberdasheries would stand out on all 11 Years of Service to Trojans gives us a rare knowledge of their choice in clothes PHELPS-TERKEL 3450 University Avenue LOS ANGELES Central Candy  Tobacco Co. WHOLESALERS CIGARS, CIGARETTES, TOBACCO, CANDIES 627 East 9th Street, Los Angeles, Calif. 424 I sides. The chap in the dirty cords would, no will blossom everywhere. The university will doubt, feel like an oaf and slink off to some have to tear out walls and build grand stair- hidden spot to await the time to slip into class cases. late unnoticed. • Just how far this sort of thing can go, we can see from history. The next stage will be that in which certain leaders in fashion will begin to come out. Because Cussy Van Oop has gone in for Empire gowns and the speckled Dalmatian, the whole campus will come out with it. Being seen at the Omega Omega tea in something different will put the social- climber forward six notches, while having his books bound in striped zebra and carried by a lackey will mean a definite rise in prestige Professors will cease to give lectures and will replace them with things like  Salon in Ad- vanced Paleontology  and  Levee for Russian Literature.  Tea and gaily-colored umbrellas 425 2.-  FUN FOR ALL • The funniest thing about college is going to class. You get up early in the morning and rush to the campus, where you have some cof- fee and meet a lot of friends. You go to class with your friends and have a big time laughing and joking for an hour or two. At ten o ' clock you have to go out and get more coffee and make several dates for the evenings, then you pick up with another crowd and tear back into class for more fun. • Of course there are interruptions. A  Pro- fessor  is selected by the university to act as a kind of monitor in the class, urging the stu- dents who fall asleep to keep awake so that even to the extent of their resenting any at- nothing will escape them. More often than tempt to introduce a new topic of conversa- not the Professor is a good sort, talking along tion. All in all, though, they help things along monotonously, usually on some certain sub- by being right there with a bit of talk in the ject, for there seems to be some occupational event that your conversationalists grow mor- deficiency which makes them run to fads, ose or take to marking in their books. TO THE CLASS OF 1934 CONGRATULATIONS ! On this auspicious occasion, the Pacific Mutual extends to you good wishes for enduring success in whatever vocation you may choose for the expression of your talents and the attainment of your ambitions. THE PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY of California Founded 1868 GEORGE 1. COCHRAN, President 426 COMPLIMENTS OF JEFFRIES BANKNOTE COMPANY ENGRAVERS — LITHOGRAPHERS — PRINTERS 117-123 WINSTON STREET LOS ANGELES • Oftentimes, too, the Professor will join in the fun by inventing guessing games for the people that come to classes. Unfortunately, a good deal of the fun is missed by the majority of the students, who seem cursed by a certain ill luck which keeps them away when the Pro- fessor has planned a little game. Those who are present enjoy teasing the Professor by bor- rowing answers from one another to make a surprisingly good general showing. Since this infuriates the monitors when they discover it, elaborate efforts are made to keep them from catching on, which adds greatly to the fun. Never nod thy head, my boy. In my class be bright and coy, Hold thy pencil firm in hand, Play thee not with rubber band; When I quiz thee, don ' t be still- Bark out answers quick and shrill. Be a constant source of joy. Crack a book for dear old Troy! • They being artless souls, the Professors are deluded into a happy frame of mind by the loungers in the class, who good-naturedly keep the Professor contented at the minimum laugh themselves purple over certain witti- of effort to the assembly, so the good-times cisms made by them which they seem to re- can go on without interruption. Why don ' t gard with an especial pride. This serves to you try to play this fine game yourself? 427 ) The 100% Shock Proof (oil-immanad) Dental X-Ray Unit for your new office • First impressions couhtl When you reach for the COX on the wall of your new Office, your patients will instinctively realize that your knowledge of dentistry is as modern as your equipment. As you start your career, do not handicap yourself with obsolete apparatus — o surprisingly small monthly payment will provide a CDX. Write for complete details. GENERAL@ELECTRIC X-RAY CORPORATION 2012 Jockien Blvd., Chicago, III. Western Badge  Button Co. Established 1912 COLD STAMPED BADGES CELLULOID BUTTONS PREMIUM RIBBONS TROPHY CUPS . . . MEDALS FOR EVENTS OF ALL KINDS 120 Henne Building — 122 Wesf Third Street | Los Angel es, Calif. Phone VAndike 7288 SECURITY MATERIALS COMPANY A COMPLETE LINE OF BUILDING MATERIALS, BACKED BY PROMPT SERVICE. OffI ce and Warehouse Phone 916 No. Formosa Ave., CLadstone 6191 Los Angeles STUFFED INTELLECT • Into men ' s lives comes the desire to kiss the hem of a prophet ' s garment, to enter temples of wisdom, and to creep reverently panther-like in the shadowy footsteps of the intellectual monstrosities of the past, laugh- ing all the while with happy cynicism. The campus chow-house is the high temple; it is not without its priests and disciples. • Several scholars, let us say, have grouped themselves adoringly around their god, a popular professor. Scholar A leads off with an item from the day ' s news, by way of getting the great man to speak. He only snorts. At this. Scholar B, a little fellow who would have made Phi Bete (  If it meant anything!  ), follows up a bit of local news. This takes hold, since the Big Boy never reads anything but the college rag anyway. A lively conversation en- sues, ending only when all agree that some- thing is quaint or no good or just typical of the common type of low mind. Silence drops heavily, pipe-smoking goes on with great vio- lence. • Scholar C is not reputed very highly, not being given to wise-cracks and sophomoric reading. He tries anyway, making a remark about something the professor has said. All the crowd refuse to take it up. He shirks away. The Big Boy clicks for a belly-laugh with a quip hanging fire from the previous ar- gument. He puffs off to class. « I 1 428 • Scholars A, B, and C stop long enough to admire the Big Boy, then hurry off to throw themselves into the college life that is so dis- tasteful to them. • The table remains, to be occupied by two pedagogues, who talk shop. After they have gone, four co-eds have lettuce-and-tomato sandwiches there. Then Scholars A,B,C, and D gather to talk about the Big Boy. They think he ' s fine, an intellect, a powerhouse, a dyna- mo, a scream. The great man comes. He sits; they wait; he puffs. Finally it comes, a story ending with a clever quip. They have coffee and lettuce-and-tomato, making scathing re- marks about Co-eds. The Big Boy waddles off again. They depart still enthralled. • Thus the great questions of the day are set- tled Troy itself is rebuilt with sidewalk cafes and cells for scholarly study with a Gothic background. The movies are edited. Great men and works are catalogued with rapidity; civic phenomenon approved or rejected. The coffee is criticized harshly. • The convenient thing about it is that you can always find the intellects when you are looking for them by following in the wake of whichever Big Boy is their idol. When I was very young I yearned For bookish aura I ' ve since spurned. What I thought was dearly earned Now I see but partly learned; For, if I henceforth spoke in fable. Clothed my thought as well I ' m able, This metre poor would be less stable Than thinking at the coffee-table. HONOR KEYS Organization Emblems Commencement Programs Prize Cups and Medals T. V. ALLEN CO. Manufacturing Jewelers — Stationers 812 Maple Ave., Los Angeles STE I N WAY and other Pianos. CONN and other Band Instruments. BIRKEL MUSIC CO. 446 So. Broadway, Los Angeles. Those Delicious Butterhorns At the Coffee Shop and Crill EVERCOOD BAKERY 1412 West 54th St. LOS ANGELES TRinity 4006 Hellman Hardware Co. 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A FRESHMAN! • Ah, how the heart of a senior is strick- en with nostalgia at the sight, or even the faint sweet odor, of a freshman. Pass- ing as he does in light, mincing steps (like a lamb?), the freshman stirs those old memories into ri- bald activity. How he recalls, doth the senior, those days when he sat in Hoose 305 while the metronome beat incessantly and psychologists rushed about with great excite- ment. How he recalls, doth this senior, as he watches the freshman stoop to a drinking- fountain to bathe his beardless chin in pure water! Coming back as if from  some unre- membered world  are those thoughts of days when it seemed athlete ' s foot would never end, when libraries still meant books and not idle chatter, when root-beer coursed up the nostrils and caused sneezes, and icicles hung in the doorway. The senior looks and smiles. • How convenient to see yourself in retro- spect. There you are, walking about on your unstable legs, craning after likely-looking wo- men, rattling the quantities of change in your pocket, and affecting a gruff greeting for up- perclassmen. There you are, Mr. Senior, four years back — drooling a bit, to be sure, but standing on your firm limbs. Your desire must be to turn back the years and walk once again as this colt. Oh, dear me, yes! TORRANCE LAUNDRY CO. Superior Service Finish Family Washing by the Piece or the Pound. Rough Dry Family Wash by the Piece. Wet Wash by the pound. OUR SOFT WATER SYSTEM INSURES 1 LONGER LIFE 1 TO YOUR CLOTHES Daily Service — Given to — HOTELS AND APARTMENT HOUSES On Commercial Linen PHONES Los Angeles, AXridge 4422 San Pedro 592 Redondo 6104 Long Beach 614-16 Torrance 141 431 . Discriminating Schools Choose BILT-RITE Covers EL RODEO Covers have been manuFactured by us each year since 1923 COAST ENVELOPE AND LEATHER PRODUCTS CO. Phone MU 9131 220 Rose Street LOS ANGELES San Diego 432 San Francisco MUSCLE-MEN • Certain scholars in our little university are well set-up with biceps and triceps and all that in them is. These men are known as ath- letes, which, by coincidence, they are. • Take any animal out of its enviroment and it is a toss-up whether it is going to thrive or not. So with athletes; take them out of the gym or off the field and they either crumble into flabby masses of insensate blubber or else they spring forth like the butterfly from the cocoon, easy to look at and free as the wind. • But it is in the elephantine problem athletes that we find our interest. Unable to cope with a complex society, these latter must be taken in hand by certain kind-hearted Co-eds, who take from them first such simple fetiches as gold footballs and medals, in order that they may publicly display