Long Beach City College - Saga Yearbook (Long Beach, CA)
- Class of 1933
Page 1 of 273
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 273 of the 1933 volume:
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Mfk4,Vt- J VH! ,Jigga X suq' 7'h'EJ:'ns 4-L 141 -:'xv 64.1517 'Ji . f HCPE jc J iff 5 f-'-5: 4l1y-- E -F I 7c'G' '74 4' 17074: i!! L4-47 yr-5' -7 7-17' IJ Q afy, '37 C-,QI 'Egg Li J X7 ff? rv I' M I 'A 04, .1 M! C7',Lq4,,4, M, ! . Q! I J A I l 6 ELC? , mQf f 1 A QCMN Ycf,7a ' f 22 L 5 M ffff C ' , ,Ja Q, I d,!-f-J . fi ffl I L 4 CPfm.,dXffL ff, ' I B ' J ff A cfvv ' L 'N' fm X4 5 J f 'A ll,-'fZLVJ I 76 We 6' h . 1 f f 'K L17 1 X. Y L!-,Viv .,' F Z 7 J, Af lf' A. -M , ,fz 5 . ,z I J ,-1 I A- Hr!!! A' ' .Z JV 1 ., Af ,V ! P ,f AV, W! :V An! 'A if A1 vscaf' Mr' , R ,X I vv' If ,, -if Aff? I ' N Cry 1- 'Q -s v Vi 2 ff, ' 'V ff? AV' v 7 4 , X If ' 'hiv' jf' I 5,0 2 fr J ,ff ff' ' ,L J' if ,,vf MU. + Q 5 fy 1 X or V+- K, C ' 1 fy kJ 7 ! I 2' IT!! f X x ,J .9 1' I f ,I . XC, x f , 'x A CQPYRIGHT -4 N 1955 3 norms squnnfs Eowosz gxauuern ELLIOTT MANAQEP. Ib' Assocuzqen sruofwr O 0NG'BEACH'fliINIORf0llfGf V5 G , ,f 1 fyvgg, l,,fK 1 . , ,, A.dA.L,,f , 5 f' 'Y J V.. 1 'U' ' fra Z,,4lf1y If 1 fvgllfif L f - ff , ,f m,.,.-. , r A ,I K , 1 f ,fyff -,f4f,1'f f ff 1 ,f . - f ,. ff I f' I , , ' ' Z fy I ,, K 1. fi, ff , I., we , -f -f f f' , gf f-9 AX DUB uco' ESTUDIEN E5 DEL L05 LONG amen JUNI PQOLLEGE ,Jeff Q' Y- rx + jjgiff LONG EJ H c NIA JULY 1,1955 I JI . DIA- ,f K' fx- C . f yi, ,fl , if ' .1 ,' 'f V, , f C, kr, V H' L , w V A ffffx! The highest, most 15 found ad miration and resp t zs du Jackson for his 7 les Zzzde s z and guidance ln the past BILL ELLIOTT Fall Siu INSCRIPTICDN lf is our belief fhaf affer a man has served an educafional insfifufion such as fhe Long Beach Junior College, from ifs incep- fion fo ifs mafurify, and served if wifh unfailing energy and con- sisfenf inferesf, fhaf man deserves whafever honors fhaf his school may give him. Because of fhis belief we fake pride in dedicafing fhis volume of our yearbook, fhis l933 Saga, fo Charles W. Jackson. For four years advisor fo fhe Sfudenf Body Cabinef, Mr. Jackson has wafched fhe sfudenf body grow in numbers from a mere handful fo a full l500. Buf he has done more fhan wafch- he has also wisely guided fhem, generously given fhem of his fime and sfrengfh, and sincerely sfriven for Their good. Under his care a consfifufion for fhe Associafed Sfudenfs was drawn up and accepfed, and a financial sysfem was puf in operafion. The Viking Award, highesf honor besfowed upon any sfudenf, came abouf fhrough his cabinefs. The weekly Viking grew from a mimeographed sheef fo an eighf-column mefro- polifan newspaper, and fhe Saga developed from an insignificanf hand-book fo a consisfenfly All-American producfion. Throughouf fhe years fhe hundreds of sfudenfs privileged fo know Mr. Jackson have been honored and benefifed by his friendship. The Edifors of fhe i933 Saga fhus add fo fhe many fribufes, known and unknown, by dedicafing fhis book fo a frue genfleman, a scholar, a friend-fo Charles W. Jackson. L ll 1 The students who come under Illr. Jackson? influence carry away with them an ajwfnreciation of his Il7Zll6I'Sl'!ZlZl1i7Zg of youth ART RENE Spring S+uden+ Body President DICATICDN CHARLES W. JACKSON ....Frienzl1y, hind, helpful, an inspirational leader- 4 U L 3 FCREWCDRD Two oT our prominenT school oTTicials once said in speaking To your lidiTor oT This publicaTion: Well, iT's only a picTure book, you know. PicTure book iT may be, buT iT is, as well, an inTerpreTaTion oT This, our college. To inTegraTe The acTiviTies oT The campus, iTs personaliTies, and iTs organizaTions, has been our ThoughT. IT has been a challenging Task. Behind Saga's publicaTion, known more To The EdiTors Than To The public, lie unnumbered hours oT in- TricaTe, deTailed, and oTTen arduous labor, repeaTed conTacTs wiTh personaliTies agreeable and oTherwiseg baTTling problems, unToreseen and unTorTunaTe-bank holidays ThaT Tied up The book Tinances, earThquakes which closed all ciTy schools Tor Three weeks, ruined Saga schedules, and Threw elaboraTe plans To The winds:-all These had To be Taced and overcome in preparaTion Tor ThaT day oT days when This volume should be published. Our inspiraTion during The long working hours has come Trom These monumenTs To The labor oT The early builders of our sTaTe, Trom The California Missions. JusT as These Missions, builT wiTh inTiniTe Toil by FaTher Junipero Sorro and his indomiTable co- workers, enshrine The pasT oT California, so may These prinTed pages hold Tor you, ThroughouT all years To come, The memories oT your college days. Lg Il 1 C O N T E N T S -lNTRoDuc:ToRY- ADMINIINSITMRATION FACULTY :ASSOCIATED STUDENTS T H E CNLWADS S E S CLASS OFFICERS ' CAPS AND GOWNS Libro Tercero STUDENT INTERESTS CAMPUS C-ROUPS Libro Quinta ' SPORTS CALENDAR THE PA-TIO WI-IO'S WI-IO ' SATIRE - SOCIETY ' FINALE A - W A 1 V' Ckftm. f'x14d f1., QQ Q Jew ww A kg AAL, 1 QQ Serbia CTL ,l,. ,d.fL.efa...,0'vm . I All ,QJ-fun., A ,Wir W CL, AAAJQQJQ aL,V,,0CgL QpcQ-s,..a..4j-.Q qifywuyfk ,AE.Lf0'-fb' . Qffbfufx.. LA1A,N.4Q , N J Mmfmlwe Father of the Missions INSPIRATICDN The world may and does forget much l' but it can never forget lll.17'l1f1ZE gentle, great souled Franciscan who brought the light of Calvary to the darkness of a lzeatlzen land. Real 1 1 MISSION MR. McGROARTY The Olcl Missions BY John Steven: McGroarty I am glad ThaT Long Beach Junior College has Taken Tor This year's SAGA The old Franciscan Missions oT CaliTornia as a Theme. There is no more inspiring sTory To be Tound anywhere in The annals oT human achievemenT. IT is The sTory oT a devoTed band oT ChrisTian missionaries who were genTlemen and scholars and masTers oT The arTs and graces seeking ouT The desolaTion oT a wilderness wiTh The sole unselTish purpose oT liTTing a heaThen race up To The sTa- Ture oT civilized whiTe men, and To make a deserT blossom. Remarkable men were The TirsT Franciscans who came To CaliTornia Trom Spain up Through Mexico To CaliTornia in The year I769. Their leader was The renowned Fray Junipero Serra, a naTive oT The Island oT Mallorca, a man oT many abiliTies, celebraTed as a scholar and Teacher, an honor man oT The UniversiTies oT Spain when Spain had The greaTesT UniversiTies in The world. I-Ie spenT I7 years oT his liTe in CaliTornia, end- ing his career in deaTh aT The Mission oT San Carlos near MonTerey. I-lis sTaTue adorns The RoTunda oT The naTional capiToI aT WashingTon. BeTween The years I769 and I823 The Franciscans erecTed 2I Missions beTween San Diego and Sonoma. These vasT esTablishmenTs were The TirsT manual arTs schools in CaliTornia1 and The TirsT Normal school was aT The Mission San Gabriel. Each Mission was a hive oT indusTry in which all The Trades oT The Times were TaughT. IrrigaTion dams and aqueducTs were builded. Orchards and vineyards were planTed, Tar-Tlung Tields oT grain invaded and conquered The deserT. IT was a greaT dream. The piTy is ThaT iT ever came To an end. IT was a dream broken by The greed and cupidiTy oT Those who represenTed The governmenT oT Mex- ico in CaliTornia. These conscienceless poIiTicians conTisc'aTed The Missions, drove The Indian neophyTes back inTo The mounTains. and Turned The holy places inTo sTabIes Tor The caTTle and The swine. Only The ruins oT The greaT Missions now remain, sTill impressive wiTh whaT was once Their beauTy. They sTand lonely and paTheTic along EI Camino Real, The King's I-Iighway, reminders oT a mighTy pasT when The ToundaTions oT our CaliTornia oT Today were laid. , MESSAGE ' l . Q L , ,,, PH o'roQ RA' i-Il IMPI ESSION If . . . SHADOW ARTISTRY .... INDENTED ARCHES AND THIN SHADOW RIMS ON THE AUDITORIUM FACADE . . . STAIRS LIKE LATERAL LINES SHIMMERING SHRUBBERY cfa O PHOTOGRAPHIC IMPRESSICNS . . . MISTY EUCALYPTUS TREES FILMED THROUGH A DIF- FUSED LENS . . . RHYTHMICAL RECURRENCE OF GRACE- FUL LINES . . . LEAF PENDANTS LIKE ETCHED SCRATCHES ...HAZY... PHCJTCDCRAPHIC IMPRESSIONS . . . SUN STREAKS AND SHADOW TRACERY ON THE LAWN . . . LAWN CLUTTERED WITH DEAD LEAVES . . . LIGHT-PEPPERED EUCALYPTUS TREES . . . TREES IN GLIM- MERING HEAT . . . 5-lv? ff74Q1ff55lf1l' - J - wwf 2 Mp: -45.--fi x G ,- IU, ,X ,,,,,, m PHCDTOCRAPHIC IMPRESSIONS . . . BLACK LEATHERY LEAVES AND SOFTLY FALLING FOLIAGE . . . A STUDY IN HIGH-LIGHTS . . . AGAINST THE CLASSIC LINES GF THE SCIENCE BUILD- ING . . . A LOW TREE, A HIGH TREE . . . FEATHERED SHRUBBERY . . . PHOTOGRAPHIC IMPRESSIONS . . . SYNOPTIC VIEW OF CAMPUS OUADRANGLE ...... TRIANGULAR PATCHES OF LAWN WITH TREES SET OUT IN NEAT ROWS .... JUNIOR COLLEGE BUILDINGS . . . NOTICE THE PARK TREES TOPPED BY OIL DERRICKS . .. PHCTOGRAPHIC IMPRESSICNS . . . INTERESTING GROUPING OF MASSIVE ARCHITECTURE FOR CONTRAST .... RED TILE ROOFS IN UNDULATING LINES . . . . . .A SWEEPING PERSPECTIVE OF THE GYMNASIUM BUILDING . . . REPETITION OF COLONNADES .... CYPRESSES STATIONED AT INTERVALS LIKE TALL SENTINELS . . . PHOTOGRAPHIC IMPRESSIONS PHOTOCRAPHIC IMPRESSIONS A STUDY IN BLACK AND WHITE . . . LOOKING FROM THE SHADOWED CORRIDOR . . . INTO THE FORECOURT . . . TWO BLACK COLUMNS . . . SILHOUETTED AGAINST THE SKY . . . In Memory of Virgiriiez Belle Spicer Eelweirel A. Gilbert I I MISSION SAN DIEC-0 iiiii iiiil lulqiili .iESZ'E I l.aTe on The aTTernoon oT July I, I769, FaTher Junipero Serra, in charge oT The overland parTy Trom Mexico, came in sighT oT The beauTiTul Bay oT San Diego. STanding on a liTTle hill and seeing aT his TeeT The broad TerTiIe valley and The blue waTers oT The PaciTic, This pioneer missionary lcnew ThaT he had Tound The ideal locaTion Tor his TirsT Mission. Ac- cordingly, on July I6, he blessed The chosen spoT and Tormally dedicaTed The Mission oT San Diego de Alcala. Scarcely had The Mission Tairly sTarTed on iTs work, when Two supposedly con- verTed Indians escaped To The moun- Tains and sTirred up a revolT againsT The long gowns . AbouT a monTh IaTer The Mission was aTTacked, and I:aTher Jayme, one oT The residenT priesTs, was cruelly murdered. AIThough in Time . . ii' San Diego became Tairly successTuI, iT iiiiliiiiiiiii illiiiiiiii never had as many converTs as some oT The oTher Missions . . . Today, aTTer I ' - 551' I ,gf long years oT disuse and decay, only a porTion oT one wall remains, buT iTs memory and signiTicance will never be dimmed. Amvxlmnsraxrnom I . n no l'l74H'l'Zll4lNtGA SAN DIEGO . . . GREY RUINS RAVAGED BY TIME .... SOMEHOW A MOULDERING BEAUTY IN CONFUSION OF DEOAY . . . A BELL WITH SILENT TONGUE AND MIRTHLESS TONE . . . WIND-BLOWN FOLIAGE IN THE BACKGROUND . . . A PATHWAY WHERE PADRES WALKED AND TOLD THEIR BEADS . . . iv' 7 ' 4 L w E 1 '. L w A r w ,' ..1, f K 1 ' 1' an -1' uf, . KN, , . fig S ..,-Nw Q1 5125 , -'fix - Faculty Administration grey skyline seen at night from rain- bofw pier .... sirzma' lights burn fwftlz fwlzite z'ntensz'ty mm' diffuse Il IIINIIUIIUIIX vapor .... their reflections inzjmrl ll sheen lo the blzlclz-lacquered fwnter . . . set-back II7'Cl1Z.fECfZH'E against fl livin' sky . . . EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL MR. UPJOHN i Superintencleni-'s Message The Long Beach Junior College like olher porlions ol lhe Long Beach Cily School Syslem has responded lo lhe exlraordinary evenls ol lhe year ol I932-33 wilh loyally and courage. Excepling in minor mallers conlingenl upon ils housing, lhe work ol lhe College has gone sleadily lorward. A greal philosopher has said lhal were il nol lor major calaslrophes, il is doubl- lul whelher lhe liner qualilies which humanily has developed would ever have ap- peared al all. We cerlainly have discovered lhal il is possible lo meel an exlraordinary silualion wilhoul serious handicap when lhese liner qualilies abound in our sludenl bodies. The College during lhe year has increased in numbers wilhoul allowing lhe qualily ol worlc ollered and accomplished lo suller. Too ollen we have regarded progress as mainly a maller ol lhe appearance ol new buildings, or ol growing incremenls ol school populalion. While we loolc wilh lavor upon developmenls ol lhis lype, we, neverlheless, leel lhal during lhe currenl year our signal achievemenls have been in lhe direclion ol spirilual conquesls ralher lhan physical elaboralion. Because ol lhis, lhe year will be so much lhe more memorable. -H. S. UPJOHN Superinlenclenl ol Schools '70 22 T221 EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL y 1 . MRS. DROWN, MR. TINCHER, PRES. HILL, MR. CHACE, DR. BOOTH The Board of Education Faced wiTh The problem oT rehabiliTaTing The enTire school sysTem as a resulT oT The March IO earThgualce. The Board oT EducaTion Took sTeps immediaTely aTTer The caTas- Trophe To revive inTeresT in educaTion. Temporary bungalows and TenT houses were erecTed, sTudenTs aT The high schools and elemenTary schools aTTended under The pla- Toon sysTem, and The school year was exTended To June 30 so ThaT no crediT would be losT by any sTudenT. Members oT The Board oT EducaTion who conTribuTed To The re- building oT educaTional inTeresTs are Dr. Walrer B. I-lill, PresidenTg Dr. l-lenry K. BooTh, Vice-PresidenT: lvlrs. Blanche A. Drown, BurTon W. Chaceq and Eugene E. Tiricher. The laTTer Three are The new members oT The Board, replacing Aubrey Parks, lvlrs. John A. Edgar, and l-l. B. CliTTon, who was noT a candidaTe Tor re-elecTion, aT The April 7 Long Beach CiTy School DisTricT elecTion. lV1eeTings oT The Board are held every Monday aTTernoon. While The Board oT EducaTion voTed To granT SupT. l-l. S. Upiohn Tull auThoriTy over all school deparT- menTs as The chieT execuTive under The Board supervision, The Board sTill remains The supreme adminisTraTive body. Plans Tor The TuTure are sTill indeTiniTe alThough com- pleTe replacemenT oT all school buildings is conTemplaTed. EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL The Year in Review The evenTs recorded in This book are Those oT pioneers: pioneers who have promoTed a series oT acTiviTies during The TirsT year oT compleTe auTonomy Tor The Long Beach Junior College. While This is noT The TirsT year oT exisTence Tor The school, iT is The TirsT year The school has been compleTely and deTiniTely separaTed Trom any oTher school in our ciTy sysTem. The Theme oT This book is The Missions , a rnosT TiTTing one, because The Missions represenT The work oT pioneers. These greaT church cenTers were esTablished more Than one hundred and TiTTy years ago wiTh The ThoughT in mind ThaT They mighT civilize and chrisTianize The savages who dwelT on This land. IT was also believed ThaT These Missions would win a new counTry Tor The Spaniards. ScaTTered Trom San Diego norTh- ward To San Francisco The remnan'Ts oT These Missions may be seen in various localiTies Today: monumenTs To a socieTy. a culTure and a civilizaTion, The inTluence oT which is TelT even To This day. WiTh This hisTorica! ' background in mind leT us noTe The work oT pioneers. Vxfe should remember ThaT regardless oT The Time or place oT acTion, pioneers all have common characTerisTics. These characTerisTics are a spiriT ThaT drives, a purpose ThaT is worThy, and accomplishmenTs ThaT are lasTing. l.eT us examine our own condi- Tions and noTe how well our school measures up To These ideals. ThroughouT The pages oT This book is The wriT- Ten and picTorial record oT The spiriT oT our school. No insTiTuTion or organizaTion oT any sorT whaTsoever could carry on and do The Things ThaT have been accomplished by our school wiTh- ouT a True and consecraTed school spiriT. Even aTTer our school was compleTely disabled by The disasTer oT March IO iT carried on soon aTTer, in every acTiviTy, in The Tace oT almosT insur- mounTable odds. As The pioneers oT Mission days Taced hunger, pesTilence and Toreign ene- mies buT carried on To a glorious accomplish- menT, so has our school been able To do greaT Things during The pasT year. The SpiriT oT The MR. LOUNSBURY ' Long Beach Junior College has inspired us all wiTh The desire To accomplish greaT Things Tor Those who have been iTs consTiTuenTs. Again, if we scan The pages oT This book we can see in every acTiviTy The True purpose oT our school. ThaT is a characTerisTic oT The work oT pioneers. The purpose oT our school is noT narrow buT broad. The Missions broughT To The naTives here religion, culTure, and reTinemenT. Our school oTTers scholasTic achievemenT, social environmenT and a varieTy OT acTiviTy ThaT lends iTselT To The developmenT oT a well rounded liTe. We should noT consider TirsT knowledge alone, buT exTended knowledge. We believe ThaT iT is The righT and privilege oT every young man and woman To have and enioy ThaT educaTional Train- ing he can enioy and use proTiTably. lT is impossible aT This Time To Tell The exTenT oT The inTlu- ence oT This year's work on The years To Tollow. There is no quesTion buT ThaT iT will be greaT. Many . oT The pracTices and procedures begun This year will conTinue as our school progresses. There is no doubT buT ThaT The desire and deTerminaTion To carry on and To build a greaT insTiTuTion oT earning will conTinue. The same high sTandards oT accomplishmenT will always mark our eTTorTs. Again may l remind you ThaT This year's work like ThaT oT our Missions has been The work oT pioneers. LeT us remember ThaT The spiriT oT The year and The purpose oT our work is oT lasT- ing imporTance To The TuTure welTare oT our school. l Tirmly believe ThaT we can TruThTully say ThaT we have builT well on a solid ToundaTion. May This year's work and This book be an in- spiraTion in The years ThaT Tollow as The Missions have To The people oT our greaT commonwealTh. yusffes T241 25 Rx , K, X R ,420 A3635 T I V E P E R S O N N E L bww? 4 i, fl, Tn. fJ'Ol1n L. Lounsbury K J V1 R 1 -x f 1 N , M F ,xg 4' l x 1 1 3 1 I Y ,o T PRINCIPAL 44 O1 DE K -OF HILW NO BETTER WORD! A FRIEND OF THE STUDENT BODY - EXECUTIVE MaTTie M. Pai.ne A :fa Mc PT ef... - , 'I ' -,cQQ ,gif L-!,:.cA, L .JW , If ,L.,1c..- The enrollmenT inathe-.Long Beach Junior College has had an increase oT 3070 over lasT year. I522 sTudenTs enrolled in SepTem- ber l932 and 3OO7.addiTional sTudenTs in February I933. This number oT sTudenTs has given us The greaTesT year as To enroll- menT, in The hisTory oT The insTiTuTion. By increasing The amounT oT inTormaTion ThaT we could obTain regarding The sTudenTs and by inviTing The besT TalenT ThaT we could geT To speala To The Advisory CommiTTee each monTh, we have been able To carry ouT a very eTFecTive program oT guidance during The school year. The close oT The school year will Tind our records and guidance daTa more compleTe Than ever beTore in The his- Tory of The college. PERSONNEL l-lelp wanTed and help oTTered! ThaT is The slogan oT Miss MaTTie Paine's oTTice as Dean oT AcTiviTies. Always in posiTion To use any help in carrying ouT The proiecTs oT The various sTudenTs and Their groups, lvliss Paine quiTe successTully supervises and co- ordinaTes all AssociaTed STudenT Body exTra curricular acTiviTies. Open aT all Times Tor individual and group consulTaTion, This oTTice is a haven Tor wel- come advice. ln addiTion, The Employmenff Bureau and The STudenT Loan Fund are di- recTed and adminisTered Through This oTTice TogeTher wiTh The booking oT all college evenTs on The calendar. The Dean of Activities The Dean of Records . S. Lance Brin+le Dean T261 T271 RoberT Ashbrook EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL The Junior College Summer School oT I932 was The second in The hisTory oT The college and even in a year oT depression showed a disTincT gain in aTTendance. The daTes were June 20-July 29. There were 92 sTudenTs en- rolled and I4 Teachers. There were 20 classes in all The main deparTmenTs oT The school. These included ArT, Commerce, lV1aThemaTics and Engineering drawing, Eng- lish, French and German, Physics, and The Social sciences. Full universiTy crediT is granTed, and any adulT may enTer. CrediT is also given Toward l-ligh School graduaTion by Those who can carry college work. The Summer Sessi STudenT PresidenT on Charles W. Jackson The Evening College has had a consTanT increase in iTs enrollmenT each year since iTs incepTion in February I93O. More Than IOOO sTudenTs have enrolled in The evening classes during The year iusT closing. The evening classes are a conTinuaTion oT The regular Day College courses and Tull college crediT is given Tor all courses ThaT are oTTered. The Evening College oTTers an unusual op- porTuniTy Tor Three groups oT sTudenTs. Those who Tind conTlicTs in The day sched- ule, Those sTudenTs who Tind iT necessary To work parT-Time, and people oT The commun- iTy who are inTeresTed in TurThering Their college Training. ' The Evening College EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL GLEE DUNCAN, M.A. Accouniing Department Chairmen Commerce To give business knowledge Tor immediaTe enTrance inTo oTfice posiTions as well as uni- versiTy preparaTion is The Tunciion of The commerce de- parTmenT. English in order To give cerTain skills Tor ordinary use, The English cleparTrnenT oTFers semi-proTes- sional Training as well as ThaT Tor correcT expression. ELl.NOR W. HIATT, M.A. LENA HIGGINS, M..A. English Zoology Biological Sciences Adding Two new courses To iTs curriculum, The biological science deparTmenT made an appeal To non-proiessional as well as To pre-professional sTu- denTs. Physical Sciences NoT only To Tuliill require- menTs, buT To give an under- sTanding oi science in every- day life is The purpose OT The physical science deparTmenT. Music OTTering a music major and several new courses. The music cleparTmenT Took parT in school acTiviTies and provided onTerTainmenT Tor various clubs in The ciTy. Social Sciences Providing a basic knowledge of The pasT. as well as an un- dersTanding of presenT-day liTe, is The TuncTion oT The social science deparTmenT. NOBLE HINES, M.S. EDITH M. HITCHCOCK, M.A. C. W. JACKSON, M.A., B.D. Chemisiry Music Cifizenship iza 29 EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL Department Chairmen Modern Languages To insTill in sTudenTs The spiriT oT linTernaTionalisrn, making Tor world-consciousness and beTTer ciTizenship, is The aim oT The language deparTmenT. ArT To esTablish inTeresTing and wholesome creaTive hobbies ThaT will be carried on Thru liTe is The purpose OT The de- parTmenT oT arTs and craTTs. Library To selecT and organize books and periodicals Tor TaculTy and sTudenT needs and To Tur- nish library experience are The aims oT The library deparT- menT. MaThemaTics - FulTilling requiremenTs oT Lib- eral ArTs, Commerce, and Diploma sTudenTs. as well as sTudenTs oT engineering, is The TuncTion of The maThemaTics deparTmenT. Women's AThleTics To develop skills and aTTiTudes which conTribuTe To eTFicienT and happy presenT day living is The aim oT The women's physical educaTion deparT- menT. Men's AThleTics To develop, Through sporT ac- TiviTy, noT only physical healTh buT a wholesome way oT liTe is The TuncTion oT The men's physical educaTion deparT- menT. CLiARINNE LLEWELLYN, M.A Sports JESSIE L. RAU, M.A. Languages BERT C. SMITH, B.A. Sporfs ANNE THOMSEN, M.A. FAY TUNISON, B..A. EVELYN WENNBERG, M.A. MaThemaTics Library ArT EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL Myron Sheppard Allen, M.E., M.A.-Physics Jessie B. Anderson-Hygiene Ru+ln Bormose, M.A.-French Florence M. Carpen'I'er, M.A.-English Mrs. Mary Chalmers, M.A.-English Eugene Corrie, M.A.-Commercial 1933 Faculty Helen Davenport B.A.-Music Wal'l'er A. Fieg, M.A.-German Albie Flefcher, M.A.-Hisiory Mary E. Gassaway, M.A., Diplome-French William Gregory, Pl1.O.-Physical Science ' Melvin Griffin, M.A.-Physical Eclucalion 30 EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL Edna Lenore Hay--Library Karl K. Heilman, M.E., M.A.1M6+h6m5+iCS H. Violei' Hess, M.A.-Social lns'rH'u+ions Edi+h M. Hi+chcock, M.A.-Music Leonard C. Hubbard, M.A.-Philosophy Harry P. Johnson, M.A.-Hisfory Russell R. Johns+on, M.A.-English Walfer V. Kaulfers, M.A.-Spanish Ka+haryn Kennedy, M.A.-Public Speaking James E. Knox, M.A.-Chemis+ry Roberi' J. Mafhews-Physical Educaiion George C. Moore-Music Faculty 193 3 EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL Roger Mullinex, MJA.-Chemislry Leslie J. Nason, MLA.-Malhemalics Raymond C. Perry, Ph.D.-Malhemalics Samuel E. Pelers, M.A.-Malhemalics Mrs. Margarel' K. Pelersen, MAA.-Geography Shirley Poore, M.A.-Arl- 1933 Faculty Mabel L. Roe, Ph.D.-Bolany Harold F. Seal, M.A.-Polilical Science Marian E. Sims, M.A.-English Alberl' Small, LL.B.-Economics Charles Smilh, Ph. D.-Hislory Okla E. Smilh, LL.B.-Physical Eclucalion 32 l33I EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL Cora Slager, M.A.-French Inez Slephenson, B.S.-Commercial Rulh Slonebarger, B.S.-Physical Educalion Mary Thomsen, MLA.-English Mabel Coy Trail, M.A.--English J. Kennelh Wade, LL.B.-Law, Malhemalics Mrs. E. Riddell While-Library Herberl' T. While, MAA.-Geology, Geography Hosea Whileneck, M.A. Ed.D.-Physics Forresl I. Wilkinson, Ph.B., M.A.-Psychology Rebecca Wilson, R.N.-College Nurse Clifford L. Wrighl, M.S.-Physiology Faculty 1933 I 4 OFFICE SECRETARIES 'IL Rum French Frances Leonard f X Mrs. Grace Olsson Clara Braakenberg M T Mrs. Kafhleen Begg Oh Tor The LiTe oT a SecreTaryl may be The cry oT some girls, buT ambiTious Temales who yearn Tor such a iolo as have The ladies on This page should Think Twice loeTore applying. Clara, Frances, RuTh, and MargareT, if we may use Their TirsT names, are exTremely busy oTFice girls. l-lowever, Their ever-ready paTience and consTanT kindness have given Them a hosT oT Triencls in The Jaysee. argare Bandon RuTh French acTs as The mimeograph operaTor in her 'annex near The show cases while Mrs. Olsson assisTs Mr. BrinTle in NighT School. The Records clerk is Tilled by Mrs. KaThleen Begg. Frances Leonard worries hersehc over The A. S. B. accounTs and Clara Braalc- enloerg is Mr. Lounsbury's secreTary. MargareT Banolon checks aTTendance Tor The college. Miss Gladys WhiTe, noT picTured, serves Miss Paine as SecreTary. , 403g ,'5'i 1 if? X 7 ' -Lili fi 9 ,pi .. . ,, ,ri :+V r X'1f!1:7 ,Ar 'r 'e rf? KF.. l34l A Yr K. , .CA Ax KA ff XVJM Sf! 4 wffw DW7 Y 0 rfjjfff 5567! ff fL f fy X , Nr x ' , W ' g' f,l! WN f X X f nv , K a f ,W X Ln W XXX!! '5 vm!! jff fyj J fyfx .J'f ' X! wx, M,f! ,f VJ ZX 71 g ,7fW,QsodEiaWecl Student Body diff M f O 9 lf?-fvxjfib ' H IL, K 5 QJYM' Q PRAM, I I f I 'I - ' - Q V I d Pip? k a' Ci,71pZ?-Zwindow 0 'J M 'H . . . . Z5 ju ll 1 fwofven into .!Jf0-0-fy, JM, ML, school! a' I zpanile oncat LQ- O,-AQ cauglzf.fz1 1zl1gl1tand glanczng slzadows . . JLA-AA-gg, .,9' vfMMu,.L yrv- 04'-f J B-4? kJ. RAI. U tl? 7'-W vv-aj QJMQ W. ,fT7j..,cgWaxU,- 30-o.0 QM.,oJ:. I 1 ASSOCl'ATED STUDENT BILL ELLIOTT ' -Fall A. S. B. Presidenf Bill Ellioff has been an oufsfanding sfudenf body presidenf. During his regime, he conceived and organized fhe Associafed lvlen Sfudenfs in fhis insfifufion, he served as presiding officer and official hosl' fo fhe fall convenfion of sfudenf body presidenfs, or- ganized a sfudenf loan fund, and revised fhe Viking Award sysfem fo eliminafe poinf- seekers and reward oufsfanding work in one field. While Ellioff was presidenf, he inaugurafed numerous minor proiecfs. A bullefin board sysfem was erecfed af Ellioff's suggesfion and a municipal inkwell was placed in fhe Junior College building for fha use of fhe sfudenf body. A plan fo sell fhe un- claimed arficles of fhe losf and found deparfmenf and place fhe money in a fund for alleviafing sfudenf financial disfress also received impefus from Bill Ellioff. The work of fhe employmenf bureau noficeably increased ifs service under guidance of fhe fall sfu- denf body presidenf. Transferring of sfudenf body cards, which is illegal, was dealf a deafh blow by Ellioff when he inifiafed a close check af school evenfs. The lickefs of fhose who confinued fo fransfer fheir sfudenf body cards were confiscafed. A plan fo organize fhe sfudenf body presidenfs info a working group was presenfed by Ellioff af fhe fall convenfion of fhe presidenfs and was favorably received. Social relafions befween fhe iunior colleges, sponsored by Los Angeles Junior College, received fhe hearfy supporl' of Ellioff. The fall presidenf's work is parficularly praiseworfhy in view of fhe facf fhaf he fook office during fhe fime of a complefe reorganiza- fion of fhe Junior College. Amendmenfs fo fhe consfifufion fhaf would correlafe fhe presenf sef-up wifh fhe consfifufion were in- froduced by Ellioff and several were puf in effecf. ln speaking of Ellioff's ferm, John L. Lounsbury, principal of fhe college, declared, l-le has placed service above self. Cheerful Bill 36 37 BODYPRESIDENTSQIKWJ 4 wif 1 ' NMA wif . ki 1 jr ART RENE Spring A. S. B. PresiclenT- UndaunTed by The disorganizaTion and handicaps imposed on The insTiTuTion as a re- sulT oT The earThguake oT March IO, ArT Rene, spring PresidenT oT The STudenT Body, led his cabineT in The work oT sTudenT governmenT by swiTT acTion ThaT assured a re- Turn To school liTe as nearly normal as possible under exisTing condiTions. By his adepT reorganizaTion oT school acTiviTy and his operaTion under Trying cir- cumsTances he gained The admiraTion oT sTudenTs, adminisTraTors, and Teachers. I-le con- sTanTly TurThered The inTeresT oT The sTudenT body in opposing curTailmenT oT sTudenT body acTiviTies as a resulT oT The quake, working wiTh lvliss lvlaTTie M. Paine, Dean oT AcTiviTies, who held The same opinion. The cabineT under The presidency oT Rene senT The debaTers To DuluTh, MinnesoTa, despiTe The TacT ThaT The Richard l-lalliburTon as- sembly, The proceeds oT which were To Tinance The Trip, had To be cancelled. Gold baskerballs and liTe passes were presenTed To The baskeTball players who parTicipaTed in The SouThern CaliTornia play-oTT game and oTher leTTermen were given silver baskeT- balls. OTher accomplishmenTs oT Rene were The voTing oT SIOO Tor The STudenT Loan Fund and S50 Tor a book loan Tund, a sum creaTed To purchase books Tor lending To sTu- denTs unable To buy Them. A commiTTee To Take charge OT all adverTising in The Junior College was creaTed and appoinTed by The spring presidenT. As- semblies held every Wednesday morning were inauguraTed by Rene when school resumed aTTer The earThguake To speed homo- geneiTy oT The disorganized college liTe. lnTeresTing personaliTies, such as Charles Paddock, were secured by Rene Tor many oT The gaTherings. AT The end of ArT Rene's Term campus leaders de- clared ThaT his work had been ouTsTanding, since he had proved his abiliTy To lead and govern by TuncTioning admirably under Try- ing condiTions. Smiling ArT ASSOCIATED STUDENT BILL ELLIOTT DON SQUIRES FLORENCE GIBSON Presideni Vice-Presidenf Secretary LLOYD HODGE EARL DIBLE HARRY ALLEN Treasurer Rep. of STud The Tall cabineT oT The Jun- ior College Took oTFice during a period oT reorganizaTion. NoTwiThsTanding, The mem- bers oT The execuTive body seT To worlq irnrnediaTely - Their rneeTings oTTen running Two hours Twice a weelc. The high-lighT oT The year's acTivi- Ties was The Tall convenTion oT sTudenT body presidenTs which The Long Beach cabi- neT served as hosT. For The TirsT Time in The his- Tory oT The school poliTical parTiesandcampaigning were recognized by The college governing body. The elecTion OT The spring cabineT was conducTed in This manner. enf Body Rep. of ArTs ART RENE JIM DEWEY Rep. of ATI-ileiics Viking EaIiTor .ill . Fall Cabinet I39I 39 L. w-., BODY GOVERNMENT LOIS GRIFFIN FLORENCE GIBSON ART RENE SecreTary Vice-PresidenT Presiclenl' GEORGE GAUGLER LLOYD HODGE TEX WESTERGARD Rep. Of ArTS Rep. of STudenT Body Treasurer The diTliculTy oT reorganiz- ing The Junior College inTo an open-air school resTed wiTh The spring cabineT. ThaT They perTormed This TeaT is evi- denced by The ciTy-wide com- mendaTion oT Their work. Po- siTions in The cabineT leTT open by The resignaTions oT Flossie Gibson and Bill STover were Tilled by appoinTrnenT. WiniTred Gould became vice presidenT and Edward Jack- Edifor Viking Rep. of Afhlerics i Son Was made Inepliesenil-alive OT aThleTics. FaculTy advisers were: John L. Lounsbury, prin- cipal, lvliss MaTTie M. Paine, dean oT acTiviTies, and J. Ken- neTh Wade, Tinances. JOHN FULTON BILL STOVER Spring Cabinet ASSOCIATED STUDENT BEVERLY RARSONS ALICE M. GARRISON MARGARET KEIDEL RUTH BORMOSE Vice-Presidenf Treasurer Comm. Chairman Adviser 1932-The Associated The Associafed Women Sfudenfs, carrying ouf ifs purpose of forwarding fhe ideals of frue womanhood, aiding in all worfhy sfudenf body acfivifies, and furfhering fhe spirif of good fellowship and democracy, puf on an exfensive program of reorganizafion besides carrying ouf fheir usual service, social and academic proiecfs. The cabinef members-Beffy Scoff, presidenfg Beverly Parsons, vice presidenfg Alice Marie Garrison, freasurerg Rufh l-lamren, secrefaryg Lois Griffin, freshman represenfafive: and Miss Maffie Paine, Miss Rufh Bormose, and Miss Marian Sims, faculfy advisers: enlarged fhe scope of fhe organizafion by developing new commiffees. The following commiffees were added fo fhe organiza- 1 -' fion-college service, communify service, friendship, dec- orafion, assembly and program, elecfion and inaugurafion, courfesy, dance, and fea. The A.W.S. gave ifs firsf masquerade dance in ifs his- fory in Ocfober af fhe Virginia Counfry Club. This dance was followed by a semi-formal dance af fhe Villa Riviera in January. Besides fhese fwo dances, fhe A.W.S. spon- sored mafinee dances and a Freshman mixer af fhe Recrea- fion Park Club l-louse. The Chaffey conference for all of fhe A.W.S. organiza- fions of Soufhern California fo which fhis J. C. senf dele- gafes, was one of fhe oufsfanding evenfs of fhe year. The faculfy was enferfained by fhe A.W.S. in Ocfober af a fea. The freshmen were also enferfained by fhe A.W.S. af an assembly held af fhe beginning of fhe semesfer fo acquainf fhe new girls wifh iunior college life. BETTY SCOTT Presiclenf i401 4 BODY GOVERNMENT MARIAN SIMS RUTH HAMREN LOUISE REHBOCK LOIS GRIFFIN Adviser SecreTary Freshman RepresenTaTive Freshman Represenfafive Women Students-19 3 3 The same Tall semesTer cabineT oT The AssociaTed Women STudenTs conTinued inTo The Spring semesTer wiTh Their program oT progressive organizaTion. A new Treshman represenTa- Tive, Louise Rehbock, was added To The cabineT in April. While mosT oT The organizing was done in The preceding semesTer, The acTual inauguraTion oT The commiTTees came in The Spring semesTer. V The A.W.S. opened Their Spring semesTer by sponsoring an assembly ioinTly wiTh The W.A. A. To adverTise J. C. clubs and proiecTs. ' To Torward Their plan Tor Triendship, The A.W.S. spon- A' sored a maTinee mixer, a Tea Tor The Freshman girls, and a series oT maTinee dances. As a service To all needy J. C. women, The A. W. S. cooperaTed wiTh The empIoymenT bureau in geTTing work Tor unemployed women. The earThguake oT March IO aTForded The Spring cabineT a chance oT communiTy and college service. A check room organized To Take The place oT sTudenTs' lockers, Tormed a Tew weeks aTTer The earThquake, TuncTioned unTiI The compleTion oT The school year. The A.W.S. also Turnished drivers Tor The RehabiliTaTion invesTigaTors. The ouTsTanding evenT oT The semesTer was The Tormal organdy Tea given in May aT The Campbell I-IoTel. An I elaboraTe insTallaTion dinner compleTed The year's work oT The old cabineT and inTroduced The new cabineT inTo acTive A.W.S. work. MATTIE M. PAINE Adviser ASSOCIATED STUDENT RAYMOND C. PERRY BILL MOONEY HENRY ZIESENHENNE JACK LORD Adviser Secrefary Tree Rep. of Rally Comm. 1932-The Associated An ambiTion was realized when The AssociaTed Men STudenTs, an organizaTion suggesTed by Bill EIlioTT, STudenT Body PresidenT, To promoTe good Tellowship among The men and To TurTher inTeresT in all school acTiviTies, grew Trom an inTanT To a permanenT TixTure in iTs iniTial semesTer. The organizaTion was TosTered by EllioTT unTil a cabineT composed oT George Gaugler, presidenTg ArThur STeinman, Vice presidenTQ William Mooney, SecreTaryg l-lenry Zies- enhennei Treasurer, Mr. Raymond Perry, TaculTy adviser: and Mr. Charles Jackson and Mr. BerT SmiTh, associaTe TacuITy advisers was appoinTed by The STudenT Body CabineT. Realizing ThaT The TirsT semesTer would eiTher make or break The or- ganizaTion, The A.lvl.S. cabineT proceeded careTully in all oT iTs underTakings. Because TooTball is The Tocus oT sTudenT inTeresT during The Tall semesTer, The A.lv1.S. acTiviTies cenTered around This sporT. Rallies, rooTing secTions, posTers, Viking an- nouncemenTs and pep campaigns over The loudspeaker were all conTribuTions oT The A.lVl.S. To generaTe school spiriT. A Pasadena bonfire was as new as The organizaTion which sponsored iT. YeT The bonTire was so successful Thar The A.S.B. CabineT voTed ThaT iT should become a yearly TradiTion. Because The bonTire climaxed The beard growing conTesT, The A.M.S. presenTed Tubes oT shaving cream To every parTicipanT in The Tinals.