Long Beach City College - Saga Yearbook (Long Beach, CA)
- Class of 1934
Page 1 of 150
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 150 of the 1934 volume:
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_ . : j u: - - • ,1 ;, c- (9 oO D O 4 - - dU- -j - r ' ' : ■¥ SAGA 19 3 4 CopyrKflit by Don roBiN Jack Y. Quayle Co-Kditors and Bob Rope yidnaijer 4 AGA Published by the Associated Student Body of the Long Beach Junior College LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA FOREWORD At the bc.iriiining of the yc;ir the total amount of the Saga budget was one-third less than that possessed by the two prev- ious year-books. Since pictures are the lifeblood of any annual, it was decided to cut down on page size rather than on il- lustrations, to meet the budget. The customary section make-up of a year-book was discarded in favor of di- viding the school year into months and listing events as they occured. Feeling that the life of a school lies in sidelights rather than in scheduled events, we have made use of characteristic anecdotes to more clearly outline personalities and happenings than would isolated data. We have stri ' en toward the end that the ideal year-book will recall memories of a cam- pus career some five or ten years after graduation. — T ie Editors TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter One .... September Chapter Two .... October Chapter Three . . . November Chapter Four . . . December Chapter Five .... January Chapter Six .... February Chapter Seven .... March Chapter Eiijht April Chapter Nine May Chapter Ten June September (I) r ACK to school . . . old friends . . . programs . . . registration x- lines . . . white books . . . advisers . . . sophomore manners ZLy . . . summer complexions ... a smoke in the park . . . pungent eucalyptus . . . new classes . . . tents . . . Happing canvas . . . new boards . . . a cabinet with ideals . . . Viking reporters . . . football prospects . . . Tong men . . . student body tickets . . . hash joints . . . milkshakes . . hamburgers . . . ccAes . . . Engineers . . . book store mobs . . . white-sweatered Kassai . . . Lounsbury . . . assignments . . . the li- brary . . . Miss Paine . . . Hammurabi . . . letter men . . . sad-faced frosh . . . classroom hunts . . . mumblypeg . . . tall tales and talk . . . busses . . . femininity . . . bulletins . . . night school candles . . . enroll- ment figures . . . ask Brintle. By the end of registration, twelve hundred and twenty-hve stu- dents had enrolled. According to S. Lance Brintle, stocky, jovial, natty dean of records, registration ran ofif with exceptional smooth- ness. We noticed a few exceptions. Early Monday morning, the eternal masculine, halfback Jack Moss appeared upon the registration scene displaying under one tan arm a pair of shiny football shoes. It wasn ' t long, however, before we noticed him heave a sigh and leave the grounds. Freshwomen weren ' t to enroll until the following day. Then, too, it would have been a lot smoother if so many tactless butters had awaited their turn in line. For instance, tall, deterrnined Viola Nielsen elbowing her way through the group awaiting C. W. Jackson ' s signature on their trial study lists. Fail Cabinet From precedent to precedent ' rM M Top row: T. Westergard, President; G. Desmond, Vice-President; E. Rodgers. Secre- tary; K. Elliott, Treasurer. Bottom row: K. Smith, Rep. of Arts; B. Rope, Rep. of Athletics; K. Dod, Rep. of Student Body; D. Tobin. Editor of Viking. Wednesday, September 13 — eight o ' clock, eyes sought chisses through a jumble of tents — language teachers found their groups composed of physics and chemistry students — general pandemonium. After time and cooperation — a welded working unit. Assembling for the first time, the fall semester Associated Student Body cabinet met at the home of Miss Mattie M. Faine, dean of activities. Guiding the activities of the college were: dark, hard- working Tex Westergard, president; affable, silver-voiced Eugenia Rodgers, secretary; naive, sincere Gerald Desmond, vice-president; golfing, pedantic Kenneth Dod, representative of the student body; business-like Kenneth Elliott, treasurer; the convivial, politic foot- ball guard, Kenneth Smith, representative of arts; and slouching, unassuming Don Tobin, editor of the V iking. Thev showed interest in plans for the new Junior College, to be located on Carson Street east of Cerritos Avenue. Principal John L. Lounsbury has worked with Superintendent H. S. Upjohn in plan- ning the project. A dream of many years ' standing will be realized for Lounsburv when Long Beach ' s junior college occupies its new site. The faculty believes with him that a more unified plant will re- sult from a break away from the high schools. From her office in the Administration building. Miss Mattie M. Faine directs the extra-curricular activities of the student body. She has charge of the social calendar, clubs, dances, the Employment Bureau, and the Student Loan Fund. 10 Adi)uiiisti(iti()n ' This pilot IS gnidnis mc PRINCIPAL JOHN L. LOUNSBURY S. Lance Brintle has done outstanding work in the field of student guidance. By the use of his carefully prepared objective tests, Brintle can direct students into fields most likelv for their success. As an aid to registration, he has changed the numbers of the courses to corre- spond to those used at the University of California. J. Kenneth Wade serves as financial adviser to the student body cabinet. His efficient surveillance has helped the Associated Student Body out of manv financial difficulties. As principal of the Junior College Summer School. Charles W. Jackson supervises classes during vacation months. Students find his advice dependable. Mattie M, Paine, Dean of Activities; S. Lance Brintle, Dean of Records; Charles W. Jackson, Principal of Summer School; J. Kenneth Wade, Financial Adviser. Fall Jss(jriiifi(j Mc Jjr.S. Cabinet B. Sutherland, President; D. Dean, Vice-President; O. Smith, Secretary; E. Lord, Treasurer. On September 21, the Associated Men Students sponsored a men ' s assembly to acquaint students with the athletic program of the col- lege. Coaches outlined their work, and the managers of the various sports urged all men to go out for at least one team. Sitting on the platform were the fall . M. S. officers: natatory Casanova Bob Suds Sutherland, president; beaming, swaggering Dan Dean, vice- president; flippant, active Oak Smith, secretary; and football man- ager Everett Lord, treasurer. Incoming women were welcomed at an assembly by officers of the Associated Women Students. Those taking part were: exotic and energetic Geraldine Thayer, president; prim, studious Maxine Hand, vice-president; slender, smiling Mary Jane Tharpe, record- ing secretary; tall and gentle Louise Rehbock, corresponding secre- tarv; and attentive Juliet Sylvia Flora, treasurer. Lois Griliin, A. W. S. dance chairman, organized the first matinee dance which was held in the Recreation Park clubhouse. ' hich reminds us of the freshwoman ' s habitual faux pas. Jimmie Mann ' s orchestra was going blue on the then popular I Have to Pass Your House. She was new and receptive. He was debonair. G. Thayer, President; M. Hand, Vice-President; L. Rehbock, Secretary; S. Flora, Treasurer. Dcpdrtuiciit Cluiiniicii Mrs. Evelyn Wennberg, Art; Glee Duncan, Commerce; Anne Thomsen, Mathematics; Jessie Rau, Modern Languages. Clarinne Llewellyn, Girls ' Physical Education; Mrs. Elinor W. Hiatt, English; Bert Smith, Men ' s Physical Education; Charles W. Jackson, Social Sciences. Edith M. Hitchcock, Music; Noble Hines, Physical Sciences; Clifford L. Wright, Biological Sciences; Fay Tunison, Library. English (iiid Modern Lnngitagc J cfdytniciits Dr. Walter V. Kaulfers, Modern Languages; Florence M. Carpenter, English; Mabol Coy Trail, English; Marian E. Sims. English; Mrs. Elinor Hiatt, English; Mary E. Gassaway. Foreign Languages; Walter A. Fieg. Modern Languages; Jessie L. Rau, Modern Languages; Mrs. Mary Chalmers. English; Cora Stager, Modern Languages; Russell R. Johnston, English. even to the swing of the gold key hanging from his breast pocket. She, wilting to his perfect rhythm, stopped softly crooning the chorus and rapturously asked, Are you a new student, too.- ' The Ph. D. smiled, You ' ll have to pass my class. The student body cabinet appointed Bob Rope to the vacant po- sition of representative of athletics (Mi the nineteenth. At the same time, Selwyn Yancy and Webster Scrubby Elliot were made soph- omore representatives of the Committee of Ceremonies. George C. Moore, organizer of the first band in the history of the Junior College, called for candidates to make up a school band. The roster swelled when Principal Lounsbury announced that members of the band wcuild not have to participate in compulsory gym work. Complete paraphernalia for the musicians, including reversible black and white uniforms, instruments, and individual courses in music were provided. Holding Fullerton Junior College to a si. -to-si tie. Coach Oak Smith ' s men played their first game of the season at Fullerton on September 23. Jack Moss, halfback, scored late in the first quarter when he raced over the goal line after Long Beach had staged a spectacular fifty-yard march down the field under the generalship of Scrubby I Uiot. Shortlv after, Scrubby was removed from the game Albert Small, Economics; Mrs. Samuel E. Peters, Psychology; Harold F. Seal, Political Science; Dr. Charles A. Smith, Psychology; Violet Hess, Social Institutions; Charles W. Jackson. Citizenship; Albie Fletcher, History; Leonard C. Hubbard, Philosophy. with a Strained siioulder ligament. Howard Estabrook and Morgan Hayes also left the game with injuries. From the end of the first quarter until near the end of the fourth quarter, neither team was able to score. Finally Pryor of Fullerton tallied on a nine-yard end run. The Viking defense held tightly throughout the game. The A. M. S. held their first rally of the semester to secure sup- port for the Chafi ' ey game. Men aspiring to be yell leaders, assisting Jack Almighty Lord, head yell leader, tried out. On the stage were Coach Oak Smith and the football squad. Coach Smith explained the system of plays used by the Vikings, illustrating his talk by having his players execute the formations as he spoke of them. Over fifty students attracted by the popularity of Raymond More- man, a newcomer to the Junior College music department, started rehearsing with the men and women ' s glee clubs and the A Capella Choir. Despite outstanding playing bv Jack Moss, George Kayama, and Eld red Vestermark, Long Beach lost the second game of the football season to Chaffey, nineteen to nothing. During the first three quarters, the Vikings outplayed the Panthers, but the heavier ChalYey line wore down the Long Beach defense. Late in the second quarter, the Vikings, guided by Moss at quar- terback, drove seventy yards to the Chafifey two-yard line. The march started when Moss fired two passes for a total gain of fifty yards. Line IS F iysinil, Biological Sciences Dcpdrtniciits James E. Knox, Chemistry; Herbert T. White, Geology; Hosea Whiteneck. Physics; Clifford L. Wright, Physiology; William Gregory, Physical Sciences; Roger Mullinex, Chemistry; Dr. Mabel L. Roe, Botany; Myron Sheppard Allen, Physics. plunges by Yancy, Campbell, and Moss carried the ball the rest of the way down the field. Long Beach ' s only threat to score was spoiled when the gun sounded for the end of the half. Chaffey tallied in the first and fourth quarters, but the conversion tries were blocked. Saturday, September 30 . . . eight-thirty o ' clock. . . . Municipal Auditorium . . . Welcome . . . shaded lights . . . jimmie Mann ' s orchestra . . . sport clothes . . . cigarettes on the balcony . . . chatting groups . . . black and white decorations . . . Selwyn Yancy and Max- inc Afflerbaugh . . . student body cards . . . circling couples . . . lights on the water . . . moon . . . Kenny Purdy with Amelia Shaw . . . receiving line . . . intermissions . . . specialty numbers . . . the Fresh- man Reception ... a success. Yes, the Freshman Reception was a success, but how about the great bout between Maurice Atkinson, the fighting orator, and Adolph Rosenfield at the College Y .Men ' s stag? Few Junior College men will forget that night. ' i ' hc bewildered Atkinson, framed by his friends, found himself in an improvised ring facing the undefeated Rosenfield. Often had he swayed audiences with his arm waving, but here was just one man. Referee Dr. R. C. Perry gave the boys their instructions and the bell clanged for the first round. Atkinson rushed; Rosenfield jabbed; .Maury was no boxer; Adolph was hardly better. Atkinson says he knocked Rosenfield down, but there are those who claim that he simply slipped. Anyway, he was saved by the bell. Coiinncrcial and MnthcDuitics Departnic its Dr. Raymond C. Perry, Mathematics; Leslie J. Nason, Mathematics; Eleanor J. Ellis, Commerce; Glee Duncan, Commerce; Eugene Corrie, Commerce; Mrs. Margaret K. Petersen, Geography; J. Kenneth Wade, Law and Mathematics; Samuel E. Peters, Mathematics. Rosenfield had the edge in the second and was walloping well in the third. Atkinson ' s seconds, Earl Butcher, Joe Graham, and Bob Rope, seeing he was in a bad way, crept to Rosenfield ' s corner. Then, to the amazement of the spectators, they threw in Rosenfield ' s towel, thus conceding Atkinson a technical knockout. But Referee Perry, a stagy hand, saw through the ruse and ordered the slaughter to con- tinue. The fight ended a draw. At a meeting of the student body cabinet to discuss budgets, new members of the Committee of Ceremonies and the Employment Bureau were approved. Assisting Kenny Smith in arrangements for social events were Selwyn Yancy, Betty Scott, Maxine Aliflerbaugh, Jack Lord, and Walter Martin. To aid needy students of the college, Tom Royce, Marvin Messner, and Peg De Armond were appointed to the employment bureau. To advertise various school e ' cnts, a Committee of Public Rela- tions was formed under the leadership of Gerald Desmond. Repre- sentatives from different college departments were placed on the board. Members chosen were: Maurice Atkinson, public speaking; Paul Teschke, Viking; Oak Smith, A. M.S. and Miriam Cone, A.W. S. We dropped in on . Ir. Brin.t!c, the dean of records, one afternoon Physical Ediicdtioii Dt virtiiicnts fT Ruth Stonebarger, Girls Physical Education; Bert Smith, Men ' s Physical Education; Clarinne Llewellyn, Girls ' Physical Education; Oak Smith, Men ' s Physical Education; Jessie B. Anderson, Hygiene; Mel Griffin. Men ' s Physical Education. to sec if his entrance exams were rcvcaliiiLi,- any more brilliant dis- coveries. Of course his face lighted up when he heard what we wanted, and he started thumbing through a stack of papers that high, telling us the phobias, I.Q. ' s, and chances for ultimate success of the students concerned. He came upon one, stopped, puckered his brow, and tugged at his mustache. After turning the paper over and look- ing all through it, he tossed it across the desk. Do you see what that hid has done. We looked at the name first, it was Glenn Taylor ' s. Then we looked for his answers. There were none! In every blank space he had written the word Dam . In fact he had written it all over the paper. Wc asked Peanuts what he was going to do about it. Well, if he had spelled the word correctly, I would admit him to the University Preparatory course. But after that he ' s got to stay in the Terminal course with the rest of the football players. Members of the Brush and Pencil club met at the Lagoon club- house on the twenty-eighth. Gustave Ertle, art director, talked on color and design. New officers of the club elected at the meeting were: Robyn Hanson, president; Ruth Berry, vice-president; Kath- erine Carpenter, secretary; Laxine Afiflerbaugh, treasurer; and Frances Wilson, historian. Speaking of Frances Wilson reminds us of another Frances, who ' - ' 18 Music, Art. hihrnry Dcpnrtniciit Fay Tunison, Library; Edna Hay, Library; Lorena Hopkirib, Libiaiy, Shirley Poore, Art; Mrs. Evelyn Wennberg, Art; Helen Davenport, Music; Raymond Moreman, Music; Edith M. Hitchcock, Music. came as a visitation to the football team. Most of you recall the chain that was stretched across the Tenth Street end of Park Avenue, and the lads who worked out their student body fees guarding that chain. One day we wondered why there was such a steady stream of fellows in that direction while Morgan Hayes was on duty. Well, we investi- gated and found that Hayes had a helper — a diminutive, brown- haired lass who did things to the pulse, one Maridel Frances, soon to gain note as the only girl who dated the whole team. Butch Heminwicz, who entered school late, was the only tackle and pass man she failed to captivate. Over the coffee cups in the eat- ing joints, they tell this of Butch ' s first day in college. It seems that Mabel Coy Trail was lecturing her English 7A class. She had hardly started to speak, when Butch, in the rear of the room, raised his hand. Yes, said Miss Trail. Is this American Institutions? asked Butch. No, this is news writing, she answered and resumed her lecture. A few moments later, he again raised his hand. Well? said Miss Trail. It says in this booklet, Butch went on, that American Institu- tions is given in this tent at this hour. Can ' t help it, said Miss Trail. This is news writing. About ten minutes later. Butch again raised his hand. What now? asked Miss Trail patiently. Are you Mr. Seal? Office Force Girls ' Hockey Tct F. Leonard, C. Braakenburg, M. Bandon, E. Hay, G. White, G. Ossen, R. French, K. Begg. First row: M. Kennedy, A. Milburn, M. Dodge, V. Renius, W. J. Hutchison, E. Thomp- son, L. Ellsworth, L. Ludlow, P. des Granges, V. Jones. Second row: M. McClellan, J. Startup, E. Larkin, E. Cline, D. Lorenz, M. J. Tharpe, A. Glaze, V. Slater, K. McNevin, R. Bovyer. 