Hanford High School - Janus Yearbook (Hanford, CA)
- Class of 1942
Page 1 of 176
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1942 volume:
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QQ, f,,f 1 .f ,ff L14 nVX Qvw Q4- i 'Yj'1 xXx J xlx. 'Rf -rx ff, fx WW xff yy bf NV V x 14 Fr 799 ff' MQEIK X -djx 5 Si ,, X....1J A 5'-253:53 4 -1' xpxgp Vf Y A --:M ' MQ, - 1:--' ,+M- 'fi N6 ff f 4, if fffii-k?o 15'Qj7 if ' 'ffftlf T' ' v ' x L N fl r', ,f 1, , if i, A' ' 1.1 Lim S3443 Nb L. 6 ' mf? J , T3 mgsgg? f 'yrif- '? '-fx V Q' ,J S: ' in A f -,,f '--.-A' M Q L- ff-'gli' f - ' ,HM 97 , AJ -4 X 53- liiisx -A Alf F if Nm---'qv'- ,ff 41 4 H ysi 'Y iii-4' f-ig 'f1,.v fff.Aw-1 , , J- ,V: ,1,HV L K1 QQIITANTIUS BL WIFCDRED UIQ CDN P1IGfH SCIPJC N ORD CALIFORNIA 1942 PU ISHED BY TPAE SEPQICDR Cl.AxSS OF P1A I CDL HA F 3 HDHBHDMGEQCXQEMGDN Jn cUl,aL6lI'l'L 1 The l942 Janus marks an umporlanl mlleslone In lhe has lory ol our hlgh school our fnchelh anniversary For Jrhl reason ll IS umporlanl IU decllcahng lhns book lo choose someone who nas been closely alllllalecl wllh The school for been wulh The school for a long lime ancl who has wllnesseo The varlous slages ln The deyelopmenl l-le has conl ubuleo ln many ways lo Jrhe welfare of sludenls ancl has always had 'rhear nnleresl al hearl Because he has done so much lo make l-lanford l-hgh School whal 1+ as lhe Class of I942 lakes greaf prncle In declncallnq Thus Issue of The Janus lo our mend and Jrruslee Wullnam L Haag O I . . - . . . I .S many years. The senior class has selecfecl a man who has . . ' F. f ' I r INN 'Q '45 K' '5' ef T5 QW ,VJ J 7,9 Ke.-L5 --1 29 if Q gg J' CW x Q g E, ,, L 'P' 163' .Wigs , , f'.Wh2-T. jmuumal The Janus sfafl brlngs you The Tnfhefh annnversary ssue of The Janus wllh :Is Theme The Gay Nunehes We have Included a qreal deal o hlslory of our school and of :Is orqanuzal ons and Inshlulrons To puck up The Threads slarled In anolher cenlury and follow Ihern Through +o The presenl day has been an mlereshnq 'ob Eor counlless hours we have searched The old Janus Tiles and Inferv ewed alurnm Now I+ IS our hope Ihal you w1IIfInd+IwIs slory as Tascnnahnq as we have and Tha ID The years Io come you wvll glance Through This Issue and remember The paflern OT your hlgh school days IIS evenls we presenl' an The Tollowung order ADMINISTRATION CLASSES CLASSROOMS ATHLETICS ACTIVITIES X DC k ' Q Wi? I - WW' ' lax . lj f ' . ' 'IS ' ' K ' f-'Ip 'af IQ! , if fag? -g'm 'dl'.Qf?4v I 90 1 J J E 4141 A ,,,, ,S 18 Y A hu. 5 5 'S U mr - .f N- X 1' -Q T ' TT,-T -II if lv - 4 sf I A . -2 ' . Z4-' N It x I5 X I -T T A ' ' S 07' ' -' C3 NMA 'msn Q91 ,A . ,I 5 im II . . . . . L ,,...,- ' PROGRAMME H ,nw ffilf-m f ,ls ' 1 1 li'-va ff' 1 J ' ' . 1 ff if 9.1, A.f sf-. ff, 'f flfff lpn., z,j BYJ f,,,u, ,Aff I Mft! ff, J A lf, f f'f fv'f1ff.'.'Cf. A I 'f 1,1 , ' J f ffl ifyya.--4 rn fglf' M! f 1. f :ff 7Z,,f,.Q, J ' ,s . V , 4, 2 1 J Curriculum for l892-1893 In lhe early years of ifs hislory Hanford, like o+her American communilies, lefl The maller of secondary educafion +0 privafe enlerprise. Young people who wished lo pur- sue 'rheir sfudies beyond The elemenlary school found if necessary lo go +o anolher localily or fo alfend a local privale school. In I89l l-lanlord could boaslr of a normal school wi'rh fiffy pupils. Public-spirilred individuals underlook fo inleresf +he people in +he eslablishmenl of a public high school. Prominenlr among lhese was lhe Reverend N. W. Molheral, whose promo+ion of lhe idea resulled in 'rhe calling of an eleclion lo be held on Augusl 23. l892, for lhe purpose ol eslablishing such a public high school in Hanford. Voling places were lhe schoolhouses of +he 'Following dis+riclrs: Orienlal ll-lanlordl, Kings River, Eu- reka, Cross Creek, Lakeside, Ruslic, Giddings llixrmonal, Pioneer lGrangevillel, and Lucerne. Allhough some people, fearing excessive laxalion voled againsl lhe proposal, il carried wifh a good maiorily. In fhe Ninelies Sivh Slreel was rne lrnporlanf Thoroughlare ai 4 ' ' ng tim 69112,-91m'qh6n'z, fm Mya HARRY RODE V908 IQNO I892-I9l8 W. S. CRANMER E. H. WALKER I897 X892 X893-1908 T. J, ROESMAN HARRY SHAFER NWO-IQN3 PQHNQNB A W LANE lyC a SuperlnTendenT oT Schools S A Croolcshanks oT Tulare CounTy There being Then no Knngs CounTy called a meeTnng Tor SepTember I3 To malce arrangemenTs Tor opening school Dr N P Duncan Dr B R Clow J W Bellcnap J M HambleTon E L Gnd dungs A L Thompson William STewarT W H Dodds J B NewporT and C M Blow ers recognszed as represenhng The varnous elemenTary school dnsTr1cTs became The T1rsT board oT TrusTees wlThouT Tormal elecTuon Dr Duncan was The T:rsT presudenT oT The board and Mr Dodds was The TlrsT clerlc The board wuTh one dusse-nT:ng voTe chose HanTord as The suTe Tor The new school The name HanTord Unnon Hugh School was adopTed A canvass oT The communuTy disclosed ThaT There were TwenTy Two young people ready To enTer hugh school and arrangemenTs were made Tor The openlng oT The school classes were conducTed In a room above The HanTord banlc on Irwnn STreeT near SuxTh IT IS raTher amazung To learn ThaT The program composed such a wade range oT sublecTs as algebra geomeTry LaTun boolckeepung physics Enolnsh and hnsTory The TursT Term ended on May I9 I893 and Mr Cranmer reporTed an average en rollmenT oT I4 wnTh an average dauly aTTendance oT I2 7 Mr Cranmer recommended ThaT The TrusTees hare a second Teacher capable oT Teachnng commercnal sublecTs In vlew oT The TacT ThaT some boys had dusconhnued school because oT The laclc oT Those sublecTs The enlargemenT oT The school necessuTaTed larger quarTers The second Term oT school was held an a Two room dwelllng house on The souTh side oT Elm STreeT un The bloclc beTween DouTy and Harris Thus bunldung was In use unT1l IB96 ln The Tall oT l892 B A BaTeman and Charles Hobler oTTered The board of TrusTees a number oT loTs a porTuon of The block which ns now Lacey Park on condnTlon ThaT a school be buulT Thereon and noT removed Tor TnTTy years The guTT oT suxTeen loTs was accepTed Mr BaTeman who had oTTered Tour oT The suxTeen dned beTore The com pleTaon oT The Transfer buT The heirs To hrs esTaTe readuly consenTed To :T The TlrsT acTual elecTlon oT TrusTees Toolc place nn l893 A W Lane one oT The mem bers elecTed aT ThaT Tlrne served conTlnuously Tor TourTeen years Tlve oT which he was pres1denT George W Murray a Tormer counTy clerlc served as clerlc oT The board Tor Ear hairrnan of The Bo rd which Took place on November 7, l892. There was one Teacher, W. S. Cranmer, and - - r 1 ' . . sixTeen years. The pracTice Tor many years was To have Ten or Twelve members. Old records show +haT noT inTrequenTly iT was impossible To TransacT business because no quorum was presenT. The Tall oT I 893 Tound E. H. Wallcer as principal and C. C. Van Vallcenburgh The second Teacher. The Two new men boTh served The school Tor many years, and are boTh Tavor- ably remembered. As principal Trom I893 To I908, Mr. Walker was a progressive and waTchTul guardian oT The school's desTinies. He had been an elemenlrary principal aT Livermore, and while There had TormulaTed an acT To legalize The esTablishmenT oT union high school disTricTs in CaliTornia. HanTord High School's TirsT graduaTion was held on May 3I, I895, in The HanTord Opera House, which sToocl on The souTh side oT SevenTh STreeT near Irwin. The Three graduaTes were Amy Clarlce llvirs. Burroughs, laTer oT PorTervillel, Fannie Fallin llvlrs. Ed. WhiTe. San Franciscol, and EdiTh Ross llvlrs. George ArmsTead, oT HanTordl. AT The conclusion oT The program, The audience by a rising voTe expressed appreciaTion oT The school. The high school grew sTeadily, and on June l5, I895, The board voTed unanimously To call a bond elecTion To provide Tunds Tor The erecTion oT a new school building. The bonds, amounTing To S7,500, To run noT To exceed Ten years aT six per cenT, were ap- proved in The elecTion oT July I2, I895. Two hundred sevenTy-seven voTes were casT in Tavor oT The proposal and IO9 againsT iT. ln The Armona disTricT, which wanTed a high school OT iTs own, There was buT one Tavorable voTe. The conTracT Tor consTrucTion was leT To David Gamble, local conTracTor, whose bid was 56,867.00 J. M. HambleTon, a TrusTee, was appoinTed as inspecTor. The new building was dedicaTed on February 22, I896. DedicaTion exercises were conducTed on The TronT porch oT The school, which Taced The S udcrT Body and Fa:c3T,, l?92Al8?3 The Town Band, IB96 souTh. The l-lanTord band led To The scene a marching conTingenT in which were rep- resenTed The 6.A.R., The Boys' Brigade, and The pupils oT The school. Clara Viney, on behalf oT The pupils, presenTed a Tlag To The school. A. W. Lane presidenT oT The board of TrusTees, made a speech oT accepTance. America was sung, There was a Tlag saluTe, and David Gamble handed over The lceys To The building. Then Tollowed an address by J. W. Graham, CounTy SuperinTendenT of Schools, and addresses by Franlc Dodge and The Reverend J. L. Blaclc. The school sang LeT The l-lills and Vales Resoundf' and Earle Fisher reciTed Our l-ligh School, a poem by The Reverend l-l. W. WalTz oT Grange- ville. ln January, I896, Miss Phoebe Lee l-losmer was added To The TaculTy, making The Third member. During This period more elemenTary disTricTs were being added To The high school union disTricT, and enrollmenT increased To such an exTenT ThaT addiTional space was needed. WiTh ThaT need in view, The TrusTees purchased Tour more adiacenT loTs and called upon The disTricT To voTe bonds Tor SI0,000 To build an annex. On February l8, l905, The issue was deTeaTed, buT in a second elecTion, April 21, iT carried. l-lowever, The bonds could noT be sold because no elecTion had been held in The Oalcvale DisTricT. ATTer a Third elecTion no buyer could be Tound who would Talce The bonds because The Oalcvale DisTricT had refused To hold an elecTion. The board Then decided To ask The CounTy Supervisors To levy a special Tax Tor build- ing The annex, which was Then badly needed Tor commercial classes. The money was raised in ThaT way, and a dwelling on Elm STreeT was used unTil The annex was compleTed in l909. ln I9IO The loTs Tacing DouTy STreeT were purchased, wiTh The resulT ThaT The enTire Fresh-air Taxi Service of The I92O's block Then belonged To The disTricT. A small building was laTer erecTed on The norTh- wesT corner oT The block Tor The accommodaTion of new sTudies. Many minor buT necessary maTTers oT arrangemenT had To be meT as The school grew. A sTable Tor horses had a place on The loT Tor a Time buT laTer was replaced by one on land some disTance easT oT The school premises. When auTomobiles replaced horses in bringing sTudenTs To school, a garage was provided. Even The waTer supply presenTed a problem. During many meeTings The TrusTees con- sidered Tanks, pumps, windmills, engines, and elecTric moTors, and Tinally decided To give a conTracT To a Mr. KurTz Tor Turnishing waTer aT The raTe oT Ten cenTs per I,00O gallons. As The buildings aged and became inadeguaTe, and The need Tor space Tor physical educaTion and aThleTics became acuTe, The demand Tor a new planT and a new locaTion became urgenT. The adopTion ThroughouT The sTaTe oT a new physical educaTion pro- gram was a sTrong TacTor in making The new premises necessary. The TrusTees called an elecTion Tor November I2, I9I9, Tor The purpose OT voTing bonds amounTing To S350,000.00. The bonds carried, and arrangemenTs proceeded Tor The erecTion oT The presenT planT, an adeguaTe TracT oT land having been procured. BeTore The work was compleTed, iT became evidenT ThaT The Tunds would noT be suTTi- cienT, and anoTher issue oT bonds was soughT. On February 3 a proposal To issue bonds in The sum oT Sl50,000.00 was voTed down by a margin oT 48 voTes, buT The TrusTees called a new elecTion To be held on April 8. AT ThaT Time The amounT asked Tor was only 590,000 buT, wiTh a very much heavier poll, The issue Tailed by ISI voTes. No TurTher eTTorT was made To raise The money by bonds, buT The necessary Tunds were obTained Through The regular channels oT revenue and by The sale oT The grounds and The old building, which broughT 530,000 Since The occupaTion oT The main building in I92l, an almosT conTinuous program oT consTrucTion has been necessary. The gymnasium and The main shop building were Tol- lowed by The TirsT uniTs oT The sTorage garage and Haag Hall. FurTher uniTs oT The old sTorage garage were added, and The Tarm mechanics building was consTrucTed. Finally came The new sTorage garage, which is new This year. The laying oT cemenT walks and curbs, The paving oT The sTreeT Through The campus, consTrucTion oT Tennis courTs, and The erecTion oT Tencing have been some oT The numer- ous proiecTs which Tollowed The original grading and landscaping oT The grounds. OUT- sTanding among proiecTs oT This Type was The consTrucTion oT The aThleTic sTadium, which was Tinished in l935. ATTer Principal E. T-T. Walker leTT The school in l908, There was a Ten-year period during which Three diTTerenT men served as principals-l-larry Rode Trom l908 To I9I0, T. J. Roesman Trom I9I0 To I9I3, and Harry ShaTer Trom l9l3 To l9I8. ln l9l8 came Jacob L. Neighbor, The presenT principal. The many accomplishmenTs of The school and iTs unquesTioned high sTanding among schools oT iTs class are due in a large measure To The high caliber oT The men who have been iTs leaders, parTicularly The TirsT and laTesT, boTh oT whom served many years. Grounds of Hanvord Union High School, l92I THU' ut? 52 llllil EE... LIOO OO OO AOO 300 OO Mr. Rode, fhe fhird principal, came fo Hanford from Efna High School. During his sfay fhe original building was being enlarged and fhe old barns were removed from fhe grounds. He assisfed in organizing fhe C.T.A., and was a member of fhaf organizafion's firsl' Council of Educafion. ln Hanford he revived infer-school afhlefics and sfarfed foofball. He also organized fhe firsf class in agriculfure, fhe second in fhe sfafe. Mr. Roesman had had a long experience in fhe profession before coming fo Hanford, and he confinued for many years afferward A newspaper sfafed in l927 fhaf he had fhen been feachung for fhlrfy seven years Mr Shafer came fo Hanford wnfh an impressive scholasfic record Many bug names in educaflon were among his professors af Harvard and Columbia He added manual framing and biology fo fhe curriculum Affer leaving Hanford he became Superunfend enf of Schools af Bakersfield and lafer was Assisfanf Superunfendenf of fhe Los Angeles schools A+ fursf 'rhe course of sfudy involved only fhree years of high school affendance The class of I907 was fhe lasf fo graduafe under fhe fhree year arrangemenf and as a re sulf of fhe change fhe graduafung class of l908 consusfed of only four sfudenfs Throughouf fhe years sublecfs and courses show a sfeady change fo fif fhe changing modes of life Af flrsf fhere was The general academic course sfressing classncal sfudnes buf in fhe second year fhe commercial course was added Vocafional sublecfs came in gradually as did also addnfnonal culfural courses Wufh fhe enormous expansion of fhe physical educaflon program affer fhe War of l9l4 l9l8 fhe curriculum had so de veloped as fo saflsfy all fhe demands placed upon a modern high school A perusal of exisflng records impresses upon fhe reader fhe facl' fhaf Hanford Hugh School has done many fine fhungs fhroughouf fhe years If is a maffer of regref fhaf fhe lumlfaflons of space forbid fhe vlfalxzlng of fhus accounf wufh many scenes of sfudenf acfivufy buf fhe pages of fhis volume fhrough picfures and prnnf malce such refer ence as is possible fo people and evenfs G e C f-'fl 5 OWIVWQ YQGFIY enrollmenf average daily aflendance number of feachers and num er ofgraducxfes from IQI3 fo fhe presenf H G 0 ll eoc er 'X Z1 Egg! ,f-13229 L2'Jx?L'1f 34 Sv-f In! gil 35? 60 TKO EO Wax fall ra ily endian 63 L9 i9I3I11l5 I6 ll I8 I9 EO EI 22 232425 26 2728 Z9303l 32 333435363738 3940 Al 42 QZCWHL This includes The whole force Principal librarian and niqhf school 7 principal, noneofwhom do any Ieachmg S3 The rowlh of The School, l892-W42 - Mr. Neighbor has raouafed 30I4 of These h li ' , ' , la . I 220' I I I3 535' ry d N S 1200 UO 9 E fs' .-B2 fliBiW'55 T Ili '5 ' X mi ffm II -QL 3 M X if u A ' -S ' ' X f, Iwo MD, V5 M3 M 'iss fs' is IOOO 42+ 75 We gg5,fg2 9 1200, I I 'U 3 38 e '32 ,'4fa'4N OO 31,1 5 VH 1.1 ' ,ag f ' ,Fag- s , 800 155: .2 3545835 M 2 .fvlwi I 'E f , .lxmr ffm I OO I 80+ C 'D 707 ni yin ml. ' 'Q X H5 'fu 97,7 700 Tr- ' ' . '12 f 'V dial-f ' Al' W7 riff' f 1' W' u Ftfag fm ,gk FE 9 AV fn ,I GN 7 ,Q -K 600 5' .B iw fs , few er f 42 rj V529 , 1341 - T59 A gif ll' ,ELZD 'ff X424 6 ,bfi V s c0,2f11s f1 f 'Sc' .428 eg I2 12 3947 fsf -3 sg. n Illn + E ff X X 0 2 Brief 256 Vf as f' TW fe ' ' ' - ,ff I 2 4,59 ' ,I 5-3 I ,f ,bg nl lg8x'I70 '- loo 'N' I2 , . dim Enhance, Showing Loa1'Kng on We Lawn i The Noon-Yime Gab-fesf A Gala Day on The Sevenfh Sfreef of Today jawn, Uicwm The Civic Audiforium, The Cgnfer of Commumfy Lfe Q Q Q2 ,fl fi'w A'-K A VN Nz lr Q-'IW QQ 1 ff 4 Mmm A- U X KN ,N Q.,.4 VF- X 1 0 X 0s -3 fa fox GQ. nl .6 f-X7-x J QQ fa CGSQGHKYQZ- x - mm5'W,- ffm gfe- F c 47 yi A ef bgtlxk.. Q lr S ks B' Q ws' Vixxf, .1', Q' y A+. dis? . M 'J' -sn, A ,Ll HL' . Y A: ' K Y - K ' hh 4' , -A .v - , 3 .,-wx 1 ,4 nw ' ff,- w, ff 5 ,ff .-.. -g i w! 1' X59 ,I V 'Cz rf. V? , 15 - ff? ,529 am -N ' I' N- J W, my - .je fl, :rl X A fx! lf if 'W V15 -'- pb Y A ff ,L - Vu I? ' ' 4 fy! br I 1 ' .0 F55 'D' f -4 et , Q Pia IQ, ff f' f .1 X -A1255 ,, Q? 'Q , kv! iff.-1 X sx5'7i5F'L-'.r7 x SJ' Qxgw' : S C ,OJ 1 rs, 'fff-'X'-is 5.7-Q Af-R 69 , Pffll ANDHMIIMNMSTHRAQIIHIIGDN 191 41 f Dellghfful fask' To rear Hwe 'render Hwoughf To feach fhe young :dee how fo shoof THE SEASONS by James Thompson .96 .5 Q- fi sf ,f :ff 14-P a' X, ' Q rf 3.-'.,'2ff w W N' LOUIS GIACOMAZZI jim, fnwzi WILLIAM L. HAAG The worlc oT The Board oT TrusTees is TundamenTal To The welTare oT The school, yeT Tew OT The sTudenTs sTop To Thinlc oT The role played by These men who have The Tinal responsi- biliTy Tor The uplceep and TuncTioning oT The school pIanT. This is a burden +ha+ naTuralIy increases as The number oT buildings and The courses in The curriculum increase. The Two mosT recenT addiTions have been The new bus garage and The remodeling oT The coolcing room. The IaTTer has been Transformed Trom a dreary, inconvenienT classroom inTo a really beauTiTuI place, gleaming in soTT Tones oT green. UniT IciTchens To accommodaTe Tour girls each are equipped wiTh boTh gas and eIecTric sToves. worIcTables, and sinlcs. Tables Tor serving The Toocl occupy The remainder oT The room. AnoTher proiecT ThaT The Trus- Tees sTiII Iceep in Their bag oT Triclcs is a new building To house The music deparTmenT and The caTeTeria. The sTaTT oT The Janus is glad To have This opporTuniTy To express Tor The sTudenTs as a whole our appreciaTion oT The advanTages which The TrusTees, as agenTs oT The Tax- payers. have provided us. LELAND RICE LE ROY PETTIJOI-IN, Clerk EARL LACEY ,Ok Because he is always ready wirh encouragement guidance, and un- dersfanding, ir is wiih sincere affec- iion inai we pay iribuie +0 Mr. Neighbor, Hnrougiiouf Jrweniy-Hnree years of ouisranding service an in spiraiion and a friend +0 ali. 24 Qacab CZ o OUR PRINCIPAL IQZI Hobmi 9. Wiontqonmaq, OUR vlcE-PRlNclPAL I9I2 I 942 No one needs an imrroducfion fo We man who makes possible Jrbe smooH'1 furwcfionirwq of our scboof roufine-Mr. Morwrqomery. A whiz af adminisfrefion problems, be is never roo busy +o 'rake a klndfy En- Teresf in sfudenf affairs. 