- The Tall cabineT closed Their semesTer oT acTiviTy wiTh a banqueT Tor Their successors. GEORGE GAUGLER AppoinTed Presideni' i42l T431 BODY GOVERNMENT BOB MURRAY ED KNOX KENNETH SMITH WEBSTER ELLIOTT Treasurer Secreiary Vice-Presicleni' Presidenf Men Students-193 3 Following The suggesTions oT The original A.lv1.S. cabineT, The new Spring cabineT composed oT WebsTer EllioTT, presidenTg BurTon ParminTer, vice presidenTq Ed Knox, secreTaryg Bob Mur- ray, Treasurer, and KenneTh SmiTh, sTudenT body represenTaTive sTarTed To work immediaTely on The Spring program. ln April Bob SuTherland was elecTed vice presidenT To replace Par- mL1nTef' who was moved up To The oTTice oT presidenT vacaTed by EllioTT, who dropped Trom sc oo. As an aThleTic program The Spring A.lvl.S. assisTed in The adverTising and in The TurTher- ing oT school spiriT in baskeTball, baseball, Track, minor sporTs, and inTramural sporT evenTs. The vicTory sTand, The adverTising, and The decoraTing Tor The SouThern Conifer- ence Relays was The work oT The A.lvl.S. As a meThod oT improved and more economical ad- verTising, The A.lv1.S. puT on a campaign Tor posTers. The cabineT encouraged each engineer To malce a posTer Tor some aThleTic game. By using posTer maTerial Turnished by The A.M.S., sixTy posTers were donaTed To The school. The big A.lvl.S. social evenT oT The year was The Spring SporT Dance given aT The Municipal AudiTorium April 2I. U WalT Richards and his Ramblers enTerTained wiTh a special TeaTured program. Because The cabineT realized ThaT in many insTances Their supporT To oTher organizaTions was as imporTanT as aTTempTing proiecTs independenTly, They gave much oT T Their Time To giving boosTs To independenT school proiecTs. 'T The Spring semesTer culminaTed wiTh The TradiTional BU RTON PARMINTER Successor PresidenT old and new cabineT banqueT To acguainT The new oTTicers wiTh Their new duTies. ASSOCIATED STUDENT CEREMONIES Class recepTions, as well as special assemblies TeaTur- ing such men as CapTain Lorenzen and Richard Hal- liburTon were sponsored by This busy commiTTee. COMMITTEE OF CEREMONIES Griffin, HoIT, Allen, Mr. Johnson, Shaw EMPLOYMENT Securing ouTside work, as well as providing employ- menT upon The Junior Col- lege campus Tor needy sTu- denTs, is The TuncTion OT The employmenT com- miTTee. RALLY Under The chairmanship oT George Gaugler, The rally commiTTee sponsored Tour rallies, among Them The TirsT bonTire pep-TesT oT The Junior College. Permanent Boards , EMPLOYMENT BUREAU Van OrdsTrand, James, Hodge, Miss Paine, Miss WhiTe, Thomas, Garner RALLY COMMITTEE HoIT, ParminTer, WesTergard, SmiTh, Lord, Hodge, Murray, Mr. Perry T441 , I45I BODY C-JOVE-RNMENT PUBLICATIONS Meelinq on call, +l'1e board of conlrol of publicalions decides all impor+an+ prob- lems beyond Ilie iurisdic- Iion ol edilors and ad- visers. BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS EIIioH', Hayes, Mrs. Hia'H', Miss Paine, Miss Trail, Fullon, Squires And Committees ff ' X FINANCE Conlrolling budqels of all school aclivilies, Iliis com- millee of Iacully and slu- denl members arlempled Io eliminale all non-essen- Iials. FINIANCE COMMITTEE Wesfergard, Mr. Lounsbury, Griffin, Rene, Hodge , LOAN FUND Willa Ilne inauguralion of rlwe loan fund, money for sludenl aid was appropri- aled 'Io be ladmiriislered by a commillee ol Iacully and sludenls. LOAN FUND COMMITTEE Parminler, Rene, Gould, Miss Paine, Mr. Mullinex, Hodge MISSION SAN LUIS REY I I I IIZI, S?1'2'f1III IIIII 1 ISISEI1f11 IIIIIEIII as IISSSIIif22i QEEIIIIIIII Il2iiIS22i2-,II ISI E- Sfanding on a genfle slope overlooking a peaceful valley is Mission San Luis, Rey de Francia. In ifs youfh San Luis was a proud king, as ifs name indicafes, for fo ifs friendly doors flocked more dusky neophyfes fhan fo any ofhers in fhe whole Mission chain. The Indians loved fhe beaufiful Mission crowned by ifs graceful and unique campanileg and well fhey mighf, for had fhey nof builf if sfone by sfone fhemselves? And fhey Ioved fhe fradifions and cusfoms of San Luis Rey, especially fhe greaf choir and orchesfra famed fhe lengfh and breadfh of California. Buf dearer fo fheir hearfs by far fhan cold sfone or femporal pleasure was genfle Padre Peyri, who, from fhe fime of fhe dedi- ee+'en eefemefw In '798 WI' 'fe Sew- larizafion in I829, gave .his whole hearf and soul fo his Mission . . . Af presenf, I affer years of neglecf, San Luis Rey's doors are again open, and again Fran- ciscans carry on fhe work of Fafher Serra. i-I E C LASSES ' - Alike Lortscher- Editor A 4 1 -1 C222 1.12 1 1 nbi erlaai .I e9lA 6 I I lt I I 1 1 1 5 V 10' -1 'lo hi - ' SAN LUIS REY I . . . WHITE SUN BEATING DOWN UPON ADOBE WALLS . . . A GLIMPSE OF SHIADOWED CLOISTER . . . EUCALYPTUS SCREENS THE FOREGROUND AND SPATTERS THE GROUND WITH SHADOW . . . STEPS WORN SMOOTH AND LEVEL FROM THE TREAD OF COUNT- LESS FEET . . . K . ,Qs n r I , L -A 4 H r 'N 'Ny' 4. 1 f s L ii X I . .v , , ' K f 11274411 1 X-. ,1 - -N .. f wx X, 1. f'7 K ' 'V 7 X1 XT: ,F I v M X, 3 , W 1 i J 1 X f e- A .lf .Y.- ' jfkk 5 X53 1 -+ , , , Y' ' S Q4 .,f4 , . - V rf H in 1 34, 4, . , if 1 f , my X A X f 1 M 5 , , mx 1 ' Xxx V , xi A I ,W ,.? v 1 The Classes of1933 the hushed expectancy of It desert twi- light with age-old palms as mute fwit- nesses .... they seem to incline their heads and to lean forward as though fwaiting . . . night deepens on the plain below . . . only the distant hills retain a grey haze .... 1 l C L A S S O F F I C E R S Sophomore class acTiviTies Tor The Fall semesTer were headed by a compeTenT group oT oTFicers. l-loward PaTriclc led The class as presidenT, while Ed Magee was elecTed To The posiTion oT vice- presidenT. CcTavia CanTield was secreTary, and Bob Murray was Treasurer. For The TirsT Time in The hisTory OT Long Beach Junior College no mid-Term graduaTing exercises were held. IT was decided ThaT members oT The February graduaTing class should receive Their diplomas aT The combined exercises To be held in June. Under The leadership OT l-loward PaTrick, plans were seT in moTion Tor an inTer-class day, buT no deTiniTe daTe was deTermined. The oTTicers also co- operaTed wiTh heads oT The Treshman class in spon- soring The TradiTional TooTball game beTween non- varsiTy men oT The Two groups. OuTsTanding in class member aTTainmenTs was The Phi Rho Pi oraTory championship won by l-low- ard PaTriclc in BalcersTiel'd. Under The ediTorship oT James Dewey, The weelcly publicaTion, Viking, was enlarged To an eighl' column paper. HOWARD PATRICK F Presidenf MAGEE CANFIELD MURRAY Fall Sophomores T48 49 C L A S S O F F I C E R S JOHNSTON GRIFFIN WESTERGARD Fall Freshmen WiTh a lighT ThaT broughT The clariTy oT day To The Viking campus, The gianT bonTire which heralded The Long Beach-Pasadena Thanksgiving Day game was The big proiecT oT The Fall Frosh under The lead- ership oT KenneTh EllioTT, presidenTg Tex WesTer- gard, vice-presidenTg Lois GriTTin, secreTaryg and Bob JohnsTon, Treasurer. This garganTuan pyre was The TirsT To be sponsored by iayseeiTes, and is being looked Torward To as an annual aTFair. Dancing aT The Municipal AudiToriurn in The Freshman Prom was anoTher aTFair under The aus- pices oT The lowerclassmen. OuTsTanding Fall Treshmen in school poliTics were EllioT, WesTergard, Miss GriTTin, class oTTicers: and l-lenry Ziesenhenne, AJVLS. STarring in aThleTics were Bob JohnsTon, Ed Knox, Kelly lvloan, George T-Tallen, and Selwyn Yancy in TooTball: KenneTh Purdy, Frank SchmidT and Don l-Teck, baskeTballg Paul Teschke and Don Tobin were acTive in publica- Tionsg while Maurice ATkinson, Bill Copple, and Len Wilson scored in Torensics. KENNETH ELLIOTT PresidenT C L A S S O F F I C E R S Carrying Through wiTh plans Tor an inTer-class day aT Orange CounTy Park, begun by oTTicers oT The Fall sophomore class, Spring semesTer leaders hoped To insTigaTe a TradiTion ThaT will become bigger and more popular each year in The Junior College. In spiTe of The TacT ThaT The earThquake inTer- rupTed several TenTaTive plans Tor class aTTairs, The oTFicers carried on in a real spiriT oT accomplish- menT, and earned an enviable repuTaTion Tor ac- TiviTy. Howard PaTriclc, elecTed To compleTe The year as presidenT, Traveled To The Phi Rho Pi na- Tional Torensic TraTerniTy convenTion in DuluTh wiTh Russell Cullen. The oraTorical conTesT was won by PaTrick. Besides being an enThusiasTic supporTer oT class aTTairs, Muriel Barnes, vice-presidenT, was ac- Tive in Kassai and Spanish club. Grace Barnes, sec- reTary, was also vice-presidenT oT Kassai. Ed NOT- ziger, Treasurer, compleTed his Third semesTer as columnisT Tor The Viking. Class meeTings were held each Thursday morning under The advisership oT Miss MaTTie Paine and Mr. Roger lvlullinex. HOWARD PATRICK Presicleni' M. BARNES G. BAR.NES NOFZIGER Spring Sophomores 50 CLASS OFFl'C E RS Because They had a weekly meeTing To admin- isTraTe Their oTTices, The leadership oT The Spring Frosh oTTicers was dominanT. Co-operaTing wiTh The sophomore leaders, The lowerclass heads were ioinT- ly responsible Tor The Tield day aT Orange CounTy Park on June 2. OTTicers oT The spring group are KenneTh SmiTh, presidenTg Jean lvlillner, vice-presi- denTg Amelia Shaw, secreTaryg and Bob JohnsTon, Treasurer. The name oT The Freshman class was upheld in many acTiviTies. ProminenT Frosh in poliTics included Tex WesTergard and Lois GriTTin, cabineTg KenneTh SmiTh, A.Iv1.S.p Amelia Shaw and Jean lvlillner, class oTTicers. ln publicaTions work KenneTh EllioT, Mau- rice ATl4inson, AI Goldberg, Jack Quayle, and Don Tobin were prominenT. On The aThleTic Tield Don Vorhies, Eric Nordman, Fred RaThbun, and Marvin Messner were prominenT in Track, while AI Conlislc, Bob JohnsTon, John Wilson, Beverly Brown, Dan ShoTTner, and Don l-leclc sTarred in baseball. Billy Copple, Len Wilson, and Maurice ATkinson de- baTed as Froshp SHAW MILLNER JOHNSTON Spring Freshmen KENNETH SMITH v PresiclenT .Jo rf 1 :Z -f.L.,Qf,b-uf 'ffffl C2Zf ' 'f 'WM ,bf Q!-f4f r. TQ 'Egan' 5r4Lfv' , , . M , I, I . I ?4!E,mA I- ,M4,f,M, VA Mui: A V, 41, 71 .. f1fL,V,., S i,Q,1f'e . , I' , R .L ff ,s .- , ,.,,,A. Entertainment De Luxe SOPHOMORE ASSEMBLY C Long, Notziger, G. Barnes, Shinn, M. Barnes With a modern radio program vying with an old-tashioned meIIerdramer , the Freshman and Sophomore clashed in the annual assembly competition, the upper-class- men broadcasted their extravaganza on the l4th ot June, while the Frosh preceded them on the 7th with their musical melodrama. The results, too late to be reported in Saga, were decided by a vote ot the student body. Collaborating in the Soph ettort was a committee ot Muriel and Grace Barnes, Winitred Long, Ed Notziger, Bob Shinn, and headed by Jack Riordan. George l-lallen, chairman: Kenneth Purdy, Maurice At- kinson and Oak Smith took charge tor the Frosh, assisted by Amelia Shaw, Jean Millner, Carroll Brooks, Kenneth Smith, and Bob Johnston. cj!! FRESHMAN ASSEMBLY CCMMITTEE Millner, Brooks, K. Smith, Hallen, Johnston, O. Smith, Shaw 521 53 Caps and Gowns gofwned fgzzres szfllzouettea' fzgninsi f1'0l0I.Clll'ZUI7H5l1Il62IO'LUX . . . tall cnndefn- bra ana' kleig liglzzfx tlzrofw the fmlwzx into ll lziglz .vlzndofw relief . . . ll lfzliicezf fzzffn- dow in the fwingx . C L A S S - O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I PHIL AARONSON Liberal Aris Transfer from Fresno Slale, Freshman Foofball. ABOVE--2 LOIS ALCORN Pre-Ieacher GERALD ADLER Engineering Engineers, College Y German Club. HARRY A. ALLEN Business Aclminislrafion Represenfafive ol Arls, Thors, Foolball, Tong. LOWER RIGHT DOROTHY BALDWIN Liberal Arrs Tyybfffifyljx MAXINE AFFLERBAUGH English Maior Arr Edilor Saga, Kassai. ROBERT L. ANDERSON Accounring l-lonor Sociefy, Inler-class Foolball. ESTHER BALLARD Journalism Kassai, Glee Club, Viking. Type and Copy, Golf. 193 3 Graduates ABOVE-I LEO F. ANDREE Business Aclminisfrarion Drama Workshop, Foren- sic. Commercial Clubs. ABOVE-2 WARREN E. BAKER Pre-'teacher Honor Sociely, German Club. EVERETT WISE AVEY Pharmacy Slucleni Body Slore Man- ager, Commercial Club. WILLIAM T. BAKER Business Adminislrafion Honor Sociely, French Club, I-lammurabi. 54 55 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-l WILLIAM B. BARNES Pre-legal l-lammurabi. Spanish Club ABOVE-2 JEAN TERRY BEERKLE Liberal Aris MARGARET BEAM Commercial Newman Club. Sporls, Commercial Club. LYMAN G. BERG Aeronaufical Finance Commercial Club, Span ish Club. ABOVE-I ANNA ELVERA BRAN DT Pre-'leacher ABOVE-2 HOWARD DRURY BROWN Business Adminislralion LOWER LEFT JOHN D. BLACK Eleclrical Engineering lnlramural Mgr., Honor Sociefy, Tong, Engineers. L. CLOVIS BRASWELL Business Aclminisfrafion French Club, Commercial Club. MARJORIE BROWN Liberal Arls Viking, Slcalcls, French Club, Honor Socieiy. EUNICE BRADLEY Liberal Ar'l's Saga. Viking, Ari Club, lnfernalional Club. MILDRED LUCILLE BROCK Pre-'leacher Asclepiadeian, Ari Club ENID GRACE BUNGE Pre-1-eacher W. A. A., French Club racluates 193 3 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 l l l i ABOVE-I J. ELMER BRUN5 Commercial Baskerball, Track, Com- mercial Club, Lellermen. ABOVE-2 ROBERT E. CALLAWAY Commercial Commercial Club, Or- cheslra. RACHEL MARGARET BRUSH Secrelarial PRAXEDIS CARMONA Pres. lnlernafional Club. Commercial Club. LOWER RIGHT DONALD CRAWFORD Pre-medical Pres. Caduceus, Hono Sociely. T' LILLl,AN CALLAHAN Liberal Aris Pres. Sludenl Club, Pres. Newman Clulo, W.A.A. PHIL CARPENTER Liberal Arls Viking, Skalds, Drama Workshop, Type 81 Copy. MAE E. CROWTH ER Pre-'reacher Pres. Asclepiadeian, Kas- sai, W.A.A., Hockey Mgr. 193 3 Graduates ABOVE-I LAWRENCE CHAFFEE Liberal Arfs ABOVE-2 WILMA COLE Liberal Ar'ls Srage Crew, Spanish Club, Golf Club, STANLEY Y. CH ENG Accouniing JOHN V. COOPER Pre-legal Pres. lnrernalional Club. Treas. College Y , l56l 57 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I MELBA LILLIAN DAILEY Business Adminisfrafion Commercial Club, Span- ish Club. ABOVE-2 JAMES DEWEY Liberal Arfs Viking Award, Viking Ed- iror. Pres. Type 84 Copy. OPAL DECKER Liberal Ar'Is EARL W. DIBLE Pre-legal Phi Rho Pi, Pres. College Y , A.S.B. Cabinef. ABOVE-I JESSIE E. DUNBAR Music Maier Riding Club. W.A.A., Or- chesira. ABOVE-2 BILL ELLIOTT Business Adminisrrarion Pres. A. S. B., Viking Award, Viking Bus. Mgr. LOWER LEFT GERTRUDE DICKINSON Liberal Arrs Sfudenl Club. Arr Club, Golf Club. ROBERT F. DUNBAR Commercial Commercial Club. Fresh man-Sophomore Fooiball VIVIAN C. ENGLISH Liberal Arrs French Club, Honor So- ciery, Sludenl Club. EMMETT DIXON Engineering Newman Club SADIE EARLE MaI'hemaI-ics Maior Alpha Gamma Sigma French Club. DOROTHY ERSKINE Secrefarial Sludenl Club Cabinel Graduates 193 3 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I EILEEN ESSELMAN Liberal Arfs French Club, W. A. A., Brush and Pencil. ABOVE-2 ROBERT F. FOSTER Pre-medical Capfain Swimming, Polo, Honor Socieiy, Tong. BERYL FLEMING Liberal Arfs Siuclenl Club Cabinet Alpha Gamma Sigma. CLARA E. FOWLER Language Maior Los Conquislaclores, Slu- denf Club. EVA FLOOD Pre-Ieacher Asclepiadeian, Ari Club LILLIAN REA FREY Liberal Arfs Sfudenl Club. Spanish Club. LOWER RIGHT ELMER F. GOODWIN Commerce Commercial Club. WINIFRED M. GOULD Liberal ArI's Pres. Honor Sociefy, Pres. Infernafional Club, Saga. 193 3 Graduates ABOVE-l JOHN H. FULTON Liberal Arls Ecliror Viking, Pres. Type and Copy. Glee Club. ABOVE-2 MAX GATOV Pre-med ical Skalds, German Club. ALICE M. GARRISON Liberal Arls Honor Socieiy. Kassai, Treas. A.W.S.. W.A.A. GEORGE G. GAUGLER Liberal Arfs Pres. A. M. S., Viking Award, A.S.B. Cabinet 58 I59l C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I MARGARET HALES Social Science Ari' Club, Siudenr Club Commercial Club, Golf. ABOVE-2 MARY E. HAVERFIELD Liberal Aris French Club, Siudenf Club. Honor Socieiy. ABOVE-I STANFORD HOLDEN TOM HOLT MARTHA HUDSON Commercial Liberal Arfs Pre-legal Commercial Club, French Tong, Track, Commifiee Pres. W. A. A., Kassai, Club, Inier-class Sporfs. of Ceremonies. Treas. Siudeni Club. ABOVE-2 RUTH A. INGLIS RAYMOND JACKSON WILLIAM B. JUCKETT Business Adminisirafion Pre-Teacher Engineering Honor Sociefy, Track, Engineers Club, Forensic Successful CaIami'ry. Club, College Y , LOWER LEFT HARRY W. HAYES LOUISE HENDRIX DQN B- HARRISON Pre-legal Liberal Aris Busmess Adm'n'5l 'ai -'n Mgr. Viking, Mgr. Golf. S+udenI' Club, Spanish Transfer from Sanla Ana Mgr. Tong. Club, Arhlerics. J unior College. MARTELLE HAVI NS Secrelarial Gow Graduates 19 3 3 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I EDITH KAVANAUGH Pre-Ieacher Alpha Gamma Sigma, Sluclenl Club. ABOVE-2 KENNETH KENNELLY Chemical Engineering Varsily Baseball, Engi- neers, lnlramural Foolball RUTH EVELYN KEELER Business Aclminisfralion Sec. Sludenl Club, Ari Club. . ELIZABETH L. KING Liberal Arls Honor Sociely, German Club. LOWER RIGI-IT NADINE LORIMOR Liberal Arfs Ari Club, Siuclenl Club, Spanish Club. MARGARET J. KEIDEL Pre-Ieacher Kassai, Spanish Club, W PMA., German Club. BETTY JANE KOHLKE Pre-Teacher Ari Club, Sluclenl Club. Spanish Club, W.A.A. KARL LOVEJOY Pre-Ieacher Honor Socieiy, Spanish Club. 193 3 Graduates ABOVE-I GENEVA V. KOHLSTEDT Liberal ArIs ABOVE-2 DOROTHY E. LAYER Pre-Ieacher French Club, German Club. MADELINE KUHN Liberal ArI's RUTH A. LEACH Pre-Ieacher W.A.A., Sludenl Club, Spanish Club, Ari Club. , I 60 6 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE--I LOIS ELAINE LUCE Liberal Ar+s Alpha Gamma Sigma, W. A.A. ABOVE-2 CATHERI N E MACKAY Pre-Ieacher Pres. Sludenl Club, Art Club. ANNA M. McGOVERN Liberal Ar+s French. Commercial. Slu- denl Clubs, W. A. A ADRIAN McLAN E Liberal Ar'I's Va rsily Foolball. Tong, Pres. Freshman Class. ABOVE-I ELEANOR V. MARKAM Pre-surgery Viking. Saga, W. A. A.. 'Alhlelic Manager. ABOVE-2 HELEN MATTHEWS Social Science Slucleni Club, W.A.A.. French Club. LOWER LEFT MARION MacMILLAN Nursing DOROTHY N. MARTIN Liberal Arls Saga, Arr Club. DOROTHY MEYER Pre-medical V-Pres. W. A. A., Honor Sociely, Aihlelic Award. SAM MAGID Pre-legal German Club. Slaqe Crew, Hammurabi. HARRY MATHENA Engineering ARTIMAS MILLER Business Adminisfrafion Track Gracluafes 193 3 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I FRANKLIN MILLER Liberal Aris Pandelcalon Membership Sec., Treas. German Club ABOVE-2 GLORIA MOORE Liberal Aris LELAND S. MILLER Liberal Ar'Is Commercial Club, Ger- man Club, Employmeni. KATHLEEN MOSHER Liberal Arfs Alpha Gamma Sigma, Spanish Club. LOWER RIGI-IT ED NOFZIGER Liberal Ar'Is Viking, Saga, Soph. Class Treas. BILL MOONEY Pre-legal Sec. A. M. S., Pres. Com- mercial Club, Fooiball. EDWARD F. MOUNT Pre-medical Baskeiball, Fooiball, Golf. ELSELEONE NOKES Liberal Arfs Rowing Mgr., W.A.A. Cabinei. 193 3 Graduates ABOVE-I MAUDYEA MOUNCE Liberal Aris Kassai, Iniernafional Club, French Club, W.A.A. ABOVE-2 ROBERT D. MURRAY ArcI1i'IecI'uraI Treas. A. M. S.. Sophs.. Saga, Vice-Pres. Froslw. MARGUERITE MULLINS Journalism Viking, Saga, W.A.A.. Kassai, Baskelball Mgr. DEAN WESLEY NEVINS Pre-legal Tennis, I-Iamrnurabi, Hon- or Socieiy, College Y . 62 63 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-l ROBERT H. OLINE Commerce ABOVE-2 E. BURTON PARMINTER Physical Educarion Pres. A. M. S., Saga. Mgr. Band, Varsily Track. G. WADE ORRIS Business Adminisfrafion College Y, French Club BEVERLY C. PARSONS Pre-feacher V-Pres. A.W.S., Sec. Kas- sai, W.A.A., Baslcelball. ABOVE-I LUCILLE PEASE Pre-'ieacher Ari Club. French Club, W.A.A. ABOVE-2 MARIAN PLANE Librarian LOWER LEFT HOWARD PATRICK Pre-legal Soph. Class Pres., Na- iional Debale Champ. EDNA PEPPERMAN Liberal Arls German Club ALLAN C. PRYOR Business Adminisfrafion Clubs, Baseball. MARGARET PEACOCK Liberal Arfs Saga. Kassai, Clubs MILES PEROVICH Liberal Arfs MARION QUICK Pre-'ieacher Ari Club, French Club Siudenl Club. Graduates 193 3 l l C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 f , ABOVE-I LUCIO RABE Liberal Arfs ABOVE-2 JACK L. RIORDAN Pre-legal Newman Club BERTHA RAVEN SCROFT Pre-'Teacher Siudenl Club. HELEN ROBERTSON Pre-leacher LOWER RIGHT EVELYN L. ROYCE Liberal Arfs W.A.A., Ari Club, Span- isln Club. ARTH U R RENE Business Adminislralion Pres. A.S.B., Represenia- 'rive of Aihlelics. JAMES T. ROGERS Pre-medical Pres. Caduceus. .ALICE MARTHA RYDER Liberal Arfs German Club. Sluclenf Club. 193 3 Graduates ABOVE-I BOB ROPE Liberal Arls Mgr. Baskefball, Pres. Spanish Club. ABOVE-2 BEATRICE ROTHWELL Liberal Ar'l's Saga, Inlernaiional Club. MAXI N E PEARLE ROSE Pre-feacher Viking Award, Pres. Valky- ries. Treas. Kassai. Saga E. BRUCE ROWLEY Business Adminisira+ion Baslceiball. College Y 64 l i ,YW 65 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I CLARCHEN SAN FORD Pre-feacher ABOVE-2 DOROTHEA SCHUMACHER Liberal Aris Skalds, Riding Club WILLIAM C. SCHAFFER Chairman oi Employmeni Bureau. BETTY C. SCOTT Liberal Arfs Pres. A.W.S.. V-Pres. Phi Rho Pi Debaie, Viking. ABOVE-l GLADYS SELL Liberal Ar'l's ABOVE-2 ALVA SHAW Liberal Arls Drama Workshop, Srage Crew. LOWER LEFT VADA FERNE SCOTT Liberal Arrs JOE SEVERNS Incluslrial Arls VERA SHELDON Journalism Viking Srahf DOROTHY SCRIVNER Pre-'leacher Pres. Sfudeni' Club. GLENNELL SEYMOUR Liberal Arfs Saga, Viking, Drama Workshop, Honor Sociefy WAYNE SH!RER Engineering Pres. Engineers, Treas. Alpha Gamma Sigma. Graduates 193 3 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I W. P. SIMPSON Business ,Adminisfrafion ABOVE-2 EMMA STEERS Liberal ArI's Spanish Club, Arr Club. DON SQUIRES Liberal Arfs Viking Aw'd, Edilor, Mgr. Saga, V-Pres. A.S.B. PEARL STEVENS Dramafics Pres. French Club, Drama Workshop, Siuclenl Club. LOWER RIGHT !RENE THOMPSON Liberal Arls Viking, Saga, Ke-ssai, W. A.A., lnrernalional Club. CARLINE SMITH Pre-medical German Club, Ari Club HARRIET STEVENSON Pre-'Ieacher Spanish Club, W. A. A., Siudenl' Club, Arr Club. MARY THOMPSON Liberal Arfs 193 3 Graduates ABOVE-I WILLIAM STOVER Commerce Rep. Arhlerics, Pres. Lel- Iermen, Tong, Foo+ball. ABOVE-2 CHARLES W. THOMAS Business Adminisirarion Commercial Club, Music Club, Ernploymeni Bureau OPAL STRICKLAND Liberal Ar'Is Srudenl Club, Brush and Pencil. V EARLE R. THOMPSON Business Adminisrrafion Commercial Club, Baslcei- ball Squad. 66 l67l C L A S S ABOVE-I MIRIAM THOMPSON Pre-feacher French Club, W.A.A., Arr Club, Sluclenl Club. ABOVE-2 CATHERINE TINGLER Pre-medical Newman Club, French Club, Sludenl Club. VIRGlNlA THOMPSON Liberal Arfs French Club CHARLOTTE V. TUCKER Languages Spanish Club, French Club, Sludenl' Club. O F I 9 3 3 ABOVE-I BIRDENA XNALTERS Physical Educafion W.A.A., Speedball Mgr. Tap Mgr., German Club ABOVE-2 W. CHAU NCEY WATT Engineering Alpha Gamma Sigma German Club. LOWER LEFT MAURlNE R. VAUGHT Pre-feacher V-Pres. Music Club, W. AA.. Brush and Pencil. GORDON WARWICK Liberal Arls Successful Calamil'y VELMA WENTZEL Liberal Arls Sfuclenf Club, French Club. RENE J. VERHAEGEN Engineering Alpha Gamma Sigma. Engineers, Track. NEAL WARWICK Liberal Arfs Pres. Music Club LAURANT L. WHELDON Business Adminisfralion Graduates 193 3 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 EDITH WICK HERBERT WICKSTROM Liberal Ar'I's Engineering Arr Ciub, In'rerna'IionaI Track, Spanish Club, Ger- Club. man Club. WILLIAM COOK Liberal Ar'Is Capi. Tennis '32, Type and Copy, Saga, College LAU RETTA WILDMAN Liberal Ar+s Viking Award, Kassai, Lei- Ier Winner, Viking, Saga. 1933 Graduates WILMA WINSTEAD Liberal Arfs Pres. Ari Club, Spanish CIub. French Club. LOUISE WOOD Pre-Ieacher ALICE WRIGHT Pre-Ieacher Ari' Club. MARY WRIGHT PTB-IBECIIBI' I I68I 69 C L A S S O F I 9 3 3 ELIZABETH ANDREWS Pre-Teacher Alpha Gamma Sigma, Sludenl Club. Rowing. FRANK BIRCH Business Yell King 30-3I-32, Rally Com. lnlerclass Foolball. LILLIAN BU FFUM Liberal Arls Kassai, German Club, Sec. Sludenl Club. EDWARD CULLEN Pre-Medical Debale, Pres. Phi Rho Pi. Forensic, Newman Clubs. GILSON HOAGLAND VERLEEN JONES GEO. M. STEPHENSON Commercial Physical Eclucalion Maior Pre-Law Track W. A. A., Spanish Club. Tennis 3l, 32, Mg., French Sluclenl' Club. Club, I-Iamrnuraloi. AINN F. JACOBSEN Pre-Teacher Tennis, Glee, Forensic Club, Spanish Club. fFeI:ruaryD V SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 2 . 521L l : 2l ' 5 i i ii i5 2 f:1 2f ii E f E MosT oT San Juan CapisTrano is a pa- +he+ic ruin now, buT in iTs early days iT was one oT The proudesT Missions Trom San Diego To Sonoma. BuilT oT guarried sTone which was TransporTed by hand Tor six weary miles, The greaT church oT San Juan once sTood as a beauTiTul monumenT To The Tireless paTience oT The Indians and The never-Tailing devo- Tion oT The FaThers. IT was one oT The mosT elaboraTe sTrucTures ever aT- TempTed by The Padres. I-ligh above iTs seven huge domes rose The bell Tower which could be seen Ten miles away. In I8I2, however, There came an earThgualce which desTroyed The newly-compleTed ediTice. The resT oT The Mission TorTunaTely survived The disasTer . . . Now only a Tew ruined arches, crumbling buildings, and a guieT garden are leTT To remind us oT The splendors oT The pasT, buT Those who love and reverence The memories oT This Melrose oT The WesT will noT soon TorgeT The haunTing beauTy oT San Juan CapisTrano. . A sruo:-f.N'r IN'fER1-ES IS 'H Maurice Atkin Edt 5-17-Y -T. -4- --1' -' ,1-H-ff 1'41-.:au1'z 2 ' EI 1 sr M 1o1ib3 - noanbl1A e9i1usM f ' SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO b . . . ROPE-STANCHIONED BELLS OUTLINED AGAINST THE SKY IN IVY- COVERED NICHES . . . A POOL OF MURKY STAGNATION CATCHING DUSKY REFLECTIONS . . . THE ROCK-HEWN FOUNTAIN BASIN SEEMS CORRODED INITI-I AGE . . . Dummy - Copy - Proof u study in solitude .... clouds like fire-streaked bluclz smoke belclzed from an inferno .... cz fringe of pine trees casting scratchy reflections on the fwczter . . . . fwillofw brush in the foreground T Y P E A N D C O P Y Edi+or Squires Ass'+. Cone Classes-Lorfscher ' Acrivifies-Arkinson Groups-Nelson Spor1's-Murray 1 Sporrs-Mullins Esrablishing a precedenl, Jrhe appoinlmenl by The Board of Publicalions, of Don Squires lo The Edilorship of lhe annual was made in June I932 ralher Jrhan in Seplember. As a resullr considerable progress had been made on l'he preliminary dummy by Jrhe lime classes came Togefher in lhe fall. Work was slarled immedialely wilh The seleclion of The slalzi, and nearly lorry s1'uden+s wenl To work under lhe direcl supervision of seclion edilors each To be held responsible for his parlricular seclion. Alice Lorlrscher, Classes: Maurice A+lQinson, Acliviliesg Frances Nelson, Organizalionsg Bob Murray and lvlarguerile Mullins, Sporlsg and Don Tobin, Fealuresg were Jrhose chosen by Squires wil'h Jrhe consenl s and olceh of lhe Publica- l l'ions Board. Each had sev- eral assisfanls. Limiled To a budge? of 53000, buf wilh The dreams and ambilions of several monlhs behind him, Edilor- in-Chief Squires who has considerable experience 1933 Saga Row I: Bradley, Merrick, Thompson, Seymour, De Armond Row 2: Teschke, Fulron, Cook, Zeisenhenne 72 73 T Y P E A N D C O P Y i l FeaTures--Tobin Ads-ParminTer Sec'T Peacock Manager EllioT'l' ArT-Afflerbaugh W O ArT-Kennedy Research-Squires qofyki-' behind him Trom a midwesTern high school and universiTy, TogeTher wiTh Manager KenneTh EllioTT sTarTed ouT on The quesT OT suiTable conTracTs. Numerous represenTaTives Trom a dozen or more Tirms conTacTed The Saga oTTice, Room 3lO, repeaTedly Tor weeks unTil all conTracTs were leT early in December. lT was The deTerminaTion OT The sTaTT To puT ouT a Saga ThaT could compare wiTh any an- nual in The iunior college class. As a resulT This prinT appears on a 9 Xl2 page raTher Than The Tormer 8'f2 Xl I size. Color, larger cuTs, exTra pages, a beTTer cover and binding plus oTher elaboraTe plans-all had To be TorgoTTen when The earThqualse came along and all hopes Tor an addiTional budgeT had To be abandoned. IT any individuals are To be singled ouT Tor unusual perseverance, Peg De Ar- mond and Bob Murray are Those individuals. Miss Mabel C. Trail OT The English deparTmenT served capably as adviser oT The publicaTion. Saga 1933 Row I: Wood, Barnes, Huff, Sheldon, Smifh Row 2: Marfin, Davis, Des Granges, Morris T Y P E A N D C O P Y Edifor Dewey Mng. EcI'1' Fulfon News EcI'f Gibson Assoc. Ecl'+ Husfon D Manager Spellings Sporfs-Hall Adviser-Miss Trail More significanf changes and improvemenfs in fhe Viking were achieved by Jim Dewey, Edifor-in-Chief, and his fall sfaff fhan probably have been accomplished by any one sfaff since fhe firsf prinfing of Jaysee's weekly paper. Wifh fhe second edifion of fhe fall semesfer fhe Viking became an eighf-column sheef, fulfilling fhe edifors' Iong-felf desire fo give fhe organ a more mefropolifan appearance. A full-sized, four-page rofogravure supplemenf which confained picfures of sfudenfs and fhe campus, as well as fhe Iafesf college fashions was published wifh fhe December I9 edifion issued iusf before Chrisfmas. As far as if is known, fhe Viking is fhe firsf iaysee paper fo pub- Iish a rofo. Collaborafing wifh Dewey on fhis feafure were Donald Tobin and Paul Teschke, arf ecliforsg and Drennen Spell- ings, business manager. Copies of fhe issue were mailed all over fhe Unifed Sfafes and abroad. Af fhe Junior College Press confab af Compfon on November I9 fwo sec-- ond places were scored by fhe local paper-one for sporfs, and one for a news sfory. ,Fall Viking Row I: Thompson, Cline, Barnes, Merrick Row 2: Brooks, Afkinson, Davis, Murra Y I mi 75 T P E A N D C O P Y News Ed'T Tobin Assoc. Ecl'T CarpenTer Mng. Ed'T HusTon EdiTor FulTon Column-Nofziger SporTs-Goldberg Manager Hayes ThaT even Though an earThguake shakes down school buildings, a college paper always comes ouT, mighT well have been The keywords oT The spring Viking sTaTT under The leadership oT John FulTon, EdiTor. Moving inTo a TenT in The local canvas ciTy when iaysee rooms were condemned, The T933 iournalisTic group did noT deTerioraTe in Their work oT puTTing ouT The paper, in TacT They acTually made a sTep upward by shiTTing The Viking's prinTing and make-up To The Press-Telegram, giving l..B.J.C. one oT The snappiesT looking college paper makeups in The counTry. , A Tive-column, eighT-page Tabloid wiTh a TronT page oT aThleTes' phoTographs was The February 24 ediTion which played-up The SouThern CaliTornia College Relays held here on STe- phens' Field The nexT day. This number compares wiTh A The Tall roTo and The TirsT ediTion wiTh The new Type Tace in being one oT The fi leading issues oT The year. l-larold LundsTrom, lrene Thompson, Ed NoTziger, Tom Cullen, Jack Quayle, Paul Teschke,-and Maurice ATkinson were ciTed by The ediTors. SpringViking Row I: Mullins, Nelson, Hendrix, Seymour, Sheldon, Walker Row 2: Teschke, Perkins, Hallen, Nofziger, Quayle T Y P E A N D C O P Y CULLEN MISS CARPENTER QUAYI7ET I c dih- Edda TFQKW ily, J Published By The Skaljs ' EDDA-an aTTracTively-bound liTerary magazine sponsored by Skalds-was is- sued on The campus June I4Th, marking The Third publicaTion oT The magazine. The sTaTT posiTions were: Thelwall ProcTor, ediTor-in-chiefg Jack Quayle, business manager, Tom Cullen, presidenT oT Skalds, AnneTTe Bayley, copy reader: and Miss Florence CarpenTer, TaculTy adviser. Because oT The low prinTing bids, iT was possible To sell The magazine aT TwenTy- Tive cenTs a copy placing iT wiThin The reach oT every sTudenT. 0Ther innovaTions were accomplished in The modern make- up and Type. Edda has always been Ti- nanced independenTly by The liTerary or- ganizaTion. The TradiTion oT publishing Edda was sTarTed in i929 when WalTer McElroy conceived The proiecT, only Tour hundred copies were issued aT ThaT Time, buT There was such a demand ThaT iT was decided T To publish i e hundred copies The nexT year. Bob ArmisTead, as ediTor-in-chieT oT The I93O Edda, improved The appearance and added new TeaTures. Edda consisTs oT conTribuTions in poeTry, shorT sTory, essay, and skeTch divisions illusTraTed wiTh linoleum block prinTs. IT was inTeresTing To noTe ThaT many conTri- buTions were Trom members oT Viking sTaTT who were admiTTed To Skalds. Among The ouTsTanding TeaTures were shorT sTories by Phil CarpenTer, Jack Quayle, Jack King, Dick Emery, Tom Cullen, and WiniTred Gould: essays by Warren Warner, Lou l-lusTon, John Spears, Audrey Daume, Dolph Winebren- ner, ArThur SmiTh, Miriam Cone, Maurice ATkinson, Max GaTov, Mary Von Shrader: poeTry by Marjorie Bishop, Maurice AT- kinson, WalTer McElroy, Ellenore Bogi- gian, Grace MargareT WebsTer, and Mar- iorie Brown. i76i 77 Plays and Playe the intricate facade of a sfwitclzboard . . . . burnislzea' metal gleaming against blackness . . . sfwitclzes poised to control tlzoiismzds of electric volts .... the Ui- brnting power of zz dynamo . . fr-- i7'Y'ff 7' H' ' ' ff' ' LIGHTS, DROPS, AND CUES A Successful Calamity Kummer, MacDonald, Shaver, Gaugler Warwick, Rose, Procfor, Wise, Small Jackson, Millner, Cullen l l A Successful Calamifyu represenfed an inferesfing episode in fhe life of a modern fam- ily during fhe presenf financial difficulfies, and was received by fhe sfudenf body wifh much enfhusiasm. The selecfion of fha play was made by Miss Kafharyn Kennedy, who direcfed fhis colorful comedy by Clare Kummer, and presenfed if November I8 af 8 p.m. in fhe audiforium. , . George Arliss used fhe screen version of fhe play under fhe same fifle, which gave fhe sfu- l denfs fhe opporfunify fo affend bofh rendifions of fhe producfion. Gordon Warwick, wifh fhe heavy parf of Wilfon, fhe millionaire fired of sociefy, managed his sarcasfic lines wifh subfle efficiency. Marjorie Wise, as fhe devofed wife buf nof foo brilli- l as 78 79 By Claire Kummer anf sfepmofher, rendered a delighfful and sympafhefic characferizafion. Jean Milner, in fhe role of Wilfon's daughfer, represenfed nafurally fhe sociefy girl whose biggesf fhrill was indulging in bridge and dances. Eddie, fhe useless son - played wifh a mosf vivacious sfyle by George Gaugler, complefed fhe Wilfon family. Connors, fhe family bufler, was played by Thelwall Procfor, who gave a really finished example of acfing. Maxine Rose as Alberfine, fhe French maid, raffled off her Gallic fo fhe confusion of fhe audience. Connors and Alberfine formed a laughable domesfic duo. The Poor Children Take fhe Calamify Hard Kafharyn Kennedy Pearl Sfevens Gordon Warwick Marjorie Wise Direcfor Assisfanf The Millionaire His Wife The oufsfanding sfar of fhe evening proved fo be Tom Cullen wifh his shambling dignify which creafed a confagious wave of laughfer every fime he appeared. Wifh fhe exaggerafed seriousness wifh which he spoke fhe lines of George Sfrufhers, fhe reiecfed suifor, Cullen managed fo make fhe sophisficafed comedy even funnier. Raymond Jaccson showec capable smoofhness wifh his porfrayal of Clarence Rivers, Sfrufher's rival. Jeaneffe MacDona c' p'ayed fhe parf of Julia Parfingfon, Eddie's fiancee, vviii-h Charm Warwick Receives fhe Sympafhies of His Family Malcolm Small gave a clever inferprefa- fion of Rafaelo, fhe lfalian painfer. Charles Kummer proved fo be a fypical business man in his role of Wilfon's business parfner, John Belden. Fremonf Shaver, as fhe offi- cious Dr. Broodle, wifh his melodious voice complefed fhe casf. This fwo-acf farce presenfed fhe sfory of a millionaire who makes his family believe he has losf all of his money in order fo keep fhem all fogefher from a sociefy-mad world. Pearl Sfevens was sfudenf direcfor. LIGHTS, DROPS, AND Drama Workshop Productions EbrighT, Seymour, James, Morris, CarpenTer CUES As The cenTer oT dramaTic acTiviTies on The campus, local Thespians mainTained Twe Drama Workshop under The guidance oT Miss KaTharyn Kennedy, iaysee drama Teacher. The group meT once a monTh during The pasT year, aT which Time members presenTed one acT plays under The managemenT oT a direcTor who had been selecTed by The c oTTicers. Thelwall ProcTor acTed as The direcTorg ElizabeTh James, assisTanT direcTorp an AusTin Lawless, Treasurer. Among The plays presenTed beTore and by The group were Mirage , an lnci drama direcTed by ElizabeTh James: The Wolves oT CernograTz , adapTec Trom ub d GH 6 shorT sTory by Monroe and direcTed by Thelwall ProcTorg Dwellers in Darkness, di- recTed by Pearl STevensg and The Russian play, A Game oT Chess , sTaged oy Fu.'er- Ton iaysee players. Kummer, Cullen, STevens, Lawless, Squires 80 Carolers and Chorisiers . . . misty play of water upon rocks . . . a tlzin spray of silver dissolving info pure vapor .... leafy foliage forms a tracery along the edge of the fall . . . ONCERT AND CHORAL l MISS POORE MISS HITCHCOCK Christmas Concert For The TirsT Time in The hisTory oT The Long Beach Junior College, The ChrisTmas ConcerT presenTed by The Music DeparTmenT, December I9-20, was enTirely a collegiaTe proiecT. Previous To This year, The sTudenTs oT The Woodrow Wilson l-ligh School and oT The Junior College combined Tor The Yule- Tide program as well as oTher musical evenTs oT The year. BuT This season each school presenTed iTs own concerT. The brighT lighTs and gay pageanTry oT The Pro- logue were in unique conTrasT To The guieT and worshipTul digniTy which characTerized The subse- guenT Tableaux. The Prologue inTroduced, in The words oT The Spanish Granny, The ChrisTmas sTory which was laTer picTured in The Tour Tableaux. The laTTer, as Though in sTained glass, porTrayed in order, The angels, shepherds, l-loly Family, and The gloriTied Madonna. The black-robed chorisTers in The Toreground oT The sTage, added greaTly To The impressiveness oT The occasion. The Junior College CDrchesTra, under The Direc- Tion oT George C. Moore playing Chimes oT Eve- ning by Boisdeiiire opened The concerT. Immedi- aTely Tollowing, The Junior College choir sang The gay Andalusian ChrisTmas Charol by Dickinson, and SilenT NighT by Gruber. RoberT Reese, Tenor, sang The solo oT The concerT, O Holy NighT by Adam. The choir Then oTTered Tour numbers each oT which accompanied a Tableau. They were: Voix CelesTes by Alcockp Slnepherol's ChrisTmas Song by Reimanng Bring A Torch by Lullyq and The Shep- herd's ChrisTmas STory by Dickinson. l-landel's Joy To The World was The ChrisTmas hymn chosen To be sung by all. The concerT concluded wiTh l-Tandel's Hallelujah Chorus. Miss EdiTh l-liTchcock direcTed The musical por- Tion oT The concerT, and Miss Shirley Poore ably assisTed by Miss MargareT Foulkes, direcTed The arT work and The Tableaux. The STudenT DirecTor oT The concerT was BeaTrice RoThwell. STudenTs Taking acTive parT included Mar- gareT Keidel, Don Squires, Geraldine Thayer, George Gaugler, EdiTh Kavanaugh, Lillian BuTFum, Doris Fickling, l-lelen BuTTolph, Jean Milner, Eliza- beTh James. The Glorifiecl Angels T821 83 ONCERT AND CHORAL Christmas algieani' Margarei Keidel as Mary, +he Moiher -Behold a virgin shall he with child and shall bring forth a son and they shall call his name Einmanuclj which heing interpreted is, God with us. Matt.