Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA)

 - Class of 1936

Page 1 of 118

 

Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collectionPage 7, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collectionPage 11, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collectionPage 15, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collectionPage 9, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collectionPage 13, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collectionPage 17, 1936 Edition, Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 118 of the 1936 volume:

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'.,:v,. . -Q e - , .-,L 1 -um. fa :1 ' i-H - E'-9 ' -- ' 115, .. ,,f 'iv' , Jn . X ' , .wh 4, . 4- ,,3,.1,.A 2.2: - 'Lffiv' Wig -' Z: . , ir, 3,4 V.. . - A .-aff. ,, ' ' ff, ,.'g.-mffxxt .-3 ' Y I . .- 'Egfr' ,ggi 1 - .- t L --fri. ',--::,.3 v.,: - 4'-' 'Z ,-Liv' -.gy ,:'- -'E-A-ff :' 'Q' . f 'L 'A-1. g ffvf, -,V 'Q-rm, 43 ra 1 '1 --.iffy 3-,5 Aw, X ' ge-.:.a'f4v vxf- ' ' ws ,. .5 .g V. V' wr!-.FL .A . 'N 4 ' ' ..-?t M I -:A 'V E 4' 1:-1,w,Q fm, - 1-, 5 . .K , , 31,15 -, - J-,y f lui? l1-1f1?f,'- 1 . ' iff- K ' P25 r 11' .j- J ui FQ? ' , ff' cg- - . ,j,i,,V, if 1 .,.A f X w 42-.E L-I - ,4g'f,,, , iw QW 4 . gn- ,,.,:,,w,.-,+ ' ,r-' 41, , ,-:g,..-- .x,.. ,,., -K ..,- V -3. ,, ,1 A1 -. 'K .f2l2? 314'f5,f'-ATR-t 7, JI.'3:91iZ 'DA 'Y -Qm1..,,1?,,f.Tn?.-5-,i. E ,I k lv Y . ' '11-5 35' .. ' 1 1 Vvxiz r ' .. ,A ., -, .. ,,, , -.. . , ff-'N' , zz, ,. ':. . Y ' ' V. f., s. .,,W , V-.-.1.,A, if . 4- Q . - --':,.Q:..1.A ' I' ' , Q1 , , iff., . 1531. .if :ff f '14 Aw, 'X-ft'?'aa4f ' L-A 1 .V W : rf . gig, I Y dw. v' ,Nw 'xg3..', .fbi-u .-1 ,iq 'EQ --F15 .. . 9- 1 'mx-,J , 5 , X- ,.,,,-,, .V 1' ,B . Ya 43, . md... 1.4444 -, ,a45f1i3:.m'3mag ii- ,. 51 , 1-,Si fgwr. tx f. ,-fc. , f 14.1. 321 7 ' 7,4-Li . V 7-Mr Au: ..f.f..a-.igg .1-.-:--es Tl-IE CITRUS SEAL 19 1 936 1 6 x 1 X VI 1 1 Q wx I . rj, V i, ' 1 i x 7 I xx Y! ' X X . ,- M' rl' V Q11 .f V . X ! I ,J X ' .X Lf v ,WH M ' w -1 'N ' W g A I I A A I 4 'M I gif 'Q .L ' . 1 . Q' ' .Nw A . 2 I A 1 ' ,iff Q, r ' A CITRUS UNICDN I-IICI-I SCHOGL AZLISA,-CLENDQRA l J DEDICATION The slaff of La Palma '36 have The honor of dedicalinq l'his yearbook lo The Board of Educalion of Cilrus Union l-ligh School: Mr. B. F. Mull, presidenl n Mr. C. A. Grilfilh, clerk Mr. F. S. l-layden, secrelary Mr. T. F. I-lelh Mr. A. L. Meier lvlr. B. W. Richardson These men are famed for Their fairness. friendliness, and underslanding of bolh 'rhe educalor's and l'he adolescemus poinl ol view. The besl' lribule we lcnow is 'rhal heard so frequenlly from lhe Tacullry of Cilrus, A school couldn'+ have a finer Board of Edu- ca+ion. 4 ROW 2: Richardson, Meier, HeH'1 ROW I: Griffifh, Mull, Hayden. 5 FCDREWCDRD Mildred E. McKusick The Theme Tor La Palma '36 is CiTrus Union High School. Perhaps as you read ThaT sTaTemenT, you ThoughT, Well, obviously. BuT, The annual sTaTT have noT only seT Tor Their goal The creaTion oT a book ThaT will conTain an accuraTe picTure oT This compleTed school year aT CiTrus, buT They have sTriven Tor someThing more-a picTure ThaT will really relive Tor you These days and make reminiscences verge on acTualiTy. For example, Bill Swisher as calendar ediTor, has Tried To caTch in a senTence or Two an impression oT each school evenT ThaT will bring To your minds The aTTair in de-Tail. PaTsy Plummer, as senior-TeaTures auThor, has Tried To rhyme whaT TirsT comes inTo your head when you Think oT a senior you know. And The resT ol: The sTaTT have worked in Their par- Ticular oTTice-wheTher wriTing up school organizaTions, ar- ranging people Tor picTures, running innumerable uninTeresT- ing errands Tor The ediTor, or doing a mulTiTude oT liTTle rouTine iobs-To make noT only a clear buT an arTisTic pic- Ture oT liTe aT CiTrus in The year l935-36. ' 6 TABLE OE CONTENTS Page ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY Principal ..... . 9 Vice-Principals .... . I I Eaculry . . . I2 CLASSES Seniors . I3 Juniors . . 2I Sophomores . . . 24 Freshmen . . . . 25 The Presidenfs' Page . . 26 ORGANIZATIONS La Palma Staff ..... . 27 Siudenr Adminisfrafive Organizaiions . 28 Big C ...... Q . 32 LeHermer1 ...... . 33 Senior I-Ii-Y . . 34 Junior I-Ii-Y . . 35 Scholarship . . . 36 ATHLETICS Boys' A+hIe+ics . . 37 Girls' A+hIe+ics . . 46 ACTIVITIES Music Organizaiions . 49 Senior Play . . . 56 Debafe . . . 57 Calendar . . 58 Liferafure . . . 62 ADVERTISEMENTS 1 ,VU Ilia rv-Haw 7, fwm9'Vf ' 1 ,. ' 51 4, Wg!! 011. AQ I '74, ffm,-3 I are 7 I wha 37 J AckuowLEDcfviENT Mildred E. McKusick f Many persons olher lhan lhe yearbook slall have givaen invaluable aid and advice in making La Palma '36, We should lfke lo voice our sincere apprecialion lo lhem here. Mr. Floyd S. l-layden, our principal, has given generously ol his lime in helping us wilh innumerable problems. Mr. Roy O. Day, ol lhe Pomona Progress-Bullelin, and Mr. Fred l-l. Smilh, ol lhe Los Angeles Engraving Company, have given a greal deal ol lime and a slill grealer amounl ol inspiralion. To lhem we owe a large share ol whalever credil lhere may be lor lhis book. We are indebled lo Mr. Burl Rice ol lhe Voorhis School lor lhe division page pholog- raphy. The adverlisers have generously conlribuled lhe money wilhoul which our yearbook could nol exisl. To lhese, who have had such a large share in making possible lhe crealion ol La Palma '36, we wish lo express our gralilude. A slall member lhal we leel deserves special recognilion lor service is Palsy Plummer, who, in addilion lo her original posilion on lhe slall, served as assislanl edilor in Lamberl Whilcomb's absence. during lhe rush season lor Annual work. Anolher conlribulion which greally aided in lhe produclion ol La Palma '36 was lhe work ol lhe lwenly-six arl assislanls whose names lollow: ' Elwin Brown, Billie Lou Chesler, Bill Cullen, Wynona Ellinglon, Andy Fay, Raymond Gossard, Marian Harding, Gerlrude Hen- derson, Raymond l-libler, Elsie Bell Jensen, Bobbie Kuhn, Roberla Label, Sarah Lopez, l-lelen Mains, Calherine Mendoza, Mary Miller, Lois Parsons, Phyllis Peirce, Van Rauch, Frances Sanlellan, Palricia Sharp, Frances Slreeler, Sumire Sugila, Richard Walhen, Marcella Williams, and Shirley Young. l-a Palma '36 has been produced and linanced by innumerable individuals whose service cannol be adequalely acknowledged on a single page. We hope lhal lhey will enioy lhe linished book. 8 wg ? Raimi? ADMIIXIISTRATICDN , ,7 c 'kk wgjfiif AN D FAC U LTY f .9 3 .1 .R 'A A :W 1 I .55 A rf. ff ' . 1 'J x ,xy ' , ' J . '..r..- . 4.428 1, N,-. I.. 5. x'-. w pe.: -. . . , t, ,,.. f. . ,, r.. 1 1 . ,T -QE-q-.v -ff-V ,WT-,v-up-gf.. .,..-.--H-P-v-5-15 uf...- 'Pfi- ry 1 , :fa . I Q +191 , .4 , ' fbi? Q' . . . 5. .. z . ' fm' LA ,Mr- . Hy, -if. ' -, , . H , Q 4: 1' A,. ' P. -,, : ' f ',.'. . I ..' V4 - ' , '- 4 .. -ff. I. n' A 1 ' ',- Y K. - Q J ,,.,. ,. - '. .'., I . v '-' wg., , V ' C. ?,. :L I' V' ,. I- v I. . U Y , -E ,.. ,, , . ra' .s. .4 .N mf, .- .- -1 . ' 1.-.VA '-.- wx, I-.v kr .,.. , -' ..- .F It -Q .- u-,.f',J-.H A .- , . . .i'. . 1 , ..,, 'X .,, U, 1 33-Cr, V ' - N , A Q ,. 3 A vl..' V' .-A ,,- +V.. QYH in , ,vlan .. 1. vw . L. L.. , ,. e Q, . - f V.. W' f X . . .ax ,, , 4 ? . ', .1 if , .., ,fy Ii ,M s W , - I -4 rl . . fx. Q , 'isp ., .. 2. '12, 1 ,1.,,A. ,.2 , 7? A ,-v 4. Ln, 5 . Q X, ,-rf' f 4 -,. -we ,Vt-1 Cl, . ,Q G . it .- . ..- ' ., , , J .:- i Am, . -Ng L-5-2 1.. f.A',, x ..... ' N . O., 1 -Y 1 . Q w 5 . .ig ,i 1, .Q.. . Vx. xx f . ' -'f 4 ,V 15' . a.. 1. ' .. ,. AA. ' Q 'HF lb, wh M I . . . ... s . . J . .. 13.5. . Y-zj,r--Q 1- - V-.-.ffr-f .H rn-1-nf-5 ff 1 I . ,. ' . Y, , ,V .. Jr !. L-.. 1 .I 1. w v ..' .'. b' V L 1 . Q . A 7 .' . .vff .J v 1 . 4 '.. , ,.1 +5 ,,' . -1 x 1. v r -Q2.nrg- ' p f--'Y Ji'T'E ffj4w.-5-N. .K . V , . . ,A -f v' L . 'vi..n.v ' ,- ' . - , 1 1. - ,J ut xii,-4 .. ---.:L: 't, . . 'LJ ...avi 'NJN w 3.,1 if f f:, H303 .'4.- . Q, 1533 I 1 ' . 'L.-, A lx , .w..,. fr ,.. ,vw ..f-,:'.V, ... - 1 4. ,,. X. , Q., I Y lad-,Q ' LT. '. 4153 in - A t . -Hi ,. , . .vw- . . M . . A . '11, 'r A .. ff. H ' 2 . . - - vu.- , .. ' f -sf '.-1 ' ' W.. i ' . -I -w ..1 . 4 . tl. J - . . , 4 qv , I .J , u-. .F 1 lf. .g,5,'. , 1 1, .. . We , .1 .1 -., .. . 11 .r N I MR. l-IAYDEN OTTen we do noT realize how much we need and depend on someone we are used To unTil we Tind he isn'T There. You surely all agree, and iT is very easy To say. buT sTudenTs and Teachers aT CiTrus This year Tound ThaT iT is very hard To learn. Mr. Hayden suddenly wasn'T here. The words They said-The careTakers, The sTu- denTs. and The Teachers-when They spoke of him, were peace, loyalTy, democracy, cooperaTion. How- ever, may we say ThaT since Mr. l'layden's reTurn we have heard This senTence pracTically verbaTim so oTTen ThaT IT seems To mean more Than mere words: l admire The capabililry of The vice-principals during Mr. l-layden's absence, buT There is no one To Take Mr. l-layden's place. We seem To be aT home again aT CiTrus now. l can'T puT iT inTo The words l wanT, buT l wish l were able To Tell him how much he means To us. 9 ffl W if THE PEINCIEMS V llil? MESSAGE MR. HAYDEN School. School-The Theme of La Palma for I936-is a magic word, almosl an Aladdin's Lamp. Yes, l 'rhink if is even superior 'lo Aladdin's Lamp because one is a fairy sfory and The oiher is a realiiy Jrhal' has broughl us many lhings once considered impossible. Our of The laborafory of rhe school have come The radio, +he Jrelephone, lhe auromobile, and The airplane, Thar have conquered space: The scienlific knowledge of medicine, Thar has 'Freed us from plagues and many dread diseases: knowledge of law and order, Thai has buill our naiions, and--s+ill holding on +o our simile of Aladdin's Lamp--wha+ aboul' lhe li'r+le eleciric lamp Thar has 'rhrown a circle of Iighr around +he world? Oui of ihe school has come a Training in The appreciarion of The beauliful of +he world-The beauriful in li+era'rure, in music, in arf. Life has been enriched a lhousand Told. Human relalrionships have also been broadened and expanded. The archifecfs, lhe scienfisls, The builders, and ariisls, have been 'Trained in our schools, colleges, and universifies. The school has very approprialely been lermed The alma ma+er of 'Those who have searched in i1 For knowledge, wisdom, and inspirafion. ' Will you boys and girls accepl +his rich herifage-preserve il, increase i+, and make if ennoble your lives? Emerson says, The farmer should nol become +he handle of a plow, fhe sailor should noi become lhe rope of a ship. l-le should ennoble his work and in Time be ennobled himself. 10 VICE-PRIIXICIPALS' GREETIIXIC3 T MRS. SHELDON MR. STURGES Our Campus Scene is The Theme, you say? Well, The blue-veiled mounTains over The way And The gleaming groves beiewelled wiTh gold Should be in The scene, if all is Told. The Tall eucalypTus ThaT arches The drive And The blossoming bushes wiTh nesTlings alive: The shady arcade, and The pride oT The school, Yon Tall senior Tower, and The clear mirrored pool- All These Torm The body. BUT whaT is The soul? YouTh's courage and vigor pursuing iTs goal. -EThel B. Sheldon How we Americans praise The spiriT oT The pioneer! All Too oTTen do we bemoan The TacT ThaT our TronTiers have vanished and ThaT, alas, There are no regions leTT To conquer. How Tar Trorn The TruTh! Though The geographical TronTiers have nearly disappeared. would we buT liTT our eyes To survey a new horizon oT a living, Throbbing world of people and counTless unsolved human prob- lems we could be capTivaTed by a Tar more sTirring challenge Than C5reely's Tamous Go wesT, young man, go wesT. To ThaT end, The school program oT Today has a renewed purpose To aid The pupil TirsT, To discover and direcT himself: second To Tind his place in The social sTrucTure: and Third, To make his conTribuTion To The general good. WhaT greaTer challenge ever conTronTed any pioneer! -David IW. STurges 11 .Wffs ROW 4:'S'revens, Graffam, Griesser, Alman, Wafson, Smifh, Scho++, Snyder. ROW 3: Slurges, Goodwin, Harper, I-lerdeg, Ebersold, Clayes, Pryor, Kanzelmeyer. ROW 2: McKusicIc, Greenlaw, Rudmann, Dimmiff, Boyd, Polfer, Zellhoefer, Lewis, Smiih, Earnsworlh. ROW I: Van Pailen, Cobbs, French, Brown, Sheldon, Purclurn, McLeocI, Dryden, Warburlon. FACULTY JOHN ALMAN-Science, Mafhemalics, Physical Educaliong MILDRED M. BOYD-Commerce: MARGARET BROWN-Home Economics: AL CLAYES- Physical Educalion, Englishi Ma+hema+icsg IRENE COBBS-Secrefaryg MAR- JORIE DIMMITT-English: GRACE M. DRYDEN-Physical Educalion, English, LEO V. EBERSOLD-Mechanical Drawing, Mafhemaricsg RUAH EARNSWORTH -Physical Eclucaiion, English, UNA M. FRENCH--Languages: JEAN GOOD- WIN-Arf, Crafl: DONALD T. GRAFFAM--Hisloryz HELEN GREENLAW4 Physical Educafion, Biology: ROBERT GRIESSER-Social Science: J. ROBERT HARPER-Chemislry: E. S. HAYDEN--Principal: HAROLD L. HERDEG--Ma- chine Shop: KATHRYN HERNDON--Dramaficsg HARRY H. KANZELMEYER- Science, Language, Mafhemaficsg J. ARTHUR LEWIS-Voice, ROSA A. Mc- KUSICK-Englishg IRENE McLEOD-Librarian, English: WILLIAM H. POTTER -Music, RALPH H. PRYOR-Commerce: MARGARET PURDUM-Languages: GRACE RUDMANN--Secrelary: HENRY A. SCHOTT-Physical Educa+ion: ETHEL BURNHAM SHELDON-Vice-Principal, English: LESTER G. SMITH-- Manual Ar'rsg RACHEL GRAVES SMITH-Dramalicsq WESLEY VANCE SMITH -Social Science: EDWARD C. SNYDER-Ma+hema+icsq VIRGIL STEVENS- Biology. Physical Educariong D. W. STURGES-Vice-Principal, Biology, JAMES M. VAN PATTEN-Physical Eclucaiion, Social Hisloryq STANLEY WARBURTON -English, Commerce: DONALD WATSON-Science: MILDRED L. ZELL- HOEEER-Hisfory, English. 12 CLASSES i E 1 T SENICDR CLASS SHIRLEY THOMPSON ln l932 a group oT ThaT Timid and reTicenT specimen commonly known as Treshmen gaThered uncerTainly in The halls oT learning. Unlike oTher members oT This genus They were smarT, if noT educaTed, and quickly adapTed Themselves To The more inTricaTe liTe oT high-school sTudenTs. They were even capable oT bearing The wraTh and scorn heaped upon Them by Their superiors wiTh an invulnerable demeanor mosT annoying. UndoubTedly Their spiriT OT nonchalance was bolsTered up immeasurably by Their producTion oT a scandal sheeT ediTed by a Tew enTer- prising girls, giving The class an unprecedenTed advance Toward social class. They TurTher disTinguished Themselves by such an ouTsTanding class-nighT sTunT ThaT The upper classmen, oT necessiTy, began To realize ThaT freshmen exisiTed. The class began Their sophomore year wiTh esTablished repuTaTions and knowing counTenances. They were by This Time well represenTed in all school acTiviTies, and They managed To keep This TacT before The Campus eye ThroughouT The year. V The Third year saw Them legally as imporTanT as They'd been ever since They had arrived. They played Their parT well and conTribuTed much To The enThusiasm oT The school. Don'T. however, be misled by such lavish praise, Tor The class kepT The adminisTraTors oT law and order Tar Trom idle. During This year,'The Tradi- Tional banqueT was given in The marine surroundings OT NepTune's Kingdom. Though The Junior-Senior BanqueT is a TradiTional and annual aTTair, This parTicular one is sTill ouTsTanding in The minds oT all Those sTudenTs who aTTended, as one OT The mosT cleverly managed and Thoroughly delighTTul oT social aTTairs during high school. In all Too shorT a Time The class embarked on Their TourTh and lasT year aT CiTrus wiTh Jack Ray as presidenT, Leon Lumpkin as vice-presidenT, Marcella Williams as secreTary, and LamberT.WhiTcomb as Treasurer. The promise oT dramaTic abiliTy shown in Their Treshman days was Tulfilled by The presenTaTion oT The senior play, Skidding. The senior class also appeared on The oraTorical map when Vernon Timmons walked away wiTh TirsT place in The annual oraTorical con- TesT. A series of unTorgeTTable gala social evenTs during Their lasT year kepT The graduaTes rushed buT pleased. This included such aTTairs as The aTTernoon Junior Club dances, an innovaTion inTroduced inTo The dancing regime. These maTinee dances, held aT The Azusa Woman's Club House, sTarTed aT Tour P. M. and ended iusT in Time To eaT supper or To dress Tor dinner. They proved To be very popular. being decidedly easier on one's pockeTbook Than nighT dances, and being unique as well. However, The evening dances were successTully conTinued, Too. Toward The end oT The year, good Times seemed To pile up. The Senior Class Picnic was celebraTed wiTh a round oT good Times and an abundance oT delicious Tood. The Junior-Senior BanqueT was The scene oT a very realisTic Hawaiian island. The seniors voiced Their appreciaTion To Their hosTs and hosTesses, The iunior class, by having a rousing. corking, never-To-be-TorgoTTen evening. And Class NighT, revealing senior TuTures by The usual presenTaTion oT real-liTe c'haracTerizaTions- made possible by The use oT prinTs Trom The senior yearbook picTures-sealed The graduaTes' TaTes. 