20 21 October (II) M$ U M f i J ( ffl 1 te f 1 1 i sFT3g 1 s s 1 i § = 1 J M B (TTI . ' K ' yell leaders . . . club elections . . . student b(xl lees . . . -. Kayama knifint lines . . . Pollyanna Pross . . . Taylor VJ snagging passes . . . black and white jerseys . . . grandstand milk nickles . . . league football . . . Tong Grid hop . . . class elections . . . fuzzy sweaters . . . death of Joe Ribber . . . sprouting beards . . . Three Little Pigs . . . Kennedy ' s ideal Savoldi . . . Viking tight song . . . assembly attendance ... in the Varsitv . . . mv cabinet . . . Miss Tunison . . . collateral . . . English students. English students do have rather a hard time of it. There ' s that task of looking up books with the correct number of pages to write on collateral cards. One is so often at loss in extemporaneous class themes to attain the c]uality of one ' s ghost writer. But worse by far is boredom. There is nothing c]uite as stultifying as reading plots you already know. It especially affects Donoho Hall, philosophic mem- ber of the intelligentsia and two-miler. Miss Florence Carpenter ' s survey English class was discussing the classic dramatists of the Eighteenth Century. The play in cjues- tion was Sheridan ' s The Rivals. Miss Carpenter, thinking it de- lightful, searched for confirmation in the soul of Donoho. Mr. Hall, tell us your opinion of ' The Rivals ' . It was trite. Why, what do you mean? Well, it was stolen from a movie I saw not long ago. In a most successful class election, Dan Dean was selected sopho- more president. Art Smokey Tindall, freshwomen football coach, Fall SophoDiorc Officers FOOTBALL SQUAD was chosen freshman head. Other sophomore officers were: pipe- puffini Jack Y. Quayle, Jr., vice-president; easily amused Maxine Afflerbaugh, secretary; and satisfied Charles Stockham, treasurer. Lower class officers were: infectiously smiling Kenneth Miller, vice- president; attractive Dorothy Parmley, secretary; and bouncing Grace Dorothy Williams, treasurer. Gerald Desmond, A.S.B. vice- president, organized the elections. It was about this time of the year that the cabinet was getting worried about student fees. Thev appealed for help to the Viking, and that noble sheet appeared with this nifty: Fee Foregoers Face Coventry in J. C. Events. They didn ' t ask again. D. Dean, President; J. Y. Quayle, Vice-President: M, Afflerbaugh, Secretary; C. Stock- ham, Treasurer. 24  Cheer Leaders Fall F res nun II Officer. First row: E. Burnham, J. Lord. Second row: J. Millner, C. Hanson, W. Long. Selected by the cabinet to assist yell leader Jack Lord were wiry Eddie Burnham, and Jack Four-Per-Cent Pabst. After competing with other girls before the student body assembled for a pep rally, three blondes, Jean Millner, Winifred Long, and Charlotte Hanson, were chosen by the cabinet to serve as song leaders. Pollyanna Pross was a sweet young thing, and so was Kenny Purdy — or so she said. Purdy didn ' t like it. He thought it made of him a laughing stock. People smiled when he walked into a tent. After all, one doesn ' t say in print of an all-conference forward that all his ambitions and desires are very girlish, and he struts about in a very ladylike way. Mr. Purdy never met Miss Pross socially, but he still pines for that introduction. Perhaps it was harsh, but on A. Tindall, President; K. Miller. Vice-President; G. D. Williams, Secretary; D. Parmley, Treasurer. ' If ' iY shoiildst thou thiiikP First row: J. August, B. Morgans, R Rains, G. DumaiL-ki. F. D.a:,i;_, X l. ' . d. T. Peter, W. Peter, J. Hata, R. Dunkle, A Smart, C. Dunlap. Second row: M. Demmert. M. Hand, L. Griffin. A. Shaw, A. Glaze, R Bovyer, D. Bowyer, F Himel, L. Marl:lo, A. Brittain, K. Heisey, D. Windes. L. Cole. Third row; J. R. McEntee, L. Miller, L. Hoffman. M. Miles, M. Beck, D. Wallentine, M. Mosher, R Sarr.on, T. Frost. G. Ojers, C. Carlson, B. Henderson, M. Stevens, H. Woife, J. Lamberc, V Ossen, Fourth row: R. Howard, B. Gowen, J. Thompson, E. Woolcock, D Smith, P. Porter, A. Spears, W. Peterson. T. Royce, H. Hagen, C. Wise, E. Grundy, A. McCreery, L. West, A. Millc , N. Bailey, W. Booher, K. Tesh. the other hand, Kenny, who could have portrayed you better than your team mate, Mel Kennedy? Weakened by the loss through injuries of Jimmie Campbell, Howard Estabrook, and others, the Vikings were trounced by th.e Bakersfield grid outfit, 38-6. Throughout the game Long Beach was befuddled by fancy spinners and tricky reverses, and hampered by the lack of substitutes. Rallying late in the fourth quarter. Coach Oak Smith ' s men made a desperate attempt to score. Finally Bill Phoenix, Viking end, hung on to a long pass and carried the ball over for a touchdown. Alpha Gamma Sigma, Junior College honor society, elected Ken- neth Dod, president; Floyd Dewhirst, vice-president; Amelia Shaw, secretary; and Arline Glaze, treasurer and publicity agent. From the small beginning of only eleven members, the band grew in size until the roster contained twenty names. It had been uncertain whether enough spirit could be mustered to back the orgiiiization, but the cooperation of George C. Moore, leader, and many interested students made possible the success of the project. . Vo Band St( bi)iiig ■icit i p (icticcd iJichiiic wly ' V .1- ' First row: A. Miner, D. Armin, J. Hata. F. Scudder, E. Baty. R. Colburn. R. Linnell, A. Lowery, B. Nehes, M. Carr. Second row: P. Noble, M. Caton, G. Schuler, E. Weikel, C. Heier, B. Gowen, C. Welty, M. Kriebel, J. Klingaman, R. Kramer, Mr. Moore. Honoring members of the student bod}- cabinet, the A.W.S. gave an informal tea at the East Branch Y.M.C.A. A novel feature of the affair was the chance given students to meet cabinet ofificers, who were in the receiving line. Friday, the thirteenth . . . night . . . pajama rally . . . yells . . . songs . . . discordant noises . . . Engineers . . . Way Middough . . , loud speakers . . . crooner Acorn Smith . . . Sweet Sue . . . colifee and doughnuts . . . Bob Dumm ' s orchestra . . . Captain Jimmie Campbell and scout Scrubby Elliot . . . glowing cigarette tips . . . trench coats . . . cold feet . . . mufflers . . . red noses . . . Almighty Lord ' s new yell . . . Two-four-six-eight; who do we appreciate? Lord! Lord! Lord! Despite the spirit generated at the rally, Long Beach lost a hard- fought game the next afternoon to Glendale. The final score was 6-0. Jack Prima Donna Moss was the Viking star of the day. He was a consistent ground gainer, and late in the second quarter slammed through left tackle for a thirty-yard gain. When Scrubby Elliot had the bad luck to let a punt roll out of bounds on our one-yard line, Moss booted out of danger. The Buccaneers scored in the fourth quarter when George Smith took the ball over after a series of line plunges. Tyj c and Copy By fruitless hope inspired First :■' .. ■' Smith, B. Scott, J. Moss, B. Hoban. P. De Armond. j. Martyr. Second row: L. McArthur, E. Saylor, M. Atkinson, K. Miller, D. Tobin, P. Teschke. Third row: D. Walker, L. Proctor, J. Quayle, K. Elliott, F. Rusk, B. Wilson. Tong ' s annual fall football daiKc was held at the ' illa Riviera the night of the Glendale game. Bids were in the shape of footballs and each dance was named in football terminology. Type and Copy, journalistic club, held their first fall semester meeting and elected officers. Those chosen were: Don Tobin, presi- dent; Jack Y. Quayle, Jr., vice-president; chubby, freckled Paul Pudge Teschke, secretary; and demure Frances Nelson, treasurer. Melvin Kennedy ' s interview with Joe Savoldi, the wrestler, gained more than campus notoriety when Art Cohn, of the Press- Telegram, roasted him in his column. Starting his interview with, Before me stood my idol, a towering mass of muscle, the perfect example of cleanliness, of sportsmanship, and yet the possessor of that humility which we all admire so much in men, the astute Ken- nedy asked Jumping Joe such sporting questions as Should we recognize Russia? and What is the responsibility of the I ' nited States in international afifairs? Cohn caustically voiced his opinion of a journalistic confrere being taken in by a rassler . Kennedy ' s idealism was hurt to the quick, and he paid Cohn a back-handed compliment by saying that Cohn was not an ossified worm. Scorn- fully Art thanked him for the defense. . lel wrote no more inter- views. Chalking up two touchdowns with intercepted passes in the last three minutes of play, Los Angeles Junior College turned an other- 28 Rallv Cu))inuttee Leave the fire ashes First row: K. Miller. B Rope, D. Williams, B. Sutherland, E. Burnham. Second row: D. Dean, O. Smith, T. Westergard, A. Tindall, J. Lord, W. Booher. wise close battle into a nuit when they beat the Vikings 22-0. The Cubs ' first score came in the opening quarter. Long Beach played a fumbling, wild passing game that was powerless against the well- drilled Cubs. Xight school students elected Kenneth Smith president; sturdy, serious Bill Quackenbush. vice-president; and personable Helen Buttoph, secretary and treasurer. Long Beach dropped the third league tilt of the season to Comp- ton, 6-0. Cecil Metzger, of the Tartars, and Charles Woodard, Vik- ing, fought a punter ' s duel throughout the game. In the third quarter, Compton recovered a fumble by Woodard on the Viking twenty- yard line, passed to the ten-yard marker, and then Metzger plunged over the goal line after two unsuccessful tries. Compton stopped a Long Beach drive on the one-yard line late in the fourth quarter. Brilliant passing by Selwyn Yancy and Jack Moss had brought the ball down the field from the center stripe. Facultv members v ere entertained at a tea in the i !a;t Branch Y.M.C.A. by the Associated Women Students, October 25. Each member of A.W.S. committees served as hostess to one faculty mem- ber. In charge of the event was Doris Pickling, assisted by Clarene George, Pauline des Granges, Evelyn Best, Miriam Cone, and Louise Rehbock. 29 Girls ' Golf ' ' A gruup of hoiins First row: E. Marty, D. Truex, F. Gather, D. Russell, E. Harkresder, K, Gather, D. Parmley, K. Teegarden, R. M. Hudkins, A. Brittain, L. Rehbock, K. McNevin, E. Thompson. Second row: L. Emrick, F. Olson, J. Startup, W. J. Hutchison, V. Norton, V. Renius, V. Edwards, D. Fox, E. Reuter, W. Wolfe, J. Gehman, R. Sarson, H. Ham, C. Cotanti D. Lorenz. Third row: F. Harold, M. Hanson, R. Bovyer, E. Larkin, D. Hinkley, V. Hazzard, M. J. Williams, R. Tucker, I. Peterson, M. J. Tharpe, M. Patter- son, F, Herrick, V. Tracy, B. A. Lenhart. H. Harrington, D. Worting, A. Milburn, P. des Granges. Fourth row: T. Bankhead, L. Ludlow, M. Dodge, M. Kennedy, Miss Llewellyn, M. Kunn, M. Chamberlain, L. Miller, H. Card, A. Marmion, V. Jones, G. Thaher, M. Fast. Originally a golf class, the Women ' s Golf Club, was organized into a group to further interest and to foster excellence in the sport. They enjoyed talks by prominent golfers. One drowsy Friday afternoon one of the Tong boys. Suds Suther- land to be exact, was passing away an idle hour in geology class. Dr. H. 1 . White was regaling the unfortunates in the front row with a description of the action of glaciers, sub-surface water, and the like. Those in the back row, having finished their candy, ice cream, and sandwiches, vainly cast about in search of other entertainment. Suds pulled a copy of the Viking out of his binder and started reading the accounts of his amatory adventures. Dr. White stopped lecturing and began asking questions. Suds read on. Suddenly Doyle Williams, the wag, nudged him. Huh? grunted Suds. He ' s calling on you, hissed Williams. Suds raised his eyes, bright with feigned interest, and lilted, I ' m sorry. Dr. White, but I can ' t answer that question. The surprised front section turnecj as one man, and a single voice piped, Hey, he asked me that one! 30 Trivia — Reading clockwise . . . the squad on the bench at one of the home games — Square Richards and Smokey Tindall shout advice . . . Polly Porter, Professor Harold Seal, and Darr Smith pause for ice- cream . . . Mr. Nason in a typical pose lectures on mathematics ... a kangaroo court — Estabrook and Yancy — hang Acorn Smith . . . Roger Mullinex, that cute instructor — watches Chuck Stockham ' s experi- ment ... in the center, Skarda, the brainy Finn, smokes a corn-cob on the porch. 31 1 OVCDl ba (III P ' l ' Rl ' GGLlNG beards . . . rain . . . d ratty tents . . . mudholcs ■■■Saga ' s prize . . . gridders win at Ventura . . . stcakbakes . . . v_ly I ' tica Jubilee Singers . . . spirituals in the park . . . Pasadena burns buntire . . . we burn bonfire . . . costumes and rags . . . hardtimes dance . . . newsreel camera grinds . . . bum idea . . . Mahabharata . . . Viking wins at Riverside . . . Kassai open house . . . ' A.A. Play- day . . . Music Club perfor ms . . . Thanksgiving . . . stuficd turkey . . . Houghton Park . . . College Day . . . frosh-soph football . . . mid- way bo:iths . . . dancing . . . fashion revue . . . D and F slips. Many students hold the opinion that if it weren ' t for the honor system, there wouldn ' t be so many D and F slips passed out. You see, it ' s all so confusing. One really doesn ' t know what to be prepared for in each class. If every teacher had the same ideas on the subject, it would be all right, but they don ' t. Each professor in the school has fome pet scheme with which to plague his students. Take Miss H. Violet Hess, for instance. Years of psychology have taught her that students are innately honest. Therefore, she has them seated so that each row faces an opposite wall, and each per son looks at the back of the one directly in front. Then there ' s Dr. Kaulfers who believes in scattering embryo Spaniards about the room at ten-foot intervals, and, if humanly possible, each chair is faced into a blank wall. Mr. Leslie J. Xason has a considerate thought for human frailty. He places his students a seat apart. This means that those who want to cheat can. while those who would not, aren ' t tempted. 33 Orc ustr j T ouches of sweet uirn o iy First row: M. Carr, E. Frinell, H. Sanders. H. Beaty, L. Dougherty, M. Schooley, E. Harkreader, M. Beck, J. Moreland, R. Pruitt, H. Kindig. Second row; P. Noble, A. Lowery, H. Downing, Mr. Moore, L, Cole. N. Warwick, B. Gowen. Messrs. Seal, Wright, Mulline.x, and Mrs. Peters give each aher- nating student a different section of the test, and then allot the exam- ination time accordingly. This, of course, penalizes those who ordin- arily finish before their slower fellows, but what ' s that to the in- structors? The 1933 Saga, edited by Don Squires, won All- American honor rating. This marked the third straight year that Saga had been awarded All-American credits. Only one junior college in the coun- try gained a higher total number of points and that beat Saga ' s 930 out of a possible one thousand by only five. A new idea in pep assemblies was presented at the rally given before the Ventura game. Representatives of the faculty, team, and student body gave the attitudes of their groups towards the approach- ing contest. Featured speakers were Mr. Seal, for the faculty, Glenn Taylor, for the team, and Lois Griffin, for the students. Way Mid- dough, prominent sportsman, spoke for the outside public. Scrubby Elliot was chairman of the event. The Vikings, without a single victory to their credit, went north to give the undefeated Ventura Pirates a breather. Ihey came roaring back into town with a 20-0 victory in their pockets. A sustained drive of fifty-five yards down the field gave Long Beach a scoring opportunity in the second quarter. Yancy, fullback, carried the ball over after a series of four hard line plunges from the .?4 ' ' The qiuihty of mercy ' £: . ( :: ' S First row: D. Packman. S. Daniels, V. Slater, L. Hileman, Mr. Small, R. M. Hudkins, B. Lyons, M. B. Burgess. Second row: V. Henderson, L. Hodge, N. Aubrey, B. Love- land, D. Miller. R. Tucker. 2()-yard line. Moss passed to Yancy for the conversion. Later in the same quarter, Bill Parr, tackle, recovered a loose ball on the Pirate 31 -yard line. Two passes, Moss to Tayl or, and Woodard to Camp- bell, and the Vikings had scored again. Moss kicked the conversion. Following an exchange of punts in the third quarter. Long Beach had possession of the ball on the Ventura 39-yard marker. After eight plays, Campbell caught Woodard ' s toss and made the third tally. Elliot ' s place kick was blocked. Early in the first quarter. Scrubby returned a punt thirty yards. The Vikings smashed through to the 15-yard line, but there the drive was halted when a pass fell incom- plete in the end zone. A group of p re-legal women students, being refused admittance to Hammurabi, men ' s legal club, took the initiative and organized Mahabharata. Now the two groups fit together like the late well- known jigsaw puzzles. This is the first women ' s club of its kind or- ganized on the campus. Betty Ann Lenhart was elected first presi- dent, and Miss Hess was selected faculty sponsor. At the outstanding assembly of the semester, the I ' tica Jubilee Singers, a negro quintet, sang spirituals and popular songs. This was the onlv assembly at which outside talent was used. It was about two o ' clock early on the morning of Friday, Septem- ber 10. Suds Sutherland, Doyle Williams, and the wide-awake Tex Upper left to right . . . Selwyn Yancy and Kenny Purdy pose demurely . . . Westergard . . . J. T. Montgomery beside a friend . . . the retreat from propriety . . . Lower left to right . . . Irvin Garrett sans pants . . . Peg De Armond, Betty Hughes, Dorothy Doyle, and Grandma des Granges . . . Ed Grissinger goes to heaven on a mule. Westergard were standing about a small tire guarding the stack n[ wood prepared for the Pasadena Rally. The night was cold. There were warm beds at home. Up spoke Westergard, The Pasadena guys won ' t be around tonight, so I might as well go home, and then he left. Since Doyle and Suds couldn ' t watch all sides of the stack alone, they were unable to see the Pasadena lad who came over the fence, touched ofif the wood, and rted with the exulting cry, Pasadena wins! In hve minutes the entire heap had burned. When classes convened, and the student body learned of the catas- trophe, through the extra rushed out by the Viking, truck loads of fellows and girls, wearing their Old Clothes Day costumes, scoured the city for more fuel. By seven-thirty in the evening, a new bonfire, larger than the first, stood in the ball park. 3ft  Music Club Hcfird melodies tire siveet First row: E. Chnstensen, R. MahaHie. A. Miner, C. Miller, O. Smith, II. Daniels, D. Armin, W. Zantiny, F. Dewhirst, C Walker, J. Barbour. Second row: C George, E. Pace, P. Aldahl, A. Brittain, Miss Hitchcock, C. Hanson, E