Beverly Hills High School - Watchtower Yearbook (Beverly Hills, CA)
- Class of 1940
Page 1 of 160
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Notes for the 1940 volume:
Page 56 contains the picture of Elizabeth Marie Betty Tallchief, Native American Prima Ballerina.
Text from Pages 1 - 160 of the 1940 volume:
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' ' as ' .f 'Zz 1 tx X A Um iv' fm' f 'xr X ' w - X , 4 fb a , , f - ffhf M ,V,, N ff 5 f O f 4,2 vm nz vw p ix 7 4 75 ' , 4 V2 , A 1 w M435 4 W7 J' Q w 1 ,ff 'Z ' Q ,aa 'Www , 'Www ,ff 'Wuufbf ve uv in qi wwf! f J L . lit Y yang-'I' f X 4 vw M ' ' for ' Q X 1 g, ff, f, lr X , in 1 Qu 1 A I S ix x 5' I Rf In I I 'I ,X A f f f , Z 4 W , , I ,I , . ,df- ' fav llme Photo by Bob Fish XIII 6 6 0 Beyerty tdttts htgh schoot has been compared to a country ctub because ot tts spactous and beautttut campus, yet tt has one ot the htghest schotasttc rattngs tn the country, and tts students are known throughout the natton tor thetr outstandtng work tn torenstcs, art, tournahsm, and mustc, As wett as nattonat tame, Beyerty entoys the pratse ot tts own students. The rotttng terraces, the tunch patto, the ctubs, and the student government wttt tang be remembered by the graduattng ctasses. The tntormat sptrtt preyatttng tn att acttytttes on the campus tnsptred the Watchtower statt to choose Ute at Beyertyn as the theme ot the t9A0 Watchtower and to carry tt out by means ot the dtvtgtofr sheets, cartoons, and tntormat tayouts. Because Dr. Merton E. trtttt, supertntendent ot Beyerty tdttts pubttc schoots, ts a new member of dmtntstratton and ot our schoot hte, he was asked to wrtte the toreword to our book. EVELYN GREENSPUN the a Yhotu by To the Student Body ot Beverty High: Dear Friends, fne year ot pubtic schoot training! You have on your having compteted another r d ring the summer to make O Congratutations up hetped your schoot become a better institution and now you witt go torth u 'b t' n to your country. your contrr u ro Moy you do your part to make the word American equat to the gtorious history ot our nation. ' usetut and constructive work, by making You can etltect this by atways doing your best, by pertormrng t' ' and by hotding atott the highest ideats ot Ameri- t ur tair city respected through your worthy rvrng, ' ts to service where energy, toyaty, yo can tite. Wherever you go, be masters ot your conduct, asprran ndittons your homes and your schoot witt teet a etticiency, and schotarship are needed. Under these co ' t iust sense ot pride in your achrevemen . f oj Sincereiy your friend, E jot , fi K d L' if f ,ii 1' V 0 I' e W 0 MERTON . t'ttt.t. If If , UM 2 4 der 3 E 4 bg nwffiwwa W H40 Vin MAWQJA 5539 Awcyumgawfff fy f 1' - ffl ' fIct ia7i tieA QWLQ C ., Jvfffrvlvw'-g JM me wwf, vw Social 777 M2446-6:0 771: I'-QW f . T BOARD OF EDUCATION X UA EXQECUTIVES , N A 3, Us Try 9MyVyff. . I - EPA E A c U LT Y T ,uhv -- My wp- x A STUDENT BODY BOYS' LEAGUAE c o U R T s X A X X EM G U A R D 5 6011, gazsvxi Y 'ty X ,Be ,MGX 20 1 u vi 6 S1 Q ji ffm 0 N-Xaagfvvx s ft ,fs M19 sz:-'W P A T R O L 5 ' Pa rch 31,2 og 6 A 0' E he A :M 07 'A Woowe WA MN' . 4 . 9 V61 4fv,Aa3A9 P11 VQZAOA 05, fl jx ' D 4 'ff N Q 7 asv' Vw dj A AM R A' 95 S156 f' WF 1 I NJ E N X 'cw . V Ayiiiil ' M W Xl, l Q1Nk M W A J WEA! Y A fm K . Wx. S QW iii! :WS ,, , X virg, M y , - , - Z 'Q '! LJ! . g if U S ,Www 7 ff, fm ,WW ,,,,, . ,ff W x. W, ww Wm.: mmm uw' www ww I WWW vw vw f 0-ff wwf-,fwwwv W Wm-mfffnww-www ff v.,W,,.f,,fwf WW .WMM fms wlmm f -fwww .. ,WH W Ecard o fducativn 0 Through the tireless efforts ofthe Board of Education, Beverly Hills High School is the proud owner ofa new gymnasium and swimming pool this year. Always devoting its time to bettering our school, the Board, through this new structure, has helped to make Beverly one ofthe finest equipped high schools in the country. Two new members ioined the Board this year and are graciously donating their time and eFforts towards the furthering of educational and social opportunities of the students, Composing the Board are President Josephine H. Fitger, Secretary Wiley N. Caldwell, John F. Starr, and the two new members, Dorothy C. Fess and Robert M. Dulin. Beverly's student body would like to thank the Board for its outstanding work this past year in guiding Beverly Hills High School to an even greater future. l DR. MERTON E. HILL Superintendent EDWARD J. HUMMEL Deputy Superintendent A. A. BOWHAY Assistant Superintendent JOSEPHINE H. FITGER President WILEY CALDWELL Secretary JOHN F. STARR DOROTHY C. FESS ROBERT M. DULIN lHllllllVl5 7irAt SemeAte1- I The Beverly Hills High School is 'a wonderful place to be-a place where fine spirit, clean sportsmanship, sincere friendliness, and mutual respect abound. We must guard iealously these attributes and work constructively if we are to hold that indefinable something that has made Beverly more than iust another school. No institution ever stands still-it either goes forward or slides back. Nor are we as individuals exempt from the responsibility that this entails. Individually, we must act so that Beverly will be proud to acknowledge us as her representatives. Collectively, we will deserve then to share that all pervasive something too fine to analyze and too subtle to understand, but which is responsible for the real Beverly, and which makes it peculiarly our own. A. A. BOWHAY, JR. BLANCHE E. DAVIS R. G. MITCHELL A. A. BOWHAY Principal R. G. MITCHELL Principal MARJORIE HAWTHORNE ISABELLE WADSWORTH HARRY M. ALTER Second Semeslter I There are many factors which determine the success or failure of an individual. The student who has the ability to apply the knowledge he receives in the classroom to the practical problems of life will find that such an ability is one of the primary factors of success. Education should be of lasting value and the principles involved in daily lessons must be retained for future application. There are other values that you should receive from your high school. Your student body has provided you with opportunities for service which have cultivated your powers of leadership, ability to co-operate with your associates in worthwhile enterprises, and assisted you in the development of good citizenship. As the school year comes to a close, I am sure you can look back upon your accomplishments and feel that your past year at Beverly Hills High School has been worth all the etfort and energy that you have put into it. You are to be congratulated upon your fine spirit, and I wish each one of you a pleasant vacation and I hope that your coming years will continue and be filled with worthwhile activities and accomplishments. R. G. MITCHELL. W Sv iggs! f if f X if W Z FACULTY, 1940 ALDRICH, HELEN LOUISE Mathematics ALTER, HARRY M. Vice-Principal, Mathematics ANDERSEN, HELEN Secretary to Principal ASHWORTH, GEORGIA Commercial AZORLOSA, EULALIA Language BABIGIAN, CONSUELO Language BARTON, MARY Language BENNETT, CAROLINE Art BLACK, WENDELL English BORDEN, NEWMAN C. Mathematics, Department Head BROWN, CHARLES W. Physical Education, Department Head BROWN, MARGARET Art, Department Head BURT, KAREN Physical Education BUTTRICK, MARY English CANADY, JOHN E. Physical Education CASE, GLEN M. Music CLARK, LEWIS W. Social Science CLARK, VENA Guidance CURLEY, WILLIAM C. Mechanic Arts ELLIOT, SAX Physical Education ELWORTHY, H. MINERVA Social Science FACULTY, 1940 EVERETT, PAULINE Commercial FAST, FLORENCE Social Science FJELDSTED, NORMAN S. Science FORSTER, GRACE W. Secretary FRANKE, NORMAN Mathematics FRENCH, JOHN H. Mathematics FROST, LOWELL c. I Science, Department Head GLASS, MAX Physical Education GOOD, ANDREW Mechanic Arts GRIFFIN, FRANCES AILEEN Language, Department Head HANCHETT, LOUIS I. Mechanic Arts, Department Head HARRIS, GLADYS K. Home Economics HAWTHORNE, MARJORIE M. Acting Dean of Girls, English HEALY, GERALDINE Music HERBST, CHARLES C. Science HERBST, RUTH English HERREID, WALTER B. Physical Education HERRON, MARY GRABER Physical Education HURD, IVA FRANCES Mathematics HURLBUT, MARY BINGHAM Language KNAUER, JAMES E. Language, English , f fry. Q ye 1-Q, swf S Y 9 ' Y ,fy sw 4 . Wap ! I f 1 as , , ff s .ci X , Q X 5 , 1 . gissis I ' f 1 'N f I, ' Q f H ., , Sy E. 4 ly Scary!!! ,sg .W 1 --an 'S s-, ,fy sw X, I , , 5 31,4 FACULTY, 1940 KNOLES, EDITH Language LESTER, WARD English LINDSAY, ISABELLE Library Clerk LONG, MARION Nurse MAGNER, MIRIAM Assistant Librarian MASON, IRENE Attendance MCCLURE, OLIVE Home Econ omics, Department Head MITCHELL, KENNETH C. Mathematics, Attendance MORRISON, WILLIAM C. Science MOORE, LEAH K. Music OWEN, WRIGHT E. Science PADILLA, JOHN C. Language PARKER, ALIDA English PATEY, JANET Physical Education PHILLIPS, VERN Art PYLE, PETERSON, DENNIE D. Commercial A BATES CORINNE S. Home Economics QUANDT, WILLIAM C. Social Science, Dept. Head RUSHING, RUTH Girls' Gym SAINT, VERNABELLE Language SCHMIDT, EUNICE English FACULTY, 1940 SCHWARTZ, JACK Commercial SEINE, VICTOR Language SPELLICY, FREDERIC R. English, Department Head STEIMLE, LEONARD N. Science SWALLOW, ALBERTA Commercial, Department Head THOMPSON, MARY Secretary TIERNEY, LENNOX Art I TOBIN, ETHEI. LOUISE Physical Education MQ! TOUTON, HARRIEQI. E Englis I FA Aw 4 f A sf f ' NS, S X VAN TILBORG, PAUL W. Social Science VAUGHAN, HAZEL Head Librarian WADSWORTH, ISABELLE H. Acting Dean of Girls, English Li ,- A :J f Q, K, ,,,,, ai wi UL , WELCH, ELEANOR 'C' I I Social Science WHEELER, RUTH I Q f ,, xx L .R English WHITE, MARGARET f S A- X English C it -,IAC I' -in 2. f UW is . I , f , f X W , Q R R oft : si sw 4 X fxf X fxv A QQS4 Sf A W R f R 2 xy . :A 1 Fi I f :N -I A ' , fs ' Q7 cs-N , 1 - -, Eff- ' Z W -A 0,4 .J X ' , f I2 t me I V' 1 .M ,. I ,V QSNLI ' , , Q2 I f' R A 4 . X gk S7 R4 Q 4 WILLIAMS, JAMES H. I Science WILSON, ANNA W. Physical Education, Department Head - WRIGHT, CHARLES F. English WRIGHT, GEORGE Music, Department Head ZAHL, MARJORIE Art Faculty photos by Helen Murray 7 I JOHNSON, CLARENCE E. LEE, JAMES R. RATHWELL, GRACE K. AIATTI'7T ':f 'Wt' Student Body Auditor Mathematics BEVERLY DOUGLASS Vice-President KATIE HAILE Records MORTON SLATER Publicity CHARLES MAY Finance HAPPY GRAVES Girls' Welfare BILL COPES Safety MAX WILLARDSON Boys' League President MATTA DARBYSHIRE Girls' League President COURTANEY PERREN Alpha President IAN ELLIOT Knight President WALT KEITH Boys' Athletics DOROTHY PAGEN Girls' Athletics IRVING BECKMAN Senior A President BERNIE GORDON Scholarship JUDY FOSTER Student Employment HAROLD HANSLMAIR Yell Leader CHARLES JOHNSON Highlights Editor ROSALIE KAPLAN Watchtower Editor, Winter tudent 5049 ARTHUR WEBBER President FIRST SEMESTER O I am writing this farewell message to you during a moment of regret and sadness, regret that the activities of the last four years must cease, and sadness that l must leave the school, the friends, and the enioyment that have enriched my life throughout this time. During these four years, l have seen Beverly progress, progress not only until it predominates as an educational institution, but also until its student loyalty and spirit are on the highest level ever reached at Beverly. f In leaving I would like to express my genuine appre- ciation to the students, to the faculty, and to the adminis- tration forthe assistance that you have extended the Board of Commissioners and myself during our term of office. In the future may Beverly continue to grow in the essen- tials of a successful student body until it ranks supreme, and may each of you have all of the success of which you are deserving. ART WEBBER tudent lady MAX WILLARDSON President SECOND SEMESTER I Four years ago we entered Beverly as freshmen. We were weak in mind, frail in body, and undeveloped in character. We looked forward to good times and perhaps a little edu- cation if time permitted. We had no goal, no ambition toward which we might direct ourselves. We were, briefly, unprepared to meet any handicap or problem which might present itself. Now, four years later, we graduate from Beverly as seniors. Time has greatly changed us. We are no longer weak and frail, but sturdy and strong. We have been guided and directed by a most willing and co-operative faculty. We have been helped and made happy by the sincere loyalty and friendship of people who have proved themselves to be Normans. The time has proved to be most worthwhile because of the many opportunities that have been opened for us. Because of the assistance of these teachers and friends, we leave Beverly enriched in wisdom, a step higher in education, and with a fuller understanding of life and its purpose. Thank you for this evolution and thank you for your loyalty and co-operation in making my term of office a most enjoyable one. MAX WILLARDSON HAPPY GRAVES Vice-President ELI INGRAM Records BETTY EVANS Girls' Welfare BILL CAIN Finance MARY PABST Girls' League President BOB ULLMAN Boys' League President JOHN WOODWARD Knight President MATTA DARBYSHIRE Alpha President JEAN HOGAN Girls' Athletics CLEMENT WOODS Boys' Athletics MORTON, SLATER Senior A President BEVERLY CAWSTON Scholarship SUE SPROULL Student Employment DICK REVNES Yell Leader JACK COOK Publicity EVELYN GREENSPUN Watchtower Editor LEONARD LOW Highlights Editor BILL REEDER Safety MATTA DARBYSHIRE MARY PABST President DARLEEN SHERANIAN MICKEY MURPHY Vice-President MARY PABST NADINE PHILLIPS Secretary ELEANOR INGRAM BECKY STEWART Treasurer irl' eague 0 Governing the girls' activities in the high school is the iob filled by the officers of the largest organization for girls in the school-the Girls' league. When each girl enters Normandy in the ninth grade, she be- comes a member of the league and is thereby entitled to participate in the social affairs presented by the league cabinet. The league cabinet itself is made up of officers elected by the girls, who in turn elect five committee heads, an historian, and a lower grade representative. In addition, the commissioner of girls' welfare, commissioner of girls' athletics, and the president of the Alphas sit in on the cabinet meetings. Beginning the fall semester, the semi-annual Big and Little Sister party was held on October 4 to acquaint the new members of the league with the activities and the officers of the group. The teas for lower and upper grade mothers were held on October 25 and November 29 respectively. Starting the plans rolling for the tradi- tional Albion street Christmas party, the annual Doll show began on December 4 and continued throughout the week. The proceeds from this event went towards financing the Albion party which was held on December l5. On December 8 the Girls' and Boys' leagues com- bined to give a student body dance. The spring semester got under way with the presentation of the Big and Little Sister party on February 28. Following this, the teas for mothers of the lower and upper grade students were given on April 4 and May I. These concluded the Ieague's activities for the year. PRD OODNN MPM WXLLARDSON BOHN NN BOB ULXNXAN MLP-N HARRXS Preskdervc Seccecanl BOB ULMMAN CLEMENT NNOODS DON FRXSBEE Bhd. DP-VXDSON e-Preskdenc Treasurer ' eag U2 hrsc E v lj O p.u'comacKcaXN becomkng a member ofc 'che Bags' League Ks che scep 'cowards schooX Xeadershkp a boy 'cakes upon encercng beverhl. A group oi 'cen Xeadkng boys are chosen by che members oi che Xeague each semesker co govern che group. Xn che cabKne'c are a presKden'c, vkce-presKden'c, SGCTGKOTY, 'creasurer, and sba assoccace Xudges oi 'che boys' courc. Pcbhf sponsored by Nxr.NNKXham C. Nxorrcson, che cabKne'c mee'cs weehhf co dcscuss ahacrs ofc che Xeague and make pXans cor akdkng Rn che beccermenc oi our schooh ShouXd s'cuden'cs need adxfrce concernkng 'che schooX Xaws, 'cheq appear before che combcned cabKne'c and cour'c cor che purpose oi recehlkng counseh A hkghhghc oi Boys' Xeague acchfrckes each year 'cs the presenca- 'cron oc the Bkg and Lhhe brochers' parw, whkch Ks heXd each semesker co acquaknc che Kncomcng freshmen v4K'ch 'che schooX acch1K'c'res and Xeaders. Pcnocher 'ceacure or 'che Boqs' Xeague Ks 'che annuaX assembhf p on cor ah che members or che Xeague. L O is 1 if f ff 1 M fra: f W , If K.: xwxxx x mul! l - Q - H. l lf. Z, ' - ff Nmixxxu, Xxxx x x..- r' W yi., I U I ru ,nr-uc, ,. v ' 1 1 Ir A - 4 X K ' 156 1 -5 ,,w....t.l U ,A . MZ leg I.: 'QQ I M - r An-gi--gg f-- ,,,,,,,......m..... , V ,nn if-I 'and Eoyst' Coal-tA O Be-verly's two iudicial bodies, the Girls' and Boys' courts, face the task of enforcing the school rules and the taking of disciplinary measures against any student who might fail to abide by the rules. The Girls' court consists of six associate iudges and the commissioner of girls' welfare. The latter is the chief iustice of the court and takes charge of the court procedure. Meeting every Wednesday, the court was sponsored for the fall semester by Mrs. Grace Rathwell and during the spring semester by Miss Mary Buttrick. Six iudges and the four officers of the Boys' league make up the Boys' court. With their cases handled much in the same manner as the Girls' court, the president of the league acts as the head of the court. Also meeting on Wednesday, the Boys' court was under the sponsorship of Mr. William C. Morrison during the past year. uardA and Patrol 0 Three of Beverly's little-rewarded and yet most valuable groups are the hall guards, auto patrol, and bounds committee. All of these groups are under the direct supervision of Mr. William C. Morri- son, who devotes much of his time towards making these groups function properly. lt is the duty of hall guards to keep the halls clear of students during the period in which classes are in session. Due to the effort of these loyal Normans, the halls have become much quieter and give students more of a chance to study. Beverly's auto patrol is in charge of keeping the cars in the parking lot during the regular school day. Another duty of this patrol is to inspect neighborhood gathering places for students who have violated school rules and have gone oft bounds. Keeping students on bounds during school hours is the iob which is handled by Beverly's bounds committee. if l .l li , as 551'---it L .. 411101 AUT l-LIN Q xxtttiglgffta A if , S it r 5 2 . D 4 1 -42742-. 1 LI Q X no' 'au ur ' Aun- ':, ' yo F s f 0 1 H eg -3, gn, D 1- L 4 .-ia, Q.,- .., V . R ' ,,,,,y4'f f f.-2, Lyra ,ii Q- F P L .1 , . HSV ZQLAQZM Wjgffyff X iw CN, vw. W'4 0 CTL S S W'40 PERSONALITIES W'4O COLOR DAY S'4 0 C L A S S S'40 PERSONALITIES S'40 COLOR DAY S E N I O R S JUNIORS A if-1 - A E fs X ii X 'iii' QR A -5 X K. Xi 5:5 X i1,. S ' O P H S F R O S H FROSH CO UNCIL W ff x xw. V , Q 'ff X fy 6 . fn 4 2 hp, QQ. f ,ff X M xgixm ,-fvkif Y x f 1 X 1, 1 'gf f f 31'-.24 J f ,ff . lfhii-' f MW 0 f W X KM Wywffmx WW 1. Aww A01 ,fm 7 V F Twenty-fourth Commencement Winter, 1940 8:15 P.M. February 8, 'I'-740 Processional Salute to the Flag Led by ROBERT JEFFERY LAPHAM Address: Youth and the Problem of Propaganda HELEN H. WINSTON Piano Solo: The Trout ........ . Schubert-Heller POLLY ANN WAPLER Address: Youth and the Problem of National Unity DOROTHE D. WINSTON Vocal Solo: Morning ....... Speaks LAURA SEABURY Accompanied by GLORIA VALLANCE Address: Youth and the Problem of Opportunity CHARLES ORVILLE WALTON Violin Solo: Dance Russe ............ . Tschaikowsky JAMES ZALMON GETZOFF Accompanied by the Beverly Hills High School Orchestra Presentation of Awards: Knight's Cup to ............. . . . IAN ELLIOT Presented by MR. R. G. MITCHELL, Assistant Principal Alpha Citizenship Cup to ............ COURTANEY PERREN Presented by MRS. BLANCHE E. DAVIS, Girls' Vice-Principal Scholarship Awards Faculty Scholarship Cup to ............ GREGORY O. YOUNG Sealbearersz VIRGINIA LOUISE BAKER, WILLIAM ROY GREENFIELD, BERNIE GORDON, CHARLES KOBLER JOHNSON, MARY ALICE LOYE, DOROTHY MARIE PAGEN, COURTANEY PERREN, DOROTHY DUNCAN ROCHE, ARTHUR H. WEBBER, GREGORY O. YOUNG Presented by MR. HARRY M. ALTER, Boys' Vice-Principal Ephebians: CHARLES KOBLER JOHNSON, COURTANEY PERREN, ARTHUR H. WEBBER Presented by MR. KENNETH C. MITCHELL, Senior Class Adviser, Presentation of Class MR. ARNOLD A. BOWHAY, Principal Presentation of Diplomas MRS. ARNOLD K. FITGER, President of the Board of Education Roll Call MR. EDWARD J. HUMMEL, Deputy Superintendent Recessional ............... . . De Koven CLASS OF WINTER, 1940 Beverly Hills High School Orchestra-Director, Mr. George Wright Vocal Music-Director, Mr. Glen M. Case Commencement Addresses-Director, Mr. Charles Wright Today well lived makes every yesterday a dream of happiness and every tomorrow a vision of hope. ' 1 C1444 o 40 Top Row: lrving Beckman, President, Anne Richards, Vice-President, Louanne Spratlan, Secretary Robert Lapham, Treasurer, Virginia Baker, Sealbearer, Robert Benton, Alfred Beresford. Second Row: Jeannette Beust, Robert Blackman, Howard Boreham, Betty Boswell, Evelyn Bowker Sam Brainard, William Brooks. Third Row: Louise Brough, Douglas Caldwell, Elizabeth Cohen, Emily Cousins, Richard DeBaugh Evaline Diekemper, Beverly Douglass. Fourth Row: Dorothy Dukey, Harriet Ettinger, Robert Evans, Robert Feldman, Phillip Fernbacher Stanley Freed, Betti Ann Friedenthal. Fifth Row: AuVergne Fulton, Marshall Gerth, Jimmie Getzoff, Phairl Getzoff, Bernie Gordon, Seal bearer, William Greenfield, Sealbearer, Jack Griffin. I Top Row lRightl: Paul Hagadorn, Jr., Katherine Haile, Elaine Halperin, Har- old Hanslmair, Clarice Hat- tenbach. Second Row: Jean Hend- ricks, Jean Herdman, Sandra Jean Herndon, Ruth Hoch- man, Donald Ingram. Third Row: Charles John- son, Ephebian, Sealbearer, Rosalie Kaplan, Elizabeth Kennedy, Vincent King, Bon- nie Kinsman. Top Row lLeftl : Nancy Jean Laughlin, Jane Lewis, Ted Lewis. Second Row: Martin Lieberman, Mary Alice Loye, Seal- bearer, Tom Lusk. MacL Third Row: Paul McKim, Janet MacDonald, William arty. Fourth Row: Martha Maclise, George Maulding, Alan Maw. Fifth Row: Charles May, Mary Meredith, Joe Mitchell. T l C1444 0 '40 Top Row: Jocelyn Mulford, Thomas Naylor, Earl Nelson, Louise Newall, Beverly-Joyce Newman, Elizabeth Osborne, Dorothy Pagen, Sealbearer. l Second Row: Nancy Payne, Courtaney Perren, Ephebian, Sealbearer, Patricia Phillips, Ruth Ran- ly dall, Dorothy Roche, Sealbearer, Paul Roy, Albert Salzenstein, Jr. , Third Row: Laura Seabury, Richard Sibeneck, Richard Simon, Neil Sinclair, Marion Sklute, Peggy l Smith, Robert Sontag. J Fourth Row: Miriam Snitzer, Edward Southard, Norma Stern, John Strock, Leonore Sturrock, Marie Taylor, Margaret Uftord. l Fifth Row: Jane Wallerstedt, Charles Walton, Polly Ann Wapler, Betty Jane Warfel,Harry 'Nar- ner, Jr., Arthur Webber, Ephebian, Sealbearer, Jackson Wells. l 1 l Q fl E 5 is li - 1 J. J: dl 'r u ig' if :il ll' l 1 i Q L E T i l i 3 l l l Top Row: Wilbur West, George Wieman, Gwendo- lyn Wiley,Franklin Williams. Second Row: Priscilla Wil- liams, William Wilner, Betty Willows, Dixon Wimpy. Third Row: Dorothe Wins- ton, Helen Winston, Stanton Wiswell, Robert WolFf. Fourth Row: Winifred Wood, Edith Woolley, Greg- ory Young, Sealbearer, Louise Young. Camera-Ahq Seniomi Hugh E. Bader William Lowber Banning Hartley Caldwell Alexander Davidson lan Elliot Richard Sheridcln Ford John F. Mount James J. O'Reilly James K. Schullinger Sheridan G. Stanton ,x E . K f enior Per :ma litieb Q I x Q 3 Q z Vx I VOTED BEST LOOXCXNG 5 Bevevkl DougXoss 1 i Bob EeTdmcm 'E ! VOTED NXOST LTTQELV TO SUCCEED Z E CJOUYTODCV Yemen PM Webber i E 3 . I . VOTED MOST POPUMP-Vx Twkng Beckman VVKnKVVood 3 3 2 I 1 VVXNTER 'AO CMP-SS OEEXCERS TreosuvevfBo'o Lophom Secvekowfkouonne Spvcmen Pveskdenkflmne Vfxdnovds Beckman 1 Vkce- Eves'xden'cfXwKnQ, I 1 I Color bay '40 0 Seven Keys to Baldpate was the theme for Color day of the class of Winter '4O. This performance of the senior class starred Joe, the ianitor's helper lplayed by Dick Simonl, who possessed seven keys to the auditorium, but by fair means and foul, he was relieved of all the keys by students who desired the quiet ofthe auditorium to write scripts for Color day. The pair that finally emerged victorious with the Color day script was Herbie and Mike, otherwise known as Bob Benton and Bob Lapham. The action took place in a hunting lodge cleverly constructed on the stage. Outstanding acts were four ghosts lCourtaney Perren, Louise Brough, Beverly-Joyce Newman, and Beverly Douglassl, who related school gossip, magic tricks by Charles May and his troupe, vocal solos by Laura Seabury and Hugh Bader, a violin solo by Jimmy GetzoFi, and a swing choir. Other instrumental numbers were piano solos by Charles Johnson and lrving Beckman and a sweet trio composed of Greg Young, George Wieman, and lrving Beckman. The high point was reached when the class, in their beige and brown sweaters, ioined the choir in singing the class song, An Apple for the Teacher, written by Charles Johnson. Student directors of this epic were Charles Walton, who was also responsible for the theme, and Nancy-Jean Laughlin. Mrs. Isabelle Wadsworth and Mr. John Padilla were 'Faculty sponsors. fn mem oriam JAMES PRICE W'40 A Twenty-Fifth Cvmmencemen Summer, 1940 8:15 P.M. June 20, 1940 Processional Salute to the Flag Led by WALTER RALPH SCHOENFELD, JR. Address: What Price Education'P MORTON VERNON SLATER Piano Duo: Blue Danube .... . Strauss-Chasins MARY LOUISE PABST JAMES ARTHUR BLODGETT Address: Tonight We Face Tomorrow MARJORIE RUTH ROSENKRANZ Vocal Solo: Ave Maria ........... . Schubert MARIE BAILEY Accompanied by MRS. MARJORIE CORSAN PARKE Address: Tomorrow's World STEPHEN G. GEBELT Violin Solo: PraeIudium and Allegro .... . Kreisler SHIRLEY IDA MARCUS Accompanied by GLORIA VALLANCE Address: Education for Service ISABELLE MOORE Clarinet Solo: Concertina ............. . Von Weber DUKE PARKENING and HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA Address: Peace, Progress, and Security MAX WILLARDSON Presentation of Awards: Knight's Cup to ...... . JOHN C. WOODWARD, JR. Presented by MR. JAMES R. LEE Co-Sponsor ofthe Knights Alpha Citizenship Cup to ....... . MARTHA DARBYSHIRE Presented by MRS. ISABELLE WADSWORTH Assistant Acting Dean of Girls Scholarship Awards: Faculty Scholarship Award to .... . . . ANITA CHARLOTTE GRANICH Presented by MR. CHARLES C. HERBST Sealbearers: MARGARET ELLSWORTH, RUTH FOLLING, ANITA CHARLOTTE GRANICH, MARY LOUISE GRAVES, DAVID ROUX JONES, LEONARD BURLAND LOW, SHIRLEY IDA MARCUS, SHIRLEY JEAN NEWMAN, MARJORIE RUTH ROSENKRANZ, NORMA EVALYN PATTERSON, DONNA JANE SANDLER, MURIEL JOYCE SIMMONDS, NANCY WHEDON, and MAX WILLARDSON Presented by MR. HARRY M. ALTER, Vice Principal Ephebians: BEVERLY CAWSTON, MARTHA DARBYSHIRE, STEPHEN G. GEBELT, MARY LOUISE GRAVES, LEONARD BURLAND LOW, MARY LOUISE PABST, and MAX WILLARDSON Presented by MRS. MARJORIE HAWTHORNE Acting Dean of Girls Presentation of Class: MR. R. G. MITCHELL, Principal Presentation of Diplomas: DR. MERTON E. HILL, Superintendent Roll Call: MR. KENNETH C. MITCHELL Recessional: Recessional ............... . De Koven CLASS OF SUMMER, 1940 Beverly Hills High School Orchestra-Director, Mr. George Wright Vocal Music-Director, Mr. Glen M. Case Today well lived makes every yesterday a dream of happiness and every tomorrow a vision of hope. C1444 0 '40 Top Row: Morton Slater, President, Ralph Hoover, Vice-President, Barbara Zeigler, Secretary, Walt Schoenteld, Treasurer, Robyn Adair, Mary Ahern, Kenneth Anderson. Second Row: Elizabeth Andre, Forest Anne Atkinson, Marie Bailey, Fred Baker, Robert Baker, Gloria Bardfield, Dick Barton. Third Row: John Bauer, Betty Bella, Edna Bennett, Betty Berch, Barbara Berry, Helen Blake, Bev- erly Blanchard. Fourth Row: Nancy Blaul, Jim Blodgett, Marian Boissier, Bill Boll, Elenora Borchert, Jim Boswell, Suzanne Bowerman. Fifth Row: Skeeter Bowers, Jayne Boynton, Jane Braly, Prue Bretherton, Gerry Brigance, Carl Burnett, l-loward Burrell. Top irightl: Bill Copes, Don Cox, Nancy Craddock, Janice Crawford, Kenyon Crawford. Second Row: Bob Craw- ley, Shirley Crowell, Jackie DaCosta,MarthaDarbyshire, Ephebian, Laurence Darst. Third Row: Charles Daus- man, Mary Davidson, Betty Davis, Maxine Deason, Mary Lee Dewan. I D E 3 U 'B V G -4 'fr Top lleftl : Bill Cain, Gerrie Calhoun, Charlotte Calori. Second Row: Gwen Campbell, Dick Carlton, Nancy Carson. Third Row: Bill Cater, Beverly Cawston, Ephebian, Glory Cedar. Fourth Row: Bill Chapman, Lewis Cianelli, Kathleen Conterno. Fifth Row: Jack Cook, Jack Cooper, .lim Cooper. C1444 0 '40 Top Row: Betty Duchand, Walt Dunn, Phyllis Easton, Margaret Ellsworth, Sealbearer, Carol Emmerling, George Epstein, Betty Evans. Second Row: Winnie Farnan, Gerry Fenning, Marshall Finck, Dona Sue Finnen, Bob Fish, Bob Flem ing, Ruth Folling, Sealbearer. Third Row: Agnes Foster, Judy Foster, Bill Fowler, Dorothy Frank, Edward Garnett, Robert Gates, Stephen Gebelt, Ephebian. Fourth Row: Marie Gilmore, Ted Giraldin, Marjorie Goodman, Edmund Gray, Happy Graves, Ephebian, Sealbearer, Jack Greenspan, Evelyn Greenspun. Fifth Row: Jacqueline Gribble, Caroline Grover, Gloria Haley, Betty Ann Hammel, Caroline Ham- mond, Mary June Hand, Joyce Hansen. Top Row lrightl: Jim Isaacs, Julian ltter, Elinor lvey, Phyllis Jack, Martha Jarvis. Second Row: David Jones, Sealbearer, Harold Jones, Egon Kafka, Karl Kahmann, Irving Kahn. Third Row: Rosalyn Katz, Edwin Kaye, Walt'Keith, Ruth Kerr, Paul Kilbourne. Top Row lleftl: Patsy Harclcastle, Jean Hardie, Bob Harms. . Second Row: Henry Harper, Ted Heil, Mary Henning. Third Row: Jack Herbst, Hal Hodges, Art l-loerl. Fourth Row: Jean Hogan, Harvey Holden, George Holstein. Fifth Row: John Hughes, Emily Hyde, Eleanor Ingram. C1444 o '40 Top Row: Sumiko Kimura, Vita KOH, Caroline Kuhns, Nancy Lakenan, Mimi Laskin, Lionel LeBel, Bob Lee. Second Row: Betty Lou Lehan, Virginia Litz, Kalman Loeb, Dick Longevan, Bryant Longwell, Mary Dale Loomis, John Lovci. Third Row: Leonard Burland Low, Ephebian, Sealbearer, Dick McCann, Bob McCray, Pat McDon- ald, Bill McEdward, Mary McMillan, Jere McWethy. Fourth Row: Roger MacNeil, Mae Magnin, Marylinn Magrill, Shirley Marcus, Sealbearer, Anne Marin, Virginia Mauzey, Marilyn Meglin. Fifth Row: Roy Merritt, Betty Jayne Miller, Jim Mitchell, Doris Mock, Marion Molin, Arthur Moore, Isabelle Moore. ,- ..,,. ...A Top Row: Duke Parkening, Jean Park-Hamilton, Nancy Parker, Patricia Patrick, Norma Patterson,Sealbearer. Second Row: Patricia Pat- terson, Harry Perry, Billie Jean Phelps, Nadine Phillips, LeRoy Pirr. Third Row: Beverly Plaut, Mariorie Powell, Barbara Pulitzer, Walter Purves, John Ragland. l i Top Row lleftl: Robert Moran, Lea Morgan, Bob Morris. Second Row: Millicent Murphey, Patricia Neffeler, Marlys Eleanor Nelson. Third Row: Beverly Jean Newman, Sealbearer, Peggy Newsom, Edith Nichelson. Fourth Row: Elwin Norberg, David Nye, Deborah Nye. Fifth Row: Clark Ogilvie, Temple Owen, Mary Pabst, Ephebian. 614440 ' Top Row: Claudia Ralls, Betsy Randolph, Mary Raphael, Zina Raymond, Eda Marie Rebout, Naomi Renier, Carmen Revnes. Second Row: Dick Revnes, Marjorie Rosenkranz, Sealbearer, Janice Ross, Bob Rubel, Donna Sand- ler, Sealbearer, Harold Sanford, Marshall Schacker. Third Row: Frank Schlesinger, Sybil Edwina Schneider, Ashmead Scott, Park Scott, Renee Shostak, Muriel Simmonds, Sealbearer, Jackie Singer. Fourth Row: Pauline Skroopka, Jackie Sloan, Geraldine Smalley, Rita Smardak, John Smith, Chuck Snipes, Virginia Snodgrass. Fifth Row: Kurt Speer, Suzanne Sproull, Ruth S'Renco, Joanne Stebbins, Edith Steinhardt, Eddie Stella, Jr., Rebecca Stewart. Top Row lrightl : Ed Wal- ler, Jane Walsh, Mariorie Walters, Dorothy Walthers, James NNard. Second Row: Earleen Warnshuis, Virginia Wellons, Muriel Westmore, Nancy Whedon, Sealbearer, Mar- iorie White. Third Row: Chase Wicker- sham, Max Willardson, Ephebian, Sealbcarer, Marie Wood, John Woodward. Top Row llettl: John Straub, Joseph Stutz, Pat Swanson. Second Row: Marietta Taylor, Beverly Thomas, Jack Tobin. Third Row: Marilyn Tousley, John Twitchell, Florence Uslan, Fourth Row: Frank Vander Veer, Tom Van Hemert, Elaine Verb. Fifth Row: Lori Von Eltz, Bettye Wagenbach, Laura Vtfalker. Uamera-Airy Senior-A Anderson, Judge Laura, Vincent Budelier, Rich Liddell, Robert Ginder, Joe North, William Granich, Anita lSealbearerl O'Neill, Richard Greenway, Richard O'TOOle, AUSHI1 Hagan, George Richards, Jack Holton, Mildred 5C1mPleI', Ed Johnson, Jean See, Harry Jones, Kenneth Shumake, Henry Kahane, Shirley 5mlfl1,l-GOD Knqpp, Jacque Storm, Jerome Kuhrts, George Wilson, Tom Nl 0129 BEST XO OXQXNG NN oodvl or 6 Bohn D01 NN cm 0901 enivr Perbcna litieb voweo N051 vovuum Nxo-1dNKXXovdson Happy Gvov es MMER 'AO CXJXSS OFEXCERS Nlkce-P 1 eskdenk fRoXpX1 Hoov ev Pves'xden'cfNxor'con SXo'cev 'Yveosu1evfNN QV: Schoenk eXd Secvekow fBov'oovo 1e'xgXex VOTED MOST WLEU TO SUCQEE9 Nxcmho D ovbq shkve NXo10N'xXXovdson .,,g,,,,......,f Colvr ay '40 O Depression, gloominess, and utter fatigue were the symptoms of the Senior A class until Dr. Measle- burg, a noted psychiatrist portrayed by Harold Jones, urged the class to get rid of its inhibitions. From that moment on, the Senior solarium turned into a lively place full of talented people and the show was on! Outstanding in Color day were Bill Chapman and his rendition of lt Ain't Necessarily So , the singing waiters, Frank Schlesinger, Karl Kahmann, and Marshall Shacker, Dean of Girls Beverly Caws- ton, romanticouple Barbara Ziegler and John Twitchell, and oomph-girl Eli Ingram. Other talented seniors in the cast included warblers Marie Bailey, Charlotte Calori, Earleen Warnshuis, and Dona Sue Finnen, each of whom sang a solo, Jim Blodgett, piano solo, and tap-dancer Marian Molin. Also on the program was a La Conga number, a so-called fashion show, and jitter- bugs Nadine Phillips and Bill McEdwards. To climax the mighty show Bill Chapman led the class in singing the Senior song written by Ash- mead Scott to the tune of Great Day and featuring the sea-foam green cashmere sweaters. Ashmead Scott and Bob Fish wrote the main part ofthe script, while Ralph Hoover acted as pro- duction chairman. l Mr. Frederic Spellicy, Mr, Charles Herbst, and Mrs. Verna Phillips gave their services as Color day sponsors. ,fryfwlf :fMf.,4f1f,.wf4sf,1fs ,np.m1.mnmf,:wlf:::Jmm4,sf,V -Wf.wmwmwwpMsysuwfmmwmfssw-rfffges-snwwucm-n-'mm A , ur .sl P 1 i 1 w X 1 K 22 2 ,W ,S A S 7 X - W JW A, , WY, -ff, -Lg1 ,,,,7 1 ,wwwmwuvwf 1 Agee, Kenneth Albright, Betty Badger, Warren Bailey, Lawrence Barman, Bob Brady, Franklyn Brockamp, Bob Burke, Stanley Butler, Pearson Carr, Carmen Fischer, Anita Fleishman, Norma Fogel, Richard Frace, Howard Friedenthal, Eleanor Hennessey, James Hickox, Jean Hilker, Fred Howell, Bob ltter, Julian Leroux, Dorothy Levitt, Daniel Lombardi, Phil Long, Bob Lyons, Ruth Manor, Sally Marohn, George Park Martin, Betty Lou Maulding, Bob Mimmack, Ethel Newcomb, Jo Ann Nichols, Kenneth Oxender, Ruth Price, Laura Ann Randall, Broox Shevitz, Seena Silver, Harry Simpson, David Smith, Bruce Stevenson, Roberta Akerman, Dorothy Allison, Kim Ancel, Mark Anderson, Peggy Arkin, Lloyd Ballenger, Bob Barber, Ed Barber, Jane Berman, Leonora Bernstein, Janet Bolin, Ginger Bowen, Stan Bowerman, Emerson Brauel, Pat Briggs, Betty Caldwell, Norman Campbell, Dick Canrobert, Doris Carney, Mary Carter, Jack Cooper, Pat Cordner, Francis Costello, Joyce Curtis, Cally Darbey, Gloria Bell, Bob Bell, Jean Benstein, Genevieve Blanchard, Beverly Bollar, Charles Clark, Warren Culbertson, Ed Erickson, Doris Erwin, John Fine, Jerry Gold, David Goldman, Toby Hamlin, Richard Heimburger, Dorothy Henderson, Bill Iverson, Bonnie Kaplan, Bette Keyes, Jack LaFond, Jeanne Leite, Mariorie McCarthy, Justin McKinney, Marylee McLester, Dorothy Mackay, Richard MocMaster, Charles MoFtie, Lila Moore, Betty Morehart, Malcolm Negley, Bob Nentwig, Tam Rice, Bette Riemer, Prudy Rough, Al Schafer, Gervaise Sharman, Lannes Unter, Zelda Wetzel, Rene Whitaker, Stephen White, Jacqueline Zimmelman, Irving Armstrong, Jeannette Armetta, Louis Arnald, Jeanne Ausman, Jane Baird, Stephen Berthelet, John Beust, Beverly Biedermann, Johnie Boal, Wanda Boarn, Frank Brintle, Shirlevon Brown, Don Bruck, Alfred Burrow, Melva Byers, Jim Castle, Don Champion, John Chapman, David Cole, Darrell Cooper, Bruce Davies, Jack Davis, Bill Davis, Lorraine Dennis, Rosemary Devvan, Agnes Dickson, Nancy Dinsmore, Haroldene Donahue, Jack Drumm, Peggy Lou Duffy, Peter Emerson, Walt Endler, Marguerite Evans, Phyllis Eyler, Bill Flagg, Gloria Freedman, Toby Friedkin, Irene Frisbee, Don Frohman, Jean Fulton, Carol Ghormley, Dave Gill, John Gillham, Jack Given, Bill Gold, Eleanor Grosse, Betty Hall, Maurice Ham, Lucita Hammond, Bob Harris, Allan Herron, Natalie Herts, Kenny Herzbrun, Herman Hirschfield, Alan Hoffman, Walter Hutchins, Alice Jackson, Jim Jacobs, Fred Jacoby, Bill Jenness, Eloise Kauffman, Bah Kavanaugh, Marion Kavich, Lawrence Kerrigan, Charles Kinsman, Bob Kraflf, Bob Kramer, Joan Krisel, Bill Krisel, Henry Kruger, Jack Leavitt, Barbara Lempares, Maria Levy, Kay Lilly, Ed Label, Powell McCann. Marge McConley, Joan McGee, Bill McLeod, Beverly McWethy, Jack Merrill, Bill Mettler, Alice Michell, Dick Miles, Robert Mitchell, Elaine Moses, Carol Jean Mullen, Bob Musser, Marion Nalley, Betty Narver, Dick O'Reilly, Joan Osgood, Mary Ostronder, Joan Parker, Jack Patterson, Virginia Perry, Tom Phillips, Jack Pierson, Jeannette Polhemus, Don Prentice, Jack ' Dunconson, Robert Dunn, Frank Duhig, Margery Earl, Jane Echternach, Marguerite Fleming, Nancy Flitton, Donald Folks, Ray Forbes, Bob Ford, Kenneth Gage, Josephine Gainsboro, Nathan Gdynia, lna Claire Geary, Logan Geller, Marilyn Goodman, Jerry Goodspeed, George Gronnis, Paul Griffith, Betty Gross, Alice Hayes, Tim Hazzard, Tom Healy, Jim Heller, Ted Hennes, Mary Jane Holland, Bob Houser, Bud Hover, Wade Hughes, Betty Lou Hurwitz, Carol Jobes, Kelly Johnson, Wesley Jones, Bob Jones, Helen Jones, Warren Klassy, Gilbert Klein, Ariel Klein, Muriel Koer, Warren Kohn, Ralph Kunkle, Jim Kutler, Gloria Lamer, Billie Lamon, Roberta Lasky, Janice Loew, Marcus Lowell, Margot Lynds, Patty Lou Lynn, Jane Lyon, Bill Mahoney, Ed Mankiewicz, Frank Mann, Ed Marquis, Margit Mayer, Natalie Mohr, Eleanor Mooring, Paulo Morgan, Bob Morgan, Dan Morros. Richard Nate, Roger Noble, Jim Noyes, Harriet Ogle, Jewell Olsen, Zora Pehkoff, Don Perkins, Marilyn Perry, Elgie Perry, Jack Perry, La Verne Ragland, Dick Randolph, Lyle Raphael, Nancy Reed, Laurel Rhodes, Clementine 3 nil, Rhodes, Robert Rhodes, Virginia Riddell, Jeanne Riestra Frank Valle Ringer, Jonas Ringold, Dorman Roberts, Dorothy Robinson, Art Robinson, Eldon Rodger, Norman !b Q ll alia! if P 'VU Ni! ll! jiri .1 , l My lift! ,lf will-M if J L' Wylii ,f lf! IL Rogers, Beverly Rameyn, Elaine Roos, Carolyn Rousselet, Denise Sampter, Ann Sherrill, Jack Siogren, Jean Slinde, Arthur Smith, Grant Smith, Mana Stehula, Adrienne Stein, Bill Stern, Betty Stern, Carol Sugden, Bill Thompson, Arthur Thompson, Hap Tilden, Robert Tumin, Dick Uhlmann, Edward Warren, Jane Wason, Tom Weber, Billie Ann Weil, Wallace Welker, Ray Williamson, Marion Willis, Jack Wilson, Patricia Wise, Konrad Wolf, Edith Alexander, Phil Allen, Valerie Atkinson, Muriel Bailey, Barbara Bates, Joyce Brown, Glen Butler, Burt Carlyle, Maxine Carpenter, Carole Cohen, Barney De Camp, Jerry Dow, Peggy Floercky, Beth Fox, Dianne Frankel, Barbara Gill, Bob Greenberg, Leanore Grossman, Don Haimolt, Gloria Hamilton, Doug Hollen, Billie Lee Homeyer, Carolyn Hoover, Bill Hutchins, Bill Jacobs, Ann Liberman, Janet Lichtenfels, Dick Litz, Jerry Lockwood, Keith Loeb, Theresa Miller, Joyce Morgan, Helen Morrison, Mel MYerson, Shirley Nakano, Tsuneo Seyring, Mariorie Shakely, Bettie Sheady, Pat Sheble, Keven Sheranian, Darleen Spratlen, Jeanne Stagner, Jean Stondaert, Dorothy Starks, Doris Starz, Mimi Toftinder, Jeannette Taggart, Gloria Talbert, Sue Tappan, Gordon Taylor, Mariorie Van Tubergen, Jean Vosburgh, Mary Jane Walsh, Robert Walt, Joe Ware, Linda Wells, Eugene West, John White, Margie Wilhite, John Williams, Evan Wolff, Allan Wright, Barbara Yellen, Beth Beats, Ed Bisher, Nadyne Boone, Betty Boreham, Roland Bowker, Marilyn Cohen, Barry Coons, John Daley, Beverly Davis, Marilyn Davis, Tim Freed, Barbara Friedenthal, Sybil Fuiimoto, Calvin Gardner, Nancy Grist, George Harris, Willard Jean Hedin, Dan Herd, June Hill, Bob Hobart, Pat Jesberg, Paul Johnson, Frances Johnston, Allene Katz, Dick Levy, Jules Maltz, lvan Bill Mayer Enrique Metzger. Harold Micheletti, Al Middleditch, Nan Nasboro, Jim Neilson, David Neville, Carleen Ormerod, Florence Parker, Millicent Paulsen, Ann Perrin, Margart Phillips, Jim Porch, Kathryn Randall, Jack Roy, Marian Sandefer, Ann Schreiber, Patsy Schroeder, Bill Sharpe, Robert Steiner, Jean Stewart, John Strickland, Ross Taw, Bob Thompson, John Randolph, Bill Reinecke, Ed Reuter, Bob Robbins, Nat Rogers, Shirley Sheedy, Barbara Sheetz, Paul Sherwin, Barbara Silver, Jerry Sloan, Mary Touton, Mary Francis Volin, Ward Walton, Bob Waltz, Patricia Whiser, Margye White, Frances WoodruH, Donald Yorkshire, Twyla Young, Bill Zukar, Eugene Adelman, Janice Agol, Allan Ahern, Joan Albright, Mariarie Ashburn, Lorraine Baum, Terry Beebe, Dorothy Bell, Jim Berglund, Audrey Bernstein, Josephine Blette, Gloria Block, Alan Booth, Carolyn Borel, Gwen Bowen, Jack Burkett, Brice Caldwell, Rod Cameron, Lou Campsey, Margaret Carnes, Bill Close, Steve Coffey, Phyllis Cohen, Phyllis Collins, Eleanor Collins, Jean Cox, Carter Cox, Earle Crowley, Joan Curtis, Bill Cuzack, Elizabeth Day, Donald Deason, Lorraine Delmar, Gray De Vane, Don Dewan, Ruth Dutton, Robert Elliott, Frances Englehart, Jeffrey Fess, Bob Firestein, Alfred Furth, Gerda Gabriel, Al Garland, Adah Gartner, Kenny Gates, Mary Grant, Jim Gray, Charles Gray, Robert Green, Mary Greenbaum, Norman Atkinson, Barbara Bacher, Carol Badt, Elise Bailey, Charles Barclay, Bloom Berry, Berna Best, Virginia Binford, Betty Jean Black, Elenor Blau, Al Bowman, Andrew Boyer, Ned Bressie, Mary Brown, Sally Burcham, Betsy Carpenter, Larrie Carson, Bob Clark, Crandall Cleveland, Jean Clinch, Marilyn Compton, Ed Cooper, Ann Corbitt, Dean Cote, Howard Cover, Millard Dale, Jack Dalton, Frank Dana, Bill Davis, Lawrence Davis, Martin De Wolf, Dot Donnutin, Suzanne Drader, Charles Duchand, Jeanne Duffy, Nancy Fitzgerald, Tom Fieldsted, Norman Ford, Charys Fatre, Vincent Friedman, Jackie Gibbon, Tom Gill, Mary Jo Gillespie, Doris Goldberg, Betty Gorney, Roddy Hansen, Juanita Hawks, Peter Hecht, Chenault Hemphill, Lewis Hentschell, Bartley Herbe, Mary Jane Herreid, Gordon Herts, Bette Holland, Betty Horace, Chuck Hymson, Donna Jacobsen, Grace Jarvis. Ed Jeffrey, Pat Jess, Bud Kernell, Peggy Kerrigan, Jack Kibby, Ellen Kingsley, Bob Kinon, Dick Laserson, Vera Layne, Thurza Leckman, Henry Lembark, Dan Lester, Marvin Lundquist, James Lutz, Sam Lynn, Mary McAdams, Barbara McCarthy, Marie McKellar, Dan McNomee, Mary Ellen McNeely, Jean MacArthur, Jackie Mallek, Beverly XMescall, lack Michell, Mary Miller, Ed Miller, Pat Minkus, Faye Morgan, Ray Mork, William Morrill, Bob Moss, Ed Mullet, Sally O'Reilly, Jack Packer, Mildred Page, Dick Page, Joy Palmer, Clark Pender, Faye Perelman, Arthur Peters, Ralph Peterson, Bette Ploeser, Leonard Rodger, Connie Roese, Connie Rubinovitz, Bert Safstrom, Helen Samuelson, Oscar Sheranian, Pauline Shiffrin, Edgar Simon, Adelaide Simons, Connie Skeehan, Pat Stahman. Jane Staples, Sally Steinberg, Warren Stephens, Vic Stevens, Norma Sullwold, Pat Swanson, Marcia Symons, Gwenn Tallchief, Betty Taylor, Bud Tipton, Harold Ureles, Dorothy Uslan, Dave Utterback, Marion Valensi, Renee Horak, R09ef Huff, RCIY Hunting'IOr1, ROY Hurd, Howard Hyde, Jack Johnson, Bette Johnson, Bob