Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA)

 - Class of 1933

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Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 400 of the 1933 volume:

J 4.1 TX.. -xu-.t ;itwi1 ' f ' o A W - VA J ■ K.. O? t]iX i ' r ' J A ' 1 his .-Jrligcm Vas issue J r J l t: Aniiclcsi Calif orffia.y i, ifl Mamuil Arts HimrSchoot. aiuiary i . ' VH i ) jnc cic li 33. Subscription JyKcc sixty cciits fu ' cnty- ix lii ih copies ivcr ii ycii . P r oijiuc c i ' the schonl ' j ful fiinij Deportiir ' V } h ■ .—b ' - ' - ' THE O-AJUinX Yv.j;w , RTISAN , ■• u MANUAL AKTS HIGH SCHOOL -vx 1033 WJNTI .-t. L- u ' o IJt.f- I €_ J 7 1 Table of ContegV Alma Mati Orgam Foreword Bv Bob Ridgwav l m HERE IS ABOUT PILOTS and piloting an adventurous air of unfalter- -i ing strength and cool thinking in the face of danger that fires the imagina- FL tion. The pages of history and the pages of fiction are filled with stirring tales of skill and daring by the few who are destined to guide the footsteps of their fellows. All ijilots are not alike, even when we place under the single category, Pilots. all the men who pilot the innumerable lanes of human travel and human endeavor. Bv this it is meant that pilots do not differ simply because one pilots a ship, another an airplane, another a group oi people who seek a spiritual goal. What, then, is this differentiation? ' Consider th.e most obvious and nKjst muiiTOne of pilots, exemplifying the pojiular concept of the word — the man whose work lies upon the crowded water- ways of the world ' s coastal cities. Observing his duties,: ' one more easily discerns the differentiation that particularly exists between pilots whose work con- sists not of guiding a vessel, but of contributing to the progress of mankind. (Jur lowlier pilot often boards a ship upon the heaving seas, far beyond its guarded berth. Clear-eyed, unafraid, among a myriad of dangers, he steers the vessel through the channel and safely to its anchorage, as from amid the storm- lashed rocks of the sea of life some men guide their neighbors to a cherished goal. We see the pilot in another guise, boarding the ship outward bound and steer- ing it skillfulK ' into the open sea. He goes over the side and the ship sails on, vanishing over the rim of the sea. Another helmsman waits to steer it safely to its berth at the end of the voyage. Lost in the phos]3horescent wake of the shi]) is the man who set it on its way. It was thus that Bacon was a pilot, and Burbank, and Woodrow Wilson. Men dreamed not of the scope of their knowledge, the deirth of their teachings, or what would come of their work. The roll call of heroes is long, l)ut there is a greater roll of those whose unrecognized genius or whose plodding efforts cleared the path for the hurried approach (jf other genius. Some men make their destiny. Others accept destiny ready made. Man made or descended from heaven, destiny ])laces some men in advance of their fellows. It is the dream of young men to be thus in the vanguard of man ' s march to salvation. They live, in their dreams, a noble life, with theiii isdnni t;illing amid the peojile as dew falls in the garden. . Let them be like this. Let them be all that is great«ll that is fine, all that is beautiful. But let them aspire to great heights knowing th among the humble and that a man may be a true helmsman to know their shouted praise of his deeds. Let him go ovqt the sid another guides it on ami know that some thought. sr fWd m mankind nearer the C(iur e of true greatness. ' %l ;re are noblemen jplfi-and yet not )the ' % bw3 while his has pni 2t d ' -j - .% ' ym k ' Here Senior footsteps echo through the years ' .:m . ? .Miv W4 ' i m M WM 7 ♦ , ' . t: ' m ' A ' f iy Thr usting skyward the smoke tower, symbol of the age - pv ' .; jf %m •e r- • - j( ' mwm i- . Jj te 41 . u •• ' •• West Lanej lost amid trees and arched buildings •Shadows bring rest to tired jninds 11 1 Alma Mater The sph ' iidor of the risiiii day ! II pur[ lc glory falls, .liid halhs ill licfiiid flaiiiiiitj fire, Thy ofalcscciit i ' alls. At ci ' c the ijoldcn sunshine melts. One last, one fond earcss Then sad to lose the sight of thee, 7 he slow sun siiik-s to rest. () Maiiuiil. all our voiees rise In tribute to thv fame. O Manual. ina Zi. ' e ez ' er bring But honor to thy name. Chorus All hail our Alma Maler Hail The furf ' le and the grav. All hail our Alma .Mater Forever and a da v. A R T I S A N S T A F F 17 The Artisan Staff Manacinc I ' j)n ' uR Assistant 1u)itok Airr I ' .DiTdi; Feattri-: Imhtor Si ' ORT I ' JMTOR Calendar Class HlSTOR ■ Feati ' res Drama and Mi ' sic Girls ' Sports I ' arties Letter INC Stenography Advertisinc. I ' lIOTOCRAI ' in ' Snap Shots Specials Hr.MOR Advisor Robert Ridcwav Donald Cook Stoddard I Iicrbert Arthir Eslick . Richard Smith Alberta IfARVEV F.TiiEL Henderson Catherine (joe Marion Dix F ;leanor Smith I ' rLLiE McFadden Rita Rouse Esther Rosenstein Dorothy Dennis Al ' stin P)R0WN Sophie Skotras EsTELLE Smith Iv ' Wh.liams Al-rel Mueller Leo Lippman Robert W ' elshons Alex Klein Alex F . Hansen 18 THE A R T I S A N W ' 33 STODDARD HERBERT art editor A 1-; T I S A N ST A F F 19 THE ARTISAN STAFF RICHARD SMITH athletics CATHEWNE GOE class histor AUSTIN BROWN leitei-.ntf AUREL MUEtlER photooraphv Al fRTA HAKvry calendar ELEANOR SMITH features DOROTHY DENNIS parties SOPHIE SKOl AS stenography LEO LIPPA A ( snap shots ESTHER ROSENSTEIN tfirls ' sp orts ix: IVY WILLIAMS ddverti ;inrf P ft ROBERT WaSHONES specials 20 T I! I . A R T I S A N W ' 33 Of Statesmen . . . Woodrow Wilson Bv Pjii.lik AIcFaddrn f inilTIXC, HIS DEVIL according to his own convictions and keeping LJ his faith in God and in the essential decency of man were Wooch-ow ■n Wilson ' s tenets of life. Courageous, hecause his was the highest con- ce])tion of courage, America ' s war ijresident ranks with the world ' s achievers. An idolized Irish father, courteous, huoyant, optimistic, and a .Scotch mother with her inherent love of (iod and honesty, handed on to their son a legacy of which he might well lie iM ' oud. During his childhood, his ])arents saw the Civil War in the South in all its dread reality. Is it any wonder that later, as I ' resident, Wilson faced the World War with reluctance, and fear for his people in his heart? Handicapped hv ill health in his youth, he never fought and, alas for the work! after l ' H9, never had to take a heating and laugh out (if it to the hoys around him. Laughing out of a tight corner to save the face of one ' s self-re- spect gives men gentle tolerance — the .thing of which Wilson stood in the greatest need. In his forty-sixth year, he hecame president of Princeton. Immediately the tempo of his hitherto uneventful life changed. His views hecame more liheral and he insisted on democracy in the university. When he was elected governor ol New Jersey in 1910, Wilson gained his halance and that unshakalile determina- tion that guidetl him through the maze of a world conflict. This remarkable power of instilling optimism, and his sense of righteousness, gained him the presidential nomination in 1912. . merica asks nothing for herself except what she has a right to ask for hu- manity itself. Keeping this statement as his guide, the president entered the war with characteristic thoroughness. He leil . merica on the crest of a wa e beyond her comprehension; he had the ]io we r to gi e his ideals to his country. By his supreme assurance of right and wrong, Wilson liroke the Prussian morale; he won the hattle of the ujiiier air. His mistake was in thinking he could talk awa ' the realities of war. The world woke uj) after the armistice to a gra ' dav of needed reconstruction. Fiery speeches, gallant lianners, and patriotic enthusiasm were no longer re- c|uired. Wilson gave Europe his Fourteen Points, including t h e coxenant of the League of Nations, with the idea that reason, when it was so ohviouslv in ac- cordance with the will of (lod. wduld ])revail in international relations. Mis ideals were utterly at variance with the more material and higoted ideals of F2urope. With his singleness of purpose, courage, and self-]iossession, Wilson plaved a lone hand at the Peace Conference hecause he stood, not for the (k ' vious wa s of ;irri ing. Inn for the ultimate outcome. During his last years as a jirix-ate citizen in Washington, D, C.. he kept his ideals inid unalterahle trust. 1die position of ex-president is hard to ni;iinlain gracelully, hut Wilson carried it off with his usual sang-froid. He kei)t his friends loyal to liim in the darkest hour; he gave the world somethitig for which we are all the better lor having had. and he could look hack on his footprints .-md see each niarlcing :i step in his countrv ' s progress. miM «V Sl£5j g||j gjpUii - ;,,., -?5t7S SZ=Vl J-__;k. 2 T HE A R T I S A N W ' 33 The Principal ' s Message To the ( iraduates : When you chose to call yourselves Pilots you undertook nuK ' h that you would do for others as well as for yourselves. At the mention of the word Pilots there flashes into the mind a majestic ocean liner arriving from a far journey. The sea is rough from a recent storm. The smoke and steam are blown in horizontal streamers. The harbor is obscured by the haze. The harbor lights blink fitfully. The shifting sands of the harbor mouth render the safe channel uncertain as to location or even existence. Then through the mist the Pilot boat appears and is skillfully maneuvered to the side of the ship. The rugged, weather-beaten pilot quickly mounts the swinging rope ladder. Now all feel safe with the Pilot at the helm controlling the movements of the leviathan and guiding it safely to its allotted berth in the Xew World Port. These Pilots are an ancient and honorable breed (jf men. They have their traditions that come down from time immemorial of daring deeds and faithful service. They are worthy of their hire, Init will not quibble as to costs. Their thought is of the job to be done, and for its consumation they will risk their lives. The Pilots are particularly loyal to their guild, but this U)yalty is exceeded by the loyalty to the service which they are called to render. They must keep themselves physically, mentally, anrl morally fit. Their great responsibility makes any slip on their ])art count too heavily in loss of property and life to permit any deviation from the path of their duty. ' hen you chose to call yourselves Pilots you undertook much that _ du would do for others as well as yourselves. Albert E. Wilson O R G A N I Z A T I O N S 23 THE PRINCIPALS OK ALBERT E.WILSON pnnci pal C.P. FONDA, boys ' vice pi ' incipal JESSIE RAYHANNA dirls ' vice principal 24 ' 1 ' 1 1 !•: A R T 1 S A W ' 3J The Faculty Dr. Albert E. Wilson. Principal Charles Percy Fonda. Vice- Principal ; Jessie Ray Hanna. ice-l ' rincipal ; Helen ' inyard Peasley. Registrar; Mary Bess Henry. Counselor; Mahel . . Dnnn. Librarian. Art Department: Frederick John Schwankovsky, Jr.. Chairman of Depart- ment: Florence Ames. Edna . . Jones. Hazel Small Martin. Jessie Sherwood Smith, Ermina Cutler ' hitney. Bi(ir.0(;v Def artment: William James Bovee. Chairman of Department; Ruth ( )livia Jackson. L. R. Langvvorthy. Ey man Dalton LaTourrette. Martha Helen Montiiomery. Harold b ' .lmer Schroeder. Isabel Swerdfe er, William ( .. Wool ley. Commercial Department: James Seeley Mullen. Head of Department; Fred ]. Armstrong. Maud Lynn .Austin. Ida M. P.aldwin. Bessie F.ersman. Charles Ernest Cargill. Monica Serena Ekkmd. Lanette Kidsun. Clara McCluskey. Alice S. Maile. Paul Henry Mitchem. Ethel Douglas Phelps. English Department: Ethel P. Sykes. Head of Department; lulna Joy .Ad- dison. Edith L. Bruckman, Harold G. Donnel. .Mae lulwards. Iris C. Crosby Field. Una E. Fowler, P)lanche K. Freeman. .Agnes l- ' risius. Lucille Furnas. . lex F. Han- sen. Lucy -A. Hifle, Anne ) lgen Johnsen. Margaret Loretta McLaughlin. Ciuy Clinton Moore. Maude (Jyler, Mary Colver Trummer. Home Economics Department: Essie Lavina l ' ' .lli(it. Chairman if Depart- ment; Jean LacDougal Pjoyer, Hadassah Beecher Cheroske. Ruby .Mildred Hodge, Anna H. Hussey, Elizabeth C. Xewkirk. Sarah (i. Hicks Rowe. Language Department: Bertha Rutledge. Chairman of Department; Ger- trude Adams-Fisher. Belle .Arbour. Nellie S. Cronkhite, Bertha Drabkin Goodwin. Evarose Griffin Lloyd, Constance Manning Moir, Catherine M. Stewart, Erva .A. Taylor. Mathematics Department: Eva Crane Farnuni. Chairman of Department: Martha E. Cilker. Rollen Harrison Drake. Ida Isabella Jones. Willette W. Witmer Juline, Karl I ' .dwin Turn |uist. Mechanical .Arts Depart.ment : Charles Merwin .Andersen. I lead of De- partment; Frank James P.ritts. Walter Edward Cciburn, Walter Wilson English. Eniil lloltz. lacoli . . Xelsim. iM ' ed Xiederwerfer. G. . . ( )hlsson. .Meredith S. Reynolds. Mechanical Drawing Depart.ment: Walter .Mien Wdods. Chairman of DejKirtment : Herman Hess, John .A. Richards. () R G A N 1 Z A T I () X S -5 Music Dei ' AKT.mf.nt : Ina iMarnarct Davids, e ' hairnian of Dei)artnient ; X ' ir- ginia C. l?lythe. F. Stillwell Moore, Elizabeth Rudy JMottern, R. Lenore Snow. Boys ' Physical Education Department: Sidney Francis Foster. Head of Department ; James Preston Armstrong, James Joseph Blewett, Herljert E. Loug- heed. Charles Toney. Arthur Elery Williams. Girls ' Physical Education Department; Mae ISaird Gei)hart. Chairman of Girls ' Division; Mary Pollock Blanchard, Mary W. Blanchard, Charlotte Al- liright Caldwell. Laura A. Davis. Mary K. Lockwood, Madge Jackman Redin. Physical Science Department: George Elbert Mitchell. Chairman of Deiiartment; Charlotte D. Gaboon. ' ernon Hodge. Isaliella Wils(jn. Robert J. Wells. Publication Department: Campbell Hewitt Greenup, Chairman of Depart- ment; Rezin A. Maynard. George A. Nelson. William H. Reeder. R.O.T.C. Department: Major ' ir,iam R. Wilson. Sergeant Clyde F-. Lit- tler. Social Science Department: Rosa ' iola Winterburn. Head of Department; Lizzie May Brown. Lulu Albia Brown. Ida B. Davidson. C. r Iaude Ingersoll. Rob- ert S. Maile, Isobel Niven Murphy. Willis T. Newton. Nellie E. Stephens. Leta Josephine Whinery. Lawrence James White. Anna G. Wiggs. Office: Freda L. Michael. Marcia . Jakeman. Maria C. Jones. Zelah Mar- sliail. Clara Mosher. Frankie Walton. Marv Helen Mavnard. 26 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 S. B. O. President ' s Message To the students of Manual Arts: Humanity as re])resented through the ages has shown the results of strife that started with the creation of man. This strife has heen written in an indelihle tone upon the world ' s affairs and policies, (ireat natii)ns have heen torn an 1 ripped aside, and greater nations have risen in their places. Our whole universe has reiiresented a gradual change. I ' cople. through a jM-ocess of education, have evolved systems of governments and living that control our present day existence. They say that a man thinks in terms of words, that is if a man has at his command a vocabulary superior to that possessed by his predecessors, the man is cajialile of accomplishing more in the line of creatixe thinking . Thus at iVIanual Arts we find hound in our own traditions, customs, and regulations all the facilities that have cost the world thousands of years of con- scientious efifort. In our school years we often fail to realize that the advantages before us have been made only at a tremendous cost. We should realize wdiat our school consists of, and in that manner seize the opportunities open to us. James Hall, Student Bodv President. O R G A N I Z A T I O N S 27 STUDENT BODY CABINET JAMES, HALL president SAM PI CONE bs-O: president VIRGINIA SMITH Vice president . A MARIE CHICK rf. S O ' president 28 A N W ' 33 STUDENT BODY CABINET L CP.OSS 6EDR0S1AN boys ' judde k LOKETTA LUNDBERG HE AAN MAULHAl DT girls ' judde manager JSP ) 4 i:ii JOHN PICOT a.b.s. president 9 nSI DOROTHY ALLERS girls league pres. lV k THAYEP. WE5TLAKE scholarship pres. W i k ' v« « i F, ARTHUR ESLICK. weekly editor ESTHER HINDIN S.D.o. secretary k BOB TRAPP cadet major () RG A N T Z A T T () X S 29 ACTIMTY MANAGERS Ray Elliott, Athletics Ralph McBribe, Box Office Edna Havden, Cafeteria Robert Cherry. Student Body Store Curtis Brandt, Commercial Office Malvern Sisson, Candy Counter 30 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 A. B. S. CABINET John Picot. Prksidf.nt Jamrs Akmstrong, Facultv Auvisek Bii.1. CnMKRKORD, ' icf.-President William Roberts, Treasurer Louis Acosta, Secretary O R G A N I Z A T I O N S 31 JLa. 4 ■t ' K ' ' v- vAA- -- ' -c xi e ' fi- ' lIT ; — C (;iRLS- i,i;a(;li ' . caiuxi-:! I ■ ; ,: T -, HeeenBurkland, Treasurer IaeOra Leahy, Secretajji) ! ' ) ( ' : yy( « . c !a.. itj. ...J v 32 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 M Sw MANUAL ARTS WEEKLY STAFF Arthur Eslick, L •A .I T. Editor R. A. L vNARll, Faculty Adviskr X ' irginia D(ktor. News Euitor I-j.KAXoR SMrrn, Feature Editor Richard Smith, Si ' ORT Editor O K G A N 1 Z A T I ( ) N S 33 Mary Louisk Fehxeu Arthuk Kxodeli. SPECTATOR S ' J ' AFF BiLi.iF. McFaddex, Editor Robert Hi ' mmei. Gladys Heywood 34 THE ARTISAN V ' 33 Manual Knights The Kniijhts enjoy the distinction of being the only group at Manual Arts sponsored directly by Dr. Wilson. Because of this fact, and because of the strict membership qualifications, to become a Knight is the ambition of every Manual boy. Since the Knights act, with the Squires, as the clearing-house of the school club and group activities, membership in the Knights is secured thru the various school organizations. In addition to the citizenship, scholastic, and character re- quirements, there is also required for membership the apiirnval of the faculty sponsor of the jiarticular activity each Knight represents. Along with their program of coordinating the school organization activities, the Knights study the prolilem of character building, worthy use of leisure time, avoca- tions, health, etc., and endeavor to be a force in the student body for the develop- ment of moral character. The officers of the Knights are : President, TomWhalley; vice-president, Glen Baker; secretary-treasurer, Bill Sloan. The faculty representative is Air. Hodge. O R G A N I Z A T I O N S ?,S Scholarship Society The scholarship society of Manual Arts comprises Chapter Five of the Cali- fornia Scholarship Federation ; Manual Arts is a charter member of the organiza- tion, drawing Chapter Five by lot. All Gold Seal graduates are life members of the federation. For this reason the federation is growing as the students realize the ad- vantages gained from.such an affiliation. The organization was unusually large this year. Six were awarded Gold Seals at the scholarship assembly, and six additional students had the award deferred until Rally Day pending their satisfying certain further requirements. In order to apprise the new students of the true value of sound scholarship in their school life and to acquaint them with the aims of C. S. F., speakers were sent to the various BIO homerooms. John Adams Junior High School was awarded the Scholarship trophy for the fourth time for the superior scholastic and citizenship records of her BIO students at Manual. The semi-annual luncheon held in November was voted by the entire society and invited guests to be one of the most successful ever sponsored by the society. The officers for the term were as follows : Thayer Westlake, president ; Val- erie Ritchie, girls ' vice ; Alvin Taurog, boys ' vice ; Leanore Lane, secretary : Everett larling, treasurer. The advisors are Miss McLaughlin, Miss Ida Jones, and Mr. Newton. 36 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 ( ) R G A N I Z , T I O N S 17 38 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 Of Labor ... A Changing World i By Catherine Goe H l ' SlE has made few changes in the fundamental principles of civilization ' s i institutions. Much has been added and much has been taken away, but the FL underlying matter has remained. This is true of the home, its juirpose being the unity of family life and the training of future poiiulations. The churches of all times have upheld all which is good in brotherhood and hope, although their systems have changed often. Edu- cational aims have never been contradicted, the general trend of nations being a higher standard of existence. There is an exception to the rule, however, in Industry. Industry ' s very i)rin- ciples have changed. Work in its early stages was for the individual needs. In the medieval ages, men and women worked collectively for the common good of a slave or a landlord. With the introduction of machinery early in the nineteenth century, and the formation of factories, the world entered a revolutionizing period which is onh- now reaping its results. During a formative period of almost one hundred years, the face of industry changed beyond recognition. However it alTected not only the surface. The ladle of the monster. Machinery, stirred more deeply into the soul of mankind ' s exis- tence, Xo longer could the individual plan his own work or regulate his time. Xo longer could he take jiride in a finished product of his own making. . new city grew up around each newly established factory. Blindly, people rushed to these new, ever-growing centers of industry — blind to the results. . s men and women grew accustomed to the increasing whirl of living, big ])usiness was making its debut into a world ready to accept anything new without investigation. Corporations were formed through the leadership of alert men who had advanced beyond the average thinker. Big business was taking its place in his- tory. Mass production swept the people off their feet, and while markets were being flooded, the masses concentrated on the dollar, which would gain them unearned riches. Com| etition grew more intense while the people unknowingly suffered. This pace which was set brought its quota of problems among the laboring classes, problems which were new and witli which the leaders were incapable of coping. Thus laljor organizations were fnvmed, the most notable being the . merican Federation of Labor. Its leader was a man who fortunately centered his life on the welfare of the organizatioii. Samuel ( ionipers for forty years guided the fimda- mental .American workers in wise jsaths which kept them organized with nuitual interests. Had it not been for that far-sighted man, labor would long ago have been in a worse condition of chaos than we are meeting in 1933. Yes, this is a changing world. We are now facing one of the most serious crises of history. More people and greater problems are involved than in any other period, and we are about to see the curtain of industrial drama rise to reveal a new era — leaving behind one of the most fantastic situations the world has ever seen. The wheel of progress enlarges at every turn and the newest evolution lies ahead. Mav we solve the direction toward which industrv mav ne.xt strive. i:-:---i; ' ! ' ? ' ;!fe?js;iJ:i,;i|i.ii!;i?:;J!i: a|:;;;;yfg«ag|! ssfs?isg l li . I- . -bis- 40 T H E . R T I S A X W ' 3: AaA. The Manual Squires lK-n tlif Manual Arts ITi-Y voted to hcconie strictly a scIhidI or anizatii)n. it received permission from the Kni.t;hts to assist them in their proi rani at .Manual Arts, and tlicv were permitted to ado])t the name of The Manual S(|uires. Into the S(|uire constitution was written: rhe purpose of this cluh shall lie: To develop character and leadership, to promote good citizenshi]). to he of service to Manual Arts, and to work at all times for its interest. In order to carry out such a program, it was realized that representation I rom every part of the school was necessary, and that members would have to he exam- ined with regard to their fitness for leadership, their scholastic record, and then- citizenship. The S(|uires, as now organized, contain reijresentatives of every group in the school, and, with the Knights, act as the clearing-house of all school and club activities. Membership in the Squires is open to every boy in Manual . rts who can jiresent tlie proper qualifications to the membership committee. Try-outs are held early in each semester. Those elected to membership this semester were Ray Lucke, Don Keller, Don Carn, Harold Donaldson, Harold Ualton, Dick Cooper, I ' .ill Sco- field, Don Cook, Merrill Knox, Mel Palmer, Bob Lherry, Tom Dooling, Elmer Maclntyre, Bill Rawson, Sam Picone, Bill Kirch. The officers are: President, Bill Sloan: vice-president, Howard Luttes ; sec- retary, Ralph McBride: treasurer. Cross Bedrosian ; chaplain. Clen Baker; ser- geant-at-arms, Joe Mason; faculty re])resentati e, .Mr. Hodge. c I. u p. s 41 The Senior Forum Scnicir l ' iinini activit} ' duriiii; the ])ast term has |)r(ive(l a hij; success under the eapaljle leadership of Art Esliek. the uutt oing ])resident. ' l he Senior I ' uruni is a forensic ort aniz.ation with Mr. ( luy C. Mocjre as s])onsor. ' i he nieetiii.L;s are lield ever ' ninth period when open discussion is held and programs are ,L;i t-n. The social acti ities of the i)ast semester have heen under the sujiervision of I.ucicn Mather and Mildred Blatherwick. the vice-presidents. . get together ])arty was held at the heginning of the term t(j welcome the new members into tlie organ- ization. The semi-annual lianquet was given on January thirteenth, A declamation contest is held each term under the aus])ices of the Forum. Members are chosen at the beginning of each semester. Students from . 