Rodgers, M. L. Dewhirst, K. Heisey, W. Smith, M. Fast, M. Hansen, D. Pickling, M. J. Tharpe, H. Kindig. Third row: M. Stamp, J. Faus, T Berry, V. Thompson, V. Townsend, L. Rehbock, L. Cole, B. Kay, J. Moreland, B. Harryman, G. Zarges. M. Lewis. R. Pruitt. Fourth row: T. Hervey, D. Patrick, J. Corcoran, H. Day, W. Booher, J. Beeson, B. Reeve, N. Warwick, M. Smith, W. Smith, S. Yancy. Forty-two men and women from the Music Club made their initial appearance in the Auditorium of the Institute of Fine Arts. I ' nder the leadership of energetic Ed Grissinger, president, and Mary Jane Tharpe, vice-president, the group presented a program including solos, chorus numbers, and instrumental selections. Spon- sors for the evening were Miss Edith M. Hitchcock and Miss Helen Davenport. The smallest things can certainly upset a school ' s routine. We mentioned the fact that Jeanette Wolfe won the first prize in the girls ' Old Clothes Contest. Well, she did, but it wasn ' t until the Mon- day following the Rally that Junior College officials discovered that Miss Wolfe was not one of our co-eds, but a girl from Poly High School. What, a high school girl? Tsk-tsk, it was too much. She was asked to return the prize. But that was too much for Clyde Cramer. He thought that such treatment of Mae W est was an insult to the virility of the Junior College engineers and other men students. So he busied himself collecting pennies from all those fellows with a sense of humor. With his pockets jingling, Cramer, and a small deputation, visited every jeweler on Pine Street. Finally thev found a compact worthv of its - 30 « F,lll rlkiuir Stdj] . First row: M. Cone, J. Sutherland, G. D. Williams, D. Wanless. B. Hob in, J. Moss, P. De Armond, D. Doyle. Second row: J. Quayle, D. Tobin, C. Wright, B. McEntee, P. Porter, B. Scott, D. Smith, K. Miller, B. Mailer. F. Rusk, D. Walker. F. Ojeda, K. Elliott, B, Wilson. Third row: A. Goldberg, L. McArthur, J. Martyr, P. Teschke. E. Saylor, M. Atkinson, L. Proctor. recipient, drove out to Poly, and presented it to the surprised Jean- ette. No one was verv astonished when Cramer showed up at the Santa Monica game escorting the hiss. For the first time since the paper ' s beginning, the Viking won the honor of being the best all-round newspaper in California at the convention of the California Junior College Press Association held at Riverside, September KS. Sweeping three out of a possible seven first prizes, the Viking took the most honors of any paper entered in the competition. Beside the all-around award, firsts were won for feature story and sport page makeup; and seconds for news story and front page makeup. Jack Y. Quayle, Jr., managing editor, wrote the winning feature story, A Mountaineer ' s Escapes , an interview with Donoho Hall. .Mel Ken- nedy, sports editor, designed the sports page. Paul Teschke, assistant editor, wrote the news storv, and Editor-in-Chief Tobin prepared the front page. In the league final of the year, the Santa Monica football team beat Long Beach 26-12. The Vikings scored in the first quarter. Woodard went over from the Corsair 1-yard line for the touchdown after Moss had completed a pass to Taylor from the Santa .Monica 36-vard marker. The conversion attempt failed. Long Beach tallied 4(1 ' The Dioving finger icritcs DON TOBIN, EDITOR; JACK Y. QUAYLE JR., MANAGING ED. Top row: A Goldberg, Associate Ed.; P. Teschke. Assistant Ed.; E. Saylor, News Ed.; M. Kennedy, Sports Ed. Bottom row: K. Elliott, Business Mgr.; B. Rope, Ass ' t Sports Ed.; M. Atkinson, Desk Ed.; Miss Trail, Adviser. Girls ' St ccdlxiH ? icd feet uiisdiidaltd First row: E. Larkin, V Nortun, M. MtClclljn. H. Wolfe. J. Stjiiu .. K. McNcvin. I. Hendrix. Second row: V. Slater, W. J. Hutchison, E, Thompson, JVIiss Stonebarger, V. Renius, L. Ellsv orth, D. Lorenz. Third row: A Milburn, M. Dodge. M. Kennedy. V. Jones, L. Ludlow, M. J. Tharpe. again the third quarter after a sustained march down the field from their own 36-yard line. Flashing a passing attack, the Vikings made five first downs and six points. Moss ' s try for the extra point was wide. Santa Monica scored in the opening t]uarter. and then went wild in the last and chalked up twentv points on an end run, an inter- cepted pass, and a conversion. On Saturday, November 25, Junior College women athletes at- tended the annual Play-Day at Compton (unior College. The Vi- queens won their basketball game with the Compton girls 34-19. Compton ran up a lead in the first part of the game, but the Viqueens ' offense finally got under way, and this, plus a smoother working de- fense, won the game. Miss Ruth Stonebarger directed the girls. In honor of the football team, A. W. S. gave a tea dance at the Surf and Bay Club. Members of the team were in the receiving line. Football signs and Junior College colors marked the route from the campus to the club. November closed with the semi-annual Sophomore - Freshman College Day held at Houghton Park on the twenty-ninth. Coached by Charles Woodard and George Kayama, of the Shanghai shift system, the freshman football team won over the sophomores, guided bv Scrubby Elliot, 9-7. Bill Fessenden, end, scored the win- « 42 nvuh Clockwise . . . Sis Rene and Gretchen Parr . . . between halves . . . Doc Smith and Winnie Sanders . . . Charlotte Hanson drives Kenny Smith ' s car . . . Pat Dixon . . . the sophs stop Lash . . . Ruth Margaret Hudkins . . . Pipes Quayle and la Spicer . . . Upper center . . . Virginia Holden dashes for the end, girl ' s frosh-soph football . . . sophomores go into a huddle while the freshwomen attend to more important matters. 43 ning points when he booted a held ti;oal in the third quarter. Lord and Mathews tallied for the sophomores and freshmen respectively. During halves of the men ' s game, girls of the two classes staged a game of their own, and again the freshmen won. This time 12-0. Dorothea Lorenz, right half of the freshwomen, scored both touch- downs on brilliant runs around right end. After the football games were finished, students and faculty wan- dered to the midway and dance. Booths, sponsored by various campus clubs, offered everything from homemade pies to dart-throwing and fortune-telling. During the intermission of the dance, a mock style show was presented by art students under the direction of Dorothy Parmley. Speaking of the art students reminds us of one of Brush and Pen- cil ' s sketching excursions to the harbor. Doris Garbo Fickling, having a sincere interest in the welfare of the harbor natives, asked an admiring Portuguese fisherman if his business had been helped by the N. R. A. I can ' t see any ditference down here. He spat. But I notice business is picking up in Los Angeles. How is that? Well, they ' re buying about three times as much fish from me as they used to. 44 December- (IV ysSOCIATED Student Body dance . . . decorated Armory r y . . . business man F lliott . . . printed prot);rams . . . more rain . . . Miss Ann Thomsen . . . mud . . . Redlands debate . . . fog in the eucalyptus trees . . . boots . . . high-water pants . . . mountain parties . . . snow sports . . . hmguage clubs combined meet . . . social whirl . . . night school dance . . . out-of-towner ' s jig . . . Kassai formal . . . Awards Banquet . . . Noel Fests . . . carolling . . . bridge parties . . . cider . . . Christmas Concert . . . Russian music . . . holly wreaths . . . kisses . . . under the mistletoe . . . travelling tree ornaments . . . gifts . . . Do Your Xmas Shopping Early. A lad who popped in from the tennis courts gave us this one. Kathryn Dee, the little washed-out blonde from Seal Beach, was in town over the Christmas holidays to do her shopping. One afternoon, while wandering down Pine Avenue with Jimmie Murray, the red- headed blushing expert, she conceived the idea of a book for Aunt Ephy. They came across a copy of Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott. Kathryn — we love those quaint spellings — seized the book with glee. It would be just the thing. Oh, Jimeeee, she squealed. Isn ' t it marvelous? They have the book written already, and the picture won ' t be premiered at the Chinese until Christmas Day. More students attended the last Associated Student Body dance of the semester than any preceding social affair. The dance, a pro- gram event, was held in the Armory under the direction of Maxine 45 A (issai Jf oDicii iiKuIcIs of their sex First row: M. Afflerbaugh, W. J. Hutchison, V. Hazzard, A. Glaze, E. Thompson, G Thayer, W. Long, Miss Duncan. G. Barnes, M. Hansen, R. Hamren, R. Pike, C. Han- son, E. Cline. Second row: P. des Granges, D. Doyle, L. Rehbock, G. Zarges, B. Mor- gan, D. Pickling, V. Renius, A. Shaw. V. Holden, M. De Armond, W. Smith, K. Car- penter, M. Morimor. Third row: J. Millner, L. Griffin, C. Mclnnis, B. Hughes, F. Scudder, L. Wildman, E. Jarvis, M. Barnes, G. D. Williams, M. J. Tharpe, E. Rodgers. AfflcrbauL h, of the nice little hands. Principal Li unsbury was satis- fied. May the Christmas music awaken within us all the sacred spirit of the season, exclaimed Miss Paine, smiling sweetly as she swept out of the entrance. Sedate, stubby Betty Scott won first prize for women ' s division extempore speaking contest at the L ' niversity of Redlands debate and oratory competition on Friday, December 8. She was awarded a silver loving cup and a gold medal for her speech on Kemal Pasha — Turkey ' s x braham Lincoln. Decorations of a Christmas tree, wreaths, and poinsettias served to augment the holiday atmosphere at the Kassai Annual Christmas Formal, held at the Virginia Country Club. Jean Millner, Amelia Shaw, and Winifred Smith planned the motif. Winifred Long was chairman. Members of the alumni were honored guests. Harold F. Seal, bland and suave wise-cracking political science teacher, was hailed into court on breach of promise charges, ad- vanced by Miss Geraldine Desmond, on December 18. Although de- fended by able counselors Harold Lyons and Donald Penrose, Seal lost his suit to the extent of fifty-thousand dollars. Judge Archie Miner presided. 46 H (iDiDinrnbi Ujuqiinl Idles unto a savage race ' First row: A. Palmer, H. Daniels, W. Smith, E. Burnham, F. George. Mr. Seal, B. Copple, A. Miner, S. Campbell, L. Campbell, E. Demler. Second row: B. Dygert, B. Jarnagm, P. Carey, H. Hagen, G. Desmond. B. Buck, L, McArthur, A. Spears, C. Wood, T. Martin, D. Ryan. J. Stout, H. Lyons, G. Sparr. The case for the defense was impregnable at first, but when prose- cutcir George Sparr read two of Seal ' s love letters and later produced a surprise witness in the shape of Miss Desmond ' s brother, Seal didn ' t have a chance. Paling slightly as the letters were produced, the professor bit his lips to keep under control as passages revealing his tender thoughts were read. Upon hearing the following, he hid his face behind a newspaper. Oh Deenie- Weenie, my darling light of the galaxy, how can I ever forget the maddening pungence of your hair, my chick? What do I care for the wife and kids? Rather would I lie in your arms, lulled to Nirvana by your lips . . . Several times during the course of the trial, the bailiff had to rap for order. Finally he threatened to throw out every person sitting at the press table. Although this decision was jeered at by the reporters, they quieted down and the trial continued. By ten o ' clock, both sides of the case had been given, the jurymen received their instructions, and retired. Ten minutes later, the jury returned. Earl Butcher, foreman, announced that the defendant was found guilty, Judge Miner rendered his decision. Yells of Lynch him! and Let ' s tar and feather the damn Yankee! broke from the angry crowd. Apple-polishing henchmen hustled Seal out a side door before any action was taken. 47 Fall Pre. udi Ills ' Cuuncil Top row: L. Griffin, Valkyries; K. Dod, Alpha Gamma Sigma; G. Barnes, Kassai; T. Westergard, Thors. Second row: M. Atkinson, Phi Rho Pi; J. Y. Quayle, Skalds; D. Tobin, Type and Copy; A Shaw, Student. Bottom row: A. Miner, Hammurabi; R. Hart, College Y; D. Dean, Enrrineers; G. Dumalski, German. Two hundred members of tlie French, Spanish, German, Intcr- nr.t ' nnal, and Music clubs attended the combined Christmas party of the organizations. The trirl ' s sextette and Billy Reeves, baritone, sang. The French and German club members rendered carols. The program wound up with a short talk by Lyle Pat Dixon explaining the dififerences between an American Christmas and the festivities held in Mexico, and a right good job he did. Harrv Butch Lash also did a right good job staging the seir.es- terly out-of-towners ' dance held at Recreation Park Clubhouse. The sight of girls sitting bv themselves had always annoyed Lash, and, while he never could see making himself a hero for the wall (lowers, he did feel that they should dance at least once. Therefore, he re- versed custom and decreed that t:irls be allowed to cut in on anv and ' Tlic Kings {I lid the C i t(Uii. ' Top row: S. Yancy. Tong; B, A. Lenhart, Mahabharata; C. Cummings, French Club; M. Messner, Caduceus. Bottom row: D. Plemon, International; Carl Dunlap, Spanish Club; D. Heck, Commerce; Miss Paine, adviser. all dances. The fellows were aghast, but the twirls were pleased, and Butch swell-chested about the campus for days. On December 19, the annual Christmas Concert of the music department was given in the Recreation Park Clubhouse. Folk songs of the middle ages and modern music were intermixed with several Spanish and Russian compositions to give a cosmopolitan cast to the program. In conjunction with the choruses given by the men ' s and women ' s glee clubs, the women ' s sextet, and the A Capella choir, in- cidental solos were sung by Dayton Armin, Ed Grissinger, and Her- bert Daniels. Miss Hitchcock and Mr. Moreman directed the singers. The Junior College orchestra, under the baton of Mr. Moore, opened the performance with Yule Tide Melodies. The selection featured Paul Lawrence on the chimes. 49 Glee Club Mv li ncrs bei dii to rrow First row: A, Long, P. Aldahl, T. Berry. Miss Hitchcock, C. L,, , mi h, .v, Heisey, A. Brittain, V. Townsend, E. Pace, B. Harryman, W. Cresswell. Second row: M. Gillespie. J. Faus, O. Bassett, R. Pruitt, M. Burley. V. Thompson, O, Smith, S. Yancy, H. Daniels, W. Smith. J. Beeson, E. Christensen, J. Whittle. Third row: J. Barbour, G. Stricler, D. Armin, W. France, D. Patrick, E. Valz, R. Cole. J. Corcoran, T. Hervey, R. Mahaffie, C. Walker, J. Peterson. For no reason at all, except that we ' re tired of the happy Yule spirit, we are going to put in an anecdote about a promising chemis- try student. One of Mr. Roger Mullinex ' s lab classes was fooling around with an experiment that involved Hasks, thistle tubes, glass rods, bunsen burners, and various bits of apparatus twisted to re- semble an anatomy chart from the physiology room. You dropped hydrochloric acid on zinc and you got hydrogen shooting out of a little tube. The idea was to ignite the escaping hydrogen so that an explosion could not be caused by the many burners standing about the room. Evervthing was going nicely with Hetty Tish Scott, initil her small jet of llame blew out. Frantically she struck matches and touched them to the opening in the glass tubing. She could see vapor coming out, but it would not light. Panic stricken at the thought of an explosion, she fluttered about calling for Mr. Mullinex. Quite calmly, he sauntered over, and asked, ' YMiat seems to be the trouble? Something is .goiui up! What ' ll I do? to happen! This hydrogen is going to blow 50 A Cap pell a Choir Chorus hvnicucdl First row: R. Colburn, E. Christensen, O. Smith, S. Yancy, D. Armin, W. Z.intm . W. Smith, N. Rankin. Second row: B. Rountree, M. McClellan, P. Aldahl. T. Berry, C. George, C. Hanson, E. Rodgers, M. Dewhirst, K. Heisey, W. Smith, M. Fast, D. Fick- hng, M. J. Tharpe. Third row: I. Hendrix, V. Norton, E. Larkin, P. Thompson, V. Townsend, L. Rehbock, G. Zarges, L. Cole, B. Kay, J. Moreland, H. Daniels, C. Walker. Fourth row: Dr. Smith, C. Miller, H. Day, J. Beeson, B. Reeves, N. Warwick, A. Miner. No, he said, toying with the neck of the rtask. That is steam you see coming out. Steam is composed of H-two-O. And then, of course, H-two-O is commonly known as water, and water very rarely explodes. He walked away. But to get back to December, there was that which reflected the true Noel spirit, the Viking staff ' s N oel Fest. Two weeks before school let out for the Christmas holidays, the editors listed the event on -Miss Paine ' s calendar and issued bids to fifty friends. The Friday of the Fest came, and the tree was not yet decorated. The staff with its usual imperturbability, walked over to Miss Paine ' s own tree and robbed it of its ornaments. Acting upon the advice of loyal students, .Miss Paine scurried over to the Viking tent. One editor went out to placate her, passing the buck to the other boys all the while. Finally they all started to help her strip the tree, putting two ornaments in their pockets to every one they returned. She could never figure how her stock of ornaments was so diminished, especially after she had seen with her own eyes the boys return them to her box. The outstanding event of the fall semester was the Awards Ban- quet, an outgrowth of the annual football team dinner. Seventeen men were given their letters and the four Viking Awards winners, tirsitv FoollhiU LcttoDic Top row: E. Vestermark, Tackle; W. Cresswell. Tackle; S Yancy. Fullback; K. Smith, Guard. Bottom row: R. Jensen, Tackle; K. Whiteneck, Guard; W. Parr, Tackle; H. Estabrook, Center. Moss breaks away in the Glendale game. r . mt, Bruised K ' lth ddvcrsitv Top row: Capt. J. Campbell, Half; C. Woodard. Half; G. Kayama. Guard; W. Elliot, Quarter. Bottom row: W. Kessler, Guard; L. Skarda, Quarter; E. Lord, Manager; Coach O. Smith. Glenn Taylor, Most Valuable Player; Jimmy Campbell, Captain; Jack Moss, Halfback. Awards Bn iqiut Conmiittcc First row: B. Rope, J. Graham, D. Williams, O. Smith, M. Atkinson. H. Ziesenhenne. Second row: K. Smith, E. Saylor, J. Lord, G. D. Williams. R. Pike, B. Sutherland, E. Burnham, T. Westergard, G. Desmond. recipients of the hit hest lionor conferred by the school, were an- nounced. They were Pauline des GranLi;es, Don Tobin, Kenneth P. Elliott, and Tex Westergard. Featured speakers of the evening were Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, the