-1:23 CONCERT AND CHORAL Row l: Brownell, Sams, Dunbar, Frey, Blackford, Neher, Frazer Row 2: Thompson, Gowen, MarTin, Moore, Rankin, SchaTz, Travers, Jarvis, ParminTer, Noice, Adams Junior College Band The Viking Band seems To be on The upward Trend, largely as a resulT oT good leadership and oT The loyalTy oT each individual member. Mr. George C. lvloore, direcTor oT The organ- izaTion, has worked long and TaiThTully To make The band beTTer wirh each succeeding year, Mr. Moore has had much experience wiTh building bands, having direcTed The originals oT Poly- Technic and Wilson l-ligh Schools, and oT The Junior College. WalTer lVlaThie, The Drum-lvlaior, and BurTon ParminTer, manager, in Their respecTive capaciTies, have done excellenT work dur- ing The pasT season. The Long Beach Junior College Band has The addi- g Tional advanTage oT receiving academic crediT Tor iTs work. Few college bands have This privilege. ln spiTe oT This, in The pasT, The band has been a raTher unpre- TenTious organizaTion, and unTil This season has given no acTive supporT aT The TooTball games as a uniT. Three Times a week during The pasT TooTball season in addiTion To Their scheduled pracTices, The band meT on The campus aT six TorTy-Tive in The morning, and wenT Through Their paces Tor The coming games and The TooTball rallies. ParTicularly Tine showings were made aT The Glendale, CompTon, and Pasadena games, when They paraded in TormaTions, The mosT ouTsTanding oT which were The marching Glendale G , and The sTaTionary HC Tor CompTon. AT The Pasadena game, The band played The P. J. C. school song. An eTTorT was made To carry ouT The colors oT The Junior College, black and whiTe, in The apparel oT The band members. MANAGER PARMINTER 84 85 CONCERT AND CHORAL Row l: Brownell, Ranlcin, Jarvis, Noice, S'l'over Row 2: Frey, Dunbar, Schooley, Dougheriy, Downer, Johnson, Nefz Row 3: Thompson, SchaTz, MarTin, Moore, Gowen, Travers, Sams, Warwick Junior College Orchestra Unusually good maTerial disTinguishes The Junior College OrchesTra oT This year. lT is un- TorTunaTe ThaT because oT evenTs, Their program oT acTiviTies was necessarily cuT shorT. l-low- ever, They did play aT The annual ChrisTmas ConcerT and as This secTion goes To press, They are planning To play aT The graduaTion exercises. The orchesTra is under The direcTion oT Mr. George C. lvloore, and iT is wiTh some anTici- paTion ThaT he loolcs Torward To The orchesTra's presenTaTion oT an enTire concerT in some noT Too dis+an+ semesTer, when condiTions will permiT a more exTensive acTiviTy program. O O O . VOICE CLASSES Deserving oT special recogniTion are The acTiviTies oT The voice classes. These sTudenTs have noT merely devoTed Themselves To classroom acTiviTies, buT have on numerous occasions been inviTed To sing before sTudenT groups and civic clubs. These classes have Two principal obiecTs: TirsT, To give The sTudenTs ToundaTion work in voice develop- menT, and secondly, To discover individual TalenTs. The mosT ouTsTanding exTra-curricular worlc oT The year has been The series oT Three reciTals given in The Young Women's ChrisTian AssociaTion. This was par- TicipaTed in by all oT The members of These classes. lvlosT oT The numbers were solos buT inTeresTing vari- eTy was oTTered in The ensemble numbers. Some mem- bers oT The voice classes have sung in sTudenT as- semblies, Tor The Spanish, French, and lnTernaTional Clubs. lvliss EdiTh l-liTchcoclc is The insTrucTor. DIRECTOR MOORE CONCER 9bAND CHORAL s f Bringing home Trom The an- nual Music ConTesT, sponsored by Redlands UniversiTy, The TirsT cup To be oTFered Tor men's quarTeTs, Edward Grissinger, l-lerberT Daniels, RoberT Reese, and RoberT l-larron, added The Tinal Touch oT Triumph To The year's work oT The Men's Quar- TeTs as an organizaTion. Under The coaching oT Miss l-liTchcoclc, The Three guarTeTs have been The medium Through which more OT The local TalenT has been broughT To lighT and aT The same Time These have made The Den-els. Reese sTudenT body assemblies more inTeresTing and versaTile. AnoTher organizaTion which has proved very popular, is The Women's SexTeT. The women have sung in several sTudenT assemblies, and also beTore numerous civic groups. Among These have been The Lions Club, The BrealcTasT Club, The PaciTic CoasT BrealcTasT Club, and The STage Crew Program in The ciTy audiTorium. Row I: BarTron, George, Hansen, Miss Hifchcoclc, M. Tharpe, J. Tharpe, W. Smifh Row 2: Agal, O. Smiih, Reel, Heron, Kramer, Shinn, Warwick, Grissinger, Qiuarfeffes-Sexfette A Capella Choir For The TirsT Time since The Tounding oT The Long Beach Junior College, The pasT year has broughT To The campus an A Cappella Choir. For iTs success, Miss EdiTh I-liTchcock, direcTor, is largely responsible, as well as Miss l-lelen Davenport by whom she is capably assisTed. The Two principal evenTs on The campus in which The choir parTicipaTed, were The ChrisT- mas ConcerT, and The Musical Assembly. Their civic appearances during The year consisTed oT The San Pedro Young Men's ChrisTian AssociaTion Vesper Service, The Teachers' lnsTiTuTe concerT, and Their Tinal perTormance, The STage Crew program, in The audiTorium. AT This lasT concerT They sang My Love DwelT ln A NorThern Land by Elgar, Aren- slcy Serenade, by Arenslcy, and The Pilgrim's Chorus, by Wag- ner. This is Miss I-liTchcocl4's TirsT year wiTh The Junior College. She was Tormerly an insTrucTor oT music aT Columbia Univers- iTy. Miss DavenporT was Torm- erly associayed Hue Wood Row I: Gaulf, STevens, Barnes, Hanson, M. Tharpe, J. Tharpe, Barfron, W. Smilh, ' Wildman rgw Vlfilggn Sclqggl Fac- Row 2: Shaleen, Heisey, O. SmiTh, Rei Kaamei, Shinn, Coles, Grissinger, DexTer, Miss ifc coc , Row 3: Davenpor'l', Agal, ScoH, Heron, Warwick, Daniels, Yinger, Reece 86 i971 C-avels and Pulpits . . . . gazing at a rustic bridge across sfworls of fwater . . . trees in the distance stretch as far as the eye can see ..... placidity marks this scene .... s e e J GAVELS AND PULPITS COACH JOHNSTON Varsity Championship oT The PaciTic CoasT, Two TirsTs in league and souThwesTern dis- TricT exTempore, a TirsT in disTricT oraTory, a Tie Tor second in The League DebaTe TournamenT, and second place in The souThwesTern division oT Phi Rho Pi were The Trophies which Coach Russell John- sTon's Viking Word-Warriors could counT aT The end oT The l932-33 Torensic season. As a climax To The season's oral acTiviTies, l-Toward PaTrick and Russell Cullen, I932 naTional debaTe champs, were assured oT a Trip To deTend Their TiTle aT The naTional speech convenTion in DuluTh, MinnesoTa. A splendid sTarT was made by The local sguad when PaTrick and Cullen won boTh TirsT and second respecTively in The League exTempore held here early in The season wiTh The November naTional elec- Tion as iTs Topic. The Two Long Beach men were presenTed wiTh bronze placgues Tor Their wins. Annexing a myThical CoasT crown aT The Redlands UniversiTy DebaTe Tourna- menT on December I-2, The Vikings de- TeaTed a Tield oT opponenTs which in- cluded The UniversiTy oT SouThern Cali- Tornia, Redlands, Cal-Tech, SanTa Barbara STaTe, Loyola, CaliTornia ChrisTian, La I SEC'TS SHAW. GRIFFIN Debates Verne, Glendale Junior College, L.A.J.C., and Pasadena J.C. The winning Team oT PaTrick and Cullen ouT-argued Los Ange- les and Loyola in The semi-Tinals To meeT and beaT Glendale in The Tinal encounTer. OTher Long Beach Teams who parTici- paTed in The parley were Billy Copple and Leonard Wilson, Maurice ATkinson and BeTTy ScoTT, Charles Kummer and Ed Fisher, and DwighT Garner and Earl Dible. Because They won aT leasT Two vicTories in This clash, ATkinson, Fisher, Copple, Wilson, Garner and Dible became eligible Tor Phi Rho membership. AlThough Coach JohnsTon suTTered an iniury beTore The meeT, he was able To send his wranglers suTTicienTly TorTiTied Tor a Triumph. WiTh Long Beach and Glendale Tying Tor second, The League Round Robin rneeT was held aT Los Angeles Junior Col- lege, December I7-I8. The Cubs won. Local speakers aTTending The Tray were PaTrick and Cullen, Kurnrner and ATkin- son, Dible and Garner, and Copple and Wilson. FeaTured by The Oregon plan oT debaTe in which a member oT one Team cross-examines a member oT anoTher, The conTesT was Tollowed by a banqueT aT six o'clock. 88 iw GAVELS AND PULPITS Opening The i933 season OT Torensic worlc, Ed Fisher, Ralph ClinTon, and BeTTy ScoTT, Isabelle Sheller composed Two Teams To compeTe in The scrub Tourna- menT on January 7 sponsored by l..A.J.C. Tor Those who, because oT The many en- Tries in The preceding evenT, were unable To compeTe. The locals Tailed To place in The aTTair which was all Los Angeles. ln preparaTion Tor The coming PaciTic SouThwesT conTesTs oT Phi Rho Pi aT Bak- ersTield, several pracTice TilTs were sched- uled. The mosT imporTanT oT These Tea- Tured Teams was made up oT Howard PaTriclc and Ed Fisher, and ScoTT and Sheller in an encounTer wiTh U.S.C. Frosh men's and women's Teams. The debaTe was held in The social hall oT The local Girls' gym aT 8 o'cloclc The evening oT February IO. Two more linlcs in The growing chain oT vicTories Tor PaTricl4 and Cullen were won when The Tormer annexed The Ora- Tory championship and The laTTer gar- nered The exTempore crown aT The Balcers- Tield meeT aT Bal4ersTield Junior College Friday and SaTurday, lvlarch 3-4. Besides winning These Two evenTs, Long Beach's duo argued Their way To The debaTe Tinals, only To Tinish second in This division by dropping a 2-I iudgmenT To Glendale. Russell JohnsTon, local debaTe menTor, who also made The Trip, was unanimously re-elecTed presidenT oT The PaciTic SouTh- wesT league: and a dance Tor The visiTing Teams compleTed The program. Billy Copple and Leonard Wilson were a sec- ond Team Tor Long Beach, and They won Three ouT oT Tive wrangles. These Tive wins were The grand Tinale Tor JohnsTon's sguad. The DuluTh Trip was in The oTTing. l-lopes Tor nexT year's supremacy in Torensics resT upon The shoulders oT Three reTurning veTerans: ATlcinson, Copple and Wilson. Because oT Their close relaTions wiTh each oTher during The pasT season. Copple and Wilson have poTenTialiTies as a duo: while ATlcinson also debaTes and specializes in oraTory and exTempore. The successes oT This year's debaTe group challenge TuTure squads. Forensic Battles ATkinson, Dible, ScoTT, Mr. JohnsTon, Cullen, PaTrick, Fisher GAVELS AND PULPITS MAURICE .ATKINSON ED FISHER Interclass Winners The deTeaT oT ex-PresidenT Hoover was ToreTold by The resulTs oT The infer-class Talk-TilT in which lvlaurice ATkinson and Bob LeyTon, Trosh, Trounced Ed Fisher and Vera Sheldon, upperclassmen, by a 2-l decision on OcTober 24 aT 8 p.m. in The lecTure-room oT The Girl's gym. Success- Tully debaTing The negaTive side oT The guesTion, Resolved, ThaT HerberT Hoov- er should be re-elecTed PresidenT oT The UniTed STaTes , The vicTorious lowerclass wranglers conTended ThaT The PresidenT's relieT, reconsTrucTion, and Toreign policies had been ill-advised, inadeguaTe, and im- pracTicable. ThaT Hoover had inTroduced a wise domesTic and foreign program was The counTer argumenT oT The aTTirmaTive speakers, Fisher and Sheldon. The iudges, Miss VioleT Hess, Mr. C. W. Jackson, and Principal John L. Lounsbury, chose AT- kinson as The besT Trosh oraTor and Fisher as The ouTsTanding soph TorensisT. The aT- Tair was concluded wiTh dancing aT The Mabel CraTTy clubhouse where The For- ensic Club served reTreshmenTs. Howard PaTrick was chairman of The evening. ATkinson, souThern California prep ora- Tory champion, and LeyTon, Tormer lllinois exTempore winner, were coached by Rus- sell Cullen while Earl Dible was The sTu- denT menTor oT The sophomores. TryouTs Tor The TiTle argumenT had been held Three weeks previously aT a Forensic Club social in The Lagoon Clubhouse aT which Mr. Jackson, WellingTon Pierce, Wilson High DebaTe Coach: William V. lvlcCay, Poly Torensic adviser: and Russell John- sTon, coach oT The local varsiTy squad: acTed as iudges. Some oT The ouTsTanding debaTers To puT in appearance aT The preliminaries were LeyTon, ATkinson, Fisher, Sheldon, AlTred Berry, RuTh Inglis, DwighT Garner, Billy Copple, and Leonard Wilson. The Topic oT The coming November elecTion was discussed, aTTer which dancing and reTreshmenTs were enioyed. ln prepara- Tion Tor The Tinal debaTe, a pracTice con- Tab was held wiTh Glendale in which one Long Beach speaker Teamed wiTh a Buc- caneer To discuss The quesTion. The Tour- ney lasTed Trom 4 Till 8 p.m. AT 6 o'clock supper was served. 90 Wi GAVELS AND PULPITS HOWARD PATRICK RUSSELL CULLEN Tournament Victors WiTh Three sTraighT vicTories in oraTory, exTempore, and debaTe, Howard PaTrick was The big noise oT The TirsT annual Viking Award DebaTe and OraTory Tour-- namenT, an inTramural Torensic conTesT, held here February 20, 2l, and 28. Win- ning TirsT place in The exTempore and or- aTory evenTs, PaTrick Teamed wiTh Russell Cullen To win The debaTe +iI+ and Thereby won a bronze placque, inauguraTing a yearly cusTom. Maurice ATkinson was runner-up To PaTrick in boTh imprompTu speaking and oraTory, while Billy Copple and Leonard Wilson Took second in The argumenTaTive division. OTher parTicipanTs in The clashes were Russell Cullen, co-champion oT de- baTe, DwighT Garner, Third-place winner in oraToryg Earl Dible, Third in exTemporeg Ed Fisher, Charles Kummer, Donoho I-lall, and Bud Turner. AT an lTalian Dinner given by Forensic Club aT The EasT Branch Y.Iv1.C.A., Feb- ruary 2O aT 6:00, The conTesT was opened wiTh The imprompTu speeches on various phases oT The War DebT problem. War DebTs and DepreciaTed Currency was The subiecT oT PaTrick's Talk. ATkinson spoke on War DebTs and The American Taxpayer , while Dible presenTed The Moral ObligaTion To Pay . Judging The aTTair were Eugene Tincher, candidaTe Tor The Board oT EducaTion, Reverend J. E. McDonald, and Leslie Nason, iaysee in- sTrucTor. Resolved, ThaT The UniTed STaTes should agree To The cancellaTion oT The inTer-allied war debTs was The quesTion argued in The debaTe evenT February 2I, aT 8 p.m. ln upholding The aTTirmaTive, PaTrick and Cullen conTended ThaT Europe cannoT pay and ThaT iT would be advanT- ageous To The UniTed STaTes To cancel. Copple and Wilson, losing negaTive duo, mainTained ThaT The debTs can be paid and ThaT The American Taxpayer cannoT aTFord To bear The burden oT cancellaTion. Judges Turning in a unanimous decision Tor The aTTirmaTive were Byron ScoTT, James Knox, and S. Lance BrinTle. AcTing as iudges, members oT ToasT- masTers' Club heard The oraTorical con- TesT on world problems on February 28, aT 7:l5 p. m. in The downTown Y . y GAVELS AND PULPITS CHAMPIONS PAT AND RUSS Defending The Championship Trading Their T932 UniTed STaTes de- baTe championship Tor The naTional ora- Tory crown, l-loward PaTrick and Russell Cullen culminaTed Their record oT 30 wins ouT oT 35 TilTs aT The inTercollegiaTe Phi Rho Pi convenTion aT DuluTh, MinnesoTa, April 6-8. ATTer PaT had won The oraTory TiTle, second place in The exTempore con- TesT, and TirsT in his division semiTinals Tor The imprompTu evenT, and Russ had also garnered a division-TirsT in The exTempore TeaTure, The local duo ToughT Their way To The Tinals oT debaTe, only To drop The l932 TiTle, The Tinal Tray Tor which was Taken by l-lomer Bell and Serrill Gerber oT Los Angeles Jaysee over a DuluTh Team. The Challenge OT Chaos was PaT- rick's TiTle-winning oraTion wiTh which he won The Phi Rho silver loving cup. ln his speech, PaTrick skeTched an analogy oT The recenT souThern CaliTornia earThquake and iTs comparison wiTh The universal ec- onomic upheaval, pleading Tor candor and co-operaTion in naTional planning. The quesTion debaTed aT The conTerence was The naTional college subiecT, Resolved, ThaT The UniTed STaTes should agree To The cancellaTion oT The inTer-allied war debTs , while The exTempore Talks dealT wiTh various phases oT The debT problem. Temblors on March IO which Torced The abandonrnenT oT cerTain school pro- iecTs, placing new Tunds aT The disposal oT The Long Beach TorensisTs, are whaT The locals Thank Tor Their Trip: since The Richard l-lalliburTon DebaTe Trip BeneTiT was made impossible by The quake. WiTh yearly convenTions in various parTs OT The counTry, naTional iunior col- leges climax The Torensic season. This year's convenTion was aTTended by dele- gaTes Trom such naTionally-known squads as Glendale, Los Angeles, Long Beach, DuluTh: Miami, Oklahoma: BrisTol, Vir- ginia: Moberly, Missouri: and Independ- ence, Kansas. Among Them were a num- ber oT very capable debaTers, according To Cullen and PaTrick. l.asT year's conTab meT aT Glendale, where Long Beach's Team oT PaTrick and Cullen were awarded The UniTed STaTes championship. The Ten- TaTive meeTing-place Tor The I934 meeT is Miami, Oklahoma, To where The Viking Torensic squad will probably journey. i92I 93 GAVELS AND PULPITS Air View of DuluTh's GreaT Harbor on Lake Superior Winning Again ai' Duluth Russell JohnsTon, Long Beach menTor, who is called by PaTrick and Cullen The TraTerniTy's besT coach is responsible Tor This year's squad as well as The champion- ship ediTion oT '32. WiTh This enviable record, JohnsTon and his Vikings are poinTing Tor The I934- TiTle. ATTer They had abandoned hopes oT aTTending The DuluTh convenTion, Russell Cullen and Howard PaTrick were enabled To go easT during The earThquake vaca- Tion Through a donaTion oT STudenT Body Tunds. Using The rooms oT HoTel DuluTh Tor , K, ,.., ,--mug,:.,,T:,.,.,3.-X-,,.,.1,s ,i,- v ,.., , .mf V I X. - 1 i,gy1z,1-mae-:Peril 'ssliwtygiJfgsLii,uesp5',3glKfgg,ig?iff's2?-f'-Gavin ' , , -1'EzZwml7LYTEYTEQR,-rf'gIr1s41252iTE'5fkT f'3' f:f,Wizf15': T ,N T , . ,',' FY- T T , , '-iWTTi9'sl'?lTMTTYWf5?f51fT'5Yi E i :'5 l.x f 'TF'-rr 11,4My,n,.Tg,iqm.,,Mgfx,i3,,,,,ir.uq-mm sw ,. -3- - V, - . , . -ll ' 4, ,f35zwt331?g,gq5.3y4qgziliilgfgigigiyi'xs53Wf,,4 2235 .5 ..,. . 11.5 4,71 Ti. Egg? T f2 'iiisgfrf--'-Qs .. r . , T - rrzifmggi,f5f'iT-.rgsiiifi. ,Q QS, .epfgw-xi, M , - f+v ' -ff 3 , 1, Q 43 T 1 :Q 1 fs'f :-'ff' 2,-Q 3 455' I , ' ' - if TTT - 'tffi2'.iiw-J- 4' .TW '. 151' '.1' 12lif ,..n1 123523 - 'CPM . -,5ffi6'sl r x- - - fy ug .WQTK if ' ' .'?9EQ'fg,s,-- fee ' ' u Lu, TEFTWLY'?tL2i'5'f 'VWEPrf'1-4-we 'bw , www .T T ggsc .4 ,Tn ,,,, wwf I ,.-, V ., I-WTI! ll T gnfyxuiy. ., V T --1 V . ,V I K: .634 -1 ' Bei'-31, . f ,- , V 4 . ,mar I , K T y , . H1-V1 1 4:4 My f-'- y T Q , W yr: 2:4 -A ..,, Q U - ' 3 1 ,,. y ,,.,,,,,.2 -E, 1: , ...-w w-' -:ff '-. --wr 2 HoTel DuluTh, ConvenTion HeadquarTers The various rounds oT debaTe, The dele- gaTes made This hosTelry Their headquar- Ters. AT an evening banqueT, PaT deliv- ered one oT The addresses on The subiecT, DebaTe and The STudenT. A visiT To The grounds oT The CenTury oT Progress Ex- posiTion in Chicago was among Their ex- periences. BeTore leaving Long Beach, The Viking word-warriors had scheduled a Torensic TilT wiTh The squad oT The UniversiTy oT Chicago on The subiecT OT war debTs, buT This clash did noT Take place because oT a mix-up in The Maroon schedule. A Scene in Lincoln Park One of DuluTh's Many NaTural Parks 'PHOTOS THROUGH COURTESY OF DULUTH CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MISSION SAN GABRIEL efi T EEZIIZ I IIIIIIE IIIEE T III IIIEZZIZ On a memorabIe morning in Sepiem- ber, I77 I, a IiIIIe band of soIdiers from Ihe presidio aI San Diego and a greaI number of curious Indians siood solemnly walrching Iwo priesis from Ihe souihern Mission consecraie Ihe ground on which was Io siand a new Mission, Ihai of San GabrieI, ArcangeI. From Ihai very day, San GabrieI seemed desiined Io become a success- 1cuIinsIiI'uIion. The neighboring' Indians, aIIhough hosIiIe aI Tirsi, soon became IoyaI Io Ihe sjrrangers and wiIIingIy worked earIy and Iaie Io raise Ihe buildings for Ihe es+abIishmenI. -The Ieriile Iand abouI Ihe Mission yielded bounIiIuI crops, and Ihe surrounding hiIIsides furnished exceIIenI pasiurage for Ihe huge herds of caIIIe. No won- der San GabrieI came Io be Icnown as Ihe Queen of Ihe Missions . . . Thei church, alihouqh II has been aI+ered' ii::ii:'iiss,, Iiili Iniiii somewhalr in Ihe course of Iime, is s+iII iiiiiiiiiiii iiii essen+iaIIy Ihe same as i'r was when Faiher Serra preached in ii. The unique I - - bell Iower and Ihe beauIifuI ouIside siaircase, once so dear Io Ihe hearIs of Ihe Mission Iaihers, s+iII deIigh+ Ihose who Iravel EI Camino Real. CAMPUS csaoups I 1 1 1 if 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 I 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . 1, egg .,,.1::1.f,,,.f711.-wmv:fwwsgei W , -' 1' ' - - 'K J 240029 ZUCIMIAD E woiibil-noalelfl ze::ns1:l . - Y w 1 Y 1 4 w i E i l V 1 l A 1 ! 3 1 ' I 4 ,N Q L 3 .5 se - k ff- filui-'7 k ' 1' ' J Awards and Honors . . . beaten metal floats on tlze watery basin belofw . . . tlze black shoulder of IZ hill encircles the lolee . . . moonlight is blotteol out by the crooked limb of a jfr tree . . . AWA , RDS KEYS, CRESTS The History of The Viking Award The Viking Award, The highesT service award on The Campus, arose ouT oT a need Tor The recogniTion oT worThTul serv- ice by The STudenT Body. For several years The l-lonor SocieTv had been driTT- ing inTo a scholarship recogniTion and neglecTing oTher TraiTs oT equal value in sTudenT liTe. ATTer much discussion and deliberaTion as To meThods oT procedure, a careTully TabulaTed sysTem oT poinTs oT crediT was adopTed by The STudenT Cab- ineT in I93O. Because many who had ren- dered service To The school in a disTinguished way were gradu- aTed, and Thus debarred Trom The recogniTion oT a pin, The cabineT oT l93I granTed Viking honor To The lisT whose names appear upon The Viking shield now in The Trophy cabineT. They are: Tom Vasey, Eva Geiger, Bill Davis, Blanche lVlerTins, Susan Bond, Joe BobbiTT, WalTer lvliller, Brad- Tord Bond, CaTherine Wood, MargaroT O'Connor, Bob Dickinson, Ted Russell, Nellie DeWiTT, and l-lazel Emery. The lisT oT winners oT The award by years Tollows: February, l93I: STanley l'-lill, Virginia PeTerson, John lvlerrill, Carl Spano, Claire MiTchell, Lois l-lough, Paul Wiley, Emil Te Groen, Loyd Landes, Louise Denny, T-larry Lee, BeTTy lvlacaulay, Frank Goss. May, l93I: Dick EllsworTh. January, I932: lvlaxine Rose, Geniece King, June l-larrison, Sally Sherman, Ger- ald Frerks, Jack Drown, EvereTT Morris, Jim PadgiTT. lvlay, l932: Bill Linn, Frank Casserly, Glenda Galleher, lVlargareT l-luTchison, Maria Markham, Velma PickeTT, Bill EllioTT, LaureTTa Wildman. January, l933: l-larry Allen, Jim Dewey, George Gaugler, Don Squires. From The TirsT The award was received as a disTincT honor on The campus. The secreT com- miTTee who accepTed or re- iecTed The applicanTs and Their poinTs was regarded as Tree Trom TavoriTism. There has grown, however, a mechanical aTTiTude Toward The accomplishmenT ThaT is symbolized by poinTs, and a movemenT iniTiaTed by Bill EllioTT is endeavoring To resTore a spiriT oT service, by making The winner a recipienT and noT an aspiranT Tor award. l-le will noT be aware ThaT he is in The race, buT will be chosen by a secreT commiTTee who will look over all campus acTiviTies and Tind The unsuspecTing lead- ers as disTinguished Trom Those who pose Tor public Tavor. These people chosen because oT an ouTsTanding spiriT oT co-operaTion in The sTudenT body will Torm an invaluable group oT Alumni who will Take care oT The TuTure needs oT The insTiTuTion. T961 T971 AWARDS. KEYS. CRESTS Squires, Dewey, Mr. Jackson, Sherman, Lee, Morris, Allen Thors and Valkyries Those men and women who have won The Viking award auTomaTically become mem- bers oT The Thors and Valkyries respecTively. To assisT in securing scholarships and To aid in esTablishing loan Tunds Tor Those who need Them are The aims oT These socieTies. They also help in Creahng and sTimulaTinq The acTive inTeresT oT The alumni oT The Junior College. Every year The Thors SHTG-rTdin The Valkyries wiTh a dinner. All oTher plans being seriously disrupTed by The earThquake, only a dance is being planned aT The daTe oT This publica- Tion. The elecTions were also inTer- Tered wiTh by The disTurbanceg Bill EllioTT was presidenT oT Thors The TirsT semesTer, buT no oTTicers were elecTed Tor The Spring period. Valkyries, leTT The second semesTer wiTh only one member, LaureTTa Wildman, were laTer enlarged by Sally Sherman's reTurn. A geT-To- geTher on May 23 welcomed new members To The socieTies. Miss ForresT Wilkinson and Mr. C. W. Jackson were The Two advisers. ELLIOTT SHERMAN AWARDS, KEYS, CRESTS Row I: Cole, Bovyer, Nelson, Flora, Gould, Wandling, Shaw, Earle, Meyer. Row 2: Smarf, Dodd, Royce, Jones, Nielson, English, King, Mosher, Peferson, Knox, McEnl'ee, Fos'l'er. Alpha Gamma Sigma Kappa chapler oi Alpha Gamma Sigma, siaie scholarship sociely, is ihe honor so- cieiy of Long Beach Jaysee. To qualify for membership a sludenl' musl have lhirly grade poinl's from ar leasi Jrwelve uni+s of college work. Allhough ihe purpose of Jrhe organizalion is Jro iurrher scholasric achievemenls among +he siudenls, Jrhese gifled people do nor hold formal and dry meelingsf' This year Jrhe Two oursianding evenrs MISS RAU GOULD were a wildwesl' round-up and sreak- balce, which lealured cowboy music and riding exhibilions in addilion 'ro a delicious barbecue supper. The an- nual snow parl'y lo Mouni Baldy fea- lured frozen fingers, snow ball fighls. and loboggan spills. Service +o Jrhe school was rendered by aiding Miss Paine and by helping wilh ihe park- ing problem. Second semesler a viialiiy com-- millee added even more pep To lhe sociely, and a pariry al Lagoon Club l-louse, a second mounlain Jrrip, and a beach parry were enjoyed by The members. l98l 99 AWARDS, KEYS, CRESTS Row I: GaTov, iATkinson, CarpenTer, Quayle. Row 2: Cone, A. Bailey, Cullen, Miss CarpenTer, C. Bailey, vonShrader, Bishop Skalds Society ThaT The wriTing oT creaTive liTeraTure mighT be encouraged, The Skalds, liTerary socieTy oT The Junior College, was Tormed several years ago. The membership oT The socieTy is composed oT Those sTudenTs who have liTerary aspiraTions, wheTher iT be in poeTry, drama, or TicTion, plus a cerTain amounT oT TalenT To supporT These aspiraTions. The Edda. 6 magazine COVYIIOOSGCT OT The WriTings oT The members, is published by The club every year. ManuscripTs are read and criTicized aT The meeTings. To raise Tunds, The Slcalds sponsored a sTudenT body program which Tea- Tured Miss Marion Von PrachT in a reciTal oT inTerpreTive dancing. MaesTro Lopez Cabello, The Tamous Spanish pianisT, accompanied, Miss Von PrachT. Tom Cullen was The sec- ond semesTer presiding oTTicer. Jack Quayle oT The socieTy won TirsT place in The sTaTe-wide conTesT oT San Diego STaTe Teachers' Col- lege wiTh his sea poem, lTching FeeT , which appeared in FirsT The Blade. CULLEN BAYLEY AWARDS, KEYS, CRESTS MT, Row I: Birch, Brooks, Kennelly, STover, Hallen, JohnsTon, Quackenbush, Duclley, Hayes Row 2: Rogers, Owen, Frinnell, Knox, Welsh, JohnsTon, Loriclon, Heck, Purdy, Graham, Bonds, Rene. C Leffermen Qnly men who have made a leTTer in some branch oT aThleTics in Junior College are eligible Tor membership in The LeTTermen's Club. A resTricTeol membership clause in The consTiTuTion helps To mainTain The morale oT The members. IT is Their aim To sTimulaTe inTeresT and supporT Tor all aThleTic conTesTs, and The l.eTTermen's Club is responsible To a large exTenT Tor The increased inTeresT among The men This year in inTra-mural acTiviTies. IT is hopecl ThaT The LeTTermen will Take charge oT sporTs nexT year in a successTul sporTs program. During The pasT year l.eTTermen have oTTiciaTecl aT The annual Freshman-Sophomore TooTball game, inTer-class baskeTball series, and The SouThern CaliTornia Relays. AT The beginning oT The school year, The club elecTeol Bill STover, George Gaugler, and Bill lvlooney presiclenT, vice-presidenT, ancl secreTary, respecTively. Oak SmiTh and BerT SmiTh are sponsors oT The group. lOl IOII AWARDS, KEYS. CRESTS Mullins, Wal'l'ers, Meyer, BoynTon, Royce Letferwinners To Those members oT The Women's AThleTic AssociaTion who have compleTed Tive sporT seasons, who have proven Themselves proTicienT in one individual sporT, and who have upheld The sTandards oT leadership, loyalTy, sporTsmanship, and scholarship, a leT- Ter is awarded. Each leTTer winner musT have acTively parTicipaTed in Three Team sporTs To be chosen Trom hockey, baslceTball, speedball, or baseball: in one individual sporT Trom among Tennis, archery, swimming, golT, riding, bowling, Tap dancing, or rowing: The TiTTh sporT may be selecTed Trom eiTher group. There are Two annual evenTs aT which The awarding oT leTTers and bars Talces place. The TirsT occurs aT The end oT The Tall semesTer, and The evenT is a breakTasT. This year The Robinson l-loTel was The scene oT The brealcTasT, anoTher purpose oT which is The Tormal insTallaTion oT new Women's AThleTic AssociaTion oTFicers. ln The spring, Towards The end oT The school year a Tormal Award BanqueT is aTTended by all members oT The AssociaTion. l-lerelagain leTTers are presenTed To women who have iusT TulTilled The re- quiremenTs oT The award sysTem. InsTallaTion oT W.A.A. oTFicers and awarding oT The Masonic Cup are oTher TeaTures oT The bangueT. AWARDS, KEYS, CRESTS A+kinson, Dible, Sco'H', Mr. JohnsTon, Cullen, Pa'I'rick, Fisher Phi Rho Pi Junior College's honorary Torensic group, Phi Rho Pi, is one oT The mosT acTive or- ganizaTions on The campus. As a naTional TraTerniTy, iT encourages oraTory and debaTe in The Junior Colleges. To be a member one musT have parTicipaTed in aT leasT Tour de- baTes, and musT have won Two. Phi Rho Pi sponsors The Forensic Club, inTerclass de- baTes, and The Viking Torensic TournamenT. AT The convenTion oT The PaciTic SouTh- wesT Division oT Phi Rho Pi, which was held aT Bakersfield, Howard PaT- riclc won oraTory and Russ Cullen won exTemporaneous conTesTs Trom Teams oT SouThern California, Ari- zona, and oTher neighboring sTaTes. They losT The debaTe Tinals, however. From among The hundred dele- gaTes presenT aT The NaTional Con- venTion held aT DuluTh on April 6, 7, and 8, Long Beach was honored when PaT won TirsT place in oraTory from I3 conTesTanTs and second in exTemporaneous Trom 22 conTesT- anTs. Russell JohnsTon, adviser, is presidenT of The PaciTic SouThwesT division. PATRICK MR. JOHNSTON 02j 3 Groups of Service an opening between tree branches . . . in the distance, a mountain seemingly corrozled by' time . . . a glimpse 4of'a lake lying on the lefvel floor of the valley . . . placidity under a pitiless sun . . . . SERVICEIS OUR MOTTO Row I: Buffum, Tingler, English, Garrison, Thayer, Callahan, Shaw, Millner, Hendrix, Ravenscroft Row 2: Scrivner, Sheldon, Mullins, Hansen, WallenTine, Birchfield, Decker, Flannery, WinsTead, Lorimer, Crow'I-her, Bovyer Student Club-Y's Women STudenT Club, iunior college branch oT The Y.W.C.A., has as iTs purpose The TurTher- mg oT world Tellowship, leadership, service, and The desire To live a Tull and creaTive I e. ln carrying ouT This purpose iT has included in iTs acTiviTies The pasT year many Tours such as visiTs To The Russian and Mexican secTions oT Los Angeles. IT also enTer- Tained Mexican children aT a parTy as parT oT iTs world Tellowship pro- gram. Supper meeTings held once a monTh provided The opporTuniTy oT parTicipaTing in discussions and pro- grams based on The inTeresTs oT col- lege women. Miss KnighT, Y.W.C.A. sTudenT secreTary, and Miss Mary Thomsen, TaculTy adviser, were sponsors oT The group: while Lillian Callahan and Kay Mackay led The group as presidenTs TirsT and second semesTers respec- CALLAHAN MACKAY lively. O4 5 SERVICEISC UR MOTTO Row I: Royce, Murray, HarT, Pafrick, Fisher, Garre'I'+, EllioT'I'. Row 2: Hodge, Lawrence, Squires, ParminTer, Campbell College Y-Y's Men College Y , The Junior College organizaTion of The Y. lvl. C. A., is among The oldesT groups on The campus. Organized wiTh The dual purpose oT developing ChrisTian characTer and oT being oT service To The Jaysee, This group oT men under The leader- ship This year oT A. W. Mueller, ExecuTive SecreTary Tor The EasT branch oT The Long Beach Y. lvl. C. A., and l.. C. l-lubbard, TaculTy adviser, meeTs weekly ThroughouT The school year. The College Man in LiTe was The Theme Tor The Tall se- mesTer. Under Earl Dible The group was led by ouTside speakers in Talks and discussions in The various proTes- sions and businesses. Services ren- dered by The club included an inTor- maTion Table aT regisTraTion, while The ouTsTanding social evenT was a men's sTag. l-loward PaTrick led The men The second semesTer wiTh a well- rounded program. MeeTings were conTinued aTTer The quake Through The courTesy oT The EasT-Side ChrisTian church. DIBLE PATRICK SERVICEIS OUR MOTTO Row I: Glaze, Long, Afflerbaugh, Barnes, Gibson, Hansen, Shaw, Ballard, Mullins. Row 2: SmiTh, Hudson, CrowTher, Parsons, WinsTead, Lorimer, Thompson, ScoTT, BuFFum, Wildman, Garrison Row 3: Peacock, Thayer, Jarvis, Canfield, Seymour, Wise, Griffin, Callahan, Millner Kassai-Women of Service NOT To be ouTdone by Tong, Kassai, women's service organizaTion, accomplished much This year. Under The direcTion oT Florence Gibson, presidenT, a candy sale was held in November, The proceeds oT which were used To Trame several arT picTures ThaT now hang in oTTice rooms. The annual ChrisTmas Tormal dance was held aT The Virginia CounTry Club on December The TwenTieTh. OTher semesTer acTiviTies included ushering aT debaTes, assisTing aT TickeT sales, and aiding aT all school TuncTions. A ChrisTmas Tree was secured Trom a local nursery aT holiday Time. Maxine Rose, Marian SmiTh, DoroThy Threl- lceld, and WiniTred Gould were Flor- ence's supporTing oTTicers. Second semesTer Tound Marian SmiTh in The presidency wiTh a capable cabineT behind her. An open house was held aT The TirsT oT The second semesTer. LaTer a TheaTer parTy and supper were held To honor The new members: The Spring Formal was aT The Army Air Base. SMITH GIBSON iiosi 7 SERVICEISO UR MOTTO Row I: STo,ver, Rene, Berg, Mr. Oak SmiTh, Mr. BerT SmiTh, Mr. Griffin, Jackson, Hodge, SmiTh Row 2: WesTergard, JohnsTon, SchachT, Hayes, Yancy, HolT, Hallen, Knox, EsTabrook, Morris, SuTher- fi Tong-Men of Service Tong, men's service organizaTion, compleTed a successTul year, having engaged in several acTiviTies which were oT service To The school. Among The various proiecTs ThaT Tong puT over was The prinTing oi baske+balI and TooTball schedules. This accomplish- menT and The assisTance wiTh aThleTic acTiviTies are considered The mosT imporTanT oT Their services by Tong members, as nearly all oT Them are leTTermen. Ushering aT as- semblies The second semesTer was anorher service rendered by The club. Social evenTs on The Tong calendar included an open As-you-like-iT hop held aT The BelmonT Beach Club, and a closed dance held aT The Cafe de Paree. PresidenTs oT The club were Ev lvlorris and Tom l-lolT. The Order gave Their Spring SporTs Dance aT Lakewood CounTry Club, May sixThg a closed dance was held The lasT oT June. STeakbakes, open houses, beach parTies, and horseback rides Tollowed by barbe- cued suppers compleTed The calen- dar. HOLT MORRIS cf.