13 W ifw' E VELYN ABBOTT Somebody! slenoq and a good one, likewise, Wilh dignified charm and smil- inq brown eyes. KATHLEEN ASHURST Kiily will make a good wife someday, If she sellles down now and learns +o pray. MAXINE R. BEATY A prelly maid with Tifian hair And a slep as lighl as fhe sum- mer air. MARY L. BUCCOLA A lively girl of friendly ways With a rep as an alhlele in high-school Clays. BILLI E LOU CHESTER One of our girls who loves 'lo ad- Jusf ask her: i+'s quile a iacl. NITA e. oLE . QZA' I c iii - Liifle Zanlla is a frail liille lass, Buf neverlheless she'll upsel' a whole class. TOM BROTHERTON A powerful afhlele who can block and run. - ln sporfs he seems 'lo find his Tun. s gof a ihere in his mind, And can? decide who's 'rhe besl' find. RICHARD A. AKIN D 641 Richard is +4qg eSn. like lasses. . By fhe way, Dick, y i ' 'ro skip classes JOSEPH BARTER Ladies' 'Home Companion ?ha+'s Joe's middle name. For among Cilrus women he's found his fame. JOHN BLACKWOOD Here is a boy wifh a cowboy drawlg He rides his horses'wilhoul' a fall. DONALD BOWLING He is one of Al Clayes' srnarl- esf lads: A pracfical ioke is one of his fads. HU QEAWQ W Af nner is ry nc rnealh h CECIL lf? u . S . 8 . N A Cecil kno U- ons' sf and l Ami n . eiaev .f . ii 5 fe.-, pa . K g l 'U , pw ONA ELLI Ton f A egder In C I NEAOLA El-IRHART This is ihe girl wiih ihe cowboy song Wh'ch ' pleasani' io hear and ion rs loui' also, l c X s Bob Singleion ouhof is ind. of W W .il JANE LEE ELLIS A girl who screams ai looibal games: She quiie oui-yells ihe other dames. JEAN E. FRASER Jean says exacily whai sh? ihinks, Spicing her worcls l'ill everyone blinks. l-ler dimpled smile is so en- iicing Thai if will lead 'ro shoes-and ricinqf' O IN E. GILKISON ho becomes more friendly when you know her awhile. T MA . i S Wh om qeis C ss, rm: l-l r, his mile will, lyigjil e gm wiih 6 foxy smile. HO R i ill and ina .. My ., ,y WRAY BURNER Wray is fall and lank and blonde: . OF him The fellows are very fond. , EARLCHAPMAN A PM A magicians brain for maih RJ and irig, .' I Bu? for oiher siudies he won'i 'a ' give a fig. HUG C L i ' s h-ool is pri l Bu I n comes b , ey lei In JOHN DEMMITT 'John likes 'ro play wilh fha resi of ihe ioisq Says he doesn'i like girls and oiher wha+-nois. R54 N AGM 55, an He's ihe more siudious half oi M ihe iwins, Ancl all 'lennis maiches easily ' wins. 45.6.- LLARD h F il . i e ob sa all j X U4 Kiwi. NWN E NA G. HAQNN e's eifher eary or awfully lafe, Bui never says No 'ro break a dale. BEVERLY HENDRICK Don'+ pi+y ihe children our Bev- erly reaches: . lnsfead of prun , fhey will all be peaches Ll 1 w , , il u A - x,,- ' i+' ' rl' a full of . f I l ' ' 6 g s she can u y u . f of W, yyffi LELA MAY JAN EWAY A sociologist +ha'r's her aimg' Seances wi'rh leachers have made her fame. RUBY B. KASPEREK Ruby has pep fhough she is small. Wilh ever a smile and a word ' for all. QILOICE KISLING ' Loice is shy and very sweet The kind of girl we like fo meef. J. T. HARGROVE Here is a boy who can surely V run, He's off iusf as soon as ihey pop 'lhe gun. 70 JACK A lil-He wifh lols of pep: For he has a rep. ROBERT L. FRENCH He's quife an arfisf lbul so aloofl: Look in This book for furlher proof E -' A My ERNIS GILBERT 7 A New Mexico lad who has a flair, As many olhers, for s ips of lhe air. 14' - Lil-ff LAURENCE GONZALES Smari as a whip when he wanls fo be. Which is quife ofien, we all agree.. HAROLD GREEN He shines well on llae field of sporfs, Buf on ihe side, he also couris. LEONARD HAET He can play The 'cello, buf +hal s noi ally He's very well known for his New York drawl. ROBERT HARRISON Here is The man who loves fo debafe ln sociology class: so he's never lafe. 7-ofw-va, LQ-Q. QM-S-A 1 6 G5 r. ., BARBARA G. KUI-lN One of 'rhe nicesf and peppiesl ol: gals Who among lhe boys finds many pals. MARTHA LA RUE LEE Whal is fhis 'rhal' we all see- A diamond ring on La Rue Lee? Pl-IYLLIS L. MACE You're sure To nolice her dark brown eyes. Thai can kindle wilh anger, love, or surprise. MILDRED MCKUSICK Since she would noi' pul my firsl poem in, To make a rhyme-she's quile Tall d +hin. 0 0 I Y MEIE I A's fer gir never seen: Bill ' r-sl'1e's his qlliw MARY JO NEEDHAM Smoky is, as her name im- plies, Surrounded wilh smoke and a swarm of guys. CONRAD MAEDING A iouchdown maker he was 'rhis year: His deeds in foolball broughl many a cheer. 1 vw MPLE There i al ays a smile on his pug-n ed face: To 'rhe J.C. girls we prescribe his case. ' HERBERT C. HOOVER Herberl is proud of his won- derful name, And he's quile well known for Republican fame. HOUGH i lo look af and +o know. year: can you low? for We is .a , .f he any ais fo a much iw all nf ,O , P as ir or ri + H Q fl I 6:3 6 .f .l,. Q '- com 1' f r some of his kisses. ROBERT MALCHO Bobby's greal skill af acc dion Playing ls ahead of his years-and he is weighing. qv N PATSY de B. PLUMMER I 'fried To be fair in wrifing These verses: So shower me nor wifh all of your curses. HELEN B. PORTER Through days of ioils and hours of care, From dark-brown iresses +o red- gold hair. - .. X M 'AKKT X9 Wh . e p ucks hose big. bass M71 M so s io ou she fmbrin Y N ELL H. POWELL Liffle Nell is a beaufiful lass, Who giggles more fhan all in our class. MARY LUCILE PRICE Lucile is +all and quiei' and dark, And she receives nor a few good -marks. MARY J. ROMERO This charming girl is quiie an ar+is+, And in our class abouf The smarresr. GLENN PEAK Glenn is an a1'hle+e as well as a scholar: He'll win every race. you can ber your las? dollar. ,M Wh 'lffff' ROBERT MCCOMIC If if wasn'+ for Bob, whal' would our sfage be? A -1 of a place, iusi befween you and me. BILLY ILLAR ' as quiie a mechanical ' i d' s, some day. he'll make a grea+ find, NY MO l U I y s w lravel sf O r c w you as R. D. MORRIS Girls, he's a man who really can cook. This is leap year: so pui' our a hook. , U' O A o io 's r and 08 -na- 5 oo, hails a l y ' smarf ones d . - ' J js Q v . ,sl ,ff A A P CINS' fpxfg-'Mun I 4 ff . Jon,g!ih93ud..he5h52Ar1anyQ:d rr ,f, lifts V - .7 .. D4 jJIQufr'fffJfLJ4 ca,PiQn,apdla'6'Qf'l 2 . .fu r i I IJ, Jf,,r7-1 DAN POWELL Dan has broken lhree or four hearls, He broke Them so well fha? 'They , can'i' find fhe paris! 9, l ,lol-wgg'?fllf'll 'm. sn? x Mi K I 6 . . . I - nfl, I I I I af if' 'ill I ll II l ll ,JV I ' I I I' X I ' li L l I l W pp fy l kkllkyuf 'U ily ny: I . I I II BIL I ous SELE JACK RAY N I l I I , goes righ+ Ihrou when a Jack has a Iongue for golden sign a s STOP S oralilgns, h f A An ex e I alk wih he e i w en if comes o I'raIi c . i i f psecniarydonafions. UQ K 10 I f fb- -if -. 1' 'R-W1 ROBERT RAY TI-IOMASINA STEVENS l-lere is a girl oi ballroom Tame, Prelfy and dark: Tam is her name. SHIRLEY THOMPSON A Gale so fair blew o'er her hearfg From her Ihey say 'Iwill never parl. SHIRLEY TIPTON Shorf and prelly, quiel and neat One of Ihose girls who are hard Io beal. ARDA TUROUE Fair liflle Arda is one of our brides: She was caughI in December moon-Iides. MARGARET van der SLUIS A beauiiiul lass and The shyesl of girls, With flashing dark ,eyes and darker curls. IDQQEV SMITH T e lovely red curls are well a ired. And Ihe hue of 'Ihe hair by ' many desired. Iilflr Squeebe is cule and lois of fun, Buf he's The source of many a pun. FREDERICK SEIMEARS iw 2 Full of spirit he's go? whaf if l lakesg As prexy and siudenf a record Azfwfif' he makes. JA- I fi Mf- B M. si Iii' N , F, S r uf ois .X Abd SQTQQAL er, W if ll' X xx, DAVID SMITH David is quiet buf he knows his sluffg I-Ie can be mild aswell as rough. FRED A. SMITH Ruby has power over This young lad. Who makes his cars a noisy Tad. FRED lvl. STREETER When giving reporfs he sounds like a preacher, If he's nof Irying Io soil-soap a Ieacher. X i ,Q X ' If Lu y is very brighl and gay, 1 And she likes 'ro giggle her lime away. ii5jLCW6.S IV A . ' rf .f, X if ,ja ,fl L , I JEPQRNETTE M.-,WHITE XXII lnqlhis world hei genfle ways -A V 3. S all be an le dless 'theme ol ' - 'raise'. I Rx ELLA WILLIAMS I Marcella is slim 'smarlg She has good I , buf whal a hearll ilk W' LW MARY ELLEN WILLS For Ihe close of school she could nol wail: A loving hubby she now does rale. JEAN WOODWORTI-I Jean herself is no'I Io blame For her apple-polish fame. A uf ' SHIRLEY M. YOUNG Shirley is young and fair Io sec, FLOYD O. STRONG Clayes chrisfened him Hoof when he litsl came Io school, Since he didn'l give one lor a book rule C. WILLIAM SWISHER Bill has such a vocabulary Thai he's bealen Websler an Iluenced Mary us e would b ' never I . , 4 Ho AR TA q ui ,lf f F tif ' S f Qs - sv. hurry. I , J ' 1 VE iMrv1obIgpv f ' I-le ay be bashlul wr h all lasses Bul he gels good grades in all his classes. T F. E I lo e hair- !-l I lcIc and sle An le s Hrs dnl enl' ffai VI' LAMBERT WHITCOMB While I sing my amorous sere- Wilh eyes mischievous and lull made' OI Qlee- Ou: 'lender love scene shall be played. sENioRs wm-iour PICTURES JOE CLARK TONY ORDUNO CECIL HARR GEORGE THURMAN H , V ,fi I 20 f yjffdlam WQQCQMM. ' JUNICDR CLASS MARY JANE GROSH This year's junior class is nof a replica of lasf year's junior class, or any ofher junior class. This year's junior class is lasf year's sophomore class, and fhe fresh- man class of fhe year before, remember? We are a special class, marked from fhe firsf for success. Even our kindergarfen feacher, 'way back in i25, recognized our oufsfanding possibilifies, which have since been realized. She suspecfed, even fhen, who fhe junior class officers of '36 would be, as she wafched us playing house, wifh Bruce Jewell always papa: Beffy Ellis, mama: and Jack Timmons, oldesf son. Jack Shelfon gof his sfarf in yell-leading when he organized a crying squad of babies-who-wanfed-fheir-mofhers. jThey gof fhem.j Which reminds me-bofh of our currenf yell leaders are juniors, which cerfainly shows where fhe pep of fhis school cenfers. Jewell, Davis, Hunfer, Nelson, Poffer, and Rollins developed fheir firsf-class muscles for junior afhlefics by knocking blocks around in a professional manner. The girls gof in a liffle pracfice of fheir own, as you can see by wafching our sfar girl afhlefes-Currier, Evans, Fay, Gar- rison, Miller, Plummer, and Sparlin. Those who were fond of goo-ing as babies -Williams, Agnew, Ellis, Grosh, La Fefra, Nelson, Shelfon, Sfurges, and Williams -have become our scholarship sfudenfs. Our kindergarfen feacher fook a special inferesf in our infanf babblings. The melodious fones, range of nofes, and general beaufy of fhese gurgles fhrilled her so fhaf she immediafely began fraining us info fufure opera sfars. Her dreams for us came frue on March 20, as she lisfened fo fhe Feasf of Music, where one- fourfh of fhe voices jjunior voicesj combined fo make fhis program fhe mosf ouf- sfanding feafure of fhe year. The pecuniary profifs from fhe Feasf of Music combined wifh junior indi- vidualify and cleverness made fhe Junior-Senior Banquef a glorious fribufe fo fhe glorious seniors, from fhe more glorious juniors. Our fheme, Hawaii, was in- spired by a hula-hula dance fhaf we had puf on in our kindergarfen days. Teacher knew we could dance, foo. We couldn'+ repeaf fhe dance af fhe banquef because we had oufgrown our cosfumes, buf fhe Junior-Senior Banquef was a grand success, anyway. The junior class has defied convenfion. We have pursued elusive charm and foughf fo make ourselves oufsfanding. The fufure year will fulfill mighfy fafes for us, for fhaf which we have gained in fhe pasf year will nof be faken from us. We've had a full year, and we'd like fo be juniors again. We conquered sporfs, sfudies, and oblivion. In fhe fufure we will confinue fo conquer unfil all fhaf we have foughf for will be ours, and we won'f forgef fhaf if was our kindergarfen feacher who gave us our sfarf. - Having had our falenfs culfivafed from fhe firsf, we couldn'f help being an exfra-special specialfy in fhe way of junior classes, buf our perfecfion will nof be reached unfil we are seniors. Wafch us nexf year! , ' ' ' 21 l l JEAN AGNEW A. J. BERRY BARBARA BETTIN ROBERT BLACKWELL FRANK BRAY PAUL BRECHT JAMES CARR PHYLLIS CARR IRENE CHENOWETH EDWARD COOK JAY COOPER JOHN CRANE PAUL CROW LOWELL CURL MARJORIE CURRIER MARGARET DANLEY BETTY ANN ELLIS BILLY ENG-ELHARDT DOROTHY EVANS ANNAMAE FAY JUNIORS 22 MINNIE GARRISON MYRNA G-OFF MARY JANE GROSH MORAINE HARBESON CHARLES HENDERSON GERTRUDE HENDERSON BERNICE HIEBERT CHARLOTTE AHOSFELDT GORDON HOUGH ELLA MAY JENSEN BRUCE JEWELL DOROTHY JONES STANLEY JOSEPH JUNIOR KAMMERDIENER RUTH KINKADE PERRY KNOWLES ROBERTA LABEL ' ADELAIDE LA FETRA SM W' MAR O TOR L RHODES ARCHIE ROLLINS WC, ACK SH ELTON 5 C KE RANCES STRE N HARRIETTE STU RC-SES BERNICE THOMPSON JACK TIMMONS FREDERICK TROUT MARY TSCHARNER CHARLES ULREY MARY ULRICH DORA VALENCIA BETH WEST EDWIN WILLIAMS JACK WILLIAMS MURIEL WILLIAMS JUNIORS I RODNEY LEHMAN LORAINE LEWIS SARAH LOPEZ BETTY LYLE MARGARET LYLE SYLVIA LYLE NORMA MAINS JUNE MALITOR RALPH McCLUSKY WANDA MEYERS HAZEL MILLER MARY MILLER JEANNETTE MORGAN BETTY MORTON AUDREY NELSON MAE NORRIS PAUL OSBORN SYBELL PLUMMER IAN POCOCK WILLIAM POTTER ,U-rf' 23 fm ' M 5 I Vw ji., V, U. ,f l I f, fl fVW I Is . ,,':'! I7 .II fm! ax, I iii i ROW 5: Peak, Hendrick, Nelzley, Allison, Boone, Rice, Knowles, Marlin. ROW 4: Nakada, Page Casper, Boap, Ouick. Wesf, Hough, Hibler. ROW 3: Harr, Perkins, Wolf, Campbell, Ealy, Redclin Mains, Harding, Williams. ROW 2: Morris, Graves, Scholler, Spencer, Walfers, Bakenlius, Baker Nefzley. ROW I: Riley, Reed, Englehardf, Dana, Corder, Wesf, Meyers. SQPHQMQRES ROW 5: Hendrick, Rlniner, Gilford, Wilson, Bell. ROW 4: Ayon, Noriega, Crabaugli, Brubaker, Yingsf, Turnour, Brown. ROW 3: Lee, Cook, Akin, Seimears, Jensen, Sele, Miller, Cook. ROW 2 Lewis, Runyan, Peirce, Teler, Kuhn, Parsons, Taylor, Hall. ROW l: Mock, Cherry, Songer, Tucker Ruddell, Oliver, Ouick. l- 24 I ROW 6: Cullen, Penland. ROW 5: McKusiclc, Burner, Demmilf, Gilliam, Harris, Beclceif, Sfone Snyder, Eggers, Venberg, Hasfie. ROW 4: Slrohmeier, Pulnam, Brandenburg, Ulrich, Dreuer Millar, Millar, McKinney. ROW 3: Goya, French, Jarvis, Pococlc, Ellingion, Wafhen, Brown Dreuer. ROW 2: Lehman, Donegan, Bradshaw, Sugiia, Lowson, Bender, Rogers, McCown ROW I: Srraub, Hopper, Warren, l-larf, Nefzley, Dunlap, Lee, Raihbone. PRES!-IMEN ROW 6: McNiel, Saunders, Mohr, Miller, Bashore, Scolr. Row 5: Sie-vans, Danley, Norris Hudqins, Burns, Hough, Purinlon, Bandy, Seerly. ROW 4: Embree, Dillman, Drendel, Price Pelerson, Boone, Cannaday, Morris, Gossard. ROW 3: Rauch, Musser, Smyih, Kendrick Nicholas, Roberfs, Wilson, Osborn, Nishiyama, Richards. ROW 2: Mace, Spaulding, Sharp Kuhn, Smiih. Lindquist Kreuizlcamp, l-lamilion, Sfucker, Proclor. ROW l: l-lill, Drake, Bradley Beriin, Arvizu, Fehrs, Ward, Songer, Smifh, Miranda. 25 Tl-IE PRESIDENTS' PACE JACK SHELTON REX JARVIS Some have been called The man of The hour. Rex is The man of The minufe. Half The ruling power of The freshman class is vesfed in his pockef-sized frame, The ofher half being pockefed in The vesT of Mr. Sfurges. Like The delicafe ma- chinery behind The face of a wafch, he is small buT imporTanT. His nickname, PeanuTs, is well chosen, for The Frosh say, Jarvis is The nuTs. HAROLD PEAK Sophomore girls call Harold Peak Our man. He achieved The disTincTion of being elecfed boTh freshman and sophomore class presidenf. To add To his laurels, he is one of The besf aThleTes in school. He possesses a beaufiful physique. To see him in a Track suiT is an educaTion in physique. And, judging from The number who wafch his Track workoufs, all The girls have begun majoring in physique-al educafion. Peak, To some means The summiT, The highesf. Sopho- more, and quife a few freshman, junior, and senior girls Too, agree when They say, Peaks is Tops. BRUCE JEWELL The Jewell of The junior class ..,. Did l hear some hereTic say somefhing abouT diamond in The rough? His chief vice, being yell leader, is offsef by his aThleTic abilify, good looks, and nnodesfy. IT was reporfed Thaf some one was discovered in Siberia who was more modesT Than Jewell. When asked abouT This, Bruce said, UndoubTedly an uncredenfialed glory-seeker. There is no one so modesT as The Greaf Jewell. His main prides are The bigness of his biceps. The Thickness of his chesf, The wiffiness of his remarks, and The shorfness of his hair. Always in superlafives-ThaT's Jewell. He was elecfed class presidenf on The women's voTe. The women's voTe is usually Termed woman suffrage. The girls say, On The confrary, There's no suffering To iT when we vofe for Bruce. JACK RAY T Alliferafions and allegorical aTTracTion prompfs me To Term him The popular, personalify-plus, peroxide polevaulfer. He has a sweeT disposifion, buf hafes To be misfaken for Jean Harlow. He's noT only a fooTball, baskefball, and Track sTar, buT he's also a member of The Scholarship Sociefy-muscles and brains! When asked if he were any relaTion To Those oTher famous Rays-cosmic, violeT, and X-he said. Never heard of 'em, buT if They're famous like me, l'll make 'em my kinfolks. 