their directorial capacity. This having been done, the blubber athlete has only to eat and obey and life becomes as an elysian idyll sans souci. This public-spirited behaviour on the part of our girls may make school dances more dangerous, but it makes the gym a nice quiet place for a game of checkers. I Gibbon-Allen PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHER 433 i The Art Work The drawings used to head the separate divisions of this volume of El Rodeo were rendered after the manner of sketches prepared by artists in the preliminary stages of designing murals. The ideas and motives em- bodied in these cartoons are naturally of interest to many, and the editors have therefore prepared these brief summaries. DEDICATION FRONTISPIECE • This drawing shows the three genera- tions of the family looking resolutely into the future after the passing of disaster. The artist has endeavored to show the pro- tective motives of the central generation in the attitude of the figures, and by show- ing this group facing the future undaunted by past adversities. research and study side of education; the act of absorbing the best of what is already known. The central figure shows a woman with hands of skill upraised, to represent the efforts of education to develop skill. The third figure holding implements of creation symbolizes the creative side of education and its desire to develop this side of man ' s nature. ACADEMIC TROY • The artist has here shown the divisions of University Life by using figures to repre- sent the factors. The figure in the back- ground holding aloft the lamp of guidance symbolizes  Faculty  . The central figure figuratively portrays  Alumni  , in the vig- orous attitude of ascending the stairs of life, while in the foreground, at the feet of faculty, is the  Student  , in the attitude of study. STUDENT ACTIVITIES • This design shows figures symbolizing Music, Publishing, Forensics and Drama in representative attitudes of each endeavor. The viewer should have no trouble in dif- ferentiating between them. Effort has been made to group the figures in circular com- position to vaguely suggest Merry-Go- Round. TROJAN LIFE • Three elements of education are here symbolized by figures in attitudes portray- ing these elements. In the foreground a figure kneeling and reading represents the TROY IN ATHLETICS • The divisional drawing for athletics alle- gorically shows the athlete in action throwing a spear or shaft. The two figures behind him represent Excellence and Sportsmanship, his two guiding motives. The figure in the foreground, that of an- other athlete watching the effort, is chiefly for purposes of artistic composition. ORGANIZATIONS • This division is represented by a drawing showing the paramount characteristics of University Organizations. Mystery and Se- crecy are suggested by the draped figure in the foreground and by the figure kneeling with upraised hand in an oath-taking atti- tude. The figure standing picturizes the honorary organization. FINIS • The Finis design is a pictorial analysis of the University of Southern California mot- to. The drawing shows the honored one standing before the figures of  Victory  dipping the emblem in his honor, and  Judges  holding aloft the scales of justice. 434 HERE is a reason why we have had the privilege of producing EL RODEO eleven years. .n undivided service of a united staff of artisans who always give the best they have.  frU vviMiuyYvy AMM  CREATORS AND PRODUCERS OF FINE PRINTING BOOKLETS . . . LETTERHEADS BROADSIDES AND SPECIAL EDITIONS CARL A. BUNDY QUILL  ) PRESS 1228 Soutk Flo-%ver Street LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA Telephone PRospect 0347 EL RODEO INDEX A Abbot. James J Ablowich. Edgar 28,204,297 Activities Ix Acton, Ralph 400 Adams, Leo 137,140,143 Adams, Maxine 28,139.150.198 Administration - 1  Administration. Student 123 Advertising Club 402 Aeneas Hall 403 Agens, Martin 160 Ahlstram, Jack 104 Ahrens. William 28 Aikin-Smith. Pearle 187 Akaka. Simeon 104 Allaire. Robert 285 Allen, Mary Frances 151 Alley Rat 409 Alpha Chi Alpha 68 Alpha Chi Omega 349 Alpha Delta Phi 362 Alpha Delta Pi 353 Alpha Epsilon Phi 3 58 Alpha Eta Rho 365 Alpha Gamma Delta 3 59 Alpha Kappa Psi 383 Alpha Omega 120 Alpha Rho Chi 385 Alpha Tau Epsilon 121 Alumni Association 63 Amazons 369 Anderson, Ann S. 28 Anderson, H. W. 322 Anderson, Kama 28 Anderson, Lois 28 Appleby, James ' 288 Appolliad 180 Architecture - 75 Ariando, Arnold 104 Aristotelian 378 Armann. Louis 104 Arne. Mary B. 28 Arthur, Wilson 28 Ashman, George 104 A.W.S. 181 Athena 393 Athletics 236 Athletics, Women ' s 188 Athletic Managers 242 Ayres, Frederick 100,104,202 B Bash, Grace C. 28 Bacon Francis M. 23, 144, 140 Baer, Irving N. 28 Bailey, Helen M. 28 Baillie, Jack K. 28 Baker, Clyde 286 Baldwin, Simeon 157 Ball and Chain 371 Ball, Carlton F. 28 Band 168 Bankston, Gene 287 Bardin, Oliver 252,330 Barnett, Robert 104 Barr, Matthew 147,158 Barry, Justin M. 268, 284, 238 Barton, Evelyn D. 28 Barton, Peggy 374 Bartow. Ruth 28 Ba.eball 283 Basketball 267 Bastanchury, Betty 142, 184 Bateman, Paul ' 8 Bauer, Harold E. 28 Baxter, Bruce 22, 81 Bascll, Dilma 28 Beard, Francis 266 Beesemyer, Franziska 28 Behlow, Dorothy 29, 185 Bell, Homer 161 Benavides, Francis 295 Benbow, Marjorie 163 Bennett, Jean 29 Bennett, Terry C. 29, 125 Bennison, Jane 151,182 Bergin, Gertrude 29 Bergin, Mary 29 Bcrls, Eleanor M. 29, 143 Bernard, Worth W. - - - 