grand old man of football, and Ernie Nevers, AU-Ameri- can back. Also a large group of local civic leaders received invita- tions because of their loyal support of the College. Their group in- cluded the cream of the citv ' s educators, newspapermen, and coaches. Bob Rope, representative of athletics, assisted by a committee of workers, was chairman. Maurice Atkinson acted as master of cere- monies, introducing the speakers and announcing the floor show. A skit, Mirth at Large, or I Kissed the Bride, by xA-tkinson and jack Quayle, was presented during the intermission. Yes, they had the thing translated and rehearsed down to the minute details. But Fate was to have her day. A night which had otherwise been so enjoyable was not to progress further without her playing a hand. Only five minutes before the act was scheduled to go on, the Bern- hardts and the Barrymores were backstage assuming their costumes. The cast lined up for final instructions from the young O ' Neills. But something was decidedly amiss. Down on the end of the line there were two empty spots. Two actors were not yet ready. A call-boy was =■34 ' - ikiiig Awards ' If ' i it Glory Gilds Thee TEX WESTERGARD Pres. A.S.B., Treas A. SB., Tong. En- gineers, Rally Comm. PAULINE DES GRANGES Secty. A.S.B., Kassai, V. Pres. W.A.A., Girls Sports. KENNETH P. ELLIOTT Treas. A.S.B., Pres. Soph. Class; Bus. Mgr. ' 33 Saga, Bus. Mgr. Viking. DON TOBIN Editor Viking; Co-editor Saga, Pres. Type and Copy. I. cftenci liners J. Startup, V. Jones, W. J. Hutchison, P. des Granges, R. Bovyer. dispatched to the basement dressing rooms. He came bounding up the steps three at a time, trying to shout in a stage whisper that there was no one down there. Everyone rushed about in frantic circles look- ing for them. They were not to be found. Morale was slowly seeping away. Everyone was beginning to forget his lines, and the directors were developing headaches. Then Quayle and Atkinson decided to go on in place of the absentees. The curtain went up. and things were going along nicely until all of a sudden there was a silence. Xo one uttered a word. Finally the cue was repeated; still nothing happened. The cue was repeated still again. Then Maury gasped, and blurted a line. The next time there was a pause. Oak Little Acorn Smith came to bat with a beautiful bit (if ad-libbing. Before the skit was half completed, the two supers had it down so that the lines that one didn ' t know, the other would pick up and vice-versa. After the final curtain. Eugene Pinky King and Art Snout Le Va, the missing actors, straggled in the dressing room and asked quite innocently, When do we go on? fong, dear old Tong, gave one of their highly publicized steak bakes at Orange County Park during December. It was one of those balmv winter evenings, native to Southern California. Some of the lads had even discarded sweaters for the more comfortable mode of shirt-sleeves. Birds twittered lazily in the stuffy twilight. The wave- lets of the small lake e.xpired on the stenching mud of the bank. s 56 s Girls ' Basketball A damsel wit i a diilciiner First row: E. Larkin, J. Startup. M. McClellan, W. J. Hutchison, V. Renius, R. Bovyer, A. Glaze. E. Thompson, V. Norton. Second row: D. Lorenz, B. Bangs. E. Chne, M. Dodge, P. des Granges. M. Kennedy, L. Ludlow, M. J. Tharpe, L. Ellsworth, A. Milburn. The boys and girls were laying about in a circle brushing off flies and listening to Yancc-the-Nance quote Omar to his little bunch of Asphodel : Into this universe and why not knowing, Nor whence, like water willy-nilly flowing: And out of it, like wind along the waste, I know not whither willy-nilly blowing. Suddenly Suds Sutherland burst upon the group, going rather excitedly from fellow to fellow. He whispered hoarsely in each ear, Say, can you lend me a blanket? Of course there being no blanket in the crowd, Suds went oft ' disconsolately. Some weeks later, at the aforementioned Viking Noel Fest, Suds was presented with a pink babv blanket with the initial M em- broidered in the corner. It started out as only a pastime in the Viking tent — but, after proving his ability to add faster than any member of the paper ' s staff ' , Albert Goldberg, associate editor, widened his field to include mathematics and science majors. He even offered to match himself against instructors, who, after witnessing his exploits, gracefully declined. The green eyes of jealousy glowed in the face of Maurice Bloat and Gloat Atkinson, Goldberg ' s old wrestling opponent, and Atki maliciously plotted his downfall. After a few days research, Maurice challenged Albert to a public match, and, lo and behold, Goldberg was defeated — ignominiously defeated. Time after time it was thus. Goldberg lost sleep over the affair, and couldn ' t digest his midnight snack of strudel and kafiltehsch. Finally, he snatched one of Atki ' s lists of figures from his hand just before another contest, and dis- covered that Maurice ' s column was especiallv prepared with the answer already written. You dirty guys, he said. 58 JdiuKiry — (V) s ASKKTBALL . . . swishin- buckets . . . Coach Mel Griffin stacked hands . . . sliding shoes . . . Good eye, ref ! the Armorv thudding spills . . boards . . . petition ings . . . banners . room arguments . Defense! Defense! . . . glistening bodies . . . Break! . . . mid-year graduates ... no plaster- . . campaigns . . . soap boxes . . . committee meet- placards . . . A good man and true . . . lunch- Dez for Prez . . . Pinky ' s microphone . . . Atkinson ' s remuneration. Atkinson never received his remuneration nor did Len Carey. It was at the Olympic Auditorium the night of the U.S.C. Frosh game that Jean Millner pulled a sneak play on Len. In fact he was the only one of many spectators unable to appreciate an otherwise highly enjoyable evening. A ot only were there such scenes of sophomoric levity as the Viking staff appearing in each others ' clothes, but the Nordic hoopsters came through in the last minute of play to defeat the Trobabes 28 to 25. It was probably that last minute of play that ruined the night for Len. Although it was a small thing to most spectators, the brilliant playing of the languid Don Heck at center meant a great deal to Jean. She was simply TOO thrilled. As far as she was concerned, all other men were jellies. Well, Don took a shower, donned his mufti, and guided bv some homing instinct perhaps, bounded up the steps to the gallery and headed straight for our song leader ' s side. Jean turned her head, looked at him, and smiled. And it was one occasion when she didn ' t need to force those dimples. Then slowly, 59 Bodid of PuhhcdtKJiis First row: Mrs. Hiatt, Mi s I i i Kennedy, J. Quayle. K. Elhutt. A. GuUiberg. U. Tobin, M. oh so slowly, she turned her svelt back on the crestfallen Carey, and that was all he saw the rest of the evening. Now we hear he has dropped out of school and is huntin a job to support the almond- faced Betty Poulson. The Saga ticket drive was announced along in the early part of January. The drive was supervised by Bob Rope, Business INIanager, and Eugene Corrie, financial adviser. Students in commercial courses made sales talks in all classrooms. There was also a large corps work- ing outside on the campus. During the morning on the second day of the campaign, Charles Lavell was scouting around the park for a possible sale. He espied the socialite Grace Dorothy Williams sitting in the shade of a euca- lyptus. Being very anxious to get to her side before Frosh Reception speaker Te.x Westergard and his cabinet captured her naive attention, he rushed to where she was sitting and breathlessly presented her with a Saga ticket. (Jh, she gushed. I ' d love to buv one, but I already have a date for that evening. Without a word Lavell took back the ducat, and with his head hanging low, he made his wa back to the Saga office and turned in his remaining tickets. Headed by Kennv Smith, members of tiie Committee of Cere- monies arranged the Sophomore Hop, final social event of the fall 6U Committee of Ceremonies W. Martin, S. Yancy, M. Atileibaugh. K Smith, J. Millner, Mr. Johnston, L. Griffin, C. Goldsmith, J. Anderson, J. Lord. semester, held Saturday, January 27, in the Municipal Auditorium. One of the outstandinj accomplishments of the committee was up- holding the recently set tradition of no corsages. Kenny, in fact, made a statement to that efifect in the Viking. But paradoxically enough the grapevine carried this one for weeks afterward. The Maedchen voung Smith was squiring, Meredith Overpeck we assume, was seen ruefully detaching her floral adornment under the stern gaze of Lounsbury. After defeating the ' I ' robabes on January 5, Coach Mel Griffin ' s V iking qu intet kept their scalps out of the hands of the San Bernar- dino Indians the following night when they triumphed 20 to 15. Long Beach drew first blood as D(M1 Heck caged a short toss from under the basket. At that point the Indians tied the count, but from then on the Vikings were never topped in the scoring column. The half ended with the local boys in the lead 14 to 4. San Berdoo rallied in the second half and ran up 10 points while Long Beach garnered 6. Kenny Purdy and Frankie Schmidt, for- wards, were high point men for the Norse. Each of them made 12 tallies. Although Long Beach won the game, the shooting was irreg- ular and the passing didn ' t display the form achieved the year before. lO.U Sd a Staff First row: D. Wanless, B. Scott, D. Parmley. Sc. : : ■. K Sellers, K. Hughes, P. De Armond. B. Hoban, J. Moss. R, Pike. G. D. Williams. M. Cuyler. Third row: D. Tobin, M. Atkinson, B. Sutherland, D. Williams, H. Ziesenhenne, P. Teschke, B. Rope, P. Porter, J. Quayle. L. McArthur, L. Proctor, C. Goldsmith, H. Hodges, C. Wright, D. Smith, E. Saylor. Saga lads and lassies met for their first and last stafif meeting when they posed for this picture. They were all diligent workers — witness the decorations on the Saga office walls. Special mention goes to Tish Scott, Superintendent of Sanitation, the only one of four office man- agers who ever bothered to clean out the place. She emptied the waste paper basket twice and once even borrowed a broom from the janitor. We think, in all justice, she should have the individual pic- ture instead of Joyce Moss who typed out only two letters. It has been said that Jack Martyr, the eternal griper, is also on the staff. But the editors have never been able to locate him when they wanted anything done. In fact he is supposed to be in the above picture. But nobody can see him. If aii astute undcrgrad can find the boy in the accompanying cut, call around at the office and receive a 26-ounce glass of beer on the editors. Which reminds us of the time we were looking for the dummy so we could write this month. We ran the risk of having Mr. Manker, the night watchman, take a pot-shot at us when we went looking for the dummy in the Saga office. We phoned all the sub-editors, but they were each and every one at the Bay Shore gathering dope to inject into the lifeless corpse of Skoal. Finally we drove to Compton and found Editor Tobin using dear dummy as a pillow for his after- dinner nap. 62 Still ycanis for rest ' r- ' n fe. ' ' i f Jack Y. Quayle Jr.. Co-Editor; Don Tobm, Co-Lditoi , Bob Rope, Business Manager. Top row: D. Smith, Associate Ed.; M. Coursen, Art Ed.; M. Cuyler, Club Ed.; L. Proctor, Sports Ed. Bottom row; P. De Armond, Classes Ed.; M. Atkinson, Activities Ed.; B. Hoban, Administration Ed.; J. Moss, Secretary. 63 c oniDicrcc Club Take the ctis i tiiid let the credit S ' ' First row; R. Howard, J. Wells, J. Pine, W. Miller, O. Smith, A. Le Va, J. Anderson, B. Connor, E. Batien, W. Booher. Second row: K. Carpenter, W. Smith, B. Morgan, M. Barnes, V. Holden, A. Shaw, R, Pike, Miss Duncan, P. De Armond, F. Scudder, K. Teagarden, E. Engh, C. Mclnnis, M. L. Stevens, M. Green. Third row: V. Roby, J. Martin, P. King, M. Travers, B. Henderson, B. Macaulay, E. Weikel, D. Hill, K. Purdy, D. Heck, K. Smith, M. Lacy. W. Middleton. Fourth row: E. Burnham, F. George, R. Knapp, R. Chaffee, L. Griffin, J. Millner, M. Kubata, J. Haple, C. Du Fresne, J. Hales, L. Miller, R, Kramer, K. Elliott. C. Cummings, R. Hale. Under the able leadership (if Miss Glee Duneaii the business acu- men of the Commercial Club sent their January dance thirty bucks in the red. Not that the jiij wasn ' t a success. Oh no, in fact we under- stand there were live couples on the floor by nine o ' clock. This year, along with the turn of the times, the campus became politically minded. Out of a decreased student body there were more votes cast than in any preceding election. Campaign managers plas- tered the sunken garden tent walls with posters. Handbills cluttered the door of every classroom. Autos carried signs. Students argued the pros and cons of their choices. Fellows backing Gerald Desmond staged a day-time torchlight parade. Those in favor of Kenny Smith drove madly around the campus hooting and honking. Backers of Dan Dean tore opponents ' signs olif the bulletin boards. K. P. Elliott and his mob put up esoteric placards in the women ' s club. In contrast to the two parties of previous elections, the campus split up into four warring factions: the Liberals, the Progressives, the Et]ualities, and the Independents. Despite expectations, no party was able to elect a straight ticket. ' hen the election board finished 64 ' ' Sprin r .S.B. Cahuict Sarins A.M.S. Top row: G. Desmond, President; B. Sutherland. Vice-President; P. des Granges, Sec- retary; K. Miller, Treasurer. Bottom row: L. Griffin, Rep. of Arts; H. Estabrook, Rep. of Athletics; M. Lacy, Rep. of Student Body; A. Goldberg, Editor of Viking. counting ballots late Wednesday night, January 17, Gerald Desmond, Equality, was President; Bob Sutherland, Liberal, Vice-President; Pauline des Granges, Progressive, Secretary; Kenneth Miller, Pro- gressive, Treasurer; Lois Griffin, Liberal, Representative of Arts; Howard Estabrook, Progressive, Representative of Athletics; Milo Lacy, Liberal, Representative of the Student Body. A.. LS. results were: Bob Rope, Liberal, President; Jack Dye, I rogressive, Vice-I resident; Jack Y. Quayle Jr., Liberal, Secretary; and ' alt Martin, Liberal, Treasurer. B. Rope, President; J. Dye, Vice-Fres ' dent; J. Y. Quayle. Secty. ; W. Ma-tin, Treasurer. CollciTc Y Some suit of our youth First row: B. Jarnagin. C. Hart, T. Royce, S. Campbell, H. Lawrence, Mr. Hubbard. C. Wise, J. Dye. C. Carlson. J. Hata. S. Watson. Second row: B. Henderson. B. Bord, O. Moore, T. Baker, D. Foster, L. MauU, R. Funke, J. Corcoran, D. Dean, J. Marriner, R. Nicholson, R. Hart, B. Matthews, M. Caton. At the last meeting of the fall semester, held at the East Branch Y. M.C.A., members of College Y elected their officers for the spring semester. The boys selected were Harry Lawrence, President; Lome Campbell, Vice-President: Jack Dye, Secretary; Charles Wise, Treasurer; and Ross Tepid Hart, field council representative. College Y held a series of four banquet meetings during the spring semester. At each of the banquets arrangements were made to have speakers talk on various angles of the general theme, Capi- talizing on College Opportunities. A platform such as that would lend itself admirably to anything from absconding with Student Body funds to boning for an ex or making the social twirls. I ' sing all his men. Coach Mel Griffin directed the Vikings to a 31-23 victory in their league opener against Glendale. Kenny Purdy and Andy Spears were high point men. The men showed a good, fast-breaking offensive, and a fairly tight defense. Some fans say the local boys won because Hindu F yes McEntee went out on fouls, while there are others that lay it to the fact that Glendale ' s star cen- ter, Threlkeld, was ineligible to play. In one of the largest attendances ever recorded by a J. C. club, more than 120 people were present at a meeting of Los Conquista- Sfaiiish Club Hasta la vista First row: C. Dunlap, M. McLain, S. Paez, M. Murphy, J. Oliger, E. Christensen, B. Recksiek, J. Stout, M. Lacy, A. Le Va, D. Hill, J. Ream, W. Middleton. B. Connor, B. Macaulay, G. Markovich, J. Y. Quayle, O. Moore. Second row: E. Renaud, C. Crow, D. Montgomery, T. Otteson, G. Williams, E. Benedict, H. Beaty, L. Hileman, B. Love- land. M. Jones. P. Haugen, F. Scudder. D. Doyle. V. Holden, A. Shaw, B. L. Sellers, E. Cline. A. Glaze, M. J. Tharpe, J. Smith. B. Morgans. Third row: H. Barrett, L. Bowler, J. Major, M. Rentz, A. O ' Brien. D. Miller. G. Cotant, H. Rodriquez. M. Dem- mert, E. Larson, D. Young. D. Fox, T. Boyle, K. Smith, J. Pine, M. Merrick, M. Bur- rows. H. Daniels. B. Henderson, J. Fox. D. Ryan. B. Service, A. Steele. J. Schultz, G. Head, C. Hart, J. Miller. B. Matthews. J. Prophet, Dr. Kaulfers. Fourth row: O. Garber, N. Wolfe, F. Olson, B. Winslow. L Minford, M. Chamberlain. M. Kumm. F. Ojeda. E. Weikel, D. Wallentine, W. Kingsbury. M. Hand, M. Connor, L. Cketkin. G. Whittle. L. H. Hinds. G. Morrison. A. Williams, D. Cooksey, J. Paige, B. Riley. S. York. R. Howard, H. Lantis, H. Clarke. D. Hoffman, J. Young, B. Hood. dores, Spanish group, in the Recreation Park clubhouse. The unusual turnout was due to the unceasing efforts of Carl Dunlap, fall presi- dent, and Dr. Kaulfers, sponsor. The group was built from one of apathy and medium size to one of the most active and the largest on the campus. Evelyn Cline and Billy Stevens featured several meet- ings with their Spanish dances, including the Jarape Tapitia, na- tional dance of Mexico. Spanish songs by Charlotte Urbina were enjoyed by the club. Other fall officers were: Frances Scudder, vice president; Glenn Taylor, secretary; and Herbert Daniels, treasurer. Salvadore Paez was later elected spring president. Little Oak Smith, having just taken the Shiksa home from the Sophomore Prom, stopped around to put us in the aisles with this one. He says he had just stepped out on the promenade of the Audi- torium for a smoke, when a fellow walked up rather nervouslv and 67 ■- Tnih Clockwise . . . Wilma Wolfe and Evelyn Reuter gaze at the world up- side down . . . Coach Bert Smith, Bob Rope, and Morse Travers loaf . . . Jack Brande putts ... a top-side shot . . . Mr. Seal, Polly Porter, and Andy Spears chat while Miss Trail reads copy . . . Quayle goes up the tree after Ziesenhenne, who has been delaying the Alpha Gamma Sigma picture ... In the center. Eric Nordman. star high-jumper, clears the bar at 6-1. 