26 GRCEANIZATICDNS F r N 4 b w W w -. , ,--x A . If 1 ' 1 1 1, v. I-, Vu, v .,, X.,- . :' 3 . .Ha-'f .AA L. Aw . 2.3.1 if - . -. S - ' .AAA . .fu . .iv - .l. . - 1 F 'fr --.. ,ga .V AQ. .9 ,,,'. -'rwjA ' .1 - 1. -:A -. t. A, -:'A-A-,A . x9'. :..'. . ...pg 4. ' ,ev - A . IA.. .4 . A .A v, As . 0. ' .. 3. 'Mil' f.A 5 ,. . 1: 'vu H15 I . . Q fiv- , 1. .-.-by-AAAJA. iq. fi.. -35.3,-A- fx, . 'f- -,.,Av1.-mx... e 1 - ' f1, ' 1 . . z 1 - e' .,.' .,1 ' II . 1. .. Q , 1 . it WA ,Ayn-,. o, A AA 'A .V 1 5.-QA '. 2 A' ' . , ww-f, - 7 D w . 1. ,A A., . J, .AAAI .-JW .-,'-,' . 1' 'L r -' ' 'Q An 0' .- ,' - . v-4,-A' :.'- gr A . A -L Y -'iv ., in 5 - A A A ' 1' ' .- ' W f.- ,' --3. ii,-. ,. .. fj -'LQ , . .ff ' : . -- ' lla' ?',Ef1'- fQ2:+ft ' A. ' .7- ,1',.'.. ...- , A...A A-A. . f,.,A A . . , . - X . A , 07 - . . A 1. a . SF '- ,l' - :..' . ' ' ' ' :Q '. I 1.AA.?fAA AA2. A . vis, AA QA .IA 'A A AA. 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' A , 1' -H, J T. ,' .P .'-.AAT2 A 'JLAA A EA.AAuA.A. Q. .A ,.A!A ,AA-A Q 4'-'.,AA. 'f W' 13'.,' . W, '. ' fi-ff VL . I .5 13. 'A ,. A' I, ' .. ' ' 1:5-11 - .-3' L, '. .,,..i 1-'if .53 -' rf 1' ., ,--'fyan -. 2--jj A.. A,'A, A A .Sw ,A - , 'jr x-Aa -. A QA. U, .A-el Q , fy ,AA A - E. .L- , 13. ATA, 4 ,- ff- 9. ' . - '-'51, 4' f? 'i k -:aw 4 1-.. - f '- 1... 32,3 mf- -. .1 ' - .ey - .-3... A. -.A.-.- A, -11' -4-'-,AA,A.4, . .- -I A..,'- .P-1 1 254- -- ,,'.-..v.QAA: --M L' ' - '. .'-'.wf'. ' . , . he ' . 'xl' 'A - 'I iw! 2 fm. 95 '. .'1 'I.E. .. -ff'-vf 7 uf f A. .r. 'ax....' m -. Lf- 1 .--',T 1 A ,A . lv -MV' 4 ., ,, '-, f.' ' 4 1 q A I A -.. V A x AL .AA. - - -70 ' -fgvvlx . ' 1, w... '..-:gh , ,- . z- 4-,vu 1 -' f- Jywaag .- A. 5. .ng .- 5 -s....--- .,,.., . 1 -If-, . .13 . . -I. ..CA:--if - A - Q' - ', '-' r .2-Lf: Y -.'1- Af' - ' ki f '. -V JJ' ' 1 . ' A' '- - l,',1 , A 4 ,- -.W r ' . A . .A ,A AA AA AA , - A 'A .- --. fx, ' , .., . ,' Q, A - . gs- 2 '14 A , ., ,AT A ' 3, .vu I, ' .4 ,. . xy -'- .A'r' C--1 A 1 .A-'m .A 'A-IL1 h' .- . ALA-Az uf 'Ag A' ,jk . -A'3 -- A'--V ', A R., 'A. ' -' f. 'A . JN. ' - 'L - ' TU .--, A , 1 .- M.-105 v Q , ax' ,yf we ' 1 A ,QTEK-3' . V A ,AA . .5-' .' .A AA ' . V 1 . - . xf . ' V5 -. l. . gf' :A . ., AA. . . ,Q W , r QL, A-A' rf . Q.. ...A--n -.- . A.r..AA. .A., I .H- We 1. Pu ' ' 'J' - . . -1' , A - X vig- I. W '-1' .C A' i,.l f 'W . f ... ., 'r-iL',,T' .Q 'A .AJ ,.: -1-.. - ' 1. 5, A . .Ap. I. ,, AQ! . . 5, . - J- - . . !....,l . ... .A A JA, if ., .E-1-, 1 '- . .A-1475. .- .- ' Ng fi.. ,.',.A.:' ' . .,A,. M, .5 3. Q'.'A,' 4. 'En U. ,i.,-V Am... ....,,k, I W? . uf-I . 17 ' gh.. 3-'V f .AA .-1 M-.. 9 ' 1 AA..n ,Y -Lt 'Z -. J.. ' .1 v .4 .-A '.Ac.. ... v Li., .. ,AAA AA ..'A A A. , K - I n. .,. AA fi, '. . -ip .. 1 !.,1'. ,Mx .. fl, -' 5... f . L1 Ly., 'Q 'EE '1--'H Elf xA..-. 0 73 ,- H-' V. I :Fifi ' . ..gA, . -A -. '. 4 W 5 . .,., ..., A A 1.1. . JS ' L-1' A. .A , a-A1-.5 A. ..'- ' 'I 4 ., . in A L. ' , 5... .V ' . ' 1. :.L ww . AA4 . ' -pw, , 4'1'1'g 4'.VM,4, . fp-Af TQ .n-' .1 ,A ..:'.:', . -..-,.g:,f'1-., K: ...f --1. '- .c .- . 1 'fvwihfyi . ' ',An'.1ff - ..- -, Siu --. . -xg-.1 :.,n f. ,' .. v-AQ? .- '.ifE- '. Fir 5 'J , 5 a. 1-Ag. A JM, ' .14 ..5. ,, ,. -. ilu. 9.223 - : Q - ' W'-Y Tv, A ,A' Av K-. QA r '1'A,.f.'..lA .. 7 ...gy .5 V?-.7 X --'5'.'-T v - wg M .n .L- ' ,T.,.w...A. 1 fl? 153. AA. .A .v .' .T-ii' - , 73 Qjsgfil' '.,,, QQ, ', 'iv .. 75, A ,A f, .Po . A . , 'xr' 1 1 W.-L. a- vi. A -Al., 4. . fic? '. fa ROW 3: Seimears, French, McKusiclc, Swisher, Ellis. ROW 2: Griifilli, Cliesler, Pryor, Goodwin, Boyd, Mcliusick, Kislinq, Nelson. ROW I: Whilcomb, Williams, Sinqlefon, Powell, Plummer. HLA PALMAH STAFF Edilor .... Assislanl Edilor . . Business Manager Adverlising, Azusa Adver+ising, Glendora Boys' Alhleiics . Girls' Ailwleiics . Music . . Arl . . . Senior Fealures Calendar . Organizalions Plworograplwy . Typing . . Annual Adviser . Arr Adviser . Typing Adviser Business Adviser Mildred McKusiclc Lamloerl' Whilcomb . Bob Singlelon Billie Lou Clwesler . Loice Kisling . Fred Seimears Marcella Williams . Kallnryn Powell .' Roberr French . Palsy Plummer . Bill Swisher . Belly Ann Ellis .Alfred Griffilh . Audrey Nelson . Miss Mcliusiclc . Miss Goodwin . Miss Boyd . Mr. Pryor Seimears. Shelfon. Kuhn. Ray, Swisher. STUDENT BQDY We, The sTudenTs of Cifrus Union High School, in order To form a more per- fecf STudenT Body. have consfrucfed a ConsTiTuTion of laws and ideals To main- Tain. ln view of This, we elecT each year from The junior class a governing body made up of presidenf, vice-presidenf, secrefary, and Treasurer. Assemblies are one of The big responsibilifies of The STudenT Body officers, and a greaf deal of Time is given To Their planning. The assemblies This year have proved To be a greaf source of educaTion as well as fun. Many sTarTling facTs of science were shown us in a mosT inferesfing way by a demonsTraTion of liquid air. We all had a jolly Time aT our amaTeur program sponsored by Bobbie Kuhn. IT displayed some real Talenf hidden in our midsT. Perhaps our presidenf, Frederick Seimears, will remember The exTemporaneous-speaking conTesT. Prizes were given by lvlr.'WarburTon, The firsT going To Vernon Timmons, The second To Jack Shelfon, and The Third To Audrey Nelson. The confinuance of This Type of program will be a sTimulus To good speaking. Why be a caufious driver was sfamped upon our minds by a represenTaTive of The Aufomobile Club of Soufhern California. His sTories of accidenTs made The dangers of driving real. ' Because of The splendid work of our STudenT Body officers, This has been a mosT successful year for CiTrus Union High School. In This The year of ninefeen hundred and ThirTy-five and Thirfy-six, The officers of our STudenT Body are as follows: Frederick Seimears. presidenT, a man of appreciable and admirable quali- Ties: Bobbie Kuhn, vice-presidenf and amaTeur Major Bowes: Bill Swisher jwho has shown in previous years his abilify for wrifingj, secrefaryz and Jack Ray. Treasurer. who has kepfus ouT of The red. IT would be hard To find a more enjoyable year in The annals of our school hisTory Than This one has been. 28 ROW 2: Jack, l-lendriclc, Wills, Powell. ROW-I: EllingTon, Meier, Evans. G I R U E The CiTrus Girls' League Tries To mainTain uniTy and harmony among all The girls. IT sTrives To creaTe a Tiner bond oT comradeship, and in doing so a Tew members OT The Girls' League acTed as Big SisTers The TirsT Two weeks oT school. Following This, a Tea was given in honor oT The new girls and Treshmen. ln The Tall, Mrs. Sheldon, adviser: Wynona EllingTon, presidenTg and DoroThy Evans, secreTary, aTTended The annual Girls' League ConvenTion. Then came The hilarious evenT of The year, Hi-Jinksl A spiriT oT Trolic predominaTed ThroughouT The enTire evening. The Theme This year was Babyland. EnTerTainmenT was held in The audiTorium and games in The gymnasium-such as only small children could enioy. Following This, reTreshmenTs oT ice-cream cones, gingerbread, and milk were served: and dancing concluded The evening. The Annual ChrisTmas ChariTy Drive was held The week beTore ChrisTmas vacaTion. The sTudenTs caughT The spiriT of giving and collecTed in Their various class boTTles a generous amounT oT money. The Tunds were divided inTo Three parTs, in order ThaT appropriaTe giTTs mighT be senT To help needy persons in Azusa, Glendora, and The OrThopedic l'lospiTal. The Girls' League assemblies This year have been very beneficial To all The girls: much crediT should go To The program chairman, Mary Ellen Wills, who planned The assemblies according To The Theme The Muses. Because oT The absence oT Mary Ellen Wills during The second semesTer, BeTTy Ann Ellis was elecTed by The cabineT To Till The posiTion. ' Through The loyal and energeTic aid oT our adviser and presidenT, The CiTrus Girls' League believes ThaT iT has creaTed The Tiner boncl OT comradeship Tor which iT was sTriving, a bond ThaT has led To beTTer undersTanding of one anoTher and The school's needs in general. The oTTicers were Wynona Elli-ngTon, president Mary ElizabeTh Meier, vice presidenT7 DoroThy Evans, secreTary: Mary Ellen Wills and BeTTy Ann Ellis, program chairmen: and Mrs. Sheldon, adviser. 29 ROW 2: l-lasfie, Lumpkin, Ray, Timmons, Seimears, STurges ladviserl. ROW I: Blackwell, PoTTer, Peak, Jewell, ShelTon. ASSOCIAXTDED BOYS COUCAR KIXIIGT-ITS JACK SHELTON The girls maniTesT much curiosiTy abouT whaT goes on in The boys' assemblies. The mysTery which cloaks These meeTings shall be sTripped away. They are noT impeneTrable sTag meeTings or even smokers: They are iusT nice, quieT assemblies over which The Boys' Org holds sway. BUT They consTiTuTe only one oT The numer- ous acTiviTies oT The Boys' Org. ln coniuncTion wiTh The Cougar KnighTs The organi- zaTion has helped aT all TooTball and baske+balI games. AnyThing which will TurTher The CiTrus spiriT Talls under The iurisdicTion oT The AssociaTed Boys. KnighTs oT old, wiTh hearTs so bold Tind Their modern counTerparT in The Cougar KnighTs oT CiTrus. The members oT This organizaTion lfive juniors and Tive seniorsl are elecTed by The AssociaTed Boys. Theirs is a coveTed posiTion, buT noT an honorary one-in evidence OT which, observe The boys Toiling sTraighT up The mounTainside carrying TiTTy-pound sacks of lime To emblazon a C on The hillside, and Then, when Temporarily Toiled, sliding down 'midsT cacTus and rocks wiTh The sacks in Their laps. More oTTen, Though, They were observed helping in assemblies, puTTing noTices on The buIIeTin board, paTrolling The Tence, and per- Torming many oTher regular duTies oT The KnighTs. BuT all work and no play makes Johnny a dull Knight so wiTh much hilarious horseplay and boisTerous buTToonery, They Tripped To Boulder Dam, iaunTed To Jenks Lake, and visiTed The San Diego World's Fair and nineTy per cenT of iTs sideshows. Jack Ray, presidenT, and Mr. STurges, adviser, direCTed These Two organizaTions This year. 30 ROW -4: Seimears, STurges ladviserl. ROW 3: Dryden ladviserl, Swisher, Ray, Lumpkin, Sheldon ladviserl. ROW 2: Peak. Evans, Meier, EllingTon, Kuhn, ShelTon. ROW l: Jarvis. Henderson, Rogers. Reddin, Ellis, Jewell. WELFARE COUNCIL GERTRU DE HENDERSON The WelTare Council oT CiTrus Union High School is made up oT The Tollow- ing persons: The STudenT-Body oTTicers, The Girls' League oTTicers, The presidenT oT each class, The chieT yell leader, a class represenTaTive who is elecTed by The class members, and Tour oT The TaculTy. AcTing as presidenT oT our VVelTare Council is Mr. Hayden. The purpose oT The Welfare Council is To help seTTle quesTions oT imporTance concerning The STudenT Body, To The besT advanTage of all concerned. Such mis- undersTandings as The iunior sweaTers were broughT up and promprly discussed. The girls asked To be able To wear whiTe blouses during Their iunior year as The iuniors oT The previous year had done. They were given The privilege oT wearing whiTe. coTTon, Tailored blouses wiTh The junior sweaTers. However, no slip-over sweaTers could be worn wiTh Them. The amendmenT provided ThaT This privilege was given only To The iuniors oT i935-l936. The council also underTook The problem oT selling STudenT-Body Ticlce+s. They Tinally arrived aT The conclusion ThaT no senior could purchase his ring, nor any junior his sweaTer, unless he had boughT a STudenT-Body TickeT. Under These circumsTances The number oT TiclceT sales increased raTher rapidly. The problems This year were diTTiculT, and The sTudenT members OT The council were graTeTul Tor having as Their compeTenT advisers Mrs. Sheldon. Miss Dryden, Mr. Hayden, and Mr. STurges. The council has proved successTul in promoTing The good name and welTare oT CiTrus High School. 31 ROW 3: Jack, Sparlin. Fay. Dryden, Plummer, Evans, Seimears. ROW 2: Williams, EllingTOn, Hendrick, Buccola, WesT, Lee. ROW I: Currier, Garrison, Miller, SchoTT lmascoTl, EhrharT, Kisling, TeTe:. BIG UC MARGARET VAN DER SLUIS The purpose OT The Big C is TO increase inTeresT in girls' aThleTics and To serve The school. Pleasure and business were delighTTully mingled in The service proiecTs underTaken by The Big C -cleaning Trophies, dusTing banners, and serving aT Jaysee banqueTs. As usual, The Big C had several clever means by which They increased Their Treasury-selling sweeT peas, which were grown on our own campus: selling candy aT The local TheaTres: and selling apples. Social evenTs in The Big C have leTT a hOsT OT happy memories. Probably The OuTsTanding evenT OT The year was The house parTy aT Balboa, The occasion ThaT is eagerly anTicipaTed each year by every member OT TlTe club. The regular mOnThly meeTings were pOT-luck suppers--always inTeresTing occasions. A greaT deal OT Tun was derived Trom iniTiaTiOns where everyone enjoyed herselT-excepT The iniTiaTes. AlThOugh This year has noT been as acTive as pasT years, The girls have had good Times TOgeTher. The girls have shown splendid school spiriT in all school acTiviTies. Much OT The value OT parTicipaTiOn in The club has been due To The energeTic and willing spiriTs OT The girls, and Their Triendly cOOperaTiOn wiTh each oTher. The Big C has had a busy year, and iTs success as a school OrganizaTiOn is largely due TO The capabiliTy and cheerTul leadership OT iTs oTTicers: Louise Jack, presidenT: Loice Kisling, vice-presidenT: Mary Buccola, secreTary and Treasurer: JaneT SchOTT, mascoT: and Miss Dryden, adviser. Special crediT is due Marcella Williams, who has planned The meals Tor all Big C acTiviTies ThrOughOuT The year. 32 ROW 3: Kuhry, Burner, Quick, Bream, BroTherTon, Rice, SchoTT ladviserl. ROW 2: Peak, Timmons, I-Iarr, Rollins, AbboTT, Pocock, Jewell, Eagle. ROW I: Embree, Knowles, KussarT, Parsons, Gonzales, PoTTer. Y LETTERMANS CLUB The CiTrus VarsiTy club is a long. Thin insTrumenT wiTh a myriad oT perfora- Tions in one end oT said insTrumenT. IT is grasped Tirmly in The hand of some member of The Club and swung in a large arc To sTop resoundingly againsT The assumed- angles of The noviTiaTes of The Club. Indeed, The iniTiaTion oT The VarsiTy club is deeply Touching: some of The CiTrus men have been so impressed by iT ThaT They wouldn'T siT down Tor Two days. Any CiTrus man becomes an eligible candidaTe To The Club when he has earned his VarsiTy C in any of The maior sporTs aT CiTrus: The major sporTs are TooTbaII, baskeTbaII, Track, baseball. and Tennis. The main purpose oT The Club is To esTablish and mainTain cerTain Training rules which all The aThIeTes musT observe. Besides This iT Tries To promoTe a higher degree oT Triendship beTween members oT our Teams and Those of oTher schools. The Club did many noTeworThy Things Tor The school This year. Among The ToremosT services was The prinTing and disTribuTing of programs aT The TooTbaII games. The hearTy sons OT The C also sponsored a special assembly and raised a lump sum of money Tor The iniured aThleTes' Tund. They also oTTiciaTed aT The annual Trosh vs. grammar schools Track meeT. KenneTh Parsons was The able presidenT oT The Club, and Mason KussarT Took over The Task of keeping Track oT our immense Tinances and being The general scribe. 