1 1 n|) are eligible to try out for menibershi]). A three minute impromptu speech is re- quired. The members of the student btxly cabinet and other prominent members of the student body are honorary members. The other outgoing officers are Esther Hinden. secretarv ; Alex Klein, treasurer; Thaver Westlake. sergeant-at-arnis. 42 THE ARTISAN W 33 The Latin Club To increase interest in Roman life and customs is the aim of Contio, the Latin Club. The club boasts one of the largest memberships of student body organiza- tions ; the meetings, held bi-monthly, are always well attended, and excellant pro- grams are given. . niong the interesting meetings was one in which Mrs. Jane Intield from the Classical Center gave an instructive talk on Roman life, illustrating it with models. At the Christmas program given jointly by the language clubs, each organization contributed a short skit and sang a song in the foreign language. The Latin Club put on a most novel fashion show e.xhibiting Roman costumes. It has always been an aim to use club talent for entertainment at the meetings. This term a club quartet was organized, the personnel of which included Jeanne Hughes, ' iola Beisner, Barbara Moore, and Lucille anslett. Their songs con- tributed greatly to the ])leasure of the Contio members. The officers for the past term were: consul. Everett Marling; praeter, Eva Bates : censor. Carmen Tross ; quaestor. Edmund Kiggs : centurio, Arthur Manella ; and the sponsor. Miss Cronkhite. All of these join in saving to you, A ' alete, till next term. CLUBS 43 44 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 C L U B S 45 46 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 STA.ur CLUU CLUBS 47 48 T H E A R T I S A N V ' 33 Of Statesmen . . . John Marshall B ' Marian I ix AGRI ' :AT MOl . OF AIII.LINC luinian Ijcint s press together and crush into a frantic herd. A scream here, h -sterical shouts there, and a riot of noise and ])rotest rends the air. I ' roni the heart of the crowd rises one, two, three figures who shepherd the dazed ones into a neat and com- ])act gatiiering, witii some system and order al)out the .grmip. So from the heart of tiie ])eo]ile in tnnes ol stress arise tiiose ligures wiio will shape liistcjry for all time to come. Such a one was John Marshall, the L ' nited States first great lawyer. His Sampsonian deed was to shape a legislation which was to stand the test of time and hlaze the trail for the progress of a great nation. lie was of the frontier, this man, which accoinits for much of his power. I lad he not heen horn in X ' irginia before its settling, he nn ' ght ha e been another Hamil- ton, for he was of a long line of titled I ' jiglish. l!ut he was to learn early the rugged pioneer spirit of America, and learn it well. His first lesson in democracy was taught him hv his fifteen brothers, of which he was the oldest. (ohn Marshall watched the birth of that cause of national independence, antl for it, became a soldier in the War of the Revolution. Here was fostered in his battle-scarred youth a great courage and the intense love of country which followed him into his work of saving the colonies by uniting them. Rut no country can run itself, and the Little Upstart had no law. The luig- lish legislation would not do in this pioneer land which had no precedents of its own. America was calling fcjr a patriot who could build a foundation, strong and sturdy, upon which the government would rest. From the ' irginia bar he came, this lawyer wdio had fought .so hard for the country and its constitution. He was the one so sorely needed, a man with courage, a man who could s(|uarely judge and determine the standarils of justice, and a man who had the facnlt ' for good fellowship in order that his countrymen might honor his judgment. ' J he character of John Marshall is breathed into the Constitutional decisions lie made — a character so built u])on truth and democracy that there is no flaw in its evidence of fearless resolution and initiative. What shall we sav, then, of our country ' s first chief justice? That he was courageous and loyal alone? No, for without the true spirit of progress born on the frontier he coubl not ha c wo -en .so fine a jjattern of law and government. Powerful and wise he stands against the flaming glor ' of the nation ' s for- mation. ;i figure outlined in the bold strokes of that h.and which fashion real men, our first great lawyer and ihe bra est pilot (jf ihem ;ill. 50 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 The School Calendar Monday. September 12 Hi. pal! Gee, I ' m glad to see you! and oilier salutations echoed and re-echoed in the halls of Manual this inornini;-. Several hundred scruhs gazed in awed wonder at the monstrous l)uildings of Manual Arts. Many powder puffs were in evidence as the girls found it difficult to eradicate the unusual lustre on their sun-scorched noses. I ' nesday. Sc{ teinbcr 13 The high and mighty Pilot class, true to their motto. We lead, others follow, lilossomed fortii with 100 ' suljscription to the Manual Arts Weekly. Old students as well as new found themselves entangled in the mesh of program perplexities. Weiliiesday. Se[ teiiiher 14 School enrollment today jjroved that Manual l)elieves in the ecjuality of sexes. The registrar ' s statistics show that there are now 3220 students. 1610 hoys and 1610 girls. Every girl will now he provided with an escort for the coming liops. Happv thought! Friday. Septeiiiher 16 Students todax- found o])]i()rtunit ' to notice tiie ciianges in Manual, six of our former teachers have heen transferred to other schools. .Additions have hecn made to the sho]) buildings, and Wilson Field is now in good condition for the coming football season. Also, tliere lias i)een another bungalow moved in since the close of school last term. Moiidax. Sef teiiil ' er 19 ' { he students seemed to have recu])erated from tlie first week of sciiool and are |)rei)are(l to begin to work in earnest. ib)peful candidates lor .Senior . yc offices were today presented to meml)ers of the class. SCHOOL LIFE Tuesday, Srplciiihcr M) StudciUs (i vi-(l till ' office a dclit iif j ratitvidc today. wIkmi teachers were forced to take time off from dailv work to sis n stift iir(j i-ams. Tlie machinery of Alaiiual is running smoothly at the present date. IVcdiicstlay. September 21 Bit;-, husky Manual fellows may he seen on Wilson field industriously throwing, kicking, and catching the pigsk in. If looks mean anything, Manual will ha e a champion team this year. Thursday, Scpfcinher 22 Today the Senior Ayes disi)layed their good judgment l)y unanimously electing Glen Baker jjresident for their final semester, ' l he Pilots are sure that this will he their ha])piest and most successful term in Manual. We hope so too! Friday, Septeinbcr 23 Manual varsity showed its worth, defeating Inglewood by a score of 13-7 in the first practice game of the season. Looks must mean something. Monday. September 26 A host of Baby Seniors declared their desires to lie at the helm of their class. )f course, all fully realized the res])onsihilities of the office and if elected would ujjhold the standards of Manual. Tuesday. September 17 Art Eslick ' s good humor got the best of him and he ]: resented all of us with a free copy of the Weekly. Guess we ' ll keep is as a souyenir. . . . may never hap- pen again. U ' cdncsday. September 28 The bleachers held nicely under the strain of 3.000 sjjirited Manualites, gath- ered to elect our head yell king. Lucien Mather, with his fatuous lengthy grin that knocks the women cold, yelled his way to the coveted jxisition. Billy Coe and Jack Rosenbergs are his able assistants. 52 r J 1 E A R T I S A N W 33 rinirstlaw September 29 In sinniltant ' ous (Hrls ' League and A. H. S. Assenililies, nominations of hopeful candidates for office were made. Also — Merrill Knox has heen chosen Senior Bee prexy(give him a hand.) Tuesday. Oetoher 4 The unfortunate or slow ones who had not suliscrihed to the M. A. Weekly were forced to look over the shoulders of their neighbors as the Weeklies were given only to those who had paid the price. Thursday. Oc ' fobcr f A rollicking rally was held todav for the coming i ' athlinder game. Hearts were lightened hy Coach Blewett ' s announcement that Manual has a chance to win. The students literallv raised the roof in response to the coach ' s challenge. Friday, October 7 It was a great game with Fremont — thrilling to tlie end. The score remained a 6 to 6 tie in spite of the fine efforts of our team. In the evening, a typical M. A. hop was sponsored by the P. T. A. Everyone had a keen time. Monday. October 10 This morning Manual students discovered that a Fremont man had been in- eligible, thus leaving the score 6-0, in favor of Manual. Tough luck. Fremont! Tuesday. October 1 1 Dr. Wilson expressed the sentiment of the school toda - when he refused to accept the forfeited game with Fremont. No one can say that Manualites aren ' t good sports. S C H O O L L I F E Jl ' cdiicsdav. October 12 Sail on, and on, was the topic of discussion in many classes in the celebra- tion of Columbus Day. Students wrote, orated, dramatized, and poemed (poetic license) on this great man. Thursday, October 13 Hold us back ! We are so peppy after the rally for the L. A. game that we could make all the Romans bite the dust! And what-a-man Jimmy Hall makes a swell leader. Besides all this we heard a radio speech by Ghandi. Friday. October 14 Are we embarrassed ! The powerful Romans lived up to their motto, You can ' t beat L.A. High, and rolled up nineteen points to our great sum of nothing! Any- way, we yelled the loudest ! Monday, October 17 For goodness sakes ! A Manual player in the Fremont game, ineligible. Now both teams have to forfeit the game! Tough break (but no casualties!) Tuesday, October IS What is that intelligent look on the faces of the Baby Seniors? Maylie it ' s the resiHinsibility of trying to keep a secret. (Could it be the sweaters?) And what, we wanta know, are the strange, weird tunes being hummed l)y the Senior Ayes . Thursday, October 20 Laundry bills must be encjrmous these days, due to the increased use of hand- kerchiefs during this flu epidemic! Today ' s assembly was postponed because of (Jld Man Flu, and Jiis bad influence. Friday, October 21 Three clieers ! We won the Fairfax game 6-0. However, our team seems to be jin.xed this vear as far as injuries are concerned. Almost every fellow on our team lias received one or more injuries. Here ' s ho])ing for better luck in the future! Moudav, October 24 Well, one-fourth of the old grind is over! This is the beginning of the f)th week of school. The teachers handed out some funny little yellow cards. The students did not appreciate them much and heaved sighs of relief when the teachers forgot to hand them one. Tuesday, October 25 This afternoon the garden in front of the Practice House was transformed into a Spanish villa. Street-singers wended their way through the crowd of Senior Ayes gathered for the Faculty Reception. Ice cream and cake added to the enjoy- ment of the hungry Pilots. Interesting fortune-telling helped to make this one of the nicest receptions ever held at Manual. Thursday, October 27 Where are our sun glasses? They are in great need since the Baby Seniors have emerged in their jade-green and white (mostly green) sweaters. The stately Senior Ayes lost their dignity in competing in such events as the sack race, water bucket race, bicycle race, etc. The Senior Bees bowed to the Pilots by a close score. The Senior Bees celebrated their new rise to pomp by having a picnic at the old meeting place of Senior Ayes, South Park. The liabes consitmed such a huge amount of food that we feared for their health. Fun was found in every corner. 54 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 Friday. October 2S Can that class 11 team throw ]iasses ! Today the stiKk-iits atlLMulcd the class J! gallic with darfield hccausc we were not allowed to trax-el to Garfield with oin- varsitv. ( )ur hii;- men held (larfield 0-0. Class 1 ' overpowered the op])osing team, roUiny up a score of 26-0. Athletic talent was displayed hy the G.. .A. irls in a hockey game between halves. Guess everyljody will take up hockey now. Tuesday. No2 ' ciiiI ' cr 1 The great dri c for Ctnnmunity Chest support is on. Sjieakers visited every homeroom to make pleas for aid in the campaign. Wednesday, November 2 What? i ' o beans? There seem to be none left in town. The .Senior Ayes must ha e eaten them all at their picnic. ( )h me, oh my! What a hilarious time — and what apjietites. How could such dainty young ladies vie with such husky boys at gorging on good things to eat? Friday, Noz ' cmber 4 The splendid efforts of the Players ' Comjiany made Where the Cross Is Made one of the greatest dramatic successes in Manual history. The tense action surrounding the roles created by Eugene O ' Neill gave us an unlooked for thrill. Monday, November 7 Off to foreign jiarts went the girls of the G.A.A. as they held their semi-an- nual dance. It took Jerry Campbell ' s orchestra to make the frolickers believe they were in the U.S.A. Jl ' ediiesday, No7 16 An extemporaneous rally was held on the tennis courts this noon. Coach Fos- ter, Lucien Mather, and Jack Rosenberg officiated as yell leaders. Never before was the M. -A. student liody so aroused! . t the same tiiue Coach Blewett was giv- ing a fight talk to all who could crowd into 24. at a self-government rally. S C H O O L L I F E 55 Thursday. Xoi ' diibcr 17 What a keen assembly! Orv Muhler, well known U. S. C. grid star, spoke to us at the self-guvernnient assenilily presided over h - Sam Picone and Marie Chick. Local talent was displayed in songs, dances, piano solos, and fight talks. Coach Foster aroused that fighting spirit, which had been somewhat lagging. A tin hop school tonight. It seems that quite a crowd took advantage of the opportunity, as some 250 cans of groceries and $15 were collected. Fri(lc- ' , Xoi ' ciiihcr 18 Manual ' s alumni were today welcomed back to the home portals in the Annual Homecoming celebration. The Senior Ayes and Bees were the honored guests of the alumni in the assembly held this afternoon. Representatives from U. C. L. A., U. S. C, and L. A. J. C. were in evidence, and the audience was entertained by talent from each of these famous institutions. The Trojan Imnd delighted the aud- ience with both popular songs and football songs. L. A. J. C. furnished a quartet and Dave Dingle spoke in the school ' s behalf. U. C. L. A was well represented liy speakers Ned :Marsh and Tom Hammond. This featured assembly was thoroughly enjoyed by all. The guests at the assembly asseml)led on the bleachers to witness the football game, which i)rovcd a tlirillcr. Victory came to the Toilers l)y a score of 6-0. It was the grand finale of tlie football season and will be long remembered. In the evening a dance for the ahinmi. Senior A ' s, and IVs was held. Moiniav. Xofcinhcr 21 Students could be seen lugging ])ackages. tin cans, and heavy bundles into H. R. ' s today. These were for Thanksgiving baskets being filled for destitute families. Incidentally, grades were issued today. Maybe that ' s the wh)- of all the worried countenances ! U ' cdiH ' .uhiy. IK ' ovciiibcr 24 Thanksgiving! We can well imagine the numl)er of fat turkeys being consumed today by 3300 Manualites. More power to the 500 turkeys. Friday. Xoi ' t ' iiibcr 26 it was certainly nice of the school board to give us an extra day in which to recu[)erate after that big turkey we had yesterday! Such consideration is highly appreciated ! Monday, November 28 Most of the students seem to have made good use of their brief respite from labor in the school room. Althugh many eyes were drooping heavily this morning, the majority of the pu])ils were back on the job in good style. Thursday, December 1 The Scholarship Assembly was held today with Thayer Westlake ])residing. Mrs. Winterburn and Mr. Drake of the faculty, presented interesting sidelights on scholarship. The Cold Seal Bearers and Candidates for the Gold Seal were presented thus culminating Scholarship Week. Friday. December 2 Manual put U]) a terrific battle only to come out on the short end of a 30 to 22 score with Roosevelt, our rivals from the old Minor League. After the game. Manual basketball fans enjoyed a consolation dance, and soon we were all swaying to the refrain, .Say it isn ' t so. 56 THE ARTISAN W 33 Hey! Hey! Whazzis? Monday. December 5 Daring- declaimers declaimed in the Declamation contest held in Senior Forum ninth period. Some of the outstanding contestants were Jimmy Hall, Bert Davidson, Louise Sherlock, and Alex Klein. IVednesday. Deceiiiber 7 E|3hel)ians were announced today. Nine students received t his coveted award, the highest given to a graduate of a Los Angeles city school. Friday. December 9 The Mariners held their Prom amid nautical scenes. Bill Barnes and Eloise Russel presided over one of the gayest afifairs of the semester. Monday. December 12 Rain in California? What unusual weather! Com- mencement tryout speakers were somewhat disturbed by the small cloudburst, but struggled through their sjjeeches. Final tryouts will be held January fifth. TJtursday. December 15 A basketball game was held tonight at Jeff, in which the locals won by a score of 30-29. What a thrilling game! All who attended got their 15 cents worth of excitement ! Friday. December 16 Last day before our long awaited vacation! Beautiful Christmas music was played and sung in the assembly today. Gay carollers walking up and down the aisles added to the Christmas atmosphere. The R.O.T.C. members celebrated to- night at the semi-annual . rmy Ball. From all re|)orts it was a great success. Monday. December 19 to Tuesday. January 3, 1933 The Christmas vacation (enough said!) Much Christmas shopjiing and very lit- tle homework was done. The appearance of dear old Santa made everyone joyous ! And what a delightful New Year ' s celebration! (To say nothing of the dreadful headache next morning!) Monday, January 3 Back to school after the vacation of vacations ! Oh. what a lot of work piled up while we were thinking of Christmas dinner and the like. And what of all those vows to use the vacation to catch up with back work? Wednesday, January 4 World Friendship assembly today. Besides the speeches and the parade of nations there were musical numbers by the orchestra and glee-clubs. It was an assembly of a worth-while nature, and one to be enjoyed as well. Thursday. January 5 Another assembly, and a snassy one. The new Manual . rts symphonic band made its initial appearance, and the vaudeville jirogram that was built around it sent everyone to roll-call in a right old merry mood. Cive us more of that ! Friday. January 6 At last! The Senior Ave d;nicc was held this evening. Ft was a lovely affair — SCHOOL LIFE 57 but didn ' t we feel a little downcast, when it was all over, at the thought that it was the last social affair of the Pilot class? Monday. January 9 The end of the term is very close. Signs of the elections are seen as poster designs for campaign il- lustrations are put up. Final tryouts for Commence- ment music began today. Tuesday. January 10 Orange gym pants, purjile ones, black ones ancl red ones were in evidence on Wilson Field today. Cause — Manual ' s (j.A.A. held a play-day for girls of other high schools. The effect — a general feeling of fim and friendship as the girls participated in athletic events, ate loads of sandwiches, and danced to the music rendered by a classy girls ' orchestra. JVcdJicsday. January 11 The Weekly was issued today for the first time since the Xmas vacation. And my, what songsters these Seniors are! Music pervaded the air as the .Senior Ayes practiced singing for Commencement. Thursday, January 12 Girls ' League and A.B.S. assemblies were held this morning for the purpose of nominating candidates for office for the coming term. In addition to the nom- inations, entertaining programs were presented. The Franklin-Manual class C bas- ketball teams met here this afternoon. I ' riday. January 13 What a Inisy day for Manual. And Friday the thirteenth at that! The daring All ' s held their party despite all the ill omens, and broke the jinx lay making their affair a huge success. Our varsity basketball team journeyed to Franklin and tamed the fierce Panthers easily. Last hut not least — the Senior Fonmi banquet, long awaited by forensic leaders, was a decided success. The affair was a])ly supervised by Mr. Moore, Arthur Eslick, Lucien Mather and Mildred Blatherwick. Thursday, January 19 With a capacity crowd in attendance, Dulcy, the long anticipated senior play, was shown for the first time at Manual. What a hilarious time was had ! Poor Dulcy ' s blunders made it one of the best plays given at Manual in years. Friday, January 20 Final showing of Dulcy tonight. The evening performance found a huge throng of proud Manual parents present. The performance was wonderful. Monday, January 23 Long roll calls have made their appearance again as the Seniors must daily practice their marching. How the semester rushes to a close! Tuesday. January 24 Out in the book-bindery the boys are working with haste to prepare the new . rtisans for distribution. The books are to be bound in beautiful blue and silver covers — so ' tis said. 58 T H E A R T I S A N ' ' 33 H ' cdiicsday, January 2S Evt-ryone is in a niuddk-. Campaigners noisily whisper, ' Wiio vuu gonna vote for? and posters are all over the school. T(jniorro v nominations will formalK ' be held for .student body offices. Thursday, January 26 Candidates for student body offices were nominated in assemblies todav. The aspirants were rather frightened, but made up a capal:)le field. ' hat a task to pick the best candidates. Friday, January 27 This evening the Lettermen ' s Banquet was held, with irginia Smith ]M-oving a charming hostess. The athletes brought their best girls and enjoyed themselves greatly. Earlier in the day the basketball season ended with Manual battling the red-sliirted boys from Hollywood in a game that was one long thrill. Monday, January 30 Election results were announced today. The new cabinet appeared rather flut- tery as congratulations rained upon them. They are worthy to succeed the Pilots. Tuesday, January 31 Artisans came out today, vivid creations in blue. The schdol became one of autograph hunters. U ' cdncsdav, I ' cbruarv 1 Rally Day! Seniors were ]iroud — but many were ilowncast when almie. Iligh school days are o ' er. ( )nly a few ceremonies, an then — we ' re alinnni. Tliur. dav, Pcbruarx 2 A i)hantasmagoria of gowns in pastel shades and dark, fanllk ' sslv tailored suits welled up before each graduate as the day passed. It became a reality at night, when beautiful ceremonies attended the departure of the class of Winter ' 33. P or the last time as students at Manual, the Pilots sang the beloved Alma Mater. Then the Recessional. . . .and it ' s over, ])ast, done. Cood-bye, Manual. . . be even greater than when we left ' ou. S C H OO I. I. 1 F E 59 Parties Senior A Picnic Once again the mighty Senior Ayes made South Park their headquarters for just one hectic afternoon, and did they enjoy themselves — well, just ask any Pilot. First of all there was a football game and did the old pigskin take a beating ! Of course there was a rooting section of fair Pilots, who spurred on the athletes as they turned their efforts toward baseball. And what is a picnic without the tradition- al pie eating contest. So amid berry stains and merriment, ' ' crooner Picone and the student body (|uartet thrilled the entire neighborhood with a pathetic and stirring rendition of Dinah. At the announcement of food there was a grand dash for the tables, but Hostess George Ann L ove and Host Phil Legarra were amply prepared for the onrush. The last rays of the setting sun revealed only empty tables and lawns, but many pleasant thoughts and memories were taken away which will linger in the minds of the Pilots. Senior Reception Brilliant color, gay melody, and true hospitality reigned supreme in the south gardens when the faculty entertained the class of ' . 