29,70,139,143,160 Berry, Clarence 302 Bertoia, Everett V. 29,318 Bcscos, Julius Anthony 257 Beta Alpha Psi 380 Beta Gamma Sigma 364 Beta Kappa 344 Beta Pi 382 Beta Sigma Omicron 360 Biegler, Phillip 128 Biscailuz, Eugene 65 Bishop, Velma F. 69 Bixler, D. W. 142, 143 Blackstone, Otis 29 Bland, Carl C. 29 Blangy, Jeanne 29 Blewitt, George D. 29 Block, Mary C. Jefferies 29 Blue Key 400 Board of Managers 141 Board of Publications 140 Boetticher, Bertha H. 29 Bogardus, Emory 77 Bogardus, Ruth 187 Bole. David 29 Bolton. Janet 29 Bonner, Betty Lee 151 Bonney, Thomas 143, 153 Boorsc, Gerda 186 Booth, Randolph 30 Borah, Charles E. 29.126,129 Bottoms, Amelia C. 30 Boudreau, John 167 Bouelle, Mary L. 30, 351 Boyette. Dorothy 30 Bradford. Mrs. C. Raymond 95 Bradford. June B. 30 Bradford. Ruth F. 30 Brand. Norman 30 Brannan. Will ' 299 Brecse. Frank 150,152,156 Bright, Kenneth 30, 263 Bromely, Phillip 30 Bronson, Bernice 30 Brooks, Harry Ill Broomfield, Marthaellen - - - 142.150.182 Brown. Bud 314 Brown, Charlotte 30 Brown, Delbert 30 Brown, Elizabeth Helen 30 Brown, Emily A. 30 Brown. Josephine 153 i 436 Brown, Manan 30 Brown, Miriam 360 Brown, Robert 104 Brown, Roy 93 Browning. Ward 2?6, 270 Bruce, Henry W, 21 Bryan. Paul 142, 144, 148 Brvden, Randall 30, 316 Bull, Albert 104 Buchard, Catherine 151 Burchard, Gerard 263 Burnight, Robert 30 Busby. Walter W. 51 Bushalter, Ted 30 c Cady, Helen 185 Cain, Beverly 182. 185 Calhoun, Chester P. 31 Callaghan, J. Beecher 31 Cameron, Marjorie 31 Cameron, Rod 264 Camp, Joy 31.138,154,207,350 Campbell, Bruce 31,242 Campbell, Elizabeth 31 Campbell, Enola 185 Campus Colleges 67 Caplan, Charles 104 Carpenter, Kenneth 299 Carter, Alice 31, 3 59 Carter, Frank 31 Carter, Gene 31 Carter, Hansel 104 Casten, Ruth 31 Castlen, Phillip 276 Cavancy, Edward 142, 143. 144 Chalfont. August 39 2 Chase, Margaret - - - 139,142.151,184.386 Chi Epsilon 398 Chi Phi 332 Chrisman, John 302 Christensen, Eileen 31 Christensen. Otto 138,242,399 Christopherson, Virginia 182 Cislini, Francis .... 138,140,153,158 Citizenship 84 Clark, Annie 31, 186 Clark, Dorothy 31 Clark, Genevieve 31 Clark, Gordon 31,262 Clark, James 31, 343 Clark, Laura Adell 3 2 Clark, Nadine 32 Clark, Paul 32 Clark, Theron ' )2 Clark, Willis 32 Clayton, Estelle -.-,,,,, 37 Clemens, Cal '  6 ' ' Chiton, Billie  32 Clionian 375 Clisbee, Docia 32 Coine, Ruth 150 Cole, Richard 32, 380 Coleman, Alfred 103, 104, 120 Collum, Dorothy 32 Colt, Henry 32 Colton. Samuel 162 Col well, H. Bundy 32 Commerce, College of 72 Committees 141444 Compere. Ida Mae 142 Conley. Hugh 32, 373. 398 Conover. Joseph 32 Conrad, Fred 162 Conser, Frank 32 Corwin, Charles 32 Cosmopolitan Club 404 Coughlin, Alvin 25 5 Covey, Florence 3 2 Covey, William 104 Crandall, Yvonne 32 Cranj, Betty 33 Crawford, Ames 162 Crawford, Mary S. 23, 144 Cromwell. Dean 239. 296 Crosley, Franklin 32 Cryer, Edward 3 3 Cullen, Benjamin 3 3 Cullen, Richard 3 3 CuUenward. Nelson - - - 143,150,155,289,381 Curran, Francis 3 3 Cutler. BiUie 33 D Daily Troian 152 Dalzell. Cloyde Duvall 174 Dances 225 Danner. Dorothy 3 3 David. Virginia 183, 184 David. Leon T. 95 Davies. Eloise 153,156 Davis, Binda 3 3 Davis. Dorothy 33,78.138 Davis, Frederick 3 3 Davis. Mane Kills 3 3 Day, Norman 104 de Kruif, Betty 186 de la Fuente, Julio 3 3 de la Portillo, Chris 3 3 Dean. Louis 3 3  Death Takes a Holiday  175 Debate 159 Dedeaux. Raoul 287 Delta Chi 3 38 Delta Delta Delta 361 Delta Gamma 357 Delta Sigma Delta 117 Delta Sigma Phi 342 Delta Sigma Pi 397 Delta Zeta 352 Dental Fraternities - - - - - - - 116 Dentistry 97 Devine, Aubrey 238 Dingle. Helena 3 3, 149 Dittberner. Art 254 Doig. Frank 3 16 Donley. Sarah 3 3, 89 Doubemeier, John - - 33 Dougherty, Charles 34 Drama 173 Draper, Foy 293 Dressier. Daniel 34 Duckwall. Mary K. - 34. 182. 184. 187, 206, 394 Duckweiler, Louis 3 3 Durkee, Harvey 34 Dutton, Winifred 34 E Eachback, Walter 34 Eddy, Arnold 136,139,143,313 Eddy, Dale 151 Edgerton, Bailey 104 Edick, Grace .... 34,139,142,148,195 Edmonds, Dorothy 34 Education 80 Eells, Dorothy 34 Effinger, Inez 154 Elections Committee 142 Elliot, Helen 187 437 Elliot, Saxon 269 El Rodeo 148 Elston, Robert 104 Encoc, Donald M Endclman, Julio 99 Engineering 127 Enyeart, Elaine HI, 154 Erlich. Hyman ........ 34 Erskine, Robert 34. 207, 255 Esnard, Adrian 104 Eta Kappa Nu - 392 Evans, Joel 289 Evans. Keith 34 Ewing. Robert 104, 121 Eymann. Florence 34 F Factora. Agapito 34 Fairchild, James 108.118 Farnham. Arthur 1 - 34 Farnum, Ralph 34 Farrand, Stephen 34,94 Faubion, Bernard 105,119 Faucett, Jack 35 Fay, Kenneth 262 Feder, Morris 35 Fedick, Frances 3 5 Fencing 318 Ferguson, Newton 105 Ferrey, Caroline 150 Fielding. Herbert 35 Fiesler, Walter 344 Findlay, Lawrence 271 Fishel, Carl 3 5. 313 Fitch, Al 301 Flewelling, Ralph 76 Floyd, James 3 5 Fogle, EUora 3 3, 3 5 Folkerts, Jenny - - - 35 Folsom. Frances - - - - - - ' - 187 Football 245 Ford, Lewis E. 24, 98 Ford- Palmer- Newkirk 115 Forensics 159 Forney, Harold ........ 286 Fornof. Elizabeth 35 Forsythe, Pauline 3 5 Foss, Harold 270 Foster, Ernest A. - - - - 35,140,150,152 Foulkes, Bernice 142 Fox, Christy - - 35,135,139,143,150,183,189 Fox, John 3 5 Frady, Dale 155 Fraide, Carmen 163 Frank, Eugene 35 Franke. Edwin 95 Franker, Ruth 163 Prankish, Jack 140,150,152 Eraser, Helen 3 5 Fraternities . ' 327 Freed. Arnold 3 5 Freidel, Frank 151, 154 French, Roy L. 85, 140 Freshman Sports 303 Frey, Victor 3 5 Frug, Nathaniel 105 Fuhrer. Robert 274 Fujiyoshi, Harry 36 Fujisato, Yaeko 36 Fukazawa, En-Ichi ...... 