25 Um jnacluhq, T-le's a sourpuss! She's an old ba+Tle-axe! These are expressions we hear aTTer The chemisTry TesT, or The civics reporT, perhaps. l-lowever, aside Trom These complainTs, There are always The nice Things we remember abouT our Teachers. Everyone oT This sTaTT is qualified in his Tield, and he is here because he wanTs To help us and Teach us a Tew oT The many Things we have noT learned abouT liTe. WhaT TaculTy members sTand ouT in your memory? Alumni answer: Miss lda Moody -she was a TavoriTe English Teacher, and she always had Tlowers on her desk. Mr, Ray Franchi-he seemed To know a loT abouT iusT everyThing! Miss Grace Ackerman-her French classes were The mosT inTeresTing l've ever aTTended. We musT noT overloolc The veTeran Teacher oT The TaculTy. To Mr. RoberT MonTgomery goes The disTincTion oT having served on our TaculTy longer Than anyone buT our principal -TwenTy'Tour years. And don'T you believe our Teachers are iusT plain, ordinary Teachers. No indeed. For insTance, Mr. Marcellus has invenTed a boring machine, feeder, ore carT, and waTer wheels Tor use in his gold mine. Mr. STrader holds The paTenT on a Tail-gaTe lock Tor Trailers. Mr. Sandifur has several musical composiTions To his crediT. Mr. J. L. Brown is The auThor of several boolcs on Kings CounTy and California hisTory. We can'T overloolc our new Teachers-noT wiTh all Those handsome men and aTTracTive women gracing our school rooms. ATTer all, our Teachers are a preTTy swell bunch, even iT They do seem To be baTTle'axes and sourpusses now and Then. STAFF OF T933 Upper Picfurez FronT row: Franchi, Ansberry, Hendsch, Carlson, Gilmore, Wiens, Longfield. Second row: LiTTle, Ausfin, ErnerT, Williams, McKellar, Burrow, Rasmussen, SmiTh, Larnpe, Manning, WellingTon. Back row: Mabee, Braun. Lower Picfurez Front row: Marcellus, Montgomery, Harper, Neighbor, Bergman, Brown. Second row: Coldwell, Slewarf, Coplin, Ayers, Hall, Duff, Church, Rhein, Ross. Back row: Duff, Davis, Anderson, FosTer. ALEXANDER GAUGER Plane Geomefry Algebra, Insfrumenls GEORGE MABEE Arifhmeiic, Physics Advanced Science E. E. WAI-IRENBROCK Algebra, Phofog ra phy Business Arifhmefic WILLIAM BRAUN Mechanical Drawing Plane Geomeiry CHARLES I-IENDSCI-I General Science Golf C. P. DUFF Biology, Bofany L. W. DAVIS Chemisiry, Tennis MARGARET C. STEWART English, Janus JAMES L. BROWN U. S. I-Iisfory and Civics English, Janus I-IELEN AUSTIN Economics and California I-Iislory, English DOROTHY DOWNING English NANCY RANKIN English CHARLES FOSTER CommercaaI Law Geography English MARGUERITE ROWAN English IVAN GRIFFIN SociaI Living English ROBERT SEARS Umfed Sfafes I-Iisfory and Modern I-Iisfory FANNIE WELLINGTON Enghsh Ancienf I-Iisfory FLORENCE RI-IEIN Unifed Sfafes I-Iisfory and CivlCs,JournaI1sm I Civics, Social Living, EMILY MURRAY Public Speaking Drama, Debafe B. F. DUEF Business Fundamenfals Bookkeeping CHARLES GILMORE Junior Business Training Commercial English Office Praciice PEARL HUGHES Transcripiion Typing, Gregg LELA MAE MALOTT Business Fundamenlals TYPIHQ BERNIECE LITTLE Spanish MADELINE CALLERI Spanish French SAM ABDALLAH Spanish Lalin DOROTHY PRATT Homemaking Foods MILDRED MORAN Family Relaiions Clolhing LaVON PHILLIPS Homemaknng Foods Clofhmg Handcrafr MYRTLE LANGE FRED MARCELLUS Turning Woodwork JOSEPH LONGFIELD Auwkomobule Mechanncs HERMAN HARPER Agrnculfure Farm Manage-menf SPENCER STRADER Farm Mechanics JACOB WIENS Ba nd Orchesfra lnsfrumenfs DALE SAN DIFUR Advanced Chorus Plano Glee AVL Airplane and Shop Fundamenfals I-I. T. ANDERSON Physical Educalion MAX BELKO Physical Educafion NICK PAPPAS Physical Educalion English RUSSELLE GETTEMY Physical Educalion CAROLINE NELSON Physical Educalion EDITH SCI-I ROEDER Library Science CALVIN COPE Principal ol Ihe Evening I-Iigh School NELLA AYERS Alfenclance Officer JOSEPI-IINE ROBINSON Affendance Clerk Regislrar MARY ANN HOUSTON PrincipaI's Secrefary Ci.sTodians Armed for BaTTle For a Trimly Tailored appearance so highly commended by fashion criTics we would recommend our own sTaTT oT Tloral experTs. Their de-xTeriTy wiTh pruning shears and lawn mower has enabled Them, wiTh a liTTle assisTance Trom MoTher NaTure, To provide us wiTh grounds which are among The loveliesT in The Valley. The school's TirsT gardeners were more accusTomed To pick and shovel Than To shears and lawn mower. Though iT would be diTTiculT Tor mosl oT us To visualize our lovely build- ings sTanding in a bare, dusTy Tield wiThouT ThaT seTTing oT smooTh lawns and graceful Trees which makes Them so aTTracTive, The TirsT classes saw iusT such a scene on opening day. WiTh The TirsT auTumn showers Teachers and sTudenTs alike plodded To class Through sTicky clay mud, which was exchanged in The spring Tor Thick dusT. IT was noT unTil aTTer The grading conTracTor, W. F. Bond, had had Tons oT earTh hauled in To cover The un- Head Gardener WesT Oversees His Floral ExperTs Jlud, will Hfwnmeat .Ionk lovely clay lhal lhe work ol planling could begin. Trees and shrubs ol many varielies were ordered from nurseries lhroughoul lhe slale, and lhe campus soon look on a more pleasanl appearance. Indispensable lo school lile are lhe ianilors, whose work is never done. All lhose paper gliders you lhrew and lhose lhrilling noles you exchanged wilh lhal cule lillle sopho- more in sludy hall lind lheir way inlo lhe lrash can evenlually-bul nol unlil lhe ianilor has palienlly rescued lhem lrom lhe sludy hall lloor. And how aboul lhal gum you so cleverly parked under your seal in assembly? Unless il's lhe cuslodian's lavorile llavor, he musl lind il a lillle boring lo have lo scrape il oll every lew weeks. And lhal black mark on lhe wall lhal your heel made-maybe you were loo weak lo sland wilhoul sup- porl aller lhal slill exam, bul who's going lo supporl lhe guy who has lo scrub il oll? A lillle more lhoughllulness on lhe parl ol each ol us would make lhe lile ol lhe men behind lhe scenes a lol easier. l-lanlorcl l-ligh School would be only hall a school wilhoul lhe bus drivers, who, be- sides seeing lhal many ol us arrive and deparl on lime, lrequenlly give up some ol lheir leisure lo lake lhe leam lo a game, or make il possible lor lhe band lo appear al a dis- lanl parade. Co-operalive and reliable, lhese men deserve lhe lhanks ol us all. Mr. Congdon, Busboys, and Their Elongaled Taxis T S 76 S F 'fn C'i7f-i-s Day P31--er' A 2:3 MQ mjnn late, The l-lanlord Evening School was begun in I922 especially for The purpose of preparing our for- eignfborn residenls for American cilizenship. Bu? soon il was found 'rhal many adulls of rhe com- munily were inleresled in conlinuing l'heir edu- calion, and commercial courses, physical educa- lion, and English were added lo lhe curriculum. When Mrs. Clara Coldwell loolc charge ol lhe evening school, she proposed The idea +ha+ a pere son's educalion is never compleled, ln pursuance ., , of 'rhis opinion she added a grealer variely oi sub- iecls To lhe school, such as music. arf, handcralr, and sewing. Mrs. Coldwell also originaled lhe Pleasanl Wednesday Evenings, an adaplalion of an English group meeling called lhe Pleasanl Sune day Ailernoons. Mr. Calvin C. Cope is now principal of rhe evening school, since Mrs. Coldwell's dealh early las+ year. l-le has succeeded in adding many new courses To +he school. Aller +he Unifed Slales' enlrance info lhe war, a number oi defense courses were adopled. Espee cially popular have been firsi aid, home nursing, lcni++ing and crochehng, and aulo mechanics for women. l-lanlord is becoming increasingly conscious of lhe opporlunilies oliered ils residenls by lhe evening school. The P.W.E. has broughl such dislinguished spealcers 'ro Hanford as Presidenl Mendenhall of Whillier College and Dr. Elam Anderson oi lhe Universily of Redlands. Time Our if W9rnen's Aufa Mecnanics FW 62 Q fx ,Alf 'f z fa. wig' ., 0-aft, 3-,iz-5.5! ,,w,,s.-,..4 fs 0:3 'N '10 Q-'s YN ffXfNv-'X gg? sw -Q-a V me-f W ,-fav-..ffv' Wh 'M- N N 1' 'ifk ,Q 'Q 'Q C iii ia? 9 Cir we-21. M- F44 5fh Q 1 bqFnk.,v S lf '57 S uf- ,- .' ,QUE 2' gg , . Xf H'A ,-,fA X ll! -fb ' . 4 w,,,Wf L - 4-' - .w- 'T' ' ' uf, l x X X wqflflh W ri' ' A,A, .v. I5 VA 54 . 1- KVM , :p x I v , Q 53. .r-59 Q, M ' g 4 k i 1 X M A pr Q1' 'W F' W W T2 gi 5'X fe wi SQL u .gl QM QgJj X n ' Q QE3QmewwfHfFfi3 i 1 Q ,iivrfh-. ',,, :,,Q.. 'I 5 .z-ra-1fV 'A' .g--Q, gHLVUQQwgw' -N.z.,,m,,-M, I .W-Nr f . .5 x 53 ' K K . 1 ig! X . ff Q 53 Sv rv' fe as 751 sz F? Tap ul fr - K J 'ww ' r . Q -- . 5 rl TQ? ,K I Ll x Q-vez 560-1 QXJJ gut' ' Aw c -9 9 ,,.,x:xR Fl ,., 5, 32 , IIIQASSJIES Ancl 'then The whlmng school boy wnlh his salchel And shunmg mormnq face creepung lulce a snail Unwnllmqly To school AS YOU LIKE IT by Wolluam Shakespeare 1,31 3 ff.. QF fl' N6 xo , Q nl-iff' we 5 ,DS L I, fl x fs.. 9 .av - 'S Q5 0 fa C. 4 03' lk. 9: 'ln-My ' -1-ll Y 'h. v ass se fe l W k sdg Jlvwuqh ffm The evenung was May 31 l895 The band had played fhe overfure and fhe schoou had sung fhe greefung song As fhe lasf nofes of fhe sungung dued away fhe fursf graduafuon exercuses of Hanford Unuon Hugh School were under way There were only fhree members un fhus graduafung class Amy Clarke Edufh Ross and Fanny Fallun Dressed un full sleeved long whufe dresses fhey were seafed on fhe sfage of fhe Hanford Opera House ln fheur genfeelly gloved hands each held an essay prepared long before fhe graduafuon exercises Af unfervals un fhe evenung s program fhese essays were read Behold How Greaf a Maffer a Luffle Fure Kundlefh Early lmpressuorus and When Shall We Three Meef Agaun Af pleasing unfervals a solousf and a double quarfeffe enferfauned and 'The Hugh School Band played Affer fhe presenfafuon of duplomas J C Kurlc Superunfendenf of Schools un Fresno Counfy gave a shorf address followed by fallcs from fhe varuous mem bers of fhe hugh school board The memorable evenung was ended wufh a song by fhe school ln lafer years affer a buuldung had been acquired fhe graduafuon exercuses foolc place un fhe hugh school auduforuum Then when fhe crowds could no longer be accommodafed fhere fhe exercuses were fransferred fo fhe Cuvuc Auduforuum ln fhe lasf few years fhe Auduforuum also has become unadeguafe and fo gef away from fhe sfuffy hof af mosphere fhe Class of l94l held ufs graduafuon un fhe hugh school bowl Unforfunafely for fhus fursf commencemenf un fhe bowl rain and wund combuned fo malce fhe auduence done However graduafung classes wull undoubfedly fund fhe bowl on balmy Jun evenungs of fhe fufure a perfecf seffung for fheur lasf hugh school evenf From Hanford Hugh School 3398 sfudenfs have graduafed un fuffy years Thus year approxumafely l9O more names wull be added fo fhe following lusf of alumnu and fhe graduafes more miserable fhan fhe forrid air of fhe Civic Audiforium had ever e Fursr Graduafuruq , H3951 a d, my Cark, Edith Ross, nny Falling fan in , C. 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X1 AX, 54 S U Montgomery Bedford Mora Mary Morrns Margaret Murray Doris Mylar Elmer Mynderup lrvan Nehls Howard Newport Donald Nneson Elxzabeth Noel Velma Occhrena Vnrqlnla Onestl Allce Orchard Dorothy Orto Steve Osburn Margaret Pakcholan Hoosher Peterson Claudla Pres Lionel Powell Ruth Ralclwkte Maxsne Rathbun Gwendolyn Reche Ernestrne Robertson Mary Jane Robnnson Lydra Sarto Haruko Sakaquchl Frank Sakaguchu Georg Sanborn Frank Sarquas Armen Scherl Don Scherf Velma Serpa Olive Shay Jack Sheets Hugh Jr Shuroyama Junoe Sholner Burton Svlva Manuel Jr Sloberg Phnllp Smnth Dollue Smith Howard Smith Naomla Splnetta Euqene Souza Souza Souza Souza Alrce Arthur Grace Mary Stephenson Annabelle Stoddard Tom Sturgeon Vernon Telxelra Lavrna Thayer Frances Thyarks Louise Thyarks Wnlluarn Tokumoto Shlgeo Trapp Theodore Trewhnlt Ernet Turner Alden Upchurch Bessie Vall Axle Van Beek Ella Van Den Akker Marte Velqa Arthur Verboon Jennne Verboon Walllam Vrerra Evelyn Vlerra Henry Welr Dorthy Whnte Maravene Wilkinson Esther Wlnq EVTTVTTG Wooooates George Wright Ralph Jr Ylng Grace Zelqler Roy 934 Abralrarn Frederlck Alvernaz Joaquln Anderson Charles Andrrws Nlcholas Angelo Charles Araulo Mlldred Azevedo Lllllan Bahler Wendell Bas :ann Emnly B s :ann Julia Baxter Cecnl Bernstenn Mary Bettencourt Theresa Bomar Frances Bonlto Vurgnnla Brautloam Erylene Bryan Dorothy Buckner Martha Ann Casella Paul Chollet Leonard Cody Evon Costa Leo Crabtree Lorna Culley Woodrow Curley Lowell Curtns Stanley DeBoe Josephnne Del-lart lra Denharn Luctlle DeRoo Vlctor Donahoo Clanre Dorlty Everette Douma Margaret Dunq Gladys Dunn James fx 1 Dye Glenn Elsenlauer Jasper Evers Raymond Feaver Helen Ferguson James Ferrel Gretchen Fullppa Johnny Felrnlnq Jerry Ford Patrlck Jr Freeman Mary Freutas Adelnne Fuller Evelyn Funahashn Edwin Gaunt Robert Grbson Zada Gordon Charle Habara Kazuo Hageman D rrrll Hamblln Gilbert Hamner Jack Hampshlre Velma Hampshnre Ze ma Hase Morroya Hayes Ray Hayakawa Chlyo Heath Travls Heath Walter Helton Johnny Hetgonk Cora H ll Stanley Hoag Helen Hooker Benlta Horton Jean e Horton Mary Howe Mark Howes Howard Hunter Dorothy lshuda Mlsao Jensen Elmore Johnstone Mary Jones lrvlng Jones Mary Kercher Elma Klnne Dorothy Kmght John Kraft Rachel Landis Elmer Landon Naomn Lavnne Leonard Lee Leona Llrdqulst Walter Llnsley Theresa Lopez Arthur Lopez Leo f'XxLA? 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Ernest Lauqlnlan Waller Leap Franlc LeBoa Dorrs Leonq Marqarelle Lopes Alvln Lovrer ale Maaslcanl Marlon Macedo Callwerlne Maclwado Joe Mariana Raymond Malcolm Arllnur Malslrom Howard Marchbanlcs Bonnne Malney Herman Malsul Fusalxo Mauclc Mildred Mayes John Messuclc Louise Meyer Nellie Miguel Edward Muller Wilbur 53 -1X -r A X 3. -,,, Z -,. ---I A A , r. I rw qw Q4 j.- 4 00 A- 4 ,. - HW -. OA ' - ' C V . E Q V. . r A 3 X l r O' - o G5 ER ,. U1 - -. .' . f - - .'9 ,'n A - - A ' -E -fb 4 - A-.A . -1 - A o' . ' , '2 , Q, . D' U ' ' A ' ' , . A - - - D . c fx. re ' 3 . 'A' 4 F l W L1 V -4-Q Ajfw r-' -x'1 ,Mm ,A A, 4--l X, - 1 4 -- v 1 l ,X ' -1 ' l r ,Xl -- -- - Af f -- - JfN X J 936 f x 'XNL.Lbw 8 y w 1 A It , . , I. . K ' mf. , f M ' ' f, X ' ' ' IP N'l f X f : W 'Ski X nt 19 AI I 1 fs- I1 if X xp!! X ' F , ,rfl ,A 'REX f ff ' 7 L ,I L wwf ' 1 4 X QKXF4 911 J ' ff . KH! 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Barrelro Anllnony Barror Alberf Barflell Jodue Berlrarn Paulrne Bsblng Arlos Bloyd Dorollwy Bolwlllen Carolyn Bois Oburr Braarn Saclre Brnnlrerlwofl Russell Brown Bruce Brown Loran Brown Leroy Brown e 1-fV X MV , mi f Brown Wrllram Buffs Mrldred Cameron Wllllarn de Campos Nalalre Carano Paul Carr Clwesfer Casella Mrlron Clwamplm Helen Clnallen Jaclr Coellwo Marne Colluer Cloe Jean Craglnlll Jack Crawford Wlllelia Damon Ruln Ann Davus Hazel Deas Wnlllarn DeCosla Everell Denlwarn Maurrce De Souza Clarence s Floren Dras Mary Dbble Bealrlce Dbble Lyle DrMuccro Salyadore Dooley Harry Downs Adlynne Dulra Myron El er Carl Els James Evers Leonard Facclwnnu Elda Fadenreclwl Daniel Feaver Melyrn Feaver Plwyllus Fernandez Joaquin J Fernandez lrene Ferrel Reber? Frnsler Florence Foley Jeanne Forrnanecl: Allred Franlznclv Eleanore Fryrnure Sack Funla Yasulco Gaulan Margarel Garcia Alberl German Ava Lee Gomes Evelyn Gong Maye Gordon Donald Habara Jrro Hageman Dorollwy Harrunqlon Cnarles Jr Harl Norrnan Hase Kelgo Hase Yoslwre Haupl Laurence J H ys Rurne F l-lacks James Hll Helen Hnnes Roberl Hrwane Krmvko Hooker Jean Howes Bob Huffman Joyce Hunler Tlrcola Jackson Sydney Jarnes Myrlle Jenlclnson Plwyllls Karaoka Mxclml: Kerr Ferne Krnnne Jean Krslmue Nobuo Landon Tlwelrna Larsen Roberla Lawrence Laura a Fldells Lew Myron L an Leslre Jr Lopez Cllrlord Lowe Bryanl Luz Laura Lee Maaslranr Corme Madruoa Vuncenl Maqora Mnye Marclwloanlrs Neorna Marow Paul Marrunez Manuel Mal ews Fannie Mafney Lorraine McCauley Lowell McCuls+ron Blanclwe McCullal1 Dorls McCullal1 Melyun Mclilrn Vrrgrnla Mnguel Glberf Mnquel Mary Mules Georqell Mrsenlnrner Eleanor Maya Yoshllco Monfgornery La Verd Morro Madalynne Nlclwols Kerrnrl Oberl Beilwel Olnaneswan Mardarel Ornala Roberl O burn Roxle Overland Ted Pace Drclc Paden Gene Pallerson Donald Payne Elsre Mae Poore Benny Prangner Marll-wa Proudl+ Benrla l 8 I . 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Sirnc cf 'nc Hi'-Vrf1:'2S or Chic Wfoek were A fncahirr parry, a bonflre fx nag ride fm rf1'M,f1 picric, Ba5ffaNfa,ren'f:,CMs5 D:'iy,i1VTd Cmn- rnencmncnr ai,0xciu1XvQNyfOr soniorf, M WN3 We olgnf wus nrfd I1 Fr:-ri .-,WHT rr fr, 510 fneir uncn on a bm rock rwerlookmq We Mngwj. Sian Jc.1rJu'n . Tnw uruup Msn 1-r zmed was n.4 :rd bonflrwdrnxg, Ewrrnono nad A wfvndorfur Hrnc fn -,DMD 135 fre fic? fn 1? We f1uTOrrr:5U'3A1 V-wjrr-:rf I-.mar TLVQ, rvruhr nnvu Ohm Tnarwn e ns d J ur L O arvxnfy Nwrcrc- ern for wnv so ma! e P1 5 sMn C 355 C Q Od 5 TCI meb r we!! are e 0 nw n 'wa T e ufure owds us forward cncwfeci nowwedqe May we an arkaun SJC: Awd ever passvvq on and on from Hnjn Scno re fwr n a srnufA+ dafs rnafare fo come Then Tnom wus 1 poem reid af WP fr Q pkarfwnq Q rcnnovy n re, sz. w r mv y G G Mr s no our a P urran frn nh wir mpposf. o ILV S r on 5 know abou? We oroqrarn c Cs proqrdnn ww mam, fr 'g 1 Q L V rn nc In WN3 r P program ron mind of fno fo 4owmq Tnm. G55 Od To We G1 Y a dw Q .J ur aIoF6oss1o Dcndx a won of Class Tre: e O by Mud Holm 1 L is A rnouqn mmf of fnes rrgdxrwons nafe Docn dmoo Cl ay 'rnv X nw MDM Bac ahureare C ass Da and Corrrnerwf 'nenf 'El , iim 1 '!y,f X it H f z, 'lunge 5 ,ng ffm f in er, 'W' Y bfffrn, H su, r ' fn 'ree an fvcnnes The safors Mero rsQUv q 'rw mein Exif inf fin any soon: .N 'af QW .-a po F - Q We' vent Tn,'a'?'f za OF Tne ocen' time if 'OF NQI4 V51 Min New 'rfrrh J ': Fa e Y 15, Nl C rn ,nzerne ffqn' CAEECQ Fw F ' ' - r . 'Z 3 S Oflc N , ' 7 1 3531 G e 'r 'L he 5 , I W'f Q f fr Y, 4: W' r .qw 3 X 'VY-DQgf7V,:rV We fiiarfyfi H13 frifl X no gh F. Arn gn N fb, f ge 3 1 e ' x nd? be X 1 y ecrer, usuaUy Q-.1 . c 'n 'inov' The Nw,-, Day . 1' - 'V hr Iwi, Miqnf of Scnhr W ck, smondar nn V nz Crr L: QMQW. rw, . , , E ' : fC! ' 'X L f51,r 'u,'C1's5 Prfwnscw, W1 B E . 'C ' 1TH H b. - wird WRC: fS:n3. 1 ' e ' ' C! C ' , ,ears oesw,?0r'1if if ' er' iz In use 'T ,L 7 . . X, .:. ,, 7 Qi- ,L I ,W . gf V' 7, 1 f , , ff?i, V 'X'V'1Qf.Pf - V ,,,, , g ,af 9 , W , AH,- W43 7 -R , , . If . 'V , 4, 'sf 4 f. iv Q. fr N- N, ' A W.-any J if C. S ' .Glff . ' 4 AX K , f qf 1 'la-fi' K Q7 rnf: C cfs fm l903. Q ff U , ' ' 3 wi? ' , ' 'ig Lag' if 2 in , Q ' Q. - ' - -' W 'Q 3 vm f 'K VV . . , , ' w MW ' ' im , .. N ', , I' ' Lf' ' A H 4 . ' ' W ' , V 4-fwfr 'f f .,, ., - f .1 f '- ' . H. Sw' f A ' ,Wit M15 W . , A' ' ' 5,3 1-'Y 7 X -l QW Q - V ' . Q , ' if . , ' ,: 3?5kQ?wv f A' 'Q 2 - 5 ', 1 K' V V I H A 1' 3 2 ogfha, mi . 