3 at the semi-annual faculty reception for the graduating seniors. This affair is one of Manual ' s traditions and this term was carried out in .Sianish motif. A strolling band of players from Spain and a chorus of girls in costume, sang with the musicians. F ' ortune telling was carried on by four different teachers and during the course of the program Dr. Wilson, Mr. Fonda, and Miss Hanna made a few brief remarks. Delicious ice cream and cake were served which climaxed an event greatly enjoyed by faculty and students alike. Each guest received as a ])arting gift a picture of the Pilot class. Secretary-Treasurers ' Dance The steamship Secretary-Treasurer was launched at approximately eight I .M. in the girls ' gym. A gang plank allowed the passengers admittance to the dance floor, which had been decorated with display flags, anchors, and life preservers so that it looked like the interior of any fashionable 3 acht club. The two skippers of the S. S. Secretary-Treasurer. Esther Hindin and Herman Maulhardt. afforded a cordial welcome to all who came. First mate. Bill Hall, saw to it that all things were kept shipshape with his handy crew of Syncopating Seamen. Just before the ship docked the grand march held sway with the boys being presented with gobs ' lids, and their fair attractions, Hawaiian leis. And .so the trip was proclaimed a most enjoyable and novel affair and further voyages are anticipated. 60 T H E A R T I S A N W ' 33 Senior B Dance Gay splendor, a charming host and hostess and varied entertainment all con- trihuted to the success of the Senior B dance held this year in the girls ' gym. The Mariners carried out the sea motif even in two realistic steamship funnels. Bill Hall and his musical crew were augmented hy several trios, soloists and novelty entertainers. Following the grand march, Merrill Knox and Eloise Russel presented sailor hats and miniature pom-poms which still more emphasized the sea idea. The punch disappeared in due course of time, after which the weary Senior Bees trundled themselves to their respective homes or elsewhere. Although a close guard was admittedly kept over the taking of tickets, we wondered at the goodly number of strange faces that were very much in evidence throughout the evening. Military BaJl ' ith George Ann Love and Bob Trapp as hostess and host, the military ball was carried off in grand style. The night of December 16 had long been awaited liy members of the unit. George Cox and his orchestra furnished the music for the affair. Semi-formal was the demand, but formal dress was very much in evidence. F rom the fir.st number until the last, everyone enjoyed himself and took advantage of the fine dancing music. The favors were small address books which were presented bv a Santa Clans after the grand march. Senior A Dance A swirl of sartorial sjilendor in that never-too-old setting of soft moonlight and enchanting music — as Seniors danced their last dance at Manual .Krts. George Ann Love and Phil Legarra, hostess and host l)y right of their offices in the Senior class, had a delightful scheme of decoration carried out for the affair, which was held in the girls ' gym. P.ill Hall and his nine ]iiece orchestra furnished music for the dancing. The waltz contest was held to the tune of Naughty Waltz with Johnny Picot and Babe Delscamp winning the box of chocolates. The gaiety of the occasion was somewhat tinged with regret as the last dance ended. Something of the hush of commencment night settled over the throng as the last note from the orchestra died away. All Party No superstitions balked the All Party on Friday, January 13. The coming class of senior Bees had a gay old time, and capitalized on Black Friday ' s ill name by holding the party in a witching atmosphere. The grand march came first instead of last, to insure acquaintanceship among the members of the new class. There were sessions at the punch bowl, and no one was backward about taking to the dance floor. Frederick Schwankovsky and Lloyd Helms sang solo numbers during dance intermissions. The success of the affair should be credited to Booth Woodruff and Frances Ward, host and ho.stess. and to the advisors. Miss Edna Jones and Mr. Rollen I )rake. S C TI O O L T. I F E 61 Squires ' Dance All the gang was present as the Squires walked their ladies about the dance floor to the rhythmic wailing of Jerry Campliell ' s orchestra. A vivid, changing pat- tern of pastel gowns shone against the dark, blue velour drapes that transformed the girls ' gym into a ballroom for the occasion. Manual Knights and alumni members of the Hi-Y were guests of honor, and many attended. Mr. Hodge and the old timers had many a choice bit of gossip to remember. Frank Mallon and Evelyn Xauman won two silver loving cups when they danced their way to victory in the waltz contest. x t the conclusion of the grand march, Florence Coburn and Howard Luttes, hostess and host, presented each couple with novel balloon men that stood on two cardboard feet. Senior Forum Banquet Manual ' s Senior Forum ended the semester in regular style with over fifty guests attending the sumptions banquet. At the affair, Arthur lislick, jjresident of the Senior b ' orum and toastmaster for the occasion, Ijestowed praise upon his cabinet and the Senior Forum in gen- eral for their splendid record. Many prominent alumni were present, among them Serril Gerl)er, former president of the group, who was one of the three chief speakers. Miss Helen Fuller and Mr. Maile of the social science department, also proposed questions during the affair. Louise Sherlock, winner of this term ' s declamation cu]), was given her award and asked to repeat the conclusion of her winning address. The Forum Ijanquet should go down as one of the outstanding social ventures of the season. Lettermen ' s Banquet Always a brilliant alifair, the Lettermen ' s Banquet and Dance was this year far in excess of expectation. The athletic talent of the school paraded in no un- certain fashion, with their lady friends at hand to give the affair that air of gaiety and grace that comes only with femininity. Decorations, in contrast to the simple effects now in vogue by reason of hard times, were lavish. Place cards consisted of miniature portraits of athletes. Corsages of mint were given the girls. Decorations were of purple and gray, with stars to represent stars and everything suggestive of sports. The Lettermen ' s Banquet is given by the S.B.O. cabinet in honor of the athletic captains and their teams. The success of every arrangement at the affair can be attributed to Virginia Smith, vice-president of the student body. Honored guests at the gathering included Dr. Wilson, Miss Hanna, Mr. Fonda. Head Coach Sid Foster, and the coaching staff. 62 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 Of Plant Culture . . . Luther Burbank Bv Bob Rii)c;wav 0 m HMIvE was once a man of that fine Scotcli-Irisli parentage that has woven A threads af royal purjjle into the tapestry of American history. His name FL was Luther Burbank, and when he was Ijorn, and hecanie an active little youngster, and even when he was a youth, that name meant nothing to most people except that someone had been born into the W(jrld and christened b - that name. But when he died the news])ai)ers were run with inverted column rules, and headlines si.x inches high were flung across the pages. It once happened that a farmer planted crops and hoiied that the harvest would be good, and if it wasn ' t good it was bad, and the farmer said, Well, we had a batl crop this year. and that was that. But when the steady eves in that fine face of Luther Burbank had closed softly, never to (j])en. the farmers were busy find- ing out the why of things, and all (jver the country. peoi)le were evolving new methods of ])lant cultiu ' e. new types of plants. When he was twenty-one, young Burbank all at once became tired of ordinarv things and decided to be a farmer. Some people jeer at farming and call it the most ordinary occupation on earth, in proof of vvdiich they point out that it is one of the oldest. But farming itself is wonderful ; it is the farmer that is ordinary, and even then we must think of all those farm boys who became statesmen and bankers. Burbank had read Darwin, and when he began raising vegetables on his little seventeen acre plot he proliably had some very definite ideas about what could be done with plants. At least he had ideas later, for born of his fertile mind there came the most wonderful array of larger, hardier, better plants, and when the Burbank potato was preferred to the farmers everyone knew that Pmrbank had ideas, good ones. This man went to California, where he found conditions ideal for his work. Upon a little garden in Santa Rosa he focused the attention of the world, which laughs at farmers but admits their usefulness. And as better jjlants began to a]ipear in Burbank ' s gardens, the world took to the idea of plant breeding and set out to make the most of it. He was a very patient man. F)Urbank. For fifty years he experimented with plums, and for thirty-five with berries. He trained his eyes to discern the most mi- nute variations in living things. ' ear after year he worked in his garden, not to make scientific discoveries or to become wealthy, but to aid the farmers of the world by producing better plants. .And in that ])atient toil and that fine ins])iration is another ]jhase of Burbank ' s jiiloting. There is a white-haired old gentleman at the school where this is written, who calls B.urbank the greatest American. He sees ] ast the meaner form of piloting for which everyone praises Burbank. He sees Burbank as a great pilot who with ]ilants showed wdiat could lie done with liinnan beings ; who showed that selectivitv can reproduce in a race all that is fine and good, while stamping out that which is un- desirable. S C n O O L LIFE 49 Where the Cross Is Made Presented bv THE PLAYERS ' COMPANY Friday, November 4, 1932 The Characters BartJ ' ett his soli lis daughter 5ilas Horn, mate Cates, bo ' sun Jimmy Kanaka, harpooner Sidney Silver Frederick Schwankovsky Ruth Lee Leach Kenneth Murphy Robert Ridgway John Boy George Valdez Masked in the powerful roles of Eutjenc ) ' Neirs harrowing study of the ma- cabre, the Players ' Com]jany plunged Manual audiences into a phantasina of horror. Long hours of rehearsal under the skillful direction of Miss Mae Edwards developed a sympathetic cast which created a vivid impression upon all who wit- nessed the presentation of Where the Cross Is Made. The difficulty of presenting a drama of this nature before a high school aud- ience is apparent. This play, although far removed from the vaudeville type of enter- taimnent so popular with high school audiences, drew a gratifying volume of ap- plause at both performances, indicating an appreciation of higher entertainment by the Manual Arts student body , as well as fine acting by the cast. Fred .Schwankowsky, Sidney Silver and Ruth Lee Leach, who carried the chief roles, were especially fine in their interpretations of the intensely dramatic charac- ters they were chosen to portray. None of these three are seniors, a fact which assures Manual of some fine material for future senior productions. The other roles were minor ones but extremely difficult, and a great deal of praise is due the players who carried these parts. The greatest delicacy was shown in handling the ghost scene, the most difficult part of the play. D R A M A A N D M U S I C 65 ' l hc plot re iilvc ' s al)nut the mad dreams of Isaiah I ' artlett, an old whaling captain, who, from the lookout atop his house on a hleak section of the Cali- fornia coast, watches day and night for the return of the Mary Allen, the schoon- er he sent to bring home a treasure from the southern seas. Long since, Nat, his embittered son, has plumbed the depths of his father ' s madness and has learned the truth about the hidden treasure. ( )n a whaling voyage his father had been shipwrecked and stranded with a few of his crew upon a desert island in the Malay . rchi|)elago. On this barren s])ot a treasure had l)een dis- coN ' ered. Days later the crew, half-dead, half-crazed, had l een rescued, and when he could do so, Ca])tain Bartlett had outfitted the Mary Allen and sent it to bring home the gold. The shi]) had been lost in a hurricane, but Captain Bartlett could not believe in the wreck of his dreams. Nat had been made heir to the secret, and had believed in the treasure. One day he found his father ' s samples of the treasiu-e and had found them worthless. Then, sure of his father ' s madness, he had come to hate him, and the captain ' s talk of gold had dri en . at to the verge of insanity. . at phits to have his father removed to an asylum, and furtively keeps this knowledge from his sister. The captain learns of Nat ' s plans and furiously berates him as a traitor and a tool. In a dreadful clima.x Nat ' s brain is overwhelmed bv his father ' s mad will ; he and his father see the ghosts of the lost crew return laden with gold. The dead men have risen from the sea — their flesh has decomposed, and the slime and seaweed of the ocean bottom is entangled in the vestiges of their clothing. Only Nat and his father see the ])hantoms. Sue Bartlett, stricken with horror, sees her father die of heart failure during his insane exultation. Nat, utterly mad, raves of the treasure as the curtain falls. Words will not suffice to discribe the mastery with which the author has wov- en his gruesome but thrilling s]3ell. Its finished production leaves no audience un- moved, and it affords the cast an opportunity to dis])la the highest t pe of acting. 56 ' r H E A R T I S A N W ' 33 Ye Old Christmas Morning A culd frosty nioniiiig. early in tlu- day! The- sun has not yt-t risen, and the lieUnian is goin i; his rounds caHiny- All is well — an assurance to the t;i)od citizens of the town that they may sluniher on in peace for another hour. Now in the distance, up the street, conies the soiuul of carolers. Sweet voices on the still cold air. niini le with the high tones of violins and flutes. They stop hefore a house, with a holly hough on the door. Someone opens a window, and throws a coin with a Merrv Christmas. Closer come the carolers, happy and gay. singing their wassails with a right good cheer. The sun rises on a glittering world and from the cathedral comes strains of the organ, and the sound of many voices raised in praise and adoration. The glass in the windows of the church sjiarkles with the rainhow colors of many jewels. The trees are fragrant under their load of snow. Now the citizens rise, and take their joyous way to the church where they too, may rejoice, in music and light. A similiar scene took place at .Manual Arts. The l)ellman. in our case, was Frederick Schwankovsky. who opened the program. A charming, quaint song typi- cal of the olden time was his contribution, sung to the accompaniment of his own bell, with his own lantern to light the way. The carolers were members of the voice class, who sung such old favorites as The First Noel, and Good King W ' en- ceslas. The musicians who accompanied them in their travels through the town (our auditorium) were members of our orchestra. The beautifttl church window was a contribution of the stage arts classes. The groups of singers on the stage who gave many delightful Christmas selections were the A Cappella Choir, the Girls ' Lyric Club, and the Boys ' Aeolian Club. In the balconv were the Girls ' Junior Glee Cluli. whose sweet dices and i)eautiful songs lent much atmosphere to the occasion. The final number. ' Glory to God. from Handel ' s Messiah, formed a fitting climax to the Christmas program, with Miss l- lizabeth Mottern singing the soprano recitatives. This number was accompanied b - the Manual Arts Little Sym- phony. The assemhlv ga ' e all who attended the feeling that they hatl had a real taste of the Christmas spirit, and a good lieginning for a Ha|)py Xew Year. I 1) k A M A A X I) .MUSI C 67 The First Dress Suit Presented by the Players ' Club L ' lider tile dire ' - ' tioii of I ' .illie llraea M rs. Harding Teddy Harding Betty Harding Johnny Drake Dorothy Glencross Irvin Markowitz Mary Louise Fehner Bill Rawson One hundred and eight laughs, hy actual C(.)unt, and a constant round of fem- inine giggles greeted the cast of ' riic l ' irst Dress Suit during the thirty-eight minutes in which it strutted the Thespian hoards. Each semester the Players ' Company sponsors the i ' layers ' Cluh, which name cloaks the cast of the pla} ' selected hy the Company and directed hy a Company memher. The cast is selected from the school at large, with the aim of grooming likely talent for memhershi]) in the select circle of the Players ' Coni])any. Fol- lowing the ])resentation of tl.e F ' iavers ' Clulj iiroduciiun, al va s a one act plav. the hest actors are invited to join the Players ' Company. The First Dress Suit was a fortunate selection, and the cast was ;ni ahle one. Miss Hillie ISraca devoted li ng hours to rehearsal and succeeded in whipping into shajie a grou|i of players who extracted the ultimate in laughs from the large audience that witnessed the after-school presentation of the pla ' . The clever ])lot concerned the woeful trials of the very young and earnest Johnny Drake, who had decided to take unto himself a wife. Miss Hetty Harding. Johnnv ' s wedding day found the Harding house in an uproar, for Teddy wanted to use the hath tuh and Betty refused to he hurrie l. Airs. Harding raved constantly. ( )nto the scene there came the distraught hride,groom-to-he. seeking a dress suit. His own was lost, and a wedding with no dress suit was no wedding. Would Teddv loan his ol ' pal a dress suit? Teddy would not I His hest girl was to he at the wedding, and Teddy must he at his hest. The machinations of the nKJther. the hrother. the hride-to-lie and her future spouse hecame ghastl - in their intensity. I ' oor Teddy ])lotted des]ierately to save his dress suit. Then the minister slipped on a piece of soa|) while taking his hath. The wedding was called off. to the relief of all parties. 68 The Players ' Company The Players ' C ' oniiiany ! What a t; ' reat deal tliat means In the school. It is the source of plays such as this term ' s so successful Where the Cross Is Made, which, hy the way, is heing entered in the Pasadena Community Playhouse competition. It is the sponsor of the Players ' Club, which jiresented its semi-annual one act comedy. Another thing. Working in conjunction with the president of the radio club, the Players ' Company prexy arranged several broaflcasts which were presented at the noon hour during the latter part of the year. This feature is ex]jected to grow in ])0]:)ularitv. and judging from the requests for more, will soon he a regular enter- tainment. There are many more such startling embryonic jilans made by this term ' s cabinet, which will have effect next semester. However, they are sur])rises. lUit there are several dramatic jiroductions which have been ])lanned for this year and are yet to come. They were not ])resented because of the illness of the achisor. Miss Mae Edwards. The grou]) is a small and decided!} ' select one. which condition is necessary to give the school the very best dramatic talent in its every appearance. The reijuire- ments for admittance into the company are consequently very strict, there being three. These are, namely, participation in an assembly program showing special indi- vidual talent, superior work in ,-i club jilay, or recommend;itii n b - the dr;imatic de- partment. The executive staff this year has been lu ' .-uled liy Rita Kousc. who served her second term as president. Other officers were: vice-jnesident, Kenneth Mur- phy; secretary, Patricia O ' Connor; ])ublicitv nianager, Marion Dix : and pro])-])oy. Jack Weigand. D R A M A A X 1) M L S I C 69 The Stage Crew A necessary part of every stage production at Manual Arts is executed, not by meml ers of the Players ' Company, hut by the stage crew. This uniformed clan lurks in the background and is many times overlooked when individual jiraise is given for an exceptionally fine stage slmw. hut the fellows deserve all the praise thev get and a great deal more. The stage crew is a semi-select group, carefully chosen by Mr. . ndersen for the often-times delicate work they nui.st perform. Mr. Ander.sen prefers boys who are more or less adept at cariientry, but this is not essential. Neither is a huge physical frame necessary to enter the group. The .senior jilav. Dulcv. as in all senior plays, was a difficult production, but the stage crew held up its end rather well. Eugene O ' Neill ' s Where the Cross Is Made, with its eerie atmosphere and ghost scene, demanded adept manipula- tion of lights and other fixtures, and the success of that ])lay reflects, in part, the skill of the stage crew. Members of the crew this term have lieen: Hill Cutts. manager; Tom Whal- ley, custodian; . 1 .Alucci. head fly-man; Leonard Moody, electrician; Frank Sho- wa-lter, office manager: Lucien Mather, Russell Newman, Charles Long, Ed (iil- bert. Bud Cook. Therold Fielder, and Charles Einley. 70 THE ARTISAN W ' o,=. Boys ' Aeolian Club Soiiit; x-ar.s agcj tlic Aculian Cluli of Manual Art Hii li ScIkkiI was organized under the leadership of Miss Elizabeth Mottern, The purjxise ni organizint; such a club was two-fold, first: to create a greater interest among the hciys (jf Afanual in the field of music : second, to combine the already existing twci Senior (jlee Clu])s. Through its few short years of history the Aenlian Club has estalilished itself as a rejiutable and intricate ])art of Manual. The club not only holds high standards in the field of music, but also makes the dexelopmenl of character a very important part of its activity. Members are chosen each term after a series of eliminations, and those persons fortunate enough to be elected to membershi]i are, in the clul) ' s esti- mation, those who ])ossess these tw .) high standards. The .Aeolian Club has ajjjjeared nian times this last semester, both in and out of school, in formal concert. The clulj also ap])eared in conjunction with the foot- ball band at football games, and were seen at the respective games in a snapi y. re- cently purchased club miiforni. The club was fortunate to ha e these uniforms donated by the school. The two outstanding social events of the ])ast term were tlie comliined part - with the Ciirls ' I-yric Club, at which e ery fellow who attended thoroughly and whdle-heartefllv enjoyefl himself; the second was the semi-annual . eolian Club banc|uet. at which time former members of the . eolian Club returned to r,iy their respects to this organizatiim. The club was last seen on the night nf graduation, when it jiresented itself to otTer its contribution to the graduating class of . 3. The officers for the i)ast term were Roland Helsel. iiresident ; .Arnold Burghart. vice-president: Ered .Schwankovskv. secretary: Lloyd llelnis, treasurer; Owen I ' ettv. manager; Ralph .Siegel. librarian: h!lizabeth .Mottern, faculty adviser. I) K A M A A N I) M f S I C 71 Girls ' Lyric Club Amony; the organizations playing important parts in the life of Manual Arts is the Girls ' Lvric Cluh. Every first ])erio(l finds them at the delightful work of singing fine music. Artistic intc-rpretation. with all that this involves of vocal technic and of musical kncjwledge, is the ideal which they iiave set as their goal. To start the day with enthusiasm for beautiful things, with cooperation and good fellowship, is to start right attitudes for the whole day. So the I yric Cluh has also set up for itself standards of good citizenship. This term the Lyric Cluh has sung on various programs. They have combined with the Boys ' .Aeolian Club in the singing of several numbers on the Christmas program, and in presenting a choral number on Commencement and Rally Day i)ro- grams. The Fashion Show, in which the Lyric Club combined with girls of the home economics department, proved most unique and entertaining. Several interesting social affairs have been held during the term. In Novem- ber, the party with the Aeolian Chih — a costume party with plenty of games and fun. was a great success. The girls have also entertained their mothers in the prac- tice house with the Mother Tea. This is one of the Lyric Club ' s most cherished events. Here each mother has the opportunity to meet her daughter ' s friends. The girls always provide an interesting program featuring cluh talent. An excellent group of officers have conducted club affairs this term. Martha ' irgin. president : Kay Neutzenholzer. vice-president : Elizabeth Gutterman, secre- tary ; and Ethelrose OrlofF, treasurer, have been faithful and efficient workers for the pleasure and profit of all. Miss Ina M. Davids is musical director and club advisor. 