-0 SERVICEIS OUR MOTTO Row I: SmiTh, WinsTead, Lorimer, Miller, G. Barnes, M. Barnes, Cline, Shaw. Row 2: E. Lord, Duke, J. Lord Stage Crew-Scene Shifters AlThough seriously handicapped by The earThgualce's removing all possibiliTies oT Their carrying ouT The conTemplaTed program, members oT The sTage crew were organ- ized and ready To perliorm all services ThaT They ordinarily do. All sTage work Tor The school play, A SuccessTul CalamiTy was handled by crews chosen Trom The members oT The STage Crew Club. When leTT wiThouT an audiTorium, The group mighT have con- sidered TurTher organizaTion useless and disbanded, buT iT insTead showed a Tine spiriT by Torming an enTirely new pro- gram. On June 9 The organizaTion presenTed Olga STeeb. noTed pianisT, and Rolla Ahcord, popular bariTone, in a de- lighTTul program held in The music hall oT The Long Beach Municipal AudiTorium. A beach parTy, which was enioyed aT Dana PoinT, was subsTiTuTed Tor The abandoned mounTain Trip and Tinished The year's acTiviTies. LORD IO8 O9 Groups of Common Interest dn interesting photographical study . . . concentric circles, wheels, and mir- rors done in polished metal .... the eyjzect of hidden lights reflected on their surfaces .... PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS Row I: Adams, Taylor, Van Orclslrand, Shirer, Dodd, Fried, As+on, Sufherland, Wesfergarcl. Row 2: Laurence, Magee, McEnI'ee, Peierson, Pe'Iers, Hyde, Hodge, Ball, Mussel, Dean, Dobbins. Row 3: Crow, Murray, Royce, Freeman, Maxwell, Slarclc, Kinsey, HarI', Gerhardf, Dunkle. Engineers-Transit Men Wilh Ihe purpose ol Iurlhering inleresl in engineering as a profession and ol eslablishing conlacls wilh I'he oulslanding local engineers, Ihe Junior College chapler of The American Associalion of Engineers found Ihemselves wilh much Io do Jrhis year. Among Ihe speakers Iealured al The bi-weekly meelings were Cily Engineer Adams and I-lerberl Davies, presidenl' of The senior chapler. Pie feeds and The annual banquel al Moore's Cale were dinner meer- ings. The planned dance coincided wilh Ihe A.IVI.S. dance. In addilion Io Ieclures on mining, archileclural and chemical engineering, Irips Io induslrial planls near Long Beach, lo Jrhe U. S. Navy, and +o Ihe San Ga- briel Dam were evenls. Lloyd I-lodge and Wayne Shirer were presidenls. SHIRER HODGE , aided by Mr. Noble I-lines, sponsor. PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS Row I: Copple, Dible, DygerT, Morrison, Penrose, Mr. Seal, Desmonds, George, Mylor, CompTon, Campbell Row 2: Hagen, ClinTon, Phoenix, MarTin, Spears, McArThur, Zellers, Sparr, S. Campbell Hammurabi-Bachelor Barristers Claiming To be The club richesT in TradiTions in campus liTe, The Order OT l-lammu- rabi, campus organizaTion oT pre-legal sTudenTs, has successTully rounded ouT a year OT boTh insTrucTive and social acTiviTy. EvenTs included in The Tull program were The mock Trial, which proved To be a greaT success, The winTer excursion, a bar dinner, and The graduaTion hop. ln addiTion To These special gaTherings, weekly meeTings were hed aT The homes OT various members. WiTh a recognized spiriT oT Tellowship, The elecTions were held, placing Don Penrose, Bob Kennelley, Gerry Des- mond, Andy Spears, and Archie Miner in oTFices TirsT semesTer To be succeeded by Gerry Desmond, ArT CompTon, Charley Morrison, Frank George, and Andy Spears. Mr. l-larold Seal was sponsor. A DESMOND MR. SEAL PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS Row I: Raines, HighTower, ZanTiny, Mr. Wrigh'I', Lee, Dyer, Hanson. Row 2: Elms, STocIcham, Bailey, DewhursT, GaIbraiTh Cacluceus-Bone Crushers Under The leadership oT Don CrawTord, Caduceus, men's pre-medical socieTy, suc- cessTully carried ouT one oT The TradiTions oT The club by sTaging The annual alumni ChrisTmas banqueT. Don's Tellow oTTicers were Charles SToclcham, WaI+er lvIaTTocl4s, James Rogers, and Red Armand. The annual mounTain Trip was Taken in February aTTer Rogers became presidenT. Mr. CliTTord L. WrighT, sponsor, and Jay Barber, Bill ZanTiny, STocl4ham, and Bob Lee as- sisTed The presidenT wiTh The club ad- minisTraTion Tor The second semesTer. T s , The purpose oT Caduceus is To band TogeTher The men sTudenTs oT The Junior College who are Taking, or are inTeresTed in The pre-medical course, and To promoTe enThusiasm and inTeresT in The sTudy oT medicine. Also oT inTeresT was The ioinT ban- gueT wiTh The women's pre-medical organizaTion, The Asclepadaen soci- eTy. Membership in boTh groups is open To all men sTudenTs who Take a A medical course, Trom eiTher a phy- ROGERS CRAWFORD sician's or a pharmacisT's view. y PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS X If if Row I: Ward, Sfevens, De Armond, Miss Duncan, Millner, Shaw, Griffin, Berry Row 2: GaTov, James, Desmond, Hanson, Smifh, Wilson, Roby, Gore, Berg, Pike, Brooks Row 3: Mylor, Compfon, Hayes, Arnold, Travers, Pryor, Reynolds, Andree, Rene, HoIT, Rogers Commercial Club-Big-Business Moguls To promoTe inTeresT and Triendship among The sTudenTs and To co-operaTe wiTh The adminisTraTion oT The Junior College are The aims oT The Commercial Club. By bringing prominenT business heads beTore sTudenTs majoring in economics and business, The oTIicers, led by Bill Mooney, have sTimuIaTed acTiviTy in The group un+iI iT is now one oT The largesT organizaTions in The school. AssisTing Bill were The live-wire workers, George Gaugler, George Marmion, and I-larry Price. The second semes- Ter Tound Bill Mooney again leading The organizaTion. Miss Glee Duncan served as sponsor ThroughouT The year, acTively aiding The club in all meeTings and acTiviTies. During The coming year The oTTi- cers plan To acguainT The members wiTh successTuI business men oT lead- ing deparTmenT and commercial houses in SouThern CaIiTornia, in order To TurTher The acTiviTies oT This year's oTTicers. Commercial club was also prominenT in inTra-mural sporTs. MOONEY MISS DUNCAN PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS 1 I -ffl -1 ' --' Row I: Kiedel, LuceKChishoIm, Yares, Rausch, Ellsworlh, Decker, Sheldon, Miller, S'I'eers, Morgan I Row 2: Bellman, Nelson, Nielson, Afllerlaaugh, Carpenler, Huff, Mr. Vredenburg, Winslead, Lorimer, Elayer, Crane. Jones, Hulchinson, Hazzard I Row 3: Warner, Howard, E. Cline, G. Barnes, M. Barnes, Quick, Mullins, Hendrix, Harringfon, Merrick, Turner, Maior, WaIlen'Iine, Service, Kollre, INeH's, Anderson, McGuire, Phlaf, Daily Row 4: Spears, Oieda, George, Mylar, Morrison, Campbell, Andree, Reed, Fisher, Fynny, Hess, Pine, Carlyle, Brady, Pease, Sreele, Henderson Row 5: Hallen, R. Cline, W. Barnes, Dygerl, Rope, Aaronson, Handy Los Conquisfadores-Tepid Toreadors Those Jaysee sludenls who are inleresled in Spanish peoples, lheir lands, cusloms, language, and lileralure, form The membership ol Los Conquisladores, lhe Spanish Club. Senor Roberlo Rope, presidenl, wilh Ihe aid ol his fellow oiclicers and ol Senor Drum- mond, sponsor, conducled lhe club lhrough an exlremely inleresling year. One ol The highlighls ol Ihe year's meelings was a demonsrralion of Ihe Cuban rumba presenled ROPE MR. KAULFERS by Senor Kaulfers and Senorila Bor- mose. Anolher unusually inleresring program was a Ialk on Pancho Villa, Ihe nolorious Mexican bandil, which was given by Senor Sine. Ivlolion piclures ol Seville and olcl Mexico were shown al' one meeling and Arlhur E. Anderson, a Chief Perry orlicer ol Ihe U. S. Navy, lalked on Un Viale por Pampas de la Argenlinan al' 'rhe May galhering. The club was sponsored by Wesley C. Drummond, Waller Kaullers, and C. W. Vredenburgh. PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS Row I: Heck, Roland, Purdy, Headland, Andree, Tigner, Lawless, Hughes, Aikinson, Denny, Sco+I' Row Z: Berry. George, Hansen, Thayer, Benneri, Sankey, Slonaker, Hazzard, Sallo, Merrick, Elayer, Aldahl Row 3: Turner. Marmion, Quimby, Barne'H', Tingler, Miss Slager, Slevens, Mullins, Josephson, Barry, Shaw, Crane, Lorimer, Whiflaker, Bovins Row 4: Bishop, Herman, Sanders, Cone, Nofziger, Garrison, Bulifum, Callahan, Bunge, Des Granges, Mayberry, Bellman, Brown, Winsiead, Hooper, Denneri, Schooley, Rogers Row 5: Riclclle, Tichnor, Clinion, Mounf, Jarvis, Phoenix, Foss, Rainey, Zellers, Mariin, Kearns, DygeH', Beclcell, Fox, Coleman, Cummings, Barnei Row 6: Morrison, George, Dixon, Desmonds, McArIhur, Hess, Seaver, Kyle a Clique Francaise-Polite Parlez-Vooers La Clique Francaise is Ihe elile name by which lhe French Club is known. Wiih Ihe purpose of grouping Iogelher The sludenls of French inlo a social club for conversa- Jrion, discussion, and enierlainmeni, ihe club members held many inleresling meelings. The mosl' successful of Ihese was one held in irue cabarel siyle - wiih candle lighl, apache dances, and all Ihal goes lo make up an evening of real Parisian enlerlainmenl. Olher meeiings of ihe year ieaiured speakers who iold of Jrrips ihrough France, describing lhe French peas- ani life and olher inleresling lhings. Mademoiselle Pearl Sievens led Ihe group Ihrough ihe year being called back lo The presidenI's chair 'Ihe second semesler. She was aided by siallis of capable officers, and by Mademoiselle Cora Slager, adviser. Mrs. Mary Chalmers, who spoke on England, and Mr. I-larry Johnson who Iold ol his laie European Iour, were feaiured guesls during 'rhe year. MISS STAGER STEVENS PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS Row I: Keidel, Jarvis, King, DuBIois, Ruerup, C. Smi'Ih, Burgess, Alyes Row 2: Newion, Buffum, Lorimer, Winsfead, Brooks, JcI1ns+on, Sfoclcham, E. Lord, Gore, Flora, Wairers, Bovyer Row 3: De Jonge, Ziesenhenne, Afkinson, Gefov, Hemphill, Bailey, Hallen, Hanson, Kramer, Ross, J. Lord, Hagen Freundschaft-Dubious Deutschers Die FreunclschaTT is The German Club, The organizaTion which TosTers inTeresT in all phases of German liTe, liTeraTure, music, anol people. The membership oT The club is composed almosT enTirely oT sTucIenTs in The German classes. Herr J. lvl. JohnsTon was presidenT Tor The TirsT semesTer and was re-eIecTeol. Under The cIirecTion oT Herr John- sTon, The club Tormeol an organizaTion new To This campus-ThaT oT a club orchesTra. This group played Tor various club meeTings ThroughouT The year and also Tor The A.W.S. Tea clance. Die - ' FreundschaTT also Toolc an acTive parT in The annual ChrisTmas page- anT. I-lerr WalTer Fieg is TacuITy sponsor oT The group. lvlany oT The members are now in communicaTion wiTh The ReichsTag in Berlin and several members oT The club are now on Their way To Ger- many. Die FreunolschaTT is larger Than The German clubs aT any oT The large universiTies in Los Angeles or on The PaciTic coasT. There are nineTy JOHNSTON MR. FIEG members. PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS . . ., . ,H -,------g--V. -- -'--- ---- ----V ---. -----. ff--,. -------I----w --'W'-1 w 2: Vaughf, SmiTl1, Kennedy, Wilkie, Lorimer, Meyer, Ward, LiggeTT, O'Brien, Decker, Pease, Kchlke, Royce, Moore, Warw Row 3: VioleT, Tracy, Carpenfer, Wilclman, Quick, Hooper, Hansen, Mrs. Wennberg, C. Smiih, Brock, MarTin, Wood Brush and Pencil-Bristle Brushers Beginning wiTh The Freshman RecepTion, The Brush and Pencil Club sponsored many evenTs To sTimulaTe The inTeresT oT arT sTudenTs in all phases oT arT by boTh social gaTh- erings and Tield Trips. Among The evenTs, Two Tield Trips and a lecTure were ouTsTand- ing on The more serious side oT The acTiviTies, while a sporT dance aT The Ebell Club and The annual dinner aT The BriTTany KiTchen led The lighTer, social evenTs. Wilma Win- sTead and Floy Spangler proved To ' be very capable presidenTs, while Their assisTing sTaTTs oT Marga'reT l-lales, BeTTy Jane Kohlke, George Magruder, and MargareT Lorimor. Maxine ATTlerbaugh, BeTTy Kennedy, WiniTred Long, and Marjorie Koenig served The second semesTer wiTh abiliTy. l-lunTingTon ArT Gallery was The scene oT a Tield Trip in The second semesTer. The club also sponsored a snap shoT conTesT wiTh some very in- TeresTing enTries and an arT exhibiT T OT sTudenT work was sponsored. SPANGLER WINSTEAD PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS Row I: ComsTock, Shaw, STevens, SwiTT, Seymour, James, Wilson, Gregg Row 2: Warwick, Lawless, ProcTor, Squires, Andree, Freeman, Kummer, Carpenfer, Morris Drama Workshop-Hopeless Hamlets The Drama Workshop TurThers inTeresT in dramaTics among The sTudenTs oT Jaysee. Each semesTer iT sponsors The presenTaTion OT aT IeasT one ouTsTanding pIay Tor The public. In addiTion To This, during The pasT year Drama Workshop members were given a demonsfrarion in make-up by a represenTaTive oT Max FacTor's in I-IoIIywood. MeeT- ings are held once a monTh aT which Time one or more one-acT plays are presenTed. AT The February meeTing The FuIIerTon Junior College presenTed a pIay. The Wolves oT CernograTz , adap- Ted by TheIwaII ProcTor, second se- mesTer direcTor, Trom a shorT sTory oT The same name by I-I. I-I. Munro, was presenTed by Long Beach aT FuIIerTon IaTer on in March. Aiding Mary SwiTT, direcTor, were Marjorie Wise, Gordon Warwick, and Miss KaTharyn Kennedy, sponsor. Drama workshop acTiviTies .were somewhaT hindered The second se- mesTer, buT The group presenTed - The PoT-Boiler on May 24 Tor a MISS KENNEDY SWIFT sTudenT body assembly. PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS r l Row I: Griffin, Seymour, Th ayer, Shaw, ScoTI', Wilclman, Crane Row 2: Squires, Dible, PaTrick, ATIcinson, Mr. JoI1nsTon, Cullen, Garner, Copple, Kummer Forensic Club-Arduous Arguers The Forensic club is mainly a social group wiTh programs which include dances as well as oTher enTerTainmenT. ITs purpose is To TurTher The inTeresT in public speaking and debaTing among The sTudenTs oT The Junior College. The Theme Tor The pasT year has been The Speaker's Place in The World . lvieeTings were held every oTher Monday nighT and The Tollowing subiecTs were discussed: The Speaker in PoliTics, The Speaker in CourT, The Speaker in Congress, The Speaker in SocieTy, and The Speaker on The Radio. Earl Dible and DwighT Garner were The men who served The club as presidenTs. As TaculTy sponsor Mr. Russell John- sTon helped The oTFicers oT boTh se- mesTers. All Those connecTed wiTh The group Teel ThaT many worThwhile Things were accomplished. The socieTy sponsored inTerclass compeTiTiong The Viking Award ex- Temporaneous conTesT, which was won by I-Ioward PaTrick, and pracTice debaTes wiTh neighboring schools. DIBLE GARNER PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS I I Row I: Squires, Cook, Murray, Thompson, Seymour, Markham, Hayes, Schachf, Carpenfer. Row 2: Brooks, Teschke, Alkinson, Johns+on, Hallen, Miller, Van Dyke, Tobin, Goldberg, Quayle Type and Copy-Prin1'er's Devils Type and Copy is Ihe campus publicalions club and consisls of members of Viking and Saga slaliis. One of The Iealures of Ihe Iirsl' semesler was Ihe high average of Iheir club Ioolball Ieam. Various social and lbusiness meelings were held Ihroughoul Ihe school year, e+ which Jrhe memberg discussed publicalion problems and o'I'her af- fairs. The edilor of Ihe paper is Ihe I'radi+iOr1el and honorary presidenl of Type and Copy. Firsl semesler officers were Jim Dewey, president Florence Gib- son, Ed Nofziger, and John Fullon. Second semesler officers included John Fullon, Lou I-IusI'on, Don Tobin, and Al Goldberg. Besides exhibiling alhlelic prow- ess in The line of Ioolball, 'Ihe iour- nalisls displayed Ialenl in baskelball. Under Maury Alkinson I'he Iype- Iwislers delealed a slrong I-Iammu- rabi Ieam 22-9. Through Type and Copy, The Viking and Saga sfarls held a parry which was a dislincr FULTON DEWEY success. O PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS ,I -bf' I Row I: Gauli, Sfevens, Barnes, Hanson, M. Tharpe, J. Tharpe, Barfron, W. SmiTh, Wildman Row 2: Shaleen, Heisey, O. SmiTh, Reel, Kramer, Shinn, Coles, Grissinger, Dexfer, HiTchcocIr. Row 3: DavenporT, Agal, Sco'fT, Heron, Warwick, Daniels, Yinger, Reese Music Club-Chronic Crooners Music sTudenTs supposedly have a greaT deal in common wiTh each oTher. AT any Jaysee may be proud oT The way iTs music sTudenTs Tormed The Music Club, The TirsT in This college's hisTory. The organizaTion has sTarTed iTs career wiTh a year oT greaT accomplishmenT. Neil Warwick and Bob Shinn, presidenTs, deserve a qreaT deal oT crediT Tor The success oT The club. Maurine VaughT, Jean Tharpe, Bob Shinn, and I-lelen Coverdale were The oTher oT- Ticers oT The TirsT semesTer. AssisTing The presidenT during The second se- , mesTer were his Tellow-oTTicers who capably co-operaTed. Miss Edi+h M. I-liTchcoclc, music deparTmenT head, is The sponsor oT The club. lTs work in The annual ChrisTmas pageanT re- ceived much Tavorable commenT. A women's sexTeT and a male quarTeT proved To be very popular, noT only wiTh The sTudenT body buT 7s wi+h The Townspeople as well. WARWICK SHI.NN C3 PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS I V Row I: Lee, Hand, RoThweII, STevens, Miss Gassaway, Thompson, Lorimer, Winsfead, HashomoTo Row 2: HaTa, MahaTI'1y, LaTer, JohnsTon, Brooks, Blemon, Carmona, Kanow InTernaTional Club-Globe Girdlers The purpose of The InTernaTionaI Club is To promofe Friendship among The various naTionaliTies in The college and To fosTer an inTeresT In The inTernaTionaI affairs of The day. In furfhering This purpose during The pasT year, This club sponsored a group of speakers aT The Pacific Palisades: sponsored an assembly for The sTudenT body on Arm- isfice Day, aT which Time They presenfed a pfiqedni of I'l'1S nafionsr senf four Of Their members To aTTend The STudenT ln- sTiTuTe of Pacific ReIaTions, held aT Redlands over Thanksgiving vaca- , Tiong and combined wiTh The Ian- guage clubs To hold The annual com- bined ChrisTmas parTy. Leading The club Through iTs very acTive year were The presidenTs, John Cooper and Winifred Gould, and The spon- sor, Miss lvl. E. Gassaway. Our Pacific Neighbors was The Theme for The second semesfer, one meefing being devoTed To each counTry. RefreshmenTs Typical of se ThaT counTry were served by The sTu- denTs from The land. GOULD COOPER I2I II23 PROGRAMS AND DISCUSSIONS Row I: Flannery, Birchfield, Beam, Garrison, Thompson, Ellsworlh, Mr. Jackson, Harring'I'on, Markham, Ruerup, Hirlh, Harper, Chisholm Row 2: Dixon, Callahan, Sheldon, Rogers, Miller, Tingler, Anderson, Bulifum, Nofziger Row 3: Lee, Howard, Hanson, Hess, Sfoclcham, Desmonds, Dygerf, George Newman Club-Frank Philosophers The fall semesler of I932 found +he addilion ol +he Newman Club Io Ihe lisl oi Junior College exlra-curricular aclivilies. The obiecl of lhe club is Ihe spirilual. moral, and in- Ielleclual advancemenl of ils members, Ihe Iurlherance of lheir social union, and lhe encouragemenl of lhal which is besl in communily and universily life. Under lhe leader- ship ol Lillian Callahan, presidenl, and of her fellow-officers, Lillian Bufiurn, Charles Sloclqham, and Bill I-less, Ihe club made ils debul. Jack Riordan headed Ihe group 'rhe second semesler, and wiI'h l'he capable supporl' of his cab- inel co-workers was able Io guide il very successfully lo lhe end of ils Iirsl year. Officers of bolh semeslers were aided by Mr. C. W. Jackson. Being of a serious characler, lhe organizalion is composed of slum denls who desire lo gel' logelher and Iallc over currenl problems. So- cial meelings are held once every monlh. A Spring open dance look place on June 3rd. CIALLAHAN RIORDAN MISSION SAN FERNANDO 2S Ei ESS S21 SSS Liffle of significance is known abouf fhe founding and early hisfory of fhe sevenfeenfh Mission, San Fernando, Rey de Espagna. The dedicafion serv- ice fook place in Sepfember I797, and for nearly a half a cenfury fhe busy life of a Mission esfablishmenf wenf on. Buf in l84l a discovery was made which made fhe whole communify wild wifh excifemenf. A few miles from San Fernando gold had been discovered! One of fhe men from fhe Mission sfop- ping af midday in fhe shade of a free had dug up a wild onion roof and had seen, fo his amazemenf, a nuggef of gold in fhe loose dirf. The news of fhe discovery spread, and soon hundreds from far and near flocked fo fhe place. The ,firsf California gold ever fo be coined in a governmenf minf came from fhese mines and was faken around Cape l-lorn in a sailing vessel fo Phila- delphia . . . One of fhe beaufiful sighfs of San Fernando foday is fhe fwo huge palm frees, over a hundred years old, which liff fheir fall columns fo fhe sky as if so puny a fhing as man or man's care were of no significance fo fhem. The Mission, fhough badly ruined, is sfill famous among Mission lovers for ifs block long corridor of sfill remain- ing arches. i f ' v SPORTS CALEFIDAR Bob. Murray- Marguerite Mullins-Co-Eclitorsi ,' , , , .V ' fm- IA- . 5... , . 2 mo SAG I4 f'1lAD -Y611UM .do8 'a1o1ibEl-03-anilluM e1i1euQ1eM SAN FERNANDO . . . BRONZE MONUMENT TO THE INDOMITABLE SPIRIT THAT MADE THESE MISSIONS POSSIBLE . . . THE TANGLED BRANCHES OF A PEPPER TREE .AS A BACKGROUND .... RED TILED ROOF A.ND COOL ALCOVES IN THE DISTANCE . . . w.'ff::f,1 ' ww- ' If vw wgfffsl-fs!--1M,wI1'sw we wmwmawmwsmwmwwm awvQm:,2:vr5xff1i63Lxtxiii:veag:f5vsz?IQaasf:rrnmViewAmise3as'2s'wg:awmb1'sfw5w-hams,-lmfsf,ww 'Y Y 1 E 2 r QA I I I I I Men . . . . surf bother puuses in shullofw fwute1 '.... sunlight like molten gold spilled from the heafuens . . . u line of breakers in tlze foreground .... of The Camera! And here's ample picforial evidence 'ihai 'I'he Long Beach Vikings play no favorifes in fhe world of sporis. Here's fooiball, baseball, golf. Here's frack, baskeiball, iennis. Here's archery, cycling, calisfhenics. And here's Beri Smiih, Mel Griffin and Oak Smifh. The Viking is versaiile and he's growing in a+hle'l'ic slafure, year by year. Long Beach is proud of 'rhese young men and women who carry 'ihe black and whi+e of 'I'he Vikings on many aihlefic fields. And, so, Camera, Pleasel They're here, 'lhose Vikings, and +hey're wrifing a+hle+ic his+ory in fhese pages. FRANK T. BLAIR Sporfs Edi+or, Long Beach Press-Telegram 6 VARSITY TRACK WATER POLO Dudley, Bill 'BuI'cher, Earl Jones, Winfield 'PeI'erson, WaI'I lCap'I'ainI Rogers, Warren ICap'IainI Clemo, Bill Reel, Vinceni Coleman, Roger Bonds, Bill Graham, Joe HoII'on, Dewey Kelly, Edwin .Nordman, Eric Pederson, Jack Raihbun, Fred Slockham, Charles Vorheis, Don Garcia, Joe IMgr.I VARSITY BASKETBALL Baum, Herman Brown, Howard 'Bruns, Elmer lCapI'.I Crawford, Howell Heck, Don Ingle, Ed Purdy, KenneI'h Schmidi, Frank Walker, Delberl' Rope, Bob IMgr.I GOLF 'I'Bohen, Bob 'Moun'I', Ed Walker, Delberl ICa Dod, KenneI'h Manning, Bill Oliger, Jake Hayes, Harry IMgr.I I7I pI'ainI VARSITY FOOTBALL Abrahams, Harold ICo-Ca plainl i Brown, Howard i EII'isI'e, Carl Fraser, Babe ICO-Cap'I'ainI Tlsenberger, Frank 'Quackenbush, Bill 'I'McLane, Adrian Mooney, Bill 'S+over, Bill Allen, Harry Campbell, James Gescheider, Carl Hallen, George Johnslon, Roberi Jordan, Roberl' Knox, Eddie ICap'I'ain EIec+I Kolda, Ronald Moan, Kelly Moss, Jack Taylor, Glenn VioIe'H'e, Romaine IMgr.I Peferson, Waller IMgr.I LETTER-WOMEN BoyI'on, Kalherine Callahan, Lillian Garrison, Alice Marie Crow'I'her, Mae Meyer, DoroI'hy Mullins, Marguerile Royce, Evelyn WaII'ers, Birdena Winners Fiske, Dixon FosI'er, Bob Frinell, Tom Hadley, Vernon Knox, Eddie London, Jack Sulherland, Bob Welch, Rod WheaI'er, Howard Workman, Fred lMgr.I BASEBALL Brown, Beverly Conlisk, Alva Dias, John Hallen, George Johnsfon, Roberl' ICO-C6 Heck, Don Kennelly, Bob lCo-Capla Lee, Roberl' McFadden, Aus'Iin Sho'FFner, Dan Wilson, John JohnsI'on, John lMgr.I TENNIS Nevins, Dean Murray, James 'WaII'on, Jack ICapI'ainI 'I'Wood, Carlfon Koos, Bill Wurman, Dale Barbour, Jay Benne+'I', Loy T. Arnold, Bob IMgr.I 'lndicafes 2 year LeH'erman of the NL p'I'ain ini H' seems 1'l1a+ +l1e Cub ball carrier is abou'l' +o receive a nice receplion from +hree Viking glacliafors. No+ice rhe graceful pose of Howard Brown and Bob Jol1ns+on. The 1932 Football Season 8 I29I O N T H E G R I D I R O N Coach CAPT. ABRIAHAMS As co-capTain of Oak's Team, Harold Ab- rahams proved To be The sTar in The line in every game. His spiriT and courage led his TeammaTes on aT all Times. On and oTT The Tield, he was a real gen- Tleman. Babe Fraser proved To The Team in The CompTon game, ThaT They made no error in picking him To be co- capTain along wiTh Ab- rahams, Tor his courage cosT him many monThs in The hospiTaI. Smith f ::,- ' OAK SMITH MANAGERS PETERSON AND VIOLETTE CAPT. FRASER To Oak SmiTh, who guided The de-sTinies oT The Long Beach Junior College TooTball Team, should go The TirsT and greaTesT TribuTe. His pa- Tience and perseverance in Teaching his boys The TundamenTals oT The game. and To be aT all Times good sporTsmen in deTeaT as well as in vicTory, deserve The TinesT complimenTs Tor This successTul yea r. NexT year, Oak should have a greaT and color- Tul Team-WaTch Them! Doing all The dirTy work as co-manager oT The TooTball Team, WalTer Wally PeT- erson and Romaine VioleTTe served The Team well, by Taking care oT all The heavy ar- Ticles and ec1uipmenT. Keeping The generally inquisiTive public oTT The Tield, chasing aTTer TooTballs ThaT wenT over The wall, prevenTing liTTle kids Trom running all over The Tield, These men had Their hands Tull. Because They did noT have To be in bed by nine o'clock, They Took care oT The TooTball players' girl Triends The Time ThaT They did The mosT work was aTTer The game aT TaTT, when They helped bring home TooTball players aT all Times oT The nighT. O N T H E G R I D I R O N BABE FRASER AB ABRAHAMS Playing +he ou'I's+anding game of his career. Babe Fraser will never be forgoilen by The many who saw him in ihe Compron clash. As Co-Cap- Jrain, he was lhe scrappiesi back of +hem all in every game. Harold Abrahams is anofher fool'- ball player who requires no iniroduc- lion io Viking readers. His prowess as guard of 'rwo years sianding on The Viking gridiron will never be lor- goiien by 'rhe many who saw him play. Besides being a pile-driving +ackle who fakes our any opposiiion on +he line, Harry Allen is well known for his work on Jrhe fall Cabinel as Rep- resen+a'rive of Arls. i x v In his lasi year of compe+i+ion under +he Black and Whife, Howard Brown has main- Jrained Jrhe high record he sei as a Fresh- man player. Bob Johns+on had 'lhe honor of being fhe only Freshman +o play consisienlly on Jrhe line. l-le possessed ihe excelleni habil of breaking up opponenis plays. HOWARD BROWN BOB JOHNSTON Grappling Gridders Y -Q 30 I R O N O N T H E G R I D The 'Fullback posiiion was filled capably by Bob River Jordan. Bob's play on defense was speciacular a+ limes. l-le will be back nexi year To fear +he opposing lines To pieces. Known fo +he local fans as Roly-Poly , Bill S+over led his Jream maies in minuies played on Jrhe balile field. l-lis leadership on Jrhe line made his services indispensable in every game. BOB JORDAN BlLL STOVER Valiant Vikings GLENN TAYLOR CARL ELTISTE A RONALD KOLDA Carl El+is+e is anoiher ve+eran whose absence will be keenly fell nexl' year. Beside being hazardous To opposing backs, he is well liked by his Jream males for coolness under fire, Having pleniy of fighi in his small, chunky physique, Ronald Kolda smolrhered many large opponenis on The line opposile him. l-lis will be anolher figure Jrhai will be missed nexi' year. Glenn Taylor's amazing reach made him an ouisianding end, for he was able 'ro snare 'rhe ball in +he air for many long gains. Thai' Oak will be glad 'ro have him back nexl' year, +here's no ques+ion! O N T JACK MOSS BILL OUACKENBUST-I Here's a player who unTorTunaTely was ouT oT many games because oT iniuries. FooTball and charlie-horses don'T mix, so Jack Moss oTTen worked up sweaT and splinTers on The side- lines. Here's anoTher smile ThaT will be missed in The line nexT year. Famous Tor his slices Through The line To smear plays, Bill Quackenbush has iusT Tinished his second big year on The Viking Team. If any of The 'FooTball games had been played in mud, Eddie Knox, wiTh his pasT record aT Poly as a waTerpolo. player, would have been a phenomenal sTar Tor Those games. HE GRIDITRON A man who is a bruising Tackle and smashes end runs as They come his way, is Bill Banjo-Eyes Mooney, who has iusT Tin- ished his TooTball career Tor The Junior College. A'FTer playing Two years on Oak's Team, Franklyn lsenberger was a TargeT Tor im- measurable praise. His ouTsTanding work aT righT guard pracTically became a Tra- diTion. ED KNOX BILL MOONEY FRANK ISENBERGER Men of Oak! T21 3 O N T H E A+ righ'I' half, Jimmie Campbell paved 'Ihe way for Ihe Viking ball carrier. Deiermina- G R I D I R O N Tion and grir were his big asseis on +he Iuri. Known on +he campus as a quief s'Iuden+, Carl Gescheider changes his +ac+ics on Jrhe gridiron, charging like a boli of Iighi- ning and hi++ing like a cyclone. JIM CAMPBELL CARL GESCI-IEIDER Men of Brawn! KELLY MOAN SWEDEN I-IALLEN EGGS MCLANE He:-e's a clevasfaling Iaclcler who blocks punls. snags passes, and is immovable on end runs. I-Iis name is George Swede I-Iallen. I-Ie will be back nexi year Io smoiher opponenis 'rricky plays again. Need more be said? Adrian Eggs McLane is ano+her Sophomore for whose presence The Viking menior was graieful during The pasi Iwo years. I-Iis playing as an end was so successful Thai he was ranked high among Jrhe conference slars. Emme'H' Kelly Moan was manna 'From I-Ieaven. As a Freshman, he filled a place in Ihe backfield so well on Oak's Ieam Jrhai he was chosen All-Conference half back. I-Ie was a passer de-luxe. Long Beach 6 TaTT 0 Long Beach I3 Bakersfield 25 O N T H E G R I D I R O N TaTT- Bakersfield ' Playing on The TaTT gridiron and under arc lighTs Tor The TirsT Time, Coach SmiTh's TighTing Norsemen emerged vicTorious by The score oT 6-O in The TirsT pracTice game oT The season. The Oilers showed unex- pecTed opposiTion, shoving The Vikings all over The Tield. IT was noT unTiI The Third quarTer ThaT one oT The Norsemen par- Tially blocked a TaTT punT, Taking poses- sion oT The ball on The 3 yard line. ThaT much needed oTTensive power came when Babe Fraser crashed Thru guard Tor The lone score oT The game. Jack Ivloss, , subsTiTuTe Viking halfback, provided The ouTsTanding run oT The game when he reTurned TaTT's kickoTF 58 yards. ATTer This, The Oilers sTopped The Viking's oTTensive power and The Two Teams spenT The resT oT The nighT show- ing noThing buT deTensive work. According To Oak SmiTh, ineTFecTive blocking on The parT oT The Viking back- Tield oTTen prevenTed anyone Trom geT- Ting away Tor a long run during The game. INIeverTheIess, Babe Fraser Turned in The besT perTormance Tor The locals. Banjo-Eyes Mooney, Eggs McLane, Franky Isenberger, and Roly-Poly STO- ver played sixTy minuTes oT smarT ball. THE 1932-33 SQUA Journeying To The BakersTield den Tor Their second nighT game oT The season, The ersTwhile TouTed Long Beach deTense was ignored compleTely by Coach Sam Hardner's Renegades when They crossed The Viking goal line Tour Times Tor a 25 To I3 upseT. The Vikings drew TirsT blood in The Tray scoring a long pass Trom Rod Welsh To Eddie Knox who Then drop kicked Tor The conversion poinT. BakersTield prompTly re- TaliaTed, Taking The ball on The kick-oTT and driving sTraighT down The gridiron Tor a Touchdown. In less Than Tive minuTes, The Rene- gades had anoTher Touchdown To Their crediT when Van Osdel TwisTed his way over Tor The score. The SmiThmen Tied The counT in The Third quarTer. Here Yancy Tossed a long pass To Oaughan who ran unmolesTed Tor The score. BakersTieId was noT To be denied, however, and pushed over Two Touchdowns in The lasT haIT. The Vikings in This game Tlashed a good passing aTTack wiTh Vvfelsh and Yancy Throwing The ball Tor long gains, buT They were unable To gain Through The line con- sisTenTly. EllioTT, lvloss, Fraser, and Wood- ard showed Tine work Tor The Beachmen. Dy' 4 of-2-eQ0Q,,,,,,wg,,,,p,, T 'g BT From lef To ri hl: of om Row-Brooks, McLane, Campbell, Taylor, Brown, Miller lMascoTJ, Moss, Hallen, Moan, Mooney: Second Row-AssT. Mgr. Hooker, Allen, Breicha, Isenberqer, Bob Johnslon, Sfover, EITisTe, Oda, Gescheider, Jordan, Gaughan, Assl. Mgr. Lord, Third Row-Mgr. PeTerson, Trainer Mathews, Kolda, A. Johnson, J. Johnsfon, Reynolds, Duke Co-Capt Abrahams, Woodard, Knox W. Smifh Quackenbush Coach Oak Smih Co-Mgr. VioleTTe' Back Row-Whifeneck Ja k Y y K Th Smiih, Morris, . . . T . , L kyer, Greenwald, Welch, ET brooks, Ellioff, Williams: Ab T C -capT. Fraser. 