5'-5:7122 ' Any class musr be very carelul in choosing ifs officers, buf ihis is especially lrue of Jrhe Senior Class for as +he old saying goes, lhe seniors musi ser rhe example for all lhose ol lesser ranlc. Our able presidenls, Joe Soares and George Fowler, really covered Jrhemselves wilh honor in showing The underclassmen how a class should be run. They did noi only lhe lhings a presidenf usually does, bu+ +hey also promoled lols and lols of oulside acriviiies. During +he 'lirsf semesier we had a Hello Day, and largely because of Jrhe clever scheming of our induslrious leaders we lcepf 'ro our four-year plan and didn'+ have To pay any senior dues! Of course, lhe presideni should nor receive all The credil for The amazing success of +he class. for even 'rhey admil lhar 'rhey would have been absolurely helpless bu+ for +he cooperarion of every member of lhe class. The many commillees lhal are necessary for rhe proper funclioning of any class are sorneiimes overlooked when 'rhe honors are besrowed. Jusr 'lhinlc whai an empiy year ir SENIOR OFFICERS Front row: Highl, second semesrer secretary, Freeman, first semester secrelaryq McNamara, firsr semester treasurer. Back row: Fowler, firsf semesier vice-president, second semesfer president Lacey, second semesler vice-presudenlg Cassidy, firsi semesier represenfafive. Y Q? .. '09 would be wilhoul a Senior Ball, a Class Day program, senior swealers, and even our arinounczemenis. Somelimes we iail +o realize ihal il is 'rhe commif- lees lhaf are responsible for The lhings fha? really make being a senior so much fun. So, Seniors, le+'s say l-lals oil +o lhe commilrees and give lhem Lhe place of honor lhey deserve in our Senior Memories. The D.A.R. girl and represenlalives 'ro Boys' Slafe are +he besr allvround srudenls in rhe class. To be chosen for 'lhese coveled honors, one musl nor only be really oulsranding in scholarship, buf musi also have +he olher quali- +ies lhai go lo make up a wellfrounded personalify-charm, honesly, courr- esy, and friendliness. Ann l-laup? as lhe D,A.R. girl and Rodney Rilchie, Gene Cassidy, George Fowler, and Gus Diesslin as The Boys' Sfale Represenlalives were as good examples oi characler as any senior class could wish for. And so we have The seniors-lhe ones who are rhe lead- ers, who promole ihings, who keep rhings going. Bul iusl being a senior in irsell is a plenly big iob. Whai wilh lrying +o keep up wilh your U. S. l-lisiory and Civics, going lo all rhe games and big alzlairs of your senior year, and worsi of all, frying +o ser a good example for The underclassmen and +o ac+ dignified and worihy of lhe name of senior-well, every member ol 'rhe Class oi '42 has had a prerly lull year! SENIOR COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN I Seafedz Cass ov S a -: 5 DELEGATES T0 BOYS STATE: Sericr Play she elves Sanding W ass D Fowle' Ritchie, Cassiox, Diessiir. Fo a s d AYU1,-, - 44 VW' 1764, Nix? U19 43 0 E 1, XYU54, - rs sur: f Q 7 i THE JANUS BOARD Burr, Anderson, Trcmaer, Cassioy Evolving lhe Walerlall lor lhe Ball Jim Hluzaf, may, Commencemenll The linal goal ol every lreshman, sophomore, iunior, and seniorl The lime when all your labors will be rewarded and when lor one shorl hour glory will be yoursl Ah, Commencemenl, lhal ecslalic lime when you lcnow lhal one chapler ol your lile is linished and lhal you will soon begin your lile in an enlirely new world! Fun? Ol course il's lunl Il you are a girl, il means planning whal you'll wear lor Class Day, how you'll lix your hair, or whal you'll do Commencemenl nighl. ll means assuming lhe lool4 ol a lrue scholar as you solemnly march up lo receive your diploma, clad in lhe dignily-lending cap and gown. You leel all sober inside, and yel you wanl lo bursl inlo gales ol laughler as someone sniclcers when some boy is called William Auguslusu in- slead ol iusl plain BiII . And lhen somelhing wells up inside you, and you are alraid you are aclually going lo gel senlimenlal and cry when everyone sings Should Auld Ac- quainlance Be l:orgol . Bul slill il's lun-in a sad sorl ol way. Almosl everylhing aboul being a senior is lun. You gel lo lalce parl in so many aclivi- lies-Senior Plays, lhe Ball, Class Day, Comnnencemenl-oh! lols and lols ol olhers, loo. Bul il really malces you lhinlc As you sil and wail lor lhe commencemenl exercises lo be over, you lhinlc aboul lols ol lhings . . . bul moslly aboul your years in high school. You remember how, when you were a lreshman, you wandered around in amazemenl al lhe Ann Haupl valedicrorian George Fowler, saiufalorian HIGH RANKING SENIORS Sealed: Wynne, Wing, Nakauchi. Sfanding: McNamara, Wilson, Hase, Kishiue, Burr vasr educarional opporlunilies offered you in such an imposing edifice, and wondered vaguely how you could make rhar posirively gorgeous senior real- ize rhal you exisred. l-low, as a sophomore, you enjoyed inilialing lhe freshmen, and slruggled along wirh geomerry and Larin ll. When you were a iunior you were on lhe decoraring commilree for rhe Junior Prom and gol our ol classes for a whole day! Also, you remember lhe day you made hydro- gen-sullide in chemislry and ir smelled so bad you pur rhe appararus ourside lhe window, and ir fell olil-a mislorrune which ran your breakage bill up considerably. Bur being a senior lopped all rhe orher years, because Then you were a big-shor-and every- one knows rha'r's run! Ten Years of Valediclorians 65 Um, Miata, MISS HELEN AUSTIN MR WILLIAM BRAUN 66 There are very few occasnons which af ford fhe Sensor Class an opporfunnfy fo show fhe slncere apprecuafnon fhey IeeI for fhenr advrsors Thus IS one such opporfunufy how ever whuch we welcome Who IS If fhaf wor rues whefher fhe cIass wuII be able fo pay :fs Io:IIs'7 Who us If fhaf wonders whefher fhe senior pIays wuII be successfuI7 Who us If fhaf speculafes abouf fhe weafher for grad uafron nlghf7 None ofher fhan our advrsors More fhan one Sensor CIass advisor has ac qunred some grey hair from fhe 'ob Their 'ob IS a very xmporfanf one and offen a very fhankless one In fhelr hands resfs much of fhe responsnbnhfy for a successful class year Many of fherr hours oufslde of school fume are devofed fo fhoughf and pIannung for way and Ieave affairs In more capable hands we rarely gave a fhoughf fo fhe work beung done by our advisors Advnsors are appolnfed for a very spec1aI reason f counsel and guide sfudenf acfuvlfy If IS Ieff fo +hem fo gef fhnngs gomg There are senuo sweafers fo choose announcemenfs for graduafvon fo be ordered sensor pIay fuck efs fo be passed ouf fo sfudenfs Janus worIc fo gef under way commnffees fo appounf and counfIess ofher defanls of cIass manage menf fo whsch fhey musf affend This ad vusor busuness IS no snap nfs reaIIy work We feel fhaf we owe a vofe of grafufude fo our advisors for fhelr help and fhe fume which fhey have devofed fo us fhxs year To you Mlss Ausfen and fo you Mr Braun our fhanks for everyfhung U v I - our acfivifies. WhIIe we go on our merry . . -n O . . . r . Alvlso, Raymond Anderson, Lloyd Anderson, Palrlcla Arnold, Roberl Allclnson, Lillian Ayers, Edyllwe Azevedo, Anflwony Barrelro, lvlarqarel Bell, Ruflw Bernard, Sylvia Belle-ncourr, Frank Bislwop, William Brady, B'll Brady, Gere Braurlgarn, Jonn Brazil, Adeline Burr, Leo Burr, Robln feral ,va 3 fx'- 5 1 Baller, Joyce Campbell, l-lerberl Cardoza, Frank Cardoza, Laurence Cassidy. Belly Cassidy, Gene Clialfin, Margarel Clweelc, Marie Clnevallier, Marie Clark, Virgle Collins, Marllwa Cornlorl, Vlaynelle Congdon, Donald Cook, Roberl Craig, Mary Lou Danell, June Crane, Maxine De Boer, Dorollny Dias, Edward Diesslin, Vernon Downen, Lois Doyle, Kelly Du Bois, Ru+l'1 Duffy, Gordon Dulany, Donald Eakles, Bonnie Edwards, Billie Marie Ellis, C. Wayne Emery, Arlene Essepian, Mary Ferguson, Woodrow Ferreira, Hilda Ferreira, Joe Ferrero, Rosie Fowler, George Franlziclw, Roderick Freeman, Audrey Fulcano, Terulfo Garcia, Torn Giacomazzi, Doris Gillespie, Barbara Gomes, Agnes Gomes, Eldora Gonsalves. Delores Grabow, Gladys Griner, Helen Guzman, Procopio Jr Ham, Lois Hansen, Henry Harper, Ellis l-larlman, Jolwn Hase, Helen Haun, Jimmy Haupl, Ann 1' J 1 Hayes, James Hayes, Kafhryn Hignr, Joann Hird, Arrhur Jr. Hiwano, Kiyoka Hoover, Kenneth Horie, is-ako Horiuchi, Yoneo ivancovicn, Junior Janes, Wfilbur Jenicinson, Marcia Jesperson, Coiieen Jonns, Roberi Kerr, Seima Kimble, Kennein Kimura, Masuich Kircneri, Donaid Kirk, Eveiyn if ' X37 X '51 , ,A Za 15, sw ' X CS' Kisliiue, Mary Koppenaal, Anneffa Koppenaal, Peler Lacey, Leland La Moine, Frank Lankford, Lorraine Largenl, Nelson Law, Alice Marie Leal, Bebeanna Linsley, Raymond Loclce, Billie Lonqacre, Virginia Longfield, Charles Maddox, Elaine Madruga, Rosemarie Marcellus, Doro+lwy Marclwbanlcs, J. T. Jr. Marslw, Don Malliews, Manuel lV1al'suluii,Sl1igero Malsunaga, Michio Mayewalci, l-lacliiro McCauley,Tily+l'1a lVlcGal1an, Richard Mc6lone, Belly McNamara, Elaine Meirelles, Abel Menzel, Dale Milwee, Laura lvlifsuyoslwi, Fusalco Mulroy, Eleanor Nalcauchi, Yoslwimi Nardini, Cyril Nelson, Keiih Odom, Della Odom, Neil ovefman, Harry Paden, Donald Pei-len, James Phillips, Anhui Pllllllps, Oliver Plmlef, Bill Proudlil, Jim Pruell, Howard Pulliam, Kc-znnelll Rainey, Vincerll Jr. Rapp, Arlllur Rapp, Ray Reed, Dixon Renna, Bill Ricll, Berniece Richmond, Bonnie Rifcllie, Rodney Roberlson, Lois Rodgers, Marie Rogers, Manuel Rogers, Douglas Rogers, Tlnomas Rose, Geraldine Rouloos, Anna Rush, Viola Russell, Vernon Rulledge, Donnie Sanchez, Nicolas Sclmerf, Mildred Scopel, Elvera Serles, Jael: Sigrnan, Lila Lee Smalley, Belly Jane Srnillw, Lillian Lee Smurr, Dorollny Soares, Joe . ,. 4 1 Sparks, June Slacy, Eula Takahashi, E++a Thornas, Alloeri Tomer, Carolyn Tomer, Lois Tomila, Graycie Trernper, Dick Tribble, Mildred Turano, Ross Vandervoel, Nellie Verrue, David Vesjral, Slanley Vickers, Dorolhy Vierra, Palricia Vivalda, Anna Vivalda, Tony Voss, Verna Wada, Nobu Ware, Dale Wahrenbroclc, Belly Lou Wheat Kaihleen Wallcer, John While, Velma Walls, l.aVeda Williamson, Jack Wilson, Billie Jean Wilson, Darryl Wing, Fred Wynne, Hugh Yoshida, Fumie Jim Haw Zvi Elvfulf Are you going fo fhe Freshman-Sophomore Brawl? This has been a popular quesfion for manyfyears. The upperclassmen run fhe affair wifh Mr. Neighbor using fhe hose on all enfering fhe fun. Usually fhe freshmen win, buf somefimes fhe fables are furned. Rivalry has always been infense among fhe classes. lf used fo be a fradifion for fhe seniors fo planf a class free af graduafion fime. When fhe freshmen gof smarf and fried fo sfeal fhis idea from fhe seniors, fheir frees prompfly disappeared, and fhe freshmen never fried planfing one again. This all happened years ago: so you wouldn'f remember. There have always been inferclass debafes, inferclass fraclc meefs, and inferclass baslcefball games. Again keen class rivalry is always presenf. Lafely fhe underdogs or underclassmen have shown some ambifions. The freshmen and sophomores have had dues' drives wifh fhe resulf fhaf fhe sophomores gave a parfy which proved fo be a fine affair. The freshmen, nof fo be oufdone by fhe sophomores, also held a parfy in fhe gym. Such ambifious people! The iuniors have awakened and Freshmen emerge vicfors Sophs are exoeft make-up a pho ores cooking up a party The 5,55 hgvg if nl-' Juniors decorafe for Baccalaureafe Juniors cas? iheir ballof osh inferclass baskefball champions: Ferguson, Duarfe, McDonald, Junior ring cornrnifree: Oliver, Bourne, McGuire, Coe Rainey, Wooley af lasf shown fhe school fhey exisf. They gave a Junior Prom a weelc before Easfer, and fhe affair was quife a success. ln I92O, class picnics were held, buf rarely in fhose days could a class afford fo give ifself a parfy. The poor iuniors used fo have fheir class picnics brolcen up by fhe seniors, whom we would have believed fo be superior fo such childish friclcs as crashing an under- class picnic wifhouf an invifafion. ln fhe years gone by dances were more frequenf fhan now. Are we moderns slipping? Affer every foofball game a dance was held. Some of fhese dances were af noon, some affer school, and some af nighf. There were always Friday nighf dances. The school was in fhe habif of giving a dance once a monfh. Lef's gef baclq fo fhaf habif. Also differ- enf organizafions held dances on ofher nighfs. There was really a greaf deal of excife- menf in fhose days. As lafe as I924-I925 fhere were freshman and sophomore dances. 79 Fronf row: Yarnanaira, Ciian, Tsufsui, Bairsfow, Aiien, M. Siiva, Soares, Abboif, Aviia, Siiveira, Second row: Bernardo, Bourne A. Cardoza, Brown, Carnacno Azevcoo, Huii, Wagner, Brady, Waxiaec, Knight, Bi inqsiey. Third row: Casirriro, Coifoi Tnovipsor Teixeira, Andrews, Arnold, Buekridqe Van Noorf P. Waiker, Garcia, Finch, E. Gribi. Back row: Donreilev, Guyfon, Fagundes, Esoinoia, Fincher, Frauen- he-Em irepreacniaiive second semesferi. Davies, Harrifon, J, Gribi, Greer, Ep cr, A. Gyrcs, Diessiin, O Froni row: Crose, Emmet? Eiario, H. Dias, B. Freifas, Griswold, A. Dias, Fukuda, Fukar-9, Second row: Crispi, D. Freifas ifreasurer second sennesferi, Jenkins lsecrcfarv iirsf sernesferi, Coe, Spear, Oden- ineinier, Ciow isecrefary second sernesferj, Gregory, A, Gomes. Third row: Duarfe, Davis, Rose, Rarnous, Sarcivez, A. Ramirez, Mifcineii, Freund. Back row: Sansirwn, Riioads, Neison fpresidcnf second sernesfcri, Paffon, Oiivas, Oiiver lpresideni fire? sernesieri, Seyrnour, J. Orfez. Fronf row: Fisher, Saylor, M. Murray, Saallield, Malsuluii, Machado, Pelrelis, Morris, M. Puclcefr, Mel- lor. Second row: Marlin, Lung, l-lanlcer, Buell, A. Cardoza, Morales, Casello, Mala, Pace, L. Ramirez, Sousamian. Third row: Lopez, Roberis, Dillon, Lyons, Clarlc lvice-presidenl firsf semesferl, McGuire lfreasurer first semesrerl, Fires, Hogan, J. Jones, Brandi, Crain, Lopes. Bacl: row: Bourne, Crawford, Leoni, Alves, Lee, Mello, Bingham, Carrer. Kelley, J. Murray, Monie. Klum, Fronf row: King, Guzman, Hari, D. Jones, Lasdan, lshida, Kimura, l-liwano, l-lardin. Second row: Miner Magnuson, Newlrirlc, Plummer, Newberry, Morgan, Green, Gilbert Jacinfo, Levis. Third row: Ying Craig lrepresenfalive lirsr semesferl, Liggefr, Loranger, l-lill, Tokumofo, Washburn, Wong. Back row: J. Souza, Yarbrough, T, Souza, Tripp, Lemmon lyice-presidenf second semesferl, Tulle, Wrighl, L. Silva, Torn. ,A ,, Klan, ADVISOR: Bernicce mis Morro: me Through caspcfsiim coiofzsf Red and whale FLOWERS: Red and wwe Roses ver, Tirsf se'vcsTer president Jerkirs, Tirs' semesTer sec- eTaryg Clow, secord semesTer secreraryg Ncison, secord semcsfer oresoerl. jniculalz, ' UnTil IQO7 or I908 no one aT HanTord High School had heard oT The Junior Class. The reason Tor This was noT ThaT iuniors were insigniTicanT and unknown, buT ThaT They were known as Middlers, or second-year sTudenTs, Tcr There were only Three classes in high school aT ThaT Time. However, iT cannoT be said ThaT Middlers have ever been middling in imporTance. For TiTTy years The Junior Class has perTormed some oT The mosT imporTanT TuncTions in The school. ln l92O iuniors sTarTed The TradiTion oT dec- oraTing Tor BaccalaureaTe and Commencement a cusTom which sTill exisTs Today. Juniors also Take parT in ushering Tor The senior plays, and compose a large parT oT The Janus sTaTT. OT course, They always look Torward To Their nexT, The senior year, when The under- classmen will serve Them. Years ago our parenTs purchased senior pins aT HanTord High School, buT Today The iunior rings Take Their place, and These rings are The only oTTicial class iewelry. The Class OT '43 chose a ring with raTher classic lines. The TavoriTe seTTings were black onyx and moTher oT pearl. The Junior Class again held a Junior Prom in The gymnasium. The naTional emergency ThreaTened even This evenT, buT oTTicials oT The school decided ThaT The Prom and The Senior Ball would be conTinued. Given on The evening oT March 27, The Prom had Tor iTs Theme, The Blues in The NighT, and TeaTured a novel revolving mirror reTlecTing colored Tloods. Cramming Tor The CrernisTrv Ex, an lrrporTar'T Junior AcTivilv Claim, ADVISOR: Charles Gilmore MOTTO: Lead, Noi Follow COLORS: Carmine and While FLOWER: Carnaliqzn SOPWOVORE CFFICERS Scafed: Worley, second-serves lc s cr:'3r,1C-arf lirs? sfmes'e' sccre any E.ler, secc sw Lsmr Z.'l,5,Cc , Slanding: FiLqf,rs, lirs fsernesfrr orcs ai Humsnpho Alfhough fhe Class of I944 did nof have as many honor sfudenfs as if mighf have had and did nof win fhe Freshman-Sophomore Brawl, if is a class of pofenfialify. We are building fo be one of fhe besf senior classes ever fo graduafe from Hanford High School. Nof only have we had several members on fhe A foofball feam, buf also a large por- fion of fhe B feam was from fhe Sophomore Class. Abouf fhe same number of boys parficipafed in baslcefball. The fraclc and fennis meefs had fheir share of sophomore parficipanfs, foo. Two of fhe fhree yell leaders were sophomores, and during fhe second semesfer, we held fhe office of Represenfafive-af-Large in fhe Sfudenf Body. Perhaps fhe pofenfialify of our class exfends fo financial maffers, foo, for fhe sfudenfs seem fo be saving fheir money for fufure use. Despife fhe musical persuasion of fhe four froubadours in assemblies and fhe colorful posfers in fhe hall on fhe sophomore bullefin board, fhe freasury failed fo grow. Forfunafely, fhe class refained enough funds from lasf year fo pay fheir expenses. Even fhough ofher classes have a few more honor sfudenfs, fhe sophomores had a large group of sfudenfs on fhe honor roll fhroughouf fhe year. ln fhe fufure fhe sophomores plan fo fulfill fhe prophecy of fheir moffo, Lead, Nof Follow, by expanding fheir energy in all direcfions. Waif unfil l944 and see. Fronf row: Tome, Chalfin, Cornelius, Clark lsecrelary, first semeslerl, Bourne, Trcwhitt, Cochrane, Asahi, Creasy, Avalos, Alamea. Second row: Baker, Bellencourf, Avila, Clement, Beeson, Thelford, Brazil, Andrade, Cunha, Thomas, Carfer. Third row: Hooker, Hoelcslra, E. Gomes, W, Freilas, F. Garcia, Furulcawa, Sousarnian, Scoli, Gilbezrl, Gambill, Horiuchi. Last row: Bandy, Geardian, Hinkle, V. Flores, Bufanda, Mora, Feaver, Ferreira, Howe, Filippi, H. Shelley, l-lernandcl. Froni row: J. Souza, Srevens, Longacre, Joe Roqcrs iprosidcnf first scrncsfori, Qiiiniin. Second row: B. Frciias, Eirod. Gienda Douglas, F. Garza, B. Garcia, P. Fioros, DeRuiier, Ford, Frauonheim, Green Ferguson. Third row: Goidsmith, G-aies. Fuiifa. E. Freiras, Gouiarr, Davies, Esrey, Trimmer, Tribbio, Troxei. Fourfh row: Sairaguchi, E. B. Rocha, E. M. Rocha, C. Perez, Saias, Richards, R. Rose. Johr' Rogers, B. Perry, Parrish E. Souza. Baci row: Pooio, i-iinron, Heao, Vaidez, Sfeohenson Rush. Pearson Tayior, Reeves, Peo-en irepresenfafive iirsr and Treasurer second semesteri, Refers, E. Rogers. Parker Svpfw Fronf row: B. Madruga Neag e, Vain-nzueia, Orriz, K. Perry Masai, Maiiepaard, Vardervoer, Maaskan? Pacheco. Second row: Berqsvom, Minchaca M. Moncibais, Oiiveira, Marvin. Voss. G. Moiio Mon? gorrery, Mirchefi, E. Madruga, Wing, Barceiios, Baci! row: Vosburgh, Bacorne, Turano, Beckman, Bis binq, R. Burr, Braun, Barnes, Vande Beck, Vivalda, Ying. Fronf row: Huffman, Hansen, Hird, Hardcaslle, Harland, Holman, Largenl, Hoany, Macedo, Yoshida, Vlerra. Second row: Wallis. La Moine, Hllburn, Kipp, Linyille, Vienna, L. Ligqeff, Hammond, Jones Wallcins, Downs, Meadows. Third row: McCauley. Mlya, Marslwall, Lew, Long, H. Lee, R. Lee, Nalragawa Mllsuyoshi, Law, J. Layne. Bacll row: Kimble, D. Madruqa. Knepper Mayo llreasurer llrs? semesferj Lindsey, lslwida, M. Ligqelf, Lewis, Menzel. Koonfz, R. Layne, Fulcuoa, .lesperscn lvlce-presldenf llrsf serneslerl . Floor. Dlllor, Easflwouse Ccmlorf, Cooper, Mower, Mulroy, Dunn. Fronf row: Wlecl 'ann, Roherls, Sweeney, Klncaocf, Scene, Reed, Wonq, Worley lsc-crelary second semesrerl, Scogglns, Slweopard, Parks. Second row: Weir. A. Roclva, C. Rose. Smiflw, Rich, N. Perez, H. Me: o. C. Rogers, Serpa, Rolf- man, Walson, Parra. Third row: L. Orflz, Crane, Elario, Shannon, Rufledge. G. Rose, Swlnaan, K. Shel' ley, Cardoza, De Sanlos, Crawford lrepresenfaliye second semeslerl. Back row: Dooley, Essepian, Ealcles, Colla, 6. Garcia, E. Miller, G. Oclwoa, I. Miller, Diclcard, S. Oclwoa,Casemero, Eller lpresldenf second semeslerl. O'Brien, Macias. Froni row: Bergslrorn, Cofla, Braz, Cosfa, Travalini, Second row: Alves, J. Avila, Briano, Hiwano, Ar que-llo, Asalci, Bcclclcy Beeson, E. Beach, Horic, Hase. Third row: Brady, Bagley, Blanchard, Binqliam Briqnfweli' Alexander, Arrvas, Hiclrerson, Howard, Hiclrs, Isliida, Coronado, I. Bridges, Fourfh row: Carnwona, Collins. Cornelius, Camaclwo, Claclcer, G. Avila, C. Bridges, E. Arnoid, Abboff, Azevedo, Treece Hanson lsecrefary second sernesferl, Barron. Back row: Celaya, A. Tsufsui, Corres, Brown Booflie, Brazil, Baldwin, D. Beach, Barbericlc, Alcers, Bowers, Burrus. J Fronf row: Aivir, Garr v, G.Dia1 J. Fifa, Fcrquson, Finiiwr R, Floinlfmr, M. Tsufsui, J. Dias, Essooian D R ul Se Q Pc . cond row: Lafev lyfl i-milf iiiwl wennovfrrf E. Silva, Jcnlcirscn, Ufferlmylc, Jong, V Ywfd P. Vif-rm V'if- fin, Tfwirili li if, -, Ziaronna. Third row: Tfnnfrr, Kendall, lnnmin, S'nar', Y S l'lW Siiyfa, Sw,-1r'n':i,-' Viiliix VVNL V- VTJ-Urri Urderfli C. Willifannz, Maness. Fourilw row: Qing Vllf',J'iAK lVlf1G L,1i lv Slagix Si -- T' a - fre- D. Vieiii W'iIffEd.1if,WQQks. M.Sf1azfa,W0ods, Sifa Frat Baclc row: Orig Sas?-ff Dm S. Siris, Daria if Goiarln, Fcsfe' Ferrr-ro, Daz,-mon :. '2 'ffl den? Xinifv Q - CSV-rl, Fire' Dif, D, Faria, Ercs. Fronf row: Hernandez, Frisso, Haiford, Hunfcr, Haydock, Kerr fyell icader second semesferi, Hari, Second row: M. Faria, Ferreira, Lonqacre, Ligqerf, Lokey, Macom, Dulafiy, L. McCann, D. Mccarfney, McNamara, Meiior. Third row: D. Norman, M. Lowe, Ochoa. Orfcz, Malano, Meirclies, Mcffluckey. McGuire, Miller, Emmeif, Lopes, Marfeiia, McKenzie, D. Garcia. Fourih row: Giacomazzi, Fulcano. Francis, Mafsunaqa, J. McCann. T. McCarYney, Na+aii, Neal, G. Norman, J. Norman, Medefros, Monres. Back row: Loveiand, Lowe, Wesffaii, Diilon, Logan, Gufierrez, Lee, Heuseveidf, Hames, Welr Ton, Jordon. ron? row: Main, Paiurrvbo, Raimussen Iviie Dresidemi Fra' sc '2sifrr1. Vifooufey fprozidewt firzf SONGS' Teri, Norris Saiiecis, B. Wiiiii1rwi,, Porfer, Norred. Second row: E. Frwifas, Pia iiE3CVfTf'3Fy' fire? ara Treas- rer seiono scfvcveri, Rosa, P. Sario, Saicagugiwi, D. Perez Rodrigues, Fernandez, Pore-S, Pbiiips Siherf, Third row: Cabrai, Seymour, S. Freiias, J. Fieicgimf, N.SJri1c, Rodrgucz, Rarwdai. Pruof' Saios, A, Frei'as, Shearer, L. Sarrfos, Runiv, i-iarfmarv. Fourfh row: A, iNA'5'.'iiCC Masfsf Rurra zava, Fmr'ziC'11 Ffvwicr, Peicrf Ruse, Roberwarw freoresf:r1ia ve-afLars? gifs' fern sezord '3'Y4CSiQ'Si, Siwrferirqa, Salazar Laiicey, Haiciwer. Greer. Back row: Wi sow Mva, O Luv' Mlm, Pe ,, Newkrif Wf'Cx Miiis, McDonald, Paredug MacDcn.1 d. Klan, 'W-ai... '?f7TyiT:w'Y775- WMP-wafe-,,,n,,, MOTTO: America, Now and Forever coLoRs. Blue and eaia FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS: ADVISORS: Ivan Griffin, Roberf Sears Woolley firsf semester presidenfg Polley, second-semesfer presidenf Hudson, second-semesfer secrefary, Pia, firsf- semesfer secrefa ry. Jullvw 3 Fiffy years ago, fhe firsf sfudenfs enfered Hanford l-ligh School. Then fhere were only fhree years of high school and freshmen were called iuniors. Affer fiffy years inferesfing changes have faken place. Take inifiafions for example. Many years ago if was fhe fradifion for fhe sophomores fo enferfain fhe freshmen in fhe Armory hall downfown. The freshmen would perform a few silly sfunfs and were given refreshmenfs. The Girls' League Recepfion for freshmen girls is all fhaf remains of fhaf cusfom. In ofher years, freshmen were somefimes fed milk from a boffle, regaled wifh lim- burger cheese, or Tossed info a fish pond. ln recenf years a lovely ride in fhe counfry has been fhe vogue. Buf greafesf of fhem all, is haircuffing. Clippers applied heavily and arfisfically have made social oufcasfs of many freshmen boys for weeks. This year fhe Boys' l-l Club has puf a sfop fo fhis by giving fhe haircuffers a bif of fheir own medicine and, sfrange fo say, one upperclassman did nof appear af school for some weeks. An annual evenf is fhe Freshman-Sophomore brawl. This year fhe freshmen fook fhe sophomores down in fwo of fhe fhree evenfs. Anofher of our achievemenfs was winning fhe Boys' Federafion Baskefball Tournas menf. Feafs like fhis go fo prove fhaf fhe lowly freshman isn'f quife so green affer all. Froni row: Dunn, M. Garcia, Floyd, Donnelley, Gonzales, J. Gufierrez, B. Chavez, F. Garcia, Hawkihs, A. Dias, Champlin. Second row: Creasv, Chandler, E. Serpa, M. Ellis, Dabrifz, Clow, Sawafzke, Ushiro, L. Serpa, Harland, Crass, C. Silva. Third row: Slusher, F. Sanchez, Raulsfon, M. Silva, Sarduis, Clark, Cheek, Campbell, Raineri, Rose, N. Sanchez, J, Wood. Back row: Silveira, Polley lpresidenf second semesferl, J. Souza, Resendez, Joaouin, Rainey, Monie, Seniceros, Verhoeven, Seals, P. Young, Sfrader, Oliveira. Janis Anderson not pictured, Hunk jluma, GX 934' f- Z' f P f f' QQLLH 102-5' 'inpiadgf 0P'q,x, QXQJ fi 11, .F fir! if 'IQ-ix .. Yx-ii. 