33 4 ROW. 5: Kuhry, Carr, Rhodes, Hough, Bream, Snyder ladviserl, Swisher. ROW 4: HasTie. KussarT, Knowles, Lumpkin, Bray, Timmons, Seimears, DemmiTT, WhiTcomb, Osborn, Ray, Hough, BrechT, Williams, Cullen, SingleTon, BarTer, Kammerdeiner, Taylor. ROW 3: Chapman, Wall, PoTTer, HaTT, Millar, Beckman, TrouT. Eagle, ShelTon. ROW 2: Peak, Blackwell, Pocock, Jewell. ROW I: Malcho, Fehrs, EnglehardT. SEIXIIQAIEHOHI-Y The CiTrus Senior Hi-Y spenT a very enjoyable and proTiTable year under The advisership of Mr. Snyder and The able leadership of Hugh Bream, The presidenT of The club. The members sTrove To live up To The club's purpose, To creaTe, mainTain, and exTend ThroughouT The school and communiTy high sTandards of ChrisTian characTer, and also To The moTTo, Clean speech, clean sporTs, clean scholarship, clean liTe, wiTh a conTagious ChrisTian characTer. This year's mem- bership oT TiTTy was The largesT in The hisTory oT The club. A large group of The new members were inducTed aT The Pasadena Y. M. C. A. Early in The year a ioinT meeTing was held aT Covina wiTh The Covina l-li-Y. Jack ShelTon, Bill Swisher, and Gordon Hough represenTed The club aT The SouThern CaliTornia Older Boys' Conference aT WhiTTier. Bob lvlalcho represenTed The club and played his accordion aT The DisTricT Hi-Y Conference aT Monrovia. The club enTerTained The CiTrus Junior l-li-Y aT one oT iTs meeTings. A series oT vocaTional Talks was given by prominenT business and professional men oT Azusa and Glen- dora. An orchesTra composed oT I-li-Y members played aT a disTricT Hi-Y Recog- niTion Service and aT The Annual Y. lvl. C. A. banquet Toward The end oT The year The club sponsored a beneTiT show aT The Azusa STaTe TheaTre To raise money To send nexT year's oTTicers To The summer Hi-Y Training Camp. Two imporTanT annual evenTs held every year were The lvloTher and Son BanqueT, near MoThers' Day, and The picnic and sTeak bake aT San Dimas Park. The officers were Hugh Bream, president Joe BarTer and lan Pocock, vice- presiclenTs: Bob Malcho, secreTaryq and Bob SingleTon, Treasurer. 34 l l i ROW 7: Penland, WaTson, GiTTord. ROW 6: Quick, Cullen, Casper, YingsT, Peak, Bashore. ROW 5: EllingTon, Hibler, I-lasTie, Snyder, Osborn. ROW 4: Nishiyama, Nakada, Hough, WesT. ROW 3: DemmiTT, Jarvis, Pocock. ROW 2: Brown, Musser. ROW I: SmyTh. JUNIOR l-ll-Y Junior Hi-Y is composed This year oT abouT TwenTy-Tive Treshman and sopho- more high-school boys, who have chosen Tor Their Theme, Playing The game. Their aim has been To live This Theme or moTTo, noT only during Their meeTings or among The members buT in all OT Their school acTiviTies and liTe. They have sTood Tor good sporTsmanship. The clean-up campaign, early in The year, was an acTiviTy ThaT made The campus a more aTTracTive place To be and consequenTly broughT The Junior Hi-Y inTo The school-service ranks as a group ThaT was organ- ized Tor someThing more Than merely having parTies. On Hollywood Day, The boys TirsT wenT nearly To Hollywood-To The Coliseum--To see The U. S. C.- WashingTon TooTball game. EvenTually They arrived aT The Chinese TheaTre in Hollywood To see The moTion picTure oT MuTiny on The BounTy. A January dinner meeTing was one oT The ouTsTanding evenTs oT The year Tor The club mem- bers. 'The enTerTainmenT in addiTion To eaTing, consisTecl of playing games under The direcTion OT The Y secreTary, Mr. STanTield. In March The boys made a SaTurday Trip To The snow on MT. Baldy. On April 27, The club held a ioinT dinner meeTing in The caTeTeria wiTh The Senior Hi-Y. 'AbouT TiTTy boys, including The Senior Hi-Y's, aTTended, and aTTer The dinner enjoyed moving picTures shown by --Mr. WaTson, adviser oT The Senior group. AnoTher especially ouTsTanding acTiviTy was The annual sTeak bake and baseball game aT San Dimas Park. The chieT execuTives Tor The club were Harold Peak, presidenT: Min Nakada, vice-presidenT: Eugene Quick, secreTary and Treasurer: and Mr. WaTson, adviser Tor The group. 35 ROW 4: Seimears, Ray, Shelion, Swisher, Casper, Singlefon. ROW 3: Sfurges, Lee, Parsons, Ellingion, Ellis, La Fefra, Seimears, Reddin, Ulrich. ROW 2: Williams, Cook, Crosh, B. Beffin. Powell, Millar, Cannaday, Kuhn, Ellis. McLeod ladviserl. ROW I: H. Beffin, Warren, Sugifa. Agnew, Brown, Rogers, Lehman, Nelson. SCI-IOLARSI-IPIP JEAN AGN EW The scholarship club has held +wo meelings each quarier l'his year. The firsi one of +he quarler was in Jrhe form of a shorl' business meeling wilh an informal parfy afferwards. The second consisfed of a visil fo some locafion or evenr of educalional in'reres+. This year, +he Pasadena Communify Playhouse has proved a favorile wi+h The members of 'rhe club: and 1'here They have wifnessed such fine plays as Yellow-Jack and lhe Guardsman. An ou+s'randing evem' on l'he scholarship calendar was +he aliending of +he annual spring conference on April 25+h af Belmonl High School. Kafhryn Powell and Jean Agnew, accompanied by The organiza'lion's adviser, Mrs. McLeod. were 'rhe Cifrus delegales. Many splendid new ideas were gained and broughl baclc 'ro improve The club. Senior Honor Day was ol course mosl popular wilh +he elder members of rhe club. A+ +his lime. Jane Lee Ellis, Kafhryn Powell, Jack Ray, and Fredericlc Seimears visiled l'he KNX sludio and 'rhe Los Angeles Times building. And of course 'rhey included luncheon and a show. The luclcy s+uden+s pronounced lhe day a mosl enioyable one. On May I2 lhe scholarship assembly was held. This year an especially fine speaker-Dr. Brougher, Senior-helped +0 malce The day memorable. The subiecf of his address was Whal s Under Your l'la'l'. Al' lhis lime, Jrhe four sfudenis named above for Honor Day, and who had been members of The club 'lor eleven quarlers, were awarded pins. 36 ATHLETIQS 6 W 4 ROW 3: Millar, Bowling, Knowles, Rice, SToddard, BroTherTon, Maeding, Has+ie, I-lough, Cullen, Seimears, Morris. ROW 2: Penland, Culler, I-loover, WesT, Green, Parsons, Green, Lumpkin, Brown, Timmons, Flanegin Icoachl. ROW I: Allison, Gonzales, KussarT, McClusky, Peak, Jewell, PoTTer, Peak, AbboTT. VARSITY FCDCDTBALL , FREDERICK SEIMEARS The I935 TooTball season aT CiTrus Union I-Iigh School began wiTh everyThing compleTely changed or new: There was The new coach, Frank Flanegin, who pinch- hiTTed This year Tor Coach SchoTT: There was The new Tri-CounTy league To dis- TribuTe compeTiTion more equally among all The schools, and There was The new Team made up of only. Two old leTTermen, Parsons and'G. Peak, plus a Io+ oT lasT year's championship B's. A Perhaps These radical changes upseT our equilibrium: who can selecT, Trom among The many explanaTions given, The True reason Tor The Team's diTTicuITies aT The beginning oT The season? WhaTever The cause, CiTrus sTarTed ouT on The wrong TooT and conTinued To be ouT oT sTep un+iI The very Tinal game of The season. And Then The Team, in a b'rillianT Tinish, showed Their True meTTIe. ,The games oT The season, summed up, are These: Ill CiTrus O, Downey I3: This vicTory Tor Downey was quiTe unexpecTed. IZI CiTrus O, Corona 7: in spiTe oT being beaTen, CiTrus played a game equal To Corona's. l3l CiTrus 2, BoniTa I4: TirsT blood Tor CiTrus. I4l CiTrus 7, Chino 26: in each game CiTrus improved, and This Time The TirsT hard-earned Touchdown OT The enTire season was made. ISI CiTrus I4, ColTon 7: The mechanism oT The CiTrus Team was polished enough by now To TuncTion perTecTly-proved by The deTeaT oT The Team desTined To become CiTrus' league rival. The leTTermen were Parsons IcapTainl, Lumpkin, G. Peak, Seimears, Green, Timmons, Knowles, l'lasTie, PoTTer, BroTherTon, Hoover, McClusky, Cullen, I-I. Peak, and Jewell. v 37 . ,I 'ig - T Q.. ' ' ' l ROW 3: Knowles, HasTie, Eggers, Chapman, Cooper, McNiel, Rhodes, Wilson, Seerly, Bray, ShelTon, Noriega, Kanzelmeyer lcoachl. ROW 2: Nakada, Lopez, DemmiTT, Aguilar. RoberTs, Nishiyama, Davis, Wall, Hendrick, Casper, Ayon, BrechT. ROW I: BallesTeros, Nicholas, Snyder, Bashore, Rice, Kendrick, Hough, Wilson, Jarvis, Musser. HX FOOTBALL . FREDERICK SEIMEARS This year's X Team was coached by Mr. Kanzelmeyer, who developed whaT looked like a championship group from The Team's performance in iTs pracTice games. Unlike The varsiTy Teams, The CiTrus X's wenT inTo league compeTiTion wiTh a Teeling oT l am going To win. This seemed To' come True, Tor in The Downey game CiTrus liTerally mopped up The Tield wiTh The Downey Team, making The score 33-O. NexT 'came The Corona game. The CiTrus X's ishowed plenTy oT power in The TirsT halT, and iT looked as iT The Cougars would Triumph. This was a league upseT. BuTl Corona played a dark horse by winning wiTh a score oT I4-7. From The experience oT bumping inTo sTiTT and sTubborn Teams, The CiTrus powerTul X's Traveled To BoniTa To TasTe Their Tough meaT. lT was a hard biTe Trom The sTarT, buT The Cougars had The sTronger iawg They won wiTh The score reading 9-7. ATTer a breaThing spell, Chino's X Team came over To CiTrus To visiT The snarling CiTrus X's, who had suTTered one deTeaT which was noT ex- pecTed. BoTh Teams had ToughT an even ba++le ThroughouT The game wiTh CiTrus leading only by The Tailure oT Chino To make an exTra poinT. IT was growing dark and cold, and wiTh only Ten seconds To play, Chino ran 60 yards Tor The winning Touchdown, Taking The game wiTh a score oT I3-7. This sickening deTeaT was due TQ, The ThoughT oT Triumph beTore The game was over. Woe was The CiTrus cub aTTer ThaT TilT. STill remembering The incidenT oT The Chino game, CiTrus Took on ColTon and losT Their lasT league game To The Tune oT I4-7. The leTTermen were Davis lcapTainl, Wall, Chapman, Casper, Eggers, Nakada, ShelTon, Bray, BrechT, Topey, Rhodes, Ayon, Aguilar, Blackwell, Rice, Noriega, Cooper, lvlchliel, and Wilson. 38 ROW 2: Sloyer, Lehman, Bream, Kuhry, Cooper. ROW I: French, Eagle, LeFever, PoTTer, YingsT, Pococlc, ShelTon. FREDERICK SEIMEARS There was a diTTerenT sTory To sTarT oTT The season wiTh in Tennis when The Tellows reporTed Tor pracTice. Since noT one member oT lasT year's Tennis Team graduaTed, Coach Herdeg was blessed wiTh six leTTermen-lvl. Eagle lcapTainl, PoTTer, Bream, I. Pocock, Kuhry, and LeFever-To use as The nucleus oT whaT was To loe a sTrong Team. From The Tellows reporTing Tor pracTice, Coach l-lerdeg Tashioned The Tollowing Team: FirsT doubles Capt M' Eagle 7 FOHSI, poinTs To winner FirsT singles Bream 5 poinTs To winner . P lc . . Second doubles Lzosggf 4 poinTs To winner Second singles Kuhry 4 poinTs To winner Third singles LeFever 3 poinTs To winner FourTh singles Jim French 2 poinTs To winner 25 poinTs ToTal This combinaTion looked like CiTrus' hope Tor a championship in The Tri-CounTy League. They deTeaTed EI lv1onTe Tor The TirsT Time in school hisTory. LaTer CiTrus played a reTurn maTch and were successful again. The Team conTinued Their win- ning sTreak by deTeaTing such sTrong Teams as Covina, ChaTTey, Pomona J. C., and Monrovia. The only Team To deTeaT The CiTrus neT Team was MonTebello, who succeeded Twice. When La Palma wenT To press, The'Team had seven league games yeT To play. CapTain M. Eagle, The Team's mosT ouTsTanding player, won The Rockwell Cup Tor The second consecuTive year. He was a Three-year leTTerman. 39 A BASKETBALL: ROW 2: SchoTT Icoachl, Knowles, Embree, Green, Rice. ROW I: Hough, AbboTT, Smi+h, Green. B BASKETBALL: ROW 2: ScI'1oTT Icoachl, Rhodes, Mauclc, Ray, I-IunTer. Hough. ROW I: Rollins, Molina, Peak, Nelson, Timmons. IIAIIIAIXID IIB!! BASKETBALL WiTh The Iosing Tever Iwhich was derived Trom TooTbaIII s+iIl in The air, Mr. SchoTT Tound iT hard To produce a winning Team. The A's were Iess TorTunaTe Than The IighTweighTs, since They IosT all Their games excepT one, which was won Trom El MonTe. IT was CiTrus' TirsT Triumph over EI MonTe Tor a number of years. When The Cougars enTered league comp-eTiTion, They were noT so sure OT Them- selves, and IosT Their TirsT game To CIaremonT. Though The Team always showed sTrengTh in The TirsT quarTer oT every game, They suTTered deTeaTs Trom Downey, Corona, BoniTa, Chino, and PuenTe in The order named. Then The Cougars enTered The Tri-CounTy BaskeTbaII TournamenT, buT were eIiminaTed in The TirsT round. The IeTTermen were Green lcapTainI,, G. Peak, Rice, AbboTT, Burner, and Maeding. The CiTrus B's TirsT showed Their claws by winning all of Their pracTice games excepT one. The Cougar Cubs, led by CapTain Iviauck, enTered Ieague compeTiTion wiTh conTidence and won Trom CIaremonT by Two poinTs. The nexT game, wiTh Downey, was a scrappy one, wiTh CiTrus shooTing Two To Downey's one aT The baskeTq buT CiTrus Ios+, 3I-32. Corona came nexT To TasTe The Cougar meaT, and They mopped The Tloor wiTh The Cougar Cubs To a score oT 22-28. Showing Their TighTing spiriT, The Team came back To win Trom BoniTa 37-23. While s+iII TeasTing over The BoniTa vicTory, The powerTuI cubs Took Chino down 28-2I. LasT buT noT IeasT, The Cougars deTeaTecI PuenTe 44-36. WiTh These resulfs, The Cubs enTered The Tri-CounTy BaskeTbalI Tournament going as Tar as The semi-Tinals. This leTT The B's wiTh e co-championship wiTh BoniTa, PuenTe, and Chino. The IeTTermen were Mauck IcapTainI, Molina, I-IunTer, Nelson, Ray, Rollins. Rhodes, and Peak. 40 - - I C BASKETBALL: ROW 2: Harris, Bashore, PurinTon, Van PaTTen lcoachl. ROW I: Nishi- yama, Ayon, Noriega. D BASKETBALL: ROW 2: Snyder, WaTT, Osborn, Embree, DemmiTT, Hough, Van PaTTen lcoachl. ROW l: Roberfs, SmyTh, Musser, Jarvis, Nicholas. IIC!! IIDIIL BASKETBALL FREDERICK SEIMEARS The C Team coached by Bill lSoapyI Timmons, an alumnus of Cifrus Union, were quiTe a powerful machine. They developed power To conquer Their firsT foe, ClaremonT, buT The Team's kineTic energy Turned To poTenTial energy--causing Their defeaT in The nexT Two games, wiTh Downey and Corona. 'Having been awakened by These hard knocks, The C Team, under The leadership of CapTain A. Rubio, came To life by defeafing The WildcaTs of BoniTa. Encouraged by Their own performance, The Team lcepT on winning-firsT from Chino and Then ColTon. Having confidence, The Team TaclcIed,The powerful Warriors from Puenfe. Their efforfs were for a good cause, since They losT TighTing Till The 'lasT minuTe of play. Their lasT defeaT placed Them wiTh a Tie for Third place. The leTTermen were A. Rubio lcapTainl, M. Rubio, Bashore, Nishiyama, Ayon, Rosas, and Noriega. From a quanTiTy of poTenTial D players ThaT had reporfed ouT for pracTice, Coach Van PaTTen forged a winning combinafion and whaT resembled a champion- ship Team. The Team were quiTe successful in all Their pracTice games. They enTered league compeTiTion wiTh confidence. The pluclcy youngsTers surprised The STudenT Body by winning Their firsT game from Claremonf. Then The D's, headed by Capfain E. Embree, gave Downey a flogging. This gave Coach Van PaTTen hopes of a championship, ,Corona visifed CiTrus nexT and were surprised To find Themselves biTTen quiTe hard. AfTer ThaT, BoniTa, Chino, and ColTon fell in line wiTh Corona. There lay only one obsTacle in The Team's way for The cham- pionship, and ThaT was PuenTe. Puenfe unforfunafely defeaTed CiTrus: conse- quenTly The D's were puT ouT of The running. The leTTermen were Embree lcapTainl, DemmiTT, Madrigal, Trujillo, Nicholas, Smyfhe, and Nalcada. 41 V T ROW 2: KussarT, AbboTT, Blackwood. Rice, STreeTer, Embree, Taylor, Ray. French, STevens lcoachl. ROW l: Peak, Ouiclc, Powell, Green, Rollins, Lumplcin, Seimears, French, Allison, SingleTon, Green. VA Wi+h buT Three leTTermen-l-l. Green, G. Peak, and Seimears--reTurning, Coach STevens developed a championship Track Team Tor CiTrus in I936 by means of a loT oT hard work Trom The Tew willing cripples ThaT Turned ouT Tor The sporT. A greaT deal oT crediT is due boTh The coach and The Team. 'Coach STevens worked The Team members inTo The Tollowing evenTs: IOO-yard dash-G. Peak, Seimears, and AbboTT1 220-yard dash-Seimears, R. French, and AbboTTg 440-yard dash-Rollins, R. French, and STreeTerg 880-yard run-H. Green, Powell, and Quick: mile run-C. Green and Allison: high and low hurdles- Lumplcin and SingleTon: broad iump-Lumpkin: high iump-Rhodes, Embree, J. French, and Rice: pole vaulT-J. Ray and Rhodes: shoT puT-Hoover and STreeTer. The sTrong varsiTy Team wenT undeTeaTed in dual league meeT compeTiTion, assuming ThaT They were The dual meeT champions oT The league. The VarsiTy's TirsT Track meeT wi+h Monrovia was rained ouT. They enTered The Orange relays and Tinished in TourTh place. l.aTer The Team Traveled To Brea To enTer The relays There, and There They Tied Tor Third place. The resulTs oT The dual meeTs were as Tollows: CiTrus 52, PuenTe 527 CiTrus 65lfj, Corona 3A8lf2g CiTrus 74 273, Chino 29 IX3: CiTrus bl: BoniTa.43: CiTrus 57, ColTon 47. By means oT dope sheeTs, iT was Tigured ThaT-There would be a close race beTween The Three C's-CiTrus, Corona, and ColTon-Tor The championship. The resulTs oT The meeT were noT as predicTed, since Corona won while ClaremonT came in a close second. CiTrus placed wiTl1 I2 poinTs. 