5 Did Bill Mooney T441 s'I'op him or did he s'l'op him? Well raTher! Sa nta Monica - Compton Well, how did This happen! In The iniTiaI conTerence game oT The year, The Vikings made more yardage and more TirsT downs Than The SanTa Monica Team, buT were Tied O-O by The small Though TighTing Team oT Coach Brown. The game was repIeTe wiTh passes, Tumbles, and misplays by boTh sides. Long Beach had aT IeasT Tive chances To make Touchdowns, buT The IighT and Terocious SanTa Monica Team inspired by The TighT- ing spiriT oT Charley Brown, Tormer Long Beach coach, proved Too greaT a handi- cap Tor The Iocal boys To overcome. Early in The TirsT period The Vikings rode deep inTo The Corsair TerriTory on a series oT compleTed passes, only To Iose The ball on downs on The Tive inch Iinel This was only one oT The many Times Long Beach visiTed The goal Iine. The Tinal score, an O-O Tie, is noT aT all indicaTive oT The baTTIe ToughT. Long Beach ouT-played The Brownmen 9 To 6 in TirsT downs and gained 250 To I4-7 yards Trom scrimmage. Kelly Moan ex- hibiTed one oT The greaTesT passing aT- Tacks ever seen in Jaysee. McLane, Ab- rahams, STover, and Quackenbush played heads-up TooTbaII on The line. In The greaTesT exhibiTion oT TooTbaII ThaT The local grid Tans have ever seen displayed by This Jaysee, The Viking TooT- baII eleven rose To magniTicenT heighTs To deTeaT The Terrible TarTars Tor The TirsT Time in hisTory by a score oT I8-6. Babe Fraser, brillianT Tullback, puT The Norsemen inTo The lead early in The TirsT quarTer when he senT The pigskin squarely Through The uprighTs Tor a perTecT Tield goal and Three poinTs. Four minuTes had barely passed aTTer The Viking's Tield goal when The Men oT Oak roared Through Tor anoTher Touchdown. Kelly Moan, who had been sTanding on CompTon's 45 yard Iine, shoT a I5 yard bulleT pass To Eggs Mc- Lane who ran 30 yards Tor The score. In The second period CompTon made a 72 yard drive Tor a Touchdown, buT This was oTTseT by The Vikings when Bob Jor- dan plunged over Trom The I yard Iine Tor a score. During This hisToric upseT, Long Beach scored in every possible way. ConsisTenTIy ouTpIaying Their CompTon rivals, The greaT Viking Iine was The de- ciding TacTor oT The game. STeIIar Iinemen were Isenberger, STover, Abraham, Brown, and Mooney. A broken Ieg puT co-capTain Babe Fraser on The casuaITy IisT Tor The season. O N T H E G R I D I R O N Long Beach 0 SanTa Monica 0 I 8 Comp'I'on 6 I Long Beach ', ,, , Glendale 0 0 lill Long Beach O Los .Angeles 6 Long Beach , O N T H E G R I D I R O N Glendale- Los Angeles In The second conTerence game oT The year, The Viking gridiron warriors renewed Their habiT oT playing scoreless To a Tie. Called one oT The greaTesT deTensive Teams in The conTerence, The Norsemen again successTully proTecTed Their un- crossed goal line, buT in doing so TorgoT To cross The Glendale goal line. Coach Sam Tenison's Glendale eleven were badly ouTclassed Trom sTarT To Tinish by The TighTing Viking line. The local grid- ders called aT The Glendale goal line laTe in The TirsT guarTer. STarTing on The Dyna- miTer's 46 yard line, Long Beach drove 35 yards To The I I yard line where a Tumble sTopped The play. ThereaTTer The Vikings visiTed The goal line Tour Times, on each occasion losing The pigskin. Kelly lvloan, wiTh 55 yards To his crediT was The ouTsTanding Long Beach player on The oTTense. The Vikings gaThered nine TirsT downs againsT Two Tor Glendale and had a mar- gin oT l7I yards Trom scrimmage To 27 Tor The Buccaneers. The Glendale eleven didn'T once ThreaTen Long Beach's goal line, averaging less Than one yard per play. A hearT-breaking aTTack in The lasT six minuTes oT play by The Los Angeles Cubs neTTed Them a Touchdown, deTeaTing The scrappy Long Beach Vikings 6-O. During The TirsT halT, The Cubs Tailed To peneTraTe Long Beach TerriTory pasT The 45 yard line. lVIoan's educaTed Toe kepT Los Angeles deep in Their own TerriTory. Long Beach had one susTained drive laTe in The game To puT Them on The Cubs I2 yard line. AT This poinT a drop kick Tailed To clear The bar. IT is needless To say ThaT Long Beach played bang-up TooTball, Tor six sTray Cub Tumbles and Tour inTercepTed passes Tound Their way inTo Long Beach hands. This alerTness nearly caused The Cubs To crumble. The whole Long Beach line showed con- sisTenT TighT. QuarTerback Eddie Knox, playing his TirsT game aT ThaT posiTion, Turned in a marvelous perTormance. The vicTory was The TirsT ever scored by a Los Angeles eleven againsT The Vik- ings. IVIcNeeley and LucoT in The Cub backTield were The main oTTensive ThreaTs Tor L.A.J.C. while The enTire line .played good deTensive TooTball To overcome The Vikings. A remarkable acTion picTure showing The eTFicacy of Cub blocking. 11361 7 ThaT Pasadena game was no pipe. Here's Isenberger sTopping Hensley. Loyola Frosh - Pasadena Long Beach gridders were deTeaTed 6-O by The Loyola Erosh in The lasT home game oT The year. Because iT was a non- conTerence game, Coach Oak SmiTh used nearly all reserves. Long Beach demonsTraTed conclusively ThaT a good oTTense is a good deTense by kicking on TirsT downs. While The visiTors were sTiII in midTieId They conTinued To gain, buT when They neared The Viking goal line, The black and whiTe held sTrongIy. When The gun sounded aT haIT-Time, iT saved Long Beach a possible Touchdown. Only once during The enTire game did Long Beach enTer inTo scoring TerriTory. This drive was due To Kelly IvIoan's splen- did passing. I-Iere Long Beach losT The ball on downs. One concerTed drive laTe in The game broughT Loyola Frosh a Touchdown ThaT proved To be The margin oT vicTory. Coach Oak SmiTh inserTed his TirsT Team in The second haIT in an aTTempT To pull The game Trom The Tire, buT The vars- iTy was held helpless by The sTurdy uni- versiTy line. Eggs IvIcLane, George I-Iallen, Ed Knox, and Bob Johnson were The ouT- sTanding players Tor The Vikings. Playing beTore a capaciTy crowd on I-Iorrell Field aT Pasadena, Long Beach losT The Tinal conTerence game oT The year To The ConTerence Championship Bulldog Eleven on Thanksgiving Day by a score oT I4-7. The Vikings made Their only score in The lasT Tew minuTes oT play, by a long pass Trom Ivloan To Gaughan. Pasadena opened The Tireworks in The Third play oT The clash when STark, all- conTerence haITback, caughT a pass Trom The hands oT CapTain Riordan, reversed his Tield, and ran Tor a Touchdown. The play caughT The Viking deTense TIaT- TooTed, The backTieId man being Taken ouT oT The play by beauTiTuI inTerTerence work on The parT oT The Bulldogs. A susTained TiTTy-Tive yard drive, laTe in The game, gave The Bulldogs Their lasT Touchdown. WiTh a scanT minuTe leTT To play, quar- Terback Gaughan called on Kelly Ivloan. I-Ie passed To Yancy who was down on The 35 yard ribbon. Then came The sensa- Tional Tinish Tor The Vikings when a pass was again called. Oaughan nabbed The pass himseIT and wenT over Tor a Touch- down. I-Iis conversion, which was by now merely a TormaIiTy, puT The nighTcap on The I932 season. O N T H E G R I D I R O N 0 Loyola Frosh 6 I Long Beach I Long Beach 7 Pasadena I4 O N T H E G R I D I R O N Daslwes Down llwe Slripe The Viking beef frusf of McLane, Jordan, and Campbell broke fhru on fhis play fo sfop 'lhose lerrilic Comp+oni'les. l+'s a long way 'I'o +l1e ground, bu'I' 'lhis Tarl'ar is going +o bile 'I'he dusi wH'h Bob Jordan on 1'l1e boHom. Kelly Moan and Bob Jordan bear down on +l1is lonely Cub man 'I'o break up 'Phe play around righl end. l8l 9 A pass ro EllioH' almosi' scored a 'louchclown and made 'l'he Loyola Frosh wish ihal' +hey hacl 'l'augh'I' +heir men +o cover pass receivers. The ferrible Tarlars 'lake fo 'l'he air, buf ii' looks as fhough 'lhis play is noi' going +o be compleled wi+h Fraser on 'rhe job. Come on Jordan, ge+ your man and Kelly Moan will be off +o +he races. Anyway, he made yards on +his play. Passes in The Air! O N T H E G R I D I R O N O N T H E G R I D I R O N Pep Kings Pep Queens JACK LORD MARY SCHAIBLE MARY McPHERSON FRANK BIRCH Enihusiasm was Ihe keynoie of Ihe Pep Queens and Kings which marked success This year in diffusing pep and vigor info Ihe fine Teams which represenied Long Beach Uunior College in I'he various sporffs. Under Ihe guidance of Jack Lord, who Iook Wayne Esies' pIace as head yeII Ieader, consiani inieresi was shown ai all games. Jack Lord was assisied in his endeavors by Frank Birch, wifh Mary Schaibie and Mary Mc- Pherson as Song Leaders. These capabie individuals worked Iogeiher very weII during Ihe season. 40 4 ON TH-E GRIDIRON I i I I Honor Award ADRIAN McLiANE Adrian Eggs McLane, all-conTerence end, won The TooTbalI I-lonor Award during The I932 gridiron season, leading Kelly Moan, his nearesT rival, by Three poinTs. TwenTy-six men scored poinTs in league games Toward The I-lonor Award, which was originaTed by Coaches Melvin Grilllin and Oak SmiTh Three years ago. McLane won The award because oT his maniTold abiliTies on The gridiron. A greaT TighTer and a True genTIe- man Eggs is respecTed by boTh Triend and Toe alike. As a June graduaTe, McLane leaves behind him a hosT OT Triends, a Tine record. Touchdowns Roll Up Coach Oak SmiTh's I932 TooTbaIl squad have leTT indelibly wriTTen inTo The minds oT The Viking STudenT Body many Thrilling momenTs. aIThough receiving only TiTTh place in The con- Terence .sTanding. They deTeaTed CompTon, Tied SanTa Monica and Glendale, buT Iosr To Los Angeles and Pasadena. In The TirsT game The Vikings beaT TaTT 6-O. The nexT week, SanTa Monica surprised The Norsemen by holding Them To a scoreless Tie. The Team Then iourneyecl To Bakersfield To a 25-I3 cleTeaT in The second guides . nighT game OT The year. L22 ixngglgca This game gave Coach CompTon Oak SmiTh a chance To I-Ong 5eGCh Glendale look over his reserves be- Tore The nexT conTerence game. Conference STandings Resuming conTerence play, Oak SmiTh's men visiTed GIendaIe's sTrong-hold To repeaT Their habiT oT playing a scoreless game. The TirsT home clash OT The season saw The Beachmen lose a biTTerIy ToughT game To The Los Angeles Cubs by a score oT 6-O, in The lasT Two minuTes oT play. The Vikings came To IiTe The nexT week To minisTer The worsT deTeaT ever suTFerecl by CompTon, I8-6. The Vik- ings Iosf Their IasT Three games oT The season To L- T- PCT' Loyola Frosh, Pasadena, ff 5 'igg and SanTa Ana respec- 2 i .soo IWGIY- 2 I .500 AT The TooTbaII ban- 2 2 -400 gueT IaTer in The year, 4 I -'OO Eddie Knox was elecTed capTain Tor The coming W year. From leff fo righl: Bolfom Row-Mathis, Brown, lngle, Walker, Baum, Miller lMasco'll, Crawford, Bruns, Schmidt, Purdy, Heck, Top Row-Frinell, McEn'lee, Wallace, Spears, Yancy, Peterson, Kennedy, Upregraff, Manager Rope, Coach Mel Griffin. The 1932-1933 Basketball Season 1 l H421 I43I ON THE HARD CAPTAIN BRU.NS Considered by his Team maTes of This year's championship Team as worfhy of The honor, Elmer Bruns, smoofh-clicking pivoT ace was eIecTed honorary capTain of The baskefball Team aT The close of The season. Quief and unassum- ing, he has proven himself an ouf- sfanding player on Coach Mel Griffen's undefeafed five. Bruns' all--round playing abilify will long be remembered in Viking hisTory. I-Ie has won many friendships by his sfeady work. Coach Griffin Capfain Bruns WOOD COACH GRIFFIN I-lere's a Toasf To Mel Griffin! Why, didn'T you know fhaf affer Trying for Three years To fill Berf SmiTh's big shoes, he has finally complefed The iob? Mel can com- pare his Team of This year wiTh BerT SmiTh's Wonder Teams of l928-29. IT was a man sized iob To make The alumni and The sTu- denTs forgef The days when Long Beach won Those hard foughf baTTles of former years. The com- plimenfs go To Coach Griffin and his squad-Champions of Soufh- ern California. MGR. BOB ROPE Manager of one of The besT Teams in Viking hisTory was The TiTIe held by Roberf Rope, who performed many duTies as Baskefball manager. I-Iis passed experience and hard work gave him The name of being one of The leading managers of The hisTory of The school. Affer all, giving up many daTes for a VarsiTy sweaTer wasn'T such a bad idea. Bob was assisTed in his work by Tom Frinnel. Members who were awarded VarsiTy leTTers by Coach Mel Griffin were Baum, Brown, Crawford, Purdy, SchmidT, Burns, I-Ieck, Walker, Ingle, and Manager Rope. ON THE HARDWOOD Theme Song: Happy Days Are Here Again! Five gallanT hearTs, schooled by Coach Mel GriTTin broughT back sweeT memories oT The Wonder Team oT I929 , by regaining The cham- pionship oT The wesTern division and The co-championship oT SouThern CaliTornia wiTh Fuller- Ton. When lvloTher EarTh Trembled lvlarch IO, our undeTeaTed Viking Tive was preparing Tor Their second game oT The SouThern CaliTornia Junior College play OTT series wiTh FullerTon. Long Beach had won The TirsT game 40-38 aT FullerTon. Then came The earThquake, posTponing in- deTiniTely The second and The Third games oT The baskeTball war. Due To The Turmoil oT The TirsT 48 hours, . iT was impossible To geT The Team TogeTher. FullerTon reTused To name new daTes Tor The game so The war was on. This maTTer was placed in The hands oT The commissioners oT The league. They Then did The impossible Thing by compromising To call Long Beach and FullerTon co-champions. Primed To give The Vv'onder Team Their TirsT deTeaT, The Vilcing Tive opened The year wiTh a nice, buT TighTing vicTory over The alumni by The score oT 29 To 25. Champions oT GRIFFIN g f BRUNS DON HECK KENNY PURDY 44 45 T Q T 4 il wif W fi lg 1 ig' fl E Tig . ff .. T QE fi JT , M 5 i g 5?5E5iT Q .2 I Z' Ii' is T v 5 ' fi 5-3 . , 'ix ! fri T . gf Q T This l ll 'T ll? YT H' iiiilli f' V w' X T l A' ON THE HARDWOOD Flashing a brillianT oTTense while using The second and Third sTrings, Mel GriTTin's VarsiTy won over SanTa Ana Jaysee by a score oT 40 To 24 in The second pracTice game oT The year. When a Junior College goes behind Their back yard To play a universiTy, iT evidenTly means a loss. ln This case iT was Three in-a-row! FirsT iT was WhiTTier VarsiTy To The Tune oT 56 To 36. Then aTTer leading aT The halT Time, The Vikings losT To SouThern CaliTornia Frosh by The score oT 28 To 23. A Tew days laTer, iT seems ThaT U.C.l..A. Frosh unleashed a devasTaTing aTTack To beaT The locals by The score oT 46 To 24. ln The lasT pracTice game oT The year, The Vikings showed a dazzling passing aTTack which so compleTely baTTled CiTrus as To show ThaT The Vikings were ready Tor The conTerence games To come. The Tinal score was 55 To 9. ln Their iniTial conTerence game on The home courT, Long Beach wiTh The help oT T Frankie SchmidT and Kenny Purdy, won an impressive vicTory over Glendale by The score oT 50 To ll. The Vikings' cleTensive combinaTion oT Baum and CrawTord smoTh- ered all ThaT Glendale had in oTTensive power. SouThern - Cal. wi l? ' T 'I ' ' 'S ffr.-J, ii-'!V fQli!fi5ll , v f - ' A W , In ,. W - f- an .w gf Ji Q wig: wa 5' - ,ir MI '5 J ifrllfszffia .Jw ffw f l iilii s fvrligzi .1 ' 'P 1 'T u x' sZf25f.f2igv55wi4-,ffl -, yimfi ' -3- -5551. T -SHfl'l'Qs'ff'f , 1 .i,,.,,izzmf ff W...-d iggs? wsim., -' .2 T ' ,.-f flfffps- iw .., Til, if tg, wil l Q,-X yg ii . ,,..1::-ef, Tqggw-M - :wi , Ming i., Wi ., l My ,dm g .W X N L, m ffifl 0525! .. ' -i1'1:gs+aT:ST V TQ,-X in .fgiziigy 55. is. T535 -is ' , 7. 4 li, . fs' 5 . ,115 I PU RDY . SCHMIDT A. ff 'Eh-.W ,. ' .N ,iam 4 . will y f i ,...- , 5- .: , -.li 24322265 'lisgwggx sf '- yi - - H . HERMAN BAUM HOWELL CRAWFORD CD I4 T Fl E T1 Ai IQ D VV CD CD D Elmer Bruns, smooTh-clicking pivoT ace, was The principal reason why Long Beach won iTs second conTerence game oT The year over Los Angeles. STaving oTT a desperaTe Cub rally, The Vikings upseT The TiTle holders 29 To 23 aT Los Angeles. For The TirsT Time since The Wonder Team oT Tour years ago, Long Beach became The war lord oT The WesTern Division baskeTloall race, by deTeaTing The greaT CompTon TarTars 43 To 30. A greaT Tive: ThaT oT Purdy, SchmidT, Bruns, Baum and CrawTord were miraculous in Their sharpshooTing and passing To overcome The TarTars in Their own den. ln a biTTerly waged Teud wiTh an inspired VenTura Team, Coach lvlel GriTTin's Tive iusT man- aged To win Trom The PiraTes 39 To 37 in The NorTherners' pavilion. Purdy and SchmidT shared high poinT honors, while Baum spark- led aT guard Tor The Vikings in This close game. Playing Their mosT impressive loaskeTball game oT The season To win The championship T oT The WesTern Division, Long Beach crushed Pasadena beneaTh a 39 To 25 score. Baum, Viking guard, led The local aTTack wiTh Ten poinTs. UndeTeaTed . ? BAUM CRAWFORD DELBERT WALKER ELMER BRUNS 11461 47 ON THE HARDWOOD SchmidT, Purdy, Bruns, Baum, and CrawTord playing The whole game againsT SanTa Monica again proved Themselves champions oT The WesTern Division. The vicTory 4I To 29, ended Long Beach's league schedule wiTh six conTerence wins and no deTeaTs. The nighT oT all nighTs. FighTing The YellowjackeTs on Their own courT aT a midweek session. The Vikings managed To Take a hair-raising 40-38 vicTory Trom FullerTon in The TirsT game oT a Three game series Tor The SouThern CaliTornia championship. Every man in The sTarTing lineup played briIlianT baskeTball in beaTing The inland quinTeT. l-ieck and Walker made a crediTable showing in handling The guard posiTions when Baum and CrawTord leTT The game via The Toul rouTe. And The ride home in The moonlighT! Need more be said? Playing preliminary TilTs To mosT oT The T varsiTy encounTers, Long Beach's reserve squad, composed oT UpTegraTT, McEnTree, Yancy, Spears, Pederson, and Wallace swepT aside all opposiTion To win The un- oTFicial WesTern Division reserve Team championship. HoopsTersy?ML,, it .- 7 M bfb , 4? ' E- T. ill yiiiliisllrlligiiy T 1 'li JKT my ,, f .- H ' 4 lug 1 IL N, ,g z , fa T ' T x 1 X fn gs QMS X 2 , ima., 5T5lils'1liVl'fJ'5f: 1 T ,, 'fiiiiii' 5 553 . if-f' fi T-if igiififs 1' 'Tiff 315 ' fgfiil if 'i -R' sisiafsgi . ,s 'D' f ' ' Unk jgllgf U 1 T :gli Vg 3' , 5,Q.ssi.4QEig5FQEi-ii' fi iei f iiifiilsiiii ff W ir? -W iiifliifg .'a 2 Jges ie ' :2isfegi?f'i'i!'3wly.Q T ii? 39 y , , :,2.. T, T'-1 T fir ml' 1 . ii. ' HECK si -, L -up: , ,.,, ., is il 1,,rn WALKER ED INGLE FRANK SCHMIDT Row I: Lawrence, Parminfer, Ed Kelly, Eugene Kelly, Caplain Rogers, Messner, Sfockham, Pederson, Kilkerg Row 2: Manager Garcia, Reel, Dudley, Bailey, Jones, Graham, Nordman, Raihbun, Bonds, Evans, Lind, Ass'+ Mgr. Campbell, Coach Oak Smifh The 1933 Track Season fl4s1 i-+91 ON THE TRACK AND FIELD Coach Smith Capfain Rogers , l I WHITEY ROGERS OAK SMITH To CapTain WhiTey Rogers goes The honor oT be- ing one oT The TinesT aThleTic leaders in Viking hisTory. I-lis indomiTable TighT coupled wiTh his abiliTy To come Trom behind To win made him an inspiring capTain Tor a Track squad oT TwenTy-Three. Rogers will be remem- bered Tor many years by his TeammaTes Tor his brillianT races in The 880 and The mile. I-lis TighTing Tinishes seT an example Tor TuTure liTe baT- Tles. MANAGER GARCIA Coach Oak SmiTh is de- serving oT high praise Tor his work in coaching a weak squad To a Third place in The WesTern Division meeT. l-Iis unTiring endeavors in devel- oping mediocre Track men in- To excellenT perTormers has received The admiraTion oT every coach in The conTer- ence. Rogers, Vorhies, and Reel are a Tew oT The men ThaT have been made inTo cham- pions by Long Beach's genial coach. GreaT TribuTe musT be paid To Manager Joe Garcia Tor The capable way he hand- led The managerial duTies oT The I933 Track squad. Joe was one oT The mosT popular managers oT The year because oT The congenial spiriT ThaT he displayed in accomplish- ing his duTies. Lorne Campbell served as The assisTanT manager. Joe Garcia received a leTTer Tor his service along wiTh Reel, CapTain Rogers, Graham, Vorheis, I-IolTon, RaTh- bun, Ed Kelly, Gene Kelly, Nordman, Jones. Pederson, Bonds, Dudley, and STockham. ON THE TRACK AN Coach Oak SmiTh's small Viking Track sguad con- cluded Their WesTern Con- Terence Track season in a blaze oT glory, by placing Third in The all-conTerence classic, aTTer a somewhaT disasTrous dual meeT sched- ule in which They losT Tive ouT oT six engagemenTs. The Vikings opened The season as hosTs Tor The SouThern CaliTornia Relays which was annexed by CompTon. For The TourTh year in a row The Black and WhiTe represenTaTives won The Two mile relay. RaTh- bun, Lind, SmiTh, and Cap- Tain Rogers comprised The winning Team. ln The A. A. U. Relay carnival, held The Tollowing week on STephens Field, The Norsemen won The 440 relay, Took second in The 880-yard relay, and a Third in The medley. VincenT Reel placed second in The open IOO meTers Tor The Vikings. CapTain WhiTey Rogers broughT his Team maTes inTo a 66-65 Triumph, in The iniTial clash oT The dual meeT schedule, when he overcame an eighT yard handicap in The anchor lap To Reel hi+s Twenfy-Two feeT in annual Relays G. KELLY BONDS lCapT.l ROGERS Track STa rs MESSN ER PEDERSON D FIELD Ol ON THE TRACK AND FIELD GRAHAM EVANS REEL Field Heroes nose ouT his VenTura rival. In addiTion To The above TeaT Rogers Took The mile and Tied in The 880 wiTh Marvin lvlessner. Reel won scoring honors Tor The meeT by winning The low hurdles, broad-iump, and placing second in The cenTury. Traveling To Glendale, The SmiThmen dropped Their TirsT league encounTer 85-46 despiTe The TacT ThaT several Tine marks were made by The locals. CapTain Rogers negoTi- aTed The mile in 4137.8 To ring up The besT mark oT The day. Reel copped The A IOO and broadiump, and Graham Took The 220 Tor a brillianT day's work. Los Angeles' greaTesT Track Team in hisTory amassed II2'f2 poinTs againsT Long Beach's I8'f2 To give The Vikings Their worsT deTeaT oT The season in The CiTy oT The Angels. Reel annexed The only TirsT Tor The locals romping home a winner in The 220. WhiTey Rogers provided The only Thrill oT The aTTer- noon when he Tied Hickerson in The 880 in one DUDLEY NORDMAN oT The mosT gruelling races ever seen on The Cubs' Tield. The Time Tor This race was I:59.7. A beaufiful jump of Twen+y-one fee? plus ON THE TRACK AN Nordman gave his Team maTes a surprise when he cleared 6' 2 To Tie Tor second in The high iump. Dewey l-lolTon, in The high hurdles, was The only oTher Norseman To place in The meeT. Fanned by a cool morn- ing breeze VincenT Reel. The Vikings' greaT low hur- dler, skimmed over The bar- riers To Tie The SouThland Jaysee record in The Vik-- ing-TarTar Track-TesT which was won by The TarTars on STephens Field. Aside Trom Reel's per- Tormance The meeT was void oT Thrills. The Vikings won only Two oTher TirsT places ouT oT The TiTTeen evenTs. CapTain Rogers Took The halT mile wiTh RaThbun coming in a good Third while Nordman and Vorheis Tied Tor TirsT in The high iump. Jones, Pederson, and Reel nabbed a Tew poinTs Tor The Vikings in The Tield evenTs. ATTer esTablishing a slighT lead in The cinder- paTh evenTs, Coach Oak SmiTh's proTeges sTood helplessly aside as Pasadena's sTrongmen Took all oT The weighT evenTs To give Their TeammaTes a well earned Triumph over The in- vading Norsemen. Reel was again The big noise Tor The Beach- men winning The l00, 220, and The broadiump. WhiTey Rogers annexed his cusTomary TirsT in The 880 wiTh RaThbun Taking Third. Ed Kelly won his TirsT 440 oT The year. LI.ND RATHBUN STOCKHAM Weight Tossers CapTain Rogers wins 'FirsT in The Long Beach mile relay PARMINTER KILKER D FIELD T H521 T31 ON THE TRACK AND FIELD ELLSWORTH HOLTON Spear Throwers l-ong Beach Took The ' only Track sweep oT The day when Graham and Bonds Tinished, in ThaT or- der, behind Reel in The IOO. The Vikings dropped Their lasT dual clash oT The season To SanTa Monica on The Samohi Track by The score oT 83 2-3 To 47 2-3. Graham in The sprinTs, Rogers in The 880 and mile, and l-lolTon in The hurdles were double win- ners Tor The Vikings. Gra- ham, unknown aT The sTarT oT The season, ran The cen- Tury in 9.9 and The Turlong in 22s. Nordman and Vor- VORHETS heis in The high jump and Jones in The bamboo evenT were The only poinT winners in The Tield evenTs Tor The locals. The premier classic oT The Track year, The all-conTerence meeT, was held aT GccidenTal, The Los Angeles Junior College winning The hisToric clash by a huge margin. Reel was The only local To win a blue ribbon Taking The 220 low hurdles. The Norse ace also Took a Third in The IOO. WhiTey Rogers losT his only race oT The year losing To l-licker- son oT The Cubs by inches in The Two lap evenTs. Vorheis and Graham also conTribuTed a Tew poinTs To help The locals'Take Third place. E. KELLEY JONES Reel beaTs Talbof of CompTon in Long Beach Relays k C Row I: Reggio, Jewell, Goldberg, Brooks, Mascol' Miller, Alford, Lee, Way, Dias, Plwinney Row 2: Coach Griffin, Mgr. J. Jolmslon, Wilson, B. Jolmslon, Conlislc, Heck, LaFon. Brown, Mounl, Kennelly, Shoffrlef. D6f1ielS The 1933 Baseball Season l4l 553 O N T H E D I A M O N D Coach Griff in Co-Captains Johnston, Kennelly JOHNSTON KEN N ELLY Two Treshmen, Bob Ken- nelly, caTcher, and Bob John- sTon, IeT+ Tielder, had The honor OT being eIecTed hon- orary co-capTains OT The baseball Team aT The close OT The season. The Two capTains, one Tor The ouTTield and one Tor The inTield, have been prOminenT in The Viking drive in The conTerence sTandings. Under Their leadership, The Team has displayed greaT Teamwork and Tine spiriT On and OTT The field. MANIAGER JOHNSTON GRIFFIN Coach Melvin GriTTin de- serves The praise OT The en- Tire sTudenT body Tor his work in moulding one OT The besT Teams in The school's his- Tory ouT OT Treshman maTer- ial. The Viking baseball maes- Tro should geT The champion- ship he desires nexT year as every member OT The TirsT nine reTurns Tor anOTher year OT duTy, barring unTOreseen circumsTances. The sTudenT body wishes you luck, Mel. John JohnsTon Occupied The posiTion OT baseball manager in crediTable sTyIe aTTer replacing Richard SexTon who resigned To Take a job. JohnsTOn was a real manager be- ing The TirsT individual To arrive in each day's pracTice and The lasT To leave. WaITer Miller, mascoT OT The Team, helped Johnny by Taking care OT The baTs aT The games. Viking horsehiders who received leTTers Tor The I933 season were Kennelly, Brown, ShoTTner, Conlisk, Lee, McFadden, Hallen. Wilson, Heck, JOhnsTon, Dias, and Manager JohnsTOn. ON THE DIAMOND The TarTars walloped The Vikings 9-4, on Their own diamond, To ruin The Vikings' hopes Tor The championship in Their sTarT. Don l-leck and Doc Wilson were The leading hiTTers Tor The Norsemen in This game driving ouT Two hiTs each. ShoTTner and Brown were hiT Treely dur- ing The conTesT while Claude Everly, CompTon's ace chucker, held The locals 'Fairly well in check. Johnny Wilson was The big gun in The Vikings' oTFensive drive againsT Pasadena in The local park when They deTeaTed Their TradiTional rivals 7-4. Wilson drove ouT Two douloles and a single in one oT The TinesT exhibiTions oT hiTTing displayed in The enTire season. Bob John- sTon was The deTensive sTar Tor The Vikings. yi K f Long Beach's nine concluded The season in lf' MMTVQ deTeaT when a TighTing loand oT Corsairs came To Town and adminisTered a 4-2 drubbing. Diamond Stars - f , ,' ,,-.- ,,,,.,-, .-QQFQH E. F73 ' :iii-1-'hs- 5'ff: f 'fW' 'f: ' ., . 2. V-V ,W-!.1,E,: ,5g Tw- ' 56' . -, lui' , ki, f f Elsa .4 glffiiigis. 52:55, .,fl15:ggiiiisii,1gy www 'Tits Y. 1:1 ,.', 4 ' - 1 , T' 5 li T :Thi Q .LQ '5L.f rrX 345' WY-Sv E ,iw VZETZT T T ,,,. i i f f -ii , if - iw 2: 1' ,.5--f.:2f2-14 ,M aimsi, ri ,igil 5,, , i ss. iw ., . K- .. , Q,.E.:,,,fzs, E, T --if -fg W -- N ' ' A , i . 'T ig A : - WE 'i -i i Q ,M J , 4 ,, 'i,lTsf7'e7-'Q Milf L,'-' ilafiisf iii. , 'wfififv'?lLTi'ih35'f. -f, ,N YT Tiii NQ,w,ii,s,LiifgT1i'Q'5gi,'2Lffls K .W 1l5ifu'Q3l5if,rf :qi:g:- s ig 5 'T il l T rseeiaifs2eiff?35iisiii:il, Tis TTTTT TQETTT T A Conlisk seems To be safe aT 'FirsT T ALFORD CONLISK WILSON Co-CapTain KENNELLY HECK LEE 6 57 O N T H E D I A M O N D DespiTe The facT ThaT The all freshman Viking baseball nine won only Two games in five sTarTs To finish in fiffh place local enThusiasTs were of The opinion ThaT The squad has gained valuable experience from Their fairly successful season ThaT should help Them To win The cov- efed conference crown nexT year if all of The men reTurn as is expecfed. Coach Mel Griffin's men opened The season in championship form when They defeafed an invading Glendale squad 6-5 in a Thrilling Ten inning encounfer. The conTesT was feafured by The Twirling of Danny Shoffner and Bev Brown. Conlisk won The game for The locals when he smacked ouT a double wiTh The bases loaded in The exTra inning. Los Angeles pinned The firsf defeaf of The year on The Vikings in an excifing game which onded 4-3. Brown hif The only home run of The game. Horsehide Hurlers - T . qv, ' ly , i srryg T 3 fl Tre wean, is f i l is TEE: f T. i 11 .,.. If .. L ,, .el ..,. ,L A f i - ' 'ii -e - 5 4 Q, , s - ' '- g as .Q-I ,g - ,, limb' s . A -alla .ea-f,.i- lii'l'!',-W 1- 'f,-, M -in-s, - g ene s. P 3 A f M ' .1 A Y ziiT'!iiQf?f- W A ' A 5 2 E , , 'l if T1.51li2f1TiTf?ri3TTfi'?i.Q . . SHOFFNER BROOKS JohnsTon hiTs a long one for a Triple ii3iRowN co-cap+ain Joi-iNsToN JEWELL DIAS Manning fees off while his +wo ieam ma+es sfancl by .... Spring foofball wifh EllioH' handling +he ball . . . . Suiherlancl passes ihe ball +0 Knox in a friendly game of Wafer Polo . . Jim Murray snags a 'Fas+y! The 1932-33 Minor Sports Season 11581 9 VIKING MINOR SPORTS l l s CAPTAIN WALTON MANAGER HIAYES MANAGER ARNOLD CAPTAIN WALKER Water Golf Polo Tennis CAPTAIN PETERSON MANAGER WORKMAIN ln The realm oT Tennis, The racqueTeers were very TorTunaTe in having Jack Walfon as capTain. Under his inspiring and capable leadership The Team really did Things This year. Bob Arnold acTed eTFicienTly in The role oT manager. Cool, calm, sTeady, Del Walker successTully capTained The Golf Team in a season repleTe wiTh vicTories and accomplishmenTs. lBusiness-like TI-larry I-layes handled The managerial reins. Capalole WalT PeTerson piloTed The waTer polo Team To a SouThern CaliTornia TiTle ThaT would have meanT even greaTer Things had noT The March lOTh quake rudely in- TerrupTed The Torward march. Fred Workman acTed in The double role oT manager oT boTh swimming and waTer polo. TribuTe musT be paid To The coaches oT The minor sporTs-BerT SmiTh and RoberT MaThews, whose ever inspiring presence proved To be an added asseT ThaT oTTen I::roughT vicTory ouT oT an almosT cerTain deTeaT. VIKING MI'NOR SPORTS Manager Arnold, Koos, BenneTT, Wood, Nevins, Wurman, Johnson, Dinsmoor, Coach SmiTh Aces- FauITs- Deuce! This year's ediTion oT The Long Beach Junior College Tennis Team smashed iTs way To a conTerence championship, The TirsT Tennis Team in The hisTory oT This college To accomplish such a diTTiculT TeaT. AlThough a Team wiThouT any ouTsTanding sTar, iTs well- balanced line-up proved Too sTrong Tor iTs eleven Tormidable Toes. In iTs TirsT pracTice maTches, I:ullerTon, CompTon. and The sTrong U.C.L.A. Trosh Tell under Top-heavy scores. Then wiTh These vicTories under Their belTs, The locals sTarTed Their heavy league schedule in earnesT. Glendale was Trounced I4 To 9. Then in The closesT maTch oT The year, Los Angeles was beaTen I2 To I I aTTer Wurman in The TourTh singles came miraculously Trom loehind To snaTch a vicTory Trom aImosT cer- Tain deTeaT. CompTon was decisively deTeaTed I8-5. VenTura was Iolanlced 23-O, Long Beach losing only 7 games in The enTire maTch. Pasadena was Trounced I6-7 aTTer boTh The local TirsT singles and TirsT douloles were exTended in long duels ThaT were in douIoT unTil The maTches were compleTed. In The Tinale oT The year SanTa Monica was overwhelmed. Four veTerans played Their lasT Tor Long Beach in This maTch. CapTain WilTon, Wood, Nevins and lvlurray comprising The graduaTing Toursome. CapTain WalTon and Wood were undeTeaTed aT TirsT couples while Nevins, lvlurray, and Koos in singles and Barbour and BenneTT in second doubles played consisTenTIy ThroughouT The year. Nevins hifs a 'FasT one 60 VIKING MINOR SPORTS Manager Hayes, Docl, MounT, Oliger, CapTain Walker, Bohen, Vorhies, Manning, Smifh Birdies-Par-Hook! An excepfionally well-balanced Team carried The colors oT The Long Beach Junior College golf squad inTo diTficulT Tournamenf and maTch play This year. A heavy sched- ule was underfalcen ThaT found The local divof diggers more Than holding Their own wiTh colleges many Times as large in size and conTemplaTed power. The firsT pracfice maTch was played wiTh The freshman squatl from The UniversiTy of California aT Los Angeles. The ouTcome was fourfeen To four in favor of Long Beach. Los Angeles Junior College Then fell under The onslaughT of The local Team. In The nexT conTesT The Team waged a Terrific baTTle againsT The varsiTy Team from The Universify of California aT Los Angeles, buT losT r T Twelve To six. The Loyola VarsiTy proved To be no equal of The Long Beach Team in The final pracfice conTesT. ln The iniTial league maTch Glendale was decis- ively overwhelmed four To one. Then in a reversal of The pracTice maTch earlier in The season Los Angeles defeaTed The liong Beach Team Three To Two. Regaining Their form afTer The abrupT seT- back CompTon fell five To nofhing and Pasadena losT four To one. Bill Manning performed in The firsT posiTion ThroughouT The year followed by CapTain Delberf Walker who won every maTch. Ed MounT occupied The Third posiTion wiTh Bob Bohen playing fourTh. Jake Oleger and Kenny Dodd alTernaTed as fifTh man. BerT SmiTh capably coached The Team assis- Ted by l-larry l-layes who handled The managerial Walker sinks a lang one! reins. VIKING MINOR SPORTS 4 LeT+ To righT: FirsT row: SuTherland, WheaTer, Frinell, PeTerson lCapT.T, FosTer, Lord Second row: AssT. Coach Klaus, Coleman, Hadley, Pine, London, Welch, Knox, Manager Workman. Foul-Coal-Splash! Once again The sTrong Long Beach Junior College waTer polo Team grabbed a con- Terence championship. This sorT oT Thing is beginning To become a habiT wiTh Coach RoberT lvlaThews' boys who have swepT everyThing beTore Them Tor The pasT Two years. The Team composed oT seasoned veTerans had lirrle Trouble in subduing The oTher Three members oT The Junior College polo division. FullerTon was The TirsT vicTim, Talling by ra counT oT 8 To 3. The locals anTicipaTed liTTle Trouble aTTer This maTch as Full- erTon was considered To be The sTrongesT oT The Three opponenTs. . True To This TacT, Los Angeles Junior College was deTeaTed I2 To 2 in Their pool. The ouTsTanding players Tor The Beachmen in This game were CapTain PeTerson, Knox, and SuTher- land. ln The Tinal game oT The year Long Beach won The Championship oT The league, by severely shellacking SanTa Monica by The score oT l3 To 3. Again, CapTain WalT PeTerson proved To be a sTellar leader aT a guard posT, while Bill Clemo, BuTcher and Fiske played The besT game oT Their long career To bring The Vikings T anoTher vicTory. Three eager hands reach for The weT balll H621 63 VIKING MINOR SPORTS 1 Ellioll' con'I'rols +he ball on a neal praclice play Y D Signals-Pass-Touchdown! Slressing lundamenlals during lhe spring loolball workouls, Coach Oak Smilh hopes lo have a successful season during lhe coming lall. More lhan lorly candidales 'lor varsily grid posls reporled lo Coach Smilh lor inlensive drill in lackling, blocking, and signal praclice lor nexl year. Prospecls lor a successful eleven nexl year depend upon having every eligible man lell from lasl' year and new freshman malerial lurn- ing oul for lhe leam. Games wilh Bakersfield, Charley, and San Diego Slale for praclice lills should pul lhe Vikings in good form lor lhe season. Lellermen who reporled for spring praclice were Jimmy Camp- bell and Jack lvloss, hallbacksg Harry Allen, guard: Caplain Eddie Knox, guarlerp Swede l-lallen and Bob Johnslon, lacklesg Glenn Taylor, end: and Karl Gescheider, fullback. Olhers who compeled in The many scrimmages were Woodward, Yancy, Ellioll, l-layes, Richards, Truex, backlieldg Whileneck, K. Smilh, Eslabrooks, J. Johnslon, W. Smilh, Duke, Royce, Dunlap, Des- mond, Mylar, linemen. The Norse- men, always famed lor lheir defense, hope lo go places wilh lhese men . s reporling nexl fall. Good luck, Oak, le+'s hope for a winning leam. Johnsfon and Allen show how fo gel 'rheir manl R r i Lefi' +o righfz Parminfer, Esfabrook, A1-kinson, Coach Ben' Smifh, S+ockham, Desmond, Lawrence INTRA-MURAL COUNCIL The Intra-mural, Inter-Class Season 64 5 INTERCLASS-INTRAMURAL COACH BERT SMITH InTra-mural WiTh almosT every club in The Junior College giving supporT, The many inTra- mural games were run oTF in greaT sTyle by Coach BerT SmiTh, head oT The Junior College aThleTic deparTmenT, and sTudenT manager, John Black. BoTh oT These men worlced hard and were responsible Tor The many Teams parTicipaTing in The lnTra- mural program. The many deTails ThaT came up during The year were Taken care oT by The lnTramural Council, which was composed oT The managers oT each club. The council included: LangworThy oT Caduceus. Van OrdsTrand and Lawronco Tor The Engineers, EsTabroolc Trom Tong. Campbell and Desmond represenTed The l-lammurabis, while The Type and Copy had ATl4inson. SToclcham and Kennedy came Trom The Commercial Club, l.eiT- hold oT The NighT School, ParminTer rep- resenTed The College Y, and The Junior College FaculTy had Mr. Perry Tor Their manager. MANAGER JOHN BLACK DirecTors Displaying a clever passing aTTaclc, l-lammurabi won The lnTramural TooTball league by deTeaTing several ouTsTanding Teams on The campus. The ATTorneys had an eTTicienT bloclcing and running aTTaclc ThaT won Them many games. The Com- mercial Club wiTh a Tine passing aTTaclc won The TirsT BaslceTball TournamenT, while The Type and Copy won The baslceTball championship aTTer The earThqualce by deTeaTing College Y and l-lammurabi, and receiving TorTeiTs Trom The Tongs and Caduceus. This was The TirsT Time ThaT The WriTers had ever enTered a Team and now They can wriTe abouT Themselves wiThouT Tear oT criTicism. WiTh The TaculTy enTering a Team Tor The TirsT Time, The baseball TournamenT should produce many greaT baTTles. As This boolc was going To The press The TirsT round was being played, and The Saga sTaTF picks Type and Copy, College Y, or The FaculTy To win The championship. f ' ff' l i INTERCLASSSQUADS Row I: Edmunclsen, Phoenix, AbboH', Rowlands, Gray, Lord, Fiske, KorTz: Row 2: McGill, Simpson, BeclceTT, Marsh, Miner, Edmundson, McCullough, Fox, Brown: Row 3: Brownell, Shinn, Pennywi'H, McFadden, Dixon, Hansen, Hagen, Randall, Bechler, Oneil, Reel. Foolish Frosh Finish FirsT As a Tinal adieu To The Viking l932 grid season, The annual inTerclass pigskin Tracas was sTaged in December on STephens Field, The Freshmen winning an exciTing, hard ToughT game in The lasT Two minuTes oT play by The' score oT 6-O. VincenT Reel, Tormer prep sTar, accounTeol Tor The lone Touchdown oT The day on a right end run Trom The Tive yard sTripe. The provoked Sophs broke up The conversion play Tor The exTra poinT. The win gave The Frosh Their TirsT vicTory over The Sophomores in Tour years. The power oT The Two class Teams was pracTically even as mosT oT The play occurred beTween The TorTy yard lines. Numerous bobbles lcepT The specTaTors in a sTaTe oT exciTemenT. T Various oTFensive ThrusTs . , ... ,, by The Fresh reveeleel Two . . . OUT-51-andmq -fog-lrbgll 1:9-fer-5 In if is T 1 '- W Reel and Don Simpson. Reel. is T, T N 9 , Q ggi? , Ti . T a Ten TlaT man on The clnder- T V y ,,,,, g. ,,,, paTh, kepT The Soph repre- ,T e e, W - . : ifif 'T f 'll' ' I' X f 59l'lT5TlVe5 l'TOT on Tliell' Teel' , ' so 1, I , 9 by breaking away Tor several as , QV I M M I . h b k .fl f T , O09 QGWS ef l 9 qUa le GC ,Mfg 1 ,, ,,,, M 1,. ,, l:4,,,,,,, f , ,wgffzgs jf-H' ee, ,K 2- .l,,,3,, O51- ' P ' .,9mjN ?m,,,, YZVLV Z QQ W W in -maxim' . T The CenTer ef +he Seph line , .,,.. was ke pT awake by The plung- . . . . 