'hw ! as ff, QA A 14-v' E 5 5 EM? Q? EN QQ q-9 4 pl 'R45 C 4 Sz? cl .1- V 'Sm ,gm- FW' 0 27 fi Q , 9 1 'MLK 0 7' Q . , r' .V fp- l L' ' - 'f R ' ' fb ' , V 1 , - , X 45 ' -5 ' xx V Y Y 4 'N -ri 'N 1 V4 X., . i A XI! f ' ' 4- AG X, 3-1 ' N-f I ww, :ws15i5'f1'fr5a'A-'ll, ,-Lf ' Eff' fliilaf I -522 M --' 1 1213?-'iff ' - 'ff 1. vt- 331 9 Q9 X fli ' F ' 'J' x 31 3 if-' X4 ' Igfiii my 5 x. . gf f f 4 1 - K , f P s X2 . I, 1 4 5 1 1, 3 Mg ki' ' 5 Val, ' Q rw' gi: 5 A Q . 1. fig, '- 5 5 i f Q . if! X HQQQH , i I . i - .Sar a ' If A I E x Q .,. A , ,Lf N ' Q ' J R271 ' A 3 .mtg ' I A 'X , kd' JJ' WY' ' at Q Q 1 -.,f5'6 as Q ei Q Q kim I ds , . it 'aff' gh ww. 6 JR x ' 1 C, ' 'R L. :QL ' ELASSRQDMS Of makmg many books There as no end A d Q 1 ,f' X Clif M' if g pm n much s+udy IS a wearmess of 'rhe flesh Ecclesnaskes ' x , 4 i-Qi' ,IX get -T ' 1 1: -if fa ,4 iwth :Nba JUSTICE JUSTIN MTLLER of The U. S. Court of Appeals, DisTricT of Columbia As every dog has iTs day, so 1899 was The magical year Tor debaTing. The SenaTe, The selecT socieTy Tor debaTers, ThaT year held a debaTe here aT l-lill's Hall wiTh The Visalia Congressmen whose rooTers arrived one hundred sTrong on a special Train, charTered Tor The occasion. The guesTs were enTerTained aT dinner aT The Aborn l-loTel. AT The hall, where There was sTanding room only, The SenaTors and The Congressmen debaTed on This viTal subiecT-Resolved: ThaT The governmenT should own, conTrol, and operaTe The CenTral PaciTic Railroad sysTem.-l-lanTcrd won. LaTer, The SenaTors Traveled To Visalia, by way oT Corcoran and Tulare, Tor a reTurn debaTe, Taking along Their own band Tor supporT. Then There were class Teams. The Middlers called Their socieTy The Regina LiTerarum, and aT one OT iTs meeTings Middler George Fowler gave a sTirring oraTion on Self Reliance. The Junior ScienTiTic DeloaTing SocieTy was called The American SocieTy oT The Nibelungs. During The early l900's debaTing declined, buT in l935, a deparTmenT Tor speech was Tormed, and inTeresT in speech revived. We are proud oT our debaTing Teams, which Tor Tour consecuTive years have won The Kings-Tulare championship and have Twice Tied Tor The Valley championshipl SENATE: FronT row: Roy Newport, Russell Taylor, George Murray, Sid Sharp, Second row: Arthur Miller, Harvey Washburn, Carl LaTimer, unknown. Back row: Joseph Beck, George Beck, Jusfin Miller, Clarence Crowell. DEBATERS ARE GREAT TRAVELERS r T o N Soares, DuBois, Fowler, Wong, J. Soarcs. Back row: Crose, Plummer, Anderson, VesTal, Buckridge. . ' , gf0I1Dll6l6.lQ, J . In spiTe OT Tire problems and TransporTaTion diTTiculTies, The speech deparTmenT has managed To Talce a number oT Tirsl' places and honorable menTions ThroughouT The year. When The order came To prohibiT The use oT cars or buses by school groups Tor inTer- school compeTiTion, The debaTers Toolr To The rails and were Thus able To cornpleTe The year. ATTer several pracTice debaTes wiTh schools oT oTher leagues, debaTing wenT inTo Tull swing wiTh The CounTy DebaTes, held aT Tulare on February TwenTy-TirsT. AT This Tourna- menT each school enTered a Tour-man Team-Two persons debaTing each side oT The guesTion. The proposiTion used aT all TournamenTs during The enTire year was, Resolved: As a perrnane-nT policy, every able-bodied male ciTizen in The UniTed STaTes should be required To have one year oT Tull-Time miliTary Training before aTTaining The presenT draTT age. ATTer winning Top counTy honors, The debaTers hurriedly prepared Tor The TournamenT aT Ripon The Tollowing weelc. AT This conTesT l-lanTord enTered Tour Twoeman Teams. Under This arrangement which has proved mosT successTul, The debaTers argue on boTh The aTTirmaTive and The negaTive of The quesTion, changing sides aTTer every round. There l-lanford Tied Tor Third place. Changing To The Tour-man Team required Tor The Valley TournamenT held aT Madera on March sevenTh, l-lanTord won second place. Because speech werlf and debaTing are open To iuniors and seniors only, iT has been exTremely diTTiculT To compeTe againsT schools which oTTer Tour years OT speech and de- baTe Training. To overcome This handicap, Coach Emily Murray has adopTed a scheme whereby poTenTial debaTers in The Treshman and sophomore classes have an epporTuniTy To Take debaTing as an exTra-curricular acTiviTy, geTTing TogeTher aT nighTs To discuss problems and obTain help Trem Miss Murray. Thus They are able To prepare Thcir speeches and can Talfe parT in TcurnamenTs as lower division debaTers. ln This manner They gain essenTial experience so ThaT when They become iuniors and senicrs They may enTer The debaTe class as veTerans wiTh Their preliminary Training behind Them, ThereTc-re iT is posf sible Ter Them To see Two Tull years oT acTual cempeTiTion as upper division debaTers. Individuals eT The deparTmenT Toolc parT in several craTory conTesTs in The American Legion confesT held in The laTe Tall. RuTh Du Bois placed TirsT in The I-lanTord EliminaTion, and second in The FirsT DisTricT ConTesT. hler subiecT was WhaT We FighT To DeTencli'. Placing second in The l-lanTcrd ConTesT was BeTTy Cdenheimer. ln The CounTy OraTerical ConTesT, compeTing wiTh Visalia and PorTcrvflle, Joe Secres placed TirsT wiTh his America, The l-lope oT The World . The Speech BanqueT is probably The mosT imporTanT evenT oT The year Tor Those inTer- esTed in debaTe and public speaking. All members oT These classes as well as The alumni oT The speech deparTmenT are inviTed To a sumpTuous banqueT held yearly aT Peden's CaTe. This year Joe Soares was elecTed ToasTmasTer OT The evenT held on May TourTeenTh. UNDERCLASS DEBATERS Silva, McNamara, Davidson, Howe, Quinlan, Har Lackey, Neal, Pollev, Merrelles, TrewhiTT4 Coclcrane DEBATE TEAMS Negative: Anderson. J, Soares AffirrnaTive: VesTal, Fowler T wil -5' L 'Tl rr, V ThaT Term Paper Sophomore-Ehglish Play Casa ,-A W.--fs J The L ,,,a-A QW' ' I Gimme an eighT-poinT book! Who swiped my reTerencesf7 'll can'T Think up a Thing To say! and Mrs. Schroeder and her sTaTT, TransTormed inTo a regular inTelligence service, prepare To cope wiTh anoTher end-OT-The-semesTer rush. This semi-annual phenomenon, The climax To weeks OT pleasanT loaTing. aTTecTs nearly everyone. Al- Though The mighTy seniors are sTouT-hearTed enough To grapple wiTh Term Papers, even The wee Fresh' men are expecTed To compose Book ReporTs. Even wiThouT The necessary evils oT Term Papers and reporTs, The Library is an aid Tew oT us could geT along wiThouT. Away back in l895, when The principal oT This high school boughT some glass cases wiTh sTouT locks in which To house The TirsT school library in The valley, he laid The ToundaTion Tor un- Told hours oT pleasure. Though The TirsT TiTTy volumes -valued aT sevenTy-Tive dollars-were kepT under lock and key, Today we have over nine Thousand Three hundred books available To all. ibrary af ar Unsua , Smdicus Momen' K f .E ., Those conTounded numbers which iusT don'T add up righTl I don'T see how 3x plus 2y equals Iz-buT Then maybe iT doesn'T. BeTween Trying To malce prob- lems in maTh come ouT righT and blowing up TesT Tubes in chemisTry and Taking bugs aparT in biology, iT's no wonder a Tellow doesn'T lcnow wheTher he really wanTs To be a research chemisT or a maTh Teacher. BuT laTer when he capTures a TaT-salaried engineering iob, This Tellow will be ThanlcTul Tor The sTiTT courses he has sTruggled Through. Perhaps The Things ThaT sTand ouT mosT in The mind OT a sTudenT aTTer he has Talcen algebra, geomeTry, TrigonomeTry, biology, boTany, physics, or chemisTry aren'T all TacTs. lnsTead There are sTill The quesTions oT why Things acT The way They do. Why do you use ll? ls iT because The subiecT is all Greelc anye way? Why don'T worms like sunshine? Why can'T l pour The waTer inTo The sulphuric acid? Dcb: s lrv1desThc Mass. ne Domain cs QQ .H Biolcgy E 'EC 67 'mv' Lillle lines ol Lalin, Lirlle lines of scan- lvlalne a miglily Virgil and a crazy man. No doulol lliere is slill a loilinq sludenl or lwo wlwo can sympalnize willi llie wriler ol llnis despairing lillle yerse, publislied in llie Janus ol V903 buf mosl ol us aller glancing over llie srudy schedule ol one olll1elirslLalin classes, would llwink our own assiqnmenls very moders ale indeed. Baclc in lhose days lie who could nol spealf lamiliarly of Virgil and l-lorace and Cicero was Considered yory iqnoranl. Freshmen, Mid- dlers, Seniors-all slruqqlod daily willn llie mys- leries ol case, or paused in llwe middle ol some parlicularly vexing passage lo wonder now a popular nero like Caesar lound lime laelween ballles lo wrile sucli a ponderous volume as llwe Commcnfares. Once eacln year all 'rlwree classes polished up llweir coniugalions in prep- Cooperafion ir a Spanlsn case I 4 P A 'ca c b' Sa lor Griswo Oil s ol he i, an, 'neri n u . y only Oderlweirfaer, Little ladvisorl B-:k Third-year Spanish studerls at work-Se habla Espanol aqui Leo Rose in one of his favoriie posilions Frerch sludenrs af ihe bullelin board Friends aralion lor ihe visil ol lhe examiner lrom lhe slaie universiiy. Allired in lheir Sunday pest ihe pelles of lhe day usually acguilled Them- selves very well on ihis alleimporlani occasion. Slill, despile verbs and Virgil and siaie examiners, many a romance was begun under fhe kindly eye oi lvlr. Charles Van Vallcenpurgh, ihe schools iirsi language insiruclor. Perhaps because if seemed easy aller he complexilies ol lhe speech of ihe Caesars, French, begun a year or so afler Laiin, scon pee came one of lhe largesl classes in lhe school, while Spanish, 'rhough ihe lasi lo be inlroduced, gained so rapidly in popularily ihai il is loday ihe largesi language seciion. Teaching melhods have changed a greai deal since Grandma! day, and allhough rhe fundamenlal rules of a language musi slill be masiered, Grandma would find modern class- worlc painless and pleasanl. Today lhe sludenl siudies ihe cusloms and hislory of lhe people whose iongue he is learning and comes ro ap- preciale lheir arf, music, and lileraiure. of Caesar, c rnmonly known as seco G-year Laiin sfudenls C- .fa -4 L 'J!ath,L'ha1mm, The music deparTmenT oT I-lanTord I-ligh School has noT always been The ouTsTanding deparTmenT ThaT iT is Today. This is parTicuf larly True oT The vocal deparTmenT. InsTrumen+aI groups were noT uncommon in The early years oT our school. In I903 The aTTempT To Torm an orchesTra Tailed-and The Mandolin Club resuITed. This club was composed oT TirsT and second mandolin, Two guiTar accompanimenTs, TluTe, corneT, and Trombone. 3 -Ig In December oT I905 a Girls' LiTerary SocieTy was Tormed in compeTiTion wiTh The SenaTe, The boys' debaTing club. The girls meT every Monday, and They devoTed every oTher meeTing To a musical program. The program consisTed oT vocal and insTrumenTaI music and The sTudy oT some greaT corn- posers. By l908 The school boasTed a boys' orchesTra oT abouT eighT members and a mixed glee club oT abouT ThirTy. I-Iowever, even aT This Time There was no head oT The music deparTmenT. InTeresTed TacuITy members oTTen Took charge oT such groups. IT was noT unTil I922 ThaT our high school had a regular music direcTor who Took charge oT The or- chesTra and The band. Vocal music goT iTs acTuaI sTarT in I926. ORCHESTRA IN I9OB: Froni row: Jessie Briner, Marrnion Childress, Charles McCuIIah, Roy Irwin. Back row: Ray Dodge, George Beck, Ray Hayes, Sidney LeggeTT, Mr. TuTTle, Ralph Rice. Una, .Sola To The music deparTmenT oT T-lanTord T-ligh School came a new direcTor This year, Mr. Dale SandiTur, a graduaTe oT The UniversiTy oT CaliTornia and an ac- complished pianisT. Mr. SandiTur supervises piano classes, glee club, and advanced chorus. The advanced chorus, a group oT singers who have presumably had some choral pracTice beTore enTer- ing The class, is an acTive group, oTTen called upon To perTorm Tor The school and The communiTy. Some oT The TirsT programs given by This group were Tor The Bryan Pmmer an Homer WOM PleasanT Wednesday Evening, The Teachers' lnsTi- T A TuTe, and The Kiwanis Club. Singing a program oT ChrisTmas music Tor The Kiwanis Club each year is an insTiTuTion sTarTed by Mr. Erwin RuTT, who Tormerly insTrucTed The group. From members oT This advanced chorus a boys' guarTeTTe and a girls' sexTeTTe, The ChansoneTTes, have been chosen. The sexTeTTe is especially acTive and TreguenTly enTer- Tains clubs, lodges, and churches oT The communiTy. AT ChrisTmas These girls sang over KARM as guesTs oT Mrs. G. C. AdydeloTT, and laTer They were guesTs oT The San Joaquin Valley AssociaTion oT WriTers and ArTisTs. The quarTeTTe, alThough noT as prominenT as lasT year's quarTeTTe, did iTs share oT enTerTaining Tor The Kiwanis and Tor oTher clubs. An opporTuniTy presenTed To The advanced chorus was The chance To sing as a group over The KTKC radio sTaTion. ln early March, ThirTy chorus members wenT To Visalia To give a concerT oT American and paTrioTic numbers. ln The laTe spring several proiecTs were underTalcen by The Choral DeparTmenT oT The school. An EasTer Sunrise Service was again given, wiTh members oT The advanced chorus and oT various church choirs Talcing parT. The chorus gave an EasTer Vesper Service aT The Lemoore Air Bases under The auspices oT The U.S.C. They parTicipaTed in The TesTival To celebraTe The TiTTieTh anniversary oT The school. ADVANCED CHORUS: Fronf row: Du Bois, Hayes, C. Tomer, Van Noori, Chappell, Chaifin, Second row: Smith, L, Tower, Hird, Milwee, Haupf, Bianchi Hoover Ros Rush Lewi Tr xei B k row' M'C'nn VV'ecn an Pf- , v, e, , s, o A. ac . c a , -c m r, ,rm Bmw, Plurrrner, Pirder, Dov e Rhodes. Ai D aro: Sardiiuf. rgfhe BAND: Fronf row: MaioreTTes Wat-iirs, SmI'n, Saylor, arg Fisnerg Fag Twirlers Braoy, Downen, Newkirk, D. Fraifas. Second row: B. FreiTas Skaggs, Linvil e, Jerkenson, P. Creasyf, Marcellus, Kooperaa, EasThouse, Trernper Funuga, Dunrf, Lay'-9, Lorg. Third row: Mellor, M. Creasy, Crose, Marchbanks, Jespersor, Verrue, Vesral, Walker, Sawabre, Ramirez, Si'va, Diesslin, Beach. Fourih row: Eleanor Mulroy, OrTez, MarTin, Trimmer, Brickey, Bisbing, Bfaun Feaver, Gomes, Freud, Ricrmord, Crawford. Back row: BrauTigam, Fowler, Ayers, Stepherscr, Erncsf Muiroy, Lee, Fehf-in Wic-fs lcofoucforl, Thierre Baylcck, Rhodes, Rusn. One OT The besT ways H.U.H.S. geTs iTs excellenT adverTising is Through The band. The HanTord Band is well known and admired ThroughouT The valley. However, This year broughT iT Tame even ouTside iTs ordinary boundaries. During The Thanksgiving vacaTion The band members spenT Two days aT The Long Beach Band Review. By selling liTTle Tags which said, l helped send The HanTord High School Band To The Long Beach Parade, The members were able To geT enough money To make The Trip. AT BakersTield The band was TransTerred Trom The school buses To SanTa Fe buses Tor The resT oT The Trip. IT was all a big Thrill, Tor several sTudenTs had never been To Los Angeles or To The beach. OT course, The Long Beach Trip was The big evenT OT The year, buT There were also oTher Trips which kepT The band in pracTice. The TirsT week oT school The band made iTs annual Trip To BakersTield Tor The Pioneers' Day Parade. The members enjoyed a day as guesTs aT The Kings-Tulare CounTy Fair, perTorming boTh in The aTTernoon and in The evening aT The racevTrack. They wenT To The Riverdale celebraTion lwhere They were served beans Tor lunch aTTer The paradel. AT The ArmisTice Day parade and game The band pe-rTormed admirably, combining wiTh The Lemoore band aT The game Tor a paTrioTic maneuver. Usually The band has a number oT parades in The spring, buT This year all Those evenTs were cancelled because oT The war and The necessiTy oT saving The Tires oT The buses. However, The band played aT nearly all The TooTball games, and The maioreTTes and Tlag Twirlers delighTed The baskeTbaII Tans wiTh several snappy rouTines. ln addiTion They also played Tor a PleasanT Wednesday Evening in The Tall and gave an Evening ConcerT in The spring. They marched in The parade on Army Day and gave a concerT aT The Lemoore Air Base. I lzandzbao 6'dl'lftlbLZ2, Thus year HanTord Hugh has had Tne besT orchc-sTra ThaT uT has had Tor several years For quuTe a long Tme The musu cuans have preTerred To be un The band unsTead oT The or chesTra because The band had more acTuvuTues BuT Thus year a Tew oT The beTTer musucuans louned The orchesTra Prob ably one reason Tor Thus was ThaT The band had To cancel mosT oT uTs sprung parade work and do more home concerT work ln a concerT very oTTen an orchesTra ouTshuhes a band Thus The success oT The H U H S orchesTra Thus year The orchesTra Turnushed very eThereal and weurd musuc Tor The TursT Senuor Play The lVloonsTone As The play was a mysTery Tull OT sTolen duamonds vullauns deTecTuves and murders The orchesTra TelT ThaT such selecTuons as The Dagger Dance would be very appropruaTe As a conurasT They played some very lughT happy selecTuons Tor The sprung producTuon Young Aprul As Thus was a lughT romanTuc comedy The orchesTra chose The Three MuslceTeers as a basuc selechon As a new proIecT Thus year The orchesTra combuned wuTh The advanced chorus and pre senTed selecTuons Tor ShowboaT The program whuch uncluded solos combuned chorus selecTuons and Tap dances all accompanued by The orche-sTra was TursT presenTed aT a sTudenT body meeTung on Aprul I5 Many sTudenTs commenTed ThaT uT was The besT enTer TaunmenT we had had aT a sTudenT body meeTunq Tor quuTe a long Tume lT was so well receuved ThaT uT was repeaTed Tor The l:uTure Freshmen who vusuTed on Aprul 28 ORCHESTRA Fronf ro Mc a l os a c eT e HaT c row We c s J J Q e a eva ar co '-loc sta o o l I . . u . . u 7 , . . . . . ,, uu - - - . - u u u - uu uu . L - . . - u u A X - uu . uu - A A uu uu - - u u ' . uu uu . . . - u u . . f- . . w: C u eu, Woo , S'nlTh Mulrov, M dd x, Rlch, Ardrcws Van der Vo Gr gory, U' ll Ba k 3 7 rs lcifr Uorl, Pafrl 5 oar uln, Lowe, F rr Ir , V 5 , Br u lqarn P- ec, Freund, FC Van 'e Beek, Dlesslin, Trervuoerx L nq. 75 Ad d Ari Srudenls IO4 Beginners ir The A rlg Jim Bnlmnuhn Q The arl' sfudenrs of l-lanford High School have a differenl program 'ro follow each year. The begin- ners sludy slill-life drawings, color and values, de- sign, lellering, figure drawing, and perspeclive, sub- iecls which make up Jrheir basic lraining. ln +he 'firsf semesler of Arr ll 'rhe course consisls of pen and ink Techniques and beginnners' lraining in phases of ad- verlising, including posler making, magazine layoul, illuslralions for book covers, and counler display work. This class usually designs American Legion poppy poslers each year. During +he las+ quarler of Arl ll Jrhe girls devole lheir lime 'ro coslume design- ing, and 'rhe boys conlinue wifh adverlising or begin- ners' wafer colors. The lhird and fourfh year arf classes work logefher and learn lhe silk screen process, used lor posler and program work. They also learn lhe slencil process of illuslrafions or for designing lable clolhs, luncheon sefs, and handkerchiels. There are also advanced coslume design, slage painling, Janus ar+ work, and box making, which