72 THE A R T T S A N V ' 33 jJK D R A M A A N 1) AI U S I C 73 Girls ' Junior Glee Club The Girls ' liinior Glee Club is an active singiny- organization wliicii takes a decided interest in assisting with the school activities. All the girls who enjoy and ai)preciate the art of singing in ])arts are eligible. The joy of mingling with other girls who ha e the same interests, and the contacts and associations formed from these pleasures, stamp an indelible imprint on our high school da_ ' s. The club this term jjrovided the wandering musicians at the senior reception in the practice house and gardens, and also sang at various gatherings and I ' .T.A. meetings. The officers of the club are : Ann Landerfield, ]jresident : h ' ranees Ryder, secretary-treasurer; and Evelyn Goodman, librarian. Miss Blythe is the sponsor and musical director of the club. A Cappella Choir . Capella singing is unique in that the voices do all without aid from instru- ments, weaving in and out to make a perfect fabric of sound in themselves — a fabric with here a strong thread of gay color, or there a delicate shading together of pastels. It seems that master coni])osers of all times have delighted to weave ])atterns with this attractive material, for there is a wealth of beautiful A Cappella music from which to choose. The A Cappella choir this term has sung mucli of this music and in doing so has not onlv learned something of interpretation, but has gained power in reading music, in carrying parts, in feeling harmony, and in -ocal control. Concert appear- ances have been made, too. and good fellowship (jromoted by a well-planned party. Officers for the term have been : Jerry Campbell, president : Al Spires, vice- president ; Vivian Hill, treasurer; Frances Branisen, .secretary. Miss Ina M. Davids is director and adviser. Boys ' Junior Glee Club This glee club has its aim, Learning to Sing. Owing to the fact that there are no tryouts for this group, the organization is full of Ijoys to whom singing is an actual enjoyment and anyone with this desire is heartily welcomefl. The activities of the club are the same as they have been since its origin. The practice of singing every day is a great help, and is a real ins])iration to all who par- ticipate. The group is taught many rudiments of niusi.-, which is in itself a valuable aid in the actual enjoyment of song. It is a recognized fact that ])art singing is not simple, and it is (juite inspira- tional to see and hear these fellows work. This club, in reality, acts as a feeder for the Aeolian (Senior) club. It also give actual experience and training, which naturally is a helji in trying out for the senior organization. Those guiding the destinv of the club r ' re Miss Mottern, director, and advisor; Gerry Chickering, president; George Smith. ice-president ; Tom Marineau, secre- tary-treasurer; Raymond Lake, librarian; and Robert James, assistant librarian. 74 T H 1-, A R T I S A X W ,1 String and Woodwind Ensemble Soniethin.iL; new and different in the wav (if musical (irs anizatiuns has been demonstrated in the new string and woodwind ensenilile. This instrumental comhi- nation has many possibilities, which have been br(jui;ht out by the fine music per- formed, and by artistic interpretation. This .gnjuj) took jiart in the recent P ' ashion Show in our auditorium, playing for the models as they appeared. They have also played for the Parent-Teacher Association. Such a group is able to ])rotit greatly for itself, and to give much pleasure to others. Much credit is due to Mr. F . Stillwell Moore, who is director of the grou]). The members include Elizabeth . clnval and . ndrew (iermer. iiilins: Duris Savery, cello; Merrill Shea and Charlotte Roach, flutes; Leslie Ruddock, clarinet; Dewey Brittingham and Robert Kirk, saxophones; (iladys Sawyer, bass; and Mary King, jjiano. Concerning the Music Club The Music Club is an organization for the promotion of good fellowship through music; hence, it invites to its membership all those who are interested in music. ( )ne need not be a musician, a student of music, or a memlier ol a music class in order to have sufficient music interest to join the group, for such interest is the basis for eligibility and also for fellowship. The noon meetings twice a month are the o] portunities for making new friends and for enjoying programs which are novel and varied. h ' ach semester, a musical to])ic is selected for the consideration ol the club. and since most of the programs relate to this objective, there are intellectual and cultural values indirectlv derived through the entertainment. In the iiresentation of ])rograms, the talent of the school is utilized whenever |)ossible; and thereby. nian - gifted students are discovered and brought to the attention of the student body. Miss Lenore Snow is the sponsor of the club, and the officers for this semester are as follows; Bee Tur])in. president; Winifred Thompson, vice-presi- vu[ : and Catherine ( loe. secretary and treasurer. The Junior Orchestra Among the organizations of the school which work (|uietl ' but acconi] lish much, is the Junior Orchestra. The students in this groujj are those who perhaps have had little orchestral experience, or who are not so far advanced technically. But they are learning the value of ensemble work in the matter of reading, and in interpretation. I ' or good music is studied, and these students are derixing the Ix ' ne- fits of working in a ,grou]) on desirable objectives. Se eral times during the term thev lo some work ui public, the most im- ]K)rtant (jf which is ])laving for the senior dramatic jiroduction during the Com- mencement season. Much credit is due Mr. l ' . Stillwell Moore, the director, and to the officers. This term the affairs of the grou]) have been handled b ' Ivud Jones, ])resident ; I.orine luiglisb, ice-presiclent ; |)orolh - Tip]! . secretary; and lo Smith, librarian. I) R A M A A 1) M r S T C 75 fi ' j Jio-i3 76 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 The Senior Orchestra ( )ur senior orchestra is one of the most elevatini; and insi)irin,iL; L roups that the school jjroduces. Membership in this organization not only develo]is one ' s appreci- ation of classical music, but it also aids many aspiring young musicians in carrying on a study that in some cases becomes their life work. Naturally, in order to attain membership one must have more than an elemen- tary knowledge of his or her particular instrument. Constant practice in conjunction with the entire grouj) in addition to expert coaching in the playing of each individ- ual instrument ])erfects the technique of each member and affords training in har- mony and co-ordination. These benefits do not apply only to those who choose music as their career, and go in the senior (orchestra in order to studs- appreciation of orchestral music. The orchestral concert given in oin ' auditorium each semester gives the school an o]jportunity to hear fine symphonic niusx- offered in a well-presented style and with an interpretation that would bring much praise to a professional (jrganization. This term ' s orchestral concert l)rought us such musical gems as Mozart ' s Magic Mute Overture. and the Tannhauser March by Wagner. At Connuence ' .ient time the orchestra does a alnable school ser ice in its co- o])eration with the graduating class. The beaut ' of the o])ening number, the en- trance march, the accompaniment of the traditional graduation songs and closing march all add to tlie srccess of the event and sliow the worth of this s])lendid or- ganization. I he orchestra this term has been under the able supervision of Mr. F. Still- well .Moore. D R A AI A A X I) r L S I C 77 The Football Band At half time in early footliall games, spectators were often as not quite bored and impatient. The modern i;anie. liowever. is never complete without a picturesque display by the bands of the o]i]iosing schools (jr colleges. Manual ' s own next door neighbor, the University of Southern California, pioneered in this field, and today the magnificent Trojan band, the largest col- legiate band in the world, affords a vital spark to everv U.S.C. football game. Manual can of course offer no such thrilling spectacle as the colleges do. but the Manual Arts football band, in ap])roved Toiler fashion, has earned itself a high place among band units of the city high schools.. Their snappy purple and gray uniforms, and the polished and intricate maneuvers they e.xecute during inter- missions at grid contests, have brought a great deal of favorable comment in their direction. This semester a drum and luigle corps was added to the band, increasing sev- eral times the effectiveness of the display. Band members were drilled in military formations and instructed in jiarade effects, such as forming the initials of rival schools. Piand members must have a large repertoire of marches, including the songs of all schools in the city. That the liand carried off all its duties in fine style is a tribute to its own natural skill and the efforts of the director. Mr. Y . .Stilwell Moore. The band leaders this semester were the commanding officers of the R. O. T. C. band. They were Captain Calvin Taylor, First Lieutenant Earl Ileverly. and Second Lieutenants Rav Mitchell and Robert Carse. (. ' 78 T II E A k T I S A X W ' 3.5 Of Dramatists . . . Eugene O ' Neill Bv llir.i.ii ' . - K { ' ' auuiCxN JX ' I ' likl ' lSTING to the world 1)ec£iusc he is interesting to himself. Eugene ( ) ' . eill has ke])t his individuality intact. Refusing to hecome stereotyped by a public which demanded the accepted thing in drama, he dared to express his own ideas, his own conception of what the theater ought to present, and by clinging U his convictions has established himself as America ' s leading drama- tist. Eugene O ' Neill comes from the theater; its very atmosphere surrounded his boyhood when he traveled in show tr(iui)es with his father. The knowledge of th theater from the work of the stage crew to the make-up kit of the star was almost instinctive in ( ) ' Xeill ; it was not necessary lor him in later life to learn all the tricks (jf the trade. Easily bored by profitless monotony, he left his father and set (jut on his own resources. Editorial work on a Xew York daily, bumming his way to odd harbors of the world on tramp steamers, seeing the realistic side of life along with its glamor — all held their fascination for O ' Neill. Determined not to accept a commonplace profession, he was wise enough to realize the importance of an occui)ation appealing to one ' s taste. Restless, discontented, writing .seemed the only field in which he could find satisfaction. Once his mind was made up, he set out with characteristic thoroughness, O ' Xeill soon discovered that drama was his forte, Init impatient with the old theatrical subterfuges, he put a startling simplicity into his plays that caught the attention of the iniblic. While he was ridiculed for being an erratic star-gazer, for daring to introduce realism into the theater, he had gained public notice. O ' Xeill was sure of himself, ure of his power, and he forged steadily ahead toward his goal. Oblivious to destructive criticism, iirofiting always by his own mistakes, Eugene ( ) ' Xeill grew. That is the strongest, most indominitable characteristic about the ' man— his nervous, courageous growth. No other man in .America has done so much at his age and ]ironiises so much for the tuture. Aiming at simplicity in all his work, he has held to that throughout his life. Casting out evervthing which tended to make life complex and disjointed, ( ) ' Xeill has always clung to reality and a straight road ahead. He likes himself, is interested in his growth: he has a remarkable power of self-analysis — the i)ower to stand off and view himself disinterestedly. O ' Neill realizes the priceless value set on originality and has made use of it to the fullest extent. The attention of the world once gained, he holds attention bv being (|uietly, purposely, himself. He has jirogressed far enough to recognize the almost emiitv glory of fame; he knows that the knowledge of a good job well k)ne is the best payment a man can ask. Holding to his goal of a true iireseiitation of life and leading an existence as sincere and unhypocritical as a man could make it. ( ) ' Neill stands forth as a man strong in himself and secure in the future. THE ARTISAN W 33 The Coaching Staff In this era of million dollar coaches and high-powered publicity of athletics, one often hears that too much em])hasis is placed on the coach and due credit is not given the jilaver. Alanualites. however, will contend that their coaching staff de- serves as much publicity as the best. Sidiicv !•. Foster, liesides being head of Manual ' s physical education depart- ment. Mr. Foster is -ice-president of the A. A. U., and served as one of the big guns of the Xth ( )lvmi)aid. Formerly an Mi-American athlete at Occidental col- lege, he took o er the reins at Manual .Vrts in 1917, practically built the Toiler athletic field, and became famous as a coach of champions. Jaiucs J. . ' V ( ' . 1 lie aniial)le Mr. Hlewett, James . . ' y ( ' . TTie aniiable Mr. lUewett, famous Manual alumnus, is head footl)all coach. He is also lightweight track coach, and has coached a chanipi inship squad ever since Class B track was organized in the league. ]im is also a jirominent football and basketball referee in the Pacific Coast Conference circles. Charles Toiicy. Mr. Tonev is one of the best liked men at Manual. lie is coach of the varsity track squad, which is an annual threat to other teams and a i)eriodi- cal championship array. He is also line coach of the varsity football squad and guides the championshi]) cross-country team. He is a graduate of California, where he pla e I on the woniler team of the last decade and received All-.Vmerican mention. James Armstnimi. Varsitv basketball coach and Class (. track mentor, the popular Mr. . rmstrong coached the brilliant Manual hoop scpiad to a championship in l ' )32. His Cee track teams ha e the best record in the city. .-Irtlitir I-.. irHliams. Mr. Williams, better known as I ' eewee. is the busi- est man on the Toiler staff. He is the coach of gym team, lightweight football, lightweight basketball and golf. The g ni team has the greatest rating in California. Herbert Lougheed. Mr. Fougheed handles the difficult assignment of cor- rective gym in.structor. Until baseball was abandoned at Manual he was varsity l)asehall coach. A T H L E T I C S 81 THK CUALHKS Sidney Foster James Blewett Chari.es Toney James Armstrong Arthur Wii.uams Herbert Lougheed r H E A R T 1 S A N W 33 A T H L E T I C S 83 Varsity Football With seven lettermen returning, the Toiler ' s chances appeared iironiisiiii;, Init injuries and ineHgil)ihties wreaked havoc with the local eleven. The Artisans ])layed real foothall in two contests, the h ' rcniont fracas and tlic Hollywood encounter. For the first time in many years, the Purple and (irey clad S(|uad faileil to finish in the mone ' . . fter trimming Inglewood, the Bay League champs, in a practice tilt, the Toil- ers were pointing for l emont took the Long Beach Jack ' rabhits too lightly. As a result, the Beach hoys won easily, 15 to 0. With this stunning defeat in mind, the team opened the season in fine mental sha])e and managed to hold the ])ovverful Fremont outfit to a 6 to 6 tie. Xot until the tinal game with Hollywood did the Toilers display their early season form, and the Redshirts fell before the determined .Artisans. ( ' ) to 0. . Class B Football The hahcs enjoyed one of the most successful seasons of lightweight foot- ])all at .Manual, losing only one game during the entire season. After a great practice season, the Bees opened their schedule by whii)|)ing Fremont, twelve to nothing. „ L. A. van(|uished the lights the following week and the babes set out after a good standing. They crushed Fairfax, (Garfield, Lincoln, and Hollywood In- large scores and also trounced Poly, the city champs, in a jjractice game late in tlie .season. The locals finished their schedule of league encounters with five wins and one defeat to grab second place. L. . . was the only eleven to cross the Toilers ' goal line. The regulars were com])osed of Ruiz and Katz at ends, Baird and Reid at tackles, I ' raum and Mel Davis at guards, Howard Davis at center. Captain Bed- rosian at quarter. Willie . bels and Alaulhardt halves, and l)erriman, full. . The outstanding reserves were Amy.x at full. Dooling and . kimoto halves, and Couts at tackle. Abels proved to be the leading scorer of the league, the sensational colored star rambling through every opponent on long runs for touchdowns. Class C Football City Champs ! That is the title attached to the midgets. Cnder the leadership of Student Coach Joe Mason, the Artisan dwarfs grabbed the coveted crown for the first time in many years. Not one team in the City League boasted as strong a team as the Manual runts. The offensive thrusts of George Takeoka and Dick Sherrick penetrated everv line that the Cees faced, while the local forward wall yeilded to no one. Captain Emil Sady at quarter, Dick Sherrick at full and Takeoka and Nushida at halves rounded out the backf ield. while the line was made up of Anraku and Angel, ends, McConnel and Braun, tackles, Komai and Camplin, guards, and Jen- son center. 84 T HE ARTISAN W 33 Big M Society The Big M signifying achievement upon the athletic field under Manual colors, entitles its wearer to membership in an honor society known as the Big M Society. The Big M is acc(;rde(l only to those athletes who attain a certain standard in varsity competition. Added to athletic ability must he a high standard of scholarshi]j and citizenshi]). Before a letter is awarded to an athlete his (luali- fications are reviewed bv the Council, which officially passes upon Coach Foster ' s recommendations. This year the organization was headed by Joe Jacobs, of varsity football note. ' ice-president was Ralph McHride, star pole-vaulter on the 1931 and 1932 track teams. The secretary was Ellen Yeakel, president of the G. A. A. This office is now the official capacity of the G. A. A. president. Yell Leaders Manual ' s knickered princes of pep carried out their duties in the approved Toiler style, cavorting wildly at football games and rallies, and calling on all loyal Toilers to split their throats in tribute to their Alma Mater. Lucien Mather served his second term as yell-king. His two assistants were Jack Rosenberg and Billie Coe. As is customary the yell leaders were selected at a s])ecial bleacher assembly. . s the candidates led the student body in yells a committee of judges selected the best of the aspirants to the yell posts. Mather graduates this semester. Jack Rosenberg, who is yell leader for the second consecutive semester, and Billy Coe will be back next semester and will probably battle for the head yell post. Toiler Club The Toiler Chil) -acts as an official ccirps of scene-shifters for the Athletic Department. It is no easy task to ])repare a school for an athletic encounter, and it is more difficult yet to attend to all the details during the actual progress of the meet. These tasks are the lot of the Toiler Club. The organization draws its membershi]i from the various athletic managers and their assistants. They are sponsored by Coach Foster, head of the physical education department. Their work is done mainly on the athletic field. The boys are personally responsible fur all the valuable athletic equipment. Ray Elliott, athletic manager, is president of the grou]). Vice-president is Arlan Wessel, varsity football manager. Secretary is Robert Welshons, and treas- urer, Dick Cooper. ATHLETICS 85 86 THE A R T I S . N W ' 33 Tom Wmai.i.rv Frank Smowai.tkr Glen Bakf.r Thomas ll ' liallcy. A great wingnian on the 1931 team, Tom l)egan this season as fullljack. until injuries to the team shifted him to end. Tom was a fine pass receiver and figured in nianv pass plays during the season. He also graduates this semester. Captain Frank Slitr ' allcr. The massive Toiler captain returned to his tackle ])ost to play a hard, steady game throughout tlie season. Not many l)all carriers in the circuit could ride over his ]K)sition. Bud graduates this semester after two years of service on tiie varsity s(|uad. Glen Baker. r;a]loi)ing Glen was the leading ground gainer on the Purple squad, and showed fine al)ility to divine the enemy ' s next play, l.ast season (ilen played a flashy game at halfhack, hut finished this season at the fullback berth. Glen graduates this semester. 87 Fraxiis Snydek Cl.AREXCE McLaUUHLIX Grs NlCHAXDROS ll ' illiaiii Snyder. The difficult position of c|uarterl)ack was held down this year hy Bill Snyder. Under the Blewett system, an adaptation of Warner ' s, the quar- ter does no hall carrying , hut functions as a sij nal caller and lilocking hack. I ' ill car- ried out these tasks in a capalile manner. Clarence MeLainjhliii. .Mac went through this season in the role of reserve wini ' man. He is another returnintj letternian. and the coaches hope to see him de- •elop into a fine jierformer at one of the end berths. (tiis Xichandros. This hoy was a threat fighter in the line, and his return to the team next season ought to aid materially in producing a winning aggregation. 88 Ray Lucre EUGEXE Cl-IXE Chestkr Halley Rav Lnckc. Ray is one of the mo t-like(l fellows on the squad. He i)lays a hard, smashing game hoth offensively and on the defen ie. and is the hardest tackier on the squad. Lucke will Ije l ack next fall, and is bound to he a aluahle asset to Coach Rlewett ' s 1933 team. Eugene Cliiic. Gene, tijiping the Fairbanks at well over two hundred jjounds, was a regular last year, and returned to the center ]50sition to hold back many an opposing line buck. Unfortunately he was injured in the F remont encounter, but returned in the Hollywood tilt to prove his ability as one of the toughest linesmen in the City League, Gene is another graduate, and will be missed Chester Halley. Clown Halley was a veteran from last year, when his work at the guard position caught the eye of the critics. He was a tower of strength this year, turning in a fine performance in e ery game. Halley wi ll graduate this semester. A T II L E T I C S 89 Dux Kf.li.f.r Rlblv Hakuu) Clixtox Don Keller. Keller came up from the lightvvei.yht team and made good among the big fellows. He was rated as one of the premier passers of the circuit and was no mean shakes at stabbing through the line. He was injured during the latter part of the season, but his work up to that time earned him his letter. He will return to the varsity team next year and should ripen into a flashy backfield performer. Iz ' o Riibly. This bov came into his own as a ball carrier in the Hollywood game. When the squad was hit hard liy injuries he filled a vacant place with nicety, and pounded the Redshirts off their feet to aid in capping the season with a fine victory. Harold Clinton. Red turned in a good year on the Toiler line this year, and was at the bottom of a lot of plays that came through the Purple forward wall. This is Harold ' s last season, and his graduation will rob the varsity staff of a cap- able reserve. 90 H !•: ARTISAN W 3o Jamks Rurisox William Ri ' rlv Aklax Wesskl .lames Karison. liii; jiiii |)laye(l at one of tlif tackle positions, a tough spot on any team. Jim will not be eligible for football next vear. Il ' illidiii h ' lihly. Like his brother. Hill broke into the limelight in the hard fought Hollywood game. As a half, he played a corking game. He will return to the team next season, and is lieing hailed as a neat line jjlunger. Arland U ' csscI, foolhall iiuniii cr. W ' essel attended to his multifarious luties with a steadiness that marks him as a standout at this trvin i)osition. % A Till. !