35 Fulmer, Mary Jane ----,,, jg Fulton. James . . 170 G Gamma Alpha Chi 387 Gamma Beta Alpha 370 Gamma Epsilon 340 Gameral. Arthur 36 Ganajian. Haig 36 Gandy. Roscoe 36 Gannon. Margaret 361 Garfield, Reuben 36 Garrison, April -------- 36 Gates, Earl 125 Gates, Samuel 94 Gehan, June 36 Gerardi, Barbara 183-185 Gibboney, Don 36 Gibbs, Edith - - - - 36 138. 183. 186, 391 Gilhula, James 314 Gillan, Morley S. 36 Gillen, Betty Lee 36, 203, 354 Glaze, Donald 36 Glaze, Donald F. 36 Gleason, Sterling 36 Goble, Tom - - - . . . . 36, 157 Godshall, Harold 277 Goldman, Mark 37 Golf 317 Goodheart, Elaine 155 Gordon, Leo - 37 Gorham, Jack 37 Gorman, Joseph 105 Gough, Lewis - - - - 64 Graduate Manager - - - - - - - 136 Graduate School 68 Graham, Philip 37 Greenberg, Robert - - 37 Grey, Margaret 185 Griffin, Thomas - 105 Griffith, Homer 37, 266, 339 Grinnewold, Carl F. 37 Grohman, Arthur 162 Gruver, Newlin 37, 243 Gunter, Stephen 105 Guthrie, James 294, 365 Gutterman, Saul 37 Guttero, Lee 271 Gym Team - - - - - - - - -316 H Hale, William Green 90 Haley. James 37 Hall. Edward 295 Hall. George E. 37 Hall. King 252 Halley, Robert 151 Hallock, Ed 241 Halperen, Nathan - - 272 Halvorson, Edwin 105, 117 Hammack, Harold 37, 240 Hannawalt, Lsabelle 151, 163 Hanson, Albert 129 Hanson. Ralph T, ------- 37 Hardage. Earl H. 37 Harem, Borgny Onora 37 Harper, Hueston 254, 297 Harris, Gladys 187 Harris, Irving - - 37 Harris, Lester 282 Harris, Richard 37 Hasbrouck, Theodore 101, 138 Hart, Mary Gene 37 Harvey, Laurance 38 Harwood, Chad M. 38 Hasuike, Harold 38 Hatfield, LaGrande 38 Hathaway, Louise 186 Hauber, Evelyn 185 438 Haugh, Robert . . . ■ 60. 140. 143, 341 Hawkins, Trevor L. 38 Hawley, Carl 38 Haynes, Myra 1 4 Heartley, Charles 313 Healy, Daniel 38 Heath, Mary 38 Heeres, Nicholas - - 38, 74 Hefner, Doris Shaw 95 Heintz, Albert 38 Helen of Troy 194 Hellman. Wendell 38 Hendricks, Mary Ehzabeth - - - - 38, 174 Hendnckson, Walter 105 Herd, Clifford 239 Hertford, Edward - - 105 Hibbert, Maurice 38 Hickman. Donald 38, 378 Higbee. Thomas Lyle 38 Hill, Virginia 105 Hills, John 38, 382 Hilton, Ada Jane 38 Hilton, Dale 139, 140, 148 Hin, Leon Mar 39 Hirshheld, Bernard • 39, 139, 142, 150, 204, 371 Hirth, Edgar 39 Hitchcock, Elisabeth 163 Hoagland, Lester - 168 HofI, Cecil 126 Hoffman, David 39 Hogan, William 39 Holbrook, Ernest - 271 Holman, June 39, 151 Holmes, HiUard 105 Holston, Deward ........ 39 Holtzman, Rita 39 Honoraries 363 Honorary Music 372 Hooder, Wesley 39 Hopkins, Robert - - 39 Horgan, Patrick 39 Horowitz, Samuel 39 Hosford, Patricia 39, 183, 184 Houck, Helen 39 Houlan, Bill 286 House, Howard 39 Houser, John 39, 88 Howard, William 261 Howell, Sophie ........%  ) Hromadka, John ........ 39 Hubbard, Florence 174 Hudson, Arthur 102, 105 Hudson, Roy 40 HufEnc, Virginia 142, 184, 187 Hughes, Kenneth 280 Hughes, Marvin 40 Humpries, Patrick 40 Hunt, Rockwell 24, 69 Hunter, Willis O. 237 Hupp, Jack 274 Hurst, Joseph - 256 Hutchinson, Carolyn 113 Hutchinson, John 40 Hutton, William 154 Huxton, Bette 113 Hyberg, William 40 I Ice Hockey 313 Immel, Ray K. 78 Inch, Thomas T. 40 Interfraternity Council 328 International Relations 82 Intra-Mural Sports 321 Jack, Theodore 157 Janke, Paul Andrew 40 Japanese Students Club 405 Jensen, Sherman - - 40, 72, 138, 143, 206, 337 Jewell, Charles 40 Joffe, Raia 384 John, Vernon 279 Johnson, Estel 292 Johnson Robert 40 Johnson, Roy - 40, 139, 143, 144, 206, 335, 367 Johnston, Marion 40 Johnston, Roy 162 Jones, Aileen 154 Jones, Betty - - - - 40, 13 5, 143, 182, 200 Jones, Edward 383 Jones, Elwood Marston 140, 143 Jones, Frances 40 Jones, Howard 238, 247 Jones, J. Lorens ' - - 108 Jones, Philip 142 Journalism 85 Juergens, Phil 155 Junior College 86 Justice, Richard 105 K Kahn. Isadore 142 Kalbus, Ralph 40 Kanase, Thomas 40 Kappa Alpha 329 Kappa Alpha Theta 3 51 Kappa Delta 3 50 Kappa Sigma 341 Kats, Barney 40 Kawabe, Kiyoto 41 Kawagoe, Katsu 41 Keefe, Bernice 41 Keeler, Betty 149 Keim, Gordon 41 Keller, Samuel 41 Kelly, Allan 105 Kelly, Joe 270 Kemp, James 41 Kenealy, Willis 41 Kennedy, Robert 41 Kennedy, Robert 41 Kennerd, Edith 375 Kidder, Bruce 41 Kidder, William 41 Kimber, Charlotte 362 King, Margaret 151, 154, 184 Kmgsley, Robert 94 Kinzy, Katherine 41, 144, 187 Kirkwood, James 162 Klakoff, Hyman 41 Kleinschmidt, Hal 155 Klitten, Martin 41 Knorr, Phyllis 41 Knowlton, Drexel 41 Kobal, Arthur 41 Kogler, Elmer 41 Koritz, Lester - - - - 138, 140, 15 5, 156 Krumm, Melvin 41 Kuhn, Gilbert 61 Kumamoto, Frank 41 Kurtlander, Robert 41, 105 Kusayanagi, Masako 144 L Lady, George 255 La mbda Kappa Sigma 384 Lambda Sigma Nu 118 Lamme, George ........ i,1 Land, Aaron 42 439 Landers. Eileen 42 Lane. Kathleen 42 Lani;ton, Mahcl 42 Larco. Mar) 42 Larrahee, Diiane 256 Lassalette. John 42 La Touche, A. .C 24. 99 Laubersheimcr, Anton 42 Laiit:, Carl 42 Lauts, Fred 298 Laveaga, Ruth .... ijg  is. , 348, 186 Lawrence, Jack 148 Law 87 Lawless. Tom 148, 154 Lawrence. A. R. 105 Law Review 94 Layng, Jack 161 Leach. John - 42, 138, 140, 143, 144, 205, 328, 336 Leahy, Eddie 239 Lee, Martha Allen 42 Lee, William 105 Lees, Robert 106 Lcedkc, William 42 Legal Aid Clinic 95 Legislative Council 39 Lehners, John 240 Lehr, Ella 42, 393 Leitj, Anne 112 Leonard, Josephine 43 Letters, Arts, Sciences ------ 70 Levine, Sam 106 Levine, Sid 345 Levine. N. Stanley 43 Lewis, Harvey Alvin 43 Lewis, J. Arthur I66 Lick, Rosemary 43 Lindsay, Robert 139  143 Littlejohn, V. Leslie no Lloyd, Lois 4j Lloyd, Margaret 152 183 Logan, Irwin - . , , 43 Lomas, Max 43 Long, Frank 43 Lopez, Charles 43 Love, Robert 26, 140, 142, 257 Lovett. Roger 43 Lowder, Willis 43 Loye, Grace - . 