consisls mainly in designing l'he paper covers. The work of The ar? classes can be seen +hroughou+ lhe school. The foolball and baskelball poslers and senior play poslers were proiecls of advanced arl sludenls. They also do The maiorily of work on lhe backslage sels for lhe plays, and arl sfudenls design The Senior Ball bids and programs. The arl deparl- menl always models any high school lloal enlered in communily celebralions. A huge, Tii'rie+h-anniver- sary birlhday cake, for The Armisfice parade, was lhis year's conlribulion. L' UL Nearly everyone, Trom GreaTfAunT MaThilda down To liTTle Junior, enioys having his picTure Taken. Even our haughTy seniors will Trek miles To Tind a phoTographer who can make a pug nose and Treckles seem glamorous. BuT There is a greaT deal more To Taking a good picTure Than iusT aiming The camera and clicking The shuTTer, as Those who have Tried iT know only Too well. The skillTully-composed shoTs Turned ouT by our phoTography class are prooT ThaT They go inTo This TascinaTing subiecT very Thoroughly. FirsT, They sTudy The elemenTs necessary To good composiTion-Tinding The correcT angle oT view, selecTing The proper lighTing eTTecT, deciding iusT whaT To include in The scene. The diTTerenT Types oT Tilm and Their characTerisTics are considered nexT, and Then, when The picTure has been successfully Taken, comes The imporTanT work oT developing. Here The class geTs valuable experience by mixing Their own developers and choosing The proper paper Tor The prinT. The Toning is decided upon and applied, and The Tinished producT is ready To be mounTed and placed on exhibiTion. The yellow and sTained Tingers oT The cameraman do noT mark him as a Tobacco addicT as one mighT suspecT3 raTher, They are a badge of meriT, proving ThaT he has spenT many busy hours in ThaT sancTuary oT all phoTographers, The darkroom. This is The TirsT class oT iTs kind in The hisTory oT our school, and iT is necessarily small so ThaT everyone may have a chance To use The equipmenT. STudenTs are building up The equipmenT needed Tor The compleTe developing and enlarging process. The class has produced some ouTsTanding phoTographs, and The exhibiTions in The school library have been very popular. A Bi? of A-I Phomgraphy by Robe T T T e Cl s ses The Haa Hall Lab for Develo in cg, ,fl sir S sx12 Wx If 31111, Um Homo, lns yeir flwe Home Economics Deparfmenf has al fle advanfages. To sfarf ouf, fney nave fnree new oaclfers--Mfss LaVon Plwllnps, lvllss Mllored Moran, and Mlss Doroflny Praff. They lnave also a ne:-.f foods laboraforyf wlflf one complefe lclfclwen fo every four people. Tlfese lclfcfens are up fo ffme minue ln every defall, and slwlnlng in new green enamel. Some excepfionally flne work Is being done ln semfg. Tlne glrls nof only malce cofbes for ffneme selves buf for flue younger generafion. ln addiflon flwey have assisfed flue Red Cross by making garf menfs for babies and small children. In lfandcraff fbe glrls saflsfy flfe Creaflve urge as flwey malce flings for giffs and for flfelr bomes. Cooking Glrls Enjoy a Meal In flue New Foods Laborafory A Corner of fhe Handcraff Room A Flfflng Experf Learns by Doing vw The Office Pradice Class in AcTion jun, UMR ln The commercial classes oT T-lanTord T-ligh School we see The poTenTial sTenographers and business leaders. These boys and girls wfli be able To Think Tor and supp:rT Themselves when hey gragucfe Trom high sihoolf Ter sTi:d1f-'ls have The eo- f porTuniTy OT working wiTh The aeTual machines They will come O :ross in Their Tulure business liTe, and They are given prac- Tga insTrueTion in shorThancl, Typing, and business Tunclaf WSU o 5. The commercial classes have always been The unknown heipersm in many ways. They prinT The Senior Play programs and oozens oT programs Tor oTher school acTiviTies aT eosT, Thus saving a sizeable amounT oT Time and money. They also Turn ouT a maioriTy OT The TesTs which are ConTinually being TT1rusT under our unwilling eyes. The commercial courses are undoubTedly among The mosT popular oTTered. The gualiTy OT The sTudenTs' worlc is shown by The number who regularly pass The Gregg and Typing speed TesTs. ShorThand Pace-SeTTers: Freeman, T-liwano, Kishiue. Hands in Posilion, Go! And The Typing Class ls Off Ggain Careful Plar-5 Precede The CorsTrucTien of Fine Furai'u'e There is one place in The bounds oT This greaT high school louTside OT The boys' gyml, ThaT you seldom see a person oT The Temale sex, and ThaT is The boys' shops. The only Time one sees a girl in These parTs is when she wanTs someThing made or repaired. These boys are The ones ThaT Tear down an old auTomobile and see whaT makes iT Tick. ATTer They Tinish working iT over and puTTing iT back inTo TirsT-class condiTion, iT rolls OTT The assembly line and ouT onTo The road Tor The TesT run. MosT OT you have seen This come oTT, even Trom The main building. Maybe some oT These working boys in our shop will be The Fords and Chryslers oT Tomorrow. ParT oT The machine shop is Turned inTo an auTo-painTing planT, and you oughT To see The good iobs They have compleTed. An old car will come ouT Trom under The hands oT These experTs in Their Trade, looking like new. MosT oT The sTudenTs ride on The buses, buT do noT realize The Trouble and painsTaking eTTorT puT inTo keeping Them in A-l condiTion. You can Thank The boys who Take care OT The buses, washing, cleaning The inside and lubricaTing Them. IT There is anyThing ThaT needs Tixing, iT is rushed ouT To The shops Tor a recondiTioning iob. Besides Tixing cars and buses The shop boys learn how To weld and work wiTh The laThe, skills which will be very imporTanT To have wiTh The war in progress. The oTher main shop is The woodwork deparTmenT. Some oT The mosT beauTiTul TurniTure ThaT you ever laid eyes on is made righT here aT high school. IT you ever wanT To see some-Thing done wiTh skill and speeol, you should journey To woodwork, where boys are Turning ouT anyThing Trom a gavel To a lamp' sTand. Making a Table is noT as simple as iT looks: a person doesn'T sTarT righT ouT building. l3irsT, There musT be a plan drawn and Then an esTimaTe oT The cosT oT The lumber. Then The Trouble has iusT sTarTed. CuTT4ng The lumber. puTTing iT TogeTher, Jim Silvia sand ng ul and llwen varnrslwlng rnalqe nl a lunlslmed producl vvlnclw really loolcs swel Everyone vvlmo wenl lo Exlwubll Nlglwl wlnclw lsll1e nlglul of nlolwls lor llxe woodwork deparlrnenl saw all llwe llne puece cl lurnnlure vvluclw were lurned oul ln llme year I94I 42 d s p ayed IU llme Gym Wnen llme maln buudlng wanls a boolc case or lable l lla s d parlrnenl wlnclw lurns oul llme llnlslwed producl ollew fvlllw very lllle creoll guvcn lo llwenw lor llwe splend d worlc enlor Play scenes are bumll and llne senlors owe lvlr Marcellus and lms ass slanls a deb ol gralnlude for 'rlwe lane worlc Wlln llme war golng on llme woodwork deloarlmenl d d ls lware bulldlng scrne lane slre clwers and model avrplanes lor llwe Navy deoarlrnem rnenlals lauglwl by Mr Slrader Slnce llxe class lS nol very large rnore lime can be de voled lo lndnvlduals so llwal llme boys can become ellucvenl rn llweur work Besldes gel lrng llme bcok learnlng oul ol flue course llmey also gel llwe olarn lundarnenla s ol uve :ng and drllllng Wlwen llwe boys complele ll1e course ll1ey wall be able lo lalce a 'ob al Loclclweed Douglas or any ol llwe oll1er alrcrall nduslrues Tlus course ll ll e war con lmues wsll be valuable ln supplying boys lo lake llme place ol dralled men Sl II anoll1er deparlmenl an 'flue slwops lS farm meclwanucs wl1ucl1 IS llwe ollmer lwall ol llme agrrcullure course ln farm rnecl1an1cs llwe boys are lauglml lo build anyllwung from a feed box lor llme cluclcens lo a l1uge cow lrauler Tlus experlence IS very good lor llme boys and as somellwung llwey can use wlwen llwey are oul on llxelr own farm and l1avelo bu Id somellnng 'rllemselves Tss os efkeeeac ' ' ' s . r ' ' , ' s 1 s l ' q . ' if l , I ls X - 3 l. . 6 I U l S ' ' ' , A . , . . , . . 4 . T , ' e ' l ' A i l The newesl slwop course, and one ol llwe newesl ln llwe high scllool, ls Aeroplane 'Funda- . . . l -. L. . ' l , , 1 V ' I l f' I Where Tl e Jalc'.:7 s r R luv r 'e gm 1 ,fam .1 Though lhe Meleor is a comparalive baby in lhe lilerary deparfmenl, il has been in exislence since l9I9. Even recenlly fhe paper was an exlracurricular aclivily and was boughlr by yearly subscriplion or lor live cenls a copy. In l925, +he paper was made a parf of rhe school curriculum, was Taken over by +he Sludenl Body and issued bi-weelcly lo Sludenl Body Card holders. Las? year lhe paper was enlarged, and lhis year an amendmenl was added To lhe Sludenl Body Conslilulion providing 'lhal lhe Edilor and Business Manager should be appoinfed by fhe advisor, subiecl lo lhe approval ol lhe Execufive Commilfee. Allhough Kafhleen Whea+'s inferview wifh Mrs. Roosevell was fhe high poinl in Meleor achievemenls, reporlers have been honored from lime +o lime wilh inlerviews wifh such people as Senalor La Follelle, John Phillip Souza, Roy Chapman Andrews, Veloz and Yolanda, Ted Lewis, as well as olhers of less nole. Despile our pride in pasl achievemenls one lhing Thal everyone wanfs lo lcnow abou? is fhe paper ilsell. So lhis arlicle is a sorl of inside sfory ol a slory. Wilhouf an edilor, lhe paper would be nolhing, for he answers queslions, assigns sfories, and works in coniunclion wifh assislanl edilors, business manager, advisor, and slaff. l-le is 'lhe cenlral cog of lhe machine. When a slory is assigned on Monday morning, +he lirsl lhing each reporler does is 'lo loolc up any malerial lhal may be in lhe files. l-'le lhen slarls on his inlerview, armed only wifh his Me+eor Pass and his recenlly acquired lcnowledge of how +o inferview peo- ple. Afler +he inferview 'rhe reporlrer re+urns 'ro wrife his slory. On Friday afler school 'rhe paper is puf out Firsf, fhe advisor checks 'For errors in punclualion, and fyping, and fhe edilor recheclcs. Meanwhile, aller 'rhe business mana- ger has pasled lhe ads in +he dummy, lhe copy is puf in by fhe edilor, who also has fo rewri+e any bad slory. This usually lakes +hree or four hours, and somelimes longer. All nofalions for lale s+ories are made, and lhe paper is pul' To bed. The copy is lhen senl' +o +he prinfer and is baclc lo lhe sludenls on lhe following Tuesday. Regardless of any doubls +he edilor may have had, lhe paper always comes oul. I+ may sound like hard worlc-il is-buf il's fun, loo. There's somelhing lascinaling abouf if-bu+ you have lo fry if 'ro lind out The Sfalf: Dawson, Cromwell, Tpoofsc Q wi'-EC alvfsoi Rcbmzfl r1 Q Bfai. :,sY'iAss H J' mf' B135-. Sci'-S Lvzfs SMJWH 5 91 1154 iii Circukafion Manage' Rogers and Assisfamfs, Smifk avd Ferreha X 'X g... f will , , ily! lil, f T -iliilffuj WTZQES! l?? wi iv 9 N ll Qhgg hf4?qgy ' l jhnnwzci Wow Today as you are glancing Thrcugh The one hundred and sevenTy smooTh pages oT your Janus, wiTh iTs heavy padded cover, I would like To Take you back To The Time when The Janus conTained TourTeen pages, covers oT heavy paper, and no picf Tures. Impossible? No, Tor The TirsTJanus was iusT such a volume. BuT waiT, youlll need a beTTer descripTion cT The book i'l',l Q ' Y ivlll yr ,,,i hi , illlll TT 4 lllwf ll ii Q i is .ii M f ll i Till v v sl i ddlr TKl CghlhaFl y , fajb, 7 5- xx 1, l l ll ' fl 'ltr TRU t l, T dll I-l A r' Q ali i lywy -B - Wu!! Q.. ii i Nvqdnl WI -T - X, lswlnplulliu T Y , T l 'll li ill l ,lillllililiillllllllill i T. fl?35511:,ii1sf'1211sfiffefi sTaTT wiTh Ruby Powell as ediTor and John Ross as business manager. This TirsT Janus TuncTioned in much The same way as our lVleTeor, Tor iT was published monThly and sold aT Tive cenTs a copy. The conTenTs oT The paper included arTicles Trom The various deparTmenTs oT The school: maThemaTics, so- called belles-leTTres, currenT evenTs, and liTerary criTicisms. The publicaTion was colored wiTh ediTorial commenTs, local happenings, and asTonishing poems. The ThoughTs oT These poems were oTTen quiTe sublime, and were evidenTly considered loTTy, inspired verse by The youThTul poeTs. One parTicular lnvocaTion enTreaTed The paTron godll Janus To bless and smile upon This humble eTTorT oT mankind, and The inTroducTory poem, paT' Terned aTTer l.ongTellow's Evangeline, declared ThaT The Janus would be a sunbeam oT TruTh and oT virTue, To glaclden The homes oT Kings CounTy. The reason Tor calling This monThly magazine The Janus was ThaT This Two-Taced god represenTed The purpose oT l-TanTord loligh School. lT inTended To express in a Tone OT JANUS STAFF OF I9I5 FronT row: lrez Hubbard, Mariorie Gribi, Margaret Orchard, Helen Rice, Lela Cox. Second row: Peler Verkwi, Grace Beekhuis, Errilv Murray, AlberT PeTerson, Grace Sears. Back row: Merrill Miller, Elhel Rice, Harry Gus'aTson, Ben SuTTon, Sibyl B'akeley, Cecil Finley, Helen Diehl, Paul Shafer. youlh lhal which we are now galherfng Q from The accumulalion of ages of lcnowl- l edge. Bul however quainl This Tirsl num- ber was, il' was The slarl' ol a splendid lradilion in The school. The Tirsf Commencemenl issue was an exlravaganl erlorl wilh piclures of lhe graduales, carloons of Jreachers, and pages of ioshes , This elaborale issue was The beginning of our modern annual. The Januses of The early nineleen hun- dreds were very similar To 'rhe lirsl' issues in slyle and conlenl. As The lilerary con- lribulions became more numerous and lenglhy-verilable essays on such sub- iecls as l.ongTellow's l-liawa+ha and Human Nalure in lvlylhologyu - The price of The Janus gradually advanced To +oday's price, lwo dollars. Shorfly afler l9I5 The slyle ol: lhe Janus began lo change. The Meleor had been launched, and 'rhe Janus wilhin a 'Few years changed from a magazine con- laining Jrhe class prophecies, personal his- lories, and baby piclures lo a piclorial record of nine monlhs of school life. The clubs of The school began lo appear in Haupf, Edifor l.aMoine, Business Manager THE STAFF Gribi, pholographerg Furulcawa, assisfanl girls' sporlsg Anderson, freshrneng Srnifh, lseniorsg Highf, girls' sporlsg Eaclrles, acfiviliesg Allen, assislan? aclivifiesg Magnuson, organizaficnsg Odenheimer, luniorsg Huffman, sophomores, Haun, phofographerg Rilchie, boys' sporls. W . 5 Slaff Arrisis, Cassidy and Freund ofoqrapher Haun and His Candid Camera as nf' lhe book, and so did shorr seclions devol- ed To pe-rsonaliries and snapshors. Of course rhe lilerary deparlmenr was srill mosr promineni. Bul occasionally ac- lion piclures would appear in which lhe evidenlly posed subiecls would be ener- gelically engaged in doing nolhing. The lasl few years have wiinessed a def cided change in yearbooks and in our own Janus. While only a few years ago ninely per cenl ol lhe piciures were ol boys and girls slanding in rows, posed for class or club piclures, 'roday rhe lrend is lo porlray school liie as we find il. Thus, allhough a number ol piclures musl slill be posed, il is possible ro pose lhem in Jrhe casual surrounding ol daily school life. VJe like lo compare lhe Janus ro 'rhe popular picrorial magazines which nar- rale lhe slory of 'rhe week's eyenls in pic- lures. This year's slaii has lhe added privilege ol picking up lhe Jrhreads oi filly years of high school and weaving Them inlo a connecied slory of The lradilions, lives, and achievemenrs of l-lanford l-ligh siudenrs and graduales. JANUS EDITORS Seaied l-laupr, McNamara, iypisfg Wilson, lavoulsg LaMoine1J. L, Brown, advisor. Standing: DuBois, fearureg Saylor, assisfanl layoulg Spear, assisranl ediforg Slewarr, advisor. Q 5. '4 4, Kg. r, IM F fv 4 J N! X-' IAQ, fi .x M' I um . Sr? F is 'X 1 IZ 6 '- 'k g ,J W gn' meh!-xJ,.,,?.J QA- A S ml' A 3' X J 521 4 fi gxgl 'lf 'fl'-QL 7 9' 1-9,-ya df H- ,, fr ia? Q ' E +- gf up-H' J N Q-774 SEQ. nl .fd N 67 ix 79 R- if QQ? Q EJ NK , 11 Nui 452 15 f qL':Mk..,. I x 'W' D' I I' ., .,,,, S Q xx 'f -' Ni Q - - 75 .' 1 9 N :X id' ' M, K - fl 11' -- KW' ,M U xt . + if-fs-Q fi-' , , C 'nr- .wwx . Q1 5,4 : v , 5 V S v L , 5, ' ' R, 77, F 1 ,f'A'A' - ., X. . .2 5 g i QQ' At . S Wifi '5Hv45..g,,,x4,'gg5qQsE2' 3? v'- ' 'M ' mf -X 19 rafsfiff 2 x r 4. f fy 1 1S4'm'i5L, ,f It . A-wi: 4 , W , ' g A oe' f fi SH- ' 4 J f - -' .41 1 S 1 an A 'KY ..- ,'7I7.'v :'f'f--.-JSA f?'gslwnf'f.'.-Eiglfliifif tp fi? .tif :Egg-g5.g.,? L' jg. ,Q X gag? hgiQ:p'!.:rg5,' -upfad 2 -4 . Q .. V, ,1 .QU ,gym V, . 1, K, v i I! M if 1 I, Er ',',,- , . 'f I if A!! K ' Af! jf' 7 Q: I.. I 4 . if s Lg fi 5 yb V75 .S 1' I U5 . -, ', V V - . A Nw? , .C ar N if 9 ...- Qi S fr sr ' if 'dr - g l B -awvp-L -Q, ' ' 'BD' A, X 3'-P- 5'f M A E ,J49 7' v 1 fi- I F -W QQ! altar R' ATIFHLHESTMGES Shoulder 'ro shoulder Fiqh? and win Brave Sons of Ha mcord F-hgh HU!-IS Song pr r nn X 535' '35 Jffo ,Q .av I PM J x . 'U Q 'E ' ' 0 I ' 1 ' 9 :P Q ,I N ,- - Z! .IL if f ,- et f Y wi if N 'GPX '7' .. ,- Y ts 1, ' x - 4 T v vs 'fF 'XN'n fs '-, Q 5- Nw xl Hianfa, 0,2 Utlum, mtlqd, f, E Y... --Z ' .-..-ii. .ss-'25-...sl Since The beginning oi 'rhe alhlelic hislory oi lhe school, Hanford has lurned oul some greal alhlelese-Sam Belah, a lraclc slar who wenl lo lhe Olympics: Cornelius Warmer- dam, who has brolcen all pole-vaulling records, Berl' Grihin and Lelano Rice, loolball champions: Dominic lvlora, baslcelball and baseball slar' and Bulch Simas, an all-arouncl, four-sporl alhlele. There have been some oulslanding leams, loo: nofably ihe ioolball leam ol l935f36, The B baslcelball leam oi l926, and lhe A baslcelball leam ol l93I, and lhe len Valley championship leams in lraclc. Foolball was inlroduced in I899, when lwo games were losl lo Fresno and Visalia. Afler a brief ancl ralher unsuccessful hislory lhe sporl was given up unlil l908. Baseball and lraclc were me-nlionecl lreguenlly in lhe early Januses. Mr. Roberl Monfgomery was one of fhe early baslcelball coaches, and aboul lhe same lime he was coaching, lhe school symbol, lhe Bullpup, came inlo exislence. TRACK TEAM OF i905 Fron+ row: Russel Taylor, Charley Young, Marion Heffon, Herndon Hilchceck, Second row: Hugo Buckner, lv1r.E.l-l. Walker, Mr, A. S. Boulware, Forrest Kerr, Sfanding: Lee Sloan,Ar1hur Kerar, Sam Bellah, Reed I-loyl, Charlcs Furby, Vlil iam Young. fsvlvlhviflw 69u.mwwLJ ' VarsiTy TooTball, This year, had iTs mosT successTul season in many years. The new coach, Max Belko, a sTudenT oT The laTe Howard Jones, broughT To HanTord High The SouThern Cali- Tornia sTyIe oT play, which was new To The Bullpups. AnoTher addiTion To The HanTord High TaculTy and coaching sTaTT was Nick Pappas, also Trom SouThern CaliTornia. Coach Pappas Took on a Tull-Time job wiTh The lighTweighTs. Many oT The Bullpups' TirsT sTringers had graduaTed and Their posiTions were ThoughT To be hard To Till, buT by puTTing TogeTher holdovers Trom lasT year and some Tine maTerial which had moved up Trom The lighTweighTs, Coach Bellco produced a winning com- l3inaTion Tor HanTord. The players, who were under sTricT Training rules and had puT in hours oT hard worlc, had Two good pracTice games wiTh Sanger and Edison Tech, and reached Their pealc iusT as The league sea- son sTarTed. ln The TirsT league game, HanTord deTeaTed Tulare, I2-6, in a rough and Tumble game. The Bullpups' second TilT was wiTh The Pioneers oT Visalia, one oT The mosT exciTing and Thrilling games oT The season. BoTh Teams scored in The TirsT quarTer, and in The Third Visalia was leading, 7-6, only To lose in The lasT min- uTes oT play, when Gus Diesslin bolTed Through The line and blocked a lciclc, giving The Bullpups a saTeTy and Two poinTs. Han- Tord, aTTer a hard-ToughT season, Tinished in Third place, while PorTerville and Delano Tied Tor TirsT. ArmisTice Day, when HanTord and Lemoore renewed Their ancienT rivalry, The Bullpups goT sweeT revenge Trom The Tigers. From The opening kiclcoTT HanTord dominaTed The game, so ouT- HEAVYWEIGHT FOOTBALL TEAM: Fronf row: Harper, Wynne, Series, Turano, Diesslin, Nardini, Duffy, Dias, Linsley. dT'T ckr C ch B llc F g s M Ts naga Marsh Hill Thomas Second a i, Cardoza, Prou I . Ba ow: oa e o, er u on, a u , , , , p Ochoa, PaTTon, Oliver, Griner, Crawford, MaTa, BairsTow, Lopez, Morales. 