Jones, Dick Kauffman, Jane Kern, Henry Kittell, Sylvia Klinglesmith, Jack Kceppel, Shiela Krumrei, Helen Larson, Dubois Levy, Audrey Leydecker, Ray Lingenberg, Jack Liss, June Rose Lissauer, Gloria McCroy, Thetis McDaniel, Marshall McDonough, Joan McGiftin, Mona McGill, Marian Maltby, Barbara Manning, Marva Lee Martin, Bill Mauzey, Bill Menold, Eleanor Minot, Peggy Mitchell, Tom A. Mitchell, Tom E. Morehart, Mary Morgan, Mariorie Negley, Nancy Nestier, Lilian Nicoletti, Betty Nugent, Jacqueline Oban, Ukie Patterson, Mary Jane Paullin, Leslie Pearson, Fred Pelton, .lim Peluso, Pat Plummer, Bob Prindle, Gene Pulliam, Harold Quinlan, Virginia Reeser, Eddie Saunders, Alex Scheidell, Pat Scholler, Henry Schultz, Lorraine Sellens, Victoria Smardak, Christina Smart, Laurie Smith, Ann F. Smith, Arlene Smlthson, John Stevenson, Alice Stone, Jack Stradlinfz. Harry Stroud, Bill Sugden, Bob Teecher, June Tennant, Ted Theobold, Linda Thomas, Harold Thompson, Mary Jani Walsh, Ed Vilanee. Muriel Vlfarren, Jack Vsfatson, Ernest Vllatson, Keith Weckbaugh, Leland Weiser, Victor Wells, Margaret Welter, George Werner, Leatrice Wolf, Bud Wood, Virginla Woods, Muriel Wright, Kenneth Abarta, Frank Anderson, Pierre Backer, Barbara Bader, Bruce Baker, June Briskin, Fred Bruck, Henry Bushard, Barbara Bussey, Marion Butterfield, Betty Jean Cottey, Paula Darling, Clark Dasteel, Ed Dering. David Duhig, Barbara Forbes, Edward Forrest, Catherine Gallagher, Jeanne Garland, Adah Belle Gheen, Joe Gordon, Bill Gordon, Jim Goss, Joe Green, Betty Greene, Jane Herzbrun, Stephen Hillman, Barbara Hlndle, Bob Hope, Marcia Ingram, Jack Jones, Charles Jones, Doris Katz, Celia Katz, Harold Keeler, Betty Leite, Bette Letts, David Lewis, Alan Loera, Domingo McCarthy, Jane Malmgren, Muriel Masnyak, Dorothy Meadows, Ernest Miles, Don Mintz, Kathryn Morton, Francis Nate, Bob Nesa, Bernard Parsons, Peggy Pettit, Shirley Renard, Sylvia Rhodes, Leslie Robbins, Albert Roberts, lrene Roesch, John Schnitzer, Simon Schultz, Jack Schulz, Mariorie Schuster, Dick Selie, Dick Weyman, Hap Wheeler, Bill Williams, Mary Lou Winnett, Ann Wittwer, Richard Wright, Patricia Young, Pot Zuchelli, Ed Barnes. Paula Berkov, Gloria Bick, Lois Bloodgood, Barbara Boyd, Susan Caldwell, Pat Canrobert, Ellen Caplan, Arthur Caughey, Marilouise Clements, Margaret Dunlap, Dick Edelman, Lowell Evans, Joyce Fischer, Rudy Fitzgerald, Ann Gibson, Fred Gilbert, Don Goldberg, June Goldberg, Paul Goldwyn, Sam Gutcheon, Gladwyn Harburg, Moriorie Harris, Mayfield Havikin, Robert Herod, Barbara Iverson, Bob Jacoby, Dorothy Janes, Lorna Jew, Bennie Johnson, Evelyn Kendrick, Bob Kendrick, Clarice Kinner, Don Koenig, Sallie La Rocque, Harry McKenzie, Don McLeod, Patricia MacDonald, Billie Maguire, Christina Maguire, David Mitchell, Hillman Monteleone, Francelia Moore, Lucy Morgan, Homer Morris, Richard Picard, Rolf Pollard, Richard Porter, Hale Proper, Kathleen Ramey, Jim Rosenthal, Jean Ross, Tom Ryan, Bill Sackett, Rodney Saville, David xsl- Semmelmeyer, Marian Sharer, Geraldine Slater, Betty Slater, Mary Ellen Snyder, Bob R A reidfpistcf ,. fx ixv , Xu ix , V f 1 X Sokolow, Norton Speer, Mark Stancliff, Roger Staullfer, Richard Stephenson, Don Thompson, Joyce Venemen, Eloise Vogelsang, Betty Wager, Marvin Worfel, David Strickland, Elizabeth Stowburgh, Audrey Taenzer, Irene Tonner, Stanley Thayer, Jim Watson, Fred Weiss, Nate West, Morgy Lou Wilner, Jerry Wineberg, Blossom Wingate, Fayette Wondries, Chet Zimmelman, Stanley Abarta, Dick Allen, Don Allen, Robert Allwine, Zora Alter, Bob Balfour, Mimi Barber, Doris Barringer, Joan Bekins, Dwight Bernasconi, Robert Bohrer, Jackie Bradley, Bob Brown, Sonia Burke, Natalie Bustetter, John Carnahan, Pat Carver, Leroy Chudacoff, Leonard Clarke, Bruce Clarkson, Teddy Constine, Barbara Corzine, Sanford Craig, Nancy Curtice, Clarice Curtis, Naomi Diamond, Elaine Dillon, Jeanne Dixon, Barbara Dodds, Vincent Dotson, Pat Evans, Evelyn Evans, Richard Ferguson. Eva Finck, Bob Fink, Ruth Frisbey, Tom Glaser, Betty Gleason, Bill Godfrey, Joyce Godfrey, Shirley Homachi, Fuiio Hamilton, Patricia Hanson, Archie Harrow, Enid Haughawout, Barbara Herbel, Ed Herendeen, Leonora Herron, Dolores Hessell, Fred Hicks, Howard Hoefener. Corl Holmes, Pat Horwitz, Arline Howell, Earl Howell, Patti Anderson, Shirley Anker, Susanne Babcock, Fred Baggott, Charles Bailey, Loretta Bickerstaff, Phyllis Blackburn, Bill Block, Jean Bone, Janet Bonwit, Joan Butler, Dorothy Butler, Clifford Calloway, Linda Caplin, Sidney Carewe, Sally Clay, Ruth Cohn, Carolyn Cole, Jim Conlon, Betty Connell, Ruth Davis, Margaret Davis, Pat De Benedict, Nancy De Francesco, Elise De Lario, Thomas Downs, Bert Du Par, Pattie Easton, Bill Edling, Dorothy Elliot, Jere Florence, Malcolm Flynn. Lorena Fox, Sally Frank, Peter Frisbee, Barbara Graham, Frances Graham, John Groves, Charles Gross, Gerrold Gross, Katherine Haughawout, Billie Hayes, Guy Hellekson, Jeanne Henn, Tommy Hennes, Matt Hlgier, Teddy Hinds, Betty Lou Hochman, lrl Hochman, Paul Hodges, Jim Hulbert. Don Hurd, Chuck HYde, Richard l'lYrnan, Frances Jock, Earl Jacks, Phil Jamison, Belly Ann Jamison, Jeanne Jarman, Bob Jennison, Uarda Kaufman, Thelma Kessler, Bill Keye, John King, Bob Kindelon, Ellis Krick, Rulh Laemmle, Carlolla Leib, Jimmy Le Maire, Gloria Levine, Melvin McLaughlin, Belly McMullin, Shirley MacDonald, Lorello MacKinnon, Dorolhy Madden, Norma Milliken, Mollie Minier, Dee Molfal, Henry Moliaf, John Molial, Nancy Moser, Molly Mosseri, Gloria Nichelson, Ralph Norlon, Nancy Oakey, Helen O'l.eary, Dick Olerich, Belly Orgeli, Cecil Osgood, Helen Palmlag, Jack Peipers, Doranne Penney, Bob Perlman, Roberl Phillips, Coleman Press, Peggy R. Robinson, Bob Romandy, Richard Rowson, Richard Sailer, Suzanne Sale, Dewighl Sheel, Beverly Shellon, Bill Sherman, Bob Sherman, Ginnie Lou Silenf, Calherine Slanley, Ann Sfarz, Bill Sleinhardl, Gerald Sleiskal, June Stroud, Chuck Thatcher, Gloria Tilus, Don Ullerbach, James Von Ellz, Ted Walker, Reed Weil, Connie Weinslein, Howard Wesl, Felifa Wheeler, Dick Wickersham, Florence Johnson, Joan Johnson, Milton Jones, Jerome Kahane, Ben Kalerndahl, Jack Kirsl, Harold Knechl, Jim Knowlden, Marilyn Koehler, Cynthia Koren, Claire LloYd, Kimla Lindberg, Marlin Lynde, Barbara McDowell, Bruce Mclnlosh, Elaine Mann, Roberl Marks, Monle Marlinex, Osefa Megealh, Jim Merrill, June Monheimer, Ann Monlemexzi, Marco More, John Morgan, Tom Morrow, Audrey Oakford, Dick Obers, Shirley O'Brien, Dan O'ConnelI, Angel Ogle, Harriel Panzer, Basil Parker, Shirley Pallerson, Bob Paulsen, June Pearson, Bill Purvis, Winifred Rakow, Marilyn Reeser, Mary Renz, Julia Richardson, Floyd Salzgeber, Isabel Sanborn, Clyde Schnilzer, Gloria Scoll, Jeanne Seiff, Saul Slale, Barbara Smilh, Ann Snilzer, Jimmie Spear, Maurice Stallings, Jack Sullon, Evelyn Tackaberry, Dewey Tamblin, Hal Tonnenbaum, Carol Taylor, Buddy Walsh, Mariorie Wall, Joanne Wallers, Belly Lou Warner, Lila Weckbaugh, Rulh Wieman, Barbara Williams, Roger Wilson, Bill Winn, Billie Wiswell, Deon Wolf, Rube Wrighl, Mary Wrighl, Ray Young, Belly Zukor, Adolf Abrams, Audreo Agol, Bob Alexander, Noelle Altman, Harry Anderson, Bill Brand, Bobette Brett, Paul Burdick, Dorothy Burke, John Chambers, Van Cox, Don Craddock, Mary Ann Davidson, Jane Dent, Peter Effenbein, Josef Gebhart, Carl Geller, Janet Gold, Eugene Goldman, Roberta Greenblatt, Marilyn Henshaw, John Hill, Paula Holden, .lack Halloway, Tom Howard, Morton Knotek, Matt Kopelson, Sally Lanquillon, Joyce laughin, Patricia Lindsey, William McCarthy, Jim McCauley, Jean McMillan, Sheila Maltz, Perry Marin, John Quimby, Fred Raphael, Joan Ritter, Georgene Robbins, Roberta Roberts, Jessie Seidel, Arnold Simmons, Michael Skauras, Charles Spaulding, Virginia Spielman, Glenrose Talmadge, Phyllis Thomas, Seymour Tucker, Georgina Viault, Harold Walton, David Wood, Bud Wood, Don Wood, George Beaudette, Bob Bellows, Harry Birkelund, Joan Blum, Betty Brackett, Betty Chancey, Bette Jayne Christian, Helen Clayton, Arthur Condon, Mary Lou Conterno, Jack Evans, Bob Feldman, Joe Finkel, Bernice Fox, Wallace Gage, Shirley Gribble, Mert Griffith, Gordon Hanbury, Nancy Ann Haney, Beverly Hassett, Nancy Hyde, .lean Jeffrey, Elizabeth Johns, Harrie Johnson, Charles Kennedy, larry LoetTler, Wilma Lofgen, Jaclr Lovelace, Jonathan Lyman, David Lyons, Louise Massey, Ann Maurseth, Stanley Noyes, Nancy Oswald, Janet Phillips, Harriet Rogers, Frances Rowley, Julene Rubin, Ann Rubin, Leslie Schnitzer, Alan Spratt, Jack Stahmann, Paul Stiner, Pat Strauss, Joanne Tallchief, Mariorie Wevill, Dick White, Earnest Whitham, Bob Wiard, Joyce Willner, Stuart Wright, Catherine Yardum, Leroy Youngquist, Kathryne -..., ,... .,.,, , T., 71-oAlaC'vuncil U The Freshman council is organized forthe purpose of uniting the ninth grades. This council is made up of the officers ofthe ninth grade and a member from each ninth grade English class. The ninth grade class, sponsored by Mr. Leonard Steimle, is planning to continue with the tree planting ceremony, but hopes to put it on a larger scale. The class in undertaking this plan hopes to develop a certain section of the campus for its own and call it the Freshman grove. The A-9's entertained the B-9's with a dance held in the cafeteria. The ninth-graders also held their traditional beach party at Castle rock. OFFICERS: President, Bob Bernasconi and Pat Davis, Vice-President, Pat Davis and Pat Carnahan, Secretary, Evelyn Evans and Barbara Frisbee, Treasurer, John More. MEMBERS: Nancy de Benedict, Mike Simmons, Don Wood, Harry Matz, Bruce Clark, Richard Bowson, Van Chambers, Jim Knecht, Sidney Capplan, Janet Bone, and Arline Horowitz. N57 Qfdf , I ' WATCIHTEJXWER H LI S JJ' Q CAQ RA ,NYVQYBRIQFJX A TAG CREW HESTRA Qj JO! Q N D fFj CAPPELLA , N'GLEE CLUBS QB' FoRENslc:s STAR WAGON J THE ENEMY CHRISTMAS PAGEANT SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL NORMAN PARADE VOCATIONAL CONFERENCE s E M B L I E 5 VERSE CHOIR AS X49 UJLXIQXX y 0 W 5 M ,QU iv M4 A Mlm! Y, W' wi L ...f 'Ma MIP atc tower LITERARY STAFF O This year it has been the obiect of the Watchtower staff to present an annual reflecting the school spirit that pervades the entire campus, thus the yearbook has been compiled in a more informal and modern style than before. To Miss Ruth Wheeler, the adviser go the sincere thanks of the entire staff, because without her work, help, and advice, this year's Watchtower could not have been successfully completed. By including informal shots of the faculty and various student leaders, we have endeavored to make this thirteenth edition of our yearbook more personal and attractive than previous books have been. However, the student body showed the staFf its appreciation of a fine Watchtower early in the semester by putting over the all- important sales campaign. JOHN STRAUB RALPH HOOVER Business Manager Classes RUTH WHEELER EVELYN GREENSPUN DICK BARTON JOANNE STEBBINS Adviser Editor Boys' Sports Features JOHN WOODWARD BETTY STERN LORI von ELTZ ROSALIE KAPLAN Administration Activities Publicity Winter Co-Editor Boys' Sports VIRGINIA LITZ CAROLINE KUHNS MARTHA DARBYSHIRE Assistant Editor Classes Clubs JUDY FOSTER MARLYS NELSON JIM ISAACS Girls' Sports Features Publicity BOB ULLMAN , JOHN TWITCHELL CHARLES JOHNSON Clubs W Business Manager Winter Co-Editor -M..-.4 Photo by Bob Fish BEVERLY PLAUT Art Editor ART STAFF OThe art stati' has played an important part in planning and producing this year's annual. In co-operation with the editorial staff, the art staff worked out ideas for pictures, cartoons, layouts, and the theme itself. The aims of the art department were the same as those of the editorial staff, in that they hoped to portray school life in an interesting and informal manner. Appreciation is extended to Mrs. Caroline Bennett, art adviser, for her help in compiling the annual. EDITH NICHELSON Division Sheets CAROLINE BENNETT Adviser PAT YOUNG Division Sheets PAT COOPER Lettering RICHARD NARVER Cartoons BOB CRAWLEY End Sheets SYBIL SCHNEIDER Mounting JERE McWETHY Lettering JANET MacDONALD Photography ELAINE VERB Mounting ANITA FISCHER Calendar GERRY FENNING Fill-ins DEBORAH NYE Features HENRY HARPER Calendar GERVAISE SCHAFER Staff HELEN BLAKE Features LEWIS CIANELLI Staff LEE McKINNEY Staff JEAN HENDRICKS Staff MARY McMILLAN Staff liiglaliglrtsf FIRST SEMESTER O In an eFlort to speed up publication, the Highlights staff this year began issuing the paper on Wednesday instead of Thursday. With the aid of the newly-acquired Ludlow typesetter, a more professional-looking and accurate paper has been published. During the first semester, under the capable direction of Charles Johnson, the staFf put out several special publications including a Thanksgiving, Christmas, Senior, Cub, and the newly inaugurated Sub-Cub edition. Leonard Low, editor during the spring semester, capably supervised that term's edition of the l Highlights. CHARLES JOHNSON Credit is due to Miss Eunice Schmidt and Mr. Andrew Good, Edllor-ln-Cl-llel journalism and printing advisers, who ably guided both the 'writ- ing and actual publication ofthe weekly. EVELYN GREENSPUN City Editor MARGARET UFFORD City Editor EUNICE SCHMIDT Adviser LOUISE BROUGH Personals LEONARD LOW' City Correspondent CAROLINE KUHNS Second Page Editor IRVING BECKMAN . Boys' Sports ISABELLE MOORE' Third Page Editor DOROTHY PAGEN Reporter ROSALIE KAPLAN Business Manager JOHN CHAMPION' Boys' Sports DARLEEN SHERANIAN Reporter ZELDA UNTER Girls' Sports DICK SIMON Reporter DICK REVNES BETTY COHEN Reporter i'Both Semesters Reporter SECOND SEMESTER 0 Each Wednesday, stories including the major events of the week at school are sent to the Beverly Hills Citizen in the form of a column, and, in addition, separate sports' stories are published. The column was handled from Sep- tember until February by Leonard Low and for the remainder of the year by Isabelle Moore, while the sports' angle was written mostly by Irving Beckman and John Champion. In November, a state-wide journalism convention was held at National City, near San Diego, and Beverly High was allowed four delegates. Those selected by lot to rep- resent the school were Rosalie Kaplan, Caroline Kuhns, Irving Beckman, and Charles Johnson, who attended round- tables and meetings at the two-day assemblage. The two outstanding activities during the year for stu- LEONARD LOW' Editor-in-Chief Phot dents of journalism are the semi-annual Press club banquets. Held at the end of each term, the out standing reporters are announced, as are those editors receiving membership in the international honorary iournalism society, Quill and Scroll. The maior scoop ofthe year was flashed to the school through the Highlights when the paper held up publication for student body election returns. DICK BARTON DOROTHY WALTHERS JOHN WOODWARD' ANDREW GOOD City Editor Second Page Editor Boys' Sports Adviser HELEN BLAKE' JOHN CHAMPION PAT BRAUEL WALT KEITH Advertising Manager City Sports Correspondent Reporter Reporter CAROL HURWITZ PAT NEFFELER ED UHLMANN DIANA THOMPSON Reporter Reporter Reporter Reporter JANE BRALY' BETTYANN HAMMEL' JANE WALSH Personals Third Page Editor Business Manager HAPPY GRAVES DON FRISBEE CHARLES DAUSMAN Reporter Reporter Circulation Manager JEANETTE PIERSON NATALIE MAYER ELEANOR GOLD Reporter Reporter Reporter I I Z -1 M4 W 1 ,,,L-,..,..-1--- BOB FISH BETTY STERN Producer Script JIM COOPER JOHN STRAUB JIM ISAACS JAMES WILLIAMS Narrator Photography Assistant Sponsor WALTER SCHOENFELD BILL STEIN Titles Assistant 0' 0 I' d O Camera, the newsreel, was presented to the student body this year with the purpose of depict- ing all phases of school life and activities. Credit for the success of the newsreel goes to Bob Fish, who not only thought of the idea, but planned and produced it, to Mr. J. H. Williams, for his work, time, and advice, and to the Knights, who sponsored it. Those who helped Bob were John Straub, photography, Betty Stern, script, Jim Cooper, narrator, Walt Schoenfeld, titles, Jim Isaacs and Bill Stein, assistants. The newsreel presented an interesting and complete picture of school activities in that it showed sports, club work, field trips, dramatics, philanthropy work, and diFferent phases of social life. lt is sincerely hoped that Camera will become one ofthe many fine traditions at Beverly. dn- If In ,I mn. IM swf. -.g J l L, f-EL. 115111152 1 l I The Stage crew, directed by Mrs. Verna Phillips, is a group of students selected each semester from the Stage production and Stage craft classes. This group of students does all of the stage work for every assembly. Besides this, it puts on all of the Color days, the senior plays, the Shakespearean festival, and the Band and Orchestra concert. The organization has proved itself an invaluable asset in the staging of these various school productions. STAGE MANAGERS: Louis Armetta and Don deVane , Production manager, Jack Hunsakertg Master electrician, Dick Kinon , Props, Beth Floerckytg Crew, Lawrence Boiley', Bob Bollinger, Glen Brown, Burton Butler, Don Flitton', John Gill, George Goodspeed, Doug Hamilton, Bill Henderson, Phil Lombardi, Justin MacCorthy, George Maulding, Bob Morris, Angel O'Connor, Bill Randolph, Art Robinson, Neil Samuelson, Jack Sherril, and Bill West. 'Both Semesters 1 ' Tx 'Z lr tw ll ld D was Q -x 2 X, Z 1 P ., gray snag s if P ,, ,rrf .,..,. .... , ...,. ....,, , 7 AFR I' L' 6 I' d 0 The schedule this year included the contest at Pasadena Junior college, where both the band and orchestra rated the highest and so qualified for the nationals, which were held at Long Beach. Both the band and orchestra placed highest with a superior rating at the national contest which is made up of schools in Nevada, Arizona, and California who have placed first in previous contests. Several students entered in solo or ensemble divisions placed first at Pasadena and thus quali- fied to compete in the nationals at Long Beach, where they all placed first or second. They were Dorothy Wade and Shirley Marcus, violin, Doris Sherman, marimba, Bob Fleming, oboe, Dan Lembark, fiute, Kenyon Crawford, bassoon, and Jack Phillips, drum. Several ensembles were entered also. They were the clarinet quartette, made up of Duke Parken- ing, Hap Thompson, Walter Purves, and John Smith, the woodwind trio with Henry Schumake, John Smith, and Jack Schultz, the flute quartette with Dan Lembark, Jack Schultz, Richard Rowson, and Jean Block, and two more woodwind trios consisting of Duke Parkening, Jean Block, and Kenyon Crawford in the first, and Hap Thompson, Richard Rowson, and Dick Carlton in the second. The band also marched on May day in the American Legion parade and played at football games and rallies, while the orchestra played in assemblies, concerts, and at graduation. Photo by Bob F d C Beverly has every reason to be proud of its band and orchestra, considering the many honors they have brought us. Very few people realize the work and activity connected with a music contest. First of all, there are three required pieces that must be worked out and learned. After this, an inter-school contest is held, in which the group not only has to play rehearsed pieces, but is also judged by ability in sight reading. To the band goes the added work of march- ing, as perfect spacing and formations count a great deal. The group or groups coming out with superior rating are qualified to enter the national contest. The orchestra and band are made up of many people who have been members for four years. To Mr. George Wright goes the credit for the excellent training he has given the group and the many individual talents he has brought out and trained. 