43 Luellcn, Doris 43 Lueschen, Alvin ........ 3 Luhman, Gerald 43 94 Lundell, Helen ' 43 Lynch, Eugene 43, 364_ 379 Lyon, Robert 293 M Maas, Bettie - - - 45, 150, 205, 353, 387 MacDonald, Gordon 44 MacDonald. Malcolm 44 Maclntyre, Lyle 44 Mackenzie, Grace 44 Madsen, Albert 45, 140, 157 Magnuson, Harold 45 Mahan, James 106 Mako, Gene 278 Malcolm, Roy 142 Male Chorus 17 0 Mandell, Maxine 45 Marshall, John 45 Marshall, W. H. 109 Martin, Albert 45 Martin, Ermin 45 Martin, Victor 45 Marzano, Marguerite - - 45 Mashimo. Yasuini 106 Masters, Vv ' illiam 106 Mathcs, Melville 45 Matlin, David 45 Matthews, Garland 265 Mattison, Laura 45 Maureaux, Jule 45 May, Paul 106 Mayekawa, Shigeo 45 Mayer, Richard 45 McBeath, Ann Hewitt 44 McBeth. Frances 44 McBride. Catherine - ... 44, 187_ 204 McCain. Lorna 44  185 McCarthy. John 292 McCaw, Robert 44_ 172 McClean, Charles 106 McCord, Hazel 44 McCoy, David 66 McClung, Reid L. 73 McCullough, Jean 44 McCurnin, Murrow 135 McDonald, Richard 243 McEachren, John 106 McFadden, Curtis 44 294 McFarland, Phillip 44 McGready, Edna 44 McGuilly, Francis 252 McGuire, Virginia 44 McHugh, Olivia 44 Mclntyre, William 44 McKenney, Alan 44 McKibben, Paul 24, 124 McLaughlin, Kern 45 341 McMartin, Harriet ' 357 McMaster, Joan - 45, 139, 143, 182, 197, 369 McNeish, Robert ' -i j McPhee, Jane 154 Mead, Charles 45 Medicine j23 Medill, Matthew igg Melekov, Martha 45 399 Mendelsohn, Leonard 46 92 Mendelson, Robert ' 45 Men ' s Council 14Q Men ' s Debate - igi Merrigan, Joseph 195 Michel, Walter 45 Miller, Brigham jQg Miller, Elmer 45 Miller, George 45 Miller, Grace 4(5 Miller, Norma 4  Millikan, George Lee 4f, Millman, Jess 279 Minasian, Richard 290 Minor Sports - - • 311 Mitchell, H. Allan 45 Mitchell, William 45 Miyamoto, David 47 Moffatt, Donald 45 Mohler, Orvilh: . . 240 Molina, Julius 106 Moninger, Malcolm 45 Monosmith, Robert - - 142 Monroe, Nancy 183 186 Montague, James 45 Montgomery, Dorris 46 Moore, Betty 388 Moore, Florence 46 Moore, Frances 47 Moore. J. Clark 106 Moore, Ross 47 Morehouse, Jacqueline 47, 203 ij 440 Morrel, Robert 241 Morns, Phillia 47 Morrow, John ........ 288 Morrow, Joseph 47 Mortar Board 394 Mortonson, Morton 106, 116 Motley, William 106 Mottinger, Maurine ....... 47 Mountjoy, Charlotte 47 Muchmore, Gareth ...... 143  155 Munn, V iUiam 106 Munson. Jay ......... 47 Mu Phi Epsilon 388 Muraoka, William 47 Murphy, Kathleen 187 Murphy, Vivian 66 Music, Department of 165 Music. School of 79 Muth, Robert 273 Myers, Grace 47 N Nagel, Fred ......... 14J Nash, Richard 155 Nedelman, Charles 106 Neeley, Arthur 66 Neff, Ida 47 Neft. Eleanor 184 Nelson, Clye 47 Nelson, Mary 47 Nemer, Jerome 47 Neuhoff,  Edward 47, 92 Newlin, Olive 47 Newman Club 379 Newman, Milton 47 Neinmcrow, Morris 48 Nichols, Alan 161 Nies, Scheffe 48 Nishihara, Ernest - - 48 Nishimoto, Kenneth ....... i,  Nixon, Russell 48, 15 5, 162 Nordenson, John 48 Hordyke, Spencer 48 Norman, Dale 48, 140 Norton, Phyllis 163, 186 Nutt, Jack 48 o O ' Brien, Helen 48 Odonto Club 114 Olsen, Kenneth 48, 142, 143 Olsen, Nelda 48 Olson, Al 302 Olson, Emery 84 Olson, Evelyn 48 Olson, Helmer 48 Olson, Sidney 48 Orbesen, Clifford 33 2 Orchestra 172 Ordansky, George 48 Orem, Jay 143, 155 Organisations 326 Orton, Chester 48 Ostrom, L. Bradford 48 Otto, Phylhs 151, 186 Outstanding Greeks 346 Owen, Wright 49 P Pabst, George 290 Pace, Leroy 49 Palmer, Ford - 249 Palmer, Jay 47 Panhellenic Council 348 Parker, Norman 153 Parr, Ralph 148 Parsons, Charles 30 1 Patrick, Howard 16O Paul, Carl 49 Peale, George 49 397 Pelton, Nellie 49 Perry, Virginia 49 Personalities 2OI Peters, Kenneth 287 Peterson, W. L. m Phares, Glenn 49 Phares, James Richard ... - - , 49 Pharmacy 74 Phi Beta 39J Phi Beta Kappa 375 Phi Chi Theta 355 Phi Kappa Phi 377 Phi Kappa Psi 339 Phi Kappa Tau 337 Phillips, Eugene 49 Phillips, Margaret 75 133 Philosophy 76 Phi Mu It : Phi Phi 390 Phi Sigma Kappa 330 Pi Beta Phi 355 Pigskin Review 147 Piguet, Wilbur - - - . 49  140, 155, 370 Pi Kappa Alpha 343 Pi Kappa Sigma 339 Pike, James 49 Play Productions 174 Poggi, Richard 143 Polep, Mildred 49 Popovsky, Vera 49 150 Poulsen, Alfred 49 ' 259 Powell, F. Pierce 49 Preston, Harold 50 Prisler, Mike 241 Price, Mary 5Q Pritchard, Lawerence - 50, 134, 138, 140, 143, 346 Privett, Jack 155 Professional Interfraternity Council - - - 395 Propst, Clifford 266 Psi Omega ng Publications 145 Purcell, Michael 59 Pust. Ferdinand 50 Q Quigley, Bertha ........ 50 Quinn, Robert - - 300 R Ragsdale, Thorne 162 Raichart, Bert 106 Raiselis, John 50 Ramey, Theron 50 Ramsey, Mane 50, 356 Raymer, Audrey ... - 50 Raymond, John 50, 138, 162 Read, Frank 50 Reboin. Al 262 Redfield. Ethel 50, 202 Reed, Robert 50 Reese. Fred 50 Reid, Robert 298 Religion 81 Rempel, Jack 50 Reuman, Clifford 289 Reynolds, Barbara 50 Reynolds, Frank 50 Reynolds, Frederick 51 Reynolds Jane 142, 143. 