3 ,, 2 ' if ,ii S' f 1 Jfiuif., Q. ,M , New M- w-lnlrii ihivg playing The Tigers in every parT ThaT The Bullpups achieved The onefsided Triumph oT 3740. For The TirsT Time in years The varsiTy placed Three players lall seniorsl on The all-counTy Team: LiTTle Frank Cardoza, hard-run- ning halTbaclc7 Gus Diesslin, pivoT man and mainsTay oT The Bull- pups' Torward wall: and Ed Dias, pass-shagging end. The lighTweighTs were noT so successTul as in pasT years, losing Two and winning Three games. All oT lasT season's Team had graduaTed or had moved up To The heavyweighTs, leaving a loT oT small and inexperienced players. However, wiTh all ThaT To conTend wiTh, The new lighTweighT coach, Nick Pappas, whipped TogeTher a very scrappy Team. The Terriers' TirsT vicTory came Trom The Papooses oT Tulare High. Neil Odom, Tullbaclc, spun over The wealc side OT The line and TwisTed 30 yards Tor The lone Touchdown oT The game. ln The second TilT oT The league season The Terriers deTeaTed The Voo- doos oT Visalia. Under The UniversiTy oT SouThern CaliTornia's sysTem oT play The quarTerbaclc is The main cog, and Junior Hinlcle direcTed The aTTaclc Tor The Terriers. His brillianT oTTensive sTraTegy and hard running, combined wiTh his good deTensive play, made him one oT The besT Tailbaclcs in The Tri-counTy league. Bob Johns, cenTer, was a greaT deTensive player. The Two deTeaTs suTTered by The Terriers were aT The hands of Delano and PorTerville, Teams which laTer Tied Tor The counTy championship. LTGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL TEAM: Fronf row: Harpeh Wada, Wheeler, TokurnoTo, J hns M Do ald o e Coach Pappas. Second row: Ferguson, PuckeTT, Silva, Odom, Hinkie, J, Morales. Bac ro S rader Parke Mac as Newkirk, Mayo, Seymour, Finch, M. Sanchez, MaTa, Derharn, Correiius, Layne, Fukuoa Ha ck Mo ales a a g.ichi, Rogers, Woolley, N. Sanchez, Cornacho, Banoy, Donnelley, Ishida, Jespcrson, M llc Gc'don, Mills. ew ...,. . Q gg?-ffm 'gffgffg . wi-sf sae Q Q Q Q ag gs sm F jhat HEAVYWEIGHT FOOTBALL Hanford-Tulare l-lanlord-Visalia , l-lamford-Porlervllle l-lanlord-Delano Hanford-Lemoore l-lanlcrcz-LlvdSay LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL l-lanlord-Tulare , Hanford-Visalia H, l-lanlord-Porlerville l-lanlord-Delano l-lanlorcl-Lindsay From fop fo boffom: Al 'Pe Armlsvlce Day Game A l-lafs-Fc.1gHlGame ln We Bow WI2- 7 8- 7 O-26 I3-39 37- 6 39- O 7- O 7- O 6-26 6-I4 6-6 THQ Ba'd Pafades Belweer l-lalves Valle. ClWa 'oiovsVo Team, l936: Kerr Rgfhtu, Mackey, A'GSVSOU, row: Beffercoqri, Fernamoes, Blow F. Elserlauef, DerPafn. Third row: Silva Hill, Sfrinqer, Fourlh row: Soares, R, Els-enlauer, Semas, Sa row: Kalal, Mclr-7urH, Slelller, Dlbcle. Firsf row: Weider: Hampvlre, Second ers, Frellas, Wllfcm, Mala, Cardin, Rose, Didleu, Kandarlam, rdsfrom, Klng. Flffh Naqafafi, Swanson, 9 an, 432, jnld, H EAVYWEIGHT BASKETBALL Hanford-Dinuba Hanford-Delano Hanford-Visalia Hanford-Tulare Hanford-Porierviife Hanford-Dinuba Han'FordfDelano Hanford-Visalia Hanford-Tulare , Hanford-Por+ervil!e LIGHTWEIGHT BASKETBALL Hanford-Dinuba . Hanford-Delano Hanford-Visalia Hanford-Tulare Hanford-Porferviiie Hanford-Dinuba Hanford-Delano Hanford-Visalia Hanford-Tulare Hanford-Por+efvil3e From fop fo bofiomz I5fI3 ,I7-32 I8-2I I I- 9 28-36 23-22 ,I6-26 222-30 ,28-26 22-I7 ,23-28 I7'34 20-33 IO-33 I4-24 .I7-I8 ,l6f3O , 9-I5 23-I5 ,2O-33 Ali-Comfy G-uafd, Refra with Coaches Andersen and Belko When ine Varsify Defeafed Hanford scores aqairsf Visaiia Pioneers Vaiiey Championship Team, I93I: Marshall. Sfeve Adamske, Richard Maynard Danlsfrom, Dominic Mora, George Jean Buckner, Coach Anderson. Joe Allen wa member of The team. Lafimerx Bassett Rogers, s a'so a wi iw-'if-Q 10,3 Hanford' Hanfordll Hanfordlll The BaslceTba ll Officials jluz, z8a.4ketlmlL VVinTer broughT wiTh iT The baslceTball season, which al- ways carries The Thrills, moans, boos, and spills ThaT go wiTh ThaT popular sporT. HanTord varsiTy This year, wiTh a new coach and The besT maTerial in many years, wenT inTo The season and won halT oT Their games. All Through The pracTice season, Coach Bellco was Trying To Tind The besT combinaTion Tor The league season. The Team ThaT made The grade was composed oT Bill Renna, Franlc Cardoza, Dale Menzel, Jaclc HinTon, and Herb Alves, a quinTeTTe which played mosT oT The games. And since These boys played TogeTher mosT oT The season, They de- veloped a very superior brand oT Teamworlc. The Bullpups sTarTed The league season wiTh a bang by coming Trom behind To deTeaT Dinuba in The lasT guarTer. BUT The glory was shorT-lived, Tor in The nexT Two games The varsiTy was beaTen by Visalia and Dinuba by very close margins. However, HanTord came To liTe again in The TourTh game oT The season and deTeaTed Tulare by The sur- prisingly low score oT I I-9. BUT playing Two nighTs in a row proved Too much Tor The Bullpups, who were beaTen by PorTerville The nexT nighT. The second halT oT The league proved To be much beTTer, Tor HanTord won Three games and losT only Two. They beaT Dinuba Tor The second Time buT again losT To Visalia and Delano. The Bullpups were quiTe oul' oT Torm when They played Visalia: They should have won going away. Coach Bellco, Tor The Two remaining games, inTroduced a new oTTensive which The Team piclced up very rapidly, and wi+h This new oTTense They succeeded in decisively de- TeaTing Tulare and PorTerville. VARSITY BASKETBALL SQUAD: Fronf row: Hinfon, F. Cardoza, W, Mafa, F. Mata, Dillon. Second row: Manager Morales, A. Cardoza, Fi ipoi, Billings- ly, Tripp, Scorer Hyper, Back row: Alves, Menzel, Renna, Braufigam, Leoni, Coach Bellmo. B CLASS BASKETBALL Fronf Seniors like Bill Renna, Franlc Cardoza, and Dale Menzel will be missed greaTly when baslceTball rolls around nexT year. Renna, versaTile guard and mainsTay oT The Team, made The annual all-counTy baslceTball Team which was chosen by The coaches oT The counTy. Wifh The holdovers Trom This year and some Tine reserve maTerial, l-lanTord rooTers should look Torward To a good baslceTball season nexT year, iT war condiTions permET inTereschool compeTiTion. Since noT a single leTTerman reTurned Trom lasT year's Team, The Terriers had The mosT disasTrous season in many years. Players moving up Trom C class and The reserves Trom lasT year could noT Till The shoes oT lasT year's Team. Fred l-linlcle, T-larry Miya, Ted CrawTord, Richard Rose, and Mac lshida Tormed The Trameworlc oT The Team. They played Their very hearTs ouT louT did noT have The experience or The heigh+ To deTeaT The opposing Teams. The Terriers waiTed many weelcs beTore The vicTory which They had long soughT Tinally came When They came To liTe They Trounced Tulare in one oT The Tinal games wiTh a score oT 23 I5 WiTh The experience They have gained This year The lighTweighT Team should be an unbeaTable compinahon when They reTurn nexT year Tor none oT Them is a senior SVU OO fl Waaa Lee Eoe Second row D s n Hori ch Back row Coac Pap as Fnc Koo F Mlya Lopes Blaylock : row: Sc e' H er, Vienna, Tokurn T , Hi - l P ' Ish da, H. Miva, Nalcauchi, Crawford, F ca, aw o , 'u i. : Tx lsr, h p , i h, nlz, F earzll , ' I X , I93I CLASS A TRACK TEAM HAD MANY OUTSTANDING ATHLETES Fronf row: David Lopez, Bernard Moafesl Rea Mackey, Lloyd Burrl Hardd HFH, Leonard Hoag, Corneiius Warrnerdarnl Lewis Gomes, Back row: Henry Maha, L. N, Bounds, Roy Ford, Herman Schumacher, Coach Afdersof, Bedford Monvqornery, John Dournal Fred Cosfa, Aiber' AngeN:. Scenes af the lnferclass Track Meef Duffy Breaks the Tape Dramafic Form In fhe Shofepuf jmck, fvnnta, l-lanford l-ligh's varsiTy Traclc Team chased one anoflter abouf The cinderless Traclc every day for Two monfhs-buf failed To Track down a single opponenT. The reason, of course, was The war-Time resTricTion on schocl bus Travel, which resLlTed in a valley-wide ban on infer-school compeTiTion. Even if The purple-and-whife Traclc and field aThleTes couldn'T meeT an opponenT direcfly, Coach Andy Anderson held a series of remoTe conTrol meefs wiTh coaches of oTher Tulare-Kings schools. Each coach mainTained and forwarded records of Times and disTances for each evenT in each class, and conducfed The unofficial meefs by mail. By comparison, l-lanford's Team undoubfedly would have won The league TiTle-if There had been a league. Alfhough a large parT of The Traclc Team is graduaTing, nexT year's Team should emerge as sTrong as This year's. More emphasis is being placed on year-round condifioningg There are some sTrong junior sTars, and The freshman class promises To furnish some good, if undeveloped, maTerial. A CLASS Fran? row: Williamson, Thomas, Olivas Kimura, Ferrero, Franfzich. Second row Frauenheim, Walker, Menzel, Duffy McGahan, Moureff, MaTsufuii. Back row: Morales, Meirrelles, Nyswonqer Crawford, Anderson, coach, Hinfon, T Mafa, W. MaTa, McGuire. B CLASS Fronf row: l-linkle, Puclceff, Odom, Jes- person, Eller. Second row: Braz, Silva Garcia, Liggeff, Oshida, Nakauchi Rodriguez. Back row: Morales, Brandt McDonald, Miller, Marfinj Geardon Anderson, coach, Bandy. Un, fha Qzhnwnd Handicapped by a change of coaches in mid-season, as well as by fhe warfime decision fo abolish compefifive afhlefics, fhe Hanford varsify baseball feam made fhe mosf of ifs plighf and enjoyed a novel and hecfic season. Following Coach Nick Pappas' deparfure for fhe Navy, Coach Max Belko divided fhe varsify info fwo feams. During a long series of affer-school games befween fhe fwo rival varsifies, bofh feams proved fhemselves 'lo be evenly mafched. The vicfory record shows a confinual see-saw in fhe scores. These games were unique in Hanford High School sporfs hisfory bcause of fhe facf fhaf each man played a differenf posifion in each game. A cerfain player mighf sfar as a pifcher in one game buf wouldn'f look any foo good a few days lafer when he fook his place behind fhe plafe as cafcher. Coach Belko insfifufed fhis policy in order fo help carry ouf fhe warfime sporfs policy of helping each afhlefe become a sfronger all-around compefifor. The varsify suffers fhe loss of several sfars, including such afhlefes as Bill Renna, Ross Turano, Leo Burr, Ed Dias, Frank Cardoza, John Braufigam, and Vernon Russell. Juniors who will make up nexf years' varsify include Medford Bingham, Eddie Lopes, Ben Don- nelly, Lee Carfer and Alvin Gomes. Sophomores who will probably find fheir way info fhe diamond limelighf are Fred Bufanda, Dan Mora, Ted Hernandez, Earl Elario, Sam and Genaro Qchoa, Gerald Filippi, Mike Essepian, Thyon Rhoad, and Louis Braufigam. Fresh- men who should emerge as varsify sfars of fomorrow include John Dolson, Tommy Hooker, Nafure Sanchez, and Al Haydock. lf is inferesfing fo nofe, incidenfally, fhaf baseball is one sporf which seems fo affracf all-around afhlefes. Pracfically every fop Hanford High School baseball player has disfinguished himself in af leasf one ofher sporf. Bill Renna and Frank Cardoza, among fhe seniors, have also been oufsfanding foofball and baskef- ball confenders, while Ross Turano, Ed Dias, and John Braufigam were gridiron mainsfays. While baseball, nof only in high schools buf in colleges as well, has never been an im- porfanf Hspecfafor sporf, if is more fhan holding ifs own as a Hparficipanf sporf . Wifh increased emphasis placed on sporfs of fhis sorf, if promises fo live up fo ifs classic nick- name: America's Pasfime. THE TEAM ron? o J M I s Gomes, Dias, Burr, Alves, Harper, Renna, Philippa, S. Ochoa, J. Braurigam, Pappas c ach Sec nd row: Donnelley, Rhoads, Essepiari, Lopes, Mora, Turano, Bufanda, Car- za a Y S Morales, Hooker. Back row: Russell, L. Brauligam, Koller, Coplin, Boofh, D 5 Fisher, Elario, Carmona, Hernandes, Sanchez, G. Ochoa. C6fdOZ5 Gi Bai 512 EB ,A W4 Golfers Waiiing for The Bus To The Couniry Club Fore! A while sphere comes huriling Through The air. Bul don'l be alarmed, il's only lhe drive oi an energeiic member oi Mr. l-lendsch's golf class. Sixrh period Jrhe rwenfy-live members meer by Jrhe fooiball bowl lo praclice, and lwice each weelc lhey go +o lhe golf links for regular play. The lhree lop players among ihe boys are Leland Lacey, Bud Wynne, and Keilh Marlin. Jane? Spear, Joan Coe, Marilyn Clow, and Belly Odenheimer are a lew of lhe oulsianding girl golfers. OSH i' O9 ' A 'nga' 4 i ,M i g 'I 4. f ag, .U K f 'N , v ' if a l , H.. 1' ' T ' ...an 4 2 Senior Assisfams Sw.. Swimming, which is one of The newer sporis of l-lanford l-ligh, loolc a nose dive like all of The orher spring sporls because of lhe all-our war eiiorl. The girls, however, be-nefiled by +he can- celing of 'rhe swimming meels because il gave lhem full access lo lhe Municipal Pool wilhoul hindrance from 'rhe male sex. Miss Nelson, who was lhe coach, is a crack swimmer and specialized in fhis sporl al college. During fhe four-day-a- weelc lraining period in 'rhe lasl parl of lhe year she laughl fhe girls much aboul lhe arl of swim- ming. Assisling Miss Nelson were a number of experienced swimmers, six or eighl of whom helped each period. The boys were unable lo go down To 'rhe pool, for wilh 'rhe reduced slaii a coach could noi be spared from fhe gym classes 'ro direcl a swimming class for lhe boys. l29 .T Q 6 4, 7 , -7 TTCCC T e A C . ,i V '- T' af J .4 , 5 2' Q- K Well, girls, if you lhinlc lhal lhe Boys' H Club is really somelhing, you were born aboul 'rhirly years loo lale To see lhe club lhal really was a club. This club hasn r always been called 'rhe Boys' l-l Club, however. As a maller ol lad, al one lime il' was called lhe Whislcers Club lno, lhis is nol' a misprinl nor a lypographical errorl. A heallhy growlh of whiskers was a prime essenlial in lhis organizalion. The more whiskers a fellow had. lhe beller-il was ever so much more manly, you lcnow. The cuslom was lo measure lhe beards lo see who had lhe longesl one and lo delermine who was lhe mosl masculine member in lhe group. ln olher words, lhe members ol lhe Whislcers Club were real he-men. The celcbraled Whiskers Club: The slalf dared not ideniify Them for fear of ensuing libel suifs Presidenf Duffy and Aide-defCamp Bishop Aboul The year I9l9 lhe Whislcers Club acquired ils new appellalion, lhe Boys' l-l Club. As lhe new club was formed lhe year following lhe big influenza epidemic, only lwo members of lhe original club came info lhe new one. This club has never ceased lo exisl since lhe lime il was eslablished. Every year since lhal lime we have had a Boys' l-l Club in exislence. Lasl year il underwenl' an reiuvenalion lo pep if up a li'H'le bil. En- 'lhusiasm had lagged and, by a process of readiuslmenl, il was pul back inlo shape. The only qualificalion necessary lo become a member of lhis club is for 'rhe boy lo be a lellerman. The purpose of The club is lo slimulale good sporlsmanship among 'rhe boys and lo encourage an inleresl in alhlelics and sporls. Fronl row: Mafsufugi, Silva, Linsley, Johns, Nakauchi, Rifchie, Hayes, Wheeler, Ferguson, Garcia, Harper. Back row: Turano, Thomas, Williamson, Walker, McGuire, Duffy, Diesslin, MacDonald, Meirelles, Puclrell R ,, A ,, .A.o, . 'M TENNTS TEAM F'onT Row: Gong, Ying, Neiscr Rose, Mulroy, Verrue, Second Row: McDonald, UnderT7l, Voss, Smurf D.Bois, Ishida, Hudson, Lacey. Bacx Row: T-lallord, Wood, Sawafzke, Coach Davis, Haupl, Hufirnan, Ernrrcfl. J . Blazing hoT sun, whiTe-shorT-clad players on broad courTs-This view oT TournamenT Tennis is The meridian oT any Tennis enThusiasT's ambiTion. Twice a year The HanTord High Tennis Team enTers compeTiTive conTesTs, and These daTes are all-imporTanT Tor our champions. ln The Tall Tournament held yearly in Tulare, HanTord neTTisTs claimed six oT The Twelve Trophies oTTered, winning boys' singles and doubles and one Trophy in girls' doubles in The Freshman-Sophomore division. Considering +ha+ eleven schools were represenTed in This conTesT, HanTord's showing was laudable. The rubber shorTage reduced spring pracTice maTches To a minimum. BuT wiTh a comparaTively sTrong Team, Coach Davis hoped To repeaT lasT year's perTormances by Talcing Three ouT oT Tive awards in The CounTy TournarnenT. fx T Q! i ,lf Boys' L. Singles I32 si si Boys' Doubles Mixed Doubles Girls' Doubles Girls Singles dmagvfu, Did any ol you lcnow lhal in l9I5 The girls ol Hanford l-ligh won lhe slale-wide championship for baskelball? They deiealed all lhe olher Teams, and greal was ihe ioy ol lhe Alma Maier when lhey dragged home The prize- winning cup. The coslumes of lhe players have changed lillle during Jrhe years. In I9I5 ihe girls wore black bloomers and while middy blouses. Then, as lhe years rolled on, ihe bloomers rolled up and finally became lhe shorls ol loday. 3, Qi' The blaclc collon sloclcings were replaced by shori socks , buf 'rhe resl of lhe cosrume is praclically 'rhe same. When ihe high school was in ils old localion, lhe lennis courls were buill for lhe girls' gym class. Boys playing iennis for a gym acliviiy were almosl unheard ol. In l92I lhe girls were oul' 'lor baslcelball, baseball, lennis, and Jrraclc. Their raiing was one ol The highesl' ol any school in 'rhe srale. Then, in 1923, rhe 'lacully slopped girls' inrer-scholaslic baslcerball games. Laler lhey also pul a slop lo inrer-school lraclc and baseball. Now, rhe baseball and baskelball games are all infer-class, and rhe girls are noi eligible lor lraclc. Tennis is lhe only sporl in which girls may compele infer- scholaslically. CHAMPIONSHIP BASKETBALL TEAM OF I9I5 Helen Diehl, Helen Rice, Veda Murray, Verna Bowhay, Gladys Roach, Sibyl Blalceley, Fannie Wood, Marnie Silva. Kneeling: Mr. Harry Shafer, Mr. J. B. Rosson. dlLD1,a,QagZ,5po1zL AT The beginning oT The year one big piece oT news Tor The girls was The announcemenl oT Two new girls' gym Teachers, Miss Russelle GeTTemy and Miss Caroline Nelson. ATTer The novelTy oT Their presence wore oTT, The girls accepTed Them as greaT Triends as well as wise advisors. While There were a Tew innovaTions in The physical educaTion deparT- menTs, classes soon seTTled down To The daily rouTine. The acTiviTies oT The gym classes vary wiTh The season. ln SepTember, aT The beginning oT school, baseball was The big inTeresT in mosT oT The gym classes. The classes were divided inTo Teams, and Then The Tun sTarTed. Each day The scores were recorded, and aT The end oT The season The losing Teams gave The winning Teams a parTy. l-Tockey was a sporT revived This year by The gym Teachers. AlThough played very li++le during The year, iT was enjoyed by The girls and They hope To play iT again nexT year. Baske+ball came nexT in The line-up. IT was played in all The periods mosT oT The year. ln TacT, The sixTh period gym class, Tormerly The aThleTic class, made baskeTball Their main sporT. Every day, The weaTher permiTTing, The girls could be seen Taking Their warming- up shoTs Tor The day. The sixTh period classes really had a Tough Time aTTer boys' baskeTball sTarTed. The boys needed The gym every day in order To pracTice, and The girls had To play ouTside in The cold, Thus doing Their biT Toward VarsiTy VicTory. Usually walking and ping pong subsTiTuTed Tor baskefball on rainy days. Once or Twice a monTh The Teachers lined The girls up in The gym and The groaning began. One-Two-Three-Tour. Arms over your head! Now Touch The Tloor. Up again! ee sf kes and ou!! G od old basketball! One-Two-Three-kick! The girls will be sore Tomorrow T V T F D f A ' 4vn:w..., , Floor! Exercises were in progress. For The nexT week you heard The resulTs around school almosT every Time anyone had To sToop over and Tie her shoe. LasT year archery was an exTra-curricular sporT, and iT became so popular ThaT This year iT was used as a regular acTiviTy. When The weaTher was nice, any number oT ama- Teur Cupids could be seen pracTicing on Their TargeTs. OT course, iT was purely accidenTal iT an arrow hiT an innocenT bysTander or The TargeT eiTher. - One oT The main evenTs of The year in The Eh why, gym classes was The Folk Dance play day aT 5' A Hr' Visalia, January 7. The represenTaTives of each ' school were asked To presenT a dance. NoTiTied A - J a week in advance, eighT girls Trom The classes 6 f signed up Tor The dance and pracTiced iT. Their dance, The LiTTle Brown Jug, was voTed one of The besT presenTed. OTher play days were held aT Tulare, Le- moore, and LaTon. NOT all of These were Tor Tolk dancing, Though: baskeTball, volleyball, and baseball were TeaTurecl. AbouT The end oT April buses were senT To The Town plunge during sixTh period. All The girls in sTudy hall and gym ThaT period were allowed To go. When vacaTion sTarTs, The sporTs oT The girls will probably vary. Swimming periods, insTead oT lasTing Tor one hour, probably will lasT Tor mosT oT The day. T-liking and horseback riding will subsTiTuTe Tor hockey and baskeTball, and lVioTher's delayed spring housecleaning will probably Take The place oT The daily baseball game. Hocke. Takcs vs? A few excrll in arch y ,0I1'l.QI'L The Gurls H Club was organuzed un The early I92O s The aums oT The club were To encourage an aTTuTude oT good sporTsmanshup among The gurls To promoTe and organuze unTer class TournamenTs and To promoTe socual gaTherungs wuTh oTher schools In The early days Thus club had a greaT many more oTTucual acTuvuTues Than Today The Gurls l-l Club ran parallel To The Boys l-l Club In Those days a large per cenT oT The gurls be longed To The club and The annual evenT was To enTerTaun The Boys l-l Club aT a dunner dance In recenT years The Gurls l-T Club has been reorganuzed Tor gurls especually unTeresTed un The Gurls League and un aTTer school sporTs OrganuzaTuon Thus year dud noT Take place unTul The Thurd quarTer and because so very Tew gurls qualuTued The acTuvuTues of The club were lumuTed However uT dud Take charge oT one Gurls League meeTung provudung The enTerTaunmenT Some sTudenTs may Thunlc uT a sumple Truclc To become a member oT The Gurls lr-T Club l-lowever any gurl who has Trued To earn The 500 pounTs necessary knows The Tallacy oT Thus aTTuTude PounTs are awarded Tor Talcung parT un aTTer school sporTs Tor holdung oTTuce un varuous school clubs and un The sTudenT body Tor perTecT aTTendance and no Tardu nesses and Tor above average grades All members oT The club are gnven scrupT l-l s To be worn on whuTe sweaTers Muss Russelle GeTTemy and Muss Carolyn Nelson are new advusors oT The club They and The members of The club are loolcung Torward To nexT year when a larger member shup wull make more acTuvuTues possuble AT ofThITT DBsSyl Chaff pa a pce . , . . , . u . I - ' I , . . , . u . , . . . . u u - . u . . . . - u I . . . , , - . I - f- V ' V ' ew e e erwomen: u ol , a of, in. S e I' lpresidenfl. H up? noT in i Tur O ,CN K 924' I, fi' ' ,V f' fha f N wi! '- X23 J., SX 19 is 'S AN. 