'HQ OT herd-HITTIHQ 5'mPS0 Sophomore Wal+ Richards geTs his punT oFF iusl' in Time. Tullbocli. 6. T671 iNTERci.Ass SQUADS Row I: HolT, K. Kennelly, Chaffee, Parminfer, Murray, Garcia, Holberh Row 2: Marooka, Cooper, Riordan, Gaugler, Clinfon, Rope, Fulfon, Jones: Row 3: Bonds, Price, Anderson, Wilson, Richards, KoTchian, Gann, Birch, D. Kelly, Rogers, Marmion Solemn Sophs Suffer Surprisingly Splendid maTerial Tor Coach.Oak SmiTh's IQ33 eleven was revealed in The work oT Phoenix, KorTs, CapTain Desmond, Lord, Gray, and Rowlands in The Freshman lineup. The poTenTialiTies OT These men, including Reel and Simpson, produced a smile on Oak ThaT was a honey To waTch. The ouTsTanding work oT The Sophs was accomplished by K. Kennelly, F. Marooka, and WhiTey Rogers, all backTield men. These genTlemen oT The hard heads and sTiTT necks handled pracTically all The oTTensive work Tor The second year men. KoTchian, l-lolT, and Wilson were brillianT on deTense. BoTh Teams were handled by Tormer Viking players. The sTudenT coaches displayed remark- able iniTiaTive in moulding or- ganized elevens in The space oT Three weeks. Eddie Knox, capTain elecT oT nexT year's Viking TooTball Team, served as head coach oT The Frosh Team. l-le was assisTed by Bob JohnsTon, Carroll Brooks and Swede l-lallen. The Sophomore squad was handled by Ed Davies, Frank- lyn lsenberger, Bill Mooney, and ArT STeinman, all Two year veTerans under Coach Oak SmiTh. Who has The ball? JusT anoTher jigsaw puzzle for The fans. Three athletic women dash thru the spray The 1932-33 Women's Athletic Association Women of she . . . . . pepper trees massed togetlzer along the roadside . . beneailz tlze a'ense foliage H701H1IfI7l'IZ.Y rise in quick succession . . . until tlze snofw-capped peak . . . . , -W - FEMININE SPORTS WORLD HUDSON MEYER ALDAHL MUSSETTER Women's Athletic Association From September to July the activities ot the Women's Athletic Association assumed a brilliant coat ot originality and variety, brilliance trom the wit ot the otticers and variety trom necessity. Atter the earthquake on March IO, attairs were carried on under ditticultiesg but triendliness, cooperation and competition, a combination which strikes the keynote ot the organization, made the spring sports program as successtul as that ot the tall season. Assuming tor the tirst time the sharp yet harmonious tones ot modern campus activities, W.A.A. tormed the toundation tor several new tuture traditions. Monthly breaktasts were climaxed by a December morning social. Complete decorations, entertainment and menu in tull spirit ot Noel rewarded 5 oiclock risers tor the tirst Christmas breaktast. Tables tor tour circled a huge tinsel-dressed spruce tree that stretched trom the gymnas- ium tloor to within a tew teet ot the ceiling. Evergreen ropes spotted with patches ot snow streamed down the walls to give proper surroundings tor the tiny apple Santa Claus that tottered on tooth pick legs on each table. Another tirst event staged in the late tall was the intormal beach initiation. Prospective members were put through the hi- larious paces ot a true initiation. COACH STONEBARGER lOl FEMININE SPORTS WORLD , , BELLMAN FLORA DES GRANGES HUDSON Cabinet Officers and Coaches Carrying ouT The spring plans, The oTTicers oT W.A.A. TuncTioned as an execuTive group in- sTead oT assuming individual duTies. A sTudenT chairman was selecTed Tor each social evenT who shouldered all responsibiliTy. One oT These aTTernoons Took shape in a picnic aT Anaheim CiTy Park, where Tennis, baseball and swimming were included on The enTerTainmenT program. Baseball was The only sporT conducTed on The regular aTTer school plan. The more sTrenuous speedball was disconTinued because oT laclc oT place To change cosTume. Swimming and row- ing were also disconTinued because oT inconvenienT TaciliTies aT The Lagoon. STudenT managers who were planning acTive seasons were Clarchen Samford, Wilma Jane l-luTchison and Madeline Blacldord. The cheerTulness and eagerness oT The women during The se- mesTer aTTer The qualce can easily be Traced To The opTimisTic supporT oT lvliss RuTh STonebarger, adviser, and lvliss Clarine Llewellyn, chairman oT The Women's Physical EducaTion DeparT- menT. BoTh have been Through pioneer proiecTs in women's physi- cal educaTion, and They pulled W.A.A. Through wiTh Tlying colors. COACH LLEWELLYN D FEMININE SPORTS WORLD Row I: Flora, Garrison, Slarlup, Crowlher, Hudson, Huchinson, Bellman, Buffum, Bovyer, Mullins. Row 2: Boynlon, Wallers, Slaler, Callahan, Des Granges, Royce, Wilson, Jones, Hendrix, Marmion. Hockey-Sporl ol lhe Speecly Selling a record lor leam sporls parlicipalion, hockey as lhe inilial lall sporl al- lracleol more lhan lhirly-live women. For lhe lirsl lime a large number ol alumnae look parl in aller-school alhlelics. Eslher Beckenslein, Mary Long and lvlary Fallon, all lor- mer aclive sporlswomen, conlinued lhrouqh lhe hockey season lo place on lhe linal leams. In aololilion lo lhe lraolilional Freshman and Sophomore rleams a lillh semesler squacl was selecled lo conlencl lor lhe class lille. ln spile ol lhe longer experience ol lhe lillh semesler leam and lhe quickness ol lhe Frosh, lhe Sophs were viclorious in lhe linal lill. lvlae Crowlher, manager, mainlaineol lhe spiril ol play and compelilion lo make one ol lhe mosl successlul seasons in W. A. A. hislory. Mgr. Crowlher l The roll-in 2 3 FEMININE SPORTS wORLD Row I: Buffum, Cline, Bovyer, G. Barnes, STarTup Row 2: Mullins, Des Granges, Elayer, BoynTon, M. Barnes. Archery-SpOrT OT The Kings Archery was inTrOduced TO The girls aT The beginning OT The spring semesTer. RuTh Bovyer, leading The grOup, sTarTed The season wiTh a grand Tiourish which has been mainTained ThrOughOuT The year. The maiOriTy OT The girls knew very liTTle abOuT arch- ery, bu+ aTTer several weeks OT pracTice Emily Mayberry and Evelyn Cline were Tairly cOnsisTenT in making bullseyes. Muriel and Grace Barnes and RuTh Bovyer were The ex- perT archers OT The season as They had parTicipaTed beTOre This semesTer. ATTer The earThguake archery was sTarTed On a much more exTensive scale. Classes were Organ- ized in This enioyable acTiviTy, and because OT The increased inTeresT The grOup Tor The W. A. A. spOrT was increased in size. A Team OT archers was senT TO The annual Spring Playday as The highpOinT OT The seasOn's acTiviTy. OuT go The arrows Mgr. Bovyer FEMININE SPCRTS WORLD Row I: BuH'olph, Bovyer, Garrison, Sl-arTup, Mullins, Hudson, Huchinson, Bellman, Buffum Row 2: Des Granges, Callahan, Royce, Meyer, McCracken, Flora Basketball-Tossers of The Pigskin Aiming Tor higher accuracy and sTrengTh, Viqueen casaba Tossers Turned ouT Tor early morning worlcouTs Three weelcs preceding The regular loaslceTball season. Upon The Tormal opening, pracTice shiTTed Trom 6:30 a.m. To 3:30 p.m. For The TirsT The Frosh ouTnumbered The Sophs as addiTional sporTswomen reporTed. The Tall playday aT Comp-- Ton came in The middle oT Long Beach season insTead oT aT The end as anTicipaTed. As a resulT FullerTon Trounced one Team 26-I2 while CompTon Took The oTher 33-I3. ConTinuing The home play, The Sophomores surprised everyone including Themselves by winning The class Trophy in an easy game. ThroughouT The season The playing oT Ger- Trude McCracken, a newcomer Trom Missouri, was especially brillianT Tor her pivoTing, passing and True aim in shooTing. Mgr. Mullins Up goes The ball T41 l75l FEMININE SPGRTS WORLD Row I: O'Brian, Aldahl, Bovyer, BuTTolph, Thompson, Meyer Row 2: Mullins, Tucker, Des Granges, Jones, WalTers, Hudson Tennis-Helens of The Future Carrying campus spiriT inTo local aTTairs, sixTeen Junior College women compeTecl in The Long Beach CiTy Mid-WinTer Closed Tennis TournamenT in December. Dale Ren- Tro placed in The Tinals while Peggy Kerr sTill holds ciTy championship Tor singles in The girls' division. BoTh are Junior Collegians. Ladder TournamenTs Tor advanced and in- TermediaTe players oTlered opporTuniTy Tor playing To Those who did noT wish To enTer inTo sTronger compeTiTion. AT all playdays The Viqueens were represenTed in TirsT and second singles and doubles. The climax OT The Tall season was marked by an inTormal aTTernoon Tea sponsored by all women's Tennis classes. Several ciTy sTars gave The women poinTers on courT sTraTegy and Technique. The service Mgrs. Thompson, Meyer FEMININE SPORTS WORLD Row I: Hudson, Bufiolph, STarTup, Boynfon, Aldahl Row 2: Thompson, Meyer, Des Granges, Wilson, Royce, Walfers Baseball-Game of The Nation The baseball season opened wiTh grand prospecTs Tor championship Teams. Anyone who saw The pre-season game aT Irvine Park will readily Tell you oT The greaT players who were in acTion aT ThaT Time. lVlarTha l-ludson, DoroThy Meyer, Helen BuTTolph, RuTh Bovyer and Wilma Jane l-luTchison looked excepTionally good in ThaT pre-season baTTle. JusTine STarTup was manager oT baseball and The sTar caTcher on The Freshman Team. She organized The pracTices which were held on The girls' aThleTic Tield Twice a week. Miss RuTh STonebarger coached The girls. Besides having an excepTionally good Time during The season, The girls organized a Team To compeTe aT The annual Spring Playday. ThroughouT The baseball season semi-monThly acTiviTies were conducTed, such as morning bicycle rides TerminaTed by brealcTasTs, and inTormal swimming groups aT The beacw. Mgr. STarTup V A ho+ one To The plaTe 6 vi FEMININE SPORTS WORLD Row I: Pace, Reurup, Carson, Bellman. Crowfher, YaTes, Thayer Row 2: Wood, EllsworTh, Beerlrle, Harringfon, Engh C-olT-America's Daily Dozen 1 IGOTT is one oT The mosT popular oT The Viqueen acTiviTies. BeTTy Reid was The man- ager The TirsT semesTer, wiTh PaTricia O'Brien acTing in The same capaciTy The second semesTer. Miss Clarinne Llewellyn was The coach and adviser To The group. Several Tour- namenTs were held in which a large number OT advanced golTers parTicipaTed. There were also some TournamenTs held Tor The beginners. AT The end oT The Tall semesTer a group oT women gaThered aT The home oT The coach Tor a social Time. The inTeresTing acTiviTy oT The evening was GolT Bridge: CaTherine BoyTon was The champion GolT Bridger. The spring semesTer was TeaTured by TournamenTs. There were Twice as many golT classes and ThereTore an increasing inTeresT in The game. BoTh These TacTs accounT Tor The number oT golTers compeTing in The Spring Playday aT Los Angeles. A TasT one off The Tee Mgr- O'Bl'ieI'l FEMININE SPORTS WORLD l Gould, Sla+er, Morgan, Eselman, Carpenfer, Chisholm, Harper Riding-Cantering Socialifes Climbing a nolcw higher lhan Jrhe record ser in previous seasons, Jrhe Riding Club has carried on lhe program eslablishec in ihe Jrhird year of Hs organizalion. Meefing from lhree lo live o'clocl4 Jrwo aflernoons a week, rhe members were inslrucled in can-- lering, jumping and olher fealures ol beginning and advanced riding by Mr. William Glascoe al +he Long Beach Riding Academy. Polo made ils debul among lhe advanced riders in Jrhe lale fall. Slealcbalces in The pario of lhe academy followed several moonlighr rides. Confelri and brighr ribbons led lhe egueslriennes on Their early morning hunrs. A+ Jrhe break- lasl following one hunl each season, Jrhe semeslerly Trophy was awarded lo The winner of The hunl. Mgrs. Morgan, Gould Boofs and saddles! 8 91 FEMININE SPORTS WORLD Row I: Haven, Wilson, OBrian, Blackford, Haverfield Row 2: Andrews, Des Granges, Elayer, Kolke Rowing-Disciplined Cooperators Expanding wiTh The sporTs program oT The Women's AThleTic AssociaTion, rowing Tor women began aT The Lagoon laTe in SepTember. Formerly This sporT was conducTed only during The spring semesTer. Progress depends upon The inTeresT and The alerTness oT The individual. IT one applies herselT, she may make The TransiTion Trom raTT To dory To boaT in Three weeks. ATTer ThaT Time iT is a maTTer oT pracTice and experience unTil she is promoTed To The shell. Vying Tor The TirsT Time in a women's rowing regaTTa held January 2I, one oT The Two compeTing squads came away wiTh all honors oT The meeT, winning The laurels Tor The season. This aquaTic 'sporT was disconTinued aTTer March because oT inconvenienT TaciliTies and handicaps encounTered in carrying ouT The spring program. T Shells and Oars! I T Mgr. Blackford MISSICJN SANTA BARBARA ii. ii EZZIZIIV :II ,. iiiiil eeei.. ii E1:EA' QAAZIIQZEA 1 zfa SanTa Barbara, The TenTh bead in FaTher Serra's Rosary oT Missions , has wiThsTood The harsh hand oT Time and naTure Tar beTTer Than any oT iTs sisTer Missions. AlThough iT has passed Through TurbulenT Times, and desTruc- Tion has more Than once been ThreaT- ened by a calamiTy oT naTure or The shorTsighTedness oT man, The Francis- can PriesTs have never deserTed SanTa Barbara. lT is The only Mission in Cali- Tornia where There has been an un- broken succession oT padres and an undimmed alTar lighT Tor nearly one hundred and ThirTy-Two years. ln The early days oT SanTa Barbara There was a hum oT indusTry all abouT The Mission. Each Indian neophyTe had a special work To do, and as a rule he perTormed iT well, wheTher iT was making bricks and Tiles, Tanning hides, shearing sheep, making shoes and saddles, or any oTher oT The TiTTy odd Trades TaughT by The Padres . . . The beauTiTul old TounTain, The work oT some devoTed neophyTe and said To be one oT The mosT exguisiTe pieces oT sTone work To be Tound in any Mission, sTill delighTs The daily visiTors. BuT iT is The aTmos- phere oT This cloisTered place, The hushed voices oT The monks ...The dim lighT and The peaceTul spiriT oT l:aTher Junipero Serra which seems To hover . . . especially here ThaT is appealing To Those who Tollow El Camino Real To SanTa Barbara. B l l : i-I E PAT Don Tob Ecl f O A 4 ?, l-i SANTA BARBARA . . . SOMEHOW IMPERIOUS IS THIS MISSION AS IT CONTEMPLATES ITS WAVERING REFLECTION IN THE WATER . . . MAJESTIC DOMES SPLIT BY THE CROSS TOWER .ABOVE SHADOWED COLUMNS .... MASSIVE BUTTRESSES ANGLE DOWNWARDS . . . DISTORTED PALM TREES SWAY . . . A 5 B v F F v 1 I W i 9 5 if I 4 P s X I hos ho .fi golden crest embossed on blzzclcness . . . This helmeiezl 116110, of a stern Vik- ing fwarrior standx for the highest honor the junior college can gifoe . . . Serfzvice, loyalty, lzard fworlz are the prices one must pay to fwirz the coveted zffwzzra' . . . VIKING AWARD WINNERS i HARRY ALLEN As Represenralive of Alhlerics, HARRY ALLEN made known Jrhe wishes of l'his deparfmenr for +he firsl semesler and in addilion did a good job for Oak Smirh on The gridiron. ll was in his regime Jrhal' all new eguipmeni was purchased for The foolball squad and lhe Soulhern Cali- fornia championship baslcelball ream goi under way. Allen, a February graduale, was a Le++erman and a member of Jrhe Order of Tong. lFebruary Winnersl 2 3 VIKING AWARD WINNERS JIM DEWEY JIM DEWEY, guieT iournalism execuTive, was able To carry ouT The dreams oT pasT Viking ediTors by enlarging his paper To an eighT-column aTFair, puTTing The local iaysee weekly in a class ranlcing wiTh any iunior college newssheeT in The counTry. l-lis ThoughTTul and conservaTive com- menT in The Tall CalJineT sessions oTTen cooled down discussions To The muTual advanTage oT all concerned. Jirn acTed as an AssisTanT EdiTor oT The I932 Saga. KING AWARD WINNE GEORGE GAUGLER A new sTudenT To The ciTy in The Tall oT l93 I, GEORGE GAUGLER broughT wiTh him progressive ideas on how To make The mosT oT one's selT in a shorT Time. Gaugler became so well known in Two semesTers ThaT he was elecTed To The CabineT as RepresenTaTive oT ArTs and Then was ape poinTed PresidenT oT The newly organized AssociaTed lvlen STudenTs. l-le played prominenTly in Two dramas Tor The college, became a member oT Commercial Club, and earned his L in baseball. As SnapshoT EdiTor oT Saga, George supervised The collecTion oT The heTerogenous mixTure we have porTrayed in The book. 4 5 VIK NG AWARD WINNERS DON SQUIRES T DON SQUIRES, EdiTor-in-ChieT oT This ediTion oT Saga, lay awake nighTs Tor monThs Thinking on plans To improve The iaysee yearbook and Then worked nighT and day Tor a Tew more monThs aTTempTing To realize These ideas. The increased size oT The book is one plan ThaT was execuTed buT several oThers had To be TorgoTTen due To a lack oT an addiTional budgeT. Though spending mosT oT his Time on Saga, Squires was an inTlu- enTial member oT The Fall CabineT as Vice-PresidenT oT The AssociaTed STudenT Body. l-le apprenTiced his ediTorship by serving as lvlanager oT The l932 year producTion. College Y, Drama Workshop, Forensic Club, and French Club had him on Their books Tor acTive membership. B 1 KING AWARD WINNERS EARL DIBLE The re-organizalion of The college Employmenl Bureau was EARL DIBLE'S iob Jrhe lirsl semesler as Represenlalive of lhe Sludenl Body on Jrhe Cabine'r. A+ Jrhe same lime Dible look charge of College Y and Jrhe Forensic Club as Presidenl. An aclive debaler, Dible earned his lcey in Phi Rho Pi, nalional forensic lralernily, by parlicipalinq in numerous vars- ily debales. During The assemblies held in lhe park, A, Q. Earl acled as chairman for several programs. lJune Winners, 6 7 KING AWARD WINNE i WINIFRED GOULD Filling mosT saTisTacTorily Florence Gibsorfs place as Vice-PresidenT of The STudenT Body This semesTer when she dropped Trom school, WINIFRED GOULD organized a PubliciTy and Public RelaTions commiTTee which sponsored and promoTed various proiecTs during The pasT Tew monThs. Holding The PresidenT's chair oT Alpha Gamma Sigma TogeTher wiTh The lnTernaTional Club, Winifred was one of The mosT prominenT and valuable campus women. Kassai and Skalds claimed her Tor membership while The l932 Saga beneTiTed by her assisTance. VIKING AWARD WINNERS I LOIS GRIFFIN The onIy Freshman woman To become a Valkyrie, LOIS GRIFFIN, be- sides making a hiT wiTh Prexy Rene, acTeoI as The CaI3ineT SecreTary This semesTer. She was eIecTeoI To The scribe's chair Tor The Freshman Class IasT TalI and acTed as The represenTaTive oT her class Tor The AssociaTecI Women STuoIenTs. NoT conTenT wiTh These secreTaryships, she Took This vimork up Tor The college cIebaTers. Lois was nameol To Kassai membership T is June. may 9 VIKING AWARD WINNERS LLOYD HODGE Red-haired, jolly LLOYD HODGE was a busy iayseeilre for his college Jrerm, keeping walch by nighl and by day of all sludenl acliviry budgefs during The fall as Cabinel Treasurer and as direclor of The Employmenl Bureau in Jrhe posilion of Represenlalive of Jrhe Srudenl Body Jrhis spring. This worlc made him an ex-olilicio member of lhe Finance and Sludenl Loan fund commillees where he ably lunclioned. College Y and Engineers comprised his campus clubs. VIKING AWARD WINNERS ED KNOX Accomplishing, shall we say The unusual l?l, EDDIE KNOX, CapTain- ElecT oT FooTball, was able To Take parT exTensively in The school's aThleTic program and sTill keep his grades up suTTicienTly To ranlc in Alpha Gamma Sigma, The CaliTornia sTaTe scholarship socieTy. Knox also was a sTar waTer-polo player and a swimmer as well as coach oT The Frosh TooTball Team. As a Freshman, Ed will lead Thors Tor The coming school year. I .1 90 KING AWARD WINNE l BOB MURRAY NOT only a Two-year leTTerrnan in Tennis, BOB MURRAY Tollowed all sporTs well enough To ediT The men's sIoorT secTion oT Saga, The biggesT individual job on The book, ouTside oT The EdiTor-in-ChieT. The besT parT oT iT is, Though, he did an unusually good iob. Aside Trom This, Murray was Vice-PresidenT oT his Freshman class and Treasurer oT The Sopho- mores. As The Keeper-oT-The-Coin Tor The AssociaTed Men STudenTs, he waTched The books There in addiTion To being an acTive Engineer. R s Timm KING AWARD WINNERS' l HOWARD PATRICK Aggressive HOWARD PATRICK broughl honor +o Jrhe school and glory lo himsehf by being iudged Jrhe besl iunior college oralor in Jrhe Uniied Slales in Jrhe Phi Rho Pi nalional convenlion a+ Duluih in March. Teamed wilh Russ Cullen, lhese lwo arduous arguers in I932 came home from Redlands wilh lhe nalional debale championship fucked away in a silver loving cup. As Presidenl oi lhe gradualing Solohomores, Pal was aclive in promoling College Day and he handled Jrhe Presiden+'s reins for College Y and Jrhe Forensic Club relieving Earl Dible in bolh Jrhese jobs. 2 T931 KING AWARD WINNE ART RENE Unassuming, eTTicienT ART RENE, PresidenT oT The AssociaTeol STu- clenTs Tor This closing semesTer shoulderecl The problems oT The school- uncler-The-Trees plan successTully and clirecTed The sTuolenT bocly Through one oT Their mosT Trying semesTers in The hisTory oT The junior college. Rene was prepared Tor The A. S. B. Presidency by serving The Tall Term as RepresenTaTive oT AThleTics. l.asT year he was a l.eTTerman in Track. CSR . R S 104-V KING AWARD WINNE BETTY SCOTT As Presidenl of Jrhe Associaled Women Sluclenls for lhe year '32, '33, BETTY SCOTT is a popular young lady and a good execulive. Under her leadership The A. W. S. have carried on in lheir aclivilies in a very credilable manner despile many handicaps. Belly acfed, as well, as Vice- Presidenr of Phi Rho Pi, debale group, Secrefary of The Forensic Club, and was a member of Drama Workshop and The Viking sfaicl. l 941 95 Campus Society and Otherwise . . . giant redfwoods tofwering over the highway . . they dfwarf all else by their magnitude . . . forest jlres have stripped the trees of much of their foliage .... CAMPUS SOCIAL AFFA RS Ro I Sams, Schuler, Healy, Sfark, Layman, Sco+'I' Row 2: Cowles, Marlin, Gailey, Claire, Reynard, Dries The German Club Orcheslra which played Tor I'he .Associaled Women Sludenls and FALL FRESHMAN RECEP- TIOIN Virginia Hole-I Bill Mooney's Orcheslra ASSOCIATED WOMEN STU- DENTS' MASOUERADE Virginia Counlry Club Orson Reynard's Collegians ORDER OF TONG DANCE Alamilos Beach Club Alamilos Beach Club Band ASSOCIATED STUDENT BODY THIANKSGIVING DANCE Municipal Audilorium Bill Mooney's Orcheslra NIGHT SCHOOL DANCE Masonic Temple Marlc Murray's Orcheslra olher malinee dances. Campus Socials KASSAI CHRISTMAS DANCE Virginia Counlry Club Blue Harmony Boys BRUSH AIND PENCIL DANCE Ebell Clubhouse Bill Mooney's Orcheslra ASSOCIATED WOMEN STUDENTS' MID-WINTER DIANCE Villa Riviera Blue Harmony Boys SOPHOMORE PROM Municipal Audilorium Frazier Simpson's Orcheslra NIGHT SCHOOL DANCE Masonic Temple Bill Mooney's Orcheslra ASSOCIATED STUDENT BODY DANCE Municipal Audilorium Jimmie CampbeII's Orchesira ASSOCIATED MEN STU- DENTS' DANCE Municipal Audilorium Wall Richard's Ramblers NIGHT SCHOOL DANCE Shell Oil Audilorium Leslie Dreis' Orcheslra TONG SPORT DANCE Lakewood Counlry Club Wall Richard's Ramblers KASSAI FORMAL Army Air Base Blue Harmony Boys NEWMAN CLUB DANCE Campbell Aparlmenls Royal Palms Band ALL-S. C. DANCE Shrine Audilorium Hoagland's Balboa Orcheslra Curl HoucIc's Calalina Casino Orcheslra SOPHOMORE PROM Municipal Audilorium Curl Houclc's Calalina Casino Orcheslra FRENCH CLUB DANCE Army Officers' Club Jimmy CampbeII's Orcheslra H961 7I CAMPUS SOCIAL AFFAIRS Reese, Grissinger, Miss Hifchccck, Daniels, Herron The iaysee oiuarlelle, champions of Soulhern California, who enlerlrained al' sludenl' assemblies and olher local galherings. College Assemblies PRINCIPAL'S ASSEMBLY Upiohn Presen'red7 Cabinel' and FacuII'y lnlroduced IA. W. S. ASSEMBLY Sponsored by Women's Clubs: Officers Presenlecl A. M. S. ASSEMBLY Inlra-mural Cups Given 'ro Winners of Pasl Semesler CAPTAIN LORENZEN ASSEMBLY Shipwreck on Island for Years: Presidenlial Vo+e PASADENA BONFIRE RALLY Beard Con+es+ Culminaiesg Serpenlrine Around Fire CARVETH WELLS LECTURE Evening Talk is Given on Rus- sia: No Morning Speech SKALDS' IASSEMBLY Marian Von Prachl Gives Inlerprelive Dances ELECTION ASSEMBLY Candidales Are Presenlecl PRINCIPAL'S ASSEMBLY New Aliendance Rules Are Explained by Lounsbury A. W. S. ASSEMBLY Women Officers Presenleclg Tableaux are Given A. M. S. ASSEMBLY Coaches Give Addresses PEP IASSEMBLY Debale, I-lalliburlon Talk, Bas-- kelball Team I-Iailed FIRST PARK ASSEMBLY Dancing Allowed on SI'age 'For Firsl Time in School DEBATE AND BASKETBALL ASSEMBLY Championship Teams Are I-lonoredg Tincher Speaks PADDOCK ASSEMBLY Famous Sprinler Tells of Olympic Experiences and of Benelils of Sporls. EARTHQUAKE ASSEMBLY Causes of lvlarch IO Shake Explained by Mr. While MUSIC ASSEMBLY S. C. Champion Ouarlelle I-Ionored: Musical Groups Make Firsl Appearances of Spring Semesler ADVERTISING ASSEMBLY S.C. Benefil Dance. J.C. Con- cer'r, and College Day are Adverlisedg Special Humorous Radio Play FRESH MAN ASSEMBLY Melodrama of 90's Given in I933 Slyle by Frosh SOPHOMORE ASSEMBLY AWARDS ASSEMBLY Sophs Gel Their Chance Winners of School Honors 'For Semesler Announced Here's looking down al' four Kassai members - Flossie Gibson, Marjorie Wise, Muriel Barnes, and Arlene Glaze .... Splaslwy lielcl-'rrip memories are brouglwl by piclures ol Zoology sludenls on beach . . . Jean lvlillner and Marian Smillw go wading . . . . Iylr. l-lubbarol prepares an evolulion olemonslralion . . . Maxine Rose and Scrubby Ellioll give us The eye . . . Below: Correcl aliire for mounlaineers are shown by Bob Fosler, Bob Sulherland, Tom l-loll, and Eol Knox . . . Aolvenlurous colleqians perch on cliff . . . N mai lql Paxlon Klaus and Bill EIlio++ pick a cule dance parlner . . . The Saga camera was cerlainly busy on lield lrips ..... Alhlelic collegians slride across lhe campus ..... Ed Nolziger and Al Berry pedal lheir long way lo Kamp Kole . . . Cenler: Thal's an awlully big seal lor Ann l-larloaugh . . . Prominenl J. C. sludenls dress up lor a snap . . . . Below: Carroll Broolcs gels anolher loiclure in Saga as Tom l-loll loolfs on . . . This lime il's more nalural . . . Even a nalional champion oralor has lo go on zoology excur- sions .... Old Clolhes Day recolleclions . . . Colorlul garb is posed by Willis Pelers, Jenel Pelli- iohn, Rulh l-lull, and Don Squires ..... George and Juanila Schuler exhibil mar- ilal bliss . . Cenler: Shades ol lhe 90's and Mae Wesl . . . . Marqarel l-lales and Mariorie Wise slep oul . . . Bob Jordan, Wall Miller, Johnny Johnslon, Bill Adams mix in a scallered group ol masqueraders . . . Dwighl Garner, Ken Purdy, Glenn Taylor, and Mary McPherson show varied slyles ol queer clad . . Below: l-loboes and wailers galher lor snaps: lhis lime il's Bob Murray, Irene Thompson, Wall Maddox, Archie Miner . . Andy Free- man, as lhe peanul man, does a song and dance on lhe campus .... 200 20 Livery fo .Ma.vsiz'e flesh on .vturaly legs .... . Nfarcellefl tresses hanging 1noti0nles.v . . A stable background fa LIVERY stable to youfj .... Wlzat emba1'ra.vs1nent to these dumb brutes were they to lznofw of tl1is...aha.a.a... M. 1- 13 g. s N 522 5 1-. 9 . Sw :as si iw , V be . f UP I+ is a far cry from 'rhe s+a+eliness of +he early Franciscan missions To +he noisy lolare of ullrra-modern life. Since finding humor in Jrhe sedare conducr of Jrhe irreproachable Padres is a near impossible rask, we have Turned ro rhe saririzing of a modern maga- zine-wirh all Jrhe foibles of I933 life re- ilecred in Hs pages-as ihe obiecr of This secrion . . . Thus, we pFSSSf'1'i' LlVERY- A STABLE PUBLICATION! I if 4 ,, , , 4 COAST HARTSOOK STUDIOS ENVELOPE PHOTOGRAPHERS 81 LEATHER ' PRODUCTS CO. 311 Pine Avenue Long Beach, California Los Angeles, California O 0 Book Covers Envelopes COMMERCIAL PICTURES Leallmer Speciallies ' o Telephone MUIual 9I3I Telephone 640-90 pmducers of ,he IQ33 Saga Cove, OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER, 1933 sAoA V All PI1oI'o-Engravings Produced by THE STANDARD PHOTO-ENGRAVING CO. Press-Telegram Building, Long Beach, California - . rinling your SAGA lias been a pleasure lo us. We wish lo complimenl your l933 Yearbook Slalll for The splendid compilalion and layoul ol copy and plwolograpliic malerial. If you are pleased wiilw your I933 SAC5A you will be equally pleased wiilfi our crealion and prinling of DANCE PROGRAMS-DANCE BIDS-CALLING CARDS ' PERSONAL STATIONERY - HEADQUARTERS FOR 5 To - I CLASSY 2 CJ G Phoio Albums - Scrap 2 Books - Parker Pens and i 52 E Pencils - Bridge Acces- E nf- 'I E sories - Fancy Box Sla- A 2 'ruonery .:. .:. .:. .:. P anned PRINTING PHONE 612-86 SEE G-I-REEN'S FOR CORRECT WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS T204 205 ff if , 17 S 5 M .Hmericals Best Red Mchly Z! Show me u man who does not believe in the doctrine of Free Speech and I will show you u couple of postcards I bought in Paris. Turn about is fair play. -Guy Fawkes. IN THIS ISSUE 'Hell Diapers-A Story REAR ADMIRAL KEESTER 206 'Poll Vaulting-Sport of Voters VAULTER LIPPSORE ............... 'Lead Nemesis Short, Shirt Story Lou HUsToN ........................... 210 'Bright Babblings of Brats 'Ox Plop ..... ................. .......... ...... 2 l 2 'Gang Word Puzzles ............ 212 'A Few Notes on Censorship DR. zEUs .................,..................... 213 'Sublimation For All On Dancing in the Park LOU I-IUSTON ,.,.,, ...,,,,,,A,,, 2 'Plenty Questions ..,.. ............... 2 l5 'Mad Monks and Bad Monkeys Mooz'e Reviews ,,.,.,.,,,,,,,,.,,,,, 216 'Any Qld Bones Today? ROBERT BENCH WARMER 218 'S500 Fool's Contest ..... ......... 2 l9 THEY CAN'T MUSCLE IN ON MUSSOLINI lllEuropean nations have concluded that the Italians are the Fascist spaghetti eaters in the world and that Hitlerites are Nazi but nice. You will look in vain among lNIussolin's loyal blackshirts for a Communist. In other words, in Italy's dictatorship, the citizens are dictated but not Red. Mussolini will not tolerate any foolishness other than his own. fllAmerica will never have a political dictator. Not unless we import from Europe some one with the brains. Economic dictatorship is here right now, it is, it is. VVhen the President throws a switch that turns on the lights at the Worldls Fair, closes a bank in Iowa, or starts a forest fire in California, his finger plays about as important a part in the actual functioning as the Champaign bottle does in the later operation of the vessel which it christens. l,lIThe real power behind American politics and busi- ness is Wall Street, where the fiscal eye of the United States is focused-which makes the nation Wall-eyed. 1llOne of the fundamentals of economics as it concerns world trade is the principle that the intensity of light varies inversely with the square of the logarithm of your hat-size. This law can be clarified with an illus- tration. lllThe writer Cif the reader will pardon a personal anecdotel was accosted on the street the other day by a panhandler, who asked for the customary dime. QlRaising my voice, I called to passersbys to note the plight of this shabby, unwashed drifter at my elbow. In an impassioned plea I portrayed the miseries of poverty suffered by this undrifted washer and pointed out that it was the duty of every man to help his un- fortunate brother. The bystanders responded generous- ly, dropping coins in the beggar's battered fedora. lQIl'4Now, I said after the people had passed on, f'We have taken in just SEZ. You asked me for a dime. Here is twenty cents. You make lOO per cent profit, having asked for a dime, and I shall be content with only 90 per cent of the E52 as managerial profits. Good dayfl UJIA. wise philosopher once said, f'The more I think of people, the less I think of them? That wise philoso- pher was the writer of this editorial, and I, sir, am your daughter. See this scar? You gave me that on my third birthday. You also striped my back with a horse- whip. The scars and stripes forever! 'To the Beetles .............................. 220 ft . QU Io sum up, the three steps to economic recovery are: PRINCESS ALAKAZAMBA . . . . Cll Increase tariff rates, C21 drastically reduce tariff KROPOUTAGAIN , rates, and C35 rub, don t blot. Cover by DON TOBIN --BERNARR MACFATHEAD Edt i l Offices and Septic Tank: Saga Tent. V ation Clinic Caducr-us iflub. Ext T t l P ssessions: Siam, Haan-1'ago, Gonna-Gonna. Published aft h t h collection b, L ry Publ h g Lo LB.J.C. Maple Soy Inail. president: Des-Des Stu s, vic p ident: Don Tootln, Edit Bawl Tak Tk J tor: Loot Hoopsun. Gwyney Femur, Sadists. Entered as tenth-rate matter two k come Yom Kippur under the Riot Act of M 1912. at Ellis Island. Contributors are urged to retain in their possession all comms ot their contributions, also the original, in d that the editors will have time to write material for this publication. All unsolicited manuscripts will be plagiarized and returned to the tl through the dead letter olfice. In the United States. one milk token ner copy, one bus card ner year: In San Pedro, 5.343 In all eou t here i is pronounced ee , 51.061 I ll months containing 10 cents in intlated currency. Address all comm icationa to SORRY care of this pane .. .K ,. -:V 1: 9 V VV- .V-r. - f.V V - Vilfviw-.':sV,' V V jYg22??'1V'. . ' .-Q if ' Lglflk 'V V -Fai: -may -5'-1 . V--wz11'.?zr -'1 Vi - . V---'fl . . V ' V ' -- -V .V-', Q-, -. , . 1- '4-.aff-4'-V.-' V -- -' ef -fu . .V V.- Vs- --ff '5f'fwVVVf -I V---fzfiw-gfsnhs. '-.-A IH'-:f.iV,Vr,:' Q ag, - lf F 1 gf . T c 7 ' rata -'-'fx-wa--3iii.-V.'VfaiLV-ff2Vf.?VIEW.-fl-V,V'f 4 ' '-Wax, -f 'f 1 V ,ga-ygw3V3,?,igV.'r.V--qfih - ,,.V-. V . + , ' -- -ex-,g.f:g1. 5.5.12 .V..V -- . I H .. V fV ff' 1 . VV ' .. 'V ' V V -L '. H ' ' '-.wh-':V. -an A-V ' .. 2 1 : ' ffl.. ' - - '-1 '- Vl: -.:'V?V:V.,.-L-'J' 1.10 .V f.1!'MpjPi?',g.+ , -Ni, -V ...V.V...-Je. , 4. WG 4, . ., , 4 .. uf. 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A shell Whizzed by him, struck a tin hat on the opposite Wall of the trench, and dropped to the ground. Gingerly, Quayle picked up the missle. QI HPeanuts!'l he said, crumbling the shell between his fingers. 4ll Gad, doesn't that-Tong eat a thing but those d-rn o-d peanuts? Why in th-nd-r l don't they toss over some bread crusts once T in a while?l' groaned a young lad, weak from hunger. lllWe had been without food for a week. 1 When Tong began invading Recreation Park early in April, our battalion of En- gineers Was sent to the front immediately. Our untrained troops Were no match for the efficient military machine of the in- humanly fiendish Tongs. lllNo Weapon was too horrible or unfair to be used against the enemy of the Tongs. Tales were running rife like rats through the trenches, spreading the contagion of hatred among the Engineers. Tongs, it was V rumored, even dated Engineers' girls, and refused Engineers information during l206l --'-1A ' ' -- - By REAR AD-MIRAI KEFSTER, U.S.A. in C 0 lla b 0 ra tio n with A, LOUIS QUINZE HUSTON I stepped back! Illustrations by DON TOBIN l!!c'Brave, hell! he replied. '4Those other tramps all 4!!The rising scream of a shell and the roar of a terrihc explosion were all I knew until I found I was being . carried across the battleheld by two men. ll! I-Iey, buddie, I cried to the man carrying my legs. Easy with that right leg. It hurts like truth! , --f f . . . i.. 