Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA)

 - Class of 1928

Page 62 of 80

 

Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 62 of 80
Page 62 of 80



Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 61
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Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 63
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Page 62 text:

E. SE IU Schuber of Class B turned in a number of fine performances to collect a total of 44 points which gave him a lean margin over Browning who scored 42 1-4 points Camp- bell gathered 24 and Lacy 21 3-4' points. Duprey, youthful Midget star, fought through the year of hard competition and established a spectacular total of 45 1-2 points for the season. Second to Duprey came Rosenberg with 38 1-2 points. Steph- ensen tallied 28 1-2, and Hadley stretched his sum to 19 counters. The score of the dual meets: Class A B C Total Franklin ....... ..... 45 36 36 117 Hamilton .............. 58 35 35 128 Edison ...... ' ........... 2 2 13 22 58 Hamilton ...........,.. 69 58 38 165 Jefferson .............. 50 48 40 138 Hamilton .............. 54 23 30 107 Washington ......... 47 20 25 92 Hamilton .......,. 51 55 46 152 Addams ............... 0 0 20 20 Dewey ................, 34 12 4 50 Hamilton ....,......... 66 59 47 172 The scores of the All-City meet: Class A--- Won by Franklin, 27 3 2nd Jeff- erson, 20 1-6: 3rd Hamilton, 19: 4th Wash- ington, 18: 5th Edison, 15 5-6: 6th Dewey, 13 1-2: 7th Avalon, 1-2. A Class B--- Won by Franklin, 30: 2nd Jeff- erson, 213 3rd Hamilton, 18: 4th Dewey, 4 1-2: 5th Edison, 43 6th Washington, 33 7th Addams, 1-2. Class C--- Won by Addams, 20 1-2: 2nd Jefferson, 161-2: 3rd Franklin, 15: 4th Hamilton, 10 3-4: 5th Edison, 10 1-2: 6th Washington, 5: 7th McKinley, 2: 8th Dewey, 1-4. F U i ll' Marguerite R.: Oh, I just saw a horse with a wooden leg. Arthur P.: Where? Marguerite R.: On a merry go round. Fit' ty-tw o SN- Y .... N F. X X X.v...xS?i.QE3,s...RR, mds,..,,.B...w..:Qs S Ns -:rim iix X X . ... i.. . , . ' ' ' 7 NEANEESGEE stars did not achieve anything event- ful in 1927, the 1923 squad carried away honors in the meet this season. The heavyweights fell to a lowly fifth place, and the Miclgets copped second in their di- vision while the Class B crew crowded the Jefferson outfit out of a clean sweep of the meet. Captain Ervin Schuber acc muted for ten of Middie's total of 26 counters by his brilliant work on the side horse and in the all-aronud event in which he won two first places. . Other stars to place in class B were Had- ley, Barnett, Barton, Hendricks, McCor- mick and Hoos. In class C Rosenberg and Miller won first places while Takahashi, Hamble and Scott collected other honors in the affair. Reynard, Bridgeman and Urrutia were the only ones that placed in Class A. Lettermen: Class A- O. Reynard, E. Bridgeman, T. Urrutia. Class B-E. Schuber, D. Hadley, PL. Barnett, R. Barton, L. Hendricks, E. Mc- Cormick, E. Hoos. Class C-- R. Miller, J. Rosenberg, R. Hamble, W. Scott, M. Takahashi, The score of the meet: Class A--- Won by Jefferson, 32: 2nd Franklin, 22: 3rd Washington, 8: 4th Hamilton, 4. Class B--- Won by Hamilton, 265 2nd Jefferson, 25: 3rd Franklin, 10: 4th Wash- ington, 5. , Class C--- Won by Jefferson, 37 1-2: 2nd Hamilton,15g 3rd Edison,7: 4th Franklin,5: 5th Washington, 1 1-2. if S1 il il Darvin M.: You sure are good -looking today. Myron: I wish I could return the comp- liment. Darvin M: You could if you were as big a liar as I am. s..55ss.. Audi A LTHOUGH the Hamilton Gymnastic'

Page 61 text:

. W V. V X l i 'A '- Q ' 'V 9 f'f1 1 f f2f f1 i ,, - , ,. , 1.,., . , y cl-rack FTER winning four out of five dual meets, the Hamilton Cinflerpath men .did not come through in such great formfin the All-city meet. Nevertheless the Heavies finished third in class A, and the Middleweights also took athird in class B. Both squads were beaten by the crack Franklin and Jefferson outfits. In the class C dual meets the midgets fell prey to Franklin and Jefferson but cinched an easy victory over Addams, the fast team that caused much surprise in the All-City clash by taking the C division in easy fashion. Downey of the varsity created much sur- prise when he ran a brilliant race in the half- mile to cop a second to Rathburn, the cham- pion. In the dash events Freeman nabbed a second in the fifty yard dash while Parks and Davis furnished fourth and fifth places in the furlong. Miller staged a fine race to win a third, and Montoya took a fourth in the low hurdles besides Miller's third in the high sticks. In the relay Hamilton's speedy quartet was nosed out of first place by Franklin and Jefferson which if we had won might have given us the championship. l l l l x l I 4 i 1 1 r 1 l l l x l l l l Scharlin won third place in the weight- throwing event, and Fawcett took fourth in the high jump. Parks finished the scoring with a fifth in the broad jump. The Class B Tracksters put on a shaky battle but landed in third place with 18 points made by Schuber, first in the shot: Holten, fifth in the shot: Cissne and Camp- bell placed second and forth in the high jump. Lacy and Browning won second and third in the broad jump. In the track events Jones placed fifth in the fifty and Rutt third in the hurdles. The relay team composed of Browning, Jones, Campbell and Schuber placed third. Duprey lead the Midget's point scoring attack with a first in the high jump and fourth in the broad jump. Hamble tied for fifth in the high jump. Stephensen ran fourth in the seventy-five yard dash. Hi- land threw for fifth in the shot. Stephensen, Rosenberg, Duprey, and Hadley ran the relay team to second place. Out of the 298 points the Heavyweights gathered during the entire season, Miller registered 40 1-4 to lead the field: Parks and Freeman tied for second with 33 1-2 each. Captain Hughes tallied 33 1-4, and Downey hung up a total of 21. , .... .... . .... . ..., ,. , , . ,... . ,.., , ,, ., . ,Ef'yg?'r QQXXNYSW S NND SYN I' X X XX X SX my it N g.-,.- .i .ls --x ' N Ss ' X-1+ gx- AN' bra, we gag. xQ SSE Nw-' ff' X wb 5' X sits 4- N if slixl si? Sax! S isih . a XXX X QQ: 1 SNNXXSC sxgy A-Sass Q 3 sw 1 R Q . is-Q:-fvxsssiw www srsrwi-msw ss. is ii l l



Page 63 text:

'S 'K Elliblll emu assess ' 'n H l BGSQIDCLUJ the garden positions while Hodges and Cl A iMontoya were used behind the bat. Her- GSS AMlLTON'S crack diamond aggre- gation completed the 1928 baseball campaign as the champions for the third consecutive season. The Eagle Ball- tossers gained permanent possession of the cup by propelling six straight vic- tories over junior prepdom competitors. The Eagles crossed bats with Franklin in the opener and downed the Greyhounds 6 to 2. The champs next engaged with Ed- ison and after a hard battle they compiled an 8 to 3 verdict over the Inventors. The Eagles annexed the third fray from Jeffer- son, 3 to 0. The outfit next flattened Washington, 9 to 2, and smothered Dewey under a 14 to 1 score. Addams lost the final game. Coach Wallace had much material in seven letterman that returned for the 1928 season. Sanchez, a releif hurler, from last year and Miller, the former first sacker, did the mound duties and shifted with center- field. Combs, McGee, and Clark patroled X. s.. he Nyliiiw? nandez displayed fine form at first sack Fwhile Cecil and Urbine covered the key- stone bag. McCormick played stellar ball at third and Howard worked at short stop. Lisman worked under Coach Wallaceas manager. The scores of the games: Hamil- ton 6, Franklin 2: Hamilton 8, Edison 3, Hamilton 3, Jefferson 0: Hamilton 9, Wash- ington 23 Hamilton 14, Dewey 1. l Ctuss C FTER defeating Franklin and Edison easily the Hamilton Midget baseball outfit loomed to cop the title for the first time, only to weaken and fall to a hard setback at Jefferson, two-year champs. The Eaglets experienced victories over Franklin, 4 to 1, and Edison, 12 to 0. After the Jeffer- son game that ended 6 to 0 in favor of Jef- yferson,Hamilton concluded the season with victories over Washingtion and Addams that landed them in second place. i The regular line-up was composed of Christensen, catcherg Captain Yocky, first ' Fifty-three Ni T' - f 'Y -. Mt' i cfis-.Vif a . ' 5 wav s + sb- .-s - s 'N ' s Ns- sf X 3 ' . i J . g -s-q-Q-if a 1. ski. SSN .gm sssfxi asm.. S NSQX: E sex: S Ng -S as six t eil, xx f s x x N N: ..-r 5 ? gl Nt. . . y X : Q,-Y., k N N.1SRX,3,v Xeogs: ,, , ,X . i. .,. -.35 I . imfssss. S 1.5 . l

Suggestions in the Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) collection:

Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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Alexander Hamilton Middle School - Warrior Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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