186 Reynolds, Margaret 51 Rice. Everett 51 441 Richards, Lisle 51 RK ' hcrt, Florence 51 Richnu.nd, Lyda-Blythe 35: Rider. Edward 51 Ritohcy. Betty 51 Ritchev, Lola May 51 Ritter. ' Lucille 51, 389 Rittler. Nannettc 51, 187 Rivera, Mercedes 51 Rives, George 51 Rivinius, William 51 Roane, Kearney 51 Robert, George 155 Roberts, Easton 51 Roberts, Frank 290 Roberts, Hal 166 Roberts, PrisciUa 51 Roberts, Walter 396 Roberts, William 156 Robinson, Fred 207 Robinson, Vernon 106 Rockwell, Thomas 142 Roe, Dorothy 51 Rogers, Lester 80 Roome, William 51 Rose, Jack 149, 333 Rose, Watson - - - - 52, 64, 139, 143, 344 Rosenberg, Aaron 253 Rosenblum, Gordon 52 Rosenthal, David 52 Rosenthal, Jean 108 Ross, Jack 107 Ross, William 154 Rothman, Elsie 154 Rousso, Paul 139, 143, 334 Rowley, Robert 278 Rudick, Gertrude 52 Ruggles, Stan 107 Rundstrom, Adele 52 Runyon, Leslie 52 Rupp, Henry 52 Russell, Robert 54, 150 S Saks, Leon 52 Saltman, Peter 52 Samson, Louis 52 Samwell, Joyce 52 Sanborn, Alvin , . 52 Sanderson, Rowe 52 Sandland, Clifford 52 Sands, Clarice 112 Sanford, Shirley 151, 155 Saxman, Melvin 100, 107 Scharaheck, Fred 52 Schmidt, Leland - 155 Schnepple, William 52 Scholl, Lincoln 109 Schreibman, Paul - 89 Schulte, Lilah 52 Schultz, Arthur 53 Schwartz, Edward 53 Scott, Eleanor 53 Sealey, McDufEe 53 Seitter, Paul F. 42, 53 Seixas, John 257 Selby, Frances ........%% Seltzer, Herbert 53 Senior Class 26 Se Nour, Elizabeth 42, 53 Sether, Wendell - - - 53, 140, 152, 139, 203 Shacknore, Phillip 162 Shannan, Kenneth 263 Shaver, Galen 107,114 Shaw, Evan 319 Shaw, Fanny 53 Sherwin, Martha 53, 151, 155 Sherman, Thomas - 53 Shiigi, Teruo ......... 53 Shimizu, Tayo - 107 Shonnard, Ludlow 53, 242 Shuken. Rose - 53 Sieche, William 79 Sigma Sigma   - 399 Siene, Victor 53 Silverman, S. Mayo 107, 115 Sigma Alpha 406 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 333 Sigma Chi 331 Sigma Nu 335 Sigma Phi Delta 373 Sigma Phi Epsilon 3 36 Simon, Lawrence 149 Siskin, Leo 53 Sitkin, Lawrence 53 Skull and Dagger 396 Slabaugh, Helen - - 54 Smale, Charlette 54 Smisor, George ........ 54 Smith, Charles 54 Smith, Edward 54 Smith, Ernest 239 Smith, Jack - - 5 4 Smith, K. Lorraine 54 Smith, Kenneth 54, 142 Smith, Whitney - - • 54, 154, 157, 385, 388 Smithers, Frances 54 Snider, Margaret 150, 163 Snyder, Chester L. 107 Social Welfare 77 Soderberg, Vinson A. 107 Solomon, George 54 Sororities ......... 345 Sparks, Esther ........ 54 Speck, Randolph 54 Speech - - - 78 Spooks and Spokes 386 Staebler, Laird 74 Stampley, Burdette 142, 151 Stanley, E. Morgan 54, 243 Stanton, Martha 54 Stanwood, Audrey ....... 54 St. Clair, Harry 54 St. Clair, Spencer ... ' - - 338 Steadman, Oliver , . , 55 Stearns, Roswell 83 Sternberg, Ernest - - 55 Steckle, Eloise - 151 Stevens, Clarke 62 Stevens, Lawrence - - ' 55, 205, 253, 331 Stewart, Alexander ' . .... 166 Stimson, Mary Jo 55 Stoller, Eleanor 55 Stone, Harold 107, 395 Stone, Lloyd - - - 55 Stonier, Kenneth 137, 140, 146 Strack, Celeste 163 Strom, John 55 Strong, Alta 167 Strong, Clara 55 Stryker, Harriet - 55 Stutsman, Carl 55, 242 Sullivan, Golda 55 Swarthout, Jack - - - 55, 82, 138, 144 Swarthout, Max - - - 79 Sweetser, Chase . . 55 T Takahashi, Ray 55 442 Tanoue, Sumio '  Tarver, James 107 Tateya, Tomoyuki  Tatsch, Herbert 254 Tatsuno, Harry  Tauber, Raymond 56 Tau Epsilon Phi J45 Teach, Rosalee 56 Tennis 275 Thomas, Grace 56 Thomas, Margaret Ehzabeth 56 Thomas, Margaret Evelyn 56 Thomas, Robert 56 Thomas, Val 56 Thompson, Eloise - - 56 Thurher. Packard 244 Thurlow, Cecille 163 Tiegs, Ernest 83 Tienken, Chester 56 Tilden, Arnold 68 Tilden, Philip 56 Todd, Mary 142. 150, 163 Tofukuji, Shinobu ...,,. - 56 Tompkins, Harry 300 Teuton, Frank C. 20, 71, 86 Teuton, Harriet - - - - 56, 186, 202, 349 Townsend, Vera 56 Track 291 Trengove, Draxy 151, 187 Trojan Band 168 Trojan, Daily 152 Trejan Groups ' 401 Trojan Knights 367 Trojan Squires 381 Trowel 122 Turney, Senia . . . . . 56, 150, 154 Twitty, Herbert 242 Twitty, Howard 56, 89, 138 Twogood, Forrest 238 Tyler, Jane 150 Tyler, Marian 56 Tyler, Maurice ' - ' ' - - - - 107 U Uhvits, Rebecca - 56 University College 83 Unland, John 107 Upsilon Alpha 122 Upton, Charles 288 Urban, Harter 56 Urquhart, Donalda 57, 150 V Valeska, Irene . . 57 Vandegrift, Ramena - 57 Vandegrift, Robert 93 Van De Verg, Nathaniel 57 Van Osdel, Robert 107 Van Slyke, Elizabeth 57 Vickers, Jo seph 126 Viereck, Louis 57 Vlcck, Harold 57, 340 Volat, Morris 107 von KlemSmid, Roberta - - 57, 138, 182, 196 von KlemSmid, Rufus B. - - - 19, 24, 82 Voss, Henri 107 W Waldorf, Mary Elizabeth . . . . 17I, 372 Wall, Glade 107 Wall, Jane 57, 355 Wall, Nancy 57 Wallenstein, Regina 57, 3 58 Walters, Margaret 57 Walton, Marion 57 Walton, Sylvan ........ 57 Wampus 156 Warburton, Irvine 260 Ward, Lester 57 Wark, William 107 Wasserman, Robert 57 Waterman, Edith ........ 57 Weber, John 57 Webber, John 142, 169 Webster, Ferris 298 Weisbrod, Paul 107 Weiss, Katherine 58 Wellington, Welton 58 Wells, Eleanor 58 Wells, Mildred 58 Wesson, Al 244 West. Robert 58, 150 Westwood, John 101 Whistler, Ralph 58 Whitcomb, Irene 58 White, Lawrence - - - - 58. 140, 142, 144 White, Mary 58 White, Polly 151 Whitsett, Leigh 58 Whitten, Robert 58, 174 Wickman, Effa 58 Wicks, Keitha 58 Wieland, William 58 Wilcox, Ralph 64 Wilder, Jack 58, 143, 329 Williams, Dorothy 58 Williams, Fred 129, 139 Williams, Harold 58 Williamson, Frank 253 Wilson, Gaiby 58 Wilson, Margaret .-.,.., 59 Winn, Everett 249 Wirsching, Carl 63 Witherbee, Orville 59 Witty, Herbert 59 Wooledge, Phil 281 Woolner, Katherine 154, 156 Women ' s Athletics 188 Women ' s Debate ........ 153 Women ' s Glee Club 171 Women ' s Residence Hall ...... 