•: T I C S 91 The Manual Arts Weekly All-City Team Tuni W ' halley Manual Arts Lett End ' T ' inky MacMoore Los Angeles Left Tackle Kenny Braden Fremont Left Guard Ray Lucke Manual Arts Center Ray Robles Lincoln Right Guard Bill Harmon Belmont Right Tackle Jack Clark Hollywood Right End Wade W ' illey Los Angeles Quarter liack Joe Aprato Lincoln Left Halfback Frank Cory Polytechnic Right Halfback Jotty Falvo Fremont Fullliack Honorable Mention: Ends — Taylor, Poly; and ILirdy, Fremont. Tackles — Stanley. Lincoln : and McConnor. Poly ; Showalter. Manual Arts. ( kiards — Popo- vich, Garfield; and Garnier, Los Angeles. Center — Chavoor, Poly; and Johnson. Fremont. Quarterback — Aprato shifted to halfback. Halfbacks — Baker. Manual Arts; Ferguson, Los Angeles; Baida. Los Angeles. Fullback — O ' Neill, Jefferson; LaBrucherie, Los Angeles; Reis, Polytechnic. W. L. T. Pet. TP. TD. C. PA. Los Angeles ....5 1 833 Los Angeles .. 108 17 6 19 Polytechnic 5 1 833 Polytechnic .....87 13 9 13 Belmont ._ 3 1 2 750 Belmont ....88 13 10 45 Fremont ♦ 2 666 Fremont -80 13 2 32 Lincoln 3 2 1 600 Lincoln -39 6 3 13 Jefferson 3 3 500 Jefferson -25 4 1 IS Manual Arts ....2 3 1 400 Manual Arts .--33 5 3 45 Hollywood 2 3 1 400 Hollywood ....51 8 3 66 Roosevelt 2 3 1 400 Roosevelt -18 8 52 Franklin 1 5 U,7 Franklin - 2 69 Fairfax 1 5 167 Fairfax -13 2 1 80 Garfield 4 2 000 Garfield -12 2 109 LEADING SCORERS Aprato, Lincoln 59 Cory, Polytechnic 37 Falvo, FreuTont 42 Willey, Los Angeles 32 LaBrucherie, Los Angeles .. 24 Montapert, Belmont 24 92 T n E A R T I S A N W ' 35 Manual: 6; Fremont: 6 Friday. October 7 Coach Jim Blewett ' s varsity pig-skiniiers opened their 1932 schedule against the Fremont Pathfinders and liattled for four thrilling periods to a 6 to 6 tie. The Artisans outplayed the Fremont outfit statistically hut failed to produce the necessary scoring punch at the opportune moments, and the contest ended with the ball in Fremont ' s possession on the Toiler three yard stripe. The Pathfinders scored early when Brighton, Fremont quarterback, took Whal- ley ' s punt on his own twenty yard line and raced eighty yards to a touchdown. The long gallop was aided by good blocking on the part of the Cardinal and Grey boys as Brighton stumbled and staggered down the sidelines for the touchdown. A third quarter drive by the Artisan ' s produced a tally to tie the count, Keller going over for the touchdown after Baker and Alucci had planted the pigskin in scoring position. A fourth quarter rush with Jotty Falvo packing the pelota. netted Fremont a series of first downs, but the gun barked as Falvo was stopped on the three yard mark. The game proved to be disastrous for lioth elevens, as it was discovered that an ineligible player had jiarticipated for Manual and Fremont. Both boys were transfers from Indiana, where scholastic requirements differ from tliose of Cali- fornia. A T II L !•: TICS 93 Manual: o ; Los Angeles: 19 Friday. October 14 Presenting a l)rilliant running attack that cunipletely liaffled a big and slow Manual Arts team, the Los Angeles high school Romans swamped the Toilers on Housh Field bv a score of nineteen to nothing. A crowd of ten thousand prep fans witnessed the fray. The Rambling Romans were too good for the locals, and experienced little trouble in piercing the Toiler defense. L.A. High ' s touchdowns came through the efforts of Wade Wiilcy and julm Baida. the Roman scoring aces. W ' illey returned a punt sixty yards for one of the Blue and White touchdowns, while Baida and ' il1ey accounted for the other pair from running plays. Toiler hopes for victory were sent to a low level when Al Mucci and Don Kel- ler were forced to leave the battle from injuries. The feature of the day was the beautiful blocking Ijy the Roman squad, the spectacular punting of La Brucherie, the line plunging of Baida, and the open-field running of Ferguson and Willey. The Blue and ' hite forward wall outclassed the heavy Artisan line and time and again opened up huge holes through which the Roman backs poured into the clear to reel off big gains at the expense of the Toiler cause. Manual fans found consolation in the fact that at their last meeting the Pur- jile warriors won from L.A. High by exactly the same score. 94 THE ARTISAN W 33 Manual: 6; Fairfax: o Friday, Oc ohcr 21 A (leterniinecl bunch of Toilers entered the Fairfax game and managed to eke out a 6 to triunii)h over the weak Colonials. Although Fairfax was outclassed, they succeeded in holding the Artisans to one touchdown, due to the fine kicking of Anderson, Colonial halfback. Fairfax was strictly on the defense, the Toilers rolling up twelve first downs to the Colonials ' one. Tom Whallev and Don Keller stood out for Manual, W ' halley making some fine catches of Keller ' s bullet ])asses and dis])laying a great brand of punting. Kel- ler led the Toiler otifense with his line iilunging and accurate passing. Two regulars. Cline and Mucci. remained out of imiform due to previous in- juries. The I ' urjjle talh ' came early in the second period when Keller scored from the four yard line on a line plunge, after Rubly. P.akcr ;uid Keller had advanced the pigskin from the Colonials ' 30 yard mark. A ' I H 1. C S Manual: o; Garfield: o Priilax. October 2S A vicious Garfitld I ' tillddg growled long enough and loud enough to hold the favored Artisans to a scoreless tie in the fourth league contest of the season, held on the Garfield sawdust field. Both elevens took to the air throughout the entire fracas, as it was useless to attemjit a running attack on the slow field. Garfield threatened in the second quarter, but a lunihle on the Toiler one yard line nullified the Bulldogs ' lone chance to score. A dazzling aerial attack hy Manual advanced the hall deep into Garfield ' s ter- ritory in the final (luarter. hut the F.ulldogs gained possession of the pigskin when Beauchamp ' s atteni])ted field goal went wide. The defense of Rav Lucke and Captain Bud Showalter was the highlight of the game, while W ' halley looked ] articularly adept at catching ])asses. Coster was Garfield ' s big noise, the P)ulldog back getting loose for several long gains and pro- ducing the Red and P)lue offensive punch. 96 THE ARTISAN W 33 I Manual: o ; Lincoln: i Ffidav, November 1 1 A ferocinus l)aiKl of Lincoln Tigers left their Xurtli llroadway lair and in- ade(l Wilson Field to claw the Toilers to ]iieces. AMien the Bengals went home, the scoreboard read: anual. 0; I.inL-oln. 27. Lincoln ' s highly praised ball packer. Joe Aprato. marched up and down Wilson Field in true Orv Mohler style, ripping off huge gains, to score a trio of touch- downs. The two teams battled to scoreless tie in the first half, but Lincoln came iut fighting mad in the third (|uarter and proceeded to run uji the biggest score that has been registered against a Toiler team in many a game. The first Tiger touchdown came when Petrushkin drojjped a pass into . prato ' s arms on the liengal 40 yard stripe and shifty Aprato galloped the remaining distance to the goal with a bunch of Toilers in hot pursuit. A pair of intercepted passes and some lengthy jaunts b Aprato gave the Railsplitters their other scores. ATHLETICS 97 ManuaJ: 6; Hollywood: o Friday, Novctnbcr 18 Closing the season in a blaze of glory, the Manual varsity thumped their tradi- ti(jnal rival. Hollywood, Ijv a score of six to nothing before a crowd of approxi- mately 8,000 fans, including several hundred rabid Manual Alumni. The two elevens battled up and down Wilson Field for three periods before the locals got that old power generating and proceeded to drive through the Redshirts for a score, early in the fourth stanza. The touchdown came through the efforts of Bill Rubly. who tore thru the Movie City line for gains of five to twenty yards and carried the ball over from the two yard line. Baker, Showalter, Whalley, Halley. and Rorison played their last game for the Toilers and went out of the picture in splendid fashion. Not since 1927 have the Sheiks defeated a Manual football team and it has also been that long since the Redshirts scored on Jim Blewett ' s varsity. The Foothillers were slight favorites at game time but a stubborn Artisan line refused to yield, and rose out of the doldrums to smear the Bedouins and come through with a convincing triumph. 98 1- A k T I S A X W Getting the Dope PASSES, PENALTIES. DoWXS, FUMRLI-.S First downs on run plays Passes comiileted Penalties Total first downs Ball lost on downs Fumbles ( )wn fumbles recovered I ' unts lilcicked bv Manual 28 10 18 42 4 9 3 Opp(inc}i:s 3() 2 21 37 3 13 5 1 YARDS (iAIXED Home Team Times ] ' ar(is Aver. Gained from running plays IbS WO 4.166 Lost from running plays 46 9 4.30 Net from running plays 204 8X0 4.,il Forward ])asses caught 15 243 1().2 Forward jiasses incomplete -I ' l -.-. Forward jiasses lost by intercejition 9 Passes attemi;)ted yards gained 70 24. 3.4J Total from runs and jiasses 274 1 123 4.0 ' . ' Field goals • Kick-offs 7 2.= .= ,¥..4 Kickoffs returned 9 147 16.33 Punts 41 1490 36.3 Punts returned 1 4 98 7. CJ])ponents ' passes intercptcltSirtd KJ 79 7.9 Times 173 3, 196 2?, 8 229 4 13 7 38 20 10 () l ' poiients Yards 77S 123 898 77 77 975 560 79 1426 29h 185 Aver. 4.41 3.72 4.. S 38.5 2.33 4.25 43. 11.2 ? 7.5 14.8 18.5 A ' 1 ' H L E T 1 L ' S 99 ' mmm ' it ' Cross Country Team F or the first time since cmss country was in;uii;urate(l in the City League. Manual dropped a dual meet. Led by Bill Comerford and Xed Jensen, the . rtisan harriers swept aside all opposition until the Poly dual, when the locals, minus the services of Jensen, lost to the Parrots by one point. The Puqile hunioneers finished third in the City finals and second in the Southern California meet. Comerford was undefeated until the City, when John Wall of Roosevelt nosed out the Toiler ace l v two yards. Hough of Poly, who ran behind Comerford twice on different occasions, fur- nished a surprise in the Southern California meet by trimming Bill. Comerford. Jensen, Burns, Inzunza, Wkbnan, JNlarineau. and Duarte will return next fall. Coach Toney expects a banner year. 100 T H E A R T I S A N W ' 33 m Girls ' Athletics One after one, and one after one down the corridor of time of each semester to its finish. Not to doom or un|)recedented end, hut to accomiiHshment and success. Then comes the fall semester — ' 32. One hundred purple and white uniforms topped hv the healthy faces of one hundred athletic girls! They ' re off for another twenty week ' s run. And when the race is run and won as well, each breathless but happy participant can raise a right hand in salute to the (iirls ' . thletic Association, maker of real girls. This term as a get on your mark measure the club staged an initiation for all new members. Each freshie was put through a drudge week, during which time she obeyed the every whim of the upper classmen. . s a gesture of deference she Ijrought apples to the seniors. Then followed a formal initiation wherein the pur- pose of the association was solemnly repeated to each new member. Get set, barks the pistol holder! With determination and enthusiasm the girls set about learning the ins and outs of hockey. Though the game was new to many its intricacies were soon mas- tered and such star players as Ellen Yeakel, Louise Cocciante, Betty Wynne, Bernice Miller, and Jean Armor came to assert their superiority. Teams from each class were chosen at the end of the season. Many girls were al)le to take advantage of this opiiortunit - to win their numerals and M ' s. I ' ollowing the close of hockey season, basketball found favor with the girls. Here again teams were chosen, the various classes competing for sujiremacy. When the command to go was given Manual (i. . . . . forged straigh t ahead lo tile tape marked ictory. ( )ne of the outstanding successes of the term was tlie G. A. . . dance gi en on Novenrber 4th. This affair was held in the girls ' g ni in honor of the fnotball AT II L ET I CS 101 men. It is well tu reiiK-niljer that tlie girls did their bit to help make the football sea- son the success it was. Girl athletes were well represented in the rooters ' section. During the half of the Garfield game the feminine hockey stars staged an exhibition. On December 9th Manual journeyed to Poly for a play-day. There were two twelfth grade hockey teams, one eleventh grade hockey team, a senior speedball and junior basketball team to bring glory to the purple and gray sport constituents. Several schools were al le to partake of the true Artisan h(jspitality when Manual was host on January 10th. ' isitors included representatives from Belmont, Fremont. Franklin. Roosevelt, Washington. Jefferson. Fairfax, and University High, engaging in hockey, tennis, speedball. basketljall. and target shooting. Ellen Yeakel. president ; Barbara Spear. vice-])resident : Valerie Ritchie, re- cording secretarv ; Katherine Roach, corresponding secretary ; ' ilda Hendricks, treasurer; Misses Davis and Lockwood, advisors: all are deserving of a rousing vote of thanks for the fine work thev have done this semester. Girls ' Big M Society The Girls ' Big AI Society is made up of G. A. A. members who have been successful in earning their 800 points, and have fulfilled the necessary scholastic and merit qualifications. The original purpose of the organization was to send out scouts to the junior high schools so that the best athletic talent could be had at Manual. The society here is unusual in that the girls attend all meetings with the var- sity athletes. This year the office of secretary was made an honorary feminine posi- tion, with Ellen Yeakel, president of the G. A. A., elected to that ofifice. Wearers of the M include Florence Amerian. Maurine Luginbuehl, ' alerie Ritchie. Esther Rosenstein, Barbara Speer. Edna Seeger and Ellen Yeakel. lOJ THE A RT I S A N W 33 A T M L E T I C S i) 104 THE A R T I S A N W ' 33 The R.O.T.C Passes in Review Bv FiKST Lieutenant William I ' lax 0 KfUK TERM STARTED WTTH SUSPENSE in the air— prutiiotions were -jl in the offing. On Friday of the first week promotions of officers were LfL announced. The non-commissioned officers were designated and given to companies in the second week. Then followed al)out three weeks used to train the new men. The drill was mainly primary facings and halts. Rifle drill also occupied a lot of time. During the fifth week of school the officers received an invitation to attend a banquet given in their honor by a club composed entirely of graduate offi- cers of the Manual Arts R.O.T.C. The lianquet was held at the Lighthouse Cafe on Washington Street. Much praise was given to the officers by Major Wilson and Sergeant Littler in the impromptu speeches which they gave at the bantjuet. Next came the installation banquet. It was held at the Army and Navy Club on Grand Avenue near Wilshire. The banquet was given for the purpose of formally installing the new officers of the Manual Arts and Belmont high schools. Rep- resentatives were present from all of the units in Los Angeles except two. Every- one was in full dress uniform except the iirincipals of Manual Arts and Belmont, making the occasion a gala one. Many jM-ominent persons were present, among them Colonel Barry, new commandant of all the units in Los Angeles; Doctor Wilson. |)rincipal of Manual .Arts High School ; and the princijjal of Belmont Higji School. The three aforementioned guests gave short speeches. Doctor Wilson be- ing tlie last to speak, as he came in late. In his speech. Doctor Wilson betrayed his great liking for the local unit. Cadet-Major Trajip acted as toastniaster for the occasion. The next important event of the term was a review given in honor of Colonel Barry. After the review, the unit was formed in a hollow square, in order to carry out the business of the day. Colonel P.arry was introduced and he gave a short speech of commendation t(j the u n i t. Next, Colonel Brandt, a veteran of the Indian wars, was introduced. Colonel l ' randt presented a liook. A Boy with Custer, to the best looking (uniform) private in the unit, private Ray Reig. Colonel Brandt then pre.sented a solid silver trumpet to the band as a whole. Mr. Moore, new instructor of the band, accepted the trunqjet for the band. Next came the most important event of the term, the Military Ball. The dancing class for the ball started on November 28, and daily from tliat time on, privates and officers alike could be seen trotting with members of the fairer sex in room 226. Finally December 16, the night of the Iiall rolled around. All men in glistening, freshly cleaned uniforms; ladies in beautiful gowns; glamorous music; exquisite lighting effects; beautiful drapes; an affair of beauty and wonder. Then followed ntuch drill in preparation for Blunt-Trophy Day. After this event, there followed the sergeants ' parades. The term closed with many regrets, ;i term of great success for Major Trapp and liis staff of officers. A T H L E T I C S 105 fcj 3 Iflll f. 106 THE ARTISAN W ' ii Sergeants ' Drill Squad At the beginning of the term speculation was about as to whether tlie officers or the sergeants would have the best drill S(|uad and achieve the distinction of lieing called the R.( ).T.C. drill squad. After much hard work on the part of Ca])tain John MacNeill, leader of the squad, the sergeants won cixer the officers. During the term the squad has drilled at the following places: .Vudubon. Masonic Temple, Patriotic Hall, the . rmy and Navy Club, the Sunset Masonic Temide. at school in dififerent assemblies, and finally at the . lumni assembly. . new type of drill was instituted bv Captain MacNeill this term. The squad is to be especially commended for learning the new type of drill and then beating out the officers. The officers ' s(|uad was ikj easily beaten groiqi. you may rest assured ! A Til 1. I ' . T I (.■ S 107 Military Police The M.P. ' s were in charge of Captain Lee Springer, with his assistant, First Lieutenant John Corcoran ; and First Lieutenants WiUiani Plax and Louis Acosta in charge of the hleachers. The griin]i had a ver_ ' successful season, having no little difficulty with unruly boys. Cooperation was evident between the self- government group, and the RLP. ' s. Boys from the R.O.T.C. entirely composed the group, and the advantage of military training showed very much in the way in which dutv was ])erformed. There were several advantages connected with the work, name- ly : being allowed to sec the games free of charge, going to L.A. in Afr. Richard ' s car, and the wearing (jf the ALP. badges. Mr. Turnquist and Air. Langworthy as- sisted in the noljle work of keeping poverty-stricken, football-minded men from climbing the fences to get U]ion the field and see the game. May we have as suc- cessful a group of Al.P. ' s ne.xt year! 108 T 1 1 !•: A R T I S A N W 33 Of Inventors . . . Thomas Alva Edison Bv Arthur Eslick i HE WIZARD OF ORANGE. Such was the title bestowed upon Thomas M Alva Edison, possibly the most famous inventor of all time, by an admiring world. And that title was well-deserved. If Edison was not a genius, then no man ever was, despite his cryptic statement that genius is ninety-nine per- cent perspiration and one percent inspiration. Yet all agree that Edison was a man of destiny — a man who brought mankind from darkness into light, not once but many times, both figuratively and literallv. Edi.son began experimenting early in life. From childhood he was interested in machinery. Always he was tinkering with something in an effort to improve its operation. His first important invention was perfected while he was working as a telegraph operator on the Grand Trunk Railway. This was an instrument which allowed a message to be transmitted automatically over a second wire withnut the presence of an operator. From that time on Edison advanced rapidly. His fame grew with leaps and bounds as he perfected invention after invention. The financial gain made from the sale of these inventions enabled him to set up a laboratory of his own, where he carried on the experiments continuously formulated in his ever-active mind. Edison always investigated miiuitely the necessity of any invention before he began to reduce it to practice. In this fact lies most of his success. Uew. if any, great scientific discoveries can be credited to Edison, but he triuni])hed over almost insurm(_)Untable difficulties, and by his skill and ingenuity brought to practical use what had often liecn suggested liv some scientific in x ' stigatnr unable to bring it to a successful outcome or a practical realization. Edison had over one thousand ])atents in his name. nian - of which were of the greatest importance to mankind. lUit luimanit ' will always remember him as the father of the incandescent light. Here was his crowning achievement, and a glorious one indeed. Edison, after iniuimerable experiments and almost heart-breaking faihu ' es, constructed a successful electric incandescent lamp. He struck out boldly for him- self, breaking all precedents in this line of work, blazing a trail which was event- ually to lead to success. It is interesting to note what people thought of the new invention when the news of Edison ' s success was released. Many hailed it with optimistic prophecy, but others were of the opinion of the superintendent of the Manhattan Gas Works, who declared, The gasmen are not a bit scared at Edison ' s latest discovery. When he first started out with his electrical experiments, there was considerable of a flut- ter, but they are getting used to being agreeably di.sap])ointed, and they do not think he is any nearer to the thing he was after than be was in the begiiniing. We can forgive them, for how could they know that from that tiny globe was to s])ring the mighty lamps of todav. which make night into day and have trans- formed man ' s life b ' increasing his bnurs of wurk and |il;iv. no T H E A U ' 1 ' I S A N W ' 3; Prep Bv P OB RiDdWAV rt ' KV McLOOD HAD A CAR, a neat linle chariot with a h.it paint Ira i ' ' - ' ' ' ' whine of its tires was heard from San I ' .enlnd to the enice T£M i ' ier. I ' .ucky had money, and clothes, and a lazy .ni ' in that hetrayed his lazy ' nature. He was not the perfect lover, hut neither was he tlie worst, and Ikicky never lacked for fair companionship on his nightly jaunts in |Ucst of relief from the tedium of school. Lessons, to Bucky, were a great and unreasonahle hore. His thoughts on the subject of lessons, on the rare occasions that he gave them any serious thought, were vile. To the oft-repeated statement that compulsory education was beneficial to a nation, he readily assented, but when the thing w as brought down to William MacMahan McLood and became personal, he felt a twinge of resentment against Authority. A gay blade, to be such, just couldn ' t lie hampered by lessons. No one called him stu])id. No one unless it was to lirand as stujiidity his contempt for .school. If vou discounted an amazing inejititude for mathematics, he had .a mind as keen as a sword lilade. He knew this. too. He had overheard teachers discussing his ])otentialities, which were tremendous, and the laziness of his grin was a cocksure laziness that mocked at his teachers as he arose each day in his classes and answered, Uniireiiared. when asked to recite. I ' .y all the laws of compensation Bucky should have flunked every subject, but he didn ' t. At the zero hour ho threw off his cloak of ennui and slaved over his S T () R V A N I) ' J ' , k S E 111 notebooks until tlic morning; hours. I If came to .chool on the day of reckoning with eyes a trifle tired and neck somewhat stiff from poring over the pages he covered with his swift, smooth jienmansliip, hut his noteliook was always worth a passing grade. Aside from mathematics an examination held no terrors for him. Me ne er boned for exams. During recitations he sank into a stupor of day dreaming from which he was aroused only Ijy the calling of his name or a disturbance in class. 