14 C'appellaf...Koq ' glee I To the A Cappella Choir go the sincere thanks of the student body for the many wonderful per- formances it has given. The A Cappella Choir is made up of both boys and girls who have been chosen for their voice quality. The main qualification is to the previous experience in one of the glee clubs. Singing with- out accompaniment, the voices give beautiful, richly blended tones that thrill all who hear them. Mr. Glen Case not only trained the group as a whole, but helped improve many individual voices. The choir participated in the Christmas pageant, at assemblies, and at a special concert which was given to raise money to buy more of the wine colored robes that it wears when performing. The Boys' Glee club is conducted on the same basis as the Girls' Glee clubs are. It specializes in four-part work with accompaniment and has appeared in assemblies and concerts. Probably the most outstanding of its contributions were the parts of the singing cooks, tailors, and soldiers that they depicted in Wenceslaus, the Christmas pageant. if-fl' lee I Girls' Advanced Glee is all that the name implies, as it consists of girls who have had some previous experience in group singing. The singing is done in three parts with piano accompaniment, under the direction of Mr. Glen Case. Dressed in white blouses and dark skirts, the group has appeared in assemblies, at teas, in the Christmas pageant, and at a special concert. Beginning Glee consists of girls who are novices at group singing. Many of these girls are music majors and plan to take Advanced Glee and then A Cappella choir. They are taught the fundamentals of three-part singing by Mr. Case, who uses the same methods with them as with the Advanced Glee. For assemblies or concerts, the Girls' Advanced Glee and the Girls' Beginning Glee are often com- bined, as they give a fuller and richer tone quality besides supplying the opportunity for actual experi- ence of singing to an audience. p-m.swW,.m.,,,,... ,,,,,,, , ,,,..,,, . JACQUELINE WHITE SHIRLEY CROWELL LEONARD LOW CHARLES WRIGHT Coach oren ic C For the third straight year, Norman speakers under the direction of Mr. Charles F. Wright retained their standing as the leading forensic group in California. Contributing to this achievement were eleven maior championships gained in several events in addition to excellent performances by students who did not quite reach the winners' circle. At the start of the year Beverly captured the USC grand championship for the third time in four years, with- outa single first place, thus showing all-around strength in every event. High point man at the tourney was Ned Boyer, who won second in oratory and third in extemporaneous speaking. Charles Walton and Maurice Hall finished second in debate, while Pat Scheidell and Bob Vallier tied for second in dramatic declamation. The situation at the LACC competition was reversed, where three first places were won in addition to the grand championship: Shirley Crowell, dramatic dec, Bill Martin, humorous dec, and Ruth S'Renco, oratory. Ned Boyer was second in the latter contest. Beverly high was host to the National Forensic league district qualifying tournament in Mqrqh, Three students become eligible for the National tournament: Shirley Crowell, first place in dramatic dec, Leonard Low, Senator from California to the National Student Congress, and Warren Steinberg, Representative. Other Normqng who placed high in this tourney were Jacqueline White, third in dramatic dec, Ruth S'Renco, second in oratory, Bill Martin and Pat Scheidell, third and fourth in humorous dec. A The squad then journeyed to Redlands for the annual state competition, returning with two first places and the grand championship. Roddy Gorney captured humorous dec, and Jacqueline White won dramatic deg vre ic 0 The following week Frank Mankiewicz and Leonard Low received gold gavel pins in recognition of having been voted the outstanding Representative and Senator at the Alhambra Student Congress. Leonard was also president pro tem ofthe Senate. The climax of the season came the week of April 29 when Shirley Crowell, Jacqueline White, Leonard Low, and Mr. Wright iourneyed to Terre Haute, Indiana, forthe National contests. .lacque- line went through seven rounds of dramatic declamation competition and was awarded a silver medal for third place in the nation. Leonard was elected president pro tem of the National Senate, and later was designated the outstanding member ofthe National Student Congress. At press time Beverly is tied for the lead in the Southern California Debate league. ln the SCDL humorous dec tourney Roddy Gorney won another first. The outlook 'for next year's squad is very promising, for the squad was composed this year of a large number of sophomores and will lose but five speakers by graduation. Top: Championship winners Bottom: Forensic squad P-1 JJDY . ex A. AxiQY S-i X. gf l' ,S ,L 1' fl Q H.- K mr' - L 1 1 r 'll .X ' FAT' kr K fllvji L LT' l Y ,V 11-'D X KF, 1 ,Q-L a . T . To Y-1 7, The tar Wagon C An amazing time-reversing invention dominates the theme of Maxwell Anderson's outstanding play, The Star Wagon. Steve Minch lBob Bentonl creates the machine with the aid of his friend, Hanus Wicks lAshmead Scottl . This remarkable invention transports the characters back to what might have happened thirty years before, had the circumstances been different. Steve learns what might have occurred if he had married his boyhood sweetheart, Hallie Arling- ton lEarleen Warnshuisl instead of his wife, Martha, played by Shirley Crowell. Actually, he discovers that he is much happier and better oFt in his present condition as a not-too-wealthy, but contented, mechanic with Martha as his wife. Other students who contributed much to the success of this Winter class play were Harold Jones, Beverly Cawston, and Jim Cooper. The performance was ably directed by Mr. Ward Lester, costumes were made under the super- vision of Mrs. Caroline Bennett, and the sets were designed and constructed by Mrs. Verna Phillips' stage crew. Photo by Bob Fish 6 6 O The Enemy, by Channing Pollock, was the play chosen to represent the senior class in its summer show. The play was timely in that the action takes place in Austria during the crisis of the first Great war and shows the eFfect it had on a Viennese family. To provide variety Mr. Ward Lester, the director, presented a music hall scene between acts with the music of Strauss and dancing. Prominent in the cast was Shirley Crowell in the part of Pauli, Gloria Haley as Mizzi, Tom Van Hemert, Bruce, Dick Longevan, Carl, Beverly Cawston, Baruska, Ashmead Scott, Dr. Arndt, Bill Chap- man, Bherend, Lewis Cianelli, Jan, Henry Harper, Fritz. Much of the success of the show was due to the excellent setting executed by Mrs. Verna Phillips' stage crew. O A hush fell over the audience as the curtain rose on Wenceslaus, an original pageant by Ashmead Scott and Harold Jones. Presented as a Christmas gift to the community by the Beverly student body, the pageant, with a cast of three hundred, was a combination of beautiful singing and dancing, colorful costumes and scenes, and fine acting and directing. All this was held together by the thread of the story, which told of the miracle Wenceslaus had in his power to perform and how he used it. The play could not have been the success it was without the help of Mr. Frederic Spellicy, direc- tor, Miss Margaret Brown, costumes, Mrs. Verna Phillips, stage and scenery, Mr. Glen Case, director of the A Cappella choir and Glee clubs, Mr. Knauer, makeup, Miss Karen Burt, dancing, and Mrs. Mariorie Hawthorne, Verse choir. Town Crier Wenceslaus Esther . . Reebles . Jan . . Walter . Anton . Mattais . Anhalt . Halle . CAST . Harold Jones . Hugh Bader . . Betty Stern . Ashmead Scott Howard Weinstein . . Stan Freed . Bill Wilner . Chuck May . Walter Dunn . Jim Cooper Anna . Annaliza Katzie . Maria Elsa . Mina . Kurt . Fritz . Ludwig . . Irene Freidkin Beverly Cawston . Claudia Ralls Beverly Douglass . Enid Harrow . Leona Thomas . . Paul McKim Frank Schlesinger . Jack Donahue z11 1 W-WM wi- ASYUH Lltxill Sh alempeareafn Qu ti al xlf X et X-' , X' ,lf X A 16 X' fy rl it jitfvlr' cx- 'tix fxqbx bc it Ay NI' , - A fi x e at QQ! O For two days cmd a night the walls of room 300 re- sounded with the emoting of Shakespearean plays. According to Shakespearean tradition, the sets were of the simplest design. The costumes were all his- torically correct, and with the fine acting and beautiful musical background, the festival was presented in an interesting and colorful manner. The festival was given for the entire English depart- ment and presented over fifteen excerpts from such plays as Romeo and Juliet, Midsummer Night's Dream, Othello, Macbeth, Merchant of Venice, Hamlet, and many others. Photos by Bob Fish Norman Parade 0 The radio speech class is made up of thirty students chosen for their voice quality, acting ability, and writing talent, The work, to the students, is interesting and exciting. Guided by Miss Harriet Louise Touton, the group presents its work under the name of the Norman Parade. A great deal of experience is gained by work on the Norman Parade, as the students write, act, and direct their pro- grams, which have been presented over the air, atclub meetings, teas, and in assemblies. Among the plays presented this year are Ranch ofthe Gathering Waters by Courtaney Perren, Trumped Hearts, Dream Girl Makes Good, Post Script Pamela, and The Oracle by Kay Levy, Mail Plane by Lenore Greenberg, Forever by Mildred Cram, Two Roads by Chuck Johnson, Beloved Friend by Jean Siogren, What Price Romance by Paula Mooring, Wanted - Prince Charming by Marilyn Meglin, and several other plays, including The Black Strawberry, Final Cur- tain, Elizabeth and Essex, City Bumpkin, The Enemy, and a round table discussion on Americanism. Ue e Choir 0 The Verse choir class is made up of a group of boys and girls who have been chosen according to their ability in acting and their voice quality. Mrs. Marjorie Hawthorne, the director, places a great deal of stress on individual work, diction, and enunciation. Although individual improvement is stressed, the work is done in unison, using an interesting style of delivery, which is cu combination of speaking and chanting. The aims of the group are to further the enjoyment and interpretation of poetry. The result of this work was an outstanding group who performed on a television broadcast, in assemblies, and at teas. Photo by Bob Fish Uvcational Con erence I Due to the success of last year's vocational conference, a second one was held this year on May 3, under the auspices of the Kiwanis club and the Commercial club. For two periods, l6OO students attended the meeting which gave information and advice on the vocation or profession which inter- ested them most. ln order to supply the need of a great variety of vocations, about seventy speakers came to rep- resent their various fields. The conference was planned by the Commercial club, and several students were appointed to act as chairmen of the various meetings. Some of the fields represented in the conference were art, home economics, dramatic and mo- tion picture art, engineering, government service, health and healing, music, accounting, agriculture, aeronautical engineering, aviation, chemical engineering, foreign trade, cosmetology, iournalism and foreign correspondence, forestry, law, nursing and aviation hostess, public speaking, radio and tele- vision, teaching, scientific research, and many others. e lie 0 School spirit has increased greatly in the past year, and part of the credit for this improvement should go to the many interesting and educational assemblies that have been presented. Rating high in the applause for the outstanding programs were the following: the fashion show, newsreel, radio speech, color day, talent show, Mr. Wellington Koo, who spoke on the Chinese situa- tion, motion pictures, rally assemblies, a Beverly-Glendale debate, awards, and an interesting dance group. All these assemblies have made up a wonderful schedule for the year's program, and it is to be hoped that the coming year will bring as fine a one. l i l i i i l l Photo by Bob Fish i i i l i l l I i 1 i I 41 i l i l l 1 i i i i i f ,X -'---f-- - -- f f f ., .,1ffm,,WQvffm,,w.1WsXfWwM-fzyw:.Nw .X Q X V, X, fX,, V , , ,,f ff M W NXW. ,MA ,WHNWA-wWs.wmsWW,eswsz ff.f'f.s-,fmqsfs:Wes ,,Wfmsm7fw.s.ew,XesWmf1,,VWXsXwmms- M,-Wf sXsWM1f,:fXvWfnw,fs O O TBALL ASK'ETBALL R A C K ASEBALL WIMMIN E N N I S G 0 ' L F YM TEA X X N X 1 X X I 5 N R K X G A A GIRLS' SP A OR NCE CLUB J . 1. hx U , N L1 K' X , i. 5 E E ff 1' ,.., MW XX A X7 ,aww fl BE VE RLY D9 '33 JD 1459 -5 E! QOYW f . -1 f X 2 f A zlltmxmflllly COACH WALT HERREID- This 'former All-American tackle from Washington State, took a light, inexperienced Beverly team under his wing this year and de- veloped it into one of the most feared squads in the Bay league. Due to his expert coaching and leadership the Normans had a better than average season. CAPTAIN IAN ELLIOT-One ofthe best all-round athletes that has ever been produced at Bev- erly, Elliot really hit his stride this year at fullback where the watch- word for other teams was, Get Elliot, he's dynamite. Elliot's sav- in every game. lf f' get BALL 7 M 4'-X 0 fl K1'd'3A'BH xf .l is l, , at I X 7 s, ltl lllil Z 2 3 4, , O Q 5 , , Nj V age blocking and tackling and his line plunging were the standouts J K M Q 'fn wwf ,fy f' ' C X I X 1 1 1 lb is T X A l '.l fc- il x sf J X . Cf ll S I 71 , -4069, I Z! ! 7 Uamtity gridiron eawon C Greeted by some thirty-odd green and inexperienced football men, led by captain lan Elliot and six other returning lettermen, Coach Walt Herreid's light but fast and tricky Beverly Hills gridiron squad fought its way through the i939 season, battling tooth and nail all the way and wound up with a better than average record. Moving Elliot to the backfield from his end post, which he had held down for three years, Herreid found only six other backs waiting for the opening whistle. Paul McKim, Clement Woods, Jack Wells, and Hartly Caldwell took care of the halfback spots, while Jack Willis and Johnny Strock did the duties of blocking quarterback, and Elliot was the plunging fullback. ln the line, returning monogram winners Bob Feldman, George Maulding, and Al Rough found themselves playing side by side with Harold Kirst, Bob Maulding, Dave Ghormley, Jack Perry, .lack Parker, Toby Freedman, Wynn Keith, and Jack Rooklyn. Using the Notre Dame style of play for the first time, the Normans went into the Monrovia game as slight favorites and emerged with a l2 to O victory to open the pigskin season. Sparked by lan Elliot, Beverly drove down the field to the five-yard line where Jack Wells went ov er for the first score. Bob Feldman recovered Clement Wood's fumble over the goal-line for the second and last Norman tally. After holding the strong Glendale Dynamiters to a 7 to 7 tie score at half-time, the Normans were overpowered by the big black and red eleven in the last period and tasted their first defeat of the year, 19 to 7. With one victory and one defeat the Normans went into the Bay league season. REDONDO, 0, BEVERLY, i3-Taking advantage of a Redondo fumble in the first few minutes of play, the Beverly Hills grid squad opened up the Bay league season with a victory over the Sea Hawks when they scored twice in the inital half. With Elliot and Wells alternating at the tail- back post, the Normans marched down the field, once from the Redondo 22 yard marker for six points and again, when in seven plays the Normans scored from their own 34 yard-line. SANTA MONICA, O, BEVERLY, 7-Picking the ball out of the air on the Santa Monica 20 yard-line, lan Elliot raced eighty yards behind perfect block- ing on an intercepted pass to the only score of the day as Beverly defeated its arch-rivals, the Santa Monica Vikings. Although the Vikings threatened several times to cross the Norman goal-line, the great defensive play of Perry, Parker, Keith, Rough, the Moulding brothers, and the rest of the Iinemen were too tough to crack. COMPTON, 'l9, BEVERLY, 7-A great Compton eleven spoiled the perfect Bay league record that Walt Herreid's boys had setup, when Will Scheller and Bill Rockefeller ran wild for the Tartars, tam- ing the Normans, 'I9 to 7. Elliot again stood out for the Hillbillies when he snagged a Compton pass on his own 25 yard- marker and rambled 75 yards to the lone Beverly tally. Parker, Kirst, Keith, and Rough were the line standouts for the Normans. INGLEWOOD, 20, BEVERLY, 7-Bobby Norton passed and ran his way to victory in the fourth Bay league tilt when he was responsible for two of the three scores that the Inglewood Sentinels made in downing the Normans for their second and last defeat. As in all the games, Elliot again was the most outstanding player on the field with Wells, Willis, Strock, Woods, and the Beverly line sharing honors for the terrific battle they put up. LEUZINGER, 6, BEVERLY, I4-With .lack Wells do- ing the pitching and Bob Maulding on the receiving end the Normans completed ten out of seventeen passes to win an air victory over a stubborn Leuzin- ger squad as the curtain came down on the Bay league season. Taking the lead in the first play ofthe second quarter, Beverly with its passes, the plunging of Elliot, Wells end runs, and the hard-hitting line were always out in front ofthe Olympians. p. 5X0 W 49 .O57Q29oN D0 SAM XI .3 3 OH' -- is bfy, 2, 3 x3':N 52' ffll -I L f ,D ,Lx 6 xfsfuooo X, iff! 73,7 C X9 - l IQ 6 gg N I' 1 , U an .44 tk., W t mf e. QP 'I -X lb Cliff like 1 4 0 llc. ,mf 3 vt ga 331- ' I fry 4, N -8.3 -N - , , - lg' 22 I, V-- .I I 4 , 7 'ep f ' I 4 I ef' I if . 9 S. V I 9, y 4 ' 0 5 .- In VARSITY Elliot, lan lCapt.I Feldman, Bob Ghormley, Dave Kavich, Larry Keith, Walt Kirst, Harold Maulding, George Maulding, Bob McKim, Paul INDIVIDUAL GROUND GAINING For 1939 Season Seven Games NAME POS. GAMES TCB YG YL TFG lan Elliot ICI ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, F 7 72 314 4 6 Jack Wells .................... HB 7 76 257 63 4 Hartley Caldwell ...,,,,.,. HB 3 3 7 ,,,, U .lack Willis .,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, HB 5 12 36 3 1 Clement Woods ............ HB 7 38 105 32 1 Paul McKim ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, HB 4 7 16 5 TCB-Times carried ball, YG-Yards gained, YL-yards lost, TFG-Times gain, AYG-Average yards gained. NAME POS. lan Elliot ICI ,,,,,,,,,,,,v, F .lack Wells ,,,,,,,, ,.,,--- H B Bob Maulding ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, E John Strock ,,,,4 ,--,--. Q Bob Feldman A,,,,, --,,,g- G FOOTBALL LETTERMEN Micheletti, Al Parker, Jack Perry, Jack Rooklyn, Jack Strock, John Wells, Jack Willis, Jack Woods, Clement Schlesinger, Frank lMgr.I AYG 4.3 2.5 2.3 2.2 1.9 1.5 failed to SCORING TOUCHDOWNS CONVERSIONS 5 1 7 2 1 1 10 7 TOTAL 30 13 12 6 6 67 lightweight PigAlzinnel-A 0 A good little man isn't better than a good big man. That was found out by Coach Sax Elliot's mighty bee football team during the past season, for although the Norbabes had speed to spare they were not able to cope with the other Bay league lightweight squads who outweighed them at least four pounds to the man. Even at that, the Elliotmen showed plenty of fight and spirit by tying two of the strongest teams in the league, Santa Monica and Compton, and coming through with a hard-fought victory over the Leuzinger Olympians. Blessed with only four returning lettermen, Elliot once again began to remold his team around another type of formation. Captain Bob Lee and Evan Williams at end and Jack Sherrill and Marshall Finck at halfbacks were the monogram winners upon whom Elliot was counting. When the whistle blew for the opening of the season, Elliot found forty men battling for the seven remaining positions on the squad. Some were reserves from last year, while others were transfers, and a few were out for the first time. With these men, Elliot built one of the fastest elevens in the Bay league, a team that was made up of sprinters, and with a little blocking, a team that had a potential championship within its grasp. But out of the forty men, not one consistent blocker could be found and only a few good defensive players were turned out. On top of that Elliot didn't have a passer and his punters were only average. Even without blocking, the Norman speed-burners, Bill McGee, Dick Lichtenfels, and Bob Brockamp, put fear in the hearts of the rival squads. ln the line, Bob Hammond, Paul Jesberg, Johnny West, and Al Wolff stole the show, those boys stopped everything and anything that came their way. The Norbabes really hit their stride in the Santa Monica game, when they entered the contest as decided underdogs and then came through with a scoreless tie after battling the Vikes for four hard- fought quarters. Samohi ended the season with four wins and one tie to be crowned Bay league champs. Beverly closed the season in a blaze of glory when it spanked the Leuzinger lightweights, 7 to 0. Although this year's record was iust average, Elliot has his hopes pretty high about next year's squad. Most of the linemen move up to the varsity, but all of his first string backs are returning, which means double-trouble to the other league squads. g ',f ,mfs I 'W C1-oAA Countl- 0 There's a long, long trail a winding. lt was a long trail that faced the Beverly Hills cross-country team during the past season, but Coach Charles Brown's hillbillies didn't let the two hard, weary miles over hill and dale hamper them too much as they finished with a better than average record. Captain Jerry Storm, a veteran of three years, led the pack that found Egon Kafka, Bob Holland, Vince Laura, Jack Mescall, Howard Hurd, Gil Klassy, and Bob Evans as its members. The Normans took on Inglewood as theirfirst and only victim of the dual meet season when Storm came through with a first place, Hurd grabbed third honors, closely followed by Laura and Kafka, Holland tied for fifth. The Long Beach Jackrabbits gave Beverly its first defeat of the season, T3 to 21. Hurd, running one of his best races, finished a close second while Kafka and Storm ran neck and neck for fourth place. A three-way meet with Dorsey and Inglewood found the Normans coming through with a second place when once again Storm copped first honors for the orange and white. Kafka took a sixth place with Mescall taking twelfth. The Southern California finals failed to help the Normans in their quest for a championship when only three, Kafka, Holland, and Storm, placed in the first fifteen. COACH SAX ELLIOT - Being a former basketball star himself, Coach Elliot is well qualified in teaching the cage sport. This year, with a lack of outstanding mate- rial, Elliot put out a team that had the potentialities of a champion- ship squad, but couldn't quite make the grade. Many a basketball star at Beverly has been born through Elliot's leadership and coaching. 7, 'x X lhpisr 1 Q 5' 1 K ef 7 , bf- ,,.1-. A 'X If s-tg, J --.1 -rl I' 1 JUN I 'O ' Y sae: 1 Wit MQW -jyf x f I ji Hfdfs CAPTAIN JACK HERBST- Tall, lanky Long John was one of the most capable and experi- enced players onthe ball club this year. Dividing his time between the pivot and forward positions, Herbst proved very valuable under the backboard. Winning or losing, Herbst displayed a fighting spirit which is essential to a good basketball player. Q M Q .