68 TnvKi Clockwise . . . Judy Johnson and her books . . . Dewhirst and Dumalski on the honor society outing . . . boys in the mountains . . . Martyr and Adrienne back together again . . . Dewhirst flops on the ice . . . Amelia Shaw comes down the rink . . . Charlotte Hanson plots revenge with a snow ball . . . Prez Dez ' Virginia Slater rides a hobby in the window at the W.A.A. Easter breakfast. 69 asked him tor a cigarette. Oak complied and then, not being given to inquisitiveness, turned and looked out over the lagoon, leaving the moocher to fidget at his side. Finally the kid seemed to be unable of standing it longer. He tapped Acorn on the shoulder. Say, is this the Viking Banquet that ' s going on inside? Oak turned around and looked at him rather surprised. Naw, that ' s the Sophmore Prom in there. The Viking banquet was last Wednesdav night. The guy said oh, and they both turned and smoked in silence. It was not long before the frosh again burst out. x fella told me the V iking banquet was gonna be at the auditorium tonight, and be- sides my date was supposed to meet me out here. I ' m sorry, answered Oak, rather amused by this time, but this is not only not the time of the Viking banquet, but it is also not the place. It was held at the Brittany Kitchen. Again they turned and smoked in silence. Oak began thinking of his doll all by herself inside. He thought he ' d better go in; so he Hipped the remaining smoke over the rail and turned to go. He was barelv half across the runway when his companion caught him by the arm. Wait a minute, wait a minute, the guy said, aren ' t you Pauline des Granges? PREZ DEZ 70 Fchrntirv (VI I ADDLE tennis . . . ball up . . . over the fence . . . white skirts . . . suede shoes . . . parked cars . . . auto radios . . . registration lines . . . identification cards . . . student body fees . . . I.O.r. . . . Pals . . . new women . . . new sacred cows . . . new cabinet in action . . . new Junior College . . . Saga ticket drive . . . class petitions . . . baseball practice . . . crack of a bat . . . charleyhorses . . . liniment . . . clean uniforms . . . fresh-oiled gloves . . . bakery wagon lunches . . . ice-cream bars . . . cafeteria hash . . . nickle sandwiches , , . ticket lines . . . high school rabble . . . the study tent . . . no studying . . . buzzing . . campaign talks . . . girls ' study tent . . . meows anent spring clothes . . . envious glances . . . league basketball . . . cheap dates . . . technical explanations . . . With every Long Beach player scoring, the Compton Tartars had no chance to beat the Vikings, February 3. Starting with a terrific attack late in the first half, the Vikings came from the short end of a 7 to 3 score to win the game 53 to 21. Captain Ken Purdy, forward, and Andy Spears, guard, were high point men with ten counts each. Mel Kennedy, Selwyn Yancey, Ken McNall, and Don Heck played outstanding games. The following night the Ventura team came to town and trimmed the boys 46 to 33. The Viking passing attack, featured against Comp- ton, was hopeless. Viking forwards played too far up-court on de- fense, allowing the opposing forwards to slip into the slot for set-up shots Only once during the game did Long Beach look good. This was when Sam ilker ' s foul shot tied the game at 1 3 all during the 71 F.Di l loyniciit Bureau Fall jr.A.A. Officers K. Dod, M. Lacy, Miss White, Mi M. Messner, P. De Armond, R. Pike. first half, however the epode ended 18-17 in favor of Ventura. Walker ' s eleven C(Uints made him high point man. Headed by the A.S.B. representative of the student body, the employment bureau aids unemployed students by securing for them part-time jobs. As many students as possible are employed. Car wash- ing, ushering, house cleaning and typing constitute the work pro- cured. Flashing under the basket with less than fifteen seconds to play, Don Heck, Viking center, took a perfectly timed pass from Captain Purdy to sink the winning basket against Pasadena. The final score was 31 to 30. With the first half closing at fourteen all, the Vikings M, J. Tharpe, President; R. Bovyer, V. Pres.; V I!ar:-ard, Eacretary; J. Startup, Treas Fiiiaiicc Coniniiffce Spriiio jr.A.A. Ofliccrs First row; K. Miller, E. Rodgers, B. Sutherland, P. Des Granges. Mr. Wade. Second row: G. Desmond, K. Elliott, T. Westergard. went into the lead at the start of the third quarter. Then the Pasadena quintet shot into the lead and held it until the last minute of play. Saturday night the Vikings defeated Santa Monica 27 to 22 on their court. Don Heck, high point man, played the entire first half practically single-handed. Until the last few minutes of the fray, it was anybody ' s game. Then Spears, Heck, and Purdy bucketed one each and the Norse held the lead until the final gun. Directing the activities of Viqueen sportswomen is the peculiar prerogative of the Women ' s Athletic Association officers. The W.A. A. arranges for fire-rings, Easter egg hunts, tennis tourneys, play days, and blind bogies. M. J. Tharpe, President; A. Milburn. Vice-President; E. Thompson, Secretary; L. Ludlow, Treasurer. 73 (irsity BnshctbdU Squad Kneeling: W. Miller. First row: B. McEntee, M. Kennedy, D. Heck, K, Purdy, D. Walker, A. Spears, S. Yancy. Second row: B. Hudkins, K. McNall, B. Carpenter, C. Goldsmith, T. Frinell, D. McCutcheon, R. Jameson, W. Stubblefield, Coach Griffin. Mel Kennedy, Guard; Kenny Purdy, Forward (All-Conference): Bob McEntee, Forward 74 Let ' s go luiiid 111 lidiia Delbert Walker. Forward; W. Stubblefield, Forward; K. McNall. Forward. Andy Spears, Guard; Selwyn Yancy, Guard; Don Heck, Center; Coach Mel Griffin. a Dciiidskcra Cliih 77 ' lors (UK. nlkvncs First row: N. La France, V. Holden, M. Johnson, D. Parmley, B. Rogers. Miss Poore, M. Cone, W. Sanders, F. Peters, N. Wilke, H. Kindig. Second row: R. Anderson, F. Froude, A. Daume, M. Faus, L. Cox, K. Carpenter, M. Fast, M. Koenig, P. Werner, P. Bailey, A. Orcutt. T. Westergard, B. Murray, L. Griffin, Mrs. Peters. Mr. Jackson, P. des Granges, K. Elliott, D. Tobin. Student Club Hold thou the good ' First row: E. Thompson. L. Rehbock, N. La France, Miss Hess, V. Holden, P. De Armond, A. Shaw, V. Renius, K. Teegarden, H. Saxe, M. Banes, D. Swift. Second row: R. Pike, B. L. Sellers, D. Doyle, E. Cline, M. Dodge, D. Wallentine, M. Kennedy, L. Ludlow, D. Windes, R. M. Hudkins. B, Lyons, D. Weir, H. Quinby. Third row: D. Wotring, J. Gehman, M. McLain, M. L. Green, J. Startup, V. Carlson, M. McClellan, V. Norton, I. Hendrix. On February 17 the Norse dropped a close game to a dynamiting Glendale quintet, who came out on top of a 37-31 score. The Vikings led off with an eight to nothing lead in the first quarter. Starting from a half-time count of 18-18, the Bucs went into the lead and held it until the end. Known as the only campus group to hold setting-up conferences, the Student Club, girls ' Y group, held a membership drive during the month. Social meetings and musical teas, arranged by pliant, plastic Dorothy Swift and Chorine Peg de Armond, were their monthly highlights. Miss Violet Hess was spring sponsor of the group. When Los Angeles J. C. licked the Vikings 33-21 at the Holly- wood High School gym, Coach .Mel Grifiin ' s boys saw their chances for a second championship dashed to the court. The Cubs ran up a ten point lead in the first three minutes of play. Purdy, who tallied five digits, was the only Long Beach player to find the hoop during the first half. With Purdy banished from the game early in the last canto Walker, McEntee and Spears started a spurt that was all that saved the Norse from a complete rout. 77 Tnvia — Counter clockwise . . . Oak holds Amelia ... at the Tong dance . . . Wilma Wolfe . . Polly Porter . . . Shaw, Purdy, and Virginia Hazzard . . . the lib window. 78 -Tr ivm Clockwise . . . paddle-tennis . . . dance in- termission . . . Joyce Moss sells Sagas . . . Doc Kaulfers wears a serape . . . Languid Lois Griffin on the lawn . . . Mr. Jackson makes citizens. 70 Trailing ten to nine at the half, Lontr Beach came back strongly in the second period to lick Compton 26-19 the following night. This was their first league win on the home court. The game was one of the roughest seen during the year. Five men were sent to the showers via the foul route. The score teetered back and forth until the middle of the last chapter, when Long Beach took the lead and held it. Order of Tong opened the spring social season with a dance held at the Ebell clubhouse. Howard Estabrook, president, and Homer Duke, vice-president, had charge of the afTair. Bill Clemo also looked important. Coaches and their wives were hosts and hostesses. There is Tong, and then there are the Nazis. Both of them seek control by an exclusive few. The Nazis base their membership on the imbecilic claim of Nordic supremacy; no one knows upon what standard Tong bases its sense of superiority. Be that as it may, it seems that the spring Viking stafif was swing- ing into action the first week of this month. Ed Saylor, green business manager, and Frank Qjeda, greener circulation manager, were get- ting copies of the first edition ready for mailing. Editor-in-chief Goldberg wanted a copy sent to his aunt in Russia. But he remem- bered just in time that she can ' t read or speak English. In fact we hear she can ' t read or speak. Our friend Goldblatt was quite disconsolate. This hurt Messrs. Ojeda and Saylor. They never could stand the mournful eyes of a sacred cow. Finally Saylor borrowed a blue pencil from His Dignity and vividly outlined the masthead of the paper. Meanwhile Ojeda had typed an address on a mailing envelope. A first edition had to be sent to someone interested in Goldberg. Who could be more so than Herr Adolf Hitler? 80 March (VII BASKETBALL playofts . . . trackmects . . . spikes . . . charley- - J horses . . . lanes . . . tapes . . . trainers . . . poles . . . vaults . . . v_ hairy legs . . . pits . . . runways . . . class elections - . . soph- omore dark horses . . . freshman fancy trotters . . . baseball . . . horse- hide . . . ' ' Caught a great game . . . pitcher ' s duel . . . battery ... in- field . . . outer garden . . . hot grounders . . . buds . . . nymphs . . . satyrs . . . Spring! Yes spring. And it is in spring that a young man ' s thoughts turn to poetry. Who could forget that artist of rhythmical utterance, Henry George Ziesenhenne, reciting his esoteric verse? Well we remember the day he bounded into the office with that cherubic gleam in his eye. He snatched the magazine out of our hands, swept all the books onto the floor, threw six leather jackets and a sweater up into the rafters, flopped himself on the desk in front of us, shouted, Down with capitalism, and recited this: Ode to an Earth Worm Oh ivhich is your ivorniy little licdd ' Oh which is your wortuy little t iil ' After finishing. Zoos removed three bolts from the tent, and watching it sag, remarked, Why the hell shouldn ' t it? Balloting for spring semester class officers resulted in the election of Maurice Atkinson, bombastic orator, as sophomore president. Charles Wright was chosen lower-class head. Other upper-class rep- resentatives were simple, serious Andy Spears, vice-president; trip- ping Roxie Pike, secretary; and Svengali Jack Y. Quayle, Jr., 81 spring Sup ioniore Ojjicers First row: C. Wise, D. Gainer, F, George, A. Pilmer, F. Hudson, B. Copple. Second row: M, Atkinson, Mr. Johnston. treasurer. Frosh officers were dimpled, pensive Dawn A ' anless, vice- president; green-sweatered Audrey Milburn, secretary; and tawny, tweeded Bernice Lyons, treasurer. The election, handled by Tong A.S.B. vice-prez Bob Sutherland, fell below a standard hit in the corresponding polling of the fall se- mester. Upholding the negative of Resolved, that the powers of the President be substantially increased as a settled policy, Maurice Atkinson and Bill Copple won the final tilt of the Viking Award debate contest. By defeating the affirmative team of Frank Buddy M. Atkinson, President; A. Spears, Vice-President; R. Pike, Secretary; J. Y. Quayle, Treasurer. liitiicLiss Dtlxitc Sf rniv Frcs nud i Ofhcers ' i ' ' jS H. Lyons, M. Atkinson, C. Wise, L. Gnffin, Mr. Johnston, F. Hudson, B. Copple, A. Palmer. Rogers George and tubby, oily, Charles Wise, Atkinson and Copple won the right to have their names in the paper again and also on the V iking Award plaque as winners of the speaking tournament. It may prove interesting that Maury Atkinson had his name in the Viking, j. C. publication, more times than anyone else on the campus. Heeding the call of Okla Eugene Smith, football and track coach, Junior College lettermen reorganized their club for the first time since last spring. Nordic Selwyn Yancy was elected president, Bev Brown, vice-president; and John Wilson, secretary-treasurer. The C. Wright, President; D. Wanless. Vice-President; A. Milburn, Secretary; B. Lyons, Treasurer. LcttLriiicN Montiin tc sdliittiDiiis First row: S. Yancy, D. Walker, B. kupc, J. Campbell. B. Brown, Coach Gnflin, Coach B. Smith, Coach O. Smith, R. Murray, J. Lord, J. Wilson, W. Peterson, C. Woodard. Second row: A. Rene, J. Murray, J. R. McEntee, K. Smith, K. Dod, H. Lawrence, L. Bennett, T Frinell, B. Lee, B. Cresswell, B. Parr, J. Barbour, E. Butcher. Third row: B. Clemo, F. Kinney, H. Estabrook, A. McFadden, D. Heck, E. Nordman, D. Vorhies, C. Stockham. B. Koos, E. Burnham, C. Wood, E. Lord, D. Wurman, H. Duke, A. Spears, D. Holton. club was founded to give a social outlet and to promote various pro- jects in behalf of letter winners. Surviving a last minute rally by the Ventura basketball quintet, the Long Beach five won by the narrow margin of 22-20. At the half the Norsemen trailed by one point, but they came back strongly in the second period to gain a four-point lead with but two minutes to play. Selwvn Yancy, filling in at guard for Mel Kennedy, played an excellent all-around game. The following night the Vikings led by Andy Spears and Mel Kennedy, who scored 16 and 10 points respectively, trounced the Pasadena Jaysee quintet 46-38. Although Pasadena led six to two in the first few minutes of the opening quarter, buckets bv Sam Walker and Spears tied the count. Then the Norse forged into the lead and held it for the remainder of the game. First honors in oratory, second place in extemporaneous speaking, and a third in debate were garnered by the Long Beach forensists at the Phi Rho Pi convention held at tlie I ' niversity of California at Los Angeles, March 9 and 10. Maurice Atkinson won the first in oratory and the second in extempore. Atkinson and Bill Copple com- posed the placing debate squad. 84 Order of Toiig Arc voii sood men and true? Fust row: J. Wilson, A. Rene, Coach Griffin, Coach O. Smith, Coach B. Smith, B, Salveson, O. Smith. Second row: T, Westergard, G. Desmond, B. Brown, H. Estabrook, D. Heck, S. Yancy, B. Clemo, D. Vorhies. It was Copple by the way who dragged into the otfice one after- noon and sagging into a seat, told us this one. Carl Dunlap, the man from Pago Pago, is the hero of the little anecdote. And since it con- cerns Carl Dunlap, Dr. Kaulfers has a spot in it, as you might have guessed. The Doc, as you know, has been compiling Spanish syllabi by the gross. Well, Carl, unser Freund, had one lying around the house. A bunch of the Navy wives were whooping it up one after- noon. One of them, tiring of the incessant chatter about new clothes — she hadn ' t had any since her husband got into that mix-up with the native woman in Alanila — picked up the syllabus and glanced at it. Cahl, my deah. She waggled a finger. Come ovah heah. Carl pitched and swaggered to her side. He smiled genially and asked her what she wanted. Is this youah book? Yes, why? She turned to the rest of the group and commanded their atten- tion. Ah reahlly don ' know jest liaow ouah children ah expected to shaow any intelligence ' tall. Wha, heah ' s young Cahl a-studyin ' Spanish fum the same book Ah used back in high school thutty yeahs ago. We hear the Doc is a-mahchin ' through Gawgia raght naow. Tving Compton Jaysee for third place, with a total of twenty points. Long Beach Junior College women brought back victories in hockey and tennis doubles from the V entura play day, March 10. The Girls ' Tciuiis Their btduty, lily white Ir- D First row: D. Bowyer, A. McFarland, R. Bovyer. M. Beck, J. Startup, W. J. Hutchison, M. McClellan. Second row: V Slater, D. Lorenz, F. Himel, F. Scudder, M. Hanson, G. D. Williams, E. Knop, K. McNevin. Third row: B. Hunter, B. Bangs, M. Hess, B. Lyons. M. Faus, N. Aubrey, F. Herrick. Fourth row: A. Milburn, P. des Granges, V. Jones, L. Hileman, H. Wolfe, M. Dodge. local girls snatched the hockey game from Los Angeles by a score of 10 to 6. The tennis doubles team, composed of Barbara Bangs and Lorene Dameron, vanquished Ventura. Long Beach entered four teams and won two events. In the last game of the basketball season, Captain Purdy and Don Heck, playing the last game of their Junior College career, led their Viking teammates to a 48 to 24 victory over Santa Monica, ALarch 8. Heck, who failed to tally during the first stanza, ran amuck in the second half and scored 20 digits. This made him high-point man. Purdy registered 13 points to carry ofif second honors in scoring. Only once during the rout did the Santa Monica lads come near overhaul- ing the Vikings. During the first quarter, after Andy Spears tossed in a foul shot and Sam Walker caged a short bucket, Poole, Corsair guard, shot a goal, making the score 3 to 2. That was the first and last glimpse the Santa Monicans had at a chance to win the game. rhe V iking hnrsc-hiders won their first two practice starts when they defeated Santa Ana 8 to 1 and Whittier 2 to (). Showing brilliant form, the Norsemen pounded out eleven hits against Santa Ana and six against Whittier. Captain Bcv Brown, number one hurler, twirled a great pair of games. Track Sqiind Hounds of Spnns First row: L. Jarvis, N. Bailey, J. T Montgomery, C. Shehorn, J, Dye, W. Graham, R. Clark, R. Wood. Second row: O. Holmes, H. Lawrence, A. Ossen, E. Adler, Capt. J. Graham, B. Jackson, G. Ellsworth, D. Hall, J. Ash, J. Culbertson, Coach O. Smith, Third row: Mgr. L. Campbell, D. Dyer, M. Lacy, W, Parr, B. Bryant, H. Siebert, D. Cresswell, R. Jensen, A. Le Va, D. Ryan. Lome Campbell, Manager; Donoho Hall, mile and two-mile; Captain Joe Graham, sprints; Coach Oak Smith. A eiviHdii CI III) And ic iv not k Kncin ' First row: V. Hirth, O. Desmond, R. Anderson, S. Daniels, B. Loveland, C. Flannery, B. Burchfield, M. Brennan, B. Kipp, H, Harrington, M. Jones, D. Miller, F. Wuytens. Second row: W. Reggio, W. Hanson, D. Parmley, F. George, E. Burnham, Dr. Jackson, Father O ' FIaherty, C. Stockham, H. Hagen, G. Desmond, P. Carey, R. Howard, P. King. Xc ' wman Club held a business and social club meeting in the Vik- ing clubroom. The meeting was preceded by a question box, dancing, and refreshments. Officers elected for the semester were: Helen Har- rington, president; Norene Aubrey, vice-president; Wayne Hanson, social chairman; Bob Lee, treasurer; Carol Flannery, recording sec- retary; and Margaret Brennan, corresponding secretary. Led by Captain Joe Cementhead Graham, the Norse harriers went down to defeat at the hands of the Los Angeles Junior College to the tune of 106 to 25 at the Cubs ' den, March 17. Donoho Hall, star Viking distance man, pulled his iron man stunt by winning both the one-mile and two-mile runs. Harry Lawrence won the broad- jump with a tine leap of 21 feet 1 inch. Eric Nordman tied with Lindsey of Los Angeles in the high jump by going up six feet one inch. Girls managers successfully directed the course of the feminine sports year under the direction of Miss Stonebarger. They arranged matches for their various teams, lined up play days, furnished the handkerchiefs for blind bogies, carried water, and bandaged scraped shin bones. The above posture efifect is no wise the fault of the Saga staff; it is officially known as the Stoneb arger line. Mr. Nason was lecturing logarithms and integral calculus. Eng- ineers were leaning forward with taut, drawn faces, lapping it up; the girls were discussing beautiful eyes. Prof Nason let a piece of ss Girls ' Managers Fair iiuiid he not so coy ' i ■• «, ktr c E. Thompson, M. Beck, V. Slater, B. Bangs, V. Renius, P. des Granges, K. Teegarden, H. Wolfe, V. Jones. chalk fall from one cupped hand into the other. Into his life came a feeble knock, at the door. He ii nored it. The knock was repeated, this time louder. Come in! shoutetd Nason. The door opened slowly, and the platinum blonde head of Miss Adrienne Spicer was thrust into the tent. ' hat can I do for you, he ogled. Is this sociology, in here? I ' m sorry, this is a math class. She looked at him a moment, then softly shut the door and left. Nason went on lecturing, cocking his head to emphasize remarks, and letting the perennial chalk fall through his hands. He was on the verge of turning to the board to illustrate a point when another knock was heard at the door. The same blonde head entered, but this time she was scratching the back of it, and her face was all screwed up. The prof walked over to her as if, perhaps, she were in trouble. Are you sure this isn ' t sociology, pleaded Adrienne, They sent me out here with a notice and said this was sociology. Mr. Nason assured her in his usual carefully chosen diction that this was math, and that someone was wrong, and that he was awfully sorry. cll, she went out again, but Nason was hardly in to his illus- tration when the door burst open, this time without the accustomed prefatory knock, but with a violence that shuddered the front of the tent. It was Adrienne. Suspicion and anger were written all over her face. Sav, she hissed, are vou Miss Hess? Campus Beauty — Dawn Wanless Adrienne Spicer Jean Millner Betty Poulson A .o oj K ' liic, (t hook of verse, (iiid thou hcsidc nic 91 Af rU- VIII HE stag . . . Kennedy ' s bloody nose . . . cigars . . . Hammurabi at the ringside . . . geev eet to heem ... da blue eye, Joe . . . rouge . . . doughnuts . . . mascara . . . debaters . . . Kansas . . . lipstick ... I Wear a Shirt . . . Kassai . . open house . . , soph- omore assembly . . . junior College on the air . . . press convention . . . three firsts . . . Tong steak bake . . . mosquitoes . raw steak . . . glares across the fire . . . beach . . . sun burn . . . red noses . . . chapped iil)s . . . spotted shorts . . . backs . . . sun goggles . , . sweat shirts . . . zinc oxide . . . towels . . . dances . . . Once upon a time, way back in February, Wootie , that is, ilma Wolfe, gave a surprise party for some of the boys. When they arrived at the house, she claimed that she knew nothing about it, and then tried to inveigle them into teaching her how to dance. This was after she had gotten over her scare at seeing those damyankees caper- ing around the floor. The boys, however, disgruntled at their sorry greeting, sat around and played bridge. Somehow or other, Woohe managed to drag through the next few months, and then she upped and met Tommy Osborne at the mountains during spring vacation. Now it seems that some of the girls were going to give a dinner dance. Woofie wanted to ask Osborne, because after all he was cute, brt she couldn ' t dance. One day, while running around a tent to get oi ' t of Ziesenhenne ' s way, she hit upon her plan. The next time the girls were giving the regular Tuesday night party, she would ask some of the more willing boys over to teach her to dance. Milo Lacy and Arkie Profile Robison were drafted for the tussle. It took only 93 Girls ' Baschdll dDi my nn t icr ' s joy ) ' V: ' - ' ' w First row: W. J. Hutchison. J. Startup. M. McClellan. V. Remus, V. Norton. Second row: D. Lorenz, M. Kennedy, M. J. Tharpe, L. Ludlow. M. Dodge, M. Smith. a few nights to teach hL ' r tn dance, but there was the problem of ro- mance. She insisted that she didn ' t want to kiss him good night; girls who kissed fellows good night weren ' t nice. Lacy knew better, but Woofie was firm. Leaving out the romance, her campaign was well managed. First she asked Osborne to the dinner dance, then she asked him over to the house for an enchilada dinner, then she took him to a show; and, finally, he dated her. Women ' s baseball, captained by Mary McClelland, competed at field days throughout the spring semester. Representative teams were chosen from competitive matches during the sport hour. Playing under the direction of Miss Stonebarger, the girls spent many dusty hours running from home to first. Polishing off the W ntura Pirates 73 to 58, the Viking track team pulled a surprise victory on April 7. Don Hall, consistent distance man, and Ralph Cresswell, weight man, shared honors for the Vik- ings. Hall ran three races and took two firsts and a third, while Cress- well beat the field in both the discus and the shotput. A leap of 22 feet 2 inches gave Walt Middleton a victorv in the broad jump. M ayne Graham and Eric Nordman received ties for firsts in the pole vault and the high jump. The Vikings made a clean sweep in the 2-mile with Glenn Stewart leading. Other point winners for Long Beach were Captain Joe Graham, Ferguson, Wood, Ash, Paez,  94 Cad First row: S. Abramovitz, K. Miller, C. Schork, F. Dewhirst, Mr. Wright, W. Zantiny, E. Harvey, C. Stockham, H. Lyons, A. Lowery. J. Barbour, Second row: D. Dyer, M. Scott, N. Bailey. K. S. Spencer, C. Hyman, T. Van Norden. H. Sandell, W. Hanson, R. Elms, W. Courson. Montgomery, Ellsworth, Adlcr, Burt(Mi, LeVa, Lawrence, Parr, Jarvis, and Seibert. Caduceus, Junior College medical group, makes a practice of engaging prominent local physicians to address the club at regular meetings. Plans are made tor visits to nearby hospitals and clinics to give an elementary knowledge in the profession. This program is varied with social pursuits. Spring officers were: William Zantinv, president; Floyd Dewhirst, vice-president; Gunther Dumalski, sec- retary; Don Dyer, treasurer; and Edwin Harvey, historian. Fall of- ficers were: Marvin Messner, president; Zantiny, vice-president; Dyer, secretary; Robert Langworthy, treasurer; and Dewhirst, his- torian. Despite able pitching by Captain Bev Brown, who struck out 1 1 men and allowed but 5 hits, the Glendale Jaysee nine beat the Vik- ings 3 to 2. With the count tied 2 all in the ninth, Glendale ' s winning rcn came in when a man was waved home from third as John Wilson, shortstop, made an error in fielding a sharp infield hit. In the first innings. Long Beach scored its first run with ease. After that, the Norse found it more difificult to score. Bobby Salveson, catcher, who scored the first run, alsD made Long Beach ' s second run in tlic sixth inning. 95 S v i!i{ J ' tkniv Staff First row: J. Moss, B. Scott, J. Sutherland, D. Wanless, P. De Armond, IJ. Doyle. Second row: J. Quayle, P. Teschke, P. Porter, D. Smith. B. Sellers, C. Wright. K. Ewart, L. McArthur, A. Goldberg, M. Atkinson. D. Tobin. F. Rusk, E. Saylor, B. Hoban, F. Scott. G. D. Williams. B. Wilson. Third row; C. Wise, J. Martyr, K. Miller, L. Proctor, B. Mailer, F, Ojeda, B. Carlson, D. Walker. The Viking, junior College weekly publication, was judged the best all-around Class A junior college newspaper at the convention of the California Junior College Press Association, held at Ventura, April 14. It made the second consecutive time the Viking had won this honor. Ihe Viking won first honors on its feature page, which was edited bv Leland McArthur. Other ratings for the Viking were: best fea- ture story, by Lucille Hotifman; second in front page make-up, by .■lbert Goldberg, Editor-in-chief; and second in sport page make- up, bv Fred Rusk. )n the way home from the convention, Ed Saylor, Atkinson, and David Armstrong were sitting in the front seat of Dave ' s Ford. Le- land McArthur and Barbara Bangs we re holding down the rumble. They stopped to refresh themselves with a spot of tomato juice and a dash of coflfee. While xVrmstrong and McArthur were gone, Barbara, who had found it a trifle cold in the rumble seat, changed places with Atkinson. After the boys had come back, McArthur resumed his accustomed position in the rumble. Young Dave threw the car in gear and proceeded on his way homeward. .Slcanwhile, McArthur, who was a trifle jubilant because of his winning feature page, didn ' t notice the exchange. To his great amazement, Atkinson felt an arm « 06 Si ' -jiid luiviuv writ, moves on AL GOLDBERG. EDITOR; PAUL TESCHKE, MANAGING EDITOR Top row: L. McArthur, Asst. Ed.; F. Rusk. Sports Ed.; C. Wright, News Ed.; F. Scott, Desk Ed. Bottom row: E. Saylor, Bus. Mgr.; B. Wilson, Office Mgr.; D. Wanless, Women ' s Ed.; Mr. Corrie, financial adviser. ' )1 StL CI lib Way ' igeath iciilf liUothu First row: G. D. McGue, F. Meinberg, D. Walker, E. Sandstedt, C. Welty, E. Jewell, H. Dreher, B. ChafFie, B. Rope, M. Kennedy, L. Proctor. Second row: R. Knapp, K. McNall, A. Smart, F. Fisher, H. Putnam, R. Jameson, J. Anderson. creep about his winsome waist, and then tor the next fifteen minutes, he was regaled with the most passionate Mow of unbridled emotion to which he had ever been the reciprocant. The Saxons were organized by a group of lonely boys who wanted to play in intramural sports. Since managers of the other clubs wouldn ' t let them play all they wanted to, these outcasts banded to- gether in mutual defense of glory. Lauren Proctor was chosen presi- dent. Coach Oak Smith ' s cindermen were defeated by the Pasadena track team, 89 to 45. The only blue ribbons copped by the Norsemen were: Donoho Hall ' s first in the mile, Dwight Cresswell ' s first in the shot, Kric Nordman ' s first in the high jump, Walt Middleton ' s first in the broad jump, and Ernie Adler ' s tie for first in the hurdles. Publicizing Junior College activities, radio broadcasts were con- ducted over stations KFOX and KGER. Herbert Daniels and Carl Dunlap were announcers. Music, dramatics, public speaking, and language departments contributed to the programs. The glee clubs, A Cappella Choir, and orchestra presented several musical selec- tions. Drama Workshop gave a one-act comedy, Enter Dora, Exit Dad , and the speech department made the announcements. The sophomore ofifering in the annual freshman-sophomore as- semblv competition consisted of a classroom skit, a cabinet skit, and a burlesque on burlesques. The whole was interspersed with numbers 08 French Club Chacuii (1 S(i DUirottc First row: M. Chamberlain. M. Kumm. S. Robinson, A. Milburn, E. Thompson, G. Thayer, Miss Stager, K. Teegarden, M. Cuyler, C. Cummings, M. Bonner, C. Hanson, E. Rodgers, T. Berry. Second row: W. Price, R. Pruitt, J. Moreland. B. Harryman, V. Edwards, D. Wallentine, C. Kratz, V. Norton, D. Notring, B. Bangs, A. Marmion, D. Swift, H. Quinby, F. Bellman, H. Saxe, E. Benedict, J. Moss, F. Himel, R. Tucker, A. Higley, W. Smith. Third row: A. Spicer, M. McLain. M. Stamp, J. Faus, L. Miller, M. Schooley, D. Armin, T. Martin, J. Riddle. A. Scott, D. Patrick, W. Plumb, C. Carlson, R. Elms, E. Larson, D. Armstrong, F. Hudson, H. Downing, E. Saylor, T. Brown. rendered bv members of Bob Dumm ' s orchestra. The material was written and arranged by Darr Smith, Virginia Holden, Bob Mann, Jack Y. Quayle Jr., and Jack Martyr. Results of the contest revealed that the sophomores gave the better assembly. The satire on the business meeting of the A. S. B. cabinet was well under way and the cast was lining up for the classroom take-ofif. It was discovered that our little Garbo, Bettisha Scott, was not present to go on. It smacked strangely of the Awards Banquet situation back in December. Everyone was going about in a dither and order was brought about only by the usual coolness of the bland Professor Harold Finch Seal, who suggested very simply that someone else be drafted to play the role. Jean Millner, a trouper of the old school, was the only one suitable to go on in Tishie ' s place. The curtain had just been lifted on the second act when Betty fogged in, her eyelashes all tangled together, and said, Simple Simon met a pieman, going to the fair. Said Simple Simon to the pieman, ' I just got up ' . The French Club, with Miss Stager as sponsor, furthers interest in the French language and customs. Regular meetings were held once a month at which times members were entertained with short 99 Genua H Club Icli luilf cnuf Kdincradcn First row: G. Ojers, C. Stockham, P. Picaiii, d. Dumalski, F Ucwhnst. M. Mc.,b,iier, B. Zantiny, C. Sedan, J. Hata. Second row; A. Daume, J. Moreland, E. Simpson, D. Wallentine, C. Kiatz, B, Scott, F. Himel, D. Bowyer, L. Ball, K. Heisey, A. Brittain, P. Carey, R. M. Hudkins, D. Windes. Third row: B. Hunter, M. Dewhirst, L. Rehbock, F. Scott, J. Barbour. C. George, N. Dickey, D. Cook, M. Hand, Mr. Fieg, R. Sarson, J. Beeson, B. Lyons, A. Higley, M. Reed, H. Brackney. Fourth row: H. Luggett, F. Her- rick, J. Kabande, D Swirtz, H Redman, R. Kramer, N, Schubert, D. Cole, N. Bailey, B. Newton, H. Hagen, M. Crandall, D. Dyer, J. Klingaman. talks, dancing, and refreshments. Officers were: Minta Bonner, presi- dent; Betty Poulson, vice-president; Margarett Cuyler, secretary; and Adrienne Spicer, treasurer. A feature of the spring semester was a combined meeting of the French, German, and International clubs. The afifair was staged at the Recreation clubhouse, April 27. Music and entertainment num- bers were furnished by Frazer Simpson ' s orchestra, which was pro- cured bv Betty Poulson. Inder the direction of Herr tlter Fieg, the German club, Die Freundschaft, enjoyed an intensive program of lectures bv German educators and business men. Members learned to sing Zwei Herzen im Dreivierteltakt and the significance of Heil! Officers were: Gunther Dumalski, president; Floyd Dewhirst, vice-president; and Billv Xewton. secretary-treasurer. Maurice Atkinson came back from Independence, Kansas, with a third in the National Junior College men ' s extemporaneous speaking contest, and fourth in the men ' s oratory. Billy Copple teamed with Atkinson in debate to represent Long Beach in that division. The trip to Kansas was made possible for the two forensists by the Long ' Kill ■' Varsitv Dchntc God-gijtcd orvtiii-voicc MAURICE ATKINSON Third place, national Phi Rho Pi tour- ney; fourth place oratory. Co-captain. BILL COPPLE Member of first string debate squad. Co- captain. First row: M. Atkinson, L. Griffin, N. Aubrey, B. Copple. Second row: F. George, C. Wise, A. Palmer, Mr. Johnston, F. Hudson, D. Garner, H. Lyons, T. Osborne. Kuvrniccrs JVe baud of brothers Fust row: A. Helfin, T. Peter, A. McCreery, E. Davis, T. Baker, W. Graham, C. H. Scott. Second row: G. Gould, S. Watson, J. Hata, B, Van Ordstrand. K. Dod, D. Dean, J. Marriner, Mr. Mines, G. Taylor, J. Dye, R. Murray, C. Crow. Third row: R. Hart, W. Gerhart, J. Oberholtzer, C. Taylor. B. Dunkle, R. Ball, B. Gowen, J. Marsh, J. Mc- Grath, T. Frinell, C. Cramer, P. Blewett, R. Davis. Beach chapter of the Order of Elks who furnished money for travel- ling expenses. Russell R. Johnson, debate coach, and A. S. B. presi- dent, Gerald Desmond, aided the two debaters in presenting their case before the Elks. Friday evening, April 20, the first A. M.S. stag rally in the history of the Junior College was given at the Armory. It was held to stim- ulate interest in the baseball game and track meet the following day, and to engender rivalry between campus clubs. Eight matches, four boxing and four wrestling, headed the entertainment. Announcement of all bouts was made by Eugene Pinky King. Lauren Proctor, diminutive promoter, made all arrangements and match-making for the affair. Bob Rope, president, was in general charge. Guided by President John Marriner and Adviser Noble F. Hines the Engineers struggled through a semester beset by many imaginary overhead difficulties. Despite it all, however, their spring hop turned out to be as great a success as the one held in the fall. Again weak batting plus spotty infield support sent the Long Beach nine to defeat against Los Angeles. Captain Bev Brown pitched a marvelous game, but the one run that Los Angeles slipped by him in the sixth inning meant that the Vikings were defeated one to nothing, 102 ■IntLtiuitioiuil Club The PnrliaDiciit oj Mtin First row: J. Hata, N. Schubert, E. Marty, H, Rodriguez, M. Hand, D. Bowyer, F. Himel, L. Markle. R. Bovyer, M. Lewis, C. Carlson, T. Nagai. Second row: F. Hudson, A. Steele, L. Miller, J. Major, D. Wallentine, Miss Gassaway, R. Sarson, G. Ojers, D. Plemon. E. Rice, H. McConnell, B. Henderson, C. Dunlap, W. Booher, R. Carville. The International Club, formed for the purpose of breakins down racial barriers and prejudices, had a profitable year under the able direction of Miss Gassaway. Spring officers were: Maxine Hand, president; Jack Hata, vice-president; Kay Ewart, secretary; and Dick Carville, treasurer. April 21, the Viking tracksters lost their dual meet finale to the Santa Monica cindermen when they were defeated by the narrow margin of 71 to 60. As in previous meets, the Norse weakness in the hurdles spelled defeat. Captain joe Graham led the locals in high scoring honors. He garnered a first in the furlong, a second in the century, and ran on the winning Norse relay team. Donoho Hall, endurance ace, took a first in the mile and placed second behind his teammate, Glenn Stewart in the two-mile. Supplied for the first time in three conference games with that essential baseball commodity — base hits, the Viking diamond nine, on the strength of a batting splurge, defeated the Compton Jaysee squad 4 to 2, April 28, at Recreation Park. Tom Osborne, Austin McFadden, and pudgy Bobby Salveson shared batting honors with two bingles apiece. 