42 ROW 2: Graffam lcoachl, Ayon, Chapman, Berry, DemmiTT, Crow, Shoemaker. ROW I: LeFever, DemmiTT, Bray, BrechT, Peak, Jewell, Hendrick, Molina. NX TRACK FREDERICK SEIMEARS From a promising group oT Tellows, Coach GraTTam developed a very pow- erTul I936 Track Team. ln TacT, iT was The TirsT Time in The lighTweighT division oT Track ThaT CiTrus could boasT of sTrengTh. Coach Graffam developed some good ThreaTs, such as l-l. Peak and Bandy in The 50-yafd dash: RoberTs and Bandy in The IOO-yard dash: l'l. Peak and Molina in The 330-yard dash: Bray and Berry in The 660-yard run: Ayon and Nakada in The I32O-yard run: BrechT and Jewell in The low hurdles: ShelTon in The high hurdles: BrechT and RoberTs in The broad iumpg LeFever in The-high iumpg Hendrick in The pole vaulT7 and l-l. Peak and Molina in The shoTpuT. Such a group seemed To promise some raTher inTeresTing Track scores Tor CiTrus. ' LaTer. This Team looked like a championship Team. They meT The Chino Tellows and massacred Them To The Tune oT 69-26. The nexT week, Corona's X's came To give The CiTrus X Team some compeTiTion, buT The Cougar's spikes dug Too deep To bring home anoTher vicTory. BoniTa suTTered The same consequences, wiTh more in addiTion by a score oT NM To 24l,f4. LasT buT noT leasT, ColTon was downed as The oTher Teams had been in The pasT. As dual meeT champions, The X Team enTered 'The league meeT. The CiTrus Team liTerally Tlooded The rneeTg Their prominence was due To The TacT ThaT They scored 44 poinTs To win The cham- pionship oT The lighTweighT division oT The Tri-CounTy League. Their nearesT com- peTiTor had only 20 poinTs. A saluTe To The X Track Team, who broughT home The TirsT championship cup Tor CiTrus in The Tri-CounTy League! The leTTermen were H. Peak lco-capTainl, BrechT lco-capTainl, RoberTs, Bandy, Molina, Jewell, Chapman, Ayon, l-lendrick, Bray, Lelzever, Lopez, and Davis. 43 ROW 2: SchoTT lcoachl, Reeve, Knowles, Embree, Akin, l-lunTer, Seimears. ROW' l: Gonzales, McClusky, Corkhill, DemmiTT, Nelson, Mauck. Eagle. VARSITY BASEBALL FREDERICK SEIMEARS ' Since La Palma oT lasT year wenT To press before baseball season ended. The resulT will be given here. They losT only one game, which was To El lvlonTe- a siTuaTion which resulTed in knocking The CiTrus Team from TirsT place To a Tie Tor TirsT. This year There were only Two leTTermen-W. Embree, The high-ranking piTcher, and Seimears, a Third baseman. Coach SchoTT worked ouT an eTTecTive Team only To have The Team broken .up when The TirsT baseman, Rhodes, was sTruck on The head by a piTched ball. So Tar The Team has been unTorTunaTe in iTs pracTice games. However, one TilT early in The season was a decided success: The Pomona 20-30 Club TournamenT. The Team enTered and deTeaTed Pomona 9-6. The Cougars seemed To improve in every game played. Because oT The posTponemenT oT The league Track meeT, The baseball schedule was moved ahead one week. This was a blessing Tor The CiTrus Cougars, Tor The morale oT The Team had been very low in The pasT. WiTh This exTra Time, The Team members were able To become acquainTed wiTh each oTher and To improve Their Technique. Even The pracTice sessions showed more pep-a TacT which made Coach SchoTT feel much beTTer. 'The VarsiTy now were ready To meeT Their TirsT Toe, Downey. The coach could noT know whaT To expecTg buT he placed greaT conTidence in The Team, and They came Through wiTh Tlying colors To win from Downey 5-O. When La Palma wenT To press, seven games were yeT To be played. ResulTs will ap- pear in La Palma '37, The leTTermen were Lumpkin lco-capTainl, Seimears lco-capTainl, Rollins, C. Green, Rhodes, J. Ray, l-l. Green, G. Peak, l-loover, Embree, Quick, Powell, STreeTer, R. French, and KussarT lmanagerl. 44 ROW 2: Nishiyama, Wilson. Bashore, Boone, Gifford, Purinfon. Gonzales. Kanzelmeyer lcoachl, ROW I: Noriega. Demmiff. Truiillo. Embree. C. Wilson, Pocock, Rubio, Osborn. JUNIOR-VARSITY BASEBALL FREDERICK SEIMEARS Lasf year 'rhe Junior-Varsify Baseball feam were nof so forfunafe as fhe Varsify. Though fhey looked like a winning feam. 'rhey losf fheir firsf fwo games because fhey lef down before fhe game was over. Lafer. fhe feam made up fheir minds fo win fheir lasf 'rhree games and did so. Since fhe feam fhis year consisfed of freshmen and sophomores, Coach Kan- zelmeyer losf from his group fhe following fellows-regulars of lasf year: l-lunfer. lvlcClusky, Corkhill, Bray, Peak. lvlauck, Rhodes. and Knowles. Because fhese players were promofed fo Varsify compefifion. fhe J V's. did nof have anyfhing fo build upon for I936 la facf which made fhings seem quife black for fhe Junior- Varsify ball clubl. Buf as a resulf of hard work. Coach Kanzelmeyer develoved an effecfive feam even fhough if consisfed mosfly of freshmen and boys who had never played baseball before. As La Palma wenf fo press, fhe feam so far had won half and losfshalf of fheir pracfice games. From fhe way fhings looked. fhe Junior Varsify did nof have much of a chance in league compefifion. for some 'reams concenfrafed on fheir Junior Varsify, expecfing fo win fhe championship fhereby. Buf fhe frack meef was posfponed and fhe baseball schedule delayed. To upsef all dope sheefs of fhe pasf. fhe Junior Varsify fraveled fo Downey fo fussle wifh fheir J. V's. Even fhough Cifrus did nol' have fheir full sfrengfh af fhe fime, fhey played a bang-up game of baseball fo defeaf Downey 9-5. With fhis vicfory fo fheir credif. fhe feam gained confidence. Since La Palma wenf fo press before fhe end of fhe season. resulfs of fhe remaining league games were nof known. Buf wifh fhe pep which has accumulafed among fhe feam-members, fhe Junior Varsify may go far. 45 FRESHMAN TEAM: ROW 2: SmiTh, Drendel, STrohmeier, Bradley, Ward. ROW I: I-lamilTon, Millar, Morris, STucIcer, KreuTzlcamp. SOPI-IOMORE TEAM: ROW 2: Parsons, WesT, Quick, I-lall, Dana. ROW I: Balcer, Lee, Seimears, Graves, TeTer. JUNIOR TEAM: ROW 2: Garrison, Plummer, Fay, Currier, Miller, ROW I: Evans, Morgan, Ulrich, STurges, Sparlin. SENIOR TEAM: ROW 2: Gillnison, Buccola, Plummer. I-Iendriclc, GOTT. ROW l: EIlingTon, Needham, Williams, Wills, Jacln. GIRLS' BASKETBALL This year The realm oT girls' baslceTball was invaded by new cusToms and com- peTiTors. The habi+ oT organizing boTh class and playday Teams was brolcen This year, and only class Teams were organized Tor home and Toreign bouTs. The new compeTiTors are ClaremonT, ColTon, Chino, BoniTa, Downey, PuenTe, and Corona, who comprise The new league. The play day held aT CiTrus was The local girls' TirsT chance To meeT Their new opponenTs Trom BoniTa, Downey, and Corona. ATTer games in The gym all morning, The girl-a+hIe+es Turned TheaTrical Tor The aTTernoon. One girl Trom each school was responsible Tor The scripT, cosTumes, and properTies Tor a slciT. In The morning she had piclced her casT: and aTTer one pracTice, The slciT was presenTed Tor The aTTernoon enTerTainmenT. Following The sIciTs-and Then dances-ribbons were presenTedfTo each girl on a winning morning.Team. BoniTa won The mosT ribbons, while The sophomore Team were The only winners Trom CiTrus. AbouT sevenTy-Tive CiTrus girls came ouT Tor basIceTbaII. The iunior class had by Tar The besT showing in aTTendance, and in The inTerclass playoTT They proved To be The sTrongesT Team in school. Their good showing was crediTed largely To The worlc of The besT guards aT CiTrus, Marjorie Currier and Sybell Plummer. The line-up oT Team capTains Tor The season reads as Tollows: LoreTTa Bradley, Treshman: BerTha Marie Seimears, sophomore: Marjorie Currier, iunior: and Marcella Williams, senior. 46 L, ,W - -Y ,.--i..,i., MIXED HOCKEY: ROW 2: Lee, Needham, Seimears, TeTer, Munson, Powell. ROW I: Ruddell, Kuhn, WesT, Bradley, Hopper, Ellis. JUNIOR HOCKEY: ROW 2: Currier, Plummer, MorTon, . La FeTra, Morgan, Fay, BeTTin. ROW I: Lyle, Lyle, Lyle, STurges, Label, Miller, Nelson. SOPHOMORE SPEEDBALL: ROW 2: Mock,' Parsons, Lee, TeTer, Dana, WesT. ROW I: Recldin, Ruddell, Baker, Hall, Kuhn. MIXED SPEEDBALL: ROW 2: Kuhn, Lyle, Currier, Jack, Morris, Millar, KreuTzkamp. ROW I: Lyle, Lyle, Bender, Rogers, Bradley, Label. GIRLS' I-IOCKEY Y VAYL RE AND sriiuisfxii famflw, X5 kr 0 MARCELLA WILLIAMS Though iT is The mosT complex oT all sporTs, hockey is very popular wiTh The girls aT CiTrus. Miss Helen Greenlaw, CiTrus hockey coach, is much pleased wiTh The showing made by The girls. Along wiTh The TundamenTals of The game, The players have learned even more imporTanT Things--'Triendliness, Tair play, and The arT oT being a good loser. A hockey play day was held aT ClaremonT during The winTer monThs. BoTh CiTrus Teams were beaTen: neverTheIess The girls are looking Torward To anoTher play day nexT year. Only The iunior class was able To Torm a compleTe Team. I-IarrieTTe Bugs STurges proved To be an able capTain. OTher skillTul hockey players among The iuniors were Marge Currier, Mary Miller, BeTTy MorTon, and Andy Fay. A mixed Team composed oT The Three remaining classes was capTained by, The mosT ouTsTanding haITback aT CiTrus, NeIIiTa WesT. Adrienne 'l'eTer and Jane Lee Ellis also were prominenT in Their posiTions. Speedball is a new sporT aT CiTrus, having-been inTroduced This year. In This game baskeTbaIl rules are used while The ball is in The air, and soccer rules are used while The ball is on The ground. On Friday aTTernoon, March 28, The speed- ball play day was held aT Chino High School. Besides CiTrus, PuenTe and Corona were presenT To enioy The hospiTaliTy oT Chino. The sophomore class had enough girls who played speedball To make a Team oT Their own, while iT was necessary To combine The remaining classes inTo a mixed Team. BoTh Team capTains were very capable. These girls were Adrienne 'I'eTer, capTain of The sophomore Team, and BeTTy Lyle, capTain oT The mixed Team. Opaglliilh XJXQEL it-gfyli 47 1 ...,.,.T..,-.--v - - JUNIOR-SENIOR BASEBALL: ROW 2: Sparlin, Buccola, Jack, Fraser, Goff. ROW I: B. Lyle, Label, S. Lyle, M. Lyle, Donegan. SOPI-IOMORE BASEBALL: ROW 2: I'-lall, I-larding, Balmer, Holcomb, Songer. ROW I: Ruddell, Mock, WesT, Ouiclc. FRESHMAN BASEBALL: ROW 2: Bradley, Price, Morris, KreuTzlcamp, Torres. ROW I: Smifh, Sfrohmeier, Bender, Hamil+on, Rogers. TENNIS: ROW 2: Buccola, Morgan, Jensen, Seimears, Williams, Grosh. ROW I: Malifor, Procfor, Balcenhus, Munson, Plummer, Garrison. ' GIRLS' BASEBALL AND TENNIS MARCELLA WILLIAMS ' Baseball season for girls aT Cifrus comes immediafely following Easfer vaca- Tion: Thus The season is iusf beginning as The Annual goes To press. The girls of Cifrus promise To form info very compeTenT Teams, wiTh The lower classmen fur- nishing The greaTer porTion of The maferial. In The infer-class Tournamenf The freshmen are favored To win. WiTh Their capfain and sfar, Eleanor Bender, The class of I939 is fasT becoming known for iTs aThleTic achievemenfs. Myrna Goff is acfing as sTudenT coach for The freshmen. Mable Sparlin, former sTar pifcher, is acfing as manager for The iunior-senior Team. Myrna Goff, pifcher of lasT year's second Team, Marie Saunders, and Dora Valencia. are all Trying for The posiTion of pifcher for The junior-senior Team. Norma Mains has been elecfed as capfain of The upperclass Team. Lois Parsons, capfain of The sophomore Team, and Helen Mains are boTh Trying for The sTar posifion of ThaT class. In The laTe spring, a play clay will be held, in which all The schools in The league will parTicipaTe. Since The Annual goes To press before any of The league Tennis mafches are held, The oufcome can only be predicfed. Mrs. French, Tennis coach, sTaTes ThaT if The girls confinue Their good playing, Cifrus will be among Those carrying away The laurels. LasT year Cifrus placed Third in The league Tournamenfsq however, Cifrus is in a differenT league This year. The schools which Cifrus musT defeaT in order To win are Claremonf, Downey, Corona, BoniTa, Chino, Colfon, and Puenfe. 48 -ni ACTIVITIES , ,, Music QTEYEPQLQTMENT The music deparTmenT conTinues To improve and have an enviable repuTa- Tion. The large regisTraTion shows The keen inTeresT Taken by The sTudenTs in all The musical organizaTions. Because of This large regisTraTion, CiTrus has con- sTrucTed a wide and varied curriculum: These courses are arranged in order ThaT They are able To include all persons inTeresTed in any field oT music. Mr. PoTTer is head oT The deparTmenT and has successfully direcTed The in- sTrumenTal acTiviTies of band and orchesTra here Tor many years. The vocal de- parTmenT is mosT capably direcTed by Mr. J. ArThur Lewis. The insTrumenTal organizaTions are The High School OrchesTra, Band, Junior College OrchesTra, Jazz OrchesTra, and several ensembles. The vocal organizaTions are Girls' Junior Glee, Club, Girls' Senior Glee Club, Boys' Glee Club, Junior College Chorus, and The Spanish Girls' Glee Club. The laTTer group was organized This year Tor The TirsT Time: Their reperToire consisTs oT a number oT English and Spanish numbers. AlThough They have iusT begun, Their success seems assured, and They'will doubT- less become an esTablished uniT in The school curriculum. WiTh The rapid develop- menT ThaT CiTrus has undergone in The pasT years, The musical organizaTions show iT The mosT. The insTallaTion oT The new Spanish Girls' Glee Club is only anoTher sTep in The advancemenT oT This deparTmenT To newer heighTs. For any and all occasions The music deparTmenT is able and mosT willing To oTTer a wide assorTmenT oT enTerTainmenT, and This group is To be congraTulaTed Tor The success aTTained and service generously oTTered The school and communiTy. ANNUAL CCDNCERT Friday, March 20, The Second Annual Music OrganizaTion ConcerT was held in The CiTrus audiTorium. This annual concerT is puT on by The insTrumenTal and vocal deparTmenTs under The direcTion of Mr. William H. PoTTer and Mr. J. ArThur Lewis. The iunior class sponsors The program in order To raise money Tor The Junior-Senior BanqueT. lT was a greaT program This year, in ThaT iT consisTed oT some of The besT-known music classics-so arTisTically done ThaT They were enjoyed by everyone. The main evenTs oT The program were OverTure LusTspiel lKeler-Belal, Pil- grim Chorus lWagnerl, and STars and STripes Forever lSousal played by The band: War March of The PriesTs Trom AThalia llvlendelssohnl and VicTor l'lerberT FavoriTes larranged by Sanfordl played by The orchesTra. Leonard l'laTT and RoberT lvlalcho played cello and accordion solos, respecTively. l-lowever, The TeaTure of The evening was The concerTized vocal version oT ll TrovaTore, by Verdi, accompanied by a small orchesTra and sung by The combined Glee Clubs and Junior College Chorus, some Two hundred voices. The enTire program was splendidly presenTed To a large and appreciaTive audience. The climax arrived wiTh The singing oT a medley composed oT easTern and wesTern college Tunes compiled by Mr. Lewis and Mr. PoTTer. The ensemble eTTecT of The combined Choruses wiTh The Band playing The accompanimenT and Two direcTors leading aT The same Time made This a specTacular and long-remembered program. 