--W - ' '--- - 6 W 10751 W Ury, I I 1 s 1 - ,,,,,, W 7' H f Nea yweiglat Hoop Squad 0 Starting the season with a green and inexperienced ball club, Coach Sax Elliot couldn't quite find a combination upon which he could depend, and consequently his varsity cagers wound up their season with a below-average record. Changing his offense to suit his different players, Coach Elliot used two different offenses throughout most of the season. ' A team composed of Capt. Jack Herbst and lan Elliot, returning lettermen, and the rest made up of iayvee and bee players, was the sad news that greeted the varsity mentor at the opening practice. Winning only two games out of ten league tilts, the varsity cage quintet could manage to finish only ahead of Leuzinger in the Bay league basketball race. ln practice games the orange and white five were on the heavy end of the score three times and on the light end five times. Coach Elliot's crew opened its season against the highly touted South Pasadena Tigers and went down to defeat by a 20-16 margin. The Beverly five couldn't gain a victory in their next two games either, dropping tilts to Glendale and PJC Frosh by 25-13 and 23-22 margins. Beverly's first win came when they met Hoover High and won 20-12. T victorious in its next game with Alhambra by a 19-12 edge. Playing rather sloppy ball in the Bruin gym, the varsity lost a game to the UCLA Frosh 23-16. The last practice games the team had before the league season opened was the Chino tourna- ment in which Beverly was defeated in the second round by Burbank 26-22 after scoring a 24-14 win over Chino in the initial round. he Norman quintet was l i l P LEUZINGER-The Normans seemed to have the number of this Olympian team as their only two league wins were victories over the Leuzinger quintet. ln their opening game of the league season, Beverly managed to nip the Olympians 24-22 in a tightly contested game. lan Elliot and Fred Hilker both turned in creditable performances for Beverly. The final score for the second game of the series was 25-l 2 with both teams playing a sloppy brand of ball. INGLEWOOD-Led by tall, heavy-set Doug Essick, the Sentinel cagers trounced the Elliotmen in both of their contests. In their first game the Inglewood five scored in the last minute of play to gain a I5-13 victory. With the Beverly quintet failing to show much semblance of an offense, the Inglewood team had an easy time of it in the second tilt, winning this time 26-12. l l COMPTON-This smooth-working Tartar club proved to have a little too much on the ball for the Norman five to cope with, and the orange and white squad dropped another pair of games. Compton held the Beverly team to a lone field goal in the first half of the series opener. The second half went much the same and Compton won 23-12. In the second game, the Tartars again showed more accuracy in their shooting and this time won 27-16. SANTA MONICA-Furnishing the fans with many thrills, the first Samohi game proved to be a real breath-taker as the Vikings eked out a 28-26 decision. Outstanding man on the fioor was lan Elliot, who sank several shots with uncanny accuracy to thrill the crowd to a frenzy. At the final whistle lan had scored i7 points. The second game found Samohi winning easily. The final score was 29-l5, REDONDO-Completely outplaying the Norman team, Redondo soundly trounced the Beverly tive in both of its games. The first tilt found the Sea- hawks grabbing an early lead, holding it, and going on to win the ball game by a 23-14 score. Closing the season for both teams, the Sea- hawks andthe Normans clashed again on the Redondo floor, with the score again in the favor of the beach team, this time 24-12. LETTERMEN Bill Copes Ian Elliot Joe Ginder Jack Griffin Jack Herbst, Capt. Bob Harms Fred Hilker Clark Ogilvie Broox Randall Bob Rhodes, Mgr. Charles Snipes t if , tl JP LEADING SCO RERS PLAYER G FG FT T Elliot ,,,,,,,,. .,,,. 1 5 40 32 112 Herbgf ,,,,,,, ,.,.. 1 7 26 16 68 Hilker .... ..... 1 8 29 6 64 Copes . ,,... 18 7 8 22 Ginder ,, ,,,,, 18 7 4 18 Harms ..,............ .......... 1 3 5 5 15 Legend: G-games played, FG-field goals, FT-free throws, T-total. RESULTS-BAY LEAGUE GAMES RESULTS-PRACTICE GAMES Beverly 24, Leuzinger 23 Beverly 16, South Pasadena 20 Beverly 12 Compton 23 Beverly 22, PJC Frosh 23 Beverly 13 Inglewood 15 Beverly 13, Glendale 25 Beverly 26 Santa Monica 28 Beverly 20, Hoover 12 Beverly 14, Redondo 23 Beverly 19, Alhambra 12 Beverly 25 Leuzinger 12 Beverly 16, UCLA Frosh 23 Beverly 16 Compton 27 Beverly 24, Chino 14 Beverly 12 Inglewood 26 Beverly 22, Burbank 26 Beverly 15 Santa Monica 29 Totals Beverly 12, Redondo 24 Beverly 152, Opponents 155 Totals Beverly 169, Opponents 230 BEVERLY'S ALL-BAY LEAGUE TEAM POS. PLAYER SCHOOL Forward Nourse Sqnfq Monica Forward Dixon Redondo Center Elliot Beverly Guard Druliner Redondo Guard Scheller Compton nfl n0 l'6d' 6 ddd bd A nel-A 0 Evidently content with third position, for the third consecutive year, Coach Kenny Mitchell's bee casaba tossers wound up in third spot in league standings. Opening their season against Hamilton, the Normans swamped the Yankees, 20-8. ln the fol- lowing tilt, the bees dropped one to South Pasadena by a 28-22 margin. They also lost their next game, 33-24, to the P.lC Frosh. Getting back into the win column, the Norbabes were victorious over a weak Glendale team, 20-14. Providing the crowd with a thriller, the bees dropped a close one in the final minute of play to Hoover High, also of Glendale. The final score was 20-18. With the exception of Justin McCarthy who hit the hoop for 10 digits, the Norman Eve couldn't come close to the basket in most stages of this game. Taken into camp 23-15 by Alhambra, theBeverly bees were back into the victory column at the final whistle of the UCLA 145 lb. game, when they took a 22-14 verdict. Leading player in this tilt was Danny McKellar, who helped the cause by scoring six valuable points from his guard spot. The bees lost their return fray with PJC Frosh by almost an identical score as their first game, 33-22. In their final practice tilt the Normans eked out a 25-23 return game victory over the UCLA Frosh. Final league standings showed four wins and six losses for the orange and white team. Show- ing their superiority both times, the bees grabbed two victories over Leuzinger, winning 17-15 and 29-14. Capt. Donnie Ingram was high scorer for Beverly in the first tilt and tied with Alex David- son for high man in the return game. A scrappy and fighting Compton team lost a close one to the men from Normandy in the series opener 21-18, but came back to win the second one 21-17. A first game thriller with Inglewood found Beverly winning 16-14. The return game found the Sentinels grabbing an early lead and marching to victory 28-14. Although losing both tilts, the bees played their best brand of ball against the league champion, Santa Monica. The beach squad won the first one 32-28 and the second 19-16. Redond 19-13. o's well balanced ball club took two more from Beverly, winning their tilts 29-18 and 0 With final Bay league standing showing them in third position, Mentor John Canady's cee casaba tossers failed to live up to pre-season predictions. In their curtain raiser Venice drubbed them 40-17 in a high scoring affair. ln their second game the C665 Were hosts to Hamilton and this time lost 21-7. A return game with Venice brought another loss, this time 35-24. The cees' return game with Hamilton found the Yankees winning 16-15. A reversal of form found the cees handing Leuzinger and lnglewood 15-8 and 14-9 setbacks in the opening league games. Beverly returned to its losing ways in the next tilt, dropping a 25-8 verdict to Santa Monica. In the finale Redondo defeated the cees 19-12. Mighty Midget eaAvn 0 Losing only two games and tying for the league crown, Coach John Canady's mighty dee basketball team was the most successful of Beverly's cage squads this year. Starting the practice season with a 20-17 victory over Venice, the cagers went on to defeat Hamilton TWT twice by scores of 19-10 and 19-4. Venice defeated them in a return-game thriller 14-13. Opening their league season, the mighty midgets routed Leuzinger 20-9. Their second loss came when they encountered lnglewood, losing to the green and white team 33-15. This victory gave the Sentinels Q tie for the championship. In the two remaining games, Beverly was victorious over Santa Monica and Redondo by 13-5 and 10-9 margins. COACH CHARLES BROWN-Add- ing to Beverly's athletic cham- pionships, Coach Brown, for the fifth consecutive year, turned out another title-winning track team this season to make his coaching mark even more enviable than in the past. Helping to improve athletes, Coach Brown not only has made champions, but throughout his coaching career has taught the its, p is 1 Mr. A i C L A MX X X ri 5 -ilu . lhnsini I J l sv if W Wy, 1 5 7 IV , -- most essential factor of any ath- letic-good sportsmanship. HQ flW B, tw Cl 'Pk 5 X Z E. X T- W, N B CAPTAIN BOB ULLMAN-His teammates couldn't have chosen a more capable or deserving leader than Ullman, who proved to be a worthy representative of his team. L Highest scorer on the varsity, Bob turned in many impressive victories for Beverly and showed himself every inch a champion. i i l Uarstity Spike Seaman O Not a championship group, and yet a good one, tells the story of Coach Charlie Brown's 'l940 varsity track team. Winning its share of the dual meets and failing to show much in the league finals, the varsity cindermen ended their campaign after a little-better-than-average season. Opening their season on the home oval, the orange and white team easily overpowered a weak and inexperienced Mark Keppel team, 86-24. Taking first in every event with the exception of the high hurdles, Beverly's team looked very promising at the end of this meet. Outstanding performer of the day was Bob Ullman who grabbed firsts in the century, low hurdles, and hop, step and iump. Also breaking the tape for Normandy were Larry Kavich, 220, Dick Mackay, 440, Jerry Storm, 880, Egon Kafka, mile, Dave Neilson, high jump, Jim Cooper, broad jump, Chuck Bollar, pole vault, and .lohnny Champion, shot put. Treking to Carpenteria for the annual Russel cup meet, Beverly didn't show anything resembling a championship team and came home sadly beaten. Bob Ullman in the low hurdles and broad iump, Dave Neilson in the high iump, and Larry Kavich in the 220 were the only point-winners for the Normans. Following the Russel cup meet the orange and white team was entered in the Inglewood relays in a tune-up meet for the Bay league preliminaries. Each Bay league school entered a team in the relays, which were held under the arcs of the Inglewood stadium, and the final score found the powerful Compton Tartars sneaking home with a two-point victory over lnglewood's classy team. The ofticial score was Compton 46, Inglewood 44, Samohi 38, Beverly 15, Leuzinger 7, and Redondo 6. Beverly's mile relay team took second, the two-mile squad grabbed third, and the 440 team, high iumpers, and weight teams all finished fourth to make up the Norman point total, Norman 7raclzAterA be eat Samvlai . BeVeflY'5 VGrSity spikemen turned in their biggest upset of the season when they faced the powerful Samohi team. The meet itself wasn't decided until the final event, which the Normans won, giving them a 61M-60M victory, Captain Bob Ullman was the big winner of the day taking first in the century, low hurdles, and hop, step, and iump. The absence of Warren Harding, Samohi's stellar trackman, was probably the difference between the two schools. Beverly got a tie for first in the 220 when Larry Kavich tied Santa Monica's Clague. Dick Mackay took a first for Beverly in the 440, Jerry Storm followed suit in the 880, and John Champion came through with a winning toss to take the shot put. Beverly's relay team of Kavich, Bowen, Mackay, and Ullman also copped first. ln a triangular meet held at Redondo, Beverly overwhelmed Leuzinger and Redondo to easily cop first place. The orange and white team had a total of 83 points to Redondo's 37 and Leuzinger's 32. Out of a possible l4 firsts the Norman team walked home with 9 victories. Bob Ullman was again the big Norman winner, this time taking firsts in the century and low hurdle events and taking a close second in the hop, step, and iump. Larry Kavich took the 220 in 22.9. Beverly's milers made it a clean sweep, with Jerry Storm, Egon Kafka, and Bob Holland finishing in that order. Also grabbing firsts for Normandy were Stan Bowen, high hurdles, Dave Neilson, high jump, .lohn Champion, shot put, Phil Lombardi, discus, and Chuck Bollar and Harry Perry, tied in the pole vault. Beverly met its conqueror when it faced lnglewood's potent track outfit. The Sentinel spikemen breezed home easy victors, winning by the wide margin of 75 V3 - 46 25. Only double winner of the day was lnglewood's Frank Ferguson who copped the century and pole vault events. Larry Kavich again won the 220 for Beverly, and Dick Mackay was a winner in the 440. Other Beverly winners were Jerry Storm, 880, Stan Bowen, high hurdles, Bob Ullman, low hurdles, and Bob Baker who tied with two Inglewood men for first in the high jump. i ,Jr it if N X I Kg ,145 l '., ETX 5 fl iN, Ill I '. l ' Q lr x , g X , amitq 71-ack I . X ,- -- ' ' MWFF BAY LEAGUE FINALS-Beverly's track forces failed to show much in the league finals and conse- quently ended up in fourth spot with 12 points. Compton's powerful outfit took top honors and then went on to win the Southern California championship. Compared with Compton's 73112, Santa Monica had 59 Vg, Inglewood garnered third place with 50, Leuzinger placed fifth with 9 digits, and Redondo trailed with 5 points. Turning in the best performance for Normandy was Bob Ullman, who copped a second in the low hurdles behind Warren Harding of Samohi. Ullman also scored two more points for the orange and white team when he finished fifth in the century and the broad lump. Also winning points for the Normans were Howard Hurd, who placed fourth in the 880, Egon Kafka, who ran the second fastest mile in Beverly's history to take fifth in 4:43.75 Dave Neilson, who took fifth in the high lump, and the Norman relay team which ended in fourth place. BAY LEAGUE FINALS 100- 220- 440- 880- Mile Jenkins, lCl, Ferguson, ill, Lewis, lCl, Paepke, lCl, Ullman, lBl-ll, time, 9:7. Jenkins, lCl, Paepke, lCl, Ferguson, lll, Clague, lSMl, Brownell, fRl, time, 21:9. Lewis, lCl, Eaves, lCl, Leasure, lSMl, Hawkins, lSMl, Hundley, lCl time, 50:2. Beck, lLl, Escobido, lCl, Townes, lCl, Hurd, lBHl, Cooper, lll, time 2:1.4. -Taylor, lCl, Aguilera, lCl, Gusman, lCl, Bergeron, lll, Kafka, lBHl time, 4:40.2. H.H.-Eshleman, lCl, Chest, lSMl, Spaulding, lSMl, Rehn, ill, Wood LH.- H..l.- BJ.- lSMl, time, 15:8. Harding, lSMl, Ullman, lBHl, Chest, lSMl, O'Neil, lSMl, Spaulding lSMl, time, 24:8. Parker, lSMl, Saplis, ill, Terry, fCl, Eshleman, lCl, Neilson, lBHl height, 6'17f8 . Harding, lSNll, Jones, lRl, Cotton, KCl, Peck, lll, Ullman, lBHl, dis- tance, 21'6lf4 . P.V.-Ferguson, lll, Beck, lLl, Scheller, lCl, McGruder, lSMl, tie for third Shot Bridges, lCl, height, 13'43A . -Nourse, lSMl, McDermid, lll, Rydlek, lll, Bruner, lll, Ash, ill distance, 47 l 1 VZ . Discus-Porter, lSMl, Larson, lll, Rydlek, ill, McDermid, lll, Appier, KC, distance, 'l29'3 . I I I I I I I I I Hop-Step 8. .lump-Harding, lSMl, Peck, ill, Eshleman, lCl, Humason, lSMl, Saplis, lll, distance, 42'63f4 . Relay-Compton, Samohi, Inglewood, Beverly, time, l:30.9. Kee Speedstter 0 Bringing Beverly another track championship, Normandy's mighty bee cinder squad was the best in the Bay league again this year. Leading the team to victory were Captain Stan Bowen, flashy hurdler, and Dick Lichtenfels, top notch sprinter. These two boys could usually be depended upon for two firsts apiece in each meet. Opening their season, the bees smashed their way to a one sided victory over a weak Mark Keppel outfit, winning by the overwhelming margin of 78-16. The orange and white team copped every event except the relay in which they won first, but were disqualified. The bees fared well against Samohi, to whom they handed a 62-33 drubbing. Lichtenfels and Bob Negley were both double winners for the Normans. Lichty copped the 100 and 220, while Negley was first in the broad iump and the high hurdles. Oscar Samuelson took first in the high iump and Bill McGee had a winning put of 45 feet 8 inches to take the shot put. Bob Iverson, cee captain, who was running bee, copped the 660, winning easily. Don Pehkoff gave Beverly five points when he came home first in the 1320. The Normans lost a heart-breaker in the Leuzinger, Redondo triangular meet when the Seahawks won 55-54 over Beverly. Leuzinger was third with 9 points. Breaking into the win column again, the bees over-powered a classy Inglewood outfit 55-39. Again Lichtenfels proved to be the outstanding Norman spikeman, winning the century and furlong. Other winners for Beverly were Bob Chrisman, 660, Pehkoff, 1320, Negley, high hurdles, Bob Gill, high iump, and Bill McGee, shot put. With eight teams competing, the Normans were victorious in the Carpenteria meet of cham- pions, winning over Santa Monica, Inglewood, Santa Barbara, Compton, Santa Ana, Anaheim, and Redondo. In a startling reversal of form, the championship. Beverly had 51 points as compared with their closest rivals, Redondo, who fin- the bees came back in the Bay league finals to breeze home with ished with 32. Beverly's captain came through with high honors, winning both hurdle events and also running h ' ' rela team The relay team which was composed of Stan Bowen, Jack Bowen, McGee, on t e winning y . and Lichtenfels, set a new school and Bay league record of 1:09.0. Another star for Normandy was Jack Dennis who copped the bee 660. Beverly's lone scorer in the CIF finals was sprm er I ' t L'chtenfeIs who finished fifth in the 220. Cee rack en O Taking third in the Bay league finals, Normandy's cee track team finished an average season with its captain taking first place in the 660 of the Southern California championship finals. Leading the pack, Captain Bob Iverson broke the school record for his class in two different events this year. In the CIF finals Iverson ran I:08.2 in the 660 event to break the school record again for the second time this season. Iverson also galloped home fifth in the finals of the low hurdles. The cees easily defeated their first opponents, Mark Keppel, the final score showing 57 for Beverly and 20 for Keppel. Showing promise for the orange and white team were Jack Mescall, Bob Nate, Bud Jess, Don Hulbert, and Harold Metzger. Iverson ran in the bee class for this meet. Beverly was handed a convincing defeat when it faced the cee spikemen of Samohi as the Viking squad administered a 51-25 licking to the Norman squad. The only firsts the orange and white team could garner were in the low hurdles and the 660 when Bud Jess and Jack Mescall broke the tape. Defeating both Redondo and Leuzinger, the cees won the triangular meet held on the Seahawks' oval. Firsts were turned in again by Jess, Nate, and Mescall. lnglewood's team handed the cees a 42-35 trouncing in a meet held on the Norman fielcl. The Inglewood relays brought forth another loss for the cees as they wound up in third spot behind Samohi and Leuzinger. In the Bay league finals Bob Iverson was the big noise for Beverly, taking firsts in the 660 Qnd low hurdles. Beverly had a total of 27 points in the finals to 38 for Inglewood and Santa Monica, who tied for first place. Other scores were Redondo with 18 and Leuzinger with 14. fmt,-fi lu E54-1 COACH JOHN CANADY-Tough luck again dogged the trail of Coach Canady this year when for the fifth time in as many years he was forced to build his team with green and inexperienced men. The characteristic congenial smile on Canady's lips, even after de- feat, was found pleasing by the discouraged ball players. CAPTAIN RALPH HOOVER-There was no doubt that Hoover was the best man on the team for the posi- tion of captain. His leadership ability was never questioned and although he wasn't the best ball player on the squad, Cap Hoover could always be counted on in the pinches. His constant lar. -Lfg i1fQl....L lg 4 ff - All QI' .o, ,,,, y I: A, 0 Jinx ' H ., f ff fr ' in f l X MWF' line of chatter and pepper will be sorely missed next year. V s i . AR 6 M f f Q X f i 1D77Z771W f M I i IR i lx r t mum., C69-X p illfs I A yi 1 H' 'BOWL I f l If Z 7701-man H0l'.66,lid6l' 0 Once more old man iinx scented the trail of the Beverly Hills baseball team and once more this iinx dogged the steps of the Normans, giving an unhelping hand wherever needed and enabling Coach John Canady's boys to set a new Bay league record for having the most consecutive league losses. Faced with the prospects of a winning ball club and stopping the terrific losing streak which has now reached the grand total of twenty league tilts, the Normans got off to an auspicious start when they came through with an opening victory over the Strong Hamilton Yankees, who later won the West- ern league title, 9 to 2. After dropping the next five games, the locals, sparked by Ralph Hoover, Ed Sampter, and Jack Perry staged a last-inning uprising that found them taking a 6 to 5 decision from the U.C.L.A. frosh. Another final inning rally gave the Normans a win in the final practice game of the season, when Lucky Kal1n's home run and triple led Beverly to a 7 to 5 victory over the University Warriors. Although Coach Canady loses eight lettermen via graduation, he will build his team for next year around five veterans that promise to form the nucleus of one of Beverly's best ball clubs. Bud Houser will be back at second base where he has cavorted for the past three years. Bart Hentschell will again handle the initial sack and Vic Stephens, a classy shortstop, might try his hand at pitching, thus rounding out the infield. While the pitching and catching staff will be weak from the lack of reserves, two outfi elders in the form of Jack Lingenberg and Tom Gibbon will return, bolstering up the squad considerably. REDONDO, 7, BEVERLY, 2-Six errors by his team- mates spoiled a no-hit, no-run game for Redondo's Jack Bastien in the first league game ofthe season when the Normans took advantage of four miscues in the second inning to score their pair of runs. Ed Sampter started on the mound for Beverly, but was yanked when he walked five straight men in the third canto. Pearson Butler took over the duties and allowed only one run the remainder of the game. ' SANTA MONICA, 9, BEVERLY, 0 - Bespectacled Jerry Alford of the Vikings pitched three-hit ball to win his second consecutive game of the season, putting Samohi in the Bay league lead. Pearson Butler started on the hill for the Nor- mans but was replaced by Sampter in the fifth stanza. Sampter started oFt well but grew wild in the later innings. Sampter, Lucky Kahn, and Tom Gibbon were the trio who managed to get b0Se hits forthe N0rmGnS- LEUZINGER, l3, BEVERLY, 3-The Leuzinger Olym- pians moved a notch nearer to the Bay league championship when they gave the Normans their worst drubbing of the season. Doral Gmur allowed only three hits as his teammates bunched eleven hits from Sampter and Bud Houser. Kahn slapped out a triple, leading the Beverly boys at bat. Vic Stevens and Jack Lingenberg were the other Normans to crack out bingles. The Nor- mans committed six errors while Leuzinger did likewise. COMPTON, 7, BEVERLY, 0-Jack Paepke's blazing, fast ball was too tough for Beverly to solve, when the Compton chucker struck out l4 Normans and allowed only one hit, sending the locals a little deeper into the league cellar. Benny Bonnell, Compton third baseman, grabbed hitting honors for the day, getting three for three. Butler pitched the whole game for the Normans, allowing ten hits. Kahn's single in the tirst inning spoiled a no-hitter for Paepke. k ll INGLEWOCJD, 4, BEVERLY, O-lnglewood's sopho- more pitcher, Newell Oestreich, closed the Bay league season in cn blaze of glory when he entered baseball's hall of tame by pitching a no-hit, no-run game against the hitless Normans. While Oestreich was striking out eleven Nor- mans, his teammates slapped out seven hits from Sampter and Butler. The Sentinel's right-fielder, Clary Truehill, cracked out two for three to be batting hero. Not one error was charged up against the Normans. I 49 ,051 QOQNDO SAft1oH,Ll, I8 bfyl L333 xscx 52. 