407 Wong, Kien 59 Wong, Mathew 59 Woodard, Virginia 59 Woodcock, Ruth 59 Woolsey, Alice 59 Wotkyns, Haskell ' - - - 266 Wright, Thomas 107 Wright, J. Warren 59 X Xi Psi Phi 119 Y Yeamans, Richard 58 Yell Leaders 241 Yeo, Everett 58 Youel, Curtis 58, 258 Y. W. C, A. 186 Z Zager, Leo 58 Zeta Beta Tau 334 Zeta Phi Eta 374 Zeta Tau Alpha 3 54 Zullig, Raymond 58, 142 Zwibelman, Arnold 58 443 i El Rodeo Editorial Staff H. DALE HILTON Editor GRACE EDICK Associate Editor RALPH PARR Assistant Editor JUNE HOLMAN Organizations Editor PAUL BRYAN Assistant Editor MAXINE ADAMS Women ' s Editor TOM COBLE Feature Editor FRANK BREESE Associate Editor TOM LAWLESS Sports Editor BOB RUSSELL Alley Rat Editor Phyllis Otto ------- Senior Editor Babe Broomfield ------ Picture Editor Caroline Ferrey ------ Dance Editor Bettie Maas - - Honorary and Professional Editor Martha Sherwin - - - Student Administration Bob West ----- Faculty Adminis tration Isabelle Hanawalt - - - - Professional Editor Stanley Gushing - - - Campus College Editor Ruth Coine ----- Junior College Editor Polly White ------- Drama Editor Jane Tyler ------- Alumni Editor Shirley Sanford ----- Publications Editor Betty Lee Bonner ----- Fraternity Editor Peggy Chase ------ Sorority Editor Robert Halley - - Musical Organizations Editor Margaret King ------ Publicity Editor Elaine Enyeart ------ Copy Supervisor Ernie Foster ------ Copy Supervisor Lee Diamant _ - - - Secretary to the Editor Frank Freidel ----- Subdivision Editor Dale Eddy ----- Secretary to the Editoi Nelson Cullenw ard - - - Assistant Sports Editoi Bill Roberts - - - - - Assistant Sports Editoi James Abbott - - _ - Assistant Sports Edito Victor King ----- Assistant Sports Editoi Betty Rea Assistant Senior Edito Barbara McHugh - - - Assistant Senior Edito Marian Noozen - - - - Assistant Senior Edito Donalda Urquhart - - Assistant Fraternity Edito Dorothy Allis - - _ Assistant Women ' s Edito Grace Baash - - - - Assistant Women ' s Edito Mary Dyer - - - - Assistant Women ' s Editoi Draxy Trengove - - - Assistant Women ' s Edito Myra Haynes - - - - Assistant Sorority Editoi Mary Todd - Ass ' t Honorary and Professional Editoi Margaret Snyder ------ Debate Editoi Pete Saltman ----- Keeper of the Key: Walter Roberts ----- Graduate Adviso Bud Rifkin - - - Assistant Organizations Edito Carl Mastopietro - Ass ' t. Campus Colleges Edito El Rodeo Managerial Staff JACK ROSE Business Manager BETTY KEELER Assistant Manager BUD SIMON Assistant Manager Builders of El Rodeo Printing by Portraits by Engravings by CARL A BUNDY QUILL  PRESS GIBBON-ALLEN STUDIOS BRYAN-BRANDENBURG COMPANY John B. Jackson, representativ e Julian Gibbon, representative J. Brewer Avery, representative Art Work by Supplementary Photography by Binding by Harold Houghton and A. L. Suman Joe Mingo ROBERT DALE COMPANY Covers by COAST ENVELOPE  LEATHER PRODUCTS CO. Al Sealock, representative 444 In Appreciation • Building a college yearbook is no small task, and success is always the result of in- estimable cooperation on the part of not a small group but many willing workers. Dif- ficulties of budget, which were due mainly to the new government codes, altered many phases of the book, but help and advice in planning by several people made it possible to overcome most of our serious problems. • Expert service men are necessary for the success of any yearbook. Through the ex- pert choice of Kenneth Stonier the con- tracts were given to companies which had had previous experience on m any college yearbooks including El Rodeo. John B. Jackson, service man for the Bundy Quill and Press, and J. Brewer Avery, who repre- sents Bryan and Brandenburg, are the two men I would like to thank most. The typog- raphy, layout, and general planning of the book are some of the many units in which Johnny and  Hootch  were of aid. Besides their separate contributions, together they offered sincere advice on many important decisions. Thanks are due to Mr. J. C. Jes- sup, General Manager of the Carl A. Bundy Quill and Press, for the manner in which he handled the technical end of publication. To Gibbon-Allen Studios goes the credit for providing some of the best photographs El Rodeo has ever published. The Studio ' s ex- cellent cooperation will always be gratefully remembered. Mrs. Allen and  Gibby  , with one of their studios on the campus, made one of the major problems of the publica- tion a pleasure. The art-work of the 1934 El Rodeo is a source of complete satisfaction to those immediately concerned with the success of the book. The two gentlemen so well concealed behind the name of Asso- ciated Artists are Harold Houghton and A. L. Suman. The interesting atmosphere and action shots in the book are the work of Joe Mingo. Joe ' s efforts were certainly appreciated. El Rodeo was bound by the Coast Envelope and Leather Products Com- pany, represented by Al Sealock. • Lack of space makes it impossible to praise every member of the staff, but there are a few persons who cannot be over- looked. Ralph Parr did a fine job of mount- ing panels and checking identifications. Ernest Foster, Elaine Enyeart, and Frank Freidel produced some excellent copy. Frank Breese, Thomas Lawless, and Shirley Sanford are a trio of hard workers especially deserving of thanks. Paul Bryan, assistant editor, also handled his sections well and assisted with the features, the index, and many other portions of the book. • Many persons, too numerous to mention, gave invaluable assistance and lightened the work of the editor. To these people I ex- tend my sincere appreciation. H. Dale Hilton, Editor 445 I ' i 
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