'WNK IJ ll, - 1 -5 Q Nfl u-+9151 5 'Syl fx X' jhfn ws! wiv' 1' f, jgrt' 1, me K MVI W fag. 'V 46 F r. r Pm Aa, mia, HQ dl T 'El :H vii, H px- HL Hgh V.-ff bla ew Y? 'Pa Q!! bww 0 75 K , W' 1' ,. Q - -7 A-Vi' ,Nfl X , -. Vjffb ,' 9' , ,, 3 - , ' . , a.. LX A ...-'Q-- 0 X A 4 L 'x - v.-3. A, ' A ' Q - -5 V auf Q r Y h i va, , ., 1 Q1 v s, df 5 E '. , 1 'vi -F - - - X, Fe Q A ,QI . ',-' ,iz-I-f'zf!' -' .:fQ:E,E-g1', :P 'iii' 'H n h FX L Q,:? 1'4,ev'.f- Y- ox X Q WI , 11 ' wi- , -1'W' aa ' ,.1 if--5, H-ll i1 ?': gs 1 ' , fiff N 5 1 ky- if f, N, -J' m1WX Lf 'W ' - fuggvq .. ima 5 I 2-i?.fi? I Slif' -zzz, gf, .. 'x ft, Q bf x - Q Q -- - Y ' A 5' Y -NV ' . s'qA ' 'S '94 AK Qf1965xl'gff?'5 fuk. 97x ,Z Wfm If Qi Nene Q gl fear ' 65, Y fi f 'il if 'aw' D 'xi kj 1 K M p U . .-1 M l f , 1 cv mllk. N 5 .fIU N Z . S by xiii. if- Qxn 2 ' '5Qlfu 1 5 L, 3 ' WA 1 Q , , f5E L'lQ Q 1-T' 'T 5' Afll36lIlJlll'VlllGllldlllllE9 l-low dull If as lo pause lo make an end To rusl unburnushed nol To slwlne In use As llwo To breallwe were lnfel ULYSSES by Allred Lord Tennyson A f ,N :Q Y age s QI X0 1 Y SQ? If X QW- . , f TY X 3 L ' 9sf' Eel , fl O l - ' ,af 'Q My J 1 4 ' ' 4,-'r ?'w'Q+. Ewfilf flu-M Since This year marlrs an anniversary Tor our high school, your inguisiTive auThor decided To peelc inTo some oT our early Januses To see whaT The pasT hides. lT was discovered +ha+ in l922, The Girls' League was Torrned, To uniTe The girls ThaT They mighT serve oThers. AbouT Tour years laTer The Boys' l:ederaTion, similar To The Girls' League was Tormed so ThaT The boys mighT become beTTer acguainTed Also in The year l922 The Ral y CommiTTee To be com posed oT Tour seniors Three iuniors Two sophomores one Treshman, The PresidenT oT The STudenT Body and one Tac , :vs I 1 : ff' Yi ull iii: Kiera -422 ' l ' ' , :: El! I - X I T T L . EE ulTy advisor, was Tormed. lTs aim Then, as now, was To encourage good conducT aT school aThleTic aTTairs. STrangely, boTh The Boys' and Girls' l-l Clubs were Tormed in l9l9, beTore The gov- ernmenTal groups. Even Then, The school possessed greaT inTeresT in sporTs. BoTh The l-lonor SocieTy and La Copa De Ora can claim prioriTy over The oTher groups OT The school, Tor They were Tormed in l924. ln The 'following years, oTher clubs and groups were organized as an inTeresT in cerTain acTiviTies grew. Even yeT, sTudenTs wiTh similar inTeresTs are ioining To TurTher These same inTeresTs. GIRLS' LITERARY CLUB OF I908 Front row: Ethel Kilpafrick, Mae Donahoo, Mabel Lee. Second row: Lillian Sears, Jessie Wallis, EsTher Olmsfead, Louise Brock. Back row: Hazel Young, Anna UnTerbrinlc, Jewell Murray, Miss lda Moody. Qrzmnmacqs at Ccfnlzlc Few of fhe members of fhe Sfudenf Body of Hanford High School know fhaf fhere was no Sfudenf Body organizafion unfil Mr. Neighbor became principal. Before his fime all maffers of school acfivifies were seffled by 'rhe feach- ers. The principals undoubfedly didn'f real' ize how insfrucfive if is fo have a school govern- menf run by +he pupils. This gives fhem a sense of responsibilify fhaf has never before been asked of fhem, If also makes leaders and pro' mofers. If makes sfudenfs more capable of filling jobs and filling fhem well. Now, more fhan ever, The Sfudenf Body is proving ifs worfh fo fhe communify. During fhe presenf emergency many organizafions have called on fhe sfudenfs for help. A paper drive was conducfed for fhe benefif of The Red Cross, fhe Salvafion Army, and fhe communify. Firsr-semesfer oresidenf, Soares: s c f y Kerr. Each fime fhe Sfudenf Body was asked fo confribufe fo worfhy organizafions, if gave all if was able. One advanfage fhe Sfudenf Body had fhis year was fhaf of good leadership. The firsf semesfer presidenf was Joe Soares, and fhe second semesfer presidenf was Rodney Rifchie. The fwo presidenfs couldn'f have filled fheir offices beffer. Since Joe Soares was presidenf in fhe firsf semesfer, he fook charge of selling Sfudenf Body Cards. The classes had a race fo see who would buy 'rhe largesf number of cards. Der, Peden, Execufive committee: Seaied McGuire, Frauenheim, Kerr Soares, Rivchie, Craig, Trem Spear. Standing Morales, Crawford, Wahren brock Cadvisorj, Roberfson. Second-sernesfer presidenf, Rifchiei secref y ccrnrnivee: Seated: Gribi, yewaki, Hayes, Rasmussen, 4 Cook STandin ' Sears n an . g, viscrl, Lacey, T-laun, Freund, La Moire. Tarv, Craig. This race was illusTraTed by horses on a racef Track. Since The drive was such a success and so many cards were sold, There were many sTu- denTs aT all The games. The STudenT Body's conTribuTion To The an- nual ArmisTice Day parade was a large TloaT builT on The order of an airplane. The Theme OT naTional deTense was carried ouT wiTh The American Tlag as a backdrop. As queen oT The TloaT, The sTudenTs oT The school chose Lois Robe-rTson. An organizaTion ThaT has helped The STudenT Body in raising Tunds Trom games is The Rally CommiTTee. ITS members Talce care oT The money ThaT is Talcen in aT The games and waTch The gaTes. Their iob is an imporTanT one even Though They receive liTTle crediT. They gave a number oT dances aTTer baslceTball games To promoTe more school spiriT and To geT The sTu- denTs TogeTher Tor good Times. Every school needs an organizaTion like This ThaT will do Those liTTle exTra jobs oThers Teel are unirnporTanT. This group is made up enTirely oT boys who are selT-appoinTed To work Tor This commiTTee. GIRLS' LEAGU E OFFICERS: Cerle'-Ear es secera sernesrer presicerh l-light firsf sernesler oresi:er'. Leif ro Rigrlfifarjsza, second semesfer vellfieaderg Kniqhf, second semesler serqeanl-a'-armsg Crose, firsl semester l- Cage' sftiorj ssrmesler e3s,'er' Silva second semi sler secrehrvi Comlorl, sezonfz semfis'er vicefpresinhrv' er lirs' semesfer viii o ,si.1er': Sn, dr, first serncslcr sec any Maqruson, first semos .' Veasurerj Chagin, firsr scnicsler scrgenr' 3 3 s. i X Xi! was I Q J ' ' joined, The Girls' League ol? l-lanlord was organized in l923 lo promole closer relalionship among 'rhe g?rls, lhe Tacully, and lhe sludenl body. The Girls' League consisls ol all lhe girls in school from The shyesl lillle lroshy lo lhe mosl impressive senior. This organizalion holds ils meelings on lhe second Wed- nesday ol every monlh. The meelings vary from business lo enlerlainmenl ol all sorls, which usually Tealures a vo- calisr, dancer, or musician. On The serious side are lallcs given by business men and women. Gne ol lhe highlighls ol lhe Girls' League is lhe yearly convenlion. This year il was held in Yosemile Valley, lvlari- oosa High School being in charge. l-lanlord senl lwo ole licial delegales and lhirleen unorlicial ones. This convenlion has lwice been held in l-lanlord, once in l924 and again in l939. Al 'rhe l924 convenlion lhere was an allendance ol lOO and in l939 an allendance of IOOO. A lew ol lhe regular aclivilies ol lhe Girls' League are Chrislrnas parries lor Door children, Easler Egg hunls, Freshman receplions, and lhe eighlh grade visiling day pul on by lhe hospilalily commillee. Replacing lhe old advisors, Miss l-lelen Avila and Mrs. Edilh Schroeder, were lvliss Caroline Nelson and lvliss Russelle Gellemy, new members ol lhe lacully. A' fre 'erverlfon' Vase RIM, Ai lvlr. Neighpers suggeslien, cn 01240- eer iwenlfyn, N26 'ne boys ei lhe school me' in lhe gymrasicrn and unanrneusiy veif ed ?e iorrn ihe Bins' lzederahon. The purf pose ol she club io proge Lhe gap pe' iween The apper GAO lewer C ass poys build up iradiiens and wcrlq For lhe general welf lare of lhe peys. E K' ' ' l ' 'h l very year p rs are awarded lei e siue denls who rnalce +he honor rel ihree linnes a year. A prohze pin is given lo lhe sludenl who wins a place on lhis roll during his lirsl year, a copper pin lor lhe second successive year, and a silver pin for lhe lhird. A gold pin goes le lhe sludenls who win places on lhis honor roll lhe lourlh year. The gold pins, being much-coveled awards, are presenled al Commencement This is probably The mos? worlh-while aclivily lhal lhe Federa- lion has inauguraled. Each year lhe Boys' Federalion sponsors a lin can dance al which lhe admission price is one or more cans of food. This is +o provide food baslcels which are senl lo uniorlunale people al Thanksgiving and Chris+nfias. ECVS' FEDERATION OFHCERSZ Seaied Trernpfr secoho sfncsler vice yu s ie lr c L e c eadew Ce':eza, secerc sernesVer pvesiden hy hrs? sunesfer prcs off? fs' Twefe, seccrc sewesler secrelaryq Garcia secoho 5 rnesfer Weasurer Sfanding: Frauewhern, firsf sernesler freasurer Mc U re hrs? serves? r se rsvarv The Mardi Gras Our Jam Sessio Taken for a ride liferally describes The freafmenf incoming French Club members received af fhe annual inifiafion. Bul no casualfies were reporfed, for blindfolds were femporary, and fhe kidnappers' speeding vehicle was only a hay wagon. The vicfims were released and duly inslalled as Frenchmen a+ King's River Bridge, where a weiner roasl' and inifialion were held. Members of The Le Fleur de Lis oflen gafhered for informal fun, such as fhealrer parfies and a iam session. A fremendous success was +he Mardi Gras. The gym was fransformed info a French nigh+ club, Le Chaf Noir, wi'rh a headwaifer, pe'ri+e waifresses, and plenfy of hors d'oeuvres and French pas+ries. The unprecedenled crowd wifnessed ia varied floor show and as a climax +o fhe evening a melodrama, Curses, Foiled Again. Dancing, of course, and rounds of colces and chocolafe eclairs compleled fhe fun. A' FRENCH CLUB: Fronf row: A. Mellor, C. Mellor, DuBOiS, Tamer, Sluhaar, Robin Burr, Hardin, Car'er. Back row: An' derson, Hayes, Roberf Burr, Cal- l i fadvisori, Marilyn Clow, Rose, Turaro, Mulrov W 9. Miriam Clow. ZAPHM e Pan-American Exhibit Dancing fgr Defense Fronf r w: a,-ev. La Copa de Oro, a club for sfudenls who have compleled a+ leasl Two years of Span- ish, was begun wi+h fhe purpose of foslering +he use of spoken Spanish, of s+udying counlries where Spanish is spoken, and of crealing sympafhy wilh races who speak if. There are many acfivilies feafured by +he Spanish Club fhroughoul 'rhe year, one of which is 'rhe popular Spanish Fiesla given every spring. For each Fies+a, lhe gym is dec- orafed +0 depicl some phase of +he Spaniard's life. The lheme for +his year's celebra- fion, given on May I, was The Pa'rrio+ic Border. The border line was drawn Through lhe cemler of fhe gym, and on one side was shown a display of our Four1'h of July, and on The o+her side were decorafions for 'rhe Spanish Independence Day, which is May 5. Vosbur , on, a los. Second row: L I d s O, l, Masai, Wilsc' Cassid, Ezrey, Cochrane, M g S Asaki, Lasoer-. Back A N, Soares, Soea' G C Bis bing, J. Soare N d Saylor, Jenk 5 ll 'l ,,,4...n,.. Thal Q 4 1 18 2 15 6 ozoz an ,zo 5 1 u 4' Z , . i i :gl-fl El H l-lanlord Union l-ligh School now has a Lalin Club, somelhing V which has nol exisled lor over lwenly years. ln lhe lasl lew years if 15ilY'f.::. .fa V: 113' -f az,--Jgyw, Lalin has been a neglecled subiecl. The only people who lalce il are lhose maioring in languages or planning lo go inlo medicine or pharmacy. ll has become more fashionable lo habla espanoll' or lloarlez francais lhan lo read Caesar or Virgil. Twenly years ago Lalin was a llrnusll' subiecl, Qne loolc il, il lor no olher reason, bee cause everyone else did. The resenl or anizalion is due lo fhe enlhusiasm ol lhe Lalin Q Ei,s-ve rarl, Dale sludenls ano ol lvlr. Sam Abdallah, inslruclor ol lhe language. Mr. Abdallah and lhe sludenls ol lirsl and second year Lalin fell lhal il S O 5 Q.. D O 49- O 1 -4 CY fo ol Us an Q1 Us GJ 3 -.- O' C -Q- al TJ -. o T7 4+- ol KI 0 mf- 3' D all -01 O 1 OL. if T o U1 cn fo 3 40- no C 2 . Q, U7 1 o of O' O C 'O' r' ol 1 3 lo have a club. The name selecled was Lux Alma lany similarily lo a well known loilel soap is uninlenlional, as il is pronounced lilce dukes, nol duclcsl. ll was chosen because il means loslering lighl, lor Lalin has lighled lhe way lor nearly all modern languages. All lirsl and second year Lalin sludenls are eligible lo ioin Lux Alma as well as lhose who have lalqen Lalin nol more lhan a year ago. Meelings are held whenever lhe members or lhe presidenl leels lhal one is necssary. Thse meelings are enlirely sludenl conlrolled, as Mr. Abdallah believes in keeping slriclly lo his advisory role. Members ol lhe club lell 'rhal pins would be appropriale. They will probably bear The name, Lux Alma, and a lorch or Roman lamp. The sludenls piclured on lhis page are charler members ol lhe Lalin Club, and lhgy consider il a greal privilege. They conlidenlly loolc forward lo lhe lime when as dis- linguished malrons and men ol affairs lhey will be honored guesls al a lulure meeling ol Lux Alma. This is probably lhe only chance many ol us will gel lo be charler members ol anylhing. Fronf row: Braun, Faria, Polley, Woolley. Second row: McNamara, Underhill, Neagle, Srnales, Meirelles, Magruson, Bagley, Blanchard, Morlqornery, Clark. Back row: Downs, Norman, Weikle, Franlzich, Cornelius, Crose, Trewhill, n Davies, Abdallah Cadvisorl. ' 'Mm f 'T Romeo, Romeo, whereTore arT Thou, Romeo? - , v ' Yes, iusT such lines as This could be heard aT one oT The A Senior Plays in The good old days . AT ThaT Time people i A hiTched up Their buggies and drove To The Opera l-louse in upTown HanTord on CommencemenT nighT To waTch The ' -- Q, seniors perTorm. Each year one play was presenTed, and fi' ff The audience did noT lisTen To The words oT some college Tellow making love To his besT girl, buT They heard The i ,fli- N f words oT Caesar, l-lamleT, and oTher Shakespearean chare ' acTers. ln I923, when The play was no longer given aT Com- mencemenT, The memorable Julius Caesar was presenTed Two successive nighTs in all iTs splendor-large casT, brighT colors, and appropriaTe cosTumes. This was undoubTedly The mosT preTenTious play ever presenTed aT l-lanTord l-ligh. Then in order To make money Tor The senior class, a Senior Vaudeville in The Tall was conceived in addiTion To The spring play. The vaudeville shows were presenTed Tor sev- eral years, buT Then were changed inTo a Tull-lengTh play. These senior plays have always been special evenTs oT The school year, as well as very proTiTable proiecTs Tor The senior class. From The TirsT, l-lanTord High has had ouTsTanding drama Teachers. IT was under The direcTion oT lvlr. McKay ThaT The unTorgeTTable Julius Caesar was presenTed. Our nexT dr'amaTics Teacher was Mr. Al WhiTe, and aTTer him, lvlr. Charles FosTer. Under Mr. FosTer The STudenTs' LiTTle TheaTer blossomed inTo one oT The mosT popular clubs here. Nearly everyone remembers lvlrs. Crow, who launched such senior plays as CapTain Appleiack and The Queen's l-lusband as well as several opereTTas. Miss lvlarTine EmerT direcTed TwelTTh NighT and LiTTIe Women, Two oT The leading producTions in The school's hisTory. As To Miss Emily Murray-oT course we who know her Think she is The besT dra- maTics Teacher ever. Scenes Trom STop, Thief presenTed in I9Z2. AT The Far RighT is Earl Ebv, ProminenT in DramaTic and Radio Circles, Ab Th D Ty 6 T C F lf A D Ab T hf Tn B k g C T R p Beo T gh? A M Tc Up AT TG s emarz. ovea ri : 9 The Leading Lady Jim m ' 4 79 7-42 To The senior who can aTTord The Time, being in The Senior Play is one oT The rnosT enjoyable experiences oT his senior year. NoT only does The class reap a subsTanTial beneTiT Trom The proceeds oT These plays, bur The casT geTs mosT valuable drarnaTic experience, and occasionally a sTage romance leads To wedding bells and orange blos- soms. The TirsT oT The Two annual senior producTions was The lvloonsTone, a ThreefacT mur- der mysTery. A beauTiTul blue diamond called The lVloonsTone caused The murder OT GodTrey AblewhiTe, nephew oT lvlrs. Verinder. This diamond, sTolen Trom a l-lindu idol's eye, was broughT To England by Franlclin Blake and presenTed To Rachel Verinder. BUT Two l-lindus, who had Tracked The sTone To The Verinder esTaTe, Tound GodTrev Able' whiTe Trying To replace The diamond wiTh an imiTaTion, and lcilled him. Franlflin and Rachel were married and Tound happiness wiThouT The aid oT The MoonsTone. The spring play was especially adapTed To The Time oT year, Tor iT was called Young April. This lighT comedy oT college liTe was presenTed on March T3. IT was a sequel To Growing Rains, given a Tew years ago. STrangely enough The parT oT lvlr. lVlclnTyre played by lVlerriTT lVlcGahan in Growing Rains was played by his broTher Richard in Young April. The play dealT wiTh The Troubles oT The lVlclnTyre Tamily, moslly Concerned wiTh The love aTTairs oT The young son and daughter oT The house, George and Terry. THE MOONSTONE 'ADY JULIA VERINDER , ,, , ,, ,, RACHEL VERINDER, HER BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER ,, , FRANKLIN BLAKE, RACHEL'S HANDSOME COUSIN . ,,,, , MARY LOU CRAIG PATRICIA ANDERSON ,, BILL PINDER , ,ROBERT COOK RICHARD MQGAHAN ,, BONNIE EACKLES BILLIE JEAN WILSON GORDON DUFFY RUTH DU BOIS Ollier roles were played by Joann Higlwl, David Verrue, Dick Tremper, Lillian Lee Smiilw, Arlene Emery, Jolin Brauliqarn, Barbara Gillespie, Lois Downen and Don Cong- SERGEANT CUFF, OF THE LONDON POLICE ,, ,, , , ,, GABRIEL BETTERRIDGE, AGED SERVANT OF THE VERINDERS PENELOPE, GABRIEL'S DAUGHTER , ,, ,, , ROSANNA SPEARMAN, A MYSTERIOUS YOUNG GIRLH, GODFREY ABLEWHITE, THE VILLAIN , ,, LUCY YOLLAND, A CRIPPLED ECCENTRIC ,, don. YOUNG APRIL PROFESSOR MQINTYRE ,, , , ,, , ..,, RICHARD MCGAHAN MRS, MCINTYRE, HIS MIDDLE-AGED WIFE, ,,,,,... ,HBONNIE EACKLES GEORGE MCINTYRE, A ROMANTIC COLLEGE FRESHMAN GORDON DUFFY TERRY MQINTYRE, A LOVELY SEVENTEEN-YEAR-OLD COLLEEN JESPERSON BRIAN STANLEY, A SUCCESSFUL YOUNG CI-IAP , , ,,,,, JOE SOARES STEWART MILLER, HIS MAMA'S BOY ,... H ,. , H RODNEY RITCHIE MRS. MILLER, HIS SELFISH, DOMINEERING MOTHER , RUTH DU BOIS DIANA GILMORE, A VIVACIOUS, POPULAR GIRL JOANN I-IIGHT Oflier clwaracfers were played by Bonnie Richmond, Mary Lou Craig, Evelyn Kirlc, Gus Diesslin, Junior Ivancoviclw, David Verrue, Elaine McNamara, and Billie Jean Wilson, Af right Refribufion Caiclwes Up wifh We Vi,IaIn of The Mconslcne 'XY Ie? S L 'rg At' 'Q You':g fuilffrzlr- AlThough The l-li-Y was organized in l929, iT did noT oTTicially become a school club unTil T93 l. Mr. Wiens, our band and or- chesTra direcTor, was The TirsT advisor OT The senior l-Ti-Y. The purpose oT The club, Talcen Trom ThaT oT The Y.M.C.A., is To creaTe, mainTain, and exTend ThroughouT The communiTy The high sTan- dards oT ChrisTian characTer. The l-li-Y is parallel To The Girl Reserves. Each year These Two clubs enioy several ioinT acTiviTies. Early in The school year a dance aT The Women's Club house was held. There The boys were The guesTs oT The girls, whose iob iT was To pay The bills. Annually The clubs Take Turns being guesTs and hosTs, which resulTs in an enjoyable evening. The l-li4Y Through The year parTicipaTes in iTs share oT social evenTs. Several dances aTTer The baslceTball games have been co-sponsored by The IcTi4Y and The rally commiT- Tee. AT ChrisTmas The T-li-Y donaTed money To The Red Cross. The TirsT oT March oT This year lvlr. George McLean oT The Lemoore uniT oT The UniTed Service OrganizaTion and Tormer secreTary oT The Y.lvl.C.A. in San Francisco spolce aT a nighT meeTing on whaT The Y.M.C.A. is doing now. On March ninTh The annual FaTher and Son BanqueT aTTracTed a number oT members and Their guesTs To The Civic Audi- Torium. This yearly aTTair is co-sponsored by The Y's Men's Club, and is one oT The chieT means oT sTimulaTing inTeresT in The Young Men's ChrisTian AssociaTion in l-lanTord. The sixTy members oT The l-li-Y are selecTed Trom ThirTeen To TiTTeen per cenT oT The sTudenT body. The meeTings are held once every Three weeks eiTher aT noon or aT nighT in The room oT Their advisor, Mr. RoberT Sears. The I-Ti-Y pin is a red Triangle inside a whiTe circle. ThaT This pin is so oTTen exchanged Tor a Girl Reserve pin is noT so much due To similariTy as To romanTic inTeresT. HI-Y: Front row: Mr. Sears, advisor, Hayes, Mayewaki, Johns, Mayo. Back row: Cook, Gribi, MCG-uire, Deisslin, RiTchie, Walker. llllllllllllu 6111.64 ' Y pY 1 . The Gurl Reserves an oT sprung oT Tne Y JT C A was Q v organuzed un l-TanTord un I929 Qrugunally uT con sTed oT Q Q Two clubs The G M O whuch was organuz d Tor The older 5 gurls and The E B M Tor The younger ones l 93I The Two clubs merged dropping Theur mysTcruous unu als and became The Gurl Reserves The TursT Two adv sors Tor The club were Muss Eunice RosenguusT oT The G M O and Mrs Jacob Weuns oT The E B M lTs suxTy members were chosen Tr m Tlne gurls oT The S-TuderT Body Gurl Reserves sTruve To un rease Theur spuruTual physical and menTal knowledge and Tr To help people oT The communuTy who are less TorTu'uaTe Than Tlrey The purpose OT Tace luTe squarely Each year The Gurl Reserves hold a number oTl unT parTues wuTh The T-lu Y ln The Tall a dance Tor The members oT These Two clubs was held un The Woman s Club l-louse All Those who wenT and parTucupaTed un Thus evenung Tull oT Tun enuoyed Themselves very much On May 4 The Gurl Reserves and l-lu Y wenT To Mooney s Grove Tor a pucnuc and Then wenT To The Vusalua SlcaTung Runlc The Gurl Reserves have seruous meeTungs as well as socual ones Efery year The Three phases OT The Triangle whuch are The spuruTual physucal and menTal are presenTed by varuous cuvuc minded women who worlc wuTh The gurls and Theur problems Muss Caroline Nelson our physucal educaTuon unsTrucTor spolce on The spuruTual luves oT gurls Dr AlberTa BasseTT spoke on The problems oT The physucal side Thus Tallc was very erulughTenung To The large group oT Gurl Reserves who aTTended The meeTung The Gurl Reserves pun us a blue Truangle wiTh The leTTers G R un blue a blue curcle surrounds Thus Truangle echoing The club colors whuch are blue and whuTe GIRL RESERVES Froni row Jenk s Wls n C ss dy Es ey M g us n Clak Pa Back row Saylor RoberTs Spear Brady F a Tz ch Bla cha d Bag ley .I ' . Z , N f x . g usu' - X i , T . . . . n l The Club is To Tind and give The besT, and The slogan is, As a Girl Reserve I will Try To . I : : un, uo,.arunE'r,naul'o,gr,-i, I , , , I Q QM .042 X . ,, - . 