1 lis subconscious mind retained a thousand stray wisps of discussion while the drone of voices broke over his head in waves. His exceptional memory of these fragmentary facts, his rapid mental digestion of what he heard when paying attention and his store of knowledge from a wide range of recreational reading stood him in good stead at examinations. He garnered his A or B in a flush of exultation at easy triumph, and a laughing scorn for the flunkers. Study or no study, he ranked high in his tests, and when he deigned to enter discussion he secured an A for the day ' s work. Contempt for routine was his un- doing. Teachers who hated his attitude and longed to flunk him were forced to give him a passing grade. Teachers who decried the abrogation of so fine an intelligence and longed to gi e him an A rating were forced to give him the lowest. Not all the time did Bucky doze in class. A good many of the class hours were spent in throttling his car at a breakneck speed down the highways that wound like greasy ribbons toward the beaches. His attendance record was an open joke among students, and his approach at the attendance oft ' ice precipitated a stormy scene with the registrar. Bucky listened to the scoldings with his tongue in his cheek, and the careless grin he flung at listening students as he left the office was the banner of a rogue. As for rogues, a very proper pair were Mack and I ' .illy, who had been pals of Bucky ' s since the days when he owned no car and they had all coveted a red bi- cycle apiece. Their own fortunes fluctuated and sometimes reached high levels. They had no car. hut they were more gifted than Bucky in persiflage and were the social leaders of the gang, which included eight rollicking youths and their lady- loves of the moment. Mack ' s widower father was a man about town who followed the ladies freely. He was seldom at home, and Mack, when he fell into careless ways, made the house a rendezvous for the gang. Here parties were planned and held ; here wild escapades were discussed, lessons forgotten and wa -s and means of outwitting the truant officers advanced by experts. Mack was the confirmed truant of the gang. His exceptional freedom made him so, and it was he who led the all-too-willing flilly and liucky into the ways of the wicked. The three of them began to absent themselves from school for a week at a time, returning on the day of a football game. The - met of a morning, flung their books into the tonneau of Bucky ' s car. and drove to the beach or to Mack ' s. At Mack ' s they read magazines half the morning, and jjlayed cards until noon. After lunch they resumed their card game until late afternoon, when they drove to school to escort the gang home. 112 THEARTISANW 33 Bucky ' s favorite girl-friend was Joyce Nichols. She was a laughing whirlwind in a gay gown, a dark-eyed, dark-haired witch who had destroyed the equanimity of all Bucky s gang within a week, and had finally assumed the role of best-girl to the sometimes dashing McLood. Joyce really liked him aside from his largesse. With a readiness that made Bucky glow with conceit, she accompanied him on any of his happy-go-luckv wan- derings after dark. Sometimes they drove to Alamitos Bay, where the moonlight lancing down on the rippling waters made liucky absurdly sentimental. Joyce sang him [lopular love-songs as they drove through the city at midnight. She agreeably accepted invitations to mid-week parties and thought no hour too late for dancing. It cannot be said that Joyce encouraged Bucky to shirk his studies. It would be too much to say that she broke him of such ways. + Bucky ' s first year at high school drew swiftly to a close, and while he toiletl over delinquent notebooks the gods were brewing him a pot of the vilest fortune. P)ucky knew nothing of the future and was game to the last. The night befi-)re the final exam in English he took Joyce to the theatre, and at midnight was driving along a foggy road that led to the Venice Pleasure Pier. He was sleepy next day, but lashed himself to wakefulness at examination time, achieved the second highest score, and passed the course by a narrow margin. That afternoon Bucky was closeted with the vice principal, a gentleman who had taken an interest in the singular attendance record of Mr. AIcLood. Bucky spent a bad half -hour with the vice-principal and emerged with the knowled,ge that only the frantic pleas of Billy ' s mother had saved Mack, Billy, and himself from expulsion. Mack and Bill} ' had lieen grilled by the vice-princi])al earlier in the day, and were thoroughly scared. In Bucky ' s mind as he drove home that afternoon was the growing conviction that he would not reenter McKinley high school. This convic tion bore fruit when he enrolled at Hamilton high in February. Bucky ' s father lost his job in October, prior to which time liuckv was as much of a rake as he had been at McKinley. At Christmas time Bucky had no car, and far less money than before. I ' ll have a new car for my birthday, he said confidently, but his birthday passed with no festive rites. His wardrobe shrank, and the half dollars that had jingled so heavily in his pockets were no more. There were no more parties, not even a fifteen cent movie on .Saturday. Ikickv didn ' t see Joyce or the gang so often, and then not at all. There came at last a time when Bucky thought not of what there would be for dinner, but whether there would be dinner at all. The bruised soul of the boy found solace in books. Night after night he tramped to the library, and avidly reafl the borrowed books in his hours of leisure, liours once so .short and viyid, but which now were saved from drabness only l)y his imagination, which cloaked him in a cob-wrb of dreams. Bucky no longer cut classes. You had to have a car to play truant enjoyablv. Bucky forgot uch things as wild jjarties and foggy roads at midnight and entered into the life of his school. He jjlayed football mi the lightweight team and took his STORY A N L) VERSE 1 13 place as a formidable opponent in debating circles. All the while he chafed at the admonitions of teachers, at the lessons, at the pother about school spirit and its demands. He grinned sardonically at what he saw of petty feuds among the teach- ers, and sneered at the straight-laced rules of conduct laid down for students. But he had to have a spillway for the dammed flood of his energies, and as the months passed an insidious feeling of loyalty for his surroundings came over him. In Bucky ' s first year at Hamilton the vice-principal had called him the worst loafer ever to disgrace Hamilton High School. Hucky still hated the man, and endorsed locker-room talk that flayed old man Prior as a pul)lic menace whose fate could be but harsh. But Mr. Prior saw the worst loafer at Hamilton no more. Bucky achieved Scliolastica membership in his B12 semester, and as Mr. Prior watched with inter- est the progress of this loafer he thougjit that in McLoofl there were signs that pointed to a great law career. Money suddenly returned to Bucky in the spring of 193.Z. In April there came a legacy to his father from a prosperous lirother in Maryland, and a week later a job was offered and accepted at $180 a month. In the first week of May Bucky drove off in the family sedan to renew relations with the gang. Bucky was still Bucky, and he had a car. His return to the fold precipitated a party that was finally halted by radio-police. A second party followed the first, and for the first time Bucky flunked a history test. Bucky was seized with a guilty fit of studying. l)ut in his mind at odd moments there rang the tlirol)l)ing din of a dance orchestra. He finally went ofif on a spree that made him the central figure at three parties and won him the esteem of the newest blonde to join the gang. There was a history theme due from Bucky on the third Wednesday in May, but Mack was giving a party on Tuesday night. Bucky wrote half a page on the theme and debated the advisability of going to the party. At five o ' clock, when Billy ' phoned that Joyce would atte nd, he ceased to debate. The party was to be the background of the best dancing and general devilment of his hilarious career. Bucky hummed as he dressed for the party, and at times whistled, but always on a lively note. Tlie gay mood lasted until si.x o ' clock. .-Xt this moment he took his trousers from the closet. For a shocked instant he stood rigid, eyes transfi.xed on the gaping rent in one trouser leg. He felt assaulted. The thing seemed devilish. Ye gods!! he roared. His maddened tones rocketed to every corner of the house. His mother stopped rolling a pie crust to ask what he was screaming about. Look at my pants! he cried furiously. Suffocating with rage he stamped into the kitchen and displayed the ravaged garment. I tore that this morning when I cleaned out your closet, answered his nKJther calmly. Don ' t go into such a tantrum. You have a dark suit in there. I haven ' t ! I sent it to the cleaners ! shouted Bucky. He raged to his bedroom and back again. Ye gods, now what am I going to wear! he groaned. 114 T H E A RT I S A N W 33 You haven ' t any Inisiness going to a party tonight, said his mother. Haven ' t you any lessons? Oh, blast the lessons! he hurst out furiously, and returned to his room, where he slammed the door with a resentful violence that brought him a scolding from his mother. No pants, no party. No party, no Joyce. Joyce, with her red lips and ebon hair. Mack would see her, and Mack wouldn ' t regret the non-interference of Comrade McLood. Whether or not Joyce would, was problematical. Bucky refused to telephone the tragic news to Billy. He kept sullenly to his room, leaving his lair only at diimer, when he sat like an ogre at the table and made no more comment than was demanded. His books lay before Bucky as he spent two hours playing Solitaire. At bed- time a fit of ambition seized him and he began to write on his theme. The pen in his hand transported him beyond the world of torn pants. The words sprang swiftly upon the page as his mind shaped iron-clad arguments ujjon point after point. He had never thought of it, but he loved to sit thus and argue with his pen. He wrote until eleven o ' clock. Bucky heard no word from the gang the ne.xt day. Thin sdav he went to school with scarcely a thought of the incident of the torn trousers. The vice-principal was visiting the 4th period Pan-Pacific history class that day. He held a sheaf of papers in one hand as he addressed the class. I have never, in twenty years ' experience with high school students, seen so profoimd a document, he said. His eyes were fixed on no one person, but Bucky knew the man was speaking of his theme. I want to read this to the class and give you the opportunity to enjoy a piece of work that bears the imjirint of a scholarly mind. Scholarly mind, and a year and a half ago the man had called him a loafer and a disgrace to the school. It was Bucky ' s theme, all right. The class shot side glances at Bucky as he sat listening with his lips twisted in a half-grin and a slight flush staining his cheeks. The class only partly understood it all, Imt everyone applauded as the reader finished. Bucky glanced up and stared straight into the eyes of the teacher. She was the best teacher he had ever known. In her eyes was a friendly light th at was almost a light of personal triumph. Bucky ' s eyes fell abruptly away. He grinned more broadly at a whispered razzberry from Kenny Ecles across the aisle, and self-consciously kept his eyes averted from the vice-]irinci])al anfl the teacher. There was a Latin e.xam scheduled for the next day. Bucky was studying for it that night when the telephone rang. The call was for Bucky, and the voice that greeted hint was Joyce ' s. Wahoo! yelped Bucky. How ' s my dark-haired angel? I ' een a good gal at Venice? What ' s that music I hear? There was an informal jamboree at Bob ' s. The gang was waiting for him. Why hadn ' t he come to Mack ' s party? S T () R Y A N D Y ERSE 115 Hiicky thought fleetingly of the test. It wasn ' t hard. He could get by easily. Joyce was there at Bob ' s, and so meone ' s orchestra was playing, Happy Madness. A new voice crackled over the wire. It was Billy ' s. Come on over, Bucky. We got some wild work to do before BoIj ' s folks get home. I have a Latin test tumorruw, complauied Bucky. He hadn ' t meant to sav it. Test! hooted Billy. Boy. you should see the test paper I wrote in commer- cial law this morning. I got the lowest grade since the school was built. This test counts a third of my grade, you mug. I want to graduate in June, too. Oh, hooey ! You haven ' t studied since you wore bloomers. No kiddin ' , I have to study, argued Bucky. He heard Jack relay this news to the gang. He heard the cat-calls. Come clean, Bucky. Who ' s the girl you got with you? Bring her along. Nerts! I ' m busy. See you tomorrow. You talk like you were paid for it. The wall was no longer in front of Bucky and he was looking at his teacher as Mr. Prior read his theme. I am, he said, and lifted a cynical lip at his own sententious utterance. The receiver clicked as Billy hung up in disgust Bucky loafed back to his room and sat down on the bed. He sat for a while moodily tracing the patterns of the coverlet with his pencil. The impulse struck him to go to the party anyway, and surprise the gang, but when he arose it was to go to his desk and open his I tin book. END OF PREP 116 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 Sting Ray Bv Frederick Schwankovskv ■rHE SUN, GLINTING through the waters, cast little ripples of ever ■ changing color which chased each other hack and forth across the little sandy spot, surrounded on all sides hy rocks and waving eel grass. ( )ccasionally a particularly large swell would glide over, sending the ri])ples of color dashing madly. The currents following the wave ]iicked up sand and sent it lazily across the clearing like miniature whirlwinds. Although there was a slight l reeze hlowing. the sky was cloudless and the he;U. ahove the surface, w;is ()])])res- sive. A tiny hermit crah, attracted liy the gleaming light reflected on the sand, ventured from the safety of the holes and crevices in the rocks, and scuttled liusily aroimd searching for food. Tiny as it was, the sand, disturhed hy its i)assing, resemhled the dust cloud which follows a speeding auto. .Suddenly a large shackiw drifted along the hottom. The tiny crah. filled with terror, dashed hack to the rocks, and crawling into a hole, with drew into his shell. A huge sting ray, close relative of the dreaded seaha t of the tro])ic seas, ha ing gorged himself on Crustacea, was looking for a place to sleejx Settling slowlv on the sand, he lay flat, almost invisible. Unlike the eight armed octopus, often incorrectlv called devil fish, the sting ray has no means hy which to close its eyes. Thus the huge, hatlike creature ' s .sole preparation for sleep was lying flat on the l)ottom. The giassv eves stared sightlessh- from each side of tlu ' Inillet shaped S T () 1-; Y A N D - E R S I-. 1 1 7 ht-ad. The lony tail CDiitainiiiL; the dart moved ,i,a ' ntly fruni side to side. Contrary to popular belief the sting ray has no regular poison which it introduces into the wound inflicted by the sting. However, it contains qualities which cause extreme pain to the victim. Slowly the sun sank toward the horizon. The hreeze freshened and light clouds scudded across the sky. The surface of the sea became ri])])led. Then, as thi ' breeze freshened, a small chop liegan to run. Down in the clearing, the shadows began to lengthen. Clefts in tiie rucks be- came gullies, then gorges, miles deep. Phosphorous gleaming from all the weeds, and the tish swimming about, lit up the .scene with a weird light which waned and swelled as the currents cjuickened or fell away. The sand in the clearing whirled around, covering the sting ray. and making his color much lighter. Catalina Island stood silhouetted against the sky for a few moments, then all became dark. ' J ' oward midnight, the storm increased. Piy morning, however, all traces of it had disappeared and the sun rose again in a cloudless sky, promising another hot day. A small row boat ]uit out from shore. In it were two men. They rowed out to tile deep water, then as one rowed, the (jther one peered at the bottom. Sud- denly, while passing over the clearing, the boat stoiiped. Bracing himself, and taking a short shafted spear in one hand, from which ran a line attached to the gunwale of tlie boat, one of the men dove over and swam downward. Poising just above the fish for an instant, he plunged the spear downward and swam clear of the striking tail, to the surface. The fish, rudely awakened by the tearing in one of his wings, fli])i)ed his tail up and rose violently from the bottom, sending clouds of sand into the water. Suddenly the line tightened and the boat began to move. The man in the water was left swimming there because he couldn ' t catch the boat. Winding in and out of the sea weed the sting ray entangled the line. Sud- denly the spear tore out of the side after a violent flap of the large wings. Frightened and bewildered he sank swiftly to the bottom and Iniried himself in the grass. On the surface the swimmer was picked up. The two men, talking excitedly, rowed in and landed the boat. Back in the clearing the sand had settled back again. The ripples of color were once more chasing each other. The little hermit crab scuttled about again searching for food, and peace was restored once more for a short time. 118 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 On the Yangtse Kiang Bv Robert Hitmmel AS THP Dl ' SK (if iii.nlit iiK-ltrd inld llu- lij lit (if day. Wan.u lit liis baiiil pipe and t(i(ik himself (lut for a wliiff of the scented ninrninjL; air. It was his delight U stmll la ilv nji and ddwn his linu-- (irn fishing craft in the early morning while the locnsts still chirped monotonously among the marshes hordering the Yangtse River. h or many generations the family of Wang had lived on the house-lioat. making a meager living from the sale of tender river fish. As W ang strolled leisureh up and down his small fishing hoat. he hummed to himself many energetic airs which most hefitted his personality and general api)ear- ance. His long, hlack eyehrows. his straight, grey-hlack hair, his deep-set eyes and his honest, deep-thinking ai)]5earance were characteristic of an experienced Chinese fisherman. As the sunbeams lanced over the Purple Mountain to the East, Wang seated himself on a creaking bamboo stool to enjoy another few minutes in deejier con- centration on the problems of life. As the moments passed, Wang kept mumbling something to himself which, freely translated, might have meant, How can any one live in a crowded city such as that near yonder pagoda? What great things in ])recious life they miss. Why, here on an ever-wending fishing boat we can see all of the beauties of nature — birds of every kind and hue, rice fields glittering in the sunlight, cloudless skies, magnificent sunsets in golden glory, rugged, foaming river banks — and other sail boats like this one of my forefathers spanning the river- brown with ease. The monotony of such a close and noisy life would soon drive mc to a resting place among my ancestors. Wang ' s eyelids were becoming heavy as he rocked on his stool in rh thni to the gentle rocking of the lioat. Puffs of smoke curled out of his mouth. Ah, peace was his. Wang ' s trancjuillity of spirit was soon ended, however, for at the door leading onto the deck appeared a man who had not met his thirtietli year — W ' u l)y name. Wu was not long in greeting Wang. His first words were. Good morning, venerable grandfather. Hast thou jiartaken of thy rice this fine morning? With a loving smile Wang gave a slow but ap])ro])riate reply. As Wu advance. Wang pressed some more tobacco into his ])ipe anti it soon was s])uttering. Wang gave a deep sigh of contentment as the smoke rolled from his mouth. Wu drew up a stool which stood nearby and a conversation concerning the ])rocedure for the day began. Fishing around here is no longer profitable, Wang commenced. We had better put sail for the Fisherman ' s Gulf near Lotus Lake. There many tender fish have been cauglit recently which have been sold for good money in the city. Wu dared not dispute the word of his elder and he cared not to do so — such was unheard of in the family of Wang — so he agreed that such an idea was indeed well s])oken. The decision hafi been made and they would leave at once. The nets were drawn in and were carefully folfled and laid on a rack. Wang ' s son at the rudder was informed; the sails were hoisted and the prow was soon cutting through the water. S TO R V AND ' E R S E 11 Moments passed. Hours passed. A jiarty of six were seated around a table made of birchwood, chatting over the noon meal. Every one helped himself to the various dishes from a community service bowl, as it were. Wang was seated at the head of the table emitting groans after each mouthful of steaming rice. Now and then he would sip some green tea. When the noon meal had come to a finish, everyone took his respective place around on the junk. The children delighted in counting clams and throw- ing pebbles from the back of the boat into the water. Their mother knelt near- liy over her laundry which she Ijeat heartlessly with a stick, the Chinese fisher- woman ' s method of cleaning clothes. As for Wang and Wu, they sat out in the open. Now and then a flock of fleecy geese flew overhead in feathery thunder. In unison they quacked until they disappeared behind the distant mountains, when the sound was lost in the ether. Wang loved to gaze dreamily into the eyes of heaven where he feigned to distinguish his ancestors that had been led to rest. For hours at a time he would sit motionless — always emiting curls of grey smoke from his wrinkled lips — now and then mumbling a few words to Wu who was more active in spirit. It was the duty of Wu to keep accurate account of the financial affairs of his family. There he sat. with brush in hand, sometimes receiving a business dictation, sometimes writing a friendly letter. Thus the hours passed — everyone content, everyone happy, everyone looking forward to the arrival at Fisher man ' s (lulf, where fishing could be started anew on a large and more prosperous scale. As the sun disappeared below the horizon, the white sails of fishing boats similar to that of Wang ' s could be faintly dis- tinguished in the distance. Wang ' s face beamed with delight. He called for Wu to assist him in arising and both men stood silently gazing toward what they hoped would prove to be a fisherman ' s gold mine. The gentle eastern winds speeded the fishing craft towards its destination. As they neared Fisherman ' s Gulf, the rhyth- mic sounds of the splashing of water against the boats could be heard, as if in welcome to them. The whole western horizon became a glowing .streak of exquisite beauty. The dark brown shores of the river were spotted with white lotus flowers which radi- ated purity over the adjacent farm lands. The sweet, high pitched warble of a golden oriole was heard as it winged its way over head in the direction of its night ' s rest: and the goal of ' ang. the fisherman, had been reached at last. With renewed spirits the first haul was made. It was greater than any haul made pre- vious to that time. With the money olitained from the first haul, Wang bought a new fishing boat with new equi])ment to take the place of the antiquated one which had been handed down from his venerable ancestors and had passed its day of usefulness. 120 ■ T n E A R T I S A N W Moro, Sequoia m By Jane Devlin E HAD ROAMED through Ctilifoniia for tliree adventure-filled months and were rounding out the summer with a trip to Sequoia National Park. The trip up was imposing but it did not even hint at the magnificence to come. We traveled for miles along a white, ever upward winding road which in time would lose itself in a maze of towering Sequoia redwoods. As we rode, to one side of us we could see a mighty water works creeping like a gigantic dragon up the steep sides of the mountains and down again into their valleys. The road was guarded all the way by tall, everlasting peaks that stretched powerfully up into the sky. They were like sturdy knights who guarded wayfarers from the dragon. When we reached the park our road disappeared among the giant redwoods. Their age seems to say that a life is eternal. Yet their greatness whispers that it is but the brief flicker of an everburning candle. — We wandered on. Summer noon, giant forests, hungry deer. They descended on us from the mountains, shy as the new dawn, How vividly they contrasted themselves with the sturdy, self-sufficient trees aliout them. They eyed us fearfully for a long while. ' e called, we coaxed, and finally brought them closer with the remainder of our lunch. The thing that kept them occupied long enough to snap a picture was a tomato. So far the day had been one of those completely happy, tranquil days. I reveled in it and anticiijated the sight yet to come — the view from the top of Moro Rock. Moro is an Indian word and means, rock of rocks. I saw this commanding edifice of solid stone as we drove towards the park earlier in the day, miles before we actually reached it. It looked as if it were a great world perche l on the Her- culean shoulder of the mountain. We began our ascent. It seemed as if we should never cease climbing uji — up — we two infinitesimal bodies clutching at the friendly solidity of old Moro. At times when our foothold seemed more permanent we would stop for breath and a look down the heights we had already scaled. It made me dizzy— that straight drop, hundreds of feet down. Out beyond stretched a soft green blanket of trees peering inquiringly up into this strange world from earth. That fanciful Hercules was very real now. It was not the same world. We climbed as if we would reach the fluf?y clouds which gracefully spread their billowy skirts above our heads. But there was a summit, and at last we reached it ! As if to remind us that we were still of the physical world, we found two young men sitting atop the rock peacefully smoking their i)i])es. We all followed the age old custom of travelers and greeted each other warmly. For awhile we discussed the weather : but the enormity of it all was too demanding .... This was no place to discuss the weather or where we hailed from (if we renum- bered ourselves). — It was very quiet. This was the spot in whicli to dream new dreams and to ronTcmber old ones. It was easv to see myself here ato]i this lean, bare S T O R Y A N I ) V E R S E . 