49 l E, L-sa ROW 6: I-lendriclx, Needham, Powell, La FeTra, Williams, Williams, Sparlin, Mains, STreeTer. Row 5: STevens, ChesTer, Young, Ellis, Sele, Seimears, STurges, Morgan, Plummer. Buccola Ulrich. ROW 4: Kis'ing, ElIingTon, TeTer, Reddin, AbboTT, Woodworlrh, Lyle, Lyle, GOTT, Agnew Evans. ROW 3: Plummer, Currier, Carr, Thompson, Parsons, Songer, ProcTor, Spencer, Gillcison, TipTon, Balmer. ROW 2: MaliTor, Lewis, Munson, Cook, I-IunTer, EhrharT, Meyers, Label, Lyle, Berry, Mace. ROW I: Lee, Cook, Ruddell, Kuhn, WhiTe, Tucker, WesT, Meyer, I-lieberT, Graves, Thompson. GIRLS' SENIOR CELEE CLUB KATI-I RY N POW ELL . Q This exceIIenT chorus, wiTh a membership of sevenTy-Tive girls, was one oi The besT ever developed aT CiTrus. The record aTTained This year will be diTTiculT To surpass in The Tollowing years. The girls who are members have had a year's ex- perience in The Freshman Girls' Glee Club and are Tully prepared To handle capably The more advanced music and more diTTicuIT programs. Their abiIiTy To sing is very seldom exceeded by college choruses. For The spring musicale The club sang The Tollowing songs: LeT All My LiTe Be Music, by Sprossg Ave Maria, by SchuberT7 LiTT Thine Eyes, by Logan: Auf Wiedersehnf' Trom The Blue Paradise by Romberg. The Soprano ObbIigaTos in Ave Maria were sung by Wanda Meyers, Lois Parsons, PaTsy Plummer, and JeanneTTe WhiTe, ancl The violin obIigaTo was played by Inez Graves. The girls can well be proud oT Their parT in The program. OTher numbers oT Their reperToire OT songs prepared Tor use on various occa- sions consisTed of The Tollowingz Serenade, Norwegian Tollc song by Kierulfq The Lord's Prayer, by ForsyTh: Sleeper's Wake, by Bach: SiIenT STrings, by Ban- doclc: and I CouIdn'T I-lear Nobody Pray, a negro spiriTuaI. The Glee Club and Mr. Lewis are To be congraTuIaTed upon The achievemenTs oT The pasT year: They also owe many Thanks To The accompanisT, BeTTy Gipp. 50 ROW 3: Casper, l-lendrick, Cooper, SrniTh, Peak, KussarT, l-lasTie, Parsons. ROW 2: Nishiyama, Richards, Bandy, WaTT, Bray, l. Pocock, PoTTer, McNiel. ROW I: Kendrick, A. Pocock. DemmiTT. WesT, Burns, Shoemaker, l-lasTie. BOYS' CLEE C LUB KATH RYN POW ELL This enThusiasTic boys' chorus, working under The direcTion oT Mr. J. ArThur Lewis, has gone Through a mosT successTul season. The boys will long remember The musical experiences They have shared. In addiTion To various programs in The communiTy during The spring, The Club gave added enTerTainmenT To The Second Annual Musicale held in The CiTrus Audi- Torium. C5reaTer inTeresT in This chorus has been developing in The lasT Tew years: Tor This reason, The Club has aTTained a noTed success, noT only aT CiTrus buT ThroughouT The valley. For The spring Musicale The Glee Club presenTed The Tollowing numbers: Tally I-lo, by Leoniq A LiTTle Lesson 'in Philosophy, by STuarT: All Day on The Prairie, by Guion, and Napoleon, a special arrangemenT by Freeman High, wiTh Temple l'lasTie as Napoleon. OTher songs in Their reperToire included The Open Road, by O'KeeTe: SouThern Lullaby, by Gibb: SoTT Shadows Falling, by Fleming: Song oT The DeserT, by Tschaikowskyg The T-lunTer's Horn, by KounTzg Tell Me Daisy, by Wellesley, Song oT The Volga BoaTmen, arranged by Townsend: and On The Blue Danube, by STrauss. Each year The club accom- panies The band Tor a program aT BoniTa. The STudenT Body is very deeply indebTed To Mr. Lewis Tor his skill in bringing abouT The achievemenTs oT The Boys' Glee Club. They also wish To acknowledge Their graTiTucle To The accompanisT, BeTTy Gipp. 51 ROW 3: SmiTh, Bradley, ProcTor, Cannaday, Price, Brandenburg, Kuhn. Hummel. ROW 2: RaThbone, Lowson, Moon, McKinney, Millar, HamilTon, NeTzley. ROW I: Fehrs, STraub, Mace, Ulrich, SugiTa, HarT, Hill, Bender. FRESHMAN GIRLS' CSLEE CLUB KATHRYN POWELL The Freshman Girls' Glee Club was a selecTed voice group. During The TirsT halT year, They were given special insTrucTion. Mr. Lewis TaughT Them The Tuncla- menTals oT correcT singing: he made a mosT careTul sTudy oT Their special needs, and parTicular aTTenTion was paid, consTanTly, To shading, expression, breaThing, and pronunciaTion. This club was noT a concerT group and did noT appear in public unTil The end oT The year. However, iT made an excellenT showing upon a number oT occasions, especially The Annual ConcerT, Girls League lnsTallaTion, and BaccalaureaTe. The girls have won a greaT deal oT sincere and cordial com- mendaTion Tor Their achievemenTs. The Freshman Girls' Glee Club conTribuTed Their parT in a praiseworThy man- ner. During The concerT The Freshman Girls' Glee Club gave as Their special parT oT The program The Tollowing Two songs: DedicaTion, by Franz, and Giannina Mia, by Friml. AnoTher TavoriTe song oT The Glee Club was Sylvia, by Oley Speaks. Personnel oT The Club Tollows: FirsT Soprano-Mae Brandenburg, Jean Low- son, Frances Millar, ElizabeTh Mace, Ferne Fehrs, BeTTy NeTzley, Leslie Kuhn, June HarnilTon, ETTie Mae ProcTor, Elsie SmiTh, and Rosie Ulrich: Second Soprano- Rosamond Cannaday, Eleanor Bender, DoroThy RaThbone, Sumire SugiTa, Carol McKinney, Marjorie STraub, Phyllis Moon, and,Mariorie Hill, AITO-DoroThy Price, Nancy HarT, Mary Louise. Dillman, LoreTTa Bradley, Eleanor Drendel, BeTTy Hummel, and Elcena Dunlap. Much crediT is given To Mr. Lewis Tor his success in Teaching The TunclamenTals oT singing. The able accompanisT was BeTTy Gipp. l 52 ROW 2: Morales, Luna, Gonzales, SaraTe, Samora, CervanTes, Zavala, Torres. ROW I: Mendoza, Marquez, SanTellan, Truiillo, Abarquez, Molina, Noriega. SPANISH GIRLS' GLEE CLUB KATI-I RYN POWELL This year, Tor The TirsT Time aT CiTrus Union T-Iigh School, There was Tormed a glee club composed of Spanish girls. The idea, however, is noT a new one. To Trace iTs origin, one musT look back To earlier school years. In The Azusa grammar school There has been such a glee club Tor a Tew years, and iT was TeIT ThaT The proiecT was successTuIg Therefore iT was decided ThaT iT would be worThwhiIe To esTabIish such a chorus in The high school curriculum. This year The Spanish Girls' Glee Club has had very liTTIe opporTuniTy To become well esTabIished: neverThe- less, iT has given The girls a very good background and comprehension of The TundamenTaIs of music. Probably nexT year There will be a more exTensive inTeresT in This group, and a larger number oT girls will Take advanTage of The musical opporTuniTies oTTered. The music deparTmenT looks Torward wiTh a good deal oT inTeresT To The TurTher developmenT OT such a proiecT. WiTh The advenT OT The Spanish Girls' Glee Club aT CiTrus, The music deparT- menT has made anoTher sTep in The advancemenT and variaTion oT Their curriculum. AlThough The group This year did noT make any public appearances, Ivlr. Lewis said +haT They esTabIished a good ToundaTion and had a number oT Spanish and English songs in Their reperToire. However, if This club conTinues, They will be able To furnish excelIenT programs nexT year. The Spanish girls are very graTeTuI To Mr. Lewis Tor his inTeresT and under- sTanding oT Them. Under his supervision The Glee Club is expecTed To grow Trom The sevenTeen members To a Tirmly esTablished group in The years To come. The accompanisT Tor This group was BeTTy Gipp. ' 53 ROW 7: Carr, Perkins, Wrighf. ROVV o: Polier linslruclorl, Shellon, Embree, Seimears, Lyle, Snyder, Po++er, Venberg, Brubaker, Boap, Wall, Sloyer, Gossard. ROW 5: Plummer, Millar, Bream. ROW 4: Ruddell, Munson, Page. Perkins, Bashore, Brown, Musser, Osborn, Singlelon, Brechf, Powell. ROW 3: Wafhen, McCown, Taylor, Berry, Williams, Janeway, Seimears, Ellis, Ellingfon, Kussari, Hari, Kreulzkamp. ROW 2: Hopper, Berry, La Fefra, Hail, Mace, Plummer, Morgan, Jack, Bakenhus, Taylor, Cullen, Johnsfon. ROW I: McCown, Peferson, Graves, Tscharner, Garrison, Malilor, Moon, Nelson, Lewis, Peirce, Spencer, Enqlehardl. ORCHESTRA KATHRYN POWELL This year's performance of 'rhe orchesira has been of Jrhe usual high calibre The group played a+ rhe Alumni Play, Senior Play, Junior College Play, Bacca: laureare, Commencement and The Annual Musicale: 'rhe Jazz Orcheslra ap- peared a+ an assembly and Class Nighi. The following +rio-Ber+ha Marie Sei- mears, piano: Leonard Hair, cello: and Mary Tscharner, violin-played a+ Rolary and Kiwanis Clubs, Senior Moihers' Tea, and oiher communiiy affairs. The per- sonnel wilh Jrhe insirumenis They play is as follows: VIOLIN: Auslin, Bakenhus, A. J. Berry, L. Berry, Cole, Cullen, Englehardi, Gar- rison, Graves, Jack, Johnslon, Kuhn, La Eelra, Malilor, G. McCown, M. McCown, Munson, Page, Peirce, Peierson, Raab, Spencer, J. Taylor, H. Taylor, Tscharner, M. Waihen, R. Walhen, Winokur. CELLO: Hair, Mace, Morgan, Plummer, Richardson. BASS: Comslock, Kreurzkamp, Plummer, Powell, Ruddell. DRUMS:'Brown, Clay, Lewis, Maeding, Musser, Shellon, Sloyer, Smyihe. ACCORDION: Hopper, Malcho. FLUTE: Janeway, Williams. CLARINET: Bream, Cook, Greenland, Holcomb, Millar, Wilkins. SAXOPHONE: Embree, Perkins, Seimears, Whilcomb. TRUMPET: Boap, Brechi, Brubaker, Hari, Marlin, Osborn, Singleion, Wall. HORN: Ellingion, Gilliam, Kussarl. S BARITONE: Rhodes, Snyder, Wrighl. TROMBONE: Auslin, Barier, Bashore, Carr, Poiier, Venberg, Walker. PIANO: Ellis, Moon,'Nel-son, Seimears. 54 ROW 6: PoTTer linsTrucTorl, Taylor, Page, C. Wilson. ROW 5: Embree, Seimears, Brearn, Chapman, Bashore, Carr, PoTTer, Venberg, SingleTon. ROW 4: Perkins, Lyle, Brown, Berry, Gossard, Brubaker. ROW 3: Graves, EllingTon, Spencer, La FeTra, WaThen, Musser, Snyder, KussarT. ROW 2: Williams, Janeway, Nakada, Cullen, ShelTon, Sloyer. ROW I: Garrison, Powell, PeTerson, Osborn, Bcap, D. Wilson. KATHRYN POWELL The CiTrus Band OT sixTy-Tive players has had an evenTTul year under The direcTion OT Mr. PoTTer. .Playing aT The TooTbail games. The band wiTh iTs pep and color added new zesT noT only aT The high-school games buT also aT iunior-college games. For The second year The Band and Boys' Glee Club gave a program aT BoniTa: The enThusiasTic way in which The audience applauded showed us ThaT This organizaTion is one of The mosT ouTsTanding in The valley. The Band again Tur- nished music Tor Memorial Day. The personnel wiTh The insTrumenTs They play is as Tollows: A TRUMPET: Boap, BrechT, Brubaker, Gossard, HarT, MarTin, Osborn, Rhodes, Sellers, SingleTon, STevens, WaTT. HORN: Berry, Cullen, EllingTon, Garrison, Gilliam, Graves, Jack, Konno, La FeTra, PeTerson, Powell, Spencer, WaThen, Wilson. CLARINET: Bream, Cook, Embree, Greenland, Holcomb, Millar, Seimears, WhiT- comb, Wilkins. SAXOPHONE: Perkins. TROMBONE: AusTin, BarTer, Bashore, Carr, PoTTer, Venberg, Walker. ACCORDION: Hopper, Malcho. DRUMS: Brown, Clay, Lewis, Maeding, Musser, ShelTon, Sloyer, SmyThe. BASS: Chapman, McCown, Page, Perkins, Taylor, Wilson. FLUTE: Janeway, Williams. For The Band's success crediT musT be given To The oTTicers as well as The players. STudenT DirecTor Howard Taylor and STudenT Manager Willard Embree, William Page, Raymond Gossard, and Donald Sloyer did well in Their respecTive duTies. 55 Singlelon, Hendrick, Whifcomb, Chesler, Kuhry, Seimears, Gilkisan, Williams, Hasfie, Sfevens. NSKIDDIN ' WYNONA ELLINGTON On February 28, I936. sihe Senior Class wenl Slcidding io fame wilh fheir preseniaiion of ihe annual class play, direcled by Mrs. Herndon. The play casl' included lhe following: Marlon . . . .... . Billie Lou Chesier Wayne Trenlon Ill . Lamberl Whilcomb Mrs. Hardy . . . Beverly Hendrick Mr. Hardy . . . Glen Kuhry Aunl Milly . . . Marcella Williams Andy ..... . . Temp Hasiie Esielle Hardy Campbell . . . Korein Gillcison Myra Hardy Wilcox ...... Thomasina Slevens Grandpa .......... Bob Singleion The produciion sfaff included 1'he following: Slage Manager ...... . Bob McComic Assisiani Siage Manager . . . . . l Fred Smi+h Elecirician ...... . . . 'Bob Miller Business Manaqemenl Commiliee Wynona Ellinglon Loice Kisling Mary Elizabelh Meier Kalhryn Powell Thomas Wall Properries Commilree Hugh Bream y Helen Porler Jack Ray Bill Swisher Class Advisers Jean Goodwin Donald Graffarn 1 56 ROW 2: WarburTon lcoachl, Williams, Bream, Timmons, ZellhoeTer lcoachl. ROW I: Nelson, DEBATE Janeway, Agnew. The CiTrus debaTers opened The year wiTh vicTory by deTeaTing Alhambra on The quesTion, Resolved: ThaT The PresidenT should be empowered To name and place an embargo againsT The aggressor in any TuTure war. The ATTirmaTive was upheld by Jean Agnew and Audrey Nelson Tor CiTrus. The same Team was selecfed Tor The second debaTe in The SouThern California League, which was Resolved: ThaT modern newspapers are de+rimen+aI To The besT inTeresTs of The American people. This Time CiTrus suffered a deTeaT aT The hands, oT Beverly Hills, who upheld The NegaTive OT The quesTion. The Third debaTe oT This League was scheduled wiTh Hollywood on The quesTion Resolved: ThaT The ThirTy-hour weelc should be adopTed Tor indusTry. The ATTirmaTive was upheld by Hugh Bream and Vernon Timmons, buT in spiTe of Their admirable argumenTs, The decision was pronounced in Tavor oT The opposiTion. The San Gabriel'Valley League debaTers, Lela Janeway and Edwin Williams, concenTraTed Their eTTorTs upon The informal, non-decision Type oT debaTe. The TirsT quesTion oT The year, Resolved: ThaT England is iusTiTied in inTerTering wiTh lTaly's invasion of EThiopia, was held wiTh Alhambra: and The second, Resolved: ThaT The several STaTes should enacT leqislaTion adopTing a plan oT socialized medicine, was scheduled againsT PuenTe. All work and no play makes James a dull debaTer g so The San Gabriel Valley League held a number OT meeTings oT The represenTaTives oT all six schools, wiTh a dinner and dancing To Tollow. AlTogeTher, The CiTrus debaTers had a pleasurable and beneficial year, and iT is sincerely hoped ThaT an even greaTer number oT sTudenTs come ouT Tor debaT- ing nexT year, Tor iT is really as much Tun as iT is work! 57 TI-IE CITRUS YEAR BILL SWISI-IER SEPTEMBER IO--IN THE BEGINNING . .. CiT,rus Union, awakened This SepTember morn by The hushed whispers oT over- awed Treshmen, The bIaTanT greeTings of impeTuous sophomores, The disin- TeresTed commenTs oT sophisTicaTed juniors, and The learned reTIecTions of omnipoTenT seniors, shook The 'slumber oT summer siesTas Trom her corridors and acknowledged The inTroducTion oT a new arrival: Monsieur I935-36. I6-ERESI-IIES BEGIN TO LEARN Eor The beneTiT oT The Treshmen, Mr. Hayden, in The TirsT assembIy OT The year explained The creeds and ideaIs oT The CiTrus consTiTuTion. The heIpTuI whiTe and beloved yellow slips oT The honor sysTem were aIso made Tamiliar To Those innocenTs who wouId have need To use Them IThe coIor To The occasioni during The near TuTure years. 20-WI-IY KEEP YOUNG AND BEAUTIEULH? The graybeards TaughT The youngsTers some of The Tiner poinTs of TooTbaII when The CiTrus AIumni vanquished The CiTrus EIeven in a 6 To G game. 2I-I-IALE-I-IOLIDAY 'Twas a Tair day Tor Eair Day: accordingly, CiTrus made The mosT oT The weaTher and hied away To Pomona Tor a diverTing haIT-day. 2+-STUDENT LEADERS SPEAK AT IasT The sTudenTs had Their say and day. Ered Seimears, presidenT oT The I935-36 STudenT Body, inTroduced The STudenT Body oTTicers and The presi- denTs of The Boys' OrganizaTion and The Girls' League, all of whom opTi- misTicaIIy ToreToId The briIIianT TuTure successes oT CiTrus during This year. The coIIecTed STudenT Body coIIecTiveIy yawned and agreed wiTh Them. 27-FIRST JUNIOR DANCE ' We caper, we dance, we have The eyes oT youTI'i. IApoIogies To Shakes- peare.I OCTOBER I-FOREIGN NEWS CORRESPONDENT Vanze, represenTaTive oT a newspaper syndicaTe, Told The assembled sTudenTs oT his observaTions and experiences in ITaIy and EThiopia. I-Iis Talk was TimeIy as weII as inTeresTing, Tor a Tew weeks IaTer war was declared beTween The Two counTries. 58 ERESHMAN GIRLS' TEA Under The sisTerly guidance oT The Girls' League CabineT, every Treshman girl was encouraged To become acquainTed wiTh her classmaTes. ETernal Triendship lTor an evening aT IeasTl was sworn beTween The Treshman girls over Their Teacups. A social hour accompanied The program. -Tl-IE ASSEMBLIES DIVIDED The Boys' OrganizaTion and The Girls' League had Their TirsT separaTe assem- blies oT The year. Bill Pierce, a Tormer CiTrus aThleTe, Told The boys OT his aThIeTic Tour oT Japan. And Billie Lou ChesTer, Muse oT dancing and music, TransporTed The girls To her realm where CiTrus nymphs danced and sang. FOOTBALL League TooTbaIl season opened wiTh vicTory-Tor Downey. They ran The ball down The CiTrus Tield To gain The only Touchdown oT The game. -LATVIAN M ELODI ES A glimpse oT Old World LaTvia-iTs singular naTive riTual proceedings: iTs ornaTe ceremonial hymns and cosTumes: iTs simple, yeT sTill vivid, domesTic choral melodies-was shown modern American youTh by The LaTvian Singers, an iTineranT vocal group. NOVEMBER -VIOLIN ARTIST The sTucIenTs were bIissTuIly TransporTed To The realm oT The classics by Angle- meyer's violin. The seasoned raTTers oT The CiTrus audiTorium had never re- sounded To The Tones oT music more beauTiTulIy played. The concerT was concluded wiTh a pracTical lesson on violin Technique, given by The arTisT. I4-POETRY AND MOUNTAIN RANGERS Again The organized boys and The Ieagued girls planned Their assemblies separaTe. lnTerpreTaTions and personiTicaTions of several well-known poems were enacTed Tor The girls by 'Miss EarnsworTh's English classes. Mr. R. A. Ireland, Senior AssisTanT Eire and Game Warden, Told The boys oT The viTaI imporTance oT our waTersheds and game reserves. -TI-IE WORM TURNS The unexpecTed comes lasT. In The Tinal game oT The season, aTTer seven sTraighT losses, CiTrus developed a worm-Turning complex by TriumphanTly challenging and conquering ColTon on The home TurT, I4-7. -Tl-IANKSGIVING ASSEMBLY A sense oT appreciaTion Tor whaT is worThwhile in living was awakened Tor each sTudenT by The pervading aTmosphere oT The Thanksgiving assembly. Mr. Hayden read a TexT Trom The Bible. ATTerwards Ed Brunsen oT The iunior college gave his idea oT The modern youTh's Thanldulness. Then Bill Swisher oT The high school read l.incoln's oraTion, A Thanksgiving ProcIamaTion. 