3114 4 L ,.. f-X ny, S SZ If WPS fiance 'Q I 1' We 3 A A I ,, I a jk W m44 I cox f Q, X ' s W X .s . 5 r A wwe -.. - in 'II3 'T W 4 019' i7 ' 18 1 3 I J 'E' 0 li J I, ,,,,ff3 vt X 8 61 'ff:f!' -5 ' Tgrf xy. 2 ' i 1 4, so , . fff yffiff I ,Z ffwwff X x in if -X 1 f 39619 Q I J J 29 3 VARSITY BASEBALL LETTERMEN Butler, Pearson Gibbon, Tom Hentschell, Bart Herbst, Jack Hoover, Ralph lCapt.I Houser, Bud Kahn, Irving Lingenberg, J Perry, Jack Sampter, Ed Stephens, Vic Waller, Ed Ward, Jim Parker, Jack BATTING AVERAGES NAME POS. GAMES AB RUNS HITS PCT. Lucky Kahn .... ...,.... L F 15 41 7 13 317 Ed Sampter .... ........ P 10 14 1 4 235 Jack Herbst ..,........c ........ C 9 'I9 1 4 210 Ralph Hoover CCI ..... ........ C F II I9 2 3 157 Tom Gibbon ........ .....,.. C F 8 I4 I 2 143 Jack Lingenberg .... ........ R F I4 27 5 3 111 Vic Stephens ...,. ........ S S I4 37 4 4 103 Bud Houser .... ........ 2 B I3 36 2 3 033 Jack Perry .,,... ........ 3 B II 24 2 2 082 .lim Ward ,,,... ........ C II 26 2 2 077 Pearson Butler . .....,.. P II I7 .. I 058 Bart Hentschell ,,.. .,...... I B I5 35 2 2 O56 Ed Waller ............................ 3B 7 9 I .. 000 ERRORS: Kahn, 9, Stephens, 9, Hentschell, 8, Perry, 6, Ward, 6, Herbst, 6, Houser, 5, Hoover, 3, Gibbon, 3, Butler, 2, Wa HOME RUNS: Kahn. TRIPLES: Kahn, 2, Perry, Gibbon. ller, 2. DOUBLES: Kahn, 2, Perry, Houser, Sampter. STOLEN BASES: Kahn, 12, Lingenberg, 5, Herbst, 4, Stephens, 3, Hentschell, 3, Sampter, 2, Gibbon, 2, Waller, Hoover. ack iMgr.I Uamfitq wimming Squad 0 The barrel-chested form of Harry Perry, captain of the Beverly Hills swimming squad, once again brought individual honors to coach Sax Elliot's Norman mermen during the l94O season when he won the Southern California diving title for the second straight year. Although Perry went through the season undefeated and was easily one of the outstanding swimming stars on the Pacific coast, the local swimmers had to be content with second place honors in the Bay league finals. Dick Narver, stellar Beverly sprint man, was the only other gold medal winner in the finals when he copped the 100 in the fast time of 58.9. Narver also took a second in the 220 with Bruce Smith placing third. Beverly opened up the season with a 53 to 22 win over the Marshall swimmers as Narver and Perry were the shining points of the victory. With Perry taking the only first place in the Southern California relays, the Elliotmen entered into Bay league competition with the championship-bound Inglewood squad and lost their only dual meet of the season, 49 to 26. Henry Krisel, John Twitchell, and Tom Perry stood out as the Normans defeated the strong UCLA frosh, 40 to 35, and the trio also accounted for quite a few points when Beverly sank Leuzinger 55 to 20. Taking Santa Monica, Redondo, and Mt. Carmel into camp, the Normans finished the season without a defeat. , W l O After going through the season with just a so-so record, Beverly's bee swimming squad found itself outclassed in the Bay l league finals, when they managed to cap- ture fifth place. Y Although Al Wolff, Don Frisbee, l Danny Morgan, and Paul Jesberg came 1 through with many important points, the A T 'rest of the positions were fairly weak, forcing the Normans into the lower division. l Elliot's Norbabes brought victories home when they defeated Santa Monica, Mt. Carmel, Leuzinger, and Redondo, but all, with the exception of Leuzinger, finished ahead of the locals in the finals. The 36 to 29 win over the Samohi Vikings was one of the biggest bee upsets of the year as Frisbee and Jesberg stole the spotlight. Midget Illermen 0 A small but mighty cee swimming squad with Dick Weevil, Johnny Moffet, Sammy Goldwyn, and Rube Wolff 1 . in the starring roles fared slightly better than the bees, when they finished fourth in the Bay league finals. l ' strong Marshall squad nosed out the Normans 20 to 19 in the opening meet to give them their first of three dual meet losses. The other defeats came at the hands of Inglewood and Redondo in league competition. ,g The fast four-man cee relay team, composed of Weevil, Gray Delmar, Jack Huff, and Roger Horack, came lf t g through with an unexpected victory in the Southern California relays for the only I . l Q midget win. Vlctorles over Leuzinger and Santa Monica rounded out the season for Elliot's iuniors. i l T l l l l l l l l I IV' by i If ix. 'LJ' fs. -11-I ,, Raclzeteemt teal Crown 0 Probably the greatest tennis team ever to represent the orange and white of Beverly high is Coach Kenny Mitchell's i940 Bay league championship racket squad. Only one team, and that a champion- ship one, was able to penetrate the powerful Norman squad this season. Opening their season on the home courts, the mighty orange and white team was victorious over an inferior Montebello team ll-O. In other practice matches the Beverly team won over Washington, Fairfax, South Pasadena, Manual Arts, and Hamilton. Their only loss came at the hands of the star-studded Santa Barbara team. At the opening of league play, Captain Kenny Nichols, Vincent Fotre, Bobby Forbes, Louie Vos- burgh, Walt Dunn, .lerry Fine, .lonas Ringer, Dick Jones, and Johnny Bauer were ready to lead the Norman team to its championship. ln the first match the Redondo team bowed to the boys from Normandy 96-21 in a one-sided affair. Following their victory over the Seahawks, the Normans met and defeated Samohi, who previous to the Norman reign, were champions for I4 straight years. The third match brought an easy victory for Coach Mitchell and his team, winning as they pleased by an overwhelming margin. Beverly met a tough team in Inglewood, but came out on the winning side 85-58. Starring for Beverl was its top player Vincent Fotre, who defeated Bud Abbott, number-one Sentinel player. Y ln the CIF play-offs Beverly advanced to the semi-finals before losing 'a close one to Santa Barbara, to taste its second defeat of the season. lg C i I folfelui Map league Title C Showing more consistency than any of Beverly's athletic teams, Coach Dennie Peterson's l9-40 golf team again turned the trick and was victorious in its quest for the Bay league crown. This championship gives Beverly four Bay league titles in five years of league competition. Only one letterman, .lack Tobin, greeted Coach Peterson on the opening day of practice. However it didn't take long for the golf mentor to round out a title-winning team. A After several practice matches, which included an easy victory over the Hamilton tee-splitters, Normandy's powerful golfers took the victory trail and opened their championship campaign. Playing their first league match at Rancho, the Normans' home course, Beverly took a 64-stroke victory from Samohi. ln a return match at Brentwood, Beverly won a 47 stroke victory totakethe series. Taking two more victories, the Normans continued their championship ways when they defeated the Redondo teemen. The first match brought a 33-stroke win, and the return match was won by 78 points. Leading the Beverly team in their toughest match, Jimmy Blodgett and Fred Briskin led the team to victory in a couple of close matches with Inglewood. In the final league frays the Beverly squad swamped Leuzinger twice. Entering the Southern California play-otfs, the Normans defeated Pasadena JC 31-5, and qt press time for this story, the squad had cinched a place in the championship finals. ngL.......... 046168160 Top C9 7 7inalA 0 Harry Perry, husky Beverly Hills gyman and Southern California champion, once again led the Norman musclemen to their third straight CIF championship when he copped two first places, helping the locals to win a landslide victory over Santa Paula, Long Beach Poly, Inglewood, and Harvard. Coach Sax Elliot's gymsters finished 31 points ahead of the second place Santa Paula squad with Long Beach, Inglewood, and Harvard following in that order. Besides Harry Perry, Tom Perry, Howard Frace, and Eldon Robinson all walked away with first place medals, with Fred Baker, Lyle Randolph, Hap Thompson, and Kim Allison grabbing second spot honors. Walt Purves, Ed Stella, Chuck Bollar, and Gene Wells were the other point scorers for the Normans. With the exception of its first meet, which found Beverly on the losing end of an 85 to 24 V2 score, the Normans went through the season with an undefeated record. A trek to Santa Paula was not wasted by the Normans when they raised the victory flag for the first time, taking the Tartars into camp with a 7l V2 to 63 V2 score. A four-way meet with the UCLA l d more found Beverly on the winning end. Another four-way frosh, Harvard, and Ing ewoo once meet, this time with the USC frosh, Inglewood, and Harvard gave the Normans their third victory. Santa Paula returned the Normans' visit, but Beverly did not live up to the tradition of a typical host when it once again found the Tartars an easY mark, ll lS flme bY U 81 lb to 53V2 SCOFG- With Harry Perry emerging high point man followed by Hap Thompson and Walter Purves, the Nor- mans wound up the season with an 83V2 to 46112 victory over the strong Long Beach Poly musclemen. DOROTHY PAGEN GERRY FENNING ELI INGRAM MARY HERRON, Sponsor JEAN HOGAN PAT COOPER DONA SUE FINNEN ANN PAULSEN FIRST SEMESTER I The fall season of the GAA started off with the annual Jolly-up held at Roxbury Park. The theme of this aFfair was to get the new girls acquainted with the old and to renew friendships of people who had been separated during the summer. On December 9 the next big event of the fall season, the basketball playday, took place. ln this, teams from Montebello, Woodrow Wilson, and Burbank competed. After a morning of basketball, the girls enioyed a community lunch and then went ice skating for the duration of the afternoon. On October 27 the annual Spinsters' hop was held in the girls' gym. Sweet music was supplied by Gail Sponselor and band. A harvest theme was carried out with hayseed and cornhusks as the proper atmosphere., This first general meeting of the season was held January lO. The theme of the meeting was tennis. The guest speakers were Alice Marble and Eleanor Tennant, who gave a tennis demonstration which proved to be very enlightening. ln the GAA the president and vice-president are the only officers that are changed at mid-semester. Dorothy Pagen, stellar president for the fall semester, ably held down her iob. Jean Hogan was vice-president and in this capacity gained valuable experience toward being president in the spring semester. This group is sponsored by Mrs. Mary Herron. The rest of the GAA board is permanent for the whole year. The board is made up of the managers of the sports as well as the organization officers. The board consists of Pat Cooper, secretary, Ann Paulsen, assistant secretary, Marylinn Magrill, tennis, Pat Brauel, riding, Jane Earl, badminton, Pat Young, bowling, Betty Peterson, ice skating, Ann Jacobs, golf, Mary Raphael, basketball, Muriel Simmonds, dancing, Beverly Rogers, swimming, Elinor Ingram, song leader, Gerry Fenning, decoration chairman. SECOND SEMESTER . Being eqUClllY as active and successful in the spring season as the fall, the GAA Started The Semester with the usual Jolly-up to acquaint the girls with each other and The 5Ch0Ol- This affair was held February l9. Moving pictures were taken in the gym and afterwards the girls played badminton. For the second semester the board remained the same with the exceptions of the offices of president which was filled by Jean Hogan and of vice-president which was taken over by Dona Sue Finnen. On April 27 was held the All-Bay league playday in which Santa Monica, Inglewood, Redondo, Compton, El Segundo, and Beverly took part. The playday is an annual affair, and the location is rotated to a different school every year. This is the first time it has ever been held at Beverly. Many authorities on girls' athletics from UCLA, LACC, ang Pomona said it was the most successful and had the best organization of any that they had seen. There were more than lOOO girls at the playday besides the 65 special guests. The Alphas were the receiving committee and acted as hostesses. Mrs. Mary Herron, GAA sponsor, was in charge and with the help of Mrs. Anna Wilson, Miss Janet Patey, Miss Ethel Tobin, and Miss Karen Burt, gym teachers, the playday was a great success. However, the gym faculty agreed that without the help of Jean Hogan, one of the best presidents the organization has ever had, and the rest of the girls who co-operated willingly, the playday could not have been successful. The girls worked in committees, and the help from the art department and the foods department was voluntary and indispensable. There was competition in basketball, baseball, hockey, speedball, tennis, bad- minton, archery, and recreational games. The big event of the day was the posture parade in which the schools competed. Santa Monica won first place, Beverly came in second, while Redondo took third honors. Committees for the day were luncheon, Miss Olive McClure, Miss Corinne Pyle, Dona Sue Finnen, Jean Hogan, Beverly Rogers, and Ann Paulsen, concessions, Betty Peterson, Barbara Haughawaut, Billie Haughawaut, Helen Osgood, Evelyn Sutton, and Ann Jacobs, programs, Pat Cooper, check room, Pat Young, Sylvia Kittel, and Marylinn Magrill, program and rally in auditorium, Jean Hogan and Eli Ingram, infor- mation booth, Mary Raphael, equipment, Pat Brauel, decorations, Gerry Fenning, sign and clean-up, Pat Young, Sylvia Kittel, Pat Brauel, Pat Cooper, June Merrill, Ann Jacobs, and Ann Paulsen. PAT YOUNG ANN JACOBS PAT BRAUEL MARY RAPHAEL MARYLINN MAGRILL BETTY PETERSON BEVERLY ROGERS JANE EARL MURIEL SIMMONDS KaAlzet6all C Basketball, the first sport of the fall season, has a larger turnout among Norman girls than any other sport on the GAA calendar. Basketball teams play inter-class games and in this way the all-star teams are selected. lt is sponsored by Miss Janet Patey, coached by the entire girls' gym staff, and managed by Mary Raphael. All-Stars: Ruth Dewan, Ann Jacobs, Pat Skeehan, Martha Darbyshire, Eleanor Black, Mary Pabst, Barbara Berry, Jane Warren, forwards, Mary Sloan, Beverly Daley, Agnes Dewan, Elinor Ingram, Martha Jarvis, Carol Carpenter, Sue Sproul, Mary Raphael, and Audrey Berglund, guards. e n n i A O The Bay league tennis team is sponsored by Mrs. Anna Wilson and man- aged by Marylinn Magrill, The tennis team has had practice matches with all Bay league schools, except Compton, as well as Marlborough and Westlake. lt has defeated Redondo, Leuzinger, and Inglewood in league meets. The season begins with round robin tournaments among all the players. By this system every girl plays every other girl and the contestants are ranked in order. After the teams have been chosen any girl can challenge the girl above her. lf she wins, she is advanced, if she loses, she retains her original position. The teams now stand as follows: Jean Tobin and Helen Jones, Pat Br-auel and Pat Cooper, doubles, Marylinn Magrill, Ann Paulsen, Anita Gran- ich, June Merrill, and Nancy Whedon, singles, Connie Roese, Doris Gillespie, Sally Brown, Mary Raphael, and Ellen Kibby, substitutes. I 9 1 3, J iii'-rg, is N ' 7 'Ill I U' ff ..i' l E 'Q as f T ' i l 4 4 n 0 I O Sponsored by Miss Pauline Everett, Miss Marion Long, and Miss Vernabelle Saint, the Girls' Golf club is an outstanding part ofthe girls' athletic curriculum. The Golf club meets each week at West- wood Golf course. ln April the members had a tournament with the UCLA golf team and an annual tournament with Redondo. The manager and spark plug ofthe team is Ann Jacobs. Among the top ranking players are Helen Jones, Doris Jones, Dorothy Ureles, Doris Barber, and Pat Peluso. K 0 w I 1 n g C The Bowling club whose 65 active members are distinguished by their red sweaters is sponsored by Mrs Mary Herron and managed by Pat Young Its season lasts from December 8 to April. The tourna- ments last three weeks and the girls work both individually and in teams These tournaments were won by Pat Skeehan, Jean Steiner, Emily Cousins Eve Bowker and Doris Stark Winning teams and indi- S Witt ,f 9 ' Ill X . ' ' A lf I . . ,h,,,4 ,hmmm My K Q Ice Skating lThe lce skating club, ably sponsored by Miss Janet Patey and managed by Betty Peterson, meets twice a week at the Pan Pacific lce Skating rink. Many novel activities such as inter-school broom- stick polo and musical chairs are enjoyed. One of the most im- portant events of the season was a breakfast skate, held at West- wood lce gardens. As the club is co-educational, both boys and girls attended. rim 613 Z-- fi tffiiq ,D A 'g ' il 4 i k k li -1 'H' W, H J 5 i i n 0 The Norman Riding club, one of the most active groups in the GAA, meets at Dupee's stables every Wednesday, when members vie for high point honors. Also known for its crack drill team, this club is sponsored by Mrs. Anna Wilson and is managed by Pat Brauel. Early this semester the girls participated in a riding show given by Santa Monica which Beverly won by points. That meet was returned to Santa Monica on May 25. modern bance 0 The Modern Dance club is one of the most unusual clubs in Beverly. Miss Karen Burt, sponsor, is nationally famous in her field. The club is made up of a group of girls who want more dancing than their gym period permits. They meet twice a week and practice toward being a professional group. The officers are Roberta Stevenson, president, Caroline Grover, vice-president, Donna Sandler, secretary-treasurer, Muriel Simmonds, GAA representative. Kadminton 0 Although co-educational, the Badmin- ton club is sponsored by the GAA. High- light of the season was a match played with Burbank. This was lost by the Normans by a score of seveg, matches to five. The winners of the mixed doubles tournament were Edna Bennett and Phil Jacks. The faculty sponsor is Miss Ethel Tobin. Edna Bennett is the girls' manager, and Roger MacNeil is the boys' manager. Sponsfvl-A O Mrs. Mary Herron lextreme leftl spon- sors the GAA board and teaches sports and body mechanics. O Miss Ethel Tobin has the corrective and self-inventory classes in gym. She also heads the badminton club. O Miss Karen Burt is nationally famous in the art which she teaches, the modern dance. O Miss Janet Patey heads the ice skating club, sponsors GAA basketball, and teaches regular sports. O Mrs. Anna Wilson, head of the girls' gym department, sponsors riding and tennis. I l ' w if M Z7 1 I N 1 1 5 V -m w,, ,f f wwf A,-My f ,, ,, ,. V, ,, . - - W ,M mf - ff .A ,f ,.,,,.f X. ,Q-mm:-qv M, A-mm , ... P A L L A D IA N S ALPHASI KNIGHTS SOUIRES5 LEKTOS PRESS, STATESMEN T R I - Y, HI- Y LANGUAGEg SCIENCE PHOTOGRAPHY LIBRARY COUNCIL SEWING: STAMP STUDIO, MAKEUP x XX ........... 1 --l .-....-.. .i.... ..1.-.. -..-.- i,-. L .L-..