121 rock. Nature uiiadDnicd i man ' s hand is startlinyly trutlitul. Here was a |ilace lliat would be good to begin life on — it might teach an individual the Great W ' h}- of things sooner. We four were so small, and that rock was so very necessary to us just at that moment. These great silences cannot last long enough and mine ended too soon I don ' t remember how. It was disappointing getting back to reality. We bade our fellow dreamers gondby and started back. 1 felt as if I had Ijeen a long, long way. . . . . Earth would never seem ([iiite the same again. Just then, I found no ade(iuate means of exijressing my feeling except in violent exercise. I challenged my friend to a race the remainder of the way down. I won. As I reached the ground I met a young man guiding an aged woman up the rock. She smiled queerly at me. I ' ve wondered many times since if she reached the top and if she saw the same things I did. I ' m not quite sure that she did .... She ' d lived a long while. Secrets By Marian Dix I ' d like to tell you a secret. A secret of velvet fern-massed banks And a little stream skipping over The rosy-hued cobblestones And a lovely, lone Amaryllis kissing The little beams of happy fire That trip across the world. And about a scarlet-breasted robin With four new, blue eggs. And the sad tale of twin acacias Forever separated by the water That laughs and sings along its way. And fuzzy-hearted little pussy willows And green, green mosses and deep blue skies And satiny silver water lilies On verdant couches. I ' ve longed to tell you — But you never understand. 122 T H E A R T I S A N W ' 33 Forget-Me-Not ] ' Marian Uix Once dearly lielcjved, when a hlcjssoin blows, ( iently swayed on a silken thread. The dream [ have made you softly i,d(iws And, awakening somehow out of the dead iX.shes of passion, swells and grows Into a flame that Imrsts and hin-ns. Then quietly each cruel memory turns And, always staring, whispers I Am the hour, the kiss you condemned to die. But you are a fool in thinking so long That you bury me, for the song That I was — I am, and always shall be. So ever you rise to speak to me. But when a blossom fades and drops Her velvet petals, one by one, I find the aching moment done ; The i)ain of half dead dreaming sto])s. And sinking slowly in the gray (Jf quiet twilight shades, you lay A symbol of some golden day — The dving scent of old bouquet — Curled cluster of forget-me-nots. Life By Mary Louise Fehner Life Is like A Bucking Bronco. If You don ' t Hold tight, It Throws you And Tramples you In the Dust Of . ges. S T U R Y A N 1) ' E R S E 123 Tarpon Fishing in Gulf Waters Bv Frku Taylor SURINC; TtlE SUMMER VACATION 1 had the pleasure of spending a month in Miami, Florida. My uncle, whom I was visiting, was the owner of a twenty- four foot cabin cruiser. At dinner one evening, my uncle suggested that luy two cousins, Bob and |oe, take me fishing. This at once met with the ai)])roval of everyone, so we decided to go the next day. We all decided to get an early start the ne.xt nidrn- ing. I set the alarm for four o ' clock and true to fnrni it went off. and awoke me from a peaceful slumber. I dressed quickly, and soon aroused the other fellows. The sun was just rising as we set sail for the fishing grounds. The fog lifted and disclosed a beautiful sea, which appeared as smooth as a pane of glass. Our cruiser cut through the water at about twelve knots, and before long we were around the point and approaching the fishing grounds. There were only a few other boats in sight, as it was yet early, but we knew there were many other sportsmen after the mighty tarpon, which is truthfully called the silver k-ing of the southern seas. As we approached the fishing grounds we slowed the boat down to about five knots, which is the best trolling si eed. Overboard went the bait, and we set ourselves in readiness for the strike. There was an air of confidence on board, as everyone expected to land a tarpon before the da ' was over. We trolled almost straight out to sea. I was piloting the boat, and Bob and Joe were watching for a sign of the tarpon. Nearly three hours had elapsed, and we had yet to feel a strike. We were growing rather discouraged, for the sun was now at its height and the heat was be- coming very uncomfortable. It began to look as if we were going to be dis- appointed, when all of a sudden Bob let out a mighty yell, and pointed to the north. A short distance away a tarpon broke the calmness of the ocean with a leap into the air. I looked just in time to see him fall back into the water with a great splash. I promptly headed the boat in that direction, and then called one of the other fellows to take the wheel. I rushed to the back of the boat, picked up my rod, strapped myself to the chair, and prepared for action. The boat was throttled down to about three knots, and we cautiously approached the spot where the tar- l)on had leaped. We passed over the spot, and I was almost ready to say we had missed hinr, when he appeared on the surface of the water, about fifty feet from the bait. He came forward and slowly overtook the bait. Then with a terrific lunge, he struck. I let him take about fifty yards of line, and when I was sure he had swallowed the bait, I struck back on the rod until it almost bent double. Feeling the sharp pang of the hook, the tarpon dove straight for the bottom. A minute later he reappeared nn the surface about a hundred yards from the boat. He then started straight for the boat, coming forward .so ra])idly that I could hardly retrieve the line fast 124 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 enoUi, li. Finally the line tii, ' htened, and he rushed away, to the left, tu the right, som- ersaulting into the air, and doing his best to get rid of the hook. This magnificent beauty of the deep was putting up a wonderful fight for ex- istence, cutting through the water with great s])eed and seemingly with lasting endurance. Yard after yard of line sped off the reel, as the tarpon kept up his ter- rific ])ace. It was truly a scene of action seldom surpassed in this kind of a struggle. A half hour passed, and although the tarpon kept on fighting, the strain was beginning to tell on him. He continued to take line but his runs were not so fast, nor so long as before. He was tiring a little. Gently then, not too rapidly, I coaxed him toward me. At sight of the boat he was otif again on another wild run. Everyone on board was wild with excitement. Bob was trying to pilot the boat around to give me the best possible position for fighting the tarpon. Joe was on the top of the cabin watching the tar])on and telling the ])i nt when to change his course. I was doing my best to keep the line tight, and not give the tarpon any slack. I had fought many game fish, but none which could equal the amazing speed of the tarpon. He was out of the water over a third of the time, his great body quiv- ering with every leap. When the sun cast its brilliant rays of light on his body, it disclosed a picture never to be forgotten. Miat a beauty he was, his silvery body glistening in the sunlight. However, all struggles must come to an end, and as I brought the tarpon to the side of the l)oat. Joe skillfully slipped tlie gaff under his gills, and the happiest mo- ments of my vacation were over. As a tribute to the great fight this game fish had put up, we turned him loose, once more to roam the southern seas. STORY AND VERSE 125 John Sterrick Bv Thayer Wf.stlake 0 AST SUMMER my father and I visited the camp of John Sterrick. If m T ' y f ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 ot been there fifteen years before we could not have jP I found it. The cabin site is about twenty-five feet off the regular trail, and the ravages of time have practically oliliterated all traces of even the foundations. As we stood there I could not help Init think of the events that that place had seen. In 1849, the world was mad with the lust for gold. The eyes of the world were turned toward the new El Dorado. Men left their families, or brought them with them, and started for California. Entire communities often banded into wagon trains and set out for the Golden Gate. Isolated trading posts found them- selves towns, and towns grew to cities. Cisco was the first town adjacent to the gold fields that men struck following the Donner Route. They left their families there and took the long trail to the North Fork of the American River. The river had a few rich places, but none like those in the valley below. Men found the richest spots, worked them, and then passed on. Traces of their activities may still be seen. A decayed stump on the river bank denotes an old-time crossing : a tumbled pile of rocks is the ruin of some cabin, or a tangle of rusty ca])le tells of some long past mining project. Most of the bars are cut by ditches through which the river was turned and the regular channel worked. Sterrick came on the crest of the rush in 1849. He found a spot that suited him, settled there, and lived the rest of his life in that spot. Not much is known of Sterrick ' s early life. He had lived most of his when men who are olcl now came to the country as youngsters. It is not known for sure whether Sailor and Sterrick were partners before they came to the country, but it is known that they worked one of the richest mines in the district together. Nothing is known of Sailor, e.xcept that at one time he had been a sailor on a clipper ship. He has remainefl an enigma. At the head of Sailor Ra ' ine, named in his honor, is a pre-glacial stream bed. These are always very rich. The bed was discovered by someone else, Init Sterrick and .Sailor found a way to share in it. They reasoned that if the stream cut the bed it carried some of the gold away. Going a step farther they reasoned that some of it nuist have been dropped on the benches bordering the l anks of the creek in days gone liy. After prospecting them all they chose one about three-eighths of a mile from the creek. As water was absoluely necessary for their operations they dug a ditch three-quarters of a mile long to supply it. The work that went into this ditch stupendous. It was but three feet deep and four feet wide, but it took the two men working from sunup to sundown two 126 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 months to complete it. Todav most of the evidence of their work is gone, for l)rush has grown over the ditch, and dirt has filled it. With the completion of the ditch, their next task was the hewing of lioards for the sluice-boxes. This sounds simple but it was a task dreaded by both of them. They felled a tree into the crotch of another. One man was on top of the log, and the other beneath it. The man on the bottom literally ate sawdust, and the man on top was hard put to keep his balance, . fter the ])lanks were hewed in this manner they were smoothed up by plane. When the boxes were finished they were ready for work. They labored but a short time, and took out some seventy thousand dollars. As winter was coming on, they stopped, and prepared tn winter it out on the l)roperty. .Sailor was ])ining for his old haunts, however, and longed to go on just one more sjiree. The temptation was too great for him, so after helping Sterrick cut the winter ' s wood he left for Frisco, promising to come back ; and we ' ll clean up. He never returned. It is not known whether he skipped the country, or whether he flashed his roll in some waterfront dive and was knocked over the head and his body dropped in the bay. The cause is not known, but the result is certain — he left Sterrick sole operator and owner. That winter while gatheiing wood Sterrick fell and broke his leg. Not relishing a fifteen mile crawl to town he tied the injured member to a tree, and twisted himself until he had set the leg. What anguish he suffered while the leg was setting! The daily task of get- ting water was torture worse than that of the Inquisition. A jierson with a broken leg should stay in bed for a month, but Sterrick was forced to get wood, draw water, and c(jok his own meals. At the end of six weeks Sterrick began to think of the journey to town. His leg was fairly healed, but he felt that he must receive medical attention. It was fifteen miles to town, and a stiff journey for a well man. Knowing that it must done he set out one morning, and by eight o ' clock that night he was safe in the liotel at Cisco. The leg had been set iinproi)erly, and Sterrick was crippled lor life. It hindered him in his work, and try as he would he was unable to make more than a grubstake from his mine. For fifty years he told the .same story in the spring: He ' ll come back this summer, and we ' ll clean up. Each fall it was: Maybe he was sick or delayed, but next spring now — . Each year Sterrick made his cabin more homelike. It was situated on a small bench i n the side of the mountain. He i)lanted a small garden :uid a small apjile (ii-clKird. T(i(l;iy. both are so grown up with hrnsli that they may n.it lie loinid. Sterrick was now approaching the four score and ten year mark. His relatives, fearing that he would die some winter, made him i)romise that he would stay through one more winter. The last triji that ic .Mathews, the packer, made that year was to Slerrick ' s cam]), to t;ike in his winter ' s supply of gruh. When ' ic awoke in the morning he found that Sterrick had passed away in the night. S T O R Y A N 1) V ERSE 127 The Bottom Drawer By Marian Dix J LD PAP TURNER WAS A TEACHER in high school. His philosophy. ' 1|- simple though it might be, was an appeal to every pupil he had (luring the 1 I [- morning. (He was a little too old to teach school all day. spry as he was.) j Love ' s in the highway, love ' s in the byway. Love ' s in the meadow, love ' s in the mart He was conceited, Pap Turner, and his little gusts of white heated temper were as his sparse and snowy hair — few and far between. Some of the teachers called him a silly old fossil, always pampering the youngsters ; some of the young- sters would call him a silly old preacher, with an aptitude for telling the same old stories over and over. But it is not to be denied that everyone loved Pap Turner. He especially joyed in saying, When 1 was a shallow kid with a thriving Western paper and held a prominent position among pulDlishers, my name was in the Who ' s Who. Now that Em doing something worth while, and he ' d smile glee- fully, Em just barely in the telephone book. The kids always recognized that as an old pun. Init they never tired of the story that generally followed it. But even if everyone forgets you (he used to say), you can remember ever so much that you live, if only in your own memory. (As to that, most of the kids recalled the .stacks of letters Pap beamed over when the semi-annual semi-surprise parties were given for him. He always knew beforehand of course. ' Jliose nights he would never ob ject to reading that pile of cherished missives, old and new. and the kids loved them all. There were letters from countless well-known folk who had known him either in the newspaper and l)olitical game, or in school. They all knew of his intense pleasure at effective Bat- tery, too.) I recall the time 1 ran the Weekly Willow in my home town (he ' d liegin). I was pretty well on then, about fifty, I should judge. I knew nearly everyone for miles around, being as I ' d lived there when a kid and had done my own reporting for so long. When I got well on with the work and was a1 le to increase my sheet, I re- modeled the old l uilding. I put in a couple more rooms, a i)rinting ])ress. and an editorial office. It was real class for a .small-town press. I hired several fellows, too. 1 bought out the two mo.st important neighboring pajiers and put reporters, (there were five) on those beats. 1 began to make money, then, . fter a while, 1 was .-ible t(j make it a daily. ( )ne day, one of the boys came to me. Pap, he said, Why don ' t you make the sheet a bit more attractive? How do you mean? I asked. Well, get a photographer and do some real pictures to dress up the stories a bit. Now I have a young brother who . . . . And so I hired Larry. He was the youngest on tlie staff, and by far the best 128 T H E A R T I S A N W ' 33 looking of any of them. He did do splendid work, though, in spite of his youth, (or perhaps because of it. I ' ve always held that you young kids can lots of times beat us old bloaters all hollow.) He turned out some nrighty fine pictures. People be- gan to take a real interest. I noticed, though, that it didn ' t get very nuich enthusiasm out of the women- folk. It seemed that they all sort of preferred a little page put out by a bunch across the creek. I used to buy a lot of copies to see what was so appealing in it. . t fiirst I thought it was the funnies, but a strip didn ' t seem to imjirove matters any. Finally I called in some of the boys and asked them what they thought it was. No one seemed to know. When Larry came around, I put the question up to him. I had a lot of faith in his judgment. He reallv would have been a fine success by now it it hadn ' t been for his fine wav with the girls. He was such a splendid looking chap, tall and hand- some, with curly, brown hair and all, that there wasn ' t a lassie in town that hadn ' t set her bonnet for him one time or another. Why, Pap don ' t you know? he asked, sort of surprised. It ' s that picture part that Lucille Way does. I was sure amazed. You mean that one where she has all the curly-cues and things? PiUt what ' s there in that? I don ' t know. he answered, but it just seems to hit the right spot with the women. It ' s so dainty, I guess. I didn ' t want to try to snitch anyone off another paper, so I made a big attempt to get a girl who could do the same kind of work. You see, this was the first of that school of fancy drawing — you know, the kind that has the girls dressed in feathers and frills, with gobs of ribbon and fluzzy hair. It seems that all the older women try to believe the pict ures resemble what they used to look like and the young girls like them because they resemble what they want to look like. Then there ' s always that romantic bit of nonsense about making yourself into the bundle of feminine allure. P)Ut there didn ' t seem to be a soul who could do the work. I foiuid plenty of mighty fine artists who were really good, but none of them quite hit the mark. So one day 1 sent for this girl, Lucille. I spent the whole morning getting everything nice, warning the fellows about cussing, and cleaning everything up dandy, as I pictured her something of a dainty little miss who would be shocked at a bit of dust. I called Larry in. Now, Larry, you must be careful with her. She ' s valuable. She ' s verv, very young, too. Not seventeen. Don ' t start anything. He did the be.st thing — went to photograph the bridge. As I expected, she was very late. It seems she went to school part-time, and had missed her bus. However, she wasn ' t at all the kind of a girl I had expected. If she was only sixteen, she sure didn ' t look it. She was an e- ce]:)tionally thin girl, with none of the beautiful, well filling-in of her Dream Girl Series. She wore too much of a chalky white ])owder, so that she looked like she ' d been dipped into baking flour. The only thing about her that was really nice was her wild mass of golden curls th;it she wore very short. Her hair was reall - be;intiful. S T O R Y A X ' D ' E R S E 129 She listeiu ' d to my proposition, which was exctUent. She was to work for my sheet the same hours as she had heen working; I would pav her halt-again as mnch as she w ' as getting; and, the point that seemed to please her most, have all her stuff copyrighted. She was a little duhious about takin.g it, though, because she didn ' t want to hurt her editor ' s feelings. Just then Larry stepped into the office to give me a cou]) ' .e of plates. - s he stood in the door, with the sun shining on his brown curls and tan face, and his teeth flashing, I didn ' t blame any of the girls. Lucille ga- ' jied. She accepted. After that, everything went nice!} ' . Plain as she was, the girl seemed to have absorbed some of the charm from her drawing into her own personality. She could be, at rare times, quite lovely. She was what the boys called a good sport. Every day when she came in at noon, she stopped at the hall mirror and fixed herself up a bit liefore stepping into the office where La r ry inspected the plates. She ' d stop a minute and he ' d talk real nice to h e r. I didn ' t think he really liked her much until he began going into the art room, where she worked alongside the society reporter and the fashion girl. There was something about her that fascinate l Larry, in a way. Every day, he ' d go back and talk to her as she did all those funny cnrly-cnes. He ' d stand by the hour watching her nimble fingers. When he went back to his own work I would often see her drop her pencil and follow him with her eyes. She ' d sit and study him through the door for a long time. It had an effect on her work, too. Oh, I don ' t mean it wasn ' t as good as ever, but all the men and boys she drew liegan to take on the ap- pearance of that curly-headed photographer. Larrv got to going back into her room so much that the other fellows started teasing him. They ' d say things about the great woman-charmer falling for a girl that didn ' t have any looks at all. She heard too, because she began to avoid seeing him as much as possible. Finally, as I saw he was pretty yellow about taking the kidding, I devised a scheme for them. I offered them my bottom drawer for a ]iost-office Irax. At first they were pretty embarrassed and refused. Aiter a time though ( I had kept it clear) Larry came to deposit little notes in it early in the morning. She ' d pick them up at noon, and blushing ( that was the only time I ever saw any color under those many coats of white powder), would slip them into her bag. Then she ' d lay one of hers in carefully, and I ' d ])retend not to notice. One day I said to her, Lu, supposing you got an offer to go with a large syn- dicate to the east, would you go? I don ' t know, I ' ap, V e often thought about it. Rut Mother wouldn ' t let me leave school until I was eighteen, I know. D o n ' t worry, though. Paj), there isn ' t much chance of my getting any such offer, and she ' d laugh. I knew differently, though, as Mr. Inmley of the New York Examiner had written me about her. So I wrote and told him she couUln ' t syndicate her work until she was eighteen, but if he still wanted her (she was seventeen then). 