103 T Linus TcdDi My grace is snjj ' iciciit ' .■. • M. Travers, D. Gardner, D. Wurman, B. Koos, W. Plumb, J. Searle, B. Oliver, Coach B. Smith. The Long Beach Junior College netmen opened their league sea- son with a team composed of Wurman, first singles; Gardner, second singles; Tyler, third singles; Plumb, fourth singles; Oliver-Searle, first doubles; and Bennett- Barbour, second doubles. As Saga goes to press, we find that the Viking tennis team has lost two and won two of its league starts. The netters defeated Glendale and Ventura, but failed to connect against Compton and Pasadena. Emma Swanson was appointed editor of the college handbook, which was published this year bv a special stafif, in contrast to the previous method which favored the appointment of the Viking editor to do the work. Assisting Miss Swanson in the publication were Dan Cherrier, Minta Bonner, Dorothy Swift, Hammond Redman, and Jack Gerard. The book was completed the first part of June to insure correct information. Now it is known bv all and sundrv that the Hammurabis don ' t like the .Mahabiiaratas. There are those who say that it is because the lasses won ' t serve the Hamms anything but tea, but, on the other hand, more competent gossips claim that the ill will dates back to the mock trial held in December. On that occasion the Mahs sat in a row and heckled the embryo Darrows. They snorted, and wise-cracked, pronounced their high anathema, and exclaimed that they could have d(Mie the thing much better in less time and without recourse to so manv boobish antics. The Hammurabis didn ' t like it. They were peeved. 104 Tnvia — Clockwise . . . mumblypeggers . . . Woody Evans, Phil Peters, and Jack Lord aid in holding up Walt Martin . . . Don Vorhies, his physique and new car ... at the bayshore with Lavell and Williams . . . Maxine Afflerbaugh, of the nice eyes, euid Eugenia Rodgers . . . Cora Mclnnis props the tent . . . Williams and Sutherland come up for air and photos. 105 One afternoon as Tom Brown was getting out of the elevator to go into the Law Library of the Jergins Trust Building, he overheard two janitors discussing a meeting to be held that night to promote safety in putting rags into mop handles. Tom went on into the Libe and sat down beside Bill Smith. Bill gave the usual, What do you know, Tommy? Not much, said Tom, with his customary tongue-in-cheek atti- tude, but I hear there ' s going to be a meeting here tonight. Did you hear that? hissed Lois Hileman to Betty Ann Lenhart, Mahabharatas both. They ' re going to have another mock trial to- night. Both of the girls seized their books and dashed for the nearest phone booth. Lenhart grabbed the receiver ofif its hook and started gathering the clan. ... uh-uh . . . yes, the Hammurabis . . . they didn ' t want us to know about it . . . another mock trial . . . oh, Judge Martin DeVries . . . slander, I guess . . . we want to get all the girls to come down and break it up . . . bye. By six o ' clock that evening even the bus drivers knew about it, and the Spit-and-Argue Club had the case decided. At eight-thirty, the Mahs, twenty strong, strode manfully into the Law Libe. They needed no horns to play the dirge for Betty Ann; their voices were enough for that. 106 Mrti IX - ■EX outstandiiii women . . . night school dance . . . lolling on the turf . . . Tong ' s closed jig . . . extemporaneous speaking contest . . . sailing on the bay . . . soft splash of oars . . . Ala- mitos Bay . . . swan dives . . . mud flats . . . floating platform . . . second annual College Day . . . police escort . . . two mile parade . . . Seal pitching ball . . . water jousts . . . picnic lunches . . . withered pickles ... no can openers . . . fires . . . yellow jackets . . . dust ... no grass . . . sport clothes . . . sleeveless sweaters . . . horses . . . bicycles . . . paddle tennis . . . volley ball . . . elections , . . Awards Banquet . . . no corsages . . . griped femmes . . . league closings . . . frosh-soph baseball . . . moonlit nights . . . beach parties . . . May day . . . Never let it be said that the old spirit of knight-errantry is dead on our campus. Our dragon killers are brave as Sir Galahad and their strength is the strength of Colt. That noble upholder of the constitution, Kenneth P. Elliott, is always found in the afterguard of those w ho are protecting democracy. Bright and early on the morning of May first, he strode out of the Administration Building, causing, as may be e.xpected a great twittering among the campus biddies. He paused authoritatively, finished buckling his cartridge belt, and slapped the enormous revolver on his hip. Where are you going? c ueried an innocent bystander, ducking behind Miss Paine ' s automobile. I ' m going out to see that the Communists don ' t spit on the sidewalks, said the monstrous Elliott. Whereupon he drove ofif and spent all day in San Pedro. Later he returned and disgustedly 107 Drtiint! Jf ' orkshol f ' csti In Giiibbn ' First row: B. Rountree, M. Carter. 1.) WiiKies, L. Hodge. M. B Burgess. D, Fickling, Miss Kennedy, S. Robinson, M. Whitaker, A. Emlein, B. Morgan. E, Engh, V. Norton, M. Johnson. Second row: F. Shaver, M. Chamberlain. C. Cader, E. Bostwick, H. Har- rington, E. Burnham, A, Miner, D. Plemon, M. Atkinson, B. Mann, V. Holden, R. Hamren, A. Long, P. De Armond, D. Garner, F. George, E. King, E. Swanson. reported that nothing had happened. The Reds had no guts! he said. The newspapers, during the previous weeks, had emphasized the fact that all demonstrations were to be held in Los Angeles on the Plaza. Freed from any directorial fiat, the Drama Workshop aims to allow student directors and actors to present plays in the light of their own individual interpretation. Miss Katharyn Kennedy, adviser, does not interfere with the monthly presentation of these productions. Two of the outstanding shows of the drama group this year were Lord Dunsany ' s A Night at an Inn and Elmer Rice ' s I ' he Pass- ing of Chow Chow. Doris Fickling is student director. In an effort to outdo the sophomore performance of the previous week, the Freshmen staged their annual competitive assembly, May 3, in the Recreation Park bandstand. They opened their program with a pseudo-imported German band. Following was a presentation of the time-honored and well-worn The Shooting of Dan Mc- Grew. They wound up their farce with a hospital scene. The affair was handled by Pinky King, Lovella Hodge, F ddie Burnham, Charles Wright, and Curby Goldsmith. Dennv Gore, the irrepressible one, claims that he threw a stench bomb during the middle of the performance but no one smelled it until after the show was over. 108 Forensic Club ' Rut have the -icisc to ■7C ' ;v ,« ' t ' First row: L. Hodge. B. Luveland, M. Burgess, L. Griff. n, B Lenhart, N, Aubrey. Second row: Mr. Johnston. D. Garner, M. Atkinson, D. Ryan, A. Miner, F. Hudson, E. Burnham, C. Carlson, C. Wise, A. Palmer, T. Martin. Third row: B. Smith, A. Spears, M. Kennedy, T. Matthews, G. Spair, F. George, H. Lyons, B. Copple, G. Desmond. Support of forensic activities is the purpose of the Forensic Club sponsored by Russell R. Johnston. The leading social event of the club was a dance following fall Field Day. The club also aided Phi Rho Pi in running olif the first annual intramural extempore contest. Officers of the club are: Billy Copple, president; Betty Anne Len- hart, vice-president; and George Sparr, secretary-treasurer. Honoring the ten outstanding women in the freshman class, Val- kvries, women ' s service organization, entertained May 4, at a formal tea at the Ebell clubhouse. Honorees in the receiving line were: Margarett Cuyler, Helen Jane Saxe, Alice Brittain, Bettie Lou Sellers, Arline Schneider, Barbara Bangs, Eileen Thompson, Audrey Milburn, Lillian Ludlow, and Dawn Wanless. Charles Wright was victor in the initial intramural extemporan- eous speaking contest given on the campus. In the finals on . Liy 10, Wright spoke on Debunking ALirs ' Latest Toys . Kenneth Smith was a close second with his speech, Open Sesame . The contest is to be a traditional rivalry among the clubs of the school. Russell John- ston, favsee debate coach, and Lois Grififin, debate manager, secured a permanent trophy from the Press-Telegram for future frays. Sixtv miles down the boulevard and over the hill , as the V ' iking puts it, expresses the rapidity and zest of the second annual College Dav at Orange County Park, on May 11. Starting at 12:15, a two- 109 Golf Squad I ' di souii through Mgr. O. Smith, D. Walker, B. Buck, J. Biande, J. Oliger, S. Watson, H. Putnam, K. Dod, G. Kayama, M. Uptegraff, Coach B. Smith. mile cavalcade of cars with a motorcycle police escort began the trek. With Raymond Kraft, Ralph Jameson, and Harold Finch Seal hurl- ing respectively for soph, frosh, and faculty, an elimination baseball tournament was the opener. The upperclassmen won. Shortly before twilight, several semi-nude young athletes of Jaysee engaged in a water joust on the sluggish waters of Irvine Park. pond. Horseback riding, bicycling, swimming, eating, and dancing made up the rest of the calendar. By losing to Santa Monica, 4 to 1, in their last league match, the Norse golf team ended up their season in second place. After a stiflf workout session in the winter months, a seeded team was sent into league action. They were: Jack Brande, first man; Sam ' atson, sec- ond; and Jake Oliger, third. Denny Gore and Harry Putnam con- tested throughout the season for fourth place, and Captain Kenny Dod was hfth man. As the chief event of the J. C. musical season, the department planned a concert for June 1. John Crown, noted British pianist, was the featured artist. Musical groups of the campus sang for the afifair, which was held in the concert hall of the Alunicipal Auditorium. The Wilson High orchestra and the Poly High A Cappella Choir assisted the collegians. Miss Edith M. Hitchcock was in charge of the event. SwiDiniins , If titer Polo Lay hold the life hue First row: J. Pine B. Morgans. Second ro Viii Dvke, B. Sutherland, T. Frinell, A. McCreery, T. Van Norden, G. Estabrook, C. Runner. Running second only to Los Angeles, the ' iking water polo and swimming teams defeated all other contestants in the league. Con- sistent point winners on the swimming team were: Sutherland and Van Norden in the 100-yard free style, Clemo in the 100-yard breast stroke, Morgans in the 220-yard free style, Clemo in the 440-yard free style, Peterson in the 100-yard back stroke, and Wheater in div- ing. The water polo team was composed of Bob Sutherland, captain and forward; Bill Clemo, sprint; Harold Tonini, forward; H nvard A ' heater, goalie; Jimmy Pine, guard; Walt Peterson, guard; Bob Morgans, center. After holding Pasadena scoreless for six innings. Captain Bev Brown allowed the Bulldogs four runs in the seventh. This made the third loss for the Vikings in four starts. Long Beach threatened to score in the fifth; however, the Viking batsmen, probably because Goldberg was not allowed to step to the plate, were not quite potent enough. Despite their string of bad luck the Vikinti; nine managed to cop second place in the league when they defeated Santa Monica 4 to 1 the afternoon of Saturday, . Liy 19. As the gentleman on the sport- ing desk of the Press-Telegram was a trifle irked, we are unable to furnish further details, since Saga went to press before the appear- ance of the morning edition. Elections for A. LS. and A.S.B. were held Fridav, Mav 25. Only I ltltl il M (l UicrcrS Laid Knidlv Liuhf C- Sio.kiL.m. H LawiciKc, H i.si.iln ......r,, A. JVlessner, C. Taylor. H. Hagen, L. Proctor. rin.ldll. CuaLh K Smith. M. Atkinson. M. six eligibility cards had been filed in the office of the Dean of Activi- ties as we went to press. Less interest was shown in this election than in any previous one. Held on May 30, the semi-annual Awards Banquet was arranged by Howard Estabrook, representative of athletics on the Associated Student Bodv cabinet. Other students working on the affair were: Curby Goldsmith, chairman of the arrangements committee; Selwyn Yancy, chairman of the ticket sales committee; and Eugenia Rodgers, Kenneth Purdy, and Virginia Hazzard. At the banquet all letter winners in spring sports: baseball, tennis, golf, track, swimming, and water polo, received their felts. At the same time, a number of stu- dents received Viking Awards. Miss Glee Duncan ' s geography class was discussing the care and cultivation of tobacco. Woody Evans was supposed to have prepared a report on a particular species. She called on him for it, and, since he didn ' t have it, he decided to get up and bluff through. For ten minutes he rambled on about how this tobacco was grown with great success in the headwaters of the Nile. After he sat down, she com- mended him and supplemented his remarks with an additional five minutes gassing. As she concluded, a child in the back of the room, one Leonard Ball, raised his hand, But it says here in this book that the onlv place that varictv yrows is in ' irginia; and furthermore, no tobacco can be grown in Xorthcrn Africa. Miss Duncan dismissed the class. 112 BnschaU Squad Manhood ' s Jvinic vigor First row: Mgr. H. Daniels, A. Tindall, L. Carey. W. Reggiom, M. Way, A. Goldberg, M. McClellan. Second row: V. Slater, D. Lorenz, F. Himel, F. Scudder, M. Hanson, J. Klingaman, W. Gregory, J. Anderson. W. Miller, mascot. Second row: A. McFadden, T. Humphrey. E, Jewell, J. Wilson, Capt. B. Brown, D. Heck, T. Osborne, F. Lehman, D. Lang, B. Mailer, B. Lee. B. Salveson. B. Jarnagin. Herbert Daniels. Manager; Captain Bev Brown, Pitcher; Bob Salveson, Catcher. 113 Trivia — Counter clockwise . . . Blaine Quick and Lawrence Chaffee hold down a bench in the park . . . Scrubby Elliott collects his golf gear . . . Tobin and Mr. Stimpson line up a Saga group . . . pearl diver Purdy serves a hamburger . . . Saga staff and car ... in the Patio between numbers . . . white skirts on the tennis courts . . . Say- lor, Scott, and Teschke rescue Arabella. -■m 14 — Trivid Clockwise . . . Audrey Skinner, Marvel Hansen, and Bertine Hudspeth with Brains Dee in the background . . . Porter peers from under . . . coy girls, ashamed of Arabella . . . Atkinson, orator, and Yancy, athlete, fight on common ground . . . going up or coming down? . . . Miss Trail lectures . . . pole-vaulter Sunderland grunting over . . . Betty Poulson and, Leonard Carey. 115 Jiuic — • — GRADUATES . . . plastcrboards . . . mis-fitting gowns . . . Saga It . . . beefs . . . signatures . . , slush . . , speeches . . , finals . . . %J tears . . . broken pencils . . . empty pens . . . blue books . . . eagle eyes . . . sun glasses . . . headaches . . . phobias , , , heat . . , petty an- noyances . . . Students Cooperative Union . . . ponies . . . Edda , . . bewilderment . . . poetry . . , vacation plans ... A. S. B. dance . . . still no corsages . . . empty tents . . . deserted square . . . rubbish and litter . . . sad-eyed janitors . . . forlorn eating-houses . . . On various occasions while the boys were sitting in the park munching blades of grass, this little tale went the rounds. Once, in the dim ages, Milo Lacy entered the Varsity. He was feeling rather low that afternoon and had decided to do a bit of slumming among the pseudo-intelligentsia and ratty individuals who frequented the place. As he was sipping a lemon coke, he noticed a blonde creature giving him the eye. Milo enjoyed the sensation as only he could. After all, he was the representative of the student body and a foot- baller to boot. The girl seemed quite taken with him. Finally, he picked up his glass and wandered over beside her. May I have the next dance? he asked, bowing superbly from the hips and clicking his heels. Whose little boy are you? she answered, and turned her back. Milo can ' t figure it out. Brush and Pencil, the stand-by of the art students, held its annual semi-formal dance on the night of May 19 at the Ebell Club. Ar- rangements for the affair were made by Arline Schneider, president, and Walter MacArthur. The bids, which were designed bv Acil Brush (iiid Pencil Art IS art for all of that First row: H. Kindig. V. Carlson. D. Bowyer, E. Cline, V. Duncanson, F. Lelke, E. Harkreader, M. Burley, L. Shure. R. Fries. J. Miciiener, J. Hagle, D. Hinkley, P. Haugen. Second row; K. Carpenter, H. Clift, B. Cartwright. D. Boyce, B. France, E. Valz, Mrs. Wennberg, P. King, P. Hughes, N. Wilke, D. Arnold, A. Orcutt. Third row: D. FickHng, C. Grundy, F. Fisher, D. Patrick. K. Watkins. R. Brady, E. Jarvis, G. Thayer, W. MacArthur, Acil Hanson. Hansen, were made by a committee of members under the chairman- ship of Virginia Carlson. One of the art students. Beryl Hoban, whose interest at present is centered in the he-man Bob Macaulay, had her heart broken this spring because she refused to break away from the conventions. One night while she was patting the cold-cream into her face, she received a phone call. The lug on the other end of the wire insisted that he had met her once two years ago when she was in Poly. Since then he had been on the stage in New York, and had held her as his ideal all the while. He asked for a date, but Bcrlie, suspicious, refused on the usual grounds. He