'I - . . . , 5.5 H mr V.-11. in N., . 1 1 ,, , .,f.,, Pi . iff i' '?:'5f'EEQ55-,i- ' .:!f13-.'! 3-Ri. . . if . ' iff-'L . 3 m g have ,.-,,jk,.l,g- .:1i,r3g,f-f,,5.,Zg.. -tg ,W Q I , . t g.. 1. ,- . . mi .' 2.21 4- -i f , , ,f 'e '- .. 'I ' UF? 1 'j r ' 1,217 ' 1, ,ai ng, J ' -. , if fu- f' :':'... 3 - -fv. f .. f M 1- , - AGL., - I 3 - , - ?fi i'f..i.1' 5' ,zfj-l.f :ff--5 .':ffl?1 . 'V -57? . Jie. 1 1,27--gi:2w .'fqg35g. --,.p?2:5ez1,-.f'ff' .'55'Q.3f.'7- 5-3551, , f- - Q, .'--. --C' L' ff-:'.'.'f ' -75.-L.-?310F?345 ff' L' -21,'.j'. ' Y .fri -VP-r?' Y . ' .,'-Zsffvi--1?'f?1J.. ' f: ..P- . ' .ii if any . ,im 1-f..f-55.1--: r,',.1,-CQ'f'g17'.'T5' ,z,'.f'.f- 'Q ' L 1'-4 af. if LL if-4115? f- 12 54, .fe wt?-i. -'. yy' Q ,1.3-1' 31 ' ',. ,gf 5.3 ,f,.,.. TQ.. -W -55,-'ga -, -'H 51 rg.-'.-1 'Pty ' ' if .- wi- 4 - 'f . . P ,i , : -:V . , .,,,A ,gm,,,,', 5 vt.: .Wi l ,I 4 .I ' I ,,,E,,,,,,. -, nf' - ' UWC4. ' vii a 1 ' .- 157:51 .. I4 G.--6, .M 6 F.-:LW 3,33 Y-. gy .aa-:.y,g,. -' 'az' ZW wt. 4. . V - - - . ,1153 ' .aj-if 4-f'- ff-N at .4 as W --aa --2 ---2 'f .ai i at t -wtf 1-4 ff. +'- r f as. . , 1- ' .f -slr -.--fit .si 0. .. 'JJ' ,,. 3' ,ici . a,.'-. ' gi,-,5 'N-:Lib--5 kr ig v 'Y '!1 f--- aff -X iv 1 --. V --aa-3 'l 1. ,V-...V I' l .Quia ,! .,i,,v . --I .. Q Q ls.. - . f.. jx .- . I . .x - 1, J J ' -Y : ' 'if . fig-'xkx .-my . . .,..-5-4 ,I-tm..-' '-1' ' ' ' 'a ' ' ' v ' e f I , v .- -JM-'P' 1 1 .11 . ' -N . . .AW . , .tpqsmx , ,,1'f.,,, , .. x. ...z A , . - , -11211-Lg-L.9.-.-.1--,.-ff.zFg.5g:,-i.j.1,g--'fy , .Q-:Q-2Q?4,gf.,a.. .- g,-:f . h, .4 w 4 vi., .y .4 M9.,,M?,.,,,c,,., .mv .. ,,o1..i JV-k IM, ,, . ,, ' I 'R' - 1- - - - -1 ' EW '-t l ' - W 'vs Nj , I 1- N I T Pd- 'Q rv ,. . XL . . . 'l . 17 fl -.. K 'Y v my A,.- .vvk - - V - . . 4 . 1. -A .-, J,.,z,.f.,,-- ,. ...- 5 J, 5- ,S-.,g,.,,,,.-1 . -'. 'M xi: 'ima' as rxr 'f-'4'V 'i ii5.'?.. .ae if-Ffa.25-i?aff't-Siqfgi-isa 2 1 , 1!! Al1 right,', replied a voiceg 'fif you think you can carry the bloody thing any better than I can, go ahead!', and he threw the limb to me, I catching the dismembered leg in surprise. I again lost consciousness, to awaken in a tent with soldiers all around me. lIHWhere am IP I asked. I, I Y N' y 9. Q 2 L 1 44' r ,I ,,it'T, 32- 1 ,o l-,,5..1.f, .,. f J ,Za p w E ,ka s,,sA'A' 1 fit! i' is .sv 'nfl-f 1 5 M! w Aa, QE xv g I ,A , , fry.:-+AgQf.:.1-L. J .A .. x-XML'.-5-5.162-.t.g....-as. ,I - ' .,..,,,, I . . ! . '41.t.,.xi'np - 1. ' - A - iv - ig? , , ' , 2 . - 1, .- N , Q:'5p-il? f' I. 1 xx gf , ' yf. ,, -1, x 'Q' . , Y . 5 v t - f .4 FH . if - - - . 4 ' ,I .. ' l1 Ach, Gott! You'll find oudt soon enough as soon as Herr Kaptain Hnishes der zoup! f!!At that moment I heard the Captain order tongue. The Order of Tong! I cried. And you, Captain, N, ,1,.,.,,' , g, Y . must be the president, Tom Holtlw A . i f TPA' II Holt your Tong! he grunted surlily. You and your if 4- ' I I 4,3-'f',,,i F, mob give me an ear-ache. .I 11' V, 1. ' ,,- 1I!KWhat kind of an ear-ache?'l I asked. I I, ,fi L, ll 'KAn Engineer-ache! Haw, haw! Wasnlt that foul!'l an M, . - ,,,1,, I fl From a corner came the staccato click of paddles and I' ' ' . I, , ' , ,af ball denoting that a game of Tin -Ton was on. - Q ,ah --f' . Ra F: ,taww H D -. . . ,, - - ,grit ' ff VVhat are you writing in that book? asked Holt. i l,,a',, .5 Q 'Tm keeping a diary!'l I replied. - jk. ,' ,mam ,sg . . . . A lot of soldiers et that disease. I think 1f,S called ' GG ,, Fil - ,-.qQilQ?i5g54:5, . , . . g5gg,,?,.,,, diarrea. Achoo-o-o-oo! I b gedding a coldt. Where did vi -wt- i, If '- 3' I f 'YH I. .QW if-gif 'lfjirtfg' ,- 5 -j you get that medal?'l Lu i l1!'fFrom a brigadier-general. Waiit to see itil!- . ' - - 1 - '. J..,- 1..-.J' .. ' ' ' . 1l! Yes, he said. HBrigadier a moment, please. !207! tests. Patriotism rose to a fever heat, but We waged a losing hght. 1!!About 11:37 that night the bombardment was resumed by the Tongs. Berthas boomedg How- litzers howledg Minnies moochedg and Squires shrieked for copy. l!!I-Iell broke loose. Shrapnel sprayed us like rice at a movie Wedding. Bombs cracked the skies open. The heavens resembled a busy inter- section of comets after the trafiic cop has gone to lunch. l!!'!Someone should cross that No-Man's land through thattstorm of death and find out who in--is playing that saxophone. I can't sleep a wink,'l I said. 'fAre there any volunteersPl' f!!The men looked at each other for a second. Then one youth stood alone in front of the line. 1l! Brave lad! I commended. I ll! The sound of firing in the dis- tance and the exploding of shells in the vicinity ended the question- ing. Holt extended his hand. I was going to take you to Siberia, but that's all offfl I'll forgive you, because Si- beria no grudge, I said. Captives to - King T ang: Giving Them A Wide Bertha Poll V ultin Sport of Voters Back to the Farmer's Daughter! fR!'ddilly lime: 154 minuir: flat, 149' if you .vit bolt upright.j HEN asked what he thought of the ballot-box as the safety vault of democracy, a promi- nent senator snorted, UThe ballot-box? just stuflitli' And right there is the reason why the machinery of govern- ment has broken down, or at least why it isn't heading in the direction the voter vaguely thinks it ought to go. fllllicture a large, gilt merry- go - round with brassy cymbals beating out American in deafening din. On one of the wooden horses place an idiot child. Give him the reins, and Militant Millner Polific Patrick Vaulter Lippsore collect some money from him every few rounds. lfHThere you have a picture of the American voter tugging on the dummy reins of self-gov- ernment and entertaining the imbecilic delu- sion that he is taking an active part in running the country. QI Doesn't that hand you a laugh? l,lIPolitics at junior College is a finger down the throat of higher education, and thatls no gag, either. lllrllake a look at the present state of affairs-as reflected in the shield of Perseus, or you'll be turned to stone by the Medusa-like horrorable- ness of the sight. On one side of the fence stands lean, loud, argumentative Howard Patrick. On the other stands short, flip, well-meaning George Gaugler, and right there is where,Cousin Fred hit the Miller boy from Moline with a whiffle- tree. ill Patrick is backed by Hearst and the powerful publications ticket, a combination that sent the pachydermatously-aesophagused orator to Du- luth. In political back-rooms it is whispered that before the campaign opened, Gaugler went to the Viking editor and asked for the backing of the publications ticket. ill We wouldn't even let you run on the stubll' was the answer he got. Gaugler finally received the support of the Order of Tong in the presi- dential race. They had to back him, since he is the only man in school whom it would not polit- 52081 x I 209 ' ' V1 W'-15 . - - - R'--'f ' ' 5 ' A,' Q - af , ' el , N: ' K ' Fir - Q g I Q qi., p . , , . . .A , I....,,E,m,,,., ww ,,,,t?,,.i ,C W ,T Wk yu .i ... 'r ' ' ' 3 1. . r':i' N i F 'Q . ' - -A-'- ----41:2 ' '2 A fir' . 712- . IC,,,...-:::::::', Iv - -Q-w ' kg . -g-,:,'4i:. -:Q-2,3 -7pm- - fi - , .,., vs-,sf V: :.-V, K, m,.ff A ' S . - q, V N Q V. 5 in -w ' ' ff., . -, . 1 .col -f'-Hg .' -1 I psi .' .Will3 ' - , , , K. '. f f f y '- -f'7 if ' ' -V 4141.--2.-safe .. .1 'Hur st 1 - . ,,., W V f . 4, -Nr ' ' ' V AA-' ' '1' am., me I I . 4.1. f -in V. a- i .,V. .. A , . i .T Y i N . vavar . f . , 0 ' A 5 'L .,..ffff f i' f .W .- .i v - . ' .af . .4 D 3 K ..'-1-1-254.1-1fa.u1.U..f. i GN :M W k .' i ' 2:00-'q:s f 1 ' ' - -' 1 iiinq - O - 4 if K . up . fs.. 1-1 ' D .I rw? ij- . N , ' 43. ically hurt to be known as a Tong man. Charcoal marks donlt show on a black- board. Besides, they Hgured that even a lame horse can win a race if you take the trouble to put Paris Green in the other nags' oats. lllTong political leaders decided that the party should put the FORM in plat- form, so they pursuaded Jean Q'iDim- ples j Milner to campaign for the mis- nomered service group. The plan worked. When dimples indented Jean's face, they made indentured servants of the j.C. male voters. llILeaders of the publications faction put their heads together, shaking them sadly till they rattled like a Mexican orchestra breaking into a rhumba. Deciding to fight Hre with Hre, they engaged the engaging Marge Wise to raise votes by doing the same with her eyebrows. lllCompetition between the two parties was intense, but neither side seemed to gain over the other. Things reached an impasse. Tong stock dropped several points and the publications group profited when George Gaugler, the Tong candi- date, stopped his car to give Marge Wise, his opponents' worker, a ride. IH When taken to task for this apparent de- sertion of his party, Gaugler stated, I was only obeying the law. llllnquirers pressed him further. 4lIHShe called to me, said Gaugler, and the law says to pull up to the curb when you hear a siren. Ill How this action of the Tong candidate will affect his party's chance for success in the present campaign cannot be deter- mined, even though a split resulted from Gaugler's act. Half of the Tongs think Gaugler is politically hamstrung and de- mand that a new candidate be put on the ballot. Conservative Tongs fear that a rift in the party will ruin its power, feeling that a split Tong is politically dumb. 1jIMeanwhile non-organized voters are debating the advisability of a third party. A committee asked the following question of Earl Dible: Does the junior College need a third party? 1-UMNO, replied Dible, we haven't got rid of the hangover from the last one yet. CH Dupes, your vote is a Chinese prayer to the heathen gods of chance- where the cross is made? U ead Nemesis! Short Shirt Star CReaa'ing time: 15 secondsj FIASCO J. WRUMP lit a match to the letter he had just received and ground the black ashes to powder on the glass- topped desk. So they had found him again after twenty years! They would keep quiet, so the t'Vulture had said, for fifty thousand. Wrump laughed grimly to himself. A mouse scurried along the picture and were now trying to live right. just be- cause he had killed his wife years ago, he had had to live the life of a hunted beast for what seemed like an eternity. But now, like the cornered rat, he would fight them to the end. There was another thing, too, that if known, would end forever his dream: the marriage of his ward, Jeannette Mac- moulding th at skirted the walls of the richly-fur- n i s h e d office. Quickly VVrump snatched the dag- ger - like letter opener and hurl- ed it at the mouse. The slen- der blade pinned the mouse to the plaster for a mo- ment, then it fell into the drinking glass on top of the water cooler. YVrump w a s o n h i s f e e t, pounding th e table top with a ham-like fist. I,ll fig h t 'emlw he shouted. I won't pay lem Bright Blabbings of Brats The Truth LITTLE Rufus hated to run errands, and this particular Saturday he picked up the market basket with even more re- luctance than usual. He was gone three hours and when he returned his anxious mother plied him with questions. I stopped in at the pool hall for a couple of games of snooker, in case it's anything to you, Rufus replied. But where's the twenty pound sack of flour? he was asked. I didn't get any flour, he said after a PZLISB. -Albert Goldberg LITTLE Fogskol came into the house crying one day as if his heart would break. Mother asked him with whom he had fought. Donald, to his friend, Parmin- ter. The following morning Wrump fell over back- wards in his chair as he was awakened from his slumbers by the sound of gun- Hre in his outer office. A minute later three armed men entered. They had just shot eighteen clerks to make the story excit- ing. You're nextlw the ringleader c r i e d, a s t h e three raised their a centli' I n t h r e e minutes he had his old pal Bur- ton Parminter on the phone. It was unfair, mused Wrump, that he should be the victim of this foul black- mailing ring, this ring that was the terror of men and women all over the world who had committed one foolish misstep After a moment, the child hung his guns' head and lisped, Aw I wan into a door. . Three shots rang out from the window be- hind Wrum p. Thaiiks, old man. You've saved my But the words were never finished. Parminter's gun blazed death, and Wriinip pitched forward on his face. The Vulture was dead! -Pear! S tevcns 2IO THE STUDENT BODY STORE ON THE CAMPUS L APPRECIATING THE SPLENDID CO-OPERA- TION AND SUPPORT OE THE JUNIOR COLLEGE AND SOLICITING THIS SAME COOPERATION AND SUPPORT IN THE FUTURE, HEREBY DEDICATES THIS PAGE TO OUR LONG BEACH JUNIOR COLLEGE. I .,' ,' , .lf , , I I x ' ' ,X IT' ' q ' ' I .I HJ I O ' II , .K L' , I IT V ,PI f I - I I 'I 5 J I A JA 4 X . I S I I I III V h X-X. V' I I Y Tlx. I 1. 1 xy. 1 'L X I M ,.xI I Ibf'-.I l 1 , S, . I I f I I N , ' I I 'IP II, K, I N ' I ' J I - ,I , . I X I V' ' . . X J I I IV I I 'I .fn 1 , , I X. 5 I ' I X xi IAIJL Vx' J XI XXV, lvl AM Q Q4 q X I J w. ' IW' Q X Nw 'II' I 'T ' of-' - v II J - I T I A U . xx' K' U fx x y xl xi -I Vs , I I S I , .X IZIII ' I Q JN Who Says We Ain't Literary? L. B. JUNIOR COLLEGE- I have been reading this here Mag. for six years now and think it is the best Mag. on the mkt. I think the stories you print is just as good literature as this here highbrOw CPD stuff. No one who dOn't think Livery is highbrow dOn't know what they is talking a bout. Keep up the good wk. LT!l6I1LVIl!!P7'0Cf0l' Well, Well! W. A. A. TENT-If you print any more rot like Cot- tonbock Tuffet's Honey- moon in Hades I'll never waste another nickel on you waste another nickel on your must spray the pages With creosote so the filthy, mag- got-like words won't rot the paper.-Ilfartlzzz Hzldsorz 3X Equals Double AW. S. TENT - Lets have more stories by Cot- tonbock Tuffet! His Hon- eymoon in Hades was sim- ply divine. I read it three times so as not to miss any double meanings.-Zl1'art!m Hztdsorz Philthy Ink BELLFLOWER, CAULI- FLOWER-I am writing you. I am writing you to give my literary opinion of The Babe from Babylon. I showed it to Uncle jose- phus. Uncle Josephus said it was filthy. I gave it to Aunt Tessie. Aunt Tessie IN THE NEXT ISSUE O Now that you merztion it, there u'on't be any next issue. . Gangword Puzzle A PA l I H .. ll HORIZONTAL l Gangsters' weapon 2 What gunmen try to beat 4 To leave 8 An exclamation 9 Ejaculation of disbelief 10 13 T An easy job or racket VVhat you wish you could hear drop when you are blowing a safe 14 Form of direct address used when speaking to a stool pigeon VERTICAL l Wliexi you gotta, ya gotta! 3 Initials to beware of 4 You have one of these under each eye after a hard night 5 The Wiiidy City Cabbixj 6 What some jobs are as easy as 7 First three letters of Of- ficer lVIahOney's last name ll General term for Where you are sent after convic- tion The answer to this puzzle will never be published Cthat we know ofj. said Ughl . I let my Cousin Hugo read it. Cousin Hugo liked it. So I read it. It was good. The author is learning to write. The story is written in black ink. I hope the au- thor will write another in black ink.-Phil Carpenter O.K., Seeing It's You STUDY TENT-Last week I forgot to buy a copy of Livery and missed the fifth installment of Four Broth- ers From Hell . I should appreciate it very much if you would print it again-in your next issue. You could put it on some of those pages where you only have adsg so it would not inter- fere with other stories. -Betty Scott Is Our Phiz Red? DES IVIOINES, IOWA--Out here we feed our garbage to the hogs. In New York you print it in Livery. -ferry Desmond Better Run, Pal STEPHENS FIELD - Tell the guy that Wrote BraWn Minus Brains Equals Youw that I am going to punch him in the lug when I see him.-Johnny Johnston Oh, Yeah! LONG BEACH, CALIF.- It's easy to see that Livery and Physical Culture are published by the same com- pany. Both bring color to Oneis Cheeks.-John Fulton 2l2 2l3 A Few Notes on Censorship By Dr. Zeus I wonder at what Peanuts Brintle is pointing. The latest device for reading Viking copy is the Critibeeste. If anything distasteful to the athletes is read, the right light will flash. Who could the tail bulb be? X Formerly Laughlin-4th orol Pirro i I -Snowme- All Productions from rho Major num Producing Companies I ADMISSION PRICES ALWAYS :so I An Independent Locally Owned Theatre E. V. TRACY, Owner 'J x T SECCN X-A one O flaw 1 R N31 WVU gh M all YFTTTW 43214 Sublimation for All by Lou Huston President of Antiguated Bi-valves Assn. Qlhading rimf: As much as you fwanl, fwe don't mrruj During recent years the tendency has been to drop away from the old tenets: Obey that impulse, UI-leed that urgef' and Bring the kiddies. Instead people have substituted the more sensible middle- path rule, Sublimate Them Drives! What effect this Will have upon civiliza- tion cannot be determined at this early date, but suffice it to say that there will be a lot less children and more lap dogs in the next generation. Freudians have argued that inhibitions result in mentalebreakdown and have ad- vocated that human beings give free reign to their desires. This Works out all right for those Who like to run about panting with passion and cut people up, but it's mighty hard on those Who like to ride in busses Without being oggled in a lewd manner by the Freud disciple across the aisle. Sublimation Works like this. Say you have an uncontrollable desire to cut human flesh. Obviously you cannot grab up a knife and cut up the postman Without bringing some measure of social disap- proval upon yourself. The thing to do is sit down quietly-or have somebody chain you down-and think of some Way you could satisfy your urge that meets With so- cial approval. You could become a barber. Or a surgeon. If you haven't an education enough to carry on a conversation With the person you're hacking, these fields are au- tomatically closed to you, so perhaps you'd better be a butcher. Very fevv butchers talk to a round steak-not union butchers, any- Way. If it's just a minor urge, you might Hnd satisfaction in just carving dogs and cats out of ivory soap bars. One very important and often neglected method of sublimation of fundamental urges Qsuch as ess-ee-exj is dancing. Njust hovv dancing has any sexual signihcance is not clear, states Miss Stonebarger, girls' physical education instructor. The Whole thing, she believes, is just a superstition which originated out of the early Nean- derthal custom of having dancing at Wed- dings. Early man believed that if guests 2I4 j2I5j danced hard enough and long enough, the union would be blessed with children. They believed you could get anything by dancing, and that praying was wicked. All the prayer-halls were closed on Sunday, and young people were forced to go to re- ligious meetings and dance. Appeal to the crop-god was made through dancing. There is record of one occasion where people danced three days and nights in order that it might be a good year for raising corn. They raised corn all right, PLENTY QUESTIONS 1-Where for whatl is Schimmelpen- 7 tion movement is not going over with the men. Ed Nofziger, for example, declares that if the girls are so darned anxious to dance by themselves they can just buy their own corsages. UGreek dancing is going over by leaps and boundsf' declared Winifred Gould, dodging Eugenia Rodgers, who just clear- ed the top of a eucalyptus tree and landed lightly on her toes. A dandelion on which she lit bent slightly under her weightg then the dainty, lithe figure was off again, but not where they wanted it. A crude drawing C reproduced here J found in a cave shows a man dancing with a bevy of Vestal virgins.. Diciphered inscriptions as well as the picture show- ed that the man was called Coach Griflin a n d h i s partner M a rt h a Hudson. The other girls, clad in cellophane slacks, were known as W.A. A. Qwithout any ap- parelj. Verse under the drawing, prob- ably a chant of re- ligious significance to the savages, read as follows: nink. 2-What is the Choctaw verb for to fracture the tibia by tipping over a platy- pus which one's aunt has left out of its cage by mistake? 3-What have I in my hand? 4-Who was Hectagon and who the h- cares? 5-What chemical united with ngeni- thorgium forms hydrothylene? 6-Who do you think you are, Barney Oldfield? 7-What famous general, when his forces were being defeated at what hill in what state, said to which second lieuten- ant-aw, the heck with the thing. 8-One lump or two, Mrs. Blumen- thal? 9-How does one contract a goitre and where would you keep it if you had it? 10-What has six wheels and flies? Cfffnrwers to these questions would be funny, too.j leaping gracefully over the fence of the ball park. The sublimation craze has reached Hollywood. P r o - ducers are casting Garbo and Gable in a tender love story wherein Greta paints radium dials on watches as a sublim- ation of her passion, and Gable makes snow-shoes as his part of the amour. One very striking story of how sublim- ation mended a bro- ken personality and saved a man from jail and perhaps the mad-house has come to the attention of Love, we find, is just a bore. We don't discuss it any more. Now we know the truth of it We all say what's the truth of it? It's glandular Not second-handular. To this paper we'll subscribe once more: The Christian Science Mon-i-tor. Muriel Slonaker is head of a movement to get junior College students to sublimate their drives in dancing - ballet dances, Greek dances, and other terpsichorian feats where there is no cutting in. Danc- ing is too co-educational,'l said Miss Slon- aker. It should be carried on by girls alone in some woodland gladefl Certain men have stated that they would gladly donate a nice tar pit for Miss Slon- akerls dancers. The 'fdance for sublima- the writer. A man whom we shall call Fred Rathbun had a fetish for collecting articles of women's apparel. Annals of ab- normal psychology are filled with cases of men who have a compulsion to collect gloves, shoes, and handkerchiefs belonging to an attractive member of the opposite sex. Rathbun's fetish ran to jewelry. In the midst of social functions he would sud- denly take a necklace or wrist watch from a striking blond. The trouble was, none of them ever struck him hard enough. Finally he aroused the interest of a psy- choanalist, after Fred had lifted his wifels rings. He advised Fred to try to sublimate his compulsion. First he transferred it to clipping locks of hair, then he became a barber and now enjoys the 1'inest clientele Park Avenue can offer. He trims the fur of poodle dogs in the summer time. Mad Monks and Bad Monkeys VER since some fellow with a lot of cameras and not much else to do set twenty-four kodaks in a row, took a lot of stills of a horse running, and flipped the prints rlippity-flip in somebody's face, we have had a lot of people who are convinced that the moving picture is here to stay. Novelty is the secret of the success of moving pictures, say producers. That is why we have one hundred gangster pictures one right after another, sixty war pictures in succession, five hun- dred horror Hlms end to end, and two hundred ape pictures in a row from The Gorilla down to the Hlm reviewed this week. l star means punk Z stars, awful 3 stars, lousy 4 stars, stinks to high heaven WW'5PING PONG CAST Ping Pong ..,............................... Carroll Brooks Ann Dervish .....,.. ...,...... M axine Afflerbaugh Ann Dervish .....,.. ...........,...... G race Barnes Ann Dervish ........ . ....,....... Muriel Barnes Fred Dexter ........, ......,........ A nn Dervish Ann Dervish .............,..................... .Fred Dexter Winifred Sanders ...........,............ Wynn Sanders Fred Dexter ...............,................ Bob Sutherland Directed by King Kong Produced by Mistake Producers of Ping Pong Hgured this way: if a nor- mal sized ape is scary, one ten times as big would be ten times as scary. So they made Ping Pong, the fifty- foot gorilla. What they should have calculated was this: if the public is sick of average gorillas, they would be ten times sicker of fifty-foot ones. Burton Parminter at a Fair buys a package of crackerjack and Hnds as the prize Ping Pong, the bulbous-nosed gorilla, played by Carroll Brooks. Pong, angry because Parminter and Maxiiie won't give him any pop-corn, chases them all over town. Pong wrecks the school buildings, which calamity the Chamber of Commerce blames on an earthquake. The climax comes in the scene where Ping Pong tears down the Campanile tower. JFMWALL AMERICAN Oaf Weedersen. ......................... Paxton Klaus Yogi Yohansen .......................... Swede Hallan Sal Hepatica ................. ........ E ugenia Rodgers Bull Svenski .............................. Walter Miller Snow Manovitch .................... Miles Perovich S' P I ck Edd' K is o a .......................... Bones Spa goni .................... , Y1d Cohen ............ ....... le nox Johnny Johnston .......Bob Johnson 217 Not having seen this picture, I canlt give a very accurate summary of the plot, but must rely on other films with a simi- lar theme. HOaf Weedersen, star throw- back on the JC. paddle-tennis team, suf- fers a fractured mustache in a practice game just before the final tilt with Hang- nail U. Because of his refusal to play in any more games, his classmates brand him as yellow. They do not know that Oaf, played by Paxton Klaus, has prom- ised his sweetheart, Eugenia Rodgers, to wear her locket around his neck always, and that he fears that bodily encounter will break it. On the day of the big game IC. is being beaten. Hang-nail U. is al- ready three sets ahead. Then at the cru- cial moment-yes, you guessed it. Claus doesnlt show up and Eugenia has to go to the dance with Swede I-Iallen. There is one good scene: the one where Johnny Johnston Hnds he has been play- ing tennis all morning with a corpse, which he embalms to hide his chagrin. fb MMWRASPUTIN CAST Rasputin .... ................................... A rt Rene The Tsar... ....... ... .................. Bob Foster The Czar... ...... .......... M aurice Atkinson Empress ...... ........................ M ax Gatov Fly .............................................................. Joe Fly Ant ............................................................ Joe Ant At the beginning of the picture the whole cast decides that Rasputin is a bad egg. This is proven by a couple of shots showing the Mad Monk blowing food all over everybody and belching at ban- quets. The remainder of the Hlm shows the entire ensemble trying to kill Ras- putin with shovels, crow-bars and pick- axes. To offer relief from seven reels of brutality, a microscopic study of a fly and an ant dismembering each other is shown. WWSHE DENIM WRONG CAST Frankie .... ......................,......... G eraldine Thayer Johnny ........ .,................. H oward Patrick Bar-keeper.. .................. Charles Kummer 1000 Palicemen .... .......................... H arry Hayes Warden ............................................ Frank Davis Howard Patrick Goes to Horace Gree- 23 ly to find the address of a dressmaker. Greely says, l'Mae West, young man, Mae Westfl So Patrick goes to the seam- stress, Mae Frankie West Cplayed by jerry Thayerj to have a shirt made out of denim. The complications which ensue when the shirt doesnlt fit are brought out in She Denim Wrong . SoRoRuTlE Tess fi-1 5,-3 ' ' rv .L . I: . Y 'Q ' xg v QQ ft N 0 , r . '.'-.' ii i ...4,,::- N 'I' i f . .,,, ...,,, So class, we've found out everything about circles-now we come to a very hard one--the polygon-can anyone describe it? P, f 5 .:.5.:.g.3.3.g. 0 . .94 '2f1112111'2 is Ah-lvliss Sororitie Tess has her hand raised-what is a polygon? l 6 'el fl RBI , YW, , - f ' l,, 9 . 1- r . : - J w, 11 9-QQ .' J I sz-:,1-wigs. I ' In lm: ,ffl- , .0 'ga if.- . .. EE::5::g:,5E,E:,,,l,' U Q Z I -..M .... 2 ,ik ggi:-L -- A LL . ... i - - eezl A polygon is a dead parrot! It you want to get the latest creations visit the SORORITE SHOP. We tea- ture new collegiate styles tor all occa- sions. You'll find our prices suitable to collegiate budgets and a large selection to choose from. Specializing in sizes I2 to 20. SHOP INC. LTD. H :X I I Any Old Bones 0 clay . By Robert Benchwarmer CReading time: one SCIENTISTS Who have been messing around now for several months on the Gobi desert in Asia have dug up a lot of rubbish Which they claim is the bones of a pre-his- toric animal larger than any heretofore unearth- ed. It Was so large, the archeologists state, that if you stepped on its tail at noon it Wouldn't bark until l2:33. One scientist of the expedi- tion asserted that it Wouldnlt bark even then, for the simple reason that the animal didn't bark at all. It just said Guff!'! in a matter-of- fact manner, and then only when something was stuck in its throat. This started a big argu- ment and all the men on the expedition stayed up all night trying to argue the insurgent back into line. The re- sult Was that the men were tired and cross the next day, and cried when things didnlt go just right. Professor Lloyd Hodge sent a telegram to the Long Beach Junior Col- lege Museum, which Hnanced the expedi- tion, asking for advice. The reply Was: FIRE HARRY IF I-IE BECOMES UNRULY STOP WITH LOVE CHARLEY. The boys all kidded Harry Hayes about being so unpopular With the heads of the museum, Which made Harry angry. When they all formed a line and lock-stepped behind him, shouting '4Guff! Guff! he became very peeved and sobbed that he was going home. They found him down in the tar pit the next morning, taking certain bones out of the skeleton of a gigantic animal they were constructing. In reply to their protests, half of Amos 'rz' Andy! Harry shouted, These are my bones and Ilm going to keep them! Sure they are. Theylre out of his head! laughed silly Atkinson. So is hell' shouted Nof Nofziger. The laughter that greeted this sally could have been heard in Bu- d a p e s t. Resolutely, Harry started tugging at a large bone in the animalls foreleg. Hey! Ilve a bone to pick With you I snorted Murray, a member of the party. I dug that bone out myself. He commenced tugging on the other end of the bone. This started a free-for-all which ended with each member of the party pacing belligerently back and forth in front of a pile of bones upon which he had succeeded in establishing a claim. After months of Work they at last put the thing together, and a very funny looking creature it Was, too. They all laughed until they cried the day they christened it by breaking a bottle of embalming fluid on it. Good idea of yours, Dr. Klopp, Te- schke commended, putting all those rudi- mentary legs along its side-even if We did have to kill all the camels to get bones enough to do it. Not relishing the idea of taking the ani- mal all apart again to be shipped back to the states, the scientists decided to install gas pumps and transform the animal into a trick service station for tourists. All they need is the tourists. 12:81 fam Livery W il! Pa F INES UF TO S500 T 0 Winners n F OOLS' NAMES AND FACES CO TE T Deface Property and Laugh at the Judge Again Livery offers you an opportunity to make money by indulging in a childish, unpro- ductive, and anti-social act. Remember what fun you've had ever since you Were a child Writ- ing funny inscriptions on public and private buildings? And drawing comic illustrations? Well, Livery is going to pay you to do it. Think of it! By continuing your hobby of inscribing Filthy words and defacing signs, you can escape punishment for such oHenses-that is, if your entry is good enough. --b, - A ' I ,. . f .1'r-' s .-' g .:2'3 .:-2 .,.,-- , g r . .gvz -,hi A Q., ,..: 2 V2 A . y y :IE 21.4 Q ' at r atvv . ai. t r saaa . , i i i - A53-' .,j: f,--' 5. . .. A, -- -Q .' - ' 'Q' X ,. A 4,.. j . M'-at Q F .Q -iis r if n W s: . V . i li I ' - ' so t r '-.. . ll 'S a ' - A i ' : T ., . V 1 .-i' . - .- ' f 'S :.c,Ja.s-. ' 'fsl9'..f'e s,. --:W- i , 491 1554, 'ia 1... ' w p ,. . YS See how simple it is? now get busy. Outht yourself and family with chalk, pencils, and chisels and make the entire city your easel. Read the rules and go to it. HERE'S WHAT YOU'LL GET FOR ENTERING CONTEST Vandalism .................. 6 months Damaging Property ...... l yr. Resisting Oliicer ............... l yr. Total Awards ............ S yrs. FOOLS' NAMES AND FACES CONTESFT RULES 1. Add moustaches, widen mouths, black out teeth, add warts, and enlarge noses on people in advertisements. 2. Write indecent words or draw caricatures of people on walls. 3. Take stick and trace ugly words in wet cement. 4. Photograph or cut handiwork out of sign, building or street and send to editors of Livery. 5. All entries were due yesterday. Here are some examples: Nertz! AW, go on home! Joe is a queer! Oh yeah? X XX X Wa T0 TI-IE j EJEETLEH S sv panacea ALAK ' S . Azamsa f X S il? ?' sz Nix ag KROPOUTAQAL N 5 , 4. llablirt, rally King Grorgz Gorgir-P0rgie ,' zlxrrrndant aj tlu' Hut Volga boalmau Clleading Iimc: I5 seconds fwill be aboui all you can sia1zd.j NE of Manhattan's swankiest dinner parties was crashed the other night by a sleepy-looking man in bright red pajamas. He stalked in while most of the guests were dancing or lounging about. A tooth brush Was in one hand and a tube of a popular brand of toothpaste was in the other. For a time he wandered about unnoticed, guests concluding that he was probably the host or a fellow who had voted for Hoover paying off an election Wager' lljAbout midnight a butler found him in one of the upstairs rooms engaged in cleaning the teeth of a polar bear rug with his tooth brush. As the butler politely but Hrmly shooed him l downstairs, the paja- maed gentleman stated, He's got two molars that need attention. ljj This fellow, who had his own idea about evening clothes, wandered about aimlessly among the guests for a while. Then he espied a corpulent jewish gentleman snoozing on a sofa. Walking over to him, the pajama-clad intruder took his tube of toothpaste and squeezed its contents on the sleeper's round abdomen, spelling f'Happy Birthdayl' with the white ribbon of paste. lljHe allowed a slight smile of self-ap- proval to brighten his drowsy face for a moment, and then ran out of the room. In a short time he returned with a large knife which he raised over the toothpaste-em- bossed stomach of the reclining Hebrew. 'lj 'fWhatls the big idea?'l asked one of the men who restrained him. ill You know jolly well I was just cutting myself a slice of Kike, he explained, stifl- ing a yawn. RUSSELL JOHNSTON Cousin of the Princess HILE strolling through the ball park late one night I was startled to hear my name called. Upon turning around I discovered a small, mis- shapen old man who insisted that I hear his story. In his youth, he said, he made a voyage to one of the Polynesian islands. One day he saw a small wild boar rooting near a native hut, and in a spirit of fun shot the beast. An old hag rushed from the hut, shrieking that since he had killed a sacred boar he would bring one into the world. Years later he married a lovely English girl, and in the course of time they were expecting an addition to the family. A feeling of dread obsessed him for months before the natal day. The na- tive woman's curse rang in his ears. When he saw what lay on the bed beside his wife on the fatal day, he ran from the house and never returned. His life has been a constant flight from the haunting horror that pursues him. ill His wife had given birth to triplets! QHNOW, is that not a strange story? 