'tfffffmr -GTC iii ll lj l . lIT'22 ' U nfl l - ri-2 f ,2 A - 52.-f,,f N ...,',X A Tar more acTive group Than Their predecessors oT The liTTle moral speeches and cul- Tural evenings are The members oT The presenT'day l-lonor SocieTy. These long-TorgoTTen cusToms have since been replaced by much more inTeresTing and varied acTiviTies, such as The annual carnival, The snow parTy, The inTormal iniTiaTion, eTc. Thoroughly modern in Their acTiviTies, The members do noT TorgeT, however, The original purpose oT The socieTy -ThaT oT high scholasTic sTanding. Back in I925, a Tew ambiTious seniors ThoughT oT forming a scholarship socieTy. There were Then aThleTic associaTions, governmenTal groups, and clubs, buT no socieTy oT any kind Tor academic sTudenTs. The more They ThoughT oT The idea, The beTTer iT became, and in a very shorT Time a consTiTuTion had been drawn up, and The name Alpha Omega Omicron adopTed. Members were admiTTed on The basis oT sTudenT acTiviTies and scholasTic abiliTy. The charTer members decided on an exclusive socieTy, Teeling ThaT such an arrangemenT would increase The honor oT being a member. Always an acTive group, because oT The inTeresT in Their purpose and The capabiliTy oT Their advisors, The members in Those early years were accusTomed To giving shorT bene- Ticial Talks on worThwhile subiecTs in The Monday morning assemblies, a cusTom which no doubT caused some TrepidaTion on The parT oT boTh speaker and audience. The meeTings were held in The evenings aT The home OT The advisor, where shorT educaTional Talks were given by some specialisT. BeTore The now TradiTional carnivals sTarTed in l932, iT was a yearly evenT Tor The whole group To appear beTore The assembly on whaT was called T-Tonor SocieTy Day To give a program. ln The course oT Time several plays, as well as various oTher enTerTainmenTs, were given. One Tine play presenTed in March, I93 l, was The Pyramus and Thisbe eDi- sode Trom A Midsummer NighT's Dream . ln l93O, The organ?zaTion ioined The NaTional T-lonor SocieTy. The new membership requiremenTs diT'lered liTTle Trom Those The Tar-seeing seniors oT I925 had made. Scholar- ship, Leadership, CharacTer, and Service are The basis oT membership now. HONOR SOCIETY OF I930 FronT row: Yaeko Sailo, Virginia SrniTh, lrcnr lv?-wee, Marbfie Robinson, Velma Quigley, Fern SliTT.e'r. Back row Rohr? Blnyd, Marforie l-luTTrnan, Dorris Wilsr:'r C cc Brorrdrl l-iefen Lirf1:u'sT, Marv Vicrra, Sa'ly Bvrfl lfa S'6- 'n sor, Oa Broedel, Jake Dounua. The firsf Carnival in l932 was a dance wifh fhe fheme carried ouf largely in fhe decorafions, alfhough chemisfry and physics demonsfrafions were added. l-lomemade candy was sold. Thus began fhe popular carnivals, wifh fheir barlcers, side-shows, ser- penfine and confeffi, forfune fellers, boofhs wifh vendors con- sfanfly compefing wifh one anofher. ln I934, a Jonah dance was given, af which fhe supersfifion fheme was carried ouf in fhe decorafions. For several weelcs before fhe affair lhe word Jinx was exploifed fo adverfise fhe dance, which proved a success. This year, according fo a club fradifion, fhe group appeared formally before fhe Sfudenf Body fo inducf fhe new members. Soon affer fhis followed fhe informal inifiafion in coniuncfion wifh fhe annual Chinese dinner. Af Chrisfmas fime, fhe group gof fogefher af a parfy, af which fhey exchanged amusing giffs, which were lafer senf fo invalids in Springville. The sociefy used fhe presenfafion of fhese giffs as an excuse for an all-day mofor iaunf wifh ifs necessary accompanimenf, a roadside picnic. An- ofher excursion wifhouf any excuse excepf fhaf of good fun was fhe picnic in March af Roeding Parlc, followed by an evening af a roller slcafing rinlc in Fresno. The annual snow parfy was called off fhis year. From fhe enferprising group of individualisfs of l925, who looked ahead fo fhose who followed fhem fo affain fheir goal, fhe l-lonor Sociefy has emerged, as fhey predicfed, a symbol of scholasfic achievemenf. HONOR SOCIETY INITIATION DINNER Fronf row: Saylcr, Spear, Clow, Soares, Mellor, Yarnanalca, l-lase, Fukano, Na-eaucri, Edwards, Froilas W sz' ircgord ing secrefaryl, McNamara lfreasurerl, Back row: Odenhcirner, Turaro, Er-werv, Burr, Thor'-as lsergfar'-.l-a rnsi, Sfewarf, Brown, Gilmore, Mrs. Monfgornerv Mr. Monfgomery, Ausfin Qaovisorl. Af end: Fowler lP'es'1Qr?l. ? K Q 1 3 .' C3l Rm l. ' ' 5 'T 'fir wmv si r Luz. C'L. es Kaz J. J. H. l:uTure Farmers are iJsT whaT Their name mplies. Today we see Them as The boys who are bringing home so many awards Tor l-lanTord l-ligh ThaT we can'T keep Traclc oT Them, buT in a Tew years, when They have graduaTed, our FuTure Farmers will cone Trol The Teeding and cloThing oT our naTion. The earliesT agriculTural organizaTion in The school was The Pig Club, Tounded in l92O. A Tew years laTer The name was changed To The Ag Club. Then in l93O They became a branch oT The l3uTure Farmers oT America. This organizaTion promoTes various phases oT The NaTional AgriculTural EducaTional Program. The aims oT The club are To encourage scholarship, leadership, ThriTT, obedience To law, and scienTfTic Tarming. Any Ag sTudenT who is worlcing on a home Tarming proiecT may be admiTTed To The club, These proiecTs are Tinanced principally by The ProducTion CrediT f'XssociaTion. ln The pasT Ten years sTudenTs have borrowed over TiTTy Thousand dollars, wiTh a loss oT less Than TiTTy dollars To The chapTer Treasury. VViThouT The aid CT This crediT associaTion, many young Tarmers Today would noT have Their ample well-sToclced Tarms. In The pasT Ten years boTh The membership and The acTiviTies oT The FuTure Farmers have grearly in- creased. ln IQ38 a new agriculTural building was erecTed, one oT The Tour largesT in The sTaTe. The same year anoTher agriculTural Teacher, lvlr, Spencer STrader, Toolc his place on The TaculTy. Forty-Tive plaques and Trophies have been awarded l56 Fufure Farmer F3 Seve Boys Raise Sh nf? ' fi? , , T L ,,,,, . -xy , QV W N nz -1919 nga I li T: i5'TTiiiliivglQfy f ll la 'I .ll f ff' 5, ru ' , , 2 ,,,, , 'f'i-' Mein , Q 1-5 l , 1 T1 4 5 'U 1 The T-lanTord FuTure Farmers. Four oT These were Tor naTional championships, sevenTeen Tor sTaTe, and TwenTy-Tour Tor San Joaquin valley honors. In I93 I , The greaTesT oT honors was besTowed on Them when l-lanTord's Team Toolc TirsT place in The lNlaTional Dairy Judging conTesT held in ST. Louis. ln l932 They were adiudgeol The besT chapTer in Cali- Tornia and TiTTh in The naTion, Trom a sTandpoinT oT acTual accomplishmenTs. Then in I939 aT The CaliTornia STaTe Fair They won The sweepsTal4es. The FuTure Farmers won This chieT award in compeTiTon wiTh all oTher schools in The sTaTe Tor Tive consecuTive years. ln l94O The SanTa Fe Railroad Turnished Tree TransporTaTion To The Championship Dairy CaTTle Judging Team when They wenT To Kansas CiTy, To be raTed The second highs esT chapTer in The UniTed STaTes. ln I94I our FuTure Farmers won TirsT place in The UniTed STaTes and were selecTed as one oT The gold medal chapTers in compeTiTion wiTh The nine Thousand local chapTers oT The naTion. Many personal honors have also been won by members oT The T-lanTord ChapTer. Five boys, l-larry Dooley, Edward UselTon, Jesse Anderson, Bill Lowry and La Verne Lowry, have received The American Farmer degree, and TwenTy-Three, The STaTe Farmer degree. During l94O Jesse Anderson was selecTed as The sTar American Tarmer in The eleven wesTern sTaTes, and George Griswold won The STaTe championship in public speaking. And in I9-4I Mr. l-larper was awarded The degree oT l-lonorary American Farmer, a very high honor indeed. The FuTure Farmers carry on many supplemenTary school acTiviTies. Perhaps, Their chieT proiecT is ridding The counTy oT predaTory animals. ln six years They have killed nearly sevenTyfTive Thousand rodenTs and predaTory animals. The CounTy Supervisors provide shells Tor This proiecT, and The boys receive money Tor The rodenTs They desTroy. As many oTher school clubs have done, The FuTure Farmers bring ChrisTmas Toys and basl4eTs oT Tood To many needy homes in The communiTy annually. This year They dis- TribuTed Three hundred Toys and Twelve large baslceTs, and They have gaThered several Tons oT scrap iron and meTal Trom Tarmers, selling iT To sTeel mills and Toundries. The proceeds have been used To buy deTense bands Tor The club. FUTURE FARMERS: Fronf Row: Palumbo, CosTa, Giacomazzi, Bacorne, Rogers, CornTorT, Raulslon, Hooker, Halford. Second row: H. Esseoian, F. Miya, Sousarnian, Cardoza, Morales, Fisher, Layne, Newkirlc, Grisso. Third row: Mc- Cauley, Faria, A. Avila, G, Avila, Perry, Dooley, MiTchel, Dias, M. Essepian. FourTh row: Sfrader ladvisorj, Eenefield, E. Azevedo, Gomes, Davies, BraTTon, A. Azevedo, BoscheTTi, Harper ladvisorl. Back row: Casemero, Sansrrurn, J, Fosler, Miller, B. FosTer, Leoni, Facchini, MarTin, Beach. , 439, Snwnlhl e S b Debs l-la e Their Mornenls of Ge e os ly Greelings, neighbors! To lhose ol you who have never heard ol Sul:JfDebs, l'm here ready lo send. ll There are any gueslions, iusl dig me. This year lhey had a Backward Dance, lhal was lhe dance ol all dances. The Visalia slags and lheir men helped il along, bul delinilelyl ln case you aren'l in lhe know, whal l rnean is, all The slcirls, lhal is, Terns, made up lheir minds, lhen rushed in Tor lhe lcill, dragged lheir olliefdrollies or any loose whalfnols lhere. Even a brain-wave or lwo dropped in lo cul a rug and hep around. Bur wail, perhaps you don'l undersland iabber-live? l'll lry lo explain. Sub-Debs are primarily a social club, whose main aclivilies are dances and general enlerlainmenlq however, lhey have regular business meelings, gave baslcels lor Chrisl- mas, and enlerlained The soldiers. They gave lwo dances lhis year, one sernielorrnal al Chrislrnas, as well as lhe aboveemenlioned Baclcward Dance, in which every girl was inviled ro aslc her secrer dream-boy. The calch was The girl had lo pay lhe boy's way. Their olher highlighl ol rhe year was lhe inilialion, which lopped all previous records. SUB-DEBS Fronf row: Clow, Saylor, Spear, Anderson, Vienna, Mchlarnara, Wilson, Giacomazzi. Back row: Soares, Coe, Bell, Roberlson, Gillespie, Richn'1ono,Craig,Calleri, advisor, Jesperson, Cassioy. SMILJIUL' '32 The war goes on whule wc rude bucycles and rem Q Z unusce abouT The good old days Then we sTop To Thur1lQThaT un The nuneTues They rode bucycles or drove 35? horses so we aren T un such duTTuculT sTrauTs ATTer all The duversuons oT The alumnu werenT very duTTerenT I from ours l-lay rudes were very very popular and They sTull are BuT There were no snow parTues no Mardu Gras no l-lonor SocueTy Carnuvals Very hugh l...b3 A on Theur enTerTaunmenT lusT were dances noT square -if dances lulce Those you were Thunlcung buT walTzes and Q13 E J Tox TroTs They had never heard oT Sadue l-lawlcuns Day buT They played grown up versuons oT Drop The T-landlcerchuef Boys you can T wunl Then how abouT uolces7 From Janus Tules oT yesTerday comes Thus Mary Do you lcnow The BuTcher Song7 l-larry No whaT7 Mary BuTcher luTTle arms around me and hold me TughT From The lvleTeor Tules oT Today comes Thus Do you lcnow whaT The haT saud To The haT racl47 You sTay here I ll go on ahead BeTore These modern Tumes oT Con Tucuus Say and WhaTs Cookun 7 were The days when They saud quoTe AloouT The only Thung leTT un The world To shock us graun unquoTe The pounT us some day our cusToms wull seem Tunny To our grandchuldren ThaT s when lcnuTTun Tor BruTaun wull be TorgoTTen and The Blues oT The NughT and A Burd un a Gulded Cage wull seem equally ancuenT WhaT Thus us comung around To us ThaT The nexT Tew pages presenT a pucTorual revuew oT whaT we re doung Thus year Tor Tun and Tor NaTuonal Deufense and ThaT Tumes aren T whaT They used To be MPFIRE MAIDENS ARE SO ROMANTIC Fr T o H T V c a e I Ad r b n c d q a M TT Bac r MayTTu Upper e ms' E of Scwoc Lower Iefi Ka? F so w Lower rxgH e C Jews Re!! HC OG Roux Q The Eaves Bwrfhday Cake JUL per right Toth Tcwms H .rc S Lower rlqhf D cevvvncr E f v s im Lower left Bum! Merwnc Q F Pwr CM Chwef UsV'ersHe Burr a ci Asswsfamfs Frark Leona Opens Hrs Pav Erve cpe Up ' 1 ' ', Q Fv 'lie WI er :off ' 1 e 'h Q Pxslneff A: f Us : ' f , ' r, fc-:A, Daria. T ' - rvs 1 , -if U L L ' 1 Y 1 Upper Iefi Noon Daw Dames are Revwved Lower leff We S x'e'ffe a Ex used From Class Agam Lower rnghf We S a SP Cub Gwves a Darce -mmm- Tbe ArmuaN Mardx Gras FFOMQ oo wer wc rs Pay The Pu r I62 LUL Upper rlghr P wdxswrq for Exhnbrf Nsq'-T Lower leff Patna Jaxe Scoutwnq for Scmors on Army Day Lower flghf The Band Members were AN There nw aw me-J M ,erurq Four Y ers Perfecf A'+endarwc:e Braoy C d Rogers I63 609, Q0 Uwe Bd, When war came lo lhe Uniled Srares on December 7, il even pene'raTed lo The small communily ol Hanlord High School. The lirsl lew weelcs were punclualed wirh rev pealed aireraid drills, bul when lhe lirsr excilemenl and horror wore oli. soudenls began inquiring as lo whal' lhey could do lor nalional defense. The advice of lolly and auslere educalors was, sludy harder, bul This prospecl did nol impress The maiorily ol sludenls. lnslead, lhey sel oul lo find direcl ways lo assisl. For one lhing, l-lanlord High sludenls gladly gave up allernoons and evenings of lun lo aid various defense aclivilies. ln lale December lhe Sludenl Body held a paper drive and collecled a huge lruclcload ol wasle paper. Volunleer sludenls pressed lhis paper, and did addilional pressing worlc for lhe Red Cross on lollowing Salurdays. Under lhe direclion ol lvlr. F. A. Marcellus, lhe woodwork shop and airplane Tundamenlals classes buill lilly model airplanes lor 'rhe War Deparlmenl, duplicales in minialure ol aclual planes ol bolh America and lhe Axis powers. Bolh 'reachers and sludenls did duly al lhe observalion posls silualed lhroughoul lhe counly lor lhe deleclion ol passing air- planes. Sludenls allend school primarily lo prepare lor lulure service, and rhe high school offered opporlunilies lor lhis lraining. The gym leachers incorporaled in lheir classes some Firsl Aid worlc, and a chance lo conrinue lhis srudy and even become a Firsl Aid inslruclor was offered in lhe evening school. Evening classes also included courses in knilling and mechanics for women. Every war brings wirh il shorrages-sugar, food, rubber-which can be direclly con- served by young people. The idea of buying a defense slarnp inslead ol a candy bar was +0 some exlenl adopled. Then in rhe spring lhe buses were prohibiled from carry- ing sludenls lo games and meels. Thus infer-school sporls were abolished. And wilh such a shorlage of rubber lor aulomobile lires, if was a common sighl lo see our worlhy leachers bicycling lo school. For a large parl of 'rhe year il was possible 'ro buy len and rwenly-live cenl defense slamps al' rhe liclcel boolh. This sale, under lrhe direclion of Mr. Abdallah, was a greal success, and il was encouraged al firsl by a gill ol a 'ren-cenl sfamp lo every srudenl by Mr. Roberl Sullivan. The Sludenl Body did ils par? in lhe invesl-for-viclory campaign by buying a 5500.00 bond. Sluclenls Bob Johns Obliges The Frsf .H.S, J, J Q 7' JS'2' W'35'::. ' UWM Co'5e'veS Shoe Leaver Wowiwq on We High SCHODI Pacer Drive pf .Q kefbaN Reqalla of I92i 5 I66 Half SNR-5 'f I899 a T!'1sf'HC ':U fu sc I 7 ,il - ,Q- .5 kv, 0 .A , 1, ,Q ,W ,gy 5, U.: M E N' 1,4 x . . , VM jim. Jaaluon, Pafzada IT 'manners make The man Then surely cloThes make manners. We smile aT The Tormal eTigueTTe oT The nineTies buT The belles oT ThaT day sTruggling along under The weighT oT six sTiTTly sTarched peTTicoaTs were Too busy managing Their Trains To be oTher Than demure liTTle ladies. And Their beaux, very dashing wiTh hair neaTly parTed in The middle and coaxed inTo waves on eiThor side necks rigidly encased in sTiTT whiTe collars were guiTe Tascunalred when Their ladies modesTly TwiTched Their sklrTs To allow lusT one liTTlo inch oT TaTTeTa peTTicoaT To appear School girls oT Grandma s day burdened by bell skirTs wiTh pipe organ backs balloon sleeves and heavy pompadours musT have longed Tor more Treedom BuT worse was To Tollow Tor in I9IO a new Tashion was inTroduced The hobble skirT a creaTion which lived up To :Ts name When The sTyle was finally abandoned school girls every where aTTecTed The debuTanTe slouch a drooping boneless posTure which made :Ts adherenTs appear as iT They were abouT To perTorm an ungraceTul Tlop Then came The war and skirTs shorTened while sleeveless blouses became The mode UniTorms were popular buT when This school adopTed Them Tor :Ts girls complainTs were long and loud Consishng oT a plain one piece serge dress worn wiTh a Tie aT The neck This cosTume was more serviceable Than sTylish Since ThaT Time bobbed hair has become commonplace skirT lengThs have gone up and down and up again and IT The girls oT Today were To voTe upon a uniform They would probably choose slacks SporTs cloThes have changed drasTically since The n1neTies when This Tield was open only To men Baseball and baskeTball were Two exTremely popular sporTs and The players were oTTen garbed In very long shorTs long sleeved lerseys and brighTly hued sTocklngs careTully rolled IusT below The knee When girls became sporTs conscious almosT a decade laTer The gym classes were conservahvely clad in long black sTockings middy blouses and very Tull bloomers I i T I NiTTy SporT Sfyles of I936 High STyle of I94Z Q ,- 6 A Ak ' -, x ' f 7-Qs: I H , Q? 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Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.