- AVIONSz BOWLING COMMERCIALg MAGIC FEATURES CALENDAR 4, -U1 , f .,,. wx: QM ,iizff E Z TL., .HX P Hia mchvglson d tv' d C Every loyal Norman earnestly pursues his studies for five days each week and anxiously looks forward to the week-end. Here he is able to really forget his worries and get away from it all at dances and other social gatherings. Whether he is active or inactive, dressy or casual, happy or sad, he is sure to be able to find some sort of amusement which will provide him with fun and frolic. It is the tradition at Beverly for each club to present an annual or semi-annual party, which may take the form of a banquet, dance, tea, or iust a glorified club meeting. Therefore it is evident that each student has ample opportunity to join in numerous social get-togethers right at school. On these pages are shown some of Normandy's sons and daughters at some favorite local spots. Q6 l Yun and 7ll'0Ii6 0 During the year the student body has sponsored several dances, as have other school groups and organizations. The Girls' league started the social ball rolling in October when they gave their party for new students, and soon after the Knights and little Bees presented their respective dances. ln December there were two outstanding social affairs: the student body dance and the Alpha dance, both held before Christmas vacation. These were followed by the semi-annual Senior A-B prom, the Big and Little Sister party, and, in the spring, the Alphas and Knights merged to put on the gala A-K dance. Towards the end of the school year the Freshman class staged its annual class hop, and as the last school dance of the year, the final Senior A-B prom was held. ou 5 B UPPER GRADE MEMBERS PALLADIANS 6 The Palladian society, Chapter 185 of the California Scholarship federation of which there are 200 other chapters in California high schools, reached a new peak this semester by setting a new record of the largest membership in the history of the school. The Palladian Society is the highest scholastic organization at Beverly. Its purpose is to encourage high ideals of service and to foster high standards of scholarship among the students. This purpose is encouraged by the offering of scholarships to California colleges and universities to students with high scholastic and excellent citizenship records. Ausman, Jane Badger, Warren Baker, Virginia Bardfield, Gloria Berry, Barbara Beckman, Irving Beust, Beverly Beust, Jeannette Boissier, Marian Bolin, Virginia Boone, Betty Boreham, Roland 'Brady, Franklyn Carpenter, Carol 'Cawston, Beverly Costello, Joyce Crawford, Janice Crowell, Shirley Curtis, Cally Darbyshire, Matta Davidson, Bill Davis, Bill Davis, Lorraine De Camp, Jerry Dewan, Agnes Douglass, Beverly 'Duchand, Betty Earl, Jane Easton, Phyllis if Ellsworth, Marguerite Gyler, Bill Fenning, Gerrie Fogel, Richard 'Folling, Ruth Forbes, Bob Freed, Barbara Friedkin, lrene 'Frisbee, Don Fuiimoto, Calvin 'Gage, Josephine Gainsboro, Nathan 'Gebelt, Stephen 'Given, Bill Gold, David Gold, Eleanor Gordon, Bernie Granich, Anita Graves, Happy Greenfield, Bill Greenspun, Evelyn Greenway, Richard Gross, Alice Hardie, Jean Harris, Allan Hattenbach, Clarice Herdman, Jean Hurwitz, Carol Jacobs, Ann Johnson, Charles Jones, David Jones, Helen Keyes, Jack Kimura, Sumiko Kinsman, Bob Klein, Ariel Knapp, Jacqueline Koff, Vita Kramer, Joan Kuhns, Caroline Kutler, Gloria wr 4 Leavitt, Barbara Leite, Mariorie 'Litz, Virginia Loomis, Mary Dale 'Low, Leonard Lowell, Margot Loye, Mary Alice McWethy, Jere Man kiewicz, Frank Marcus, Shirley Martin, Betty Lou May, Charles Moffat, Ed Newman, Jean Noble, Jim Ogilvie, Clark Olsen, Zora Pabst, Mary Pagen, Dorothy Panzer, Max Patterson, Norma Perren, Courtaney Phillips, Nadine 'Pierson, Jeannette Plaut, Beverly 'Polhemus, Don Price, Laura Ragland, John Randall, Jack Riestra, Frank Roche, Dorothy Rogers, Shirley Y'Rosenkranz, Mario Sandler, Donna Schneider, Sybil lu rie Seabury, Laura Seyring, Marjorie Sheedy, Barbara Sherwin, Barbara Shevitz, Seena Silver, Harry 'Simmonds, Muriel Singer, Jackie Siogren, Jean Slater, Morton Stebbins, Joanne Steinhardt, Edith Stern, Betty Stern, Norma Swanson, Patricia Tilden, Robert Tousley, Marilyn Touton, Mary Frances Twitchell, John Ufford, Margaret Uslan, Florence Wade, Dorothy Wallerstedt, Jane Walsh, Jane Walton, Robert Webber, Arthur Weil, Wallace Wellons, Virginia Whedon, Nancy Whiser, Margye Willardson, Max Williamson, Marion Wright, Barbara Young, fi Gregory Both Semesters PALLADIANS O Members wear the Scholarship society torch, and seniors who have won Palladian membership six semesters, one of which has been in the senior year, are awarded the California Scholarship federation lamp. This year's sealbearers are Virginia Baker, Marguerite Ellsworth, Ruth Folling, Bernie Gordon, Anita Granich, Happy Graves, Charles Johnson, Mary Alice Loye, Shirley Marcus, Jean Newman, Dorothy Pagen, Norma Patterson, Courtaney Perren, Dorothy Roche, Marjorie Rosenkranz, Muriel Sim- monds, Art Webber, Nancy Whedon, Max Willardson, Gregory Young. OFFICERS: President, Bernie Gordon and Beverly Cawston, Girls' vice-president, Beverly Cawston and Barbara Willurdson and Bill Given, Secretary, Logan Geary and Carol Hurwitz, Treasurer, Bill Davidson and Jack Randall. LOWER GRADE MEMBERS Agol, Alan Anderson, Pierre Bader, Bruce Balfour, Mimi Baum, Terry Berry, Berna Bick, Lois 'Black, Elinor Block, Jean Bone, Janet 'Boyer, Ned Carewe, Sally Cooper, Ann Dana, Bill Davis, Pat Dewan, Ruth Downs, Bert Englehart, Jeffrey Evans, Dick Evans, Evelyn 'Fess, Bob Fieldsted, Norman Ford, Charys Frisbee, Barbara Gabriel, Albert Gates, Mary' Glaser, Betty Gorney, Roddy Gross, Katherine Greene, Jane Hall, Maurice Haviken, Bob Herendeen, Leonora Hervey, Nancy Horwitz, Arline Hymson, Donna Ingram, Jack Iverson, Bob Johnson, Evelyn 'Jones, Doris Kagawa, Jimmie Kibby, Ellen Kingman, Dan Kinon, Dick Knowlden, Marilyn Krick, Ruth Laserson, Vera Leite, Betty Mae 'Lembark, Dan Maltby, Barbara Martin, William Merrill, June Morgan, Tom Morrill, Robert Nicholls, George Nugent, Jacqueline Palmer, Clark Parsons, Peggy Robbins, Albert Roberts, Irene Roberts, June Rodger, Connie Rowson, Richard Wright, Boys' vice-president, Max Safstom, Helen Sailer, Suzanne Schultz, Jack Schuster, Richard Seift, Saul 'Sellens, Victoria Shelton, Bill Silent, Catherine Simon, Adelaide Slate, Barbara Smarda k, Christina Stevenson, Alice Swanson, Marcia Symons, Gwen Taenzer, Irene Tallchief, Betty Tennant, Ted Thayer, Jim Weil, Connie Werner, Leatrice Win nett, Ann ' Both Semesters 'S 'S 'Ns 3 E l ,ir , our - B N! S ALPHAS O The girls' honor society, the Alphas, for girls outstanding in scholarship, organizations, and activi- ties, is the goal of every girl and is the highest honor she can attain. Every upper grade girl is eligible for membership, unless she is a member ofa secret sorority. There are two requirements for eligibility. One is to have a B average, the other requirement is to be recommended by three faculty members. After fulfilling these two requirements, a maiority vote by the members is needed. The aims of the Alphas are to give willing service and to participate in school activities. The phi- lanthropy work of the society is done at Thanksgiving when the girls send food baskets to the needy, at Christmas through their help at Albion Street school, and during the year through a special fund in in the office of the girls' vice-principal which is used to give girls financial aid. During the fall semester the girls, sponsored by Mrs. Blanche Davis and Miss Margaret White, gave their annual Alpha dance. This semester, sponsored by Mrs. Isabel Wadsworth and Miss Margaret White, the Alphas presented their annual benefit tea. Also, in the spring semester the Alphas and Knights combined to give the A-K dance. OFFICERS: President, Courtaney Perren and Matta Darbyshireg Vice-President, Beverly-Joyce Newman and Nancy Whedon, Secretary, Louise Brough and Beverly Cawstang Treasurer, Jane Wallerstedt and Judy Foster. MEMBERS: Betty Bello, Barbara Berry, Shirley Crowell, Beverly Douglass, Betty Evans, Dona Sue Finnen, Geraldine Fenning, HCIDDY GfUV9Sf Katherine Haile, Jean Herdman, Eleanor lngram, Bonnie Iverson, Martie Jarvis, Mary Alice Loye, Martha Maclise, Millicent Murphey, lgabelle Moore, Mary Pabst, Dorothy Pagen, Nadine Phillips, Laura Price, Anne Richards, Dorothy Roche, Louanne Spratlen, Suzanne Sproull, Betty Stern, Rebecca Stewart, Marilyn Tousley, Edith Wooleyt KNIGHTS O To become a Knight is the highest honor any high school boy can receive. He is chosen for out- standing sportsmanship, for dependability, for service, for scholastic attainments, and for citizenship throughout his school career. The purposes of the Knights are to combine a worthy group of repre- sentatives from all recognized school activities, to encourage and reward exceptional service to the school, to promote loyalty, and to foster the spirit of fellowship within the organization and school. The Knights also co-operate with the Boys' court in the problem cases and aid in promoting better attention and order in all athletic contests, assemblies, and student gatherings. The Knights are under the sponsorship of Dr. Lowell Frost. Mr. R. G. Mitchell, Mr. Arnold Bowhay, and Mr. James Lee are honorary members. This year the Knights were responsible for the establishment of what is to be an everlasting tradi- tion at Beverly, the newsreel. They financed Camera the first semester from their own treasury and the second semester by a sale called The Darch of Mimes. During the fall semester the Knights held their annual dance at the Riviera country club, and in the spring semester the Knights and Alphas combined to put on the first A-K dance ever held by the two clubs at the exclusive Beach club. OFFICERS: President, lan Elliot and John Woodward, Secretary-Treasurer, Jack Wells and Jim Cooper. MEMBERS Irving Beckman Bob Benton, Bill Capes, Bob Crawley, Bill Davidson, Bob Feldman, Bob Fish, Don Frisbee, Bernie Gordon, Harold H I ' Allan Harris Fred Hilker Ralph Hoover Don lngram, Chuck Johnson, David Jones, Win Keith, Bob Lapham, Bob Lee, Leonard Low, ans monr, f 1 ' Ch I M H rry Perry Bill Reeder Walter Schoenfeld John Straub, John Strock, John Twitchell, Bob Ullman, Art Webber, Max Willordson, ares aYf C' ' ' ' Clement Woods, and Gr99 Young' N 'st 6 ll-1 N SQUIRES 0 Sponsored by Mr. Wendell Black, the Squires is the only honorary organization in Beverly exclu- sively for lower grade boys. The main objectives ot this club are to serve the school, to promote fel- lowship with the club cmd school, cmd to promote the development of leadership in lower grade boys. The members assist in athletic events, lower the tiag daily, and serve the school in various other ways as called upon. OFFICERS: President, Ed Reinecke and Don Frisbee, Vice-President, Bill Hoover and Bill Davidson, Secretary-Treasurer, Bob Iverson, Allan Harris. MEMBERS: Pierre Anderson, Chuck Baily, Bob Bernasconi, Ned Boyer, Jack Carter, John Champion, John Coons, Bill Davis, Lawrence Davis, Don Day, Jerry De Camp, Jack Donahue, Bob Fess, Norman Fielsted, Ray Folks, Dave Ghormley, Bill Given, Mike Grant, Mayfield Harris, Tim Hayes, Tom Hazzard, Jack Ingram, Ed Jarvis, Bud Jess, Bob Kinsman, Warren Koer, Bill McGee, Jack McWethy, Richard Narver, Jim Noble, Dick Page, Tom Perry, Bob Plummer, Hal Pulliam, John Stewart, Jack Stone, Harold Thomas, Eugene Wells, Evan Williams. LEKTOS C The Lektos organization, sponsored by Miss Frances Hurd, is an honorary club composed of students with outstanding ability in some one field. Members are chosen upon the recommendation of the faculty for their above average achievement in a particular department. One member is chosen for every 200 students in each department. OFFICERS: President, Bernie Gordon and Cally Curtis, Vice-President, Charles Johnson and Eldon Robinson, Secretary, Nancy Whedon and lrene Friedkin, Historian, Dorothy Roche and Phyllis Easton. MEMBERS: Warren Badger, Irving Beckman, Marian Boissier, Franklyn Brady, Jim Cooper, Janice Crawford, Bob Crawley, Beverly Douglass, lan Elliot, Marguerite Ellsworth, Dona Sue Finnen, Bob Fleming, Ray Folks, Stephen Gebelt, Jimmie GetzoFt, Happy Graves, Jean Hogan, Charles Johnson, Dave Jones, Edwin Kaye, Leonard Low, Shirley Marcus, Ed Moffat, Jean Newman, Ruth Nittinger, Jim O'Reilly, Mary Pabst, Dorothy Pagen, Norma Patterson, Courtaney Perren, Donna Sandler, Frank Schlesinger, Sybil Schneider, Ashmead Scott, Laura Seabury, Harry Silver, Muriel Simmonds, Morton Slater, Suzanne Sproull, Betty Stern, Roberta Stevenson, Margaret Ufford, Dorothy Wade, Arthur Webber, Jacqueline White, Gregory Young. jl LfL N, !I4 345Jgw . V!-L4 jf: VV In g, J!! XX vi -V ,f sf, W, N Mwfij fyowd fl 34- , . ft- il. W l ,I -,A A Hrflnsbf ' lfvfvfsl Il' I 1 I Q, - n I il , XM ' LQ i 1.,Mws,,,-M1 .s.s ..,sm,,,,1,d., ,,.,s,7 W .-', f ,s., ,skew h ,, Wi, s,fw,-swff- ff mm. , wwf W . :ww wwf-i--i--f-1---Y PRESS CLUB 0 The purpose ot the Press club is to bring about comradeship among Highlights staFf members. Any student who has done actual work on the Highlights is eligible for membership. There is an annual banquet each semester when the outstanding reporter is awarded the reporter's cup. Miss Eunice Schmidt and Mr. Andrew Good are co-sponsors ofthe club. OFFICERS: President, Dick Simon and Natalie Mayer, Vice-President, Darleen Sheranian and John Champion, Secretary, John Woodward and Jeannette Pierson, Treasurer, Dick Revnes and Walt Keith, Sergeant-at-Arms, Charles Dausman and Leonard Low. MEMBERS: Dick Barton, Irving Beckman, Helen Blake, Jane Braly, Pat Brauel, Louise Brough, Betty Cohen, Don Frisbee, Happy Graves, Evelyn Greenspun, Eleanor Gold, Bettyann Hammel, Carol Hurwitz, Charles Johnson, Rosalie Kaplan, Jacque Knapp, Caroline Kuhns, Elaine Mitchell, ' ' U J W I h d Isabelle Moore, Pat Netfler, Dorothy Pagen, Jeannette Pierson, Frank Ruziecki, Diana Thompson, Edward Uhlmann, Zelda nter, one o s , an Dorothy Walthers. INTERNATIONAL STATESMEN 0 Members of this club, sponsored by Mrs. Florence and understand the problems of democratic govern ment in the United States and the problems, ideals, and customs of foreign peoples. To further this purpose, the members entertain guest speakers, attend and participate in debates, and try to create an interest in good citizenship and government. Fast and Mr. William Quandt, endeavor to know OFFICERS: President, Frank Mankiewiczg Vice-President, Marie Wood, Jacqueline White, Secretary, Jacqueline White, Nadyne Bridges, Treasurer Bob Sontag, Ed Moffat. MEMBERS: Charles Bailey, Joyce Bates, Edward Beets, Audrey Berglund, Lois Bick, Nadyne Bisher, Janet Bone, Betty Boone, Arthur Caplan, Sally h' Evel n Evans Joyce Evans Alfred Firestein, Peter Frank, Jean Gallagher, Joe Goss, Stephen Gebelt, Charles Gray, Gladys Carewe, Barbara Du lg, Y 1 r Gutchean Enid Hassane, Herman Herzbrun, Stephen Herzbrun, Bob Hindly, Jack Holden, Warren Jones, Marilyn Knowlden, Ruth Krick, Carlotta Laemmle David Letts, Gloria LeMaire, Ernest Meadows, Peggy Minot, Shirley Myerson, Hillman Mitchell, Edward Moffat, Robert Perlman, Ann I b Slate, Warren Steinberg, Edith Steinhardt, Dan Stephensen, Marcia Swanson, Carol Tannenbaum, Sandefer, Simon Schintzer, Arlene Smith, Bar ara jim Theyer Eloise Veneman, Pat Waltz, Howard Weinstein, Ann Winnett, Marie Wood, Betty Young. I 's. 6 'N N I 's 6 'N I The Tri-Y is a branch ofthe YWCA. Its purposes are to promote friendship among high school girls and to aid members to develop personality and high standards of citizenship. There are four divisions of this organization, and each separate division concentrates on its own philanthropy work to help the needy. Miss Helen Aldrich sponsors the Senior group, Miss Eulalia Azorlosa sponsors the Junior group, Miss Mary Barton and Miss Vernabelle Saint sponsor the Sophomore group, and Mrs. Ruth Herbst and Miss Alida Parker are the sponsors of the Prep Tri-Y. SENIOR TRI-Y OFFICERS: President, Jane Wallerstedt and Isabelle Moore, Vice-president, Mary Alice Loye and Laura Price, Secretary, Betty Boswell and Betty Lou Martin, Treasurer, Jean Herdman and Genevieve Benstein, Inter-club representative, Laura Pric d W d e an an a Rust, Ring Chairman, Genevieve Bernstein. MEMBERS: Gloria Bardtield, Betty Bella, Jocelyn Mulford, Peggy Newsom, Marietta Taylor, Lori Van Eltz, Virginia Wellans. JUNIOR TRI-Y OFFICERS: President, Jane Earl and Pat Kruse, Vice-President, Pat Kruse and Joyce Costello, Sceretary, Virginia Patterson and Josephine Gage, Treasurer, Joyce Costello and Pat Cooper, Inter-club representatives, Irene Friedkin and Jane Earl. MEMBERS: Beverly Beust, Betty Boone, Pat Brauel, Agnes Dewan, Margery Duhig, Logan Geary, Alice Gross, Roberta Lamon, Betty Shakley, Mimi Starz, Adrienne Stehula, Sue Talbert, Patricia Waltz, Billie Ann Weber. SOPHOMORE TRI-Y OFFICE RS: President, Pat Skeehan and Connie Roese, Vice-President, Barbara Sheedy and Anne Cooperg Secretary, Elinor Block and Sally Brown, T e05U ef, Pat Young and Audrey Berglund. MEMBERS: Barbara Atkinson, Barbara Backer, Carolyn Booth, Betsy Burcham, Margaret Campry, Jean Collins, Charys Ford, Jean Gallagher, Betty Holland, Donna HYUISOU. Sylvia Klttell, Ellen Kibby, June Liss, Barbara McAdams, Mona McGiFtin, Jean McNeeIy, Mary Morehart, Jacqueline NUQGFIY, Mildred Packer, Faye Pender, Helen Safstom, Victoria Sellens, Pauline Sheranian, Jane Stahmonn, Elizabeth Strickland, Patricia Sullwood, Gwen Symons, Eloise Venemqn, PREP TRI-Y OFFICERS: President, Evelyn Evans and Jean Block, Vice-President, Barbara Frisbee and Carol Tannenbaumg Secretary, Janet Bone and Sonia Brown: TVSUSUFSF, Betty Young and Evelyn Evansy Inter-club representative, Leonora Herendeen and Teddy Clarkson. MEMBERS: Noella Alexander, Loretta Bailey, Doris Barber, Betty Blum, Dorothy Butler, Linda Callaway, Sally Carewe, Mary Lou Condon, Clarice Curtice, Margaret Davis, Nancy De Benedict, Dorothy Edling, Sally Fox, Shirley Gage, Betty Glaser, Pat Hamilton, Jeanne Hellekson, Arline Horwitz, Frances Hyman, Marilyn Knowlden, Claire Karen, Carlotta Laemmle, Dorothy MacKinnon, Anne Monheimer, Betty Olerich, Harriet Phillips, Shirley Parker, Joan Raphael, Frances Rogers, Suzanne Sailer, Marian Semmelmeyer, Virginia Sherman, Barbara Slate, Patricia Steiner, Phyllis Talmadge, Connie Weil, Barbara Wieman, Margy West. 7 fs '-' .e,,.,ew, e :w S 'S I N N. I HI-Y C The Hi-Y is one ofthe outstanding boys' organizations at Beverly. The underlying principle ofthe club is others, and it has been the organization's purpose to create, maintain, and extend through the school and community high standards of Christian endeavor. The members are elected for out- standing service and ability, either in athletics or in other student activities. The Hi-Y is sponsored by Mr. John C. Schwartz. OFFICERS: President, Jack Wells and Walt Keith, Vice-President, Walt Keith and John Woodward, Secretary-Treasurer, Don Ingram and Bob Ullman. MEMBERS: Bob Brochamp, Ion Elliot, Bob Feldman, Joe Ginder, Jock Herbst, Fred Hilker, Bob Lee, Justin McCarthy, Paul McKim, Bob Moulding, George Moulding, Jim O'ReilIy, Jack Parker, Harry Perry, AI Rough, John West, Max Willordson, Jock Willis, Clement Woods. MANAGERS 0 Coach Charles Brown sponsors the Managers' club which was organized for the purpose of stimu- lating a sense of responsibility and initiative among managers of athletic teams. To be elected into the club the candidate must have earned a Varsity, B, or C letter as a manager of some team. Among other activities, the managers gave a successful Barn dance this spring. OFFICERS: President, Harvey Holden and Tim Hayes, Vice-President, George Goodspeed and Dick Revnes, Secretary-Treasurer, Tim Hayes and Bob Kinsman. MEMBERS: Fred Jacobs, Bryant longwell, Bob Miles, Tom Mitchell, Elwin Norberg, Jack Parker, Bob Rhodes, John West, Max Willardson. lx., 1 v 1 ff ull- url- - 1.- f1f s .1..,,,...4-T-7-- lg, : Z2 1. qw Wales. VARSITY LETTERMEN 0 The Varsity Lettermen's club, sponsored by Mr. John Canady, was organized to encourage athletic endeavor within Beverly and the improvement of athletic relations with other schools. The members assist in guarding at athletic events and present a cup at the close ofthe semester to the outstanding graduating athlete. Membership in the club is open to those who have earned a varsity letter and have been elected by a maiority ofthe members. OFFICERS: President, Bob Feldman and Harry Perry, Vice-President, Jack Willis and Bud Houserg Secretary-Treasurer, Tom Lusk and Jack Parker. D l E 0 Kafka Walt MEMBERS: Bob Barman, Dick Barton, Al Beresford, Alex Davidson, lan Elliot, Dave Ghormley, Ralph Hoover, on ngram, g n , Keith, Tom Lusk, Paul McKim, George Maulding, Richard Narver, Dick O'NeiI, Jack Parker, Jack Perry, Tom Perry, Ed Sampler, Bruce Smith, Sheridan Stanton, John Straub, John Twitchell, Jack Tobin, Jim Ward, Jack Wells. LITTLE B 0 Sponsored by Mr. Frederic Spellicy, the Little B club is the second oldest organization at Beverly. The past year, in which the club gave a dance and presented a victory flag to the school, was one of the most successful in the club's history. Other activities included guarding at athletic events and the presentation of a perpetual trophy to the outstanding graduating B athlete. Membership in the club is open to Bee lettermen who are elected by a maiority vote. OFFICERS: President, Jack Herbstp Vice-President, AI Rough and Joe Ginder, Secretary-Treasurer, Bob Ullman. E rson Bowerman Bob Brockamp John Champion, Bill Copes, Ray Folks, Bob Hammond, Bob Harms, MEMBERS: Jim Blodgett, Stan Bowen, me , I Fred Hilker, Bob Iverson, Paul Jesberg, Bob Lee, Bob Moulding, Justin McCarthy, John Mount, Austin O'Toole, Neil Samuelson, Jack Sherrill, John Clement Woods. Strock, John West, Max Willardson, Evan Williams, N all FI' N N N. FI' all 'S N -. 