called the next morning, the next night, and twice on the following day. Berlie still thought it was a gag. Finally he phoned to tell her that he was making a personal appearance at Poly and Wilson the following day and wondered if she wouldn ' t like to see him perform. Berlie ' s eye Hashed like gufiflebugs in the por- ridge. She told him he sounded like a sissy, shouted no at him, and slammed down the receiver. The next day she saw a notice in the paper where the World ' s Strongest Man had made an appearance at both Poly and Wilson. The campus literarv group, Skalds, issued their ainuial publica- tion, Kdda, on May 28. It contained the best of the club ' s entire out- IIS Skalds Edda Staff First row: G. Williams, F. Wilson, L. Miller, M. Schooley, B. A. Lenhart, F. Herrick, M. Cuyler, J. Moss. Second row: J. Moreland, F. Wilson, T. Brown, D. Smith, P. Teschke, D. Armstrong, J. Quayle, M. Atkinson. put for the year. Mel Kennedy edited the magazine, Frances Wilson was art editor, Maury Atkinson held the position of business man- ager, and Margarett Cuyler, president, acted as associate. Miss Flor- ence M. Carpenter, sponsor, superintended the production. Contrib- utors were Lois Miller, Joan Lambert, Maxine Schooley, Margarett Cuyler, Gladys Williams, Betty Ann Lenhart, Betty Poulson, Darr Smith, Jack Gerard, Tom Brown, Paul Teschke, John Lissol, Jack Y. Quayle, Jr., Joe Moreland, Donoho Hall, Fred Wilson, Frances Wilson, Karl Butcher, . Luirice Atkinson, and Mel Kcniiedv. M. Kennedy, Editor; M. Atkinson, Business Manager; F. Wilson. Art Editor; M. Cuyler, President of Skalds. Spn io- Presidents ' CoiDicil Top row: M. Cuyler, Skalds: W. Zantiny, Caduceus; M. Hand, International; A. Schneider, Brush and Pencil. Bottom row: L. Proctor, Saxons: L. Hileman, Mahab- harata; M. Koenig, Demaskera; A. Palmer, Pcliticos. C. H. Thurbcr, President of the I ' niversity of Redlands, had been selected to be the commencement speaker, as Saga went to press. Exercises were scheduled for June 14 in the Recreation Park band- stand. Bill Copple, co-captain of the varsity debate squad, was ap- proved as the chief student speaker on the program. Maurice Atkin- son, president of the sophomore class, and Harold F. Seal, adviser, supervised arrangements. Continuing the policy begun last year, both February and June graduates were eligible to receive their sheep- skins at the June exercises, since no commencement was held in mid- year. Approximately 120 sophomore diplomas had been prepared for distribution at the ceremonies. Principal John L. Lounsbury an- nounced that H. S. Upjohn, Superintendent of Long Beach Schools, would present graduates with their certificates. Members of the fac- ulty, assisted by sophomore officers, prepared decorations for the bandstand, and arranged a musical program. On the night of the Poly graduation at the Municipal Auditor- ium, Lois Grififin fittingly bedecked in her black gown and plaster board appeared to receive her sheepskin. After seating herself in the midst of the Poly seniors, who were wearing gray gowns, she felt that something was amiss. Perturbed, she looked anxiously about. Not a familiar face could she see. At last she arose from her seat and approached Poly Principal David Burcham. 120 A Mmhtv Fortress Top row: J. R. McEntee, Alpha Gamma Sigma; W. Long, Kassai; C. Hanson, Music; B. Copple. Forensic. Second row: H. Estabrook. Tong; A. Goldberg, Type and Copy; J. Marriner, Engineers; H. Lawrence. College Y. First row: S. Paez. Spanish; H. Harrington, Newman; D. Fickling, Drama Workshop: M. Bonner, French. hllt is it? he inquired. Is this the Junior College graduation: ' No this is Poly ' s night, he answered, turning away. Lois went back to her seat, and then in a few minutes returned to the platform. Well? asked Burcham. It said in the Viking. Lois went on, that the Junior College graduation would be given here at this hour . I am very sorry, said the principal, but this is the Poly High School graduation. Again Lois departed. About ten minutes later, however, there she was standing in front of him again. What now? asked Principal Burcham, patiently. Are you Mr. Lounsbury .• ' 121 GrddudtiiiiJ Sop ioDiores- PHIL AARONSON— Liberal Arts, Tennis. PHYLLIS ALDAHL— Liberal Arts, W.A.A., Golf Club, Pals. JOHN A. ANDERSON— Business Administration, Commerce Club, Baseball. MARJORIE ASMUS— Liberal Arts, Student Club, Alpha Gamma Sigma. MAURICE ATKINSON— Liberal Arts, Soph. Pres., Scholarship U. of Chicago, Debate. NICHOLAS BAILEY — Pre-medical, Caduceus, German Club, Alpha Gamma Sigma. ROWLAND BALL — Mechanical Engineering, Treas. Engineers Club. JAY BARBOUR— Pre-medical, Caduceus, German Club, Tennis, Men ' s Glee Club. GRACE ELSA BARNES— Pre-teacher, Pres. Kassai, Soph. Secretary, W.A.A. ORA BARNETT— Liberal Arts, Student Club, French Club, Pals. JOSEPH ALDEN BEESON— Liberal Arts, Football, Water Polo, German Club. LOY BENNETT— Pre-teacher. Tennis, Pres. Chess Club. -GrddiKitnifr Sophomores EVELYN BEST— Commercial, Golf, A.W.S. Committee. JOSEPH MICHIEL BORTELL— Liberal Arts, Law, College. RUTH BOVYER— Liberal Arts, International Club, Alpha Gamma Sigma, W.A.A. DELLA D. BOWYER— Liberal Arts, Alpha Gamma Sigma, Brush and Pencil. MARY BOB BURGESS— Liberal Arts, Secretary Mahabharata, Student Club, Debate. KATHLEEN BURNETT— Liberal Arts, Student Club, French Club, Pals. EARL WEBSTER BUTCHER— Commercial, Viking Staff, Skalds, Type and Copy. HELEN M. BUTTOLPH— Pre-teacher, W.A.A., Student Club. LORNE CAMPBELL— Pre-legal, Hammurabi, College Y, Viking, Track Manager. STUART MUNRO CAMPBELL— Pre-legal, Hammurabi, College Y. HELEN E. CARD— Liberal Arts, German Club, Student Club, Golf Club. CHARLES K. CARLSON— Liberal Arts, Alpha Gamma Sigma, V. Pres. College Y. Graduntnifj Sot honiorcs — KATHERINE CARPENTER— Liberal Arts, Kassai, Brush and Pencil, Riding. ROGER COLEMAN— Liberal Arts, Swimming. MIRIAM CONE— Liberal Arts, A.W.S. Publicity Chairman, Saga. Viking, Skalds. WILLIAM P. COPPLE— Pre-legal, Pres. Forensic Club, Pres. Hammurabi, Debate. CHARLES CROW— Engineering, College Y. Engineers. CHARLES CUMMINGS— Commercial. Pres. French Club, Commercial Club. HERBERT S. DANIELS— Pre-legal, So. Calif. Champion Quartette, Mgr. Baseball. HAROLD DAVIS— Engineering. DANIEL DEAN — Engineering, Pres. Sophomore Class, Pres. Engineer s, College Y. KATHRYN DEE— Liberal Arts, Brush and Pencil. PAULINE DES GRANGES— Physical Education, Viking Award. Secretary A.S.B. GERALD DESMOND— Pre-legal, Varsity Football, Pres. Hammurabi, Tong. - 124 - -Grdduatnis Sophomores Hi FLOYD DEWHIRST, JR.— Pre-dental, Caduceus, German Club. Alpha Gamma Sigma. SHIRLEY DIBBERT— Pre-nursing. LYLE DIXON— Liberal Arts. KENNETH DOD— Engineering. HOMER DUKE— Commercial, Football, V. Pres. Tong. GUNTHER DUMALSKI— Liberal Arts, Pres. German Club, Caduceus. DON DYER— Pre-medical, Caduceus. KENNETH P. ELLIOTT— Commercial, Treas. A.S.B., Frosh Pres., Bus. Mgr. Viking. HOWARD ESTABROOK— Advertismg. Football. Rep. of Athletics, Pres. Tong. FLORENCE FITSCHEN— Liberal Arts. SYLVIA FLORA— Pre-teacher, W.A.A.. Treas. A.W.S. DWIGHT L GARNER— Pre-teacher. Debate, Pres. Forensic Club, Phi Rho Pi. Gradiiatiiii SophoDior IRVIN GARRETT— Liberal Aits. JESSIE LOUISE GEHMAN— Liberal Arts, Student Club, Golf Club. FRANK GEORGE— Commercial, Hammurabi, Music Club, Debate. Drama Workshop. WALLACE GERHART— Engineering, Engineers Club. HAZEL ARLINE GLAZE— Pre-teaching, Alpha Gamma Sigma, Kassai, A.W.S. Com. ALBERT GOLDBERG— Liberal Arts, Editor Viking, Ass. Ed. Viking, Baseball. DENNY GORE— Pre-medical LOIS GRIFFIN— Liberal Arts, Viking Award, Secty A.S.B., Rep. of Arts, Debate Mgr. HARLAN HAGEN — Pre-legal, Alpha Gamma Sigma, Hammurabi, German Club. LA VONNE HALL— Liberal Arts. MAXINE HAND — Liberal Arts, Pres. International Club, Alpha Gamma Sigma. WAYNE P. HANSON— Pre-medical, Caduceus, Newman Club, Football. 1U -Gradndtiiig S()ph(jnif)res t mM E. ROSS HART— Engineering, Pres. College Y, Engineers Club. VIRGINIA HAZZARD— Pre-physical Education, French Club. V. Pres. Kassai. KATHREN HEISEY— Liberal Arts, Women ' s Sextette, Alpha Gamma Sigma. KENNETH L. HEMPHILL— Engineering. Engineers Club. VERNE W. HENDRIX— Business Administration. EVA HERMAN— Pre-teacher, Women ' s Ed. Viking. BERYL HOBAN— Liberal Arts, Drama Workshop, Classes Ed. ' 32 Saga, Com. Club. RAYMOND HOWARD— Commercial, Alpha Gamma Sigma, Spanish Club. FRED R. HUDSON, JR — Pre-legal. Phi Rho Pi, Debate. Forensic Club. WILMA JANE HUTCHISON— Physical Education. Pres. W.A.A., Kassai, A.W.S. Chr. EVELYN B. JARVIS— Liberal Arts, Kassai, V. P. A.W.S., Music Club, German Club. JOHN JARVIS— Liberal Arts. 127 Giiuintiti i Sophomores- MELVIN KENNEDY— Liberal Arts, Basketball, Sports Ed. Viking, Editor Edda. PATRICIA KLEIN— Commercial. RUSSELL KNAPP — Business Administration. Alpha Gamma Sigma, Spanish Club. MARJORIE KOENIG— Liberal Arts, Pres. Demaskera, Art Chairman A.W.S. THELMA KOENIG— Busmess. RUSSELL KRAMER— Commercial, Band, A Cappella Choir, German Club. CLARA KRATZ — Liberal Arts, Alpha Gamma Sigma, German Club, French Club. HARRY LAWRENCE— Industrial Engineering, Pres. College Y, Intrammural Mgr. KENNETH LEITHOLD— Engineering. BETTY ANN LENHART— Pre-legal, Pres. Mahabharata, Forensic Club. Skalds. HOWARD LEWIS— Liberal Arts, Football. WINIFRED DALE LONG— Liberal Arts, Pres. Kassai. Song Leader, Stage Crew. 12S  -Gr{](jii(it n r SophoDiorcs EVERETT LORD— Engineering, Stage Crew, German Club, Treas. A.M.S. JOHN A. LORD— Liberal Arts, Yell King, Stage Mgr., Rally Com., Pres. Stage Crew. ROBERT MACAULAY— Commercial, Spanish Club, Commercial Club, Basketball. JUANITA MACMILLAN— Commercial, Rowing, Student Club, French Club, W.A.A. MARGARET JANE MAJOR— Liberal Arts. Spanish Club, International Club. MURIEL ADELE MARMION— Liberal Arts. French Club, W.A.A., Student Club. THOMAS MARTIN— Pre-legal, Hammurabi, French Club, Forensic Club. WALTER MATTOCKS— Pre-medical, Caduceus. LELAND McARTHUR— Pre-legal. Ass. Ed. Vikmg. Type and Copy, Hammurabi. J. ROBERT McENTEE— Aeronautics, Pres. Alpha Gamma Sigma, Basketball, Viking CORA McINNIS— Liberal Arts, Kassai, Drama Workshop, Viking, Com. Club. MARGARET MERRICK— Liberal Arts, Spanish Club. Viking, Saga, Pals. 129 Gradndtiii Sophomores — ARVILLA MERRITT— Commercial. MARVIN MESSNER— Pre-medical, Pres. Caduceus. CLYDE WALTER MILLER— Liberal Arts, Music Club, Musical Arts Scholarship. DOROTHY MILLER— Liberal Arts, Mahabharata, Newman Club, Spanish Club. LOIS MILLER— Pre-teacher, Skalds, International Club. French Club, Golf. ARCHIE MINER— Liberal Arts, Pres. Hammurabi, Employment Bureiu. J. T MONTGOMERY— Engineering, Track, Cross Country. MURIEL MOSHER— Liberal Arts, Alpha Gamma Sigma. Brush and Pencil. JAMES MURRAY— Liberal Arts, Tennis. VIOLA NIELSEN— Liberal Arts, U.C.L.A. MINA OPPERMAN— Liberal Arts, Alpha Gamma Sigma, W.A.A. ELIZABETH PACE— Liberal Arts. 131) -G radii (It I II g So p h o di ores ALBERT PALMER— Pre-legal, International Club, Forensic Club. Debate. DON PENROSE— Pre-legal, Pres. Hammurabi. WILLIS GRASSLE PETER— Chemical Engineering, Alpha Gamma Sigma. WALTER H. PETERSON— Chemical Engineering, Capt. Water Polo ' 32, Swimming ' •m i ROXIE ADA PIKE— Secretarial, Soph. Secretary, Kassai. Commerce Club, A.W.S. DON PLEMON— Business, Pres. International Club, Com. Club, Drama Workshop. CARLETON POLLOCK— Pre-medical. PHILIP O. PROCTOR— Pre-legal, German Club, Spanish Club, Chess Club. HARRY PUTNAM— Physical Education, Golf. JACK Y. QUAYLE. JR.— Liberal Arts. Co-editor Saga, Managing Ed. Viking HARRY C. RADIN— Liberal Arts. DON RANEY— Pre-legal, French Club. 131 Grddiidtiiijj; Sop t loiiiorcs- DOROTHY RANKIN— Secretarial. EDITH M. RAUSCH— Pre-teacher, Spanish Club. Student Club. Music Club. HAMMOND F. REDMAN— Business. German Club, Commerce Club. BURNS RICK— Pre-teacher. JOSEPH C. RIDDLE— Liberal Arts. VERNON ROBY— Liberal Arts. EUGENIA ARTELL RODGERS— Liberal Arts, Secretary A.S.B., Kassai, Pals. BOB ROPE— Liberal Arts, Rep. of Athletics, Pres. A.M.S., Bus. Mgr. Saga. THOMAS ROYCE — Engineermg, Engineers Club, College Y, Alpha Gamma Sigma. WINIFRED SANDERS— Liberal Arts, Saga ' 33. Viking, A.W.S. Com., Demaskera. RUTH SARSON— Liberal Arts. EMOGENE SIMPSON— Liberal Arts. German Club, French Club. 1. 2 — Graduntiii i Sop io mores jr B luk «- f- VIRGINIA SLATER— Pre-legal, Mahabharata. DARR SMITH— Liberal Arts. KENNETH SMITH— Liberal Arts, Rep. of Arts, Frosh Pres., V. Pres. A. M.S. OAK SMITH— Business, Tong, Secretary A.M.S., Rep. of Athletics A.M.S. ANDREW M. SPEARS— Pre-legal, Basketball, V. Pres. Sophs, Tong, Hammurabi. JUSTINE STARTUP— Liberal Aits, Treas. W.A.A. AVANELLE STEELE— Pre-teacher, Spanish Club, Student Club, International Club. GEORGE WESLEY STUBBLEFIELD— Commercial, Basketball. BOB SUTHERLAND— Engineering. GLENN J. TAYLOR— Engineering. Engineers Club, Interclass Sports. PAUL E. TESCHKE, JR.— Liberal Arts, Managing Ed. Viking, Ass ' t. Ed. Viking GERALDINE THAYER— Liberal Arts, Pres. A.W.S., Kassaai. Grndiiatniu Sol hoDiorcs — JAMES W. THOMPSON— Engineering. Alpha Gamma Sigma, Interclass Football. DON TOBIN— Liberal Arts. Editor Viking. Co-editor Saga, Pres. Type and Copy. EDWARD TURLEY— Engineering. MALCOLM E. UPTEGRAFF— Pre-legal, Golf. r WILLIAM VAN ORDSTRAND— Engineering, Engineers Club. Track. Inter. FootbalL ROMAINE VIOLETTE— Liberal Arts, Mgr. Football, Basketball. DELBERT WALKER— Basketball, Capt. Golf. Mgr. Golf, S. Cal. Golf Champ. 2 yrs. DORIS ELIZABETH WALLENTINE— Liberal Arts, Student Club, Spanish Club. WILLIAM TEX WESTERGARD— Engineermg, A.S.B. President, A.S.B. Treasurer. NAREE WILKE— Liberal Arts, Historian Demaskera, French Club. FRANCES WILSON— Liberal Arts, Skalds, Art Ed. Edda. Brush and Pencil. CARLTON E. WOOD— Pre-legal, Tennis, Hammurabi, Lettermen, Alpha G. Sigma. 1,U -Graduating Sof KJiiiores AMELIA SHAW— Pres. Student Club, Frosh Secty., Kassai, Comm. Club. ED WOOLCOCK— Pre-medical. BILL ZANTINY— Pre-medical. Pres. Caduceus, Saga Photographer. CLYDE FAWSON— Liberal Arts. MAXINE AFFLERBAUGH— Liberal Arts, Kassai, Soph. Secty., Saga. MURIEL BARNES— Liberal Arts, Soph. V. Pres., Kassai. Spanish Club. MARGARET DE ARMOND— Liberal Arts, Saga ' 33, ' 34, Kassai, Comm. Club. CHARLOTTE HANSON— Liberal Arts, Pres. Music Club, Kassai, Glee Club. Reading clockwise — Students work in chem lab . . . that far-famed two-mile cavalcade of cars that made the trip to Orange County Park for College Day . . . Suds Sutherland shows the diving skill that helps make him a champion swimmer . . . Social group gathers in front of library window . . . Girl sports switch to horseback riding. 136 u y Your FTS f Without C or the Do not let cash shortage prevent your purchase of a gift — the lasting reminder of a cherished occasion. Somewhere about the house you undoubtedly have an old watch or some odds and ends of obsolete gold or platinum jewelry which you no longer desire. Bring them In. You ' ll be pleasantly surprised at the liberal allow- ance we will make on any purchase during this month. If the gift you select amounts to more than your old gold, you may charge the balance and pay it off at your convenience. Newest Baquette 17 el— Fully Gi t to Match. t9i; nn ' baquette 17 O.VKJ Jewel-Fully Guar- (ith Br, Here you will find all of the newest stiapes and designs in strap watcties for men in such famous makes as TAVANNES. HAMILTONS, ELGINS, WALT. HAMS. ILLINOIS, BULOVAS. $25 to $100 What finer gift could you give than a diamond— especially the satisfaction of knowing that it ' s a perfect gem as none but Blue White Perfect Diamonds are permitted in our stocks. Exclusively designed hand made settings. $25 to $1500 —Watches of absolute depend- ability — Newest designs in platinum. white or natural gold — famous makes only — $25 to $500 Our watch guarantee is that Your Watch Must Keep Time J A M II N - II R V I N G CO. The House of Perfect Diamonds 225 PINE AVENUE • ° LONG BEACH, CALIF Comptiments of HOBBS COLLE GE BOOK STORE — :-. Vc - lOTH ANp XIMENO c: ' y y o-c rV SWEATERS SWIMTOGS SPORTSWEAR V l ritShop 242 Pine Ave. STIMSON STUDIO DISTINCTIVE PHOTOGRAPHY 3 I I Pine Ave. Long Beach, California T INDIVIDUAL PORTRAITS COMMERCIAL AND HOME PHOTOGRAPHY OFFICIAL SAGA PHOTOGRAPHERS 1934 13S ' J ' ' - -r  GALIFORNI Sixth and Pine Avenue WE PAVE THE WAY TO BETTER PAY CHARTERED BY THE STATE Authorized to Grant the Regular Commercial Degrees MEMBER OF NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF ACCREDITED COMMERCIAL SCHOOLS Strong courses — modern equipment — thoroughly trained teachers COMPLIMENTS OF MARTFS Broadway at Locust Ordinarily it ' s lapels, pockets, and shoulders t hat get our attention. This season the back of your coat tells the style story with smart belts . . . tricky pleats . . . sport- swing backs too. V Under-Grad C bthes at $25.00 T IHIIECIKSI i ■:?|:4ZI--S-- ]:l:« 1 248 Pine Avenue 139  Eiujravers of Distinctive Yearbooks • LONG BEACH ENGRAVERS, LTD. 410 Press-Telegram Building Long Beach, Calif. LONG BEACH SECRETARIAL BUSINESS COLLEGE BUSINESS IS ASKING FOR COLLEGE PEOPLE — BUT DEMANDING THAT THEY BE BUSINESS TRAINED Advanced Accounting and Private Secretarial Courses for those v ho want to specialize ASK TO SEE OUR LIST OF RECENT PLACEMENTS AMERICAN at FOURTH-. -PHONE 617-53 Over 25 Years in Long Beacfi 14ll ' =Sl . WINSTEAD BROS., INC KODAKS • FOUNTAIN PENS PICTURE FRAMES • GREETING CARDS 244 PINE TIMELY CLOTHES Rochesler Tailoied APPRAISE and Praise Exclusive in Long Beach KtiS S IIIICH-nEiE BROADWAY AND LOCUST 141 THE STUDENT BODY STORE ON THE CAMPUS DEDICATES THIS PAGE IN APPRECIATION OF THE PATRONAGE AND SUP- PORT GIVEN US BY THE STUDENTS AND FACULTY OF THE LONG BEACH JUNIOR COLLEGE -yr 141 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Work on the 1934 Saga was done by the following hrms and individuals: GREEN ' S, IXC. Long Beach, through Frank Thorndike and Art Buntrock, did all the printing and make-up of the book. LONG BEACH ENGRAVERS who handled all engraving in the Saga. Stan Hill, himself once a student at Junior College, nursed LSO cuts through the engraving pro- cess. COAST ENVELOPE AND COVER COMPANY, who through Mr. Sealock, was responsible for the covers appearing on this edition of Saga. JOSEPH STLMSON, Photographer, who did all of the group photographs and individ- ual pictures for this book. 143 ? ] u ' Hit A ' y I l JiNC v 1 i
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