59 DECEMBER -ECHOES FROM THE ALPS A Tamily oT German-Swiss yodelers one morning, quiTe unexpecTedly, invaded our halls and Therein seT The wild echoes Tlying by vocal reverberaTions OT such Alpine qualiTy ThaT The Swiss cheeses in The CaTeTeria began To shed lacTeal Tears oT homesickness. -AMATEUR HOUR ProTecTed by The spiriTual presence OT Maior Bowes and his sympaThy Tor The sTruggling nonenTiTy, some Ten would-be-aspiranTs To Tame and TorTune braved The menaces oT The dreaded gong and displayed Their homespun TalenTs beTore The STudenT Body. The performances, as a whole, passed wiThouT criTicism, excepT once when The gong pronounced iTs sepulchral senTence of doom upon a piano solo played by one who should have known beTTer. -Hl-JINX The birTh raTe OT The CiTrus BeTTer Baby lnsTiTuTe reached a new heighT as over Two hundred inTanTs made Their appearance aT The annual Hi-Jinx cele- braTion. The babes, decked ouT in Their besT Sunday swaddling cloThes, spenT a ioyTul evening gurgling and cooing over The games, dances, and nourish- menT unTil Time Tor The sandman. Then They had To go home because They iusT couIdn'+ keep Their liTTle eyes open a minuTe longer. -CAM ERON BECK The personnel direcTor oT The New York STock Exchange spoke To The assem- bled members of The high school and junior college abouT The problems of presenT-day youTh. The valuable and solid advice given- by Mr. Beck mighT be summed up in his words, WhaT you are To be, you are now becoming. CHRISTMAS ASSEMBLY ' ATTer The glee clubs had made beauTiTul once more The ever-remembered YuleTicle carols, Mr. Hayden inTroduced The Reverend Mr. Jones, a local pasTor, who wiTh inspiraTion and vigor expressed The True meaning of The spiriT oT ChrisTmas, lf you would live as a ChrisTian, live ChrisT. '74-LEAP YEAR DANCE . The preTTy, liTTle, Timorous boys were asked by The big, bashTul girls Tor The honor oT escorTing Them To The dance. Of course The boys had To go home early as MoTher was waiTing up, buT The girls said They wouldn'T Teel Too bad if The boys could call on Them again some evening. JANUARY -JAZZ oRcHEsTRA Coming ouT oT iTs hibernaTion during The winTer monThs, Mr. PoTTer's Jazz Band made iTs debuT aT CiTrus. The laTe hiTs oT The day composed The 60 HAROLD NICHOLAS Mr. Nicholas. displaying rare slcill, whisTled an enfire classical aria wiTh The accompanimenT of a full symphony orchesTra lvia lT is a recording. I. He gave various difficuIT whisfling demonsTraTions, some of Them impercepTibIe To The ear. His was The Technique ofa True arTisT. FEBRUARY THE AMERICAN LEGION AND ABRAHAM LINCOLN In keeping wiTh The paTrioTic observance of a greaT American's day of birTh, The American Legion and iTs Auxiliary presenTed Dr. Emerson, whose subiecT was The inTerpreTaTion of American ideals. FLEEING FROM THE 'FLU A diminuTive buT poTenT epidemic was experienced by The sTudenTs and faculTy of CiTrus. When The influenza had reduced The aTTendance forTy-Two per cenT, The board of TrusTees ordered a Three-day suspension of school. AIR MAGIC A cenTury and a half ago iT would have been called black magic: Today iT is buf The appIicaTion of modern science. A demonsTraTion of liquid air, showing iTs peculiar properTies and acTions, was presenTed To The high school and iunior college assembly by Mr. ElioTT James. He boiled The liquid on a cake of ice, used iT as gunpowder, and wiTh iT made a resilienf rubber ball briTTle as glass. -JAPANESE BATHS, ETC. Joseph Schafer lwe may call him a self-s+yled diplomafl enTerTained The sTu- denT body wiTh an hour and a half lecTure illusTraTed by slides concerning his soiourn in Japan. The desire of This Swiss Traveler seemed To be To urge The schools of The world To Teach EsperanTo as The inTernaTional language. AfTer The assembly Mr. Schafer poinfed ouf The advanfages and explained some of The mechanics of The language To a group of inTeresTed sTudenTs- MARC!-I -UMP-AH! UMP-AH! ' ErsTwhile sTudenT of The Universify of Pennsylvania, globe-Troffer, lecfurer, and aufhor-These and oTher TiTles mighT be applied To ArThur Cone, as- sembly enTerTainer. AusTralia was The ulTimaTe desTinaTion of This rover when he was once hifch-hiking over The world. One incidenT he recalled was his walking from Sydney across The greaf deserT To Melbourne wiTh only sheep and uncivilized bushmen for company. 61 enTire program. Proceeds oT This pay assembly wenT inTo The Tund Tor The care oT iniured aThIeTes. -GERALD FITZGERALD AND GREEN VOLCANOES The empIoymenT manager oT The May Company advised The members oT The Boys' OrganizaTion concerning vocaTionaI guidance and success. The girls were enTerTained wiTh a unique and unusually inTeresTing iIlusTraTed IecTure abouT Mexico, given by Miss Goodwin. -EX TEM PORE InauguraTing a new Type oT conTesT aT CiTrus, Mr. WarburTon sponsored an exTemporaneous speech conTesT. The conTesTanTs were given a choice OT Three Topics and TorTy minuTes in which To prepare The Talk. The TirsT prize was Three dollars. By showing clearly The eTTecTs oT Repeal, Vernon Timmons was Three dollars richer when assembly was over. -THIRD QUARTER ENDED The sTudenTs Turned inTo The home sTreTch as The TirsT Three laps oT The annual race Tor educaTion were ended Today. APRIL -SENIOR MOTHERS' TEA ' As guesTs oT Their daughTers, The senior moThers enioyed an aTTernoon Tea and social. -BONITA ASSEMBLY A gesTure oT inTerschoIasTic Triendliness was given when The CiTrus sTudenT body was enTerTained by a group oT BoniTa sTudenTs on The home grounds. -EDITOR-ELECTED The junior class meT and chose Audrey Nelson as ediTor of La Palma '37. IO-SPRING VACATION Giving The boys and girls The opporTuniTy To caTch up in Their EasTer-egg hunTing, spring vacaTion aT IasT arrived. -MR. HAYDEN RETURNED TO SCHOOL CiTrus sTudenTs welcomed Mr. Hayden, who. aTTer several monThs oT illness. once more resumed his duTies as principal. 62 I 4 I6- I7- ZI- 29- I- 4, - THE MARCH OF THE MOVIES T For The TirsT Time in The hisTory oT The school, Talking picTures made Their enTrance inTo CiTrus. From The EgypT oT Rameses To The America oT Edison, The movies marched pasT our eyes. Every idea, every invenTion ThaT helped To make The moTion picTures possible was illusTraTed. Also, glimpses and memories of TavoriTe old silenTs were broughT back by The magic oT The movies. GIRLS' LEAGUE ELECTION The weaker sex waged Their annual baTTle in The inTeresTs oT poliTics. ATTer The smoke had cleared away and The wounded had been carried oTT The Tield, Those who sfood vicTorious were Mary Miller, presidenT1 Marjorie Currier, vice-president Arlene Lewis, secreTaryq and Adelaide La FeTra, program chairman. I8-TRACK MEET The X's broughT home glory and The bacon by winning Their Track meeTp however, The VarsiTy conTenTed Themselves wiTh a lowly place. ALUMNI ORATORICAL CONTEST VerbosiTy, EnunciaTion, and InTerpreTaTion' reigned supreme in This compe- TiTion. Those deemed To have aTTained The requiremenTs of each were Vernon Timmons, TirsTq HarrieTTe STurges, second: and Jack SheITon, Third. PARENTS' NIGHT ln observance oT Public Schools Week, ParenTs' NighT was held aT CiTrus Union. Mr. Lee Shippey, coIumnisT Tor The Los Angeles Times, was The TeaTured speaker. MAY FISH DAY The poor Tish had a bad half day. LA PALMA WENT TO PRESS MonThs OT Toil sTarTed To be ended as La Palma wenT inTo iTs Tinal sTage of producTion. 5-PUPPET SHOW . Under The direcTion OT Miss Goodwin, The arT sTudenTs managed puppe-Ts presenTed Tor our enTerTainmenT The opera Carmen. The blockheads per- Tormed quiTe ably, considering The inescapable TacT ThaT They are hard- headed liTTle people. 63 ASSocIATED BOYS' sme NIGHT Men Only -SENIOR HONOR ASSEMBLY Wha+'s Under Your Hal was Ihe address given by Dr. Brougher in Ihe Senior Honor Assembly. Pins were received by Jane Lee Ellis, Kalhryn Powell. Jaclc Ray, and Frederick Seimears. -JUNIOR - SENIOR BANOUET Tropical isles, cocoanul palms, grass skirls, nalive beaulies, a cruise Io Ihe Soulhern Seas! Yes, 'Ihe Junior-Senior Banquel was held in Hawaii Ihis year. JUNE -BACCALAU REATE Baccalaureale will long be held in Ihe memory ol The qradualinq class of nineleen 'rhirly-six. The impressive program was designed as a guidance by which we should use our years of educalion. SENIOR WEEK Coming as a reward for four years of diligenl sludy Senior Weelc was hailed by 'rhe 36's, who Iherefore infesled The halls, pervaded Ihe campus, or in olher words overflowed Ihe school wilh 'rheir obslrucling presences and obnoxious personalilies. -CLASS NIGHT The roof of Ihe Cilrus audilorium This niqhl suffered greally from raised arches. Yelling, singing, and spewing forlh all olher Iypes of sound, Ihe four classes celebraled Iheir release from The bondage of school Io Ihe unham- pered freedom of vacalion-a cause for greal merrymalcing. IO-SENIOR PICNIC Hungry seniors, afler ealing everylhing edible, pronounced Ihe picnic very salislyirig. COMMENCEMENT . . . . and 'rhus Ihe final curlain was rung down. 64 LITERATURE I I5 Villanueva Avenue Poblacion Banco Chile SanTiago, Chile July IS, I936 DearesT lvloTher: l'll beT you Think ThaT l am an ungraTeTul liTTle wreTch Tor noT wriTing To you beTore This: buT really, l've been so busy doing everyThing imaginable and seeing everyThing ThaT l haven'T had Time To wriTe To anybody excepT Grandpa. l wish you were here wiTh me seeing all The very picTuresque and rusTic scenes oT This amazing Chile. WhaT l've considered mosT ouTsTanding, so Tar, are The beaches here. They are noT even To be compared wiTh ours in CaliTornia. Those norThern beaches seem like garbage dumps compared wiTh The wonderTul condi- Tion in which These golden, SouThern sands are kepT. There is noT a scrap of paper in sighT Tor miles around unTil one enTers The privaTe homes and sees The daily paper! There are, neverTheless, many TilThy Things here which we would noT sTand Tor in America. A good example is The greaT public markeT. l.asT Sunday morning aTTer mass, Uncle Max and his Tamily Took me To The Mercado CenTral. markeT-place and mad-house. l'II Try To describe This place To you because iT fascinaTed me so much. ATTer we had crossed The Rio Mapocho, which is SanTiago's main arTery II should say capillaryl, we came To a high adobe wall abouT seven blocks long, in The middle OT which was a huge wroughT-iron porTal, which was Then wide open. AbouT ThirTy TeeT on ei+her side oT The gaTe were seaTed old wrinkled hags selling Their wares, which consisTed mosTly oT pumpkin dough Tried in molasses. The odor of These TriTTers was very appeTizing. buT The dirT on The hands oT The old crones was noT: so we did noT eaT any. Besides These old women. There were counTless deformed. blind, helpless, and lazy beggars. all wailing Tor alms in Their mosT piTiTul manner. As we enTered The iron porTal, a sTrong mixed scenT oT laborers, fish, carrion. and planTs liTerally sTruck us on our Taces. We came upon a huge square where all kinds oT poulTry, Tish. and meaT were sold. The smell was ThaT of blood and Treshly killed dead bodies. Flies swarmed by The millions over The uncovered carcasses oT animals. Squawk- ing poulTry awaiTed Their Turn under The ax in TilThy cages. Blood was smeared over The cemenT Tloor. on The merchanTs' aprons, and even on Those cusTomers who wandered Too near a slaughTering. No one seemed To mind iT, Though. To This markeT came The eliTe of socieTy as well as The poor class and Indians. The rich came wiTh Their servanTs, The poor wiTh Their burros or baskeTs. All wenT home loaded. ATTer we could sTand The smell no longer. we all wenT inTo anoTher secTion oT The markeT where all kinds oT TruiTs and vegeTables were sold. This smell was ever so much more pleasanT in here. spicy and nosTalgic around The Tropical TruiTs: dusTy and Tresh around The vegeTables. Flies, neverTheless, per- sisTed. They Thrived on some of The roTTing TruiTs which could noT sTand The heaT. They buzzed and crawled over us in swarms wiTh Their sTicky TeeT. The noise in The markeT was nerve-racking. Each screaming merchanT Tried To ouT-yell The compeTiTor nexT To him, Trying To aTTracT as much aTTenTion as possible, Telling oT 65 fhe beaufy and qualify of his wares. If was worse fhan a mad-house. Dogs growled and foughf viciously, nof only wifh one anofher, buf wifh young boys and drunk men as well! Goafs bleafed and gof in everyone's way. Inquisifive don- keys and horses pushed whole carfs of fruifs and vegefables over and were prop- erly cursed by foaming merchanfs. Screaming men and women quibbled over prices. Gypsy forfune-fellers sfood oufside fheir boofhs and offered fo fell one everyfhing for only fwenfy cenfs. I was never so glad when we finally Ieff fhaf bedlam of mad-haffers. I-low nice if seemed fo breafhe fresh air again-air fhaf was nof mingled wifh perspirafion from a fhousand fired bodies. In fwo days we are going fo fhe 'Sfraif of Magellan, anofher place of infer- esf which l will endeavor fo describe in my nexf leffer fo you. Answer soon. Mummy dear. You may address your leffer fo I-lofel Savoy, Buenos Aires, Ar- genfina. Give all my love fo Daddy. Sybell, and Vincenf, and fo fhe dearesf mofher in fhe world. Very lovingly, Pafsy llnlummerl MY FAVORITE PERIOD IN HISTORY BRUCE JEWELL f' I I will be absolufely frank! My favorife period in hisfory is fhaf small dof fhaf comes affer fhe lasf leffer in fhe lasf senfence of any hisfory book. There, I have said if: do fo me whaf you will. There is anofher period in hisfory which is of greaf inferesf fo me: if is over in fhe fhird chapfer where fhe men have beards. I find infinife pleasure in linger- ing over fhis secfion of hisfory and. now and fhen, adding an arfisfic fouch fo fhe already decorafed bushmen. Offen fimes fhe period when fhe sailors of fhe old world feared sea monsfers and such. draws my affenfion. There is nofhing more resfful for me fhan 'ro draw picfures of sea monsfers and label fhem as members of 'lhe faculfy. I As for acfual hisfory, fhe fime I like fo sfudy abouf loesf is fwenfy fhousand years before Chrisf. Some very inferesfing fhings happened in fhose days. Of course we know nofhing abouf fhe hisfory of fhaf period. Obviously we can'f sfudy abouf fhaf period. Obviously fhaf pleases me very much. Yes, indeed, hisfory is a delighfful subiecf. I fhink every child over four years of age should have af leasf fwo large hisfory books. There is nofhing like siffing on a hisfory book fo make a Iiffle fellow higher af fhe dinner fable. Graaf fhing, hisfory. 66 LITTLE ,Qs HERO Bang! A SchoTT rang ouT, and The engineer of old 37 biT The dusT. Again a pisTol barked, again The engineer biT The dusT. Twice more The pisTols spaT Tlameg Twice more The engineer biT The dusT. PisTols roared again, buT The engi- neer had now finished his spinach sandwich. Suddenly The rail-Rhodes Train goT a TlaT Tire. A Bray was heard and Two donkeys galloped up To The sTeam engine. Two bandiTs lThey looked like seniors, buT They couldn'T have been, Tor They had beardsl climbed OTT Their Jacks and sTepped inTo The Train. The engineer sTarTed To geT his knife ouT oT his lunch pail. C-5eT your hand ouT oT ThaT PoTTer l'm Label To Curl your TeeTh in wiTh a dull hammer, growled one of The ruTTians. f Yeah, snarled The oTher, TroT ouT da gold chesT if you Knowles whaT is good or ya! BuT The engineer, sTouT Tellow, wasn'T To be cowed so easily, he swore aT Them Thusly, Grosh darn you Tellowsl You ain'T nice. Hal hal laughed The TirsT ruTTian, wouldn'T his grammar McKusick? Then he reached over and slapped The engineer on The wrisT, Come on, quiT Sparlin Tor Time! he shouTed. We have waiTed Long enough. Bring ouT The cash. or l'll BrechT your neck. The engineer, dazed from The blow, sTaggered inTo a back Carr To geT The money. They'll puT you in The coop Tor This, he mumbled. l-lo, ho, imagine us in a Cooper a iail. eiaculaTed one Thug. BuT iails ain'T so bad, aT ThaT, reTlecTed The oTher bandiT, l've seen Minnie Garrisons ThaT l liked. . JusT Then The engineer pulled The chesT of TilThy lucre inTo view. The ruTTians gasped. Boys, sighed one ruTTian, There are enough Berrys here To make us Ulrich. Well, our Troubles are over: we'll be Rollins in money Trom now on. RighT! said The oTher. LeT us be Hough: and iusT BeTTi'n us, we'd beTTer hurry. , BuT iusT Then The rugged, raucous voices of The rough and ready Rover Boys renT The rare evening air as They ran rapidly, regardless oT risk, and wiTh revolvers ready, Toward The rail-Rhodes Train. I WhaT The Ellis is going on here? asked Tom. Q WhaT difference does iT Mac To you, mug? a rogue sneered. Tom waxed angry aT The ruTTian's uncouTh language. g Suh, l'Il have you know ThaT where Osborn Those words mean TighT. Suh, l Wanda if you wanT To have a Deuel? Why, Evans if I had Time To. I wouldn'T TighT you. The robber said. Why, l could Curl you around my .... BuT he goT no TurTher, Tor Tom had rapped Them boTh- on The ChenoweTh his dimpled liTTle hand. Then l.iTTle Nell rushed up and Tlung her arms around Tom's neck. ll TorgoT To menTion abouT liTTle Nell's being kidnaped by These Two Thugs, buT you probably saw ThaT They had Taken her ouT oT The TiTle.l Oh, Tom, she