4 N 'lu 9 'si 9 's E, LOS QUIJOTES 0 Los Quiiotes, the upper grade division ofthe Spanish club, is sponsored by Mrs. Consuelo Babigian and Mr. Juan Padilla. The purpose of the club is to understand the customs and language of the Spanish-speaking peoples. To further this purpose the members entertain guest speakers, attend Spanish movies, make trips to Padua Hills to see the famed Padua Hills players, and make excursions to Olvera street. OFFICERS: President, Jack Donahue, Vice-President, Ginger Bolin, Betty Grosse, Secretary, Dorothy Roche, Margie White, Treasurer, Jean Siogren, Prudy Reimer. MEMBERS: Lloyd Arkin, Fred Baker, Kathleen Conterna, Lorraine Davis, Jack Donahue, Frank Dunn, Marguerite Ellsworth, Happy Graves, Betty Griffith, Bonnie Iverson, Dorothy Leroux, Eleanor Mohr, Arthur Moore, Jean Newman, Jewel Ogle, LaVerne Perry, Prudy Reimer, Pat Sheedy, Jean Siogren, Jeanette Taftinder, Florence Uslan, Margie Lou White. LAS CHISPAS O Las Chispas, an organization for lower grade Spanish students, sponsored by Miss Edith Knoles and Mr. Victor Seine, is organized to promote interest in things and events pertaining to Spanish. In order to accomplish this the members attend bi-annual banquets at Olvera street, celebrate several Spanish holidays, and present speakers from Spanish-speaking countries at their meetings. OFFICERS: President, Sally Brown and Bruce Bader, Vice-President, Connie Roeseg Secretary, Ellen Kibby and Fred Hessell, Treasurer, Dick Page. MEMBERS: Noella Alexander, Bob Alter, Jeanne Arnold, Loretta Bailey, Paula Barnes, Andrew Bowman, Susan Boyd, Betsy Burcham, Barbara Bushard, Marian Bussey, John Bustetter, Betty Butterfield, Leroy Carver, Bruce Clarke, Carol Cohn, Ann Cooper, Edmond Dasteel, Margaret Davis, Pat Dotson, Walter Emerson, Phyllis Evans, Judy Foster, Mary Gates, Ina Claire Gdynia, Eugene Gold, June Goldberg, Sammy Goldwyn, Roddy Gorney, Marilyn Greenblatt, Katherine Gross, Jean Hendricks, Jim Hodges, Walter Hoffman, Patsy Holmes, Lorna Janes, Elizabeth JeFlery, Celia Katz, Betty Keeler, Ruth Kerr, Jim Knecht, Melvin Levine, Mary Lynn, Barbara McAdams, Jim McCarthy, Henry Moffat, Jack O'Reilly, Janet Oswald, Robert Patterson, Bob Robinson, Bob Rubel, Ann Sandefer, Richard Schuster, Adelaide Simons, Ann Smith, Norton Sokolow, Jean Steiner, John Stewart, Harold Tipton, James Utterback, Fred Watson, Leatrice Werner, Felita West, Ernest White, Ed Zuchelli. FRENCH C One ofthe largest and most active clubs is the French club sponsored by Miss Mary Hurlbut. lts pur- pose is to promote the students' interest in French culture and to use the language in a more natural setting. The meetings are always full of entertainment, such as plays put on by members of the club, speakers of note, teas, lectures, and French movies. All of these things go towards furthering the motto ofthe club, Every man has two countries, his own and France. OFFICERS: President, Dorothy Roche and Stephen Gebelt, First Vice-President, Stephen Gebelt and Barbara Wright, Second Vice-President, Berna Berry and Betty Stern, Secretary, Marguerite Ellsworth and Ellen Canrobertg Treasurer, Ed Moho ny and Berna Berry, Sergeant-at-Arms, Paul Grannis and Frank Mankiewicz. MEMBERS: Kim Allison, Barbara Atkinson, Beverly Beust, Evelyn Bowker, Suzanne Boyd, Linda Calloway, Gwen Campbell, Doris Canrobert, Nancy Jean Carson, Frances Cordiner, Nancy Craddock, Clarice Curtice, Lorraine Davis, Agnes Dewan, Betty Duchand, Nancy Dutty, Margery Duhig, Marguerite Echternach, Frances Elliot, lrene Friedkin, Barbara Frisbee, Josephine Gage, Phillip Gardner, Marylin Geller, Eleanor Gold, Alice Gross, Caroline Hammond, Junie Herd, Leonora Herendeen, Barbara Hellman, Mimi Huntington, Donald Jones, Doris Jones, Helen Jones, Julian ltter, Jacqueline Knapp, Gloria Kutler, Billie Lamer, Mary Dale Loomis, Margot Lowell, Nancy Martin, Bill Merril, William Mitchell, Ed MoFfat, Nancy Nolton, Bob Perlman, Jeannette Pierson, Shirlee Pitkin, Marilyn Rakow, Clementine Rodes, Beverly Rogers, Davie Saville, Vicki Sellens, Geraldine Smalley, Jean Spratlen, Jean Stagner, Edith Steinhardt, Gerard Steinhardt, Jean Tobin, Dorothy Wade, Margery Walters, Billie Anne Weber, Howard Weinstein, Florence Wickersham, Marion Williamson, Marie Wood, Patricia Young. GREEK CLUB O This club was organized with the intention of building a better appreciation of Greek customs and culture. The members study the Greek language, civilization, drama, art, and visit classical exhibits at Huntington Library and Exposition Park. Miss Vernabelle Saint sponsors this group. OFFICERS: President, Maria Lemparesg Vice-President, John More, Secretary, Billie Lamer, Treasurer, Lois Bick. MEMBERS: Richard Rowson, Victoria Sellens, Marcia Swanson, Konrad Wise. ! ' , , , , U, esw:mm1.......m f M-we . Jizz-sw.-wfm M , fv- M,-...AM 1--iz... Y f,crf.rqms.n..J -.fo-vu-n1s. ss, -N Si N N 9 N N 'x SPQR 0 Beverly's Latin club is co-sponsored by Miss Frances Griffin and Miss Vernabelle Saint. The members participate in discussions, plays, trips to places of classical interest, and attend lectures. By their vari- ous activities they attempt to gain a thorough knowledge of Roman lite, customs, and language. OFFICERS: Pontifex Maximus: Edward Uhlmann and Joe Walt, Consuls: Konrad Wise, Genevieve Benstein, Mary Osgood, and Edward Uhlmann, Scribe: Shirlevon Brintle and Genevieve Benstein, Quaestor: Bob Gray, Praetors: Pat Waltz, Chuck Bailey, Ed Reineke, Ed Reeser, Chenault Hecht, and Joe Goss: Aediles: John More, Janet Bone, and Mary Reeser, Lictors: Ruth Krick, Betty Young, Bill Pearson, Maria Lempares, Marilyn Knowlden, and Ed Herbel. MEMBERS: Terry Baum, Arthur Caplan, Sally Carewe, Leonard Chudacoft, Paula Coffey, Mary Lou Condon, Lawrence Davis, Joyce Evans, Bob Fess, Logan Geary, Joyce Godfrey, Shirley Godfrey, Mary Irish, Pat Jeffery, Uarda Jennison, Henry Kern, Charles King, James Leib, David Letts, Kimla Lloyd, Elaine Mclntosh, Ed Mann, Robert Mann, Bob Miles, Mollie Milliken, Shirley Monheimer, Jacqueline Nugent, Ray Page, Peggy Par- sons, Robert Rankin, Mary Raphael, Richard Romandy, David Saville, Connie Simons, David Simpson, Barbara Slate, Ann Smith, Gerard Stein- hardt, Gwen Symons, Sue Talbert, Carol Tannenbaum, June Teecher, Ted Tennant, Lita Warner, Connie Weil. DIE WANDERVOEGEL 0 Die Wandervoegel membership is open to any student who has had German or who is enrolled in a German class. Purposes ofthe German club, sponsored by Mr. James Knauer, are to help students gain a more thorough knowledge of life and customs ofthe German people and to provide an opportunity for them to hear and speak this language. The activities and programs of this club are arranged by the oFFicers. This year the German club held its annual program for the parents and also its annual banquet. OFFICERS: President, Barbara Leavitt and Joe Walt, Secretary-Treasurer, Suzanne Anker and Henry Brick, Program chairman, George Anker and Dorothy Wade. MEMBERS: Zora Allwine, Jane Barber, Franklyn Brady, Pat Brauel, Lqrrie Carpenter, Don Cox, Bill Davidson, Bill Davis, Irene Friedkin, Karl Hoefner, Bill Jacoby, Jim Jackson, Bud Jess, Warren Koer, Margot Lowell, James Lindquist, Ed Mann, Bill Martin, Ed Miller, Frank Riestra, Elden Robinson, Park Scott, Pat Sullwald, Gordon Tappan, Joanne Walt, and Tom Wason. lsxxwv,w,:4.m f m, A f1urws-memw f4mmnt1n4-.-,,-.'.m--.- fwzm llqf-4' 'rw TFZN ' A-.L....,.., , I Y SCIENCE 0 The combined Slip-Stick, Chemistry problems, and Science clubs are sponsored by Mr. Wright Owen and Mr. Charles Herbst. The members endeavor to become proficient in the operation of the slide rule, to increase their knowledge of chemistry, or to participate in research along scientific lines. There are no club officers as the members believe that for their organization activities officers are unnecessary. MEMBERS: Beverly Beust, Ned Bayer, Lewis Ciannelli, Barney Cohen, Bill Davidson, Peter Dent, Gordon Drader, Betty Duchand, Bob Duncanson, Bob Fess, Norman Fieldsted, Bob Forbes, Vincent Fotre, Albert Gabriel, Harvey Holden, Jim Jackson, Bud Jess, Paul Kilbourne, William Martin, Jack Mescali, Betty Moore, Max Panzer, Don Polhemus, Ed Stella, Gordon Tappan. LIFE SCIENCE O Mr. Williams is the very able sponsor of the Life Science club, whose aim is to promote interest in all branches of science and to interest students in the various fields allied to their studies. Included in the programs are field trips to nearby points of interest and special demonstrations and talks given by the members. The membership of this club is open to any student whether or not he is enrolled in a science class. OFFICERS: President, Mariorie Rosenkranz, Vice-President, Marion Boissier: Secretary, Caroline Grover, Treasurer, Bill Stein. MEMBERS: Shirley Anderson, Virginia Best, Tom Bothar, Franklyn Brady, Patricia Carnahan, Glory Cedar, Helen Christian, David Dering Norma Fleishman, Bill Gordon, Glen Hagadorn, Mariorie Harbrug, Betty Kaplan, Bryant Langwell, Mary Dale Loomis, Ann Massey, Homer Morgan Jacqueline Nugent, Cecil Ougil, Bob Robinson, Catherine Silent, and Harold Tipton. '50 N N N. N N. N N '11 -A g l t STUDIO CLUB 0 The purpose of the Studio club, sponsored by Miss Margaret Brown, Mrs. Caroline Bennett, and Mr. Lennox Tierney, is to serve the school through provision of art students to assist in the arrangement of display cases or to provide any other artistic assistance requested. OFFICERS: President, Bob Crawley, Vice-President, Gerrie Fenning, Secretary, Edith Nichelson, Treasurer, Maxine Deason. MEMBERS: Mariorie Albright, Valerie Allen, Jane Barber, Gloria Bardtield, Jean Bell, Dorothy Beebe, Betty Berfield, Berna Berry, Helen Blake, Gloria Bletto, Dick Campbell, Maxine Carlyle, Ann Cooper, Pat Cooper, Jane Earl, Phyllis Easton, Joyce Evans, Winnie Farnan, Dona Sue Finnen, Anita Fischer, Ann Friedman, Betty Goldberg, Jim Grant, Dan Grossman, Jean Hendricks, Jack Hunsacker, Mary Ann Hyde, Emily Hyde, Billie Hollen, Mimi Huntington, Alice Hutchins, Evelyn Johnson, Jean Johnson, Kenneth Jones, Karl Kahman, Dick Kern, Ray Kenner, Dorothy Kutler, Mary Dale Loomis, Kay Levy, Terry Loeb, Patsy McCloud, Dorothy Mansyak, Mary McMillan, Helman Mitchell, Carol Jean Moses, Mary Morehart, Peggy Newsom, Jim Noble, Deborah Nye, Nancy Payne, Max Panzer, Bill Randolph, Carmen Revnes, Betty Rice, Jeanne Riddell, Dwight Sale, Mariorie Seyring, Gervaise Schaffer, Sybil Schneider, Dianne Thompson, Joyce Thompson, Jean Van Tubergen, Mary Vosburgh, Muriel Westmore, Mary Lou Williams, Marian Williamson, Pat Wilson, Pat Young. STUDIO MAKEUP O For every performance or stage presentation a makeup crew is needed to administer the needed solution. Under the sponsorship of Mr. J. Erwin Knauer a crew is chosen from the club for every occasion. Thus the masters administer the makeup. This last year the crew has applied the makeup for both Color days, both Senior plays, the Christmas pageant, the fashion show, and the Shakes- pearian festival. OFFICERS: President, Betty Bellap secfefufy, Dick evans. MEMBERS: Zora Allwine, Jane Ausman, Wanda Boal, Dick Campbell, Jack Davis, Pat Dotson, Jean Frohman, Marie Gilmore, Beverly Haney, Osefa Martinez, Claudia Ralls, Ashmead Scott, Jean Spratlen, Jean Stagner, Joyce Thompson, Jean Van Tubergen. U There are two different of students who W0 of students ch groups in connection with our school library the staFF which is compos rk one period every day m the library, cmd the library council, which is made p osen by the faculty to represent the various classes. Miss Hazel Vaughan is sponsor o the staff and M' Ol LIBRARY STAFF OFFICERS: President, L MEMBERS: For awrence Kavlch Secretary Treasurer Muriel Simmonds est Ann Atkinson, Carol Bacher, Peter Hawks, Jacqueline MacArthur, Betty Nalley, Marian Roy, Patricia Young, Kathryn Youngquist LIBRARY COUNCIL OFFICERS: President, Kenyon Crawford, Vice-President, Margery Duhig, Secretary, Forest Ann Atkinson- Treasurer Bill Hoover MEMBERS: Barbara Atkinson, Melvin Burrows, Joyce Costello, Agnes Dewan, Ruth Dewan, Barbara Frisbee Don Frisbee Pat Holmes Jack Hunsciker, Pat Jeffery, Evelyn Johnson, Sylvia Kittell, Mary Dale Loomis, Dorothy Mansyak, Peggy Minot, Betty Nulley Bill North Shirlee Petkin Nadine Phillips, Edu Rebout, Georgene Ritter, Bill Shelton, Muriel Simmonds, Lori von Eltz, Mary Wright, Pat Young, Kathryn Youngquist PHOTOGRAPHY C This club was organized for the purpose of giving the younger boys a chance to develop their hobbies and to expand their classroom contacts in photography. The activities ofthe club, sponsored by Mr. Lennox Tierney, are conference meetings, laboratory sessions, and field trips. This semester the club took over the Bliss Hayden theatre for one night to raise money to buy a camera. Membership in the club is open to any student interested in photography OFFICERS: President, Dick Comen, Vice-President, Clyde Sanborn, Secretary, Ed Mann, Treasurer, Du Bois Larson, Sergeant-at-Arms Norman Fieldsted. MEMBERS: Don Brown, Carter Cox, Bob Duncanson, Roddy Gorney, Peer Hawks, Gordon Herreid, Ben Kahane, Jock Kerrigan, Henry Leckman Kalman Loeb, Joe Mitchell, Franko Nakano, Max Panzer, Jack Parker, Jack Prentice, Dwight Sale, Dick Selle Marvin Wager Ray Wright Eugene Zukor . . . . - I . . ed . . . . . . . U f iss ive McClure and Miss Hazel Vaughan sponsor the council. 5. E W 3 , 0 ml-1 1 .J ,,,.'.,-WM,,,,1,, ,. . U 'N N 'st N 'lv 0 The sewing and weaving organizations are separate clubs both sponsored by Mrs. Gladys Knight Harris. Their purposes are to provide an opportunity for those interested in sewing and weaving to do more work in these fields. Any student of either class may become a member. Mrs. Harris' girls made the dresses which were sent to Albion Street School at Christmas, and they drafted the costumes forthe Senior play. SEWING OFFICERS: President, Mariorie Seyring, MEMBERS: Robyn Adair, Valerie Allen, Susanne Anker, Joyce Bates, Audrey Berglund, Jayne Boynton, Jane Braly, Gwen Campbell, Nancy Craddock, Blanche Dahms, Maxine Deason, Agnes Dewan, Ruth Dewan, Dorothy De Wolf, Jeanne Dillon, Anne Doherty, Beverly Douglass, Jaclyn Finder, Dona Sue Finnen, Lorena Flynn, Agnes Foster, Mary Gates, Frances Graham, Betty Grosse, Caroline Grover, Joyce Hansen, Pat Hardcastle, Dorothy Heimburger, Natalie Herron, Nancy Hervey, Pat Hobart, Emily Hyde, Phyllis Jack, Martha Jarvis, Frances Johnson, Joan Johnson, Sumiko Kimura, De Ette King, Muriel Klein, Mimi Laskin, Kay Levy, Jane Lewis, Mary Dale Loomis, Jane Lynn, Marie McCarthy, Joan McConley, Mary Ellen McNamee, Loretta MacDonald, Martha Maclise, Millicent Murphey, Beverly Joyce Newman, Edith Nichelson, Betty Nicoletti, Deborah Nye, Jewel Ogle, Helen Okada, Zora Olsen, Helen Osgood, Joan Ostrander, Pat Peluso, Claudia Ralls, Clementine Rhodes, Shirley Rogers, Carolyn Roos, Wanda Rust, Suzanne Sailer, Adelaide Simon, Pat Skeehan, June Spitze, Ruth S'Renco, Marilyn Tousley, Betty Vogelsang, Mary Vosburgh, Fat Waltz, Polly Ann Wapler, Leatrice Werner, Felita West, Nancy Whedon, Mariorie White, Edith Wolf, Wini Wood, Barbara Wright. WEAVING OFFICERS: President, Maxine Deoson, Secretary, Sue Sproull. MEMBERS: Peggy Dow, Doris Ercikson, Gloria Haimoft, Evelyn Johnson, Jane Kauttman, Mimi Laskin, Janet Liberman, Dorothy Masnyak, Mary Meredith, Elaine Mitchell, Louise Newall, Joan Ostrander, Peggy Parsons, Mary Jane Patterson, Kathryn Porch, Catherine Scott, Geraldine Sharer, Pauline Sheranion, Adelaide Simon, Rita Smardak, Jean Steiner. STAMP CLUB C Organized to foster one ot the world's most fascinating and widespread hobbies, the Stamp club is sponsored by Mr. Louis Hanchett. This club gives the members an opportunity to meet and discuss recent philatelic trends, new issues, changes of price, or new purchases. The members also have the chance to trade with or make purchases from each other at their meetings. OFFICERS: President, Phillip Fernbacher and Joe Walt, Vice-President, Joe Walt and Guy Hayes, Secretary, Betty Glaser. MEMBERS: Dick Abarta, Henry Bruck, Linda Callaway, Doris Canrobert, Ellen Canrobert, Paul Goldberg, Ed Gray, Bob Hindle, Jim Jackson, Don Polhemus, Isabel Salzgeber, Keven Sheble, Joanne Walt. E l - ---Y . J f ,. .. BOWLING O The Boys' Bowling club, sponsored by Mr. Charles Herbst, was organized forthe purpose of creat- ing an interest in bowling and to teach the beginner to bowl and to improve his technique. The mem- bers ofthe club played a split season, and at the end of each season the club sponsored a handicap tournament. This year the Bowling club split up into two divisions, the boys' and girls'. OFFICERS: President, Bob Rubel, Vice-President, John MacMaster, Secretary-Treasurer, Leonard Low. MEMBERS: .lim Bell, Alan Block, Stan Burke, Arthur Caplan, Ed Dastell, Eugene Gold, Bob Gill, John Graham, Matthew Hennes, Richard Hamlin, Art Haert, Bob Kauffman, Robert Kingsley, Ed Mann, Jim Megeath, Dan Tevitt, Hale Pocter, Ray Page, Fred Quimby, Warren Steinberg, Hap Thompson, Ed Uhlmann, Irving Zimmelman, Tom Wilson, Richard Wittwer, and Jerry Willner. ' AVIONS O An outgrowth ofthe Norman Aviation club, the Avions were organized this fall as an affiliate ofthe American Aeronautical society. The purpose of this society is to further interest in aviation. The mem- bers build model airplanes and study flight principles and meteorology. Other activities include visits to airplane plants and assisting at senior flight activities. There is a complete program of advancement for members. The Beverly club, sponsored by Mr. Louis Hanchett, is regarded as one ofthe most active Avion clubs in existence. OFFICERS: Assistant Squadron Director, Tom Hazzardg Chief Pilot, Henry Schollerg Observer, Bill Sugden, Quartermaster, Lloyd Arkin, Flight Leaders, Bob Miles, Don Day, Bill Wiley. MEMBERS: Bob Bradley, Jerry Goodman, Ed Gray, Archie Hanson, Gordon Herreid, Hal Hodges, Ray Huff, Marvin Lester, James Lundquist, John Marin, Roger Nate, Bob Rvbel, Bob 509590- J' f' .raft Qi 5 'S N. 'Ns S COMMERCIAL O This organization was formed for the purpose of promoting interest in commerce. lt sponsored, for the second consecutive year, the Vocational conference which was held in May. The membership of the Commercial club is limited to students with a commercial maior, or those having at least ten units of commercial work. Mr. Dennie Peterson sponsors this group with the assistance of Mrs. Alberta Swallow. OFFICERS: Presidents, Tom Lusk and Frank Schlesinger, Vice-President, Bob Caliva, Secretary, Betty Jayne Miller, Treasurer, Hal Sanford. MEMBERS: Peggy Allen, June Baker, Charles Bailey, Joan Barringer, Elenora Borchert, Bob Bradley, Gerry Brigance, Melva Burrow, Glory Cedar, Barbara Constine, Janice Crawford, Naomi Curtis, Beverly Daley, Lawrence Darst, Margaret Davis, Nancy DeBenedict, Mary Lee Dewan, Suzanne Donnatin, Peggy Drum, Bob Finck, Jack Gillham, Maiorie Goodman, Bill Greenfield, Mary June Hand, Pat Hardcastle, Mary Henning, Karl Kah- mann, Rosalyn Katz, Egon Kafka, Thelma Kaufman, Carl Hoefener, Helen Krummerli, Janet Liberman, Dick Longevan, Shirley Love, Marie McCarthy, Bruce McDowell, Bob McKinney, Shirley McMullin, Mary Ellen McNamee, Norma Madden, Bill North, Florence Ormerod, Betty Peterson, Billie Jean Phelps, Kathryn Porch, Naomi Renier, Dick Romandy, Florence Selznick, Jacqueline Sloan, Dervey Tackabery, Arthur Thompson, David Uslan, Elaine Verb, Eloise Veneman, Betty Wagenbach, Roger Williams. CONJURII O - O The Coniurii, sponsored by Mr. John Padilla, is one of Beverly's most active clubs. To insure activity, the club has a limit of fifteen members. Once elected into the club, members must continue to be active or their membership is revoked. The purpose of the organization is to learn magic tricks and showmanship and also to educate the public that magic is an art to be acquired and not a power to be misused. At the meetings the members are entertained by demonstrations of fundamentals and technique by local magicians. OFFICERS: President, Jack Davies, Vice-President, Ashmead Scott and Art Robinson, Treasurer, Dick Wheeler: Publicity Chairman, Tom Morgan MEMBERS: Alan Block, Bill Easton, Walt Emerson, Fred Hessell, Bruce McDowell, John Marvin, Bob Sherman. 155 OF You GREAT BIG WAY' VERY THGJSHT QF YQEJ 5,5 1 W-5' 913924 i 26- gawk f X ,r K ZMQ fy-2 J' X W YESTERDAYJ Wjffiiiif N 4 Hwrnvwwwgm V ,ls K 4 , . . if 1,-1 Smwm mms if Q 56535 his-hi QP ,Pm HAvsa-amsmeo Qi g .,GRlEVeNG.. GY www Wm Down WTHE ALLEY I AND OVER THE FENG DARK EYES ALUN FMoR3AY'E' . 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YQU W0 RQMANTW, BEA PLAY TESL' Have asm, A an Wi BABY g E ea HGMERNDTHQ, vows momsa HONEY CDW MY PRAYER BN FUN N WRETBNG mx M 5 N BEAEJTSFM om, LU was BE Wg mn mm DQWQ 'Wo PRUIY 'CNRLSZ-2 HOLY SMOKE LET .S ALL SING BABY CRY SEVEN 'bOH 2 WHAT You sms DARN THAT DREAM WHY DHGUEQDI e wmwmswf A Jmvg FE GUOD LLGW mmm-a ME I SEPTEMBER 18 Opening day assembly 29 A football of school, with Mon- rovia, rally assembly OCTOBER 4 Girls' league party for new students 5 Assembly on conserva- tion 6 A football at Glen- dale 12 Student talent assembly l3 A football with Re- dondo l8 Boys' league assembly 20 A football at Samohi, rally assembly 25 Girls' leagu e tea for lower grade mothers 26 Radio speech assembly 27 Spinsters' hop NOVEMBER l Library staff council in- vitations 3 A football with Compton, ass lO A football embly with Ingle- wood, Armistice day as- sembly l6 Color day I7 A football at Leu- zinger 21 Thanksgiving assembly 23 Thanksgiving vacation 29 Upper grade mothers' tea 30 Posture week assembly DECEMBER 5 Girls' league doll show 7 Ninth grade talent as- sembly 8 Student body dance l3 Art sale 14 Albion street party, Christmas pageant l5 Alpha dance 16 Christmas vacation JANUARY 4 Rally assembly, Knights' program I2 Nomination assembly, primary elections Final elections Star Wagon publicity assembly Afternoon performance of The Star Wagon Evening performance of l7 18 26 27 The Star Wagon FEBRUARY l One act plays 2 Basketball with Redondo 3 Senior A-B prom 4 Baccalaureate 7 Awards assembly 8 Senior breakfast, Com- mencement 9 End of first semester i2 Start of second semester l3 A basketball with Inglewood A basketball with Santa Monica A basketball with Redondo Girls' league assembly, Big and Little Sister party LACC Forensic tourna- ment, style show I6 20 28 29 I X f-XJ, fb bw on Wi W 9 L Hgp 'Q R fain' X M N W i iff., 'lil Q Q 5 L K . , X A -g-,xv ' ' . 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Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
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