0 0 ' EMINISCENT of the asafeclita bags worn around the necks of our grand- mothers is the dainty bottle of hy-- drochloric acid suspended by a tiny gold chain sported by soignee French beetles ffemmesj. No Parisian party is consid- ered a success unless one of the feminine guests gulps down the contents of her vial and falls inert to the floor. ID you ever have a chance to ex- amine algae real closely? I did re- cently when I fell into a fish pond when on a bat. That squishy green slime floating on top is spirogyra. It tastes awful. Someone should invent a better way to study algae. jzzoj 2 'k'k'kir'k'k'k'kir'k'k HOBBS ' vllege BOOK STORE f sends gree'rinqs and TeIiciIaIions Io The Junior CoIIeqe sIudenIs and Thanks Hriem for Their pafronage during The year I932 and I933. New and Used J.C. TexI' Books ENGINEERING and ART SUPPLIES 4339 EAST TENTH STREET THE I933 SAGA STAFF WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THAT AUSTIN STUDIOS WERE THE OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR THE I932 SAGA 5+I1 FIoor-HearIweII Building Long Beach, CaIiIornia Campus Mix-ups . . . Airplane view of TenT Ci'I'y . . . Engineers gaTher beTore The STuolenT Lounge .... CenTer: Feminine social lighTs chaT under an umbrella . . . A ToasT Trom BeTTy Cashon and Cora Mclnnis . . . From Arrowhead snows To YosemiTe wiTh The Saga camera . . . . Below: ArT Rene and John Black, prize beard-culTivaTors, exhibir The growTh ThaT won Them The TradiTional conTesT . . . Woolen-clad colleg- ians line up beTore a Tree . . . Coy Kassai members . . . 222 223 1 Afterword . . . . moonlight p01H'lHg its radiance over black velvety hills and onto the water . . . fr needles etelzed in black . . a slice of gray in the distance .... I 33 SAG-A ADVERTISERS 4 Carmel Mission on Hs s+one bed . . . The graceful sun-lil' arches of San Fernando . . . Sanla Barbara's inspiring lower viewed from a new angle . . . Cenler: San Miguel slreiches before l'he camera .... San Luis Obispo Mission .... The lypical Spanish mission slyle ol San Buena Venlura . . . Sanla Barbara courl wilh ils robed guardian . . . Crumb- ling arches ol San Juan Capisirano . . . Sanla Ynez Mission wilh ils ivy- colored enlrance . . . Sanla Barbara's while lronl. 224 , 1933 SA f2251 GA ADVERTISERS AUTOGRAPHS i fs ere ! A?:+'-:-:-:-:44x-aa.-.- -: W---M-W! 'i ., V ..... . 11111155513313L1.I1I.l1fff2'1'Z'.'1.25255 ig. -rf: -Iz rfr-. : : 'iffQi5252322222222225Zifff2i222:ffffQiQ:2:fifiQ 152315 .i,E..,.,i,:.,.,.,.,,,,,,,.+,,,A,,4.:.,.:iEE 2525522252 QE EQEQEQEQEQ ':j1.3iziz5gsgsgagg:f., 125 gags .W i - Ef21 2Ef22i:Eii2?1ifa 'i . E 5325 iii? 1' I ' iii? -232225252523 its -.3 3:51 Rf-, .-.g:-. .ffj '..:'P-.- J .5.-,Q:g:5:f:1:5:g N 'iK':'fi1 L-2. ..5aaE3E.g254: -1:'E:1fi5E5I5?fEfififffififigififfifziiIfiiigiiififi ' A 1 f '11'f2i23fEif2?fifi-fifiiiiifi - ,ze-, 53:-:-' T3 New zjj' odvzk EASTMAN'S latest: a folding camera as easy to use as a Brownie. Press a button- pop -it opens. Press another - click -it snaps the picture. Makes fme, clear snapshots the easiest possible way. The Jiffy Kodak Six-16 fzvz x 414 pic- turesj is 37.50. jitfy Kodak Six-20 f21A x 31A picturesl, 36.75. See these new cameras. WINSTEAD BROS., INC. Kociaks-Foun+ain Pens Qualiiy Kodak Finishing 244 Pine Ave. Long Beach We Pui Jrhe Snap in Snapsi1o+s 33 SAGA ADVERTISE HeH'er-skel'rer Shois a+ Viking A+hle+ics . . Above: Coaches whose worlc for a vicrorious Soph leam wenl for naughl . . . Cenlerz Girls' racing she.l . . . Co-caplain Baloe Fraser wilh +he broken leg, sulilereol in The Complon game, which lcepl him on crulches for seven monlhs . . Below: The Fighiing Frosh coaching slalil . . . Viking rackel-wielders awail lheir march . . . Kelly Moan, slellar Norse griolder, shows his versalilily by jumping over six feel .... IZZ61 227 I933 SAGA ADV Belmont Sea FoocI Grotto GREETINGS TO THE FACULTY A ND STUDENTS OF TH E LONG BEACH JUNIOR COLLEGE Qt:- - VISIT TH CE IN LONG BEACH: WHERE YOU CAN ALWAYS FI ND SEA FOOD DISHES, STEAKS. CHOPS, OR CHICKEN TO SATISFY YOUR TASTE. OUR SL E MOST UNIOUE EATING PLA OGAN IS I Look For The Fish Sign IN BELMONT SHORE 5,I I8 East Second Street Long Beach, California ERTISERS l933 SAGA ADVERTISERS Roscoe Dickey commi'I's assaulf and loaH'ery . . . Rudolph Ziesenhenne reclines on a Big Tree . . . Gaugler and Morris exhibil' summer lens . . . The snow scenes end here . . . Cenler: Lloyd l-loolge shows us how To pan for gold .... Below: Miss Higgins' zoology class ga+hers on The beach . . . The Hodge cavalcaole . . . Earl Dible sneaks up on a poor fish . . . l-lolberl and Jones exhibir enough inleresl for an A . . . . 228 Izzfai I933 SAGA ADVERTISERS 0 THE BELMONT THEATER O 4908 EasT Second BEST WISHES TOTHECLASS To The Class oT I933 OF 1933 We Wish The BesT oT Success O O BILL and I-IARRY WOODWORTH FAINS Peoples Ice and Cold STorage Co. In or T d Oldesl and Be:T Corp ae lnqorporafed I9OS 'z' ManuTacTurers oT PURITAN DISTILLED WATER SUPERIOR ICE CREAM X h PURE ICE, MADE IN LONG BEACH l2l WGST N- F- GUSTWIG 3027 EAST ANAHEIM STREET Third MQW THREE KINDS OF FAITH FAITH IN YOURSELF FAITH IN THE FUTURE I FAITH IN LONG BEACH The depression hurT us all. The earThqualce hurT us locally louT ThaT doesn'T mean ThaT we are licked. As The PoeT says: You are Thrown To The earTh. Well, well, whaT's ThaT? Come up wiTh a smiling Tace. lT's noThing againsT you To Tall down TIaT BUT To lie There, ThaT's disgrace. CaliTornia College oT Commerce, in iTs new quarTers, 6Th and Pine, will carry on beTTer Than ever. To every graduaTe oT Long Beach Junior College who will send us name and address, we shall be glad To mail an aTTracTive circular ThaT will help you meeT presenT condiTions. CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF COMMERCE 6Th and Pine Long Beach, California Phone 624-38 I933 SAGA ADVERTISERS Around The Campus . . . Toolhpasle smiles by Coaches Berl' Smilh and Mel Griffin . . . Thai mid-winler regislralion horror . Jean Millner and Marjorie Wise gel logelher . . . Cenlerz Russell Johnslon srill can smile, buf Oak Smilh-his muslache, also-seems loo busy . . . Below: Moolernislic glimpses of l-larolol DeYonge and Wayne Esles . . . An in- lirnale shol of Miss Higgins and Dr. Roe all clacl in 'rheir loesl hiking coslumes-nice, aren'Jr They? 230 2 I933 SAGA ADVERTISERS 6 I Oil G g n w Tires Washing f -A'A I CLAYCOMBS lvlasler Service lO'rh al Termino Fx 'NEI' I, , I . ,llllll'lilllll m Ml, Ill:- 1: .L I I... .. n Q A . fx. I-,I-P-:I - .. 'L ' B 1 , asf nl d l f , 9 ,. -1' ?l -4- Q, QIQ Q RALPH SPENCER A General Re airln Phone ESSJ6-l3g B ll ' P I ll Q SANDVVICI-IES FOUNTAIN DRINKS PLENTY BOOTI-IS FREE DANCING ' ' Complimenls of The PALACE THEATRE BAY SHORE INN 3OP'NEfWE' Calerlng lo Luncheon 84 Dinner Parlies . 5390 E. Zncl S+. Phone 805-Sl R.J. Jerabelc, Mgr Long Beach Secretarial College Business IS asking lor College people bul clemancllng lhal They be BUSINESS TRAINED AMERICAN at FOURTH Phone 617 53 Oxer 25 Years ID Long Beach I 0 ASK TO SEE OUR LIST OF RECENT PLACEIVIENTS 0 I933 SAGA ADVERTISERS 4 4 i ! 3 1 1 4 l l 4 3 Snaps from 'rhe College Year . . . Looks like opening nighl' on Broadway . . . Cenlerz Gas masks seen on Qld Clolhes Dayg They should have been saved for regislralion . . . The Viking arrracls a reader . . . Free-lon all . . . lvlorris, Moquin, Kimball, Drown, and l-lodge look handsome: Dr. Perry keeps a record . . . Below: Pax Klaus scowls . . Squires' alrocious Ford wirh BoHle+op Harry smirking on a fender. H321 233 I933 SAGA ADVERTISERS Besf Wishes I'o The SIucIenI' Body of The Long Beach Junior College R I T Z T H E A T E R 7Ih 81 Redondo R. F. Begg, Mgr. LEARN TO DANCE aAeBY's srunlo or BALI.RooM DANCING 552 Wesf Ocean Blvd. Privafe Insfrucfion I6 for 55.001 by appoinimenf af your convenience CI Lessons CIO for S45 every M d y 84 Thursday nighf, B:I5 E'RE PREPARED TO SERVE YOU WITH GENU- INE SAVINGS, DEPENDABLE MERCHANDISE, AND THE IRONCLAD GUARANTEE THAT HAS WON FOR US SO MANY LOYAL FRIENDS. id era learn' in ha ffedwllessons. ce pup: s s ou mprove har dance wifh The Iafesf in S Fox Tro+-WalIz-Tango-One- Y Sfep-Rumba-C II g' Ie gyda! Balboa H p Y 'TT f d I d 'Wd ,F-O A I29 Eas+ Broadway PHONE 650 338 THE Newhouse Cafe 3l6 EasI' 4+h S+reeI' INVITES YOU TO MAKE FRIDAY NIGHT YOUR NIGHT HERE Open a+ All Times DAY AND NIGHT F. J. SCHINNERER 8: CO. Kodalcs .:. Foun'rain Pens .:. Sfafionery Greefing Cards Phone 668-I62 9 Pine Ave. Beslr Wishes To +he Class of I933 NEW STRAND THEATER The BesI' For Jus+ a Li'rHe Less af The New SI'rancI 235 Wesf Pike D. W. Ross, Mgr. THE BOOK IS FINISHED Saga Personnel STAFF OF THE I933 SAGA OFFicial Yearbook of lhe Long Beach Junior College EDITORIAL STAFF ADMINISTRATION Miriam Cone and Don Squires- Edilors Margarer Merrick. Jim Dewey, John Fulron-Assisranrs TI-IE CLASSES Alice Lor+scher--Edilor Frances Chisholm, Howard Palrick -Assis'ranl's STUDENT INTERESTS Maurice Arkinson-Ediror Bealrice Rolhwell, Maxine Rose, Winifred Sanders--Assisranls BUSINESS STAFF KEN.NETH ELLIOTT Manager BURTON PARMINTER Aclverfising Manager MARGARET PEACOCK, Secly. Henry Ziesenhenne. David Hooker, Harry Hayes-Assislranls DON SQUIRES Edifor-in-Chief PEG DeARMOND, Assislanl CAMPUS GROUPS Frances Nelson-Edi'ror Eunice Bradley, Helen Markham, Ray Mahalfie, Muriel Barnes, Frank George-Assislanls SPORTS CALENDAR Bob Murray and Marguerile Mul- Iins-Edilors Frank Davis, Bill Cook, Pauline Des Oranges-Assisranrs THE PATIO Don Tobin-Ediror Glennell Seymour-Assislanl Lou Huslon, Tom Cullen, Maurice Arkinson, Conlriburors Io Livery BOB MURRAY the Ediiorir pal, who was ready io help at any and all Iimzfsf STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER John Black Bill Zanriny, Assislanl COPY READERS Berry Nelz, Irene Thompson RESEARCH EDITOR Hope Squires SNAP-SHOT EDITOR George Gaugler. Edilor ADVISER Mabel Coy Trail ART STAFF BETTY KEN NEDY EcIi'I'or John Johnslon, Maxine Aicfler- baugh, Susanne Lamb - Assisl- anls Paul Teschke-Fealure Arl Mildred Wood-Mounfing Jack Quayle, Don Tobin-Exploi'ra- lion 234 I THE BOOK IS FINISHED 235 EdiTor's CommenTs NoTice: You may noT be inTeresTed in This page: and again you may. This is The one place in This brain-child of mine where The TirsT person will be used. I have waiTed Tor The pasT six monThs To siT down and pound ouT This copy and now when The Time is aT hand, perhaps This IiTTIe message will noT be as pungenT as aT Times I ThoughT iT would be. I prob- ably should have wriTTen This some six weeks ago when I was siTTing up every nighT Till Two a.m., yea, verily, Till 5:30 as iT was one nighTq I mighT have composed iT when The group picTures were coming in so haphazardlyq when people refused To have Their picTures Taken: when The earThquake broughT all work To an absoluTe sTandsTiII Tor pracTicaIIy a monTh: when we were haggling over price-cuTTing conTracTs7 when sTudenTs criTicized The idea oT Saga and said iT was a wasTe oT money: when I wenT Tor days wiTh- ouT sTudying and I goT back seven sTraighT F's in French TesTs: when The dummy reTused To come ouT righT: when, as even aT This momenT, The TaTe of our lasT hope Tor someThing diTFerenT by presenTing The Viking Award winners hangs in The balance: when all my dreams and hopes oT exTras ThaT I have been mulling over since June I932 had To go by The boards because oT a lack of cash: eT ceTera-Tar on inTo The nighT. BuT whaT's The use? No one wiTh The possible excepTion oT Bob Murray, Peg DeArmond, and Tom Cullen really knows iusT whaT iT means To have To go Through wiTh This iob. IT's The biggesT Thing l've ever aT- TempTed and iT I'm a menTaI, moral, and physical wreck aTTer July I. you may have an idea why. I should pay my respecTs To The many who have helped so greaTIy in The year's work. Alice I.orTscher. Frances Nelson. MargueriTe Mullins, Maurice ATkinson, and Don Tobin deserve much crediT Tor Their splen- did work. BuT Peg and Bob will have in parTicular my undying graTiTude Tor Their assisTance. Peg did all The Thankless secreTariaI work Tor weeks and made so many IisTs oT diTTerenT Things ThaT as a whole we had re- markable good Iuck and didn'T lose a single sTory or lisTing oT value. I have pracTicaIIy lived wiTh Murray Tor The pasT Tew weeks and have sIepT and had meals There wiThouT end. I appreciaTe These kindnesses deeply. As The work on The book To a close, I Think back To The behind-when Saga as you see 'who now was noThing buT an inspiraTion, Then a Thing oT heiroglyphics on dummy paper-a cuT here, copy There, pages, and secTions mapped ouT. LaTer There were The hecTic days of picTure Taking, oT assign- menTs, oT galley proof, engravers prooT, of page prooT. ATTer The quake oT March IO The Trek wiTh TaiThTuI Murray in my much publicized, IYogi-PiTFIe- Joe Ribberl buT sTilI running model T, Cecelia, To The prinTers aT 4 p.m. every single day unTiI The Tinish, June IO. Here our Trazzled nerves clashed wiTh The noise and busTIe of presses and IinoTypes. ATTer This sTop we had To clamber up eighTy-seven sTeps en- cumbered by Timbers, morTar muck, Tile, rope and hose in The ruined Press-Telegram building To The en- gravers. Came The TirsT secTion oT sixTeen pages and a big Thrill To see The Thing acTuaIIy in prinT-and only I4 more IeTTI As The weeks passed by, Saga rolled in, and my grades dropped down. Now The book is pracTicaIIy finished. By way oT warning, may I say ThaT any individual who conTempIaTes This iob nexT year should noT plan To Take more Than I5 uniTs The TirsT semesTer and IO uniTs The second. To Take more would be eiTher To Tlunk in everyfhing or else To puT ouT a good book. l've Tried To do The IaTTer. Perhaps my Tond insTruc- Tors will see TiT To do The Tormer-buT I hope noT. I would like To graduaTe. WheTher l've beneTiTed more from The responsi- biIiTies and Training oT Saga Than Trom my so-called scholasTic sTudies remains To be seen. SUB-DIVISION PAGES g IT is The conTenTion oT The sTaTT ThaT Too oTTen yearbooks follow ouT The cusTomary plan oT carToon- ing The sub-division pages To an unnecessary degree. When a col- lege is Tor'runaTe enough To have in iTs sTudenT body a pho- Tographer oT The calibre of Bill Zan- Tiny, who, armed wiTh his TrusTy Graflex, can and will shooT anyThing Trom a Tly To an eIephanT - ThaT schooI's yearbook should wasTe no money on meaningless caricaTures. So-Mr. ZanTiny has given us here a heTerogeneous mixTure of his prinTs in The hope ThaT They, Though They admiTTedIy have buT IiTTIe con- necTion wiTh any subdivision, are sTilI Things oT beauTy and inTeresT. We Think They are. I D. E. S. Ihr Edzior in all phasfs of Ihr? fbUOI'lI. ' THE BOOK IS FINISHED Saga's Acknowledgements Every yearbook sfaff asks favors of ifs friends nof on y on fhe college campus buf in fhe business world as well. This year your Edifor has found fhaf nof only firms in fhe cify of Long Beach buf also several in Los Angeles were of greaf service, as well as many individuals oufside fhis immediafe vicinify. To fhe following people and fhe companies which fhey represenf go deep fhanks and fhis expression of appreciafion for fheir kindnesses which greafly added fo fhe value and inferesf of fhis I933 Saga: To Messrs. FRANK Tl-IORNDIKE and ART BUNTROCK of Green's, Inc., Long Beach, who were responsible for fhe acfual publishing and prinfing of The book and who incidenfally faughf Edifor Squires a greaf deal abouf many fhings. To Mr. E. L. JUDSON of fhe Sfandard Engraving Company, Long Beach, who found his way clear fo furn ouf a firsf class sef of engravings af a price fhaf came wifhin Saga's low budgef. To Mr. FLOURNEY P. CARTER of fhe Coasf En- velope and Leafher Pro- ducfs Company, Los An- geles, who made repeafed frips fo fhe Saga office in order fo give fhis year's sfaff a cover fhaf would be decorafive and inexpensive af 'rhe same fime. To fhe KEYSTONE Pl-IOTO COMPANY, Los Angeles, who furnish fhe prinfs of fhe Missions used on fhe division pages. To fhe POWELL PRESS SERVICE who lenf fhe air view of fhe campus faken from fhe Goodyear blimp, Volunfeer. To Mr. I-I. S. MELVIN of fhe Long Beach Press-Tele- gram who was kind enough fo furnish glossies of fhe Board of Educafion and f h e Superinfendenf of Schools. To JULIAN. I-IIATT of Long Beach who spenf hours looking over and shoofing fhe inferesfing Phofographic I m p r e s- sions secfion. To fhe CALIFORNIA SPORTING GOODS COMPANY of Long Beach who showed fheir willingness fo cooperafe affer fhe earfhquake by lending fhe sfaff a fenf which was used as an of- fice in TenI' Cify for several weeks. ' To fhe CHAMBER OF COMMERCE of Dulufh, Minnesofa, who expressed fheir inferesl' by sending fhe picfures of fhaf cify appearing in 'rhe forensic secfion. To Mr. PI-IIL WEID- MAN, Carefaker of fhe Sanfa Barbara Counfy Courfhouse, who made ar- rangemenfs for a visifing arf sfaff fo wander all over fheir beaufiful building. To NOLA BROOKS of Long Beach and PAUL GRENBEAUX of I-IoIly- wood who 'rook fhe orig- inal phofos of Mr. Mc Groarfy. The interest shown by fohn Steven McGroa1'ty, Poet Laureate of California, and noted authority on the missions is most heartily appreciated by the staff of the 1933 Saga. His hind- liness in writing an expository foreword as well as furnishing cuts and copy which were used to weave in the Mission theme will long be remembered.-The Editor. T236T l237l THE BO Aaronson, Phil ............ Abrahams, Harold ........ A Capella Choir ......... 129, I3O Adler, Gerald .........,......... .............. 5 4 Afflerbaugh, Maxine ,....... ....... 5 4. 73 Alcorn, Lois ................... ........... 5 4 Aldahl, Phyllis .......,.... ....................... I 70 Alford, John ............,.........,,.................... l56 Allen, I-larry A ...........,..... 38, 54, l3O, I82 Alpha Gamma Sigma .............................. 98 Anderson, Roberl L ..,...,.,.....,..,..........,.... 54 Andree, Leo F ............... ,...,,. 5 4 Andrews, Elizabelh ,.,.,.. Archery, Women's ....... Arnold, Bob .,................. Ashbrook, Roberl' ...,....,.... Assembly Commillee ,...,.,..... . .......69 I 73 ........I59 ........27 Associaled Men Sludenis .................. 42, 43 Associafed Women Sludenls ...,........ 40. 4I Alkinson, Maurice ..,.......,,.................. 72. 90 Avey, Eve rell' Wise ............... Baker, Warren E .,,,..,,,. Baker, William T .......... Baldwin, Dorolhy ......... Ballard, Eslher ...,........ Band, J. C ......,...... Barnes, Grace ........ Barnes. Muriel ............. Barnes, William B .,...,,. Baseball Squad ......,.., Baseball, Women's ..,.,., Baskelball Squad .....,... Baskelball, Women's ,...... Baum, Herman .,..,,.,..,.., Bayley, Annelle ....,.,. Beam, Margarel ........... Beerkle. Jean Terry ..,...... Bellman, Frances .,........... Berg, Lyman G ...,,.... Birch, Frank ........,....,..... Black, John D ..,................ Blackford, Madeleine ......... Bovyer, Rulh ...............A..... Board of Publicalions ......... Bradley, Eunice ................. Brandi, Anna Elvera ..,.... Braswell, L. Clovis ....... Board of Educalion ..,.. ........54 .......54 ........54 .......54 I45, 84 50 50 55 I54 76 I42 I76 I46 .......55 7I I40 ........69, .55. l65 79 73 .......45 ........55 ........55 .......55 ........23 Bonds, Bill .,....................... .A....... I 50 Bormose, Rulh ................,.,. ........ 4 0 Brock, Mildred Lucille ...,.... .,...,...,. 5 5 Brooks, Caroll C ..........,.... ......... I 57 Brown, Beverly ..,.,.,.......... .,......,.... I 57 Brown, Howard Drury ......... ......... 5 5, I3O Brown, Mariorie ....,.......... ............... 5 5 Bulzlum, Lillian ............... ........... 6 9 Bunge, Enid Grace .........,...,........,...,....... 55 Brinfle, S. L., Dean .................................. 26 Bruns, J, Elmer .,.............. 56, I43, I44, I46 Brush and Pencil Club .....................,.... II7 Brush, Rachel Margarel ........ ........... 5 6 Cabinel, Fall, Spring .......... ....... 3 8, 39 Caduceus .................. . ...... I2 Callahan, Lillian ................ ......... 5 6, IO4 Callaway, Roberl' E ........ Campbell, James .......... Canfield, Oclavia ....... Carmona, Praxedis ....... Carpenler, Phil .,........... Chaliiey. Lawrence ....... Cheng, Slanley Y .......... .........I33 .......48 .......56, 75 ....,..56 O K IS FINISHED -Index- Cole, Wilma .......... College Dances ....,.. College Assemblies ..... ........56 ......I96 ......I97 College Y .................. ....... ...... I 0 5 Commercial Club .....,...,,............ ,..... I I3 Commillee of Ceremonies .......,.. ........ 4 4 Concerl, Chrislmas ................... ........ 8 2 Cone, Miriam ......,,...... .....,, ........ 7 2 Conlisk, AI .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,.......... I 56 Cook, William ....,,...,......... ................... 6 8 Cooper, John V .,,,..,..,..,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,..., 56, 122 Crawford, Donald John ..........,.,..... 56. lI2 Crawford, Howell ............... ........ I 45, I46 Crowrher, Mae E .,.....,. ............. 5 6, I72 Cullen, Edward ......... ...,...A. 6 9, 9l, 92 Cullen, Tom ................. ............ 7 6, 99 Dailey, Melba Lillian... Debale Squad ......... Decker, Opal ,,,,..,,,,..,,, Deparlmenl Chairmen... ........ 28, 29 DesGranges, Pauline ......... ................. I 7I Desmond, Gerald .................................... I I I Dewey, James .... 38, 57, 74, IZO, l35, l83 Dias, John ..............................,...,....,,....... I57 Dible, Earl ......,........... 38, 57, IO5, II9, l86 Dickinson, Gerlrude .................................. 57 Dixon, Emmell ........................................,. 57 Drama Workshop Plays .................. 80, IIB Dudley, Richard .................. Dulu'I'h Convenlion .......... Dunbar, Jessie E .......... Dunbar, Roberi E ........ I 5I Duncan, Glee ........ .......... 2 8, II3 Earle, Sadie ........ ......,............... 5 7 Edda Slaicl .............. ............................. 7 6 EIIio'l'I', Bill .................. ......... 3 6, 38, 57, 97 EIIio'll', Kenneih ........ ................... 4 9, 73 Ellioll, We bsler .... Ellsworlh, G .............. Ellisle, Carl ...................... Em ploymenl Bureau ........ Engineers ............................ I53 if I 3I ........44 I IO English, Vivian Carolyn ......... ........ 5 7 Erskine, Dorolhy .................. ........ 5 7 Esselman, Eileen .............. ........ 5 8 Evans, Harry .......... ........................ I 5I Faculiy ...................... ,........ 3 0, 3l. 32. 33 Fieg, Walier .................... ,..............,.... I I6 Finance Commiliee ........ ........ 4 5 Fisher, Ed ..................... ........ 9 0 Fleming, Beryl ........... ........ 5 8 Flood, Eva ....,............ ........ 5 B Flora, Sylvia ................. ...... I 7I Foolball, Freshman ........ Foolball, Resumes .......... Foolball, Sophomore ......... I 66 I 34 ......I67 Foolball, Spring .............. ...... I 63 Foolball Squad ............ ....... I 34 Forensic Club ..................... .......... I I9 Eosler, Roberl F .................... ............... 5 8 Fowler, Clara Elizabeih .......................... 58 Frazer, Havelock ............................ I29. l30 French Club ............................................ II5 Freshman Assembly Commillee ,........... 52 Frey, Lillian ................................................ 58 Fullon, John H ............. 39, 58, 74. 75, I20 Garcia, Joe .............................................. I49 Garner, Dwighl .................. ...,......... I I9 Garrison, Alice Marie ....... ........ 4 O. 58 Gafov, Max .....,............., ............ 5 B Gaugler, George G ........... 39, 42, 58, German Club ...........,............................. German Club Orcheslra ....................... Gescheider, Carl ................................... Gibson, Florence ................ 38, 39, 74, Golf, Men's Squad ............................... Golf, Women's Squad ......................... Goldberg, Alberl ................................... Goodwin, Elmer F .................................. Gould, Winiired M. 58, 98, I22, l58, Graham, Joe ......................................... Griffin, Lois ...............,.. 39. 4l, 50. 88, Griffin, Melvin ...................... I43, I44, Hales, Margarel' ........ ,............. .. Hall, Bob .................. ...... Hallen, George .......... ...... Hammurabi ............ ...... Hamren, Rulh .........,..,. .... ...... Harrison, Don B ................... ...... Haverlield, Mary B ................................ Havins, Frances Marlelle .......,............. Hayes, Harry W ............,.......... 59, 75, Heck, Don ............................... I44, I47, Hendrix, Louise Marcia ....................... Hiall, Elinor ........................................... Higgins, Lana ..................... ...... Hines, Noble .......... ...... Hiichcock, Edirh ............... ...... Hoagland, Gilson ................ ...... Holden, Slanford W ............................ Hockey, Women's Squad ..................... Hodge, Lloyd .................... 38, 39, IIO, Holl, Tom ................. .................. 5 9, Hollon, Dewey ............ ........................ Hudson, Marlha .......... ......... 5 9, l7O, Huslon, Lou ............. ................ 7 4 Ingle, Ed ....................A. ...... Inglis, Rulh ...................... ...... Inrra-Mural Council ....... .......... Inlra-Mural Managers ....... .............. lnlerclass Foolball .......... ......... I 66. Inlernalional Club ................................. Isenberger. Franklyn .............i............... Jackson, C. W., Dedicalion ............ 27 Jackson, Raymond E ............................ Jacobsen, Ann ....................................... Jewell, Earl .........,................................... Johnslon, Bob .......... 49, 5I, I3O, I55, Johnslon, John ................... ........ I I6. Jones, Verleen ............ Jones, Winfield ..... : .... Jordan, Bob ................ Wifi: Juckell, William B ........ ...... Kassal .............. ........ ------ Kaulfers, Waller .......... ------ Kavanaugh, Edilh ............... ............. Keeler, Rulh Evelyn ............................... Keidel, Margarel Jeanne .......... 40, 60 Kelley, Ed ....................................--..-.-.-.- Kelly, Eugene ..................... ...........-- Kennedy, Belly ............ .--.------ Kennedy, Kalharyn .......................... 79. Kennelly, Bob .................................. I55. Kennelly, James Kennelh ................ 60. Kilker, Berl' .....,....................................... King, Elizabelh L .................................. Knox, Ed ..,................... ........ 4 3. l32. Kohlke, Belly Jane ............. ................. Kohlsledl, Geneve V .,...... ...... Kolda, Ronald ............... ...... THE BO Kuhn, Madeline ........... Layer, Dorolhy E ........... ........6O Leach, Rurh A .......,,,,......,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.. 60 Lellermen, Lellerwomen ...... IOO, IOI, I27 Lind. William ,.............,,..............,........... I52 Livery ....,..,..,,..,........,...... 20I, 22l, 222, 224 Llewellyn. Clarinne ...,.,..,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,, 29, I7I Loan Fund Commillee ...,.....,....,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 45 Lord. Jack .....,.......,....,...........,. 42, los, I40 Lorimer, Nadine ,,....,,.. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 6 0 Lorlscher, Alice ..,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,.,,,. 7 2 Los Conquisladores ........ Lounsbury, Principal ....... I4 ..,,.,..24, 25 Loveioy. Karl .,,...,,..,,,,, ,,,,.,,A,4,, 6 O Luce, Lois Elaine ,,,,,,.,,,,, ,,,,,,,.,-,- 6 I McGovern, Anna May ...........,.....,........,. 6I Mackay, Calherine ...............,.,,..,..,, 6I, IO4 McLane, Adrian ....,................. 61, l33, I4I McPherson, Mary ,..,.,...... Macmillan, Marian ........ Magee, Ed ........,......... Magid, Sam ............,. ,. Markham, Eleanor .......... Marlin, Dorolhy Nell ....... Malhena, Harry ..........,.,. Mafhews, Helen ..,.,,.... Messner, Marvin ....,.,. Meyer. Dorolhy ......,...,........... 61, I 70, I75 Miller, Arrimes ......,.,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,, 6I Miller, Franklin Alberi' ,,,,4,,,4 ,,,,,,,,, 6 2 Miller, Leland S .,,,,,,,,,,A,,,, ,,,,,,,,, 6 2 Millner, Jean .,,,,,,,,,,,4,,,,, ,,,A,,,,, 5 I Minor Sporrs ....... Missions I 58 San Diego .......,A........... ......... 2 O San Luis Rey ........,.......,., ..,.A,,,. 4 6 San Juan Capislrano ,......,, ,,,,,,,,, 7 O San Gabriel ..,.,,,,...,,,.,,,, ,..,.,,,, 9 4 San Fernando ..........,.,. ,,.,,.,,..,A,, I 24 Sanla Ba rba ra ,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,...,,,,4,,.,A,,,, I 80 Mission Map ...,,.,....., ..,,,e,......... E nd Sheer Moan, Emmell' ..,.,.e......................,...,....,, I33 Mooney, Bill .......... ........, 4 2, 62, I32, II3 Moore, Gloria ..... ....,,.....,....A.,,.,,,,,,,,, 6 2 Morgan, Belly ...,.......,.... ,.,..,, I 78 Morris, Everell .................., ,,,,,,, I O7 Mosher, Karhleen G .,...,. ,,,,,,,,, 6 2 Moss. Jack ............,.,,,..,,, ,,,,,,, I 32 Mounl, Edward F ....... Mounce, Maudyea .......... Mullins, Marguerile ........ Murray, Roberl D .,...., 43-,F-48-. Music Club ..........,.........., Musselrer, Eloise ..........,, Nelson. Frances .......... Nolziger, Ed .................,... Nevins, Dean Wesley ..... Newman Club ..............,. Nokes. Elseleone ........ Nordman, Eric ......... O'Brien, Parricia ,..,,..,.... Office Secrelaries ..,....... Oline, Roberr H ....,.,., Orcheslra, J. C .,.,.... ..62, 72. I74 62, 72, I9I .......,,62, 75 .........5O, 62 I 23 I 5I 77 .,.....,34 ........63 ......,.85 Orriss, G. Wade ,,,,,..,,,,, ,,,,,, , H63 Paine, Maflie M., Dean ,,,.,,.,...,,.,,..,, 26, 4I Parminler, Burlon ..s..... 43, 63, 73, 84, I52 Parsons, Beverly C .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 40, 63 OK IS FINISHED -Index- Pairick, Howard .... 48, 50, 63, 9I, 92, I05, IO2. I92 Pederson, Jack ,.............,...........,............. I50 73 Peacock, Margarel' ,..,...., Pease, Lucille .............. Pepperman, Edna ....,... Perovich, Miles ,.....,. Perry, R. C ...,..,,,,.,, Pelerson, Waller ,.,...,., Phi Rho Pl ...........,,,.. Plane, Marian .......... Pryor, Allan C .,....... Purdy, Kennelh ........ Ouackenbush, Bill ........... Ouarlelles, Sexlelle ..,... Quayle, Jack .........,..., Quick, Marion ........ Rabe, Lucio ..,...,.....,.., Rally Commillee ..,..... Rarhbun, Fred ....,.,. .........63, I 59 I 29, .,.....I45 I 32 .....,.86. I97 I 52 Rau, Jessie L ...,,,...,..... ..,.,,,,, 2 9 Ravenscroll. Berlha .....,. .....,... 6 4 Reel, Vincenl .............. ..,...................... I 5I Rehbach, Louise ...............,,.......,..,....,....... 4I Rene. Arlhur ............ 37, 38, 39, 64 Riding, Women's .....Y,. ......................... I 78 Rlordan, Jack L ........,, ........,,..,. 6 4, Roberlson, Helen .,...... Rogers, James, ,.....,. Rogers, Warren ....... Rope, Bob ...,...,,....... Rose, Maxine .....,....... .......,.......... Rolhwell, Bealrice ...,..... Rowing, Women's .,.,,,... Rowley, E. Bruce ....... I23 I 49, ...,.....64, I I4, II2 I50 I43 .....64 I 79 Royce, Evelyn ................. ......... 6 4 Ryder, Alice Marlha ..,...,., ........,...,... 6 4 Saga Slafl ,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,.... ,..,.., 7 2, 73, 234 Sanford, Clarchen .....v..,,,A. Schaffer, William C .......... Schaible, Mary ....,,.A....... .................. I 40 Schmidf, Frank .....,............. ......... I 45, I47 Schumacher, Dorolhea ........ ................. 6 5 Scoll, Berry C .......,........... ......... 4 O. 65 Scorl, Vada Ferne ...,...,. Scrivner, Dorolhy ....... Sell, Gladys .........,.. Severns, Joe ........... . .... Seymour, Glennell .... ,.,,, Shaw, Alva ...,....,..... Shaw, Amelia ........... Sheldon, Vera ...,.,..,. Sherman, Sally .,...,., Shinn, Bob ............ Shirer, Wayne ,...,,... Shollner, Dan .......,.. Sims, Marian .......... Simpson, W. P ....,.. Skalds Sociely ...,.,.. .88 I 2I I IO .......65, .......I57 Smi'I'h, Berl' ............ ....... 2 9, I65 Smilh, Kennelh ,................................. 43, 5I Smilh, Marian ...,...................................... IO6 Smilh, Oak .....,................................ I29, I4-9 Snapshols .... I98, I99, 200, 226, 228, 230, 232 Sophomore Assembly Comm ....,............ 52 I I7 Spangler, Floy ,.............,.,......... .....,. Spanish Club .....,.,...... I4 Spellings, Drennen .......,.......................,.... 74 Sporls L ................,,..,..,...,...,,.,,.......... I26 Spring Foolball ..,,,.,.,....,,...,...,,,,.,..,,,,,,,. Squires, Don ...... 38, 66, 72, I35, I85, 235 Squires, Hope ......................,......,.,.,...,.... 73 Slage Crew .....,,...,,, ,.,,,,,, I O8 Slager, Cora ...,.,.,..,.,., ,,,,,,,, Srarlup, Jusline ......... .......,.....,, Sreers, Emma .....,,,,,,,, ,.......,,,,,,,,,,,, 6 6 Slevens, Pearl ......,,.,,.A,.,, ,,,,,,,, 6 6, 79, lI5 Slephenson, George ,,,,,,,,,,, ,, ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 69 Slevenson, Harrierl M ........ ................, 6 6 Slockham, Charles ..........,, ...........,...,,., Slonebarger, Rulh ........ ,,.,.,...,.. ......,,,, Slover, William .......,.. ,,.,... 3 9, 66, Sirickland, Opal ..,..,,,. ...,......,....,,,,,,,,,,,,, 6 6 I04 Sludenr Club ..,,.,,..,,.,...,,,,,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Successful CaIami+y , A .............,., 78, SWIFT, Mary .,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,.,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,, Taylor, Glenn ..,..,....,., ,,,,,,,, Tennis. Men's ................ , ....... - . Tennis. Women s ........,,,,.. .....,-, Thomas, Charles W ,,,,,,.., ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 6 6 Thompson, Earle W ........,,,,.,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,66 Thompson, Irene ........................ 66, 75, Thompson, Ma ry Grelchen ..,.,.,....,....,.., Thompson, Miriam ..................................., 67 Thompson, Virginia .............,... .....,,,., Thomson, Ann ........,....... ..... Thors and Valkyries .......... Tingler, Carherine ,.....,, Tobin, Don ..,.,.,...,.....,, .......,,, 7 3 Tong ...................,..,,.,. ,,,,.,,,,,,, Track Squad ,.......... A,,.,., ,,,,,,,, Tucker, Charlolle V ,,,,,,,,, ,.,,,,,,,, 6 7 Tunison, Fay ..,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,, 2 9 Type and Copy ................... ......., Upiohn, Superinlendenl ,,,,,,.,. ,.,,,,,,,, Vaughl, Maurine ................. ..,.... Veraegen, Rene J .............,...... ,......... Viking Award, Hislory of ....,.................,. Viking Slall ....,...,..,....,....A,,.....,........., 74, Violelle, Romaine .,.........,.......,......,....... Vorheis, Don ......................................,,,... Walker, Delberl ............ I46, I47, I59, Wallon, Jack ..........,..,..,,,.....,................. Wallers, Burdena ,,.,. s ..,,.,...,.,.,.....,..,.,...... 67 Warwick, Gordon ....u...........,....,........ 67, 79 Warwick, Neal .........,,..,.................... 67, Wafer Polo, Men's Squad .................... Wall, W. Chauncey ............... ...,....., Wennberg, Evelyn .,,..... .,.... Wenlzel, Velma ............ .............. Weslergard, Tex ............... Wheldon, Lauranl L ......... Who's Who Seclion ........ Wick, Edirh ..............,......... ..........39 flea Wicksrrom, Herberl L ...,.,., ,...... 6 8 Wildman, Laurella .......... Wilson, John ................ ............... Winslead, Wilma ...,............,..........s 68, Wise, Mariorie ..................................,....... 79 Women's Alhlelic Associalion .............. I68 Wood, Louise .................................. ,...,.. 6 8 Workman, Fred ......... ........ I 59 Wright Alice ............. ....... 6 8 Wrighl, Mary ................ ....... 6 O Ziesenhenne, Henry .......... .......... 4 2 238 I Q , , 1 ' ' f if L xv , VJ! , If I QI' X Viybufif'-1 it V aff f .' ' ,f C u ,-XV , -fi-f 2 I ON' X QUJQ 7. ,,, . Q 'XY POLL f J, ,,5,v'-'K ' S Mar X ff f If LJ J ,N Vpfu ,114 , x'.'k. X K V, ' , s !V LJLJN ' N J yffrv, 'x A I UC L fvwfy ' ,fyvwl 1 T 4 . ' A fx I ff lpjgj W5 .1 6' ' V, 1 Y J 1 f X A yjlfn 1 . da! M I 1' Jfdff f , y Af., I ' 1 ,SH , y f -A N XVY VJ fwyflyjlf X VSAM Lggmiijcblr X V U70 1 f , r G ' K- 'xn,U'uJ - 'X 'X ' .K ' K xy Z 5 X , 'Y 1-xyx f ML WW X Vw Wm' HW 'rf' :fu ' M x'LiL ' ' My M K5 J' PL-vi.. K ' ,f 5 7L 7 ' 'fy-gy, - ' f - fj! 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