cried. you are iusT grand. You saved good old '37'. Mr. Rover blushed modesTly. , Oh, iT wasn'T much. lAiusT seen my duTy and did iT: any of The guys in our class would have done iT, he said. 67 MY RCDAD- One of my earliesT memories is of an old road ThaT winds up my TavoriTe hill. When I was very young, IvloTher would puT my baby sisTer in her carriage and we would be oTT, lv1oTher To read, Helen To sleep, and I To play on'my roacl. LaTer I remember gaThering chilicoThes by iTs side, and once a whim made me begin To puT a small rock on a pile Tor every Time I wenT up There. Now The pile is large, and wiTh each sTone is connecTed a pleasanT memory of a happy clay spenT in The hills. And always The road is There. In The winTer There is The dead gray sage brush and The darkesT oT green oaks: The mud is soTT and sTicky: There is moss on every sTone. ln The spring The poison oak is emerald-green: Ii++Ie whiTe shooTing sTars wiTh purple cenTers doT The ground: and meadowlarks delighT The ear as The soTT grass The Touch. In The summer. The yuccas. Candles oT The Lord, show Their waxen blossoms and enfold The whole hillside in Their sTicky Tragrance: in laTe aTTernoon The sunlighT TilTers Through liTTle biTs of dusT and makes a soTT golden misT ThaT dulls The whiTe oT The yuccas To cream and blends The brilliance of The orange and red and yellow summer Tlowers wiTh The brown oT dead grass. In The Tall The air is sharp and clear: and one may look Trom The sea in The wesT To ma- iesTic and lonely San JacinTo in The easT: and The winds blow TasT and make one wish To whirl ancl dance wiTh Them. And always my road is There: and always, when I may, I will be There Too. TLAIXIINICD l'le is proud and harsh and someTimes uniusT: he can be cruel as no one was ever cruel before: and he can be so genTIe ThaT one wonders aT The harshness of one's moTher. l'le is Tall and sTraighT and of such beauTy ThaT one can buT marvel ThaT beings are sTill born when one as perTecT as he has been creaTed. IT anyone is qualified To wriTe an encyclopedia by himself. iT is Tlanno. Wonder where LouTh is and Tlanno will know: ask whaT Ivlendalkock or STworans did and Tlanno will Tell you: menTion a mandlenTon and he will discourse Tor an hour on iT-iT in The mood. Where he learns. I don'T know: no one has ever seen him open a book: perhaps he remembers when he lived beTore. Tlanno is Tlanno, and whaT he is and where he came Trom no one knows: buT when he has mellowed wiTh The empTying oT many Ii++Ie heavy glasses, he can Tell Things abouT a cerTain counTry +ha+ makes you TainT Trom horror, or he can Tell Things ThaT make you weep Trom The sheer beauTy of Them. I-le always walks on sTones. Never has anyone seen his TooTprinT, Tor The man is yeT To be born who does noT Tear The mark ThaT he mighT Tind. SomewhaT like ThaT is Tlanno. 68 A BARN RODN EY LEI-I MAN As I gaze Through The open door ir1To The inTerior of our neighbor's barn during haymaking Time, I caTch The sTrong, sweeT odor OT clover. I Iay is sTrewn everywhere, over The Tloor, on The beams: The mows are crammed over wiTh iT, yeT no one is enioying This IuxurianT scene excepT a horse and some kiTTens. The dark brown, peaceTuI-looking mare doesn'T even bo+her To swish aT The Tlies on her back and would appear To be asleep if she were noT munching on some oT The clover. The resT oT The sTaIIs are empTy, buT iT can be readily seen Trom The wearing down of The wood on The hay Teed bins ThaT They have endured consTanT use. AT The righT, back oT The sTaIIs, some old, cIiIapidaTed, and worn-ouT harness, inTermingIed wiTh some new, hangs on pegs. On The oTher side in TronT oT me, I see Two kiTTens, curled up in a manger asleep, noT aT all impressed by The bounTiTuI supply oT hay or The cobwebs which sTreTch Trom beam To beam, clear To The eaves. Forks oT every size and shape, whiTewash hose, and oTher Tarming imple- menTs cluTTer up The wall on The Third side. Above Them sTreTches The main hay mow. Fallen hay has draped iTseIT over The implemenTs in a picTuresque Tashion. Overhead is The cupola, inhabiTed by a Tew peaceTuIIy cooing pigeons. The Tragrance alone' has always enchanTed me: The rich deTail inTrigues me: buT rudely I musT leave or else be run over by The haymakers who are coming in wiTh anoTher load oT hay. u DAWN CDN THE DESERT CLIFTON SI-IOEMAKER I Dawn now breaks on The deserT: Waking I rise To gaze Cn The Tar-away jagged peaks, girdled wiTh morning haze. On The deserT's sandy wasTes here sTruTs a moTher quail. On his morning hunT Tor Tood There hops The coTTon Tail. A sTaTeIy yucca sTands eTched on The brazen sky. Above The barren hills The lonely vuITures cry. MY SUNG MARY LOUISE DILLMAN My song, she's Tinish now Today: how she's done I cannoT say. One day I wasa siT and siT. and Then she come iusT biT by biT. My song, she's goT The rhyThm, so. I'Iow you noT Iike, I do noT know! My song, I Think she's very Tiney I love her mosT because she's mine. 69 TI-T REE ADVENTU RERS HELEN BETTIN We Three wenT ouT To view The sea, To brave The waves and play, To gaTher shells and seaweed brighT And dash Through ocean's spray. Then TarTher down The beach we raced XfVhere sTern rocks Trowned on high, As if They challenged us To come Their hidden coves To spy. The waves dashed high: we waTched our chance: We held our breaTh To see. Then came a lull, and how we ran And scrambled up, all Threel Among These rocks we Tound a cove And preTTy shells and sTone. We gaThered Treasures greedily, Our ThoughTs on This alone, When suddenly a gianT wave Came rushing in The cove, And we were nearly swepT To sea. AgainsT iT how we sTrovel And Then anoTher wave came in, BuT rocks were in our paTh. Ah, safe! A lull! We raced Tor land AgainsT The sea's sTrong wraTh. We Three wenT ouT To view The sea, To brave The waves and play. The sea was mosT unkind To us: NexT Time aT home we'll sTay. Tl-IGUGEITS AT VESPER MARY LOUISE DILLMAN The alTar's candles golden glow, gleam soTTly on The Torms below. These Torms wiTh lowered heads, in prayer, are whispering words To banish care. This holy place, halT darlc, iT seems, is blenT wiTh shades as a land oT dreams. Then The Tone oT an organ Tills The air, and voices blend in a singing prayer. Oh, why, as The benedicTion's done. musT my ThoughTs Turn earThward, everyone? 70 ADVERTISEMENTS FIRST NATICDNAI. BANK AZLISA, CALIFORNIA AND Azusa VaIIey Savings Bank AZUSA, CALIFORNIA The Officers and Direc+ors of +I'iese Ins+iI'u+ions congra'IuIa+e Cifrus Union I-Iigh ScI1ooI and con- Iribufe Iheir besf wishes for II'1e success of each member of Hue Graduafion class of I936. 71 THE CITY CDF AZUSA AND TI-IE AZUSA ClTY CCDUNCIL Extends Congratulations te THE GRADUATES et Nineteen Hundred and Tl1irty+Six 72 COMPUMENTS OF ARNGLUS MARKET MEATS z GROCERIES z VEGETABLES E Azusa, California COmp'imen+S of NEW Your sToRE Canis Quality l-lighesf Qualify Merchandise SAM AMSTER, Propriefor I34 E. Eoofhill Blvd. M3 Azusa Avenue Azusa. California Azusa, California COMPLIMENTS OF LEo C, NASSER 639 Azusa Avenue ' Azusa Grayco - Arrow - lnfernafional ULRICI-l'S BAKERY LAMPHEARBQMOODY Fresh Breads and Pasfries Eoofhill Blvd. af San Gabriel Cakes Made fo Order Phone 367-4l 723 Azusa Avenue Azusa, California Azusa : : California Your Smiling Associafed Dealer 73 IWW JNO. F. TYCK W Your Jeweler Diamonczls-Radios-Wafclies-Silverware-Refrigerafors Creclif Terms 703 Azusa Avenue Azusa, California Phone 390-43 235 San Gabriel Avenue Azusa Laundry Company Safisfacfion Guaranfeeol WET WASI-I FINISHED WORK ROUGI-I DRY INGRAM gl SKIDMORE Dr.A.A.SancIoval,U.S,C. UNION OII. PRODUCTS OPTOIVIETRIST IOO Fooflwill Blvd. 444 W. Fooflwill Azusa, Calif. Azusa, Calif. Plwone 355-9I JEWELER Marie's Style Shoppe Special Repair Swiss Wafclw 726 Azusa Avenue Azusa - - - California SIVIARTEST FROCKS for Tl-IE GRADUATE 628 Azusa Ave. Azusa, Calif. W, RIO-lTER'S Azusa Avenue and Eoofhill Boulevard Azusa, California CENTER MQINTIRES FURNITURE STORE Azusa C I + F . h. CLEANERS ompe e urnis ings and For fhe House DYERS l40 Easf Foofhill Boulevard Phone 353-3l One-Day Service From O u r O W n P l a n f Phone 378-9I 736 Azusa Ave. O. K. GENERAL . i MERCHANDISE Congrafulafionsl T. S. Olci, Prop. from 630 Azusa Avenue Phone 339-ll Azusa - - - California RUTI-lE'S BEAUTY SALON Azusa - - - California Emergency Sfafion No. 5l Official Garage of Aufomobile Club of Soufhern California KORT l-l. MEIER GARAGE ' 250 Easf Foofhill Boulevard Phones: 335-ii Day 377-62 Nighf Chinese Dishes American Dishes l-lAPPY'S Cl-lOP SUEY l39 Easf Eoofhill Boulevard Azusa. California Orders fo Talce Oul' gas WI-IlTE'S FUNERAL GENERAL PETROLEUM SERVICE STATION PARLORS Moloile Producfs Ambuhnce U. S. Tires and Bafferies Sefwce H. s. ALEXANDER , , 20I Wesf Foofhill Azusa : California Azusa I California RICI-IFIELD . SERVICE STATION For Service OWENS-VOSBURG Lu bricafion-Tires Accessories Ed. Munson - - Manager Paul Thomson - Affendanf Bob Munson - Affendanf Azusa, California Insurance Agency I22 Wesf Foofhill Boulevard Phone 37I-7I Azusa I-IARRY LINDSAY Kelvinafor Refrigerafors Philco Radios Mayfag Washers Phone 368-8I 625 Azusa Avenue Azusa AZUSA HERALD AND POMOTROPIC A Communify Insfifufion Founded in I887 ROLLIN E. PEIRCE FOOTI-IILL DAIRY Denfisf Bill I-Iopper, Disfribufor Phone 399-2I Phone 389-84 Azusa California Azusa : California , w I I I I I 4 AI 'x - REX'S SHOE REPAIRING Complimenfs of HENRY MELZER'S Excellenf Workmanship MEAT MARKET Azusa : California Azusa California Complimenfs of SPRIGGS BROTHERS I-IARDWARE WILLIAMS GROCERIES Complem Line 7I7 Azusa Avenue of Hardware Fruif ancl Veqefable Depf. Sfaple and Fancy Groceries Phone 334-8I 72I Azusa Avenue Phone 332-4I Azusa : California VANITY-BEAUTY-SALON Phone 365-72 7IO Azusa Avenue Azusa California 724 Azusa Avenue INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS Af Your Service Pho n e 375-O I Azusa ' California J. C. MUEHE WHOPPER CALVERT ELECTRIC MALT- SHOP SHOP Gianf Malfs E Jrh, Milkshalces - Sundaes Very ,mg Elecfrical IOc B. E. ARBORN Phone 353-7I 637 Azusa Avenue Azusa 6I5 Azusa Avenue Azusa COMPLIMENTS OF American Cyanamid and Chemical Corporation Successors fo Owl Fumigafing Corp. Azusa California Congrafulafions FOOTI-lll.I. DRUG COM PANY fo fl'ie Edgar Van Vlief Class of '36 . . Prescripfion Specialisf SINGLETOWS GARAGE Plrione 350-8I Azusa California Azusa California 78 PURITY ICE CREAM PARLOR When in Need of I'IOmG of Good Variefy Merchandise MaI+ed MiIIcs - Candies SEE Ice Cream Your Pafronage Apprecialred 602 Azusa Ave. Azusa, Calif. N A T I-I A N ' S VARIETY STORE ai 707 Azusa Avenue Azusa - California T E X A C O Cerfified Service Srarion Phone 37I-40 G. E. TempIeman - Aqenf Bob Befferidge - Assisranr Aiameda and Foo+hiII Azusa CaIifornia WORK'S OUALITY BAKERY I-IIGI-IEST OUALITY Breads-Pasiries-Candies Speciai Orders Taken o4I Azusa Ave. Azusa, CaIiI. WILLIAMS LUMBER YARD WEST FOOTI-IILL BOULEVARD AZUSA Phone 383-I I ALPI-I ABETA FOOD MARKET E. MORGAN, Manager Azusa CaIifornia it ' 6 p.NGLsc O. .i-l- 46,9 v Nf I Printers ol LA PALMA and many other outstanding school publications Q 5' . ' IBIQQMQ LLQEQ1 Printers and Publishers Progress-Bulletin Building Pomona, California Z9 S fIg6VCl'S 6 L11 Yea Books Q El O XX Avnlc' y f P SO B V v Q To Tl-IE CLASS OF 36 FROM Walt Wiley's VALENCIA SANDWICH Sl-IGP y 66 and Grand Avenue Glendora, Calif O FIRST NATIONAL BANK FIRST SAVINGS BANK OLENDORA Offer Congrafulafions Io The GraduaIes of NIne+een Hundred and Thirfy-Six SI-IOES TO FILL! oIsI1oes'roflII In II1e O I d World. o PIII Them? Congrafulafions and Success I-I. S. RISER LUNIBER CO. ' GLENDORA CONGRATULATIONS TO TI-IE CLASS OF 36 VENBUROS CLOTI-IIERS TO CITRUS STUDENTS 8 COM PLIMENTS OF BEST WISI-IES TO GUFFEY'S TI-IE CLASS OF 36 To Our Pafrons from of 36 ' Service Sfafion W. F. WILLS Ice Cream Candy Glendora Elecfric Company COM PLIMENTS OF of WARNER'S MEN'S STORE Glenclora California Pl-IONE 444-3bI For Appoinfmenfs af Marcel Beaufy Shoppe MRS. GLADYS MNA, Prop Glenclora, California TI-IE EMPORIUM D r y G o o d s LADIES' READY TO WEAR I7I N. Michigan Avenue MRS. MYRTLE S. PENLAND Glenolora, California Phone 488-I2 SERVICE WITI-I A SMILE PJ. F. McCormick UNION SERVICE STATION TIRES and ACCESSORIES Glendora, California REIFF anol I-IAINES CONGRATULATIONS! fo fhe TEXACO SUPER CLASS OF H36.. - SERVICE STATION from fhe Glendora, California IDEAL CLEANERS Phone 469-32 Glenclora 83 Graduafion marks an imporfanf period in fhe life of every young person: fherefore a Porfraif fo commemorafe fhe evenf should be perfecfly posed, arfisfically liqhfeol and finely finished: which is whaf we have fried fo give every member of fhe Senior Class who has come fo our sfudio for his class pic- fures. Oufside of any financial considera- fion, if has been a real pleasure fo meef and phofoqraph so many members of fhis year's '75 class. Our besf wishes are always wifh you. I-IOWLETT STUDIOS H: ,lu -Pa- .1 -J Pasadena, California . PHONE Complimenfs of, FOR APPOINTMENTS F.A.SEllv1EARS al' FURNITURE STORE KERR'S BEAUTY Si-IOPPE Glendora California Glendora California Phone 482-65 - Residence 26l-44 WASI-IBURN 84 BELL FUMIGATIN6 COMPANY Glendora California 84 D U T C I-I B O Y SANDWICI-I CO. 39I9 Whiffier Blvd., L. A. 'Originafors of fhe Dafed Sandwich Sold in fhe Cafeferia Look for fhe Dafe Mark Phone An. 4289 J. J. PEYTON 84 SON All Makes of Radios, Refrigerafors and Elecfrical Appliances Sales - Service - Renfals Phone 450-O2 Glendora, California Phones: Res. 478-23 Shop 472-2I PARSON'S GARAGE General Aufo Repairing Sales : Service 224 Wesf Eoofhill Boulevard Glendora, California SCI-IWIMLEY'S We Undersfandu J. T. CHAMBERS E. E. MILLER Super Service Plumbing Sheef Mefal GAS and OIL Gas Furnaces In Glendora phones Come, of Res. 4-64-26 Shop 454-22 Vermonf and Foofhill Boulevard Glendora, California For Good Things fo Eaf Try D. O. JANEWAY'S CASI-I MARKET Free Delivery Inside Glendora Cify Limifs 233 N. Michigan Phone 442-43 Glendora, California CARL NORDBLOM I 4 TUCKER STUDIO For Beffer Phofography More Goods for Same Money Same Goods for Less Money Porfraifs Picfure Frames Gi Kodaks and Movie Cameras CANFIELUS 5 gl IOC STORE Phone l I7-OI Glendora Covina California California FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES In a Form Thaf Everyone Likes SUNFREZE A Food Vifal as Sunshine SO GOOD TO EAT Wesfern Dairy Producfs. Inc. A Phone 42l-3l FOOTHILL DAIRY Lesfer Huber Grade A Milk af All Times Always Readyfo Serve You Glendora California ARTHUR'S BAKERY Our Business Moffo: HCLEANLINESS AND OUALITYH W. C. Arfhur, Propriefor T Phone 452-73 Diamonds . Wafches . FINCH BROTHERS . 26 Years of Success in fhe San Gabriel Valley Phone IO4-2I ' I76 Michigan Avenue Covina California We Are Growing and Are ' Thanking Our Cusfomers R. B. BIDWELL We Hope for Their Fufure ' Pafronage ' TURNER WHOLESALE CO. !O9-II W. Colorado Blvd. Monrovia PRESENTS HIS COMPLIMENTS TO Tl-1E CLASS OF '36 l 86 Ti3TER's MARKET g Exfends Congrafulafions To fhe Class of '36 F. E. TETER Groceries, Fresh Fruifs and Vegefables Glendora, JOHNNY DETWILER lvleafs Smoked and Dried California GORDON 'BLACKWOOD ' REALTOR Member Realfors' lnferchange Offices On Phone 479-5I CARL TI PTON Building Confracfor Repair Work of All Kinds Esfimafes Given The Bla-clcwood Ranch 323 N. Vermonf Olendora Engraving I Binding ' srirrs if wooo ' Super Service Sfafion ciimoorf-x PRESS Printers GASOLINE and GENERAL REPAIRS . BATTERIES g Publishers 1 T TIRES Sociefy Prinfing a Specialfy 'lb Nall' Michigan Phone 4-97-72 and 453-ii Phone 499-73' Glendora - California Glendora California 87 I COMPLIMENTS OF THE Olendora California I34 N. Michigan Avenue Telephone 488-8l The John l-lastie Manufacturing and Engineering Company Pomona lrrigaiing Equipmeni l-larris Overhead Ciirus Packing House lrrigalion Equipmeni Q lnsiallafion and Engineering .H5NEI'g 2lI32JP Mickey Freeze - Nugo Freeze Glendale. California SNO'MlLK BARS Oualiiy All Really Good io Eai Lowejiprices Manufaciured for You Take Advanlage of Thirieen by Years' Experience H05 Easi California Avenue FRIGID PRODUCTS CO. COMPLIMENTS F ADAMS-GOODMAN CO., Inc. SPORTING GOODS IO4l Soulh Broadway, Los Angeles Phone Prospecl 4477 88 -.rg-n.1,:ma.. -1-an-f-r -' - is- muixnnava f Y 'g gwhgfw QW 1 ' . ,N , f CTW ' L W M' sw W WWW f Q , 'fffzfyl Lf -if hw


Suggestions in the Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) collection:

Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Citrus Union High School - La Palma Yearbook (Glendora, CA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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