1 wnuld back her. 130 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 I felt like her mother did about school, so I didn ' t say anything more to her about it. A year went by. Larry and Lucille got along fine, but I began to see that his attitude was merely friendlv, that it was just another silly office flirtation for him. I was sorry then that I had suggested the post-office, as I could see how seriously she was taking it all. I tried to talk to Larry, but he laughed. I didn ' t want to hurt Lu. so I didn ' t say anything to her. Then Larry got a chance to go to Frisco with a friend of his. He went. Lu missed him. She drew more and more boys. He hardly ever wrote. About a week before she was eighteen, I wrote to Mr. Funley. He said he cer- tainly did want her, and to send her immediately. His proposition was very satis- factory, and I was terribly pleased. I thought I ' d save it as a surprise — sort of a liirthday present. The morning of her birthday, I got a letter for her from Larry. I thought I ' d be real smart and make her happy, so I cleaned out the bottom drawer again. There I put Larry ' s envelope, and the message from Mr. Funley. When she came in, I told her to look in the bottom drawer. There was a big box of chocolates from the boys with Happy Birthday on it. That tickled her. Next was the letter from the Examiner. As she read it. her lace seemed to light up like a flame was burning inside her. Oh, Pap darling. she cried, Just think! Isn ' t it too wonderful? Mama will l)e so glad. And Larry will be hack right away — ne.xt week, isn ' t it? Won ' t he be ha]ipy ? She was like a little kid, and I fairly burst with joy. She hadn ' t seen his letter, she was that excited. There ' s another one, Lu, 1 said. When she recognized his writing, she trembled all over. She slipped it in her bag, as always, and then she bent over and kissed me. (She wasn ' t one to make any demonstration, either. ) Then she ran back into her little room and shut the door. She didn ' t conre out all afternoon. I thought prubablv she was writing him. Finally, I began to get worried, and went back. There was no one there, as the other girls were off at noon. I didn ' t see anything of her when I opened the door. All her things w-ere on the table, so I looked around. The closet was locked. I knocked, hut Ud answer. I opened it with my pass-key expecting to find her dead. There she was. poor little thing, all crumpled up in the corner, fast asleep. I didn ' t know what it was all about, so I woke her. What ' s the matter, Lu? I asked as I drew her out of the stuffy little closet. She broke into a deluge of tears and handed me Larry ' s letter. I saw it then. She ' d gone in there to cry it out ;ind h;i(l finally tired nf it all and gone to sleei). Plucky little kid. S T () R V A N 1) ' ERSE 131 The letter was -erv short, and he told her he was married. He wanted her to know because, she was his ol ' pal, and would he tickled black and l)lue and wish him all kinds of luck. Too bad, honey. I offered. It is not. she said with a funny little twist to her head and a funny little catch to her voice. It is not. lie ' s so happy and — and — oh Pap. I loved him so. I was never so sorry in my life as I was then about that bottom drawer. Yes, she went to New York, all right. ( )f course she did. She had grit. She ' s sure successful, too. The famous Lucille of the Examiner Dream Girl Series. She never married. I don ' t know where Larry is. All the men and boys, you will notice, are the same in her drawing. Tall, hand- some fellows with curly dark hair and white, gleaming teeth. (Pap would say.) Yessir, he ' d finish with a sigh, you never know where you ' re going to meet love, Most of the girls in the class would he crying by then, familiar as the story was. The boys would grin sheepishly and blink their eyes. On the Campus they ' d say affectionately what a silly old preacher Pap Turner was. Treasure Bv Marian Dix Out of the blue of the earth. God made creeks and mosses ; From the 1)lue of the sea. Fog and spring rain ; From the azure heavens He shajied Lakes and larkspur. But his work was not done. Behind the big hills And the yellow sun and silver moon Is a tiny patch of blueness Which he clips at sparingly for dreams And the eves of little babies 132 T H E A R T I S A X W Of Journalists . . . James G. Bennett (i Bv Arthur Eslick NE OF THE MOST RE LARKABLE DEVELOPMENTS of the Modern era has heen that phenomenal growth in size and power of the American newsjiaper. This growth cannot l)e attrilnited to any single factor. ]Many and varied were the infUietices which w(jrked to make modern American journalism what it is today, the most powerful single agent for good or evil in existence. Just how power- ful may be judged by the assertion made by good authorities that through the force of public opinion created and directed by their newspapers, ninety men conti ol the destinies of these United States. No more need be said in proof of the modern newspaper ' s importance to the world. Three men stand head to shoulders above all others in the story of American journalistic ]5rogress. James Gordon Bennett, Charles A. Dana, Josejih Pulitzer, are men famous for their contributions to newspaper modernization. ()f this trio we have chosen here to tell of James Gordon Bennett, Ijecause he was the first, because he was the Pilot who charted the stormy seas of newspa])er management and pol- icv that others may follow. Born in Scotland, James Gordon Bennett, when he was twenty-four, emigrated to America. He tried various occupations, but finally drifted into his destined field. First a proof-reader on the North American Review, he later became a re- porter for the Enquirer, and then p;irt owner and princi])al editur nf the Philadel- phia Pennsylvanian. But it was not until May, IS.x , that Bennett reallv began to make his leader- shi]) felt. I ' rcim a W all .Street cellar, liennett issued the first edition of the New York Herald, a lively little sheet of four four-column jiages. Two months after its inception Bennett jirinted in the Herald the first finan- cial review e er published in an American news])a])er. Here indeed was a Pilot! From that ])eginning in a New York cellar has sprung the huge network of finan- cial news services which flash stock market reports to everv corner of the glol)e. Yet this inauguratidii, great though it was. is but one of the nianv such ex- am])les in iiennett ' s trail-blazing career. He it was who introduced modern re])or- torial methods when he ])rinted graphic accounts of the great New ' ork Stock Ex- change fire, together with |)ictures of the burning buildings and a map of the dev- astated district. It was James Gordon Bennett who first took advantage of the new telegrajih system in his liusiness by printing the entire text of John C. Calhoun ' s speech on the Mexican War, flashed to him b - telegrajih. Bennett has been accused of absolute lack of conviction. This is ] rol)ai)lv true, as shown when he declared, We have never been in a minoritv, and never shall be. He was not generally liked, although his ])aper was alninst universally read. His editorial comment was often cynical, and made man - enemies. Yet despite all this the world owes James Gordon Bennett an undxing debt of gratitude for gui ling the newspajjer int:i a greater field (if usefulness for hu- m;niily and f(ir pninting the wa_ - toward continu.al and higher ;ichievement. 134 T H E A RT I S A N V ' 33 Senior Presidents Message Our class, realizin.t;- that we. (lurselves, must yuidL- nur Ship [ Fate, decided iipnn the name nf Pilots. . t all times we have endeax ' ored to lead the school in sound, proi ressive activities. We leave it for others to tell if we have succeeded. We have learned to work and play hard and clean. This lesson we .shall cherish through life. As we voice our last re. retlul adieu to Manual and depart our separate ways in this vast, enigmatic world, we shall continue to live our motto: We lead; others follow. Glen IjAker, President, Class of 33 SENIORS r ■ 135 fT f ' • A «s s  ii5SSJi«e;4yw:s? . ,- . SKXIOK A CA1 ' .1XI ' :T Glen Baker, President Phillip I.ecarra. ke-President George Ann Love, ice-President Charlotte Rubine, Secretary Laurence Underwood, Treasurer 136 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 - .  4 1 _ Ethel P. Sykes Isabel Swerdfeger Agnes Frisius •| HI-: Ali IM ' .KS PiELLE Arbour RoLLEN Drake Mary LocKUdon SENIORS 137 i ' v B i«£it;i:H9 «iii u .: L mm - ' 1 ' Ak .,a! M«!H i .3?15el«K ' it ' WfWwv«  « ' -T ' ' 7 svl Till-: si;. i()R r. cabinet Mkrrill Knox, President Bill Barnes. Vice-President Eloise Russell. Vick-Pkesident Viola Beisner. Secretary Emil Sady. Treasurer 138 T H E A R T I S A N V ' , 3 Senior Advisor ' s Message To the Graduates — ' inter Ihirty-Three : 111 his play. ■ ' Dear Brutus, Sir James I ' .arrie suggests that even if we were given an opportunity to hve our Hves over, we should improve ourselves very little : although the techniques might he altered, the same hold mistakes would he apparent. It would seem, then, that organizing one ' s life according to a plan would be impor- tant. In fact, as an intelligent human being, each of us must assume responsibility for the decent ordering of his life — so as to be someone worth being and to do something worth doing. To he someone worth being would suggest growing — developing those few powers that each of us must possess. Tacking on superficially a few virtues ad- mired in others is not growing. Growing requires nourishment and zest. Dangers to one ' s growth seem to be failure to recognize what one can grow into; failure to select the proper means of stinnilation for sturdy growth; and failure to ajjpraise the resultant growth. In assuming responsibility for being someone worth being, one must guard against a standard of too easy accomplishment. )ne must maintain a standard that insures his self-respect, for one may get by on outsider ' s requirements, but he can never completely evade the dictates of his own code of ethics. To win. even in small measure, after honest, intelligent appraisal, one ' s sincere approval is an achievement. Actually, how many of us dare submit our conduct to that gruelling test? When we give too ready acceptance to another ' s jjerhaps flattering — certainly, undiscriminating — ajjproval. we become at once our own dearest enemy; when we are able honestly to ajijiraise the success of our undertaking, we become our own dearest friend. To do something worth doing is the ambition of us all. We want to take pride in our own work. We want to bestow something of ourselves upon our j(jl) because we all feel we have something to contribute — something to share with others in the acti itv. There is no substitute for work. .Xlmost invariablv. the lazy, superficial or the indifferent indi -idual is tempted to substitute something glamorous, some- thing romantic or beguiling, or something ])retentious for the prosaic obligations we all must meet. It is not always the work so much as the way we do it that mat- ters ; it is the imaginative lift that counts ; it is the creative effort which makes any- thing imjKjrtant or worth doing. Envisioning the possibilities of the futiu ' e may not fill one with bold assur- ance ; yet. each is boiuid to accept the challenge of planning — even awkwardly — to to be someone worth being and to do something worth doing. In that direction lie the permanent values. IvriiEi. P. SvKKS. S E N [ O R S 139 Class Song (Tune: Rift Song ) Ho— So we sing as we are leading on — We ' re the Senior Ayes three hun-lred strong — We fight for honor and fame. Long— ' ill victory follow our name! Ho— Hear the niightv song we ' re singing, On— Loud and clear the call is ringing. So— You ' ll know the Pilots are here And give a rousing good cheer As on we go ! Ckss ' Yell (Locomotive: increase tempo) P — I — L — O — T — S RAH! RAH! RAH! RAH! P — I — L — O — T — S RAH! RAH! RAH! RAH! P — I — L — O — T — S RAH! RAH! RAH! RAH! PILOTS ! SENIOR AYES ! G( ) ! Class Colors Spanish tile and beige Class Motto We lead; others follozv 140 T HE A R T I S A N ' ' oo r. d.M khh ACOSTA. FRANK ADKINSSON. MARGARET Weekly Staff 3 Euodia Club 1 Natural History Club 3 G.S.G. 2, 3 ALLARD, LILLIAN East Hieh School. Denver, Colorado Girls ' Junior Glee Club 3 ALLERS. DOROTHY S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Girls ' LeaKUe President 4 Secretarial Club 2, 3. 4 Council 4 Senior Forum 4 ALMALEH, MORRIS Polytechnic Hijrh School, Los Anfreles. California AMERIAN. MARGARET Polytechnic Hiph School. Los AnKeles. California Girls ' Leacue Cabinet 2 Secretary 3 G.A.A. 2, 3 Secretarial Club 2 AMYX. MILTON Weekly Staff 4 Press Club 4 Spectator Staff 3 Cast : Senior Play ANDERSON. ,IACK Latin Club 1. 2 ANDREN. DOROTHY Euodia Club 1, 2, 3. 4 Secretary 2. 3 Gladiola Club 2. 3 Treasurer 2 G.S.G. 4 Tri-Y 2 ARMSTRONG. YVONNE Commercial Club 3, 4 Secretarial Club 4 Gladiola Club 2 AUSTIN. PEARL Commercial Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 Harmony Club 3 Secretarial Club 4 Commercial Club 4 HAIN. THELMA MARIE Scholarship Society 2, 3 C. S. F. Award 4 Music Club 2. 3. 4 Junior Forum 3 Chemistry Cluli 3. 4 Latin Club 2, 3 G.S.G. 2, 3 German Club 3, 4 Euodia Club 3, 4 SENIORS 141 BAKER. GLEN Senior Aye Cabinet 4 President 4 Senior Bee Cabinet 3 President 3 Manual Knights 2. 3. 4 Manual Squires 2. 3. 4 Scholarship Society 1 Senior Forum 4 Big M Society 2. 3. 4 Varsity Football 2. 4 Varsity Track 2. 3 BANK. RUTH French Club 1. 2. 3. 4 Music Club 1. 2. 3, 4 World Friendship Cl ub 2. 3. 4 S- eretary 2 Vice-President 4 Gladiola Club 2. 3. 4 Treasurer 4 liF.CKER. MAR.JORIE BECKER. MINERVA Secretarial Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 French Club 1 G.S.G. 4 BEDROSIAN. CROSS S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Boys ' Judge 4 Manual Knights 4 Manual Squires 2. 3. 4 Senior Forum 4 Class C Football 2 Class B Football 3. 4 Captain 4 Citizenship Committee 4 BEDWELL. MARGUERITE Girls ' League Committee 3 Gladiola Club 4 Natural History Club 2 BEHAR, GENEVIEVE Secretarial Club 2. 3. I BELLMAN. RUTH Commercial Club 4 Gladiola Club 2, 3. 4 BENNEDETTI. SOLEDAD BENNETT. MARIE Commerical Club 3 Euodia Club 2. 3. 4 President 3. 4 Secretarial Club 3 BESSONY, ISRAEL BETSINGER. DON Varsity Football 4 142 THE AR TISAN W ' 33 ' 1 t- -r — . it C - 1 BISNOFF, RUTH BLACK, CARMELITA Los AnKeles High School, Los Angeles, Califf)rnia BLACK, GERALDINE Commercial Club 2, 3 Secretarial Club 3, 4 Girls ' League Representative 2 Natural History Club 2 BLACK, JANE E. Natural History Club 1. 2 French Club 2, 3 Secretarial Club 3 Commercial Club 3 BLATHERWICK, MILDRED Weekly Staff 4 Girls ' Big M Society 3, 4 Scholarship Society 2 Girls ' League Cabinet 3, 4 S ' . ' nior FV rum 4 Lyric Club Cabinet 3, 4 G.A.A. Cabinet 2 BOWMAN, JOHN BKACHMAN, ADELE G.A.A. 1, 2, 4 Tri-Y 2, 3, 4 President 3, 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 3 Euodia Club 2, 3 Commerical Club 3, 4 Treasurers ' Association BRANDT, CURTIS Commercial Office Manager 4 Scholarship Society 3, 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 Council 1 BROWN, JEANETTE BROWN, MILDRED Commercial Club 4 Natural History Club BURGHARDT. ARNOLD Aeolian Club 2, 3, 4 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 1 B.S.G. 1, 2 Class C Track 1 Cast: Pied Piper of Hamelin 2 BURNS, BRUCE Natural History Club 3 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 1 SENIORS 143 BURTON, EVELYN Latin Club 1 Tri-Y 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee 1 G.S.G. 4 CABRERA. MOENA Tri-Y 2. 3. 4 Treasurer 2 Vice President 4 CALDWELL. LUCILLE Stamp Club 1 Tri-Y 4 Chemistry Club 3, 4 Latin Club 2 CALHOUN. HENRY North Central High School. Spokane. Washington Class C Football 1 French Club 2. 3. 4 Class B Baseball 2 Girls ' League Committee CARLSON. MAURICE Oakland High School. Oakland, California Ballard High School. Seattle. Washington B.S.G. 1 CARSON. JOHN Inglewood High School. Inglewood, California Leuzinger High School. Lawndale. California Spectator Staff 3 Chemistry Club 3. 4 Traffic Committee 3 CASTLE. BETTIE Adelphic Cabinet 3 Vice-President 3 Girls ' League Committees 2, Natural History Club 2 Secretarial Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 4 CHANCELLOR. JAMES Council 1 B.S.G. 1. 2 Gym Team 2. 3 Toiler Club 1 CHESHIRE, LAURA BELLE G.A.A. 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee 3 CHICK. MARIE S.B.O. Cabinet 4 G.S.G. President 4 Senior Forum 4 Lyric Club 3 Girls ' Court 4 Girls ' League Committee 2. Council 4 Citizenship Committee 4 CLARK. ELSIE CLINE. EUGENE Big M Society 2. 4 Varsity Football 2. 4 144 THE A R T I S A N W ' 33 COBURN. BEVERLEY COCCIANTE. LOUISE COE, EARL Jefferson Hi(?h School. Los Anpeles. California CONGLETON, BURT ig M Society 4 Team 2. 3, 4 C FAotball 2 atinp: Club R.O.T;gv 2 CORSON. EDNA Overbrook Hiph School, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania French Club 3. 4 CRAMER. HAROLD Varsity Track 2. 3 CROCKETT. ELEANOR MAY CROOK. WILLIAM Gym Team 3. 4 Biff M Society 4 CROSBY. GERTRUDE Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 All-City Orchestra 1. 2. 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 1. 2. 3. 4 Scholarship Society 1. 2 Latin Club 1 Commercial Club 3 Girls ' League Committees 4 SENIORS DAMEIR. HELEN MAE Lyric Club G.A.A. Girls ' Court Council Secretarial Club Chemistry Club Girls ' League Committees DAVIS. MELVIN Class B Football 2. 4 Class B Track 1 DELSCAMP. LUCILLE Spanish Club 2 Secretarial Club 2 Girls ' League 1 Girls ' League Committee 3 Gladiola Club 4 DeMILITA. VINCENT Scholarship Society 1 Class C Track 1 Chemistry Club 2 German Club 1. 2. 3 Treasurers ' Association 1. 2 Fencing Club 1. 2 DENNIS, DOROTHY Lyric Club 3. 4 Senior Forum 4 Artisan Staff 4 Latin Club 2 Spanish Club 1. 2. 4 G.S.G. 1. 2, 3. 4 Girls ' League 1 DE ROSA. LAUREL MARGARET Spanish Club 2. 3. 4 Latin Club 1. 2 Natural History Club 1. 2 Secretarial Club 3 DILDINE. TOM Roosevelt High School. Des Moines, Iowa DIX. MARION Artisan Staff 4 Weekly Staff 3. 4 Senior Forum 3.4 Players ' Company 2. 3. 4 Cabinet 4 G. A. A. 2. 3 Spectator Staff 2. 3. 4 Editor 3 Cast: Senior Play 4 DOCTOR, VIRGINIA Weekly Staff 4 News Editor 4 Spanish Club 1. 2. 3. 4 World Friendship Club 1. 2. 3 Natural History Club 2 Secretarial Club 3 Girls League Committee 2. 3 DONAN. ELIZABETH Senior Forum 3. 4 Scholarship Society 2. 4 Spanish Club 2, 3 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 1 Gladiola Club 2. 3 CSC ' ' 1 Worl.i Friendship Club 3 DRIPS. SHIRLEY Senior Forum 3. 4 Latin Club 1. 2 World Friendship Club 2. 3 Natural History Club 2 Girls ' League Committee 3 DUBUC. IRENE Catholic Girls ' High School. Los Angeles. California Players ' Company 3. 4 Cast : When the Horns Blow 3 j. -0k ' ' ' M 146 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 DUIT. BEATRICE Natural History Club 2 Commercial Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 LUDWICK. RUTH Commercial Club 3. 4 Girls ' League 2 Secretarial Club 4 G.S.G. 1, 2, 3 EDMONDS, FLORENCE French Club 2. 3, 4 Chemistry Club 2 Girls ' Rifle Team 3 Girls ' LeaKue Committee 3, 4 Modes and Manners Club 3, 4 ELLIS. PEARLE Pontiac High School, Pontiac. Michigan ELLIS, VIRGINIA Pontiac High School. Pontiac. Michigan ELM, MARGARET Commercial Club Secretarial Club EMMETT, EDITH Girls ' League Home Economics Club St. Mary ' s Academy, Los Angeles, California ESLICK, ARTHUR S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Weekly Staff 4 Editor 4 Scholarship Society 2. 3. 4 C.S.F. Award 4 Artisan Staff 4 Senior Forum 3. 4 President 4 Manual Knights 4 ETTER. BILL S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Vice-Pre.sident 4 Senior Bee Cabinet 3 Vice-President 3 Manual Knights 3, 4 Merit Board 4 Senior Forum 2, 3, 4 Aeolian Club 2. 3 Players ' Company 1. 2, 3, 4 Varsity Track 3 Cross Country 2 Class B Track 2 EVANS, ADELANE Latin Club 2 Belmont High School. Los Angeles, California FALLON, MARGARET Girls ' League Representative 2, 3 G.A.A. 3. 4 G.S.G. 3 Secretarial Club 4 FIELDER. THEROLD Big M Society 4 Class C Basketball 1 Tennis Team 3 Council 2, 3 Toiler Club 3, 4 Stage Crew 3, 4 Ice Skating Club 2, 3 President 3 S E N ' I ( ) R S 147 FIELDING. BARBARA Spanish Club 1. 4 G.S.G. 3, 4 Home Economics Club 3, 4 Girls ' League Committee 2 FISHMAN. A. STELLA Commercial Club 3 Secretarial Club 3 Chemistry Club 2. 3 G.S.G. 4 Latin Club 1. 2 FLANEGIN, LOUISE Secretarial Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 4 World Friendship Club 4 Gladiola Club 4 FLECK. JEANNE FOSTER, BETTY Scholarship Society 2. 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 1. 2 Secretarial Club 3. 4 FUKUYAMA. SUNAO GALANTE, DORIS G. S. G. 2. 3. 4 Girls ' Court 3 G.A.A. 1, 2. 3 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 1 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee 2, Spanish Chlb 1. 2. 3. 4 GALKE. CLARA Commercial Club Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Natural History Club 1 GARDNER. HILDA Chemistry Club Latin Club Girls ' League Committee GARRISON. ELOISE Franklin High School. Los Angeles. California Gladiola Club 4 Home Economics Club 4 Girls ' League Committee 2 GEFFMAN. LILYAN Treasurers ' Association 2 Cast: Pied Piper of Hamelin 2 GEIGER. ALYCE Senior Forum 3. 4 Girls ' Big M Society 3. G.A.A. 2. 3. 4 Junior President 2 Tri-Y 2. 3. 4 President 2 Girls ' Court 3 French Club 1. 2. 3. 4 148 THE A R T I S A N ' W ' 33 GERKE. WOODROW Varsity Track 2. 3 GILES. GENEVIEVE Roosevelt Hii h School. Los Angeles. California Commercial Club 2 Secretarial Club 2 Girls ' Leatiue Representative 2 GILLETTE. ELIZABETH Latin Club 1. 2 Safety Committee 1. 2 Commercial Club 1 Girls ' League 1. 2 GIRARD. MARY GOE. CATHERINE Lyric Club 2, 3. 4 Cabinet 3. 4 Artisan Staff 4 Senior Forum 4 Music Club 4 Spanish Club 3 GRADY. OTIS Varsity Track 2. 3 GREEN. HAZEL Natural History Club Latin Club 3 G.rl Reserves 1. 2. 3, 4 President 4 GUSTAFSON. SWEN Class C Track 1 Class B Track 2. 3 Class C Football 1 HAGOPIAN. ARMONI) HALUERT. EDNA Jefferson High School. Los Angeles. California HALE. FRANCES Commercial Club 2 Girls ' League Committee Secretarial Club 2 Home Economics Cluli 2 HALL. WILLIAM X I (  14 ' ' HALL. JAMES S.B.O. Cabinet 4 President 4 Squires 4 Manual Kniphts 4 Merit Board 4 Artisan Staff 4 Weekly Staff 3. 4 Aeolian Club 2. 3 Scholarship Society 4 Senior p ' orvim 4 Class B Baseball 1. 2 Cross Country 1 HALLEY. CHESTER Varsity Football 2. 3, 4 Big M Society 3. 4 Players ' Company 3, 4 Harmonica Club 2. 3. 4 HAND, GERTRUDE Secretarial Club 3. 4 Girls League 4 HARRIS, BEN Chemistry Team 2 Varsity Football 2, 4 Scholarship Society 1. Senior Forum 4 Chemistry Club 1. 2. 3. HARRIS. DEAN HART. DON Boys ' Court 3 BiK M Society 3, 4 Junior Orchestra 3 Senior Orchestra 4 Gym Team 2 Council 3 HART, LUCILLE G.A.A. 1 Home Economics Club 1 Secretarial Club 2 G.S.G. 1 HARVEY. ALBERTA Artisan Staff 4 Secretarial Club 2 Music Club 4 Spanish Club 4 Gladiola Club 3 HAWTHORNE. LESTER Council 2, 3 R.O.T.C. Band 2 HELD, MAX HENDERSON. CHARLES HENDERSON. ETHEL Scholarship Society 1. 2. 3, 4 C.S.F. Award 4 Artisan Staff 4 St-nior p oruni 3, 4 G.A.A. 2. 3. 4 Chemistry Club 2 Latin Club 1 150 THE ARTISAN W 33 HENRY. HARVEY A. T fl di I V HERBERT. STODDARD Junior Orchestra 1, 2 President 2 Senior Orchestra 3 Council 1. 2 Weekly Staff 3. 4 Spectator Staff 3 Artisan Staff 3, 4 Art Editor 4 HERSTINE. JENNIE World Friendship Club 2. 3, French Club 3. 4 Music Club 2. 3. 4 Gladiola Club 3, 4 BEVERLY. EARL Senior Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4 Senior Forum 4 Officers ' Club 3, 4 R.O.T.C. Band 1. 2. 3. 4 Treasurers Association 1, 2 Non-Corns ' Club 1. 2 String Ensemble 4 HEUSHINS. ERWIN Class B Track 2, 3 Cross Country 2 HILDITCH. ARLEEN Scholarship Society 2. 3 Chemistry Club 2. 3. 4 Spanish Club 1. 2, 3. 4 HILL, BETTYE G.S.G. 3, 4 Home Economics Club 2 ' Tri Y 3. 4 HINDIN. ESTHER S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Secretary 4 Secretarial Club 4 President 4 Board of Finance 4 C.S.F. Award 4 Senior Forum 3. 4 Scholarship Society 1. 2. 3 Council 4 HOLMBERG. VERA Jefferson High School. Los Angeles. California Spanish Club Natural History Club Girls ' League HOLME. MARGARET Girls ' League Cabinet 2 French Club 3. 4 G.S.G. 1 Girls ' League Committee 1, 2 HONEYCUTT. DON Fremont High School. Los Angeles. California Jefferson High School. Los Angeles, California HORNBROOK. VIRGINIA Latin Chih 2 (Jerman Club 2. 3 Girls ' League Committee 2. 3 World Friendship Club 2 SENIORS HOMOWITZ. JOE HOOKER. RICHARD HOWARD. ANNIE tlirl Reserves 2, ' i Natural History Club 3. 4 Gladiola Club 4 HUGHES. JACK Varsity Tennis i Bie M Society 3. 4 Chemistry Club 2 B. S. G. 2 German Club 1 HUNTOON. LUCILE Spanish Club 1 Girls ' LeaKue Committee 1. 2. 3 Girls ' Leacue 1. 2 HUTCHISON. BETTY Players ' Company 3. 4 Secretary 4 Cast: Senior Play 4 Wilson High School. Dallas, Texas ISRAEL. VICTORIA Secretarial Club 3. 4 Commerical Club 4 Girls ' League Committee 1 JACKSON. MATTIE World Friendship Club 2. 4 Natural History Club 2. 3 Gladiola Club 3. 4 JACOBS. JOE Senior Hi-Y 2. 3 Bis M Society 3, 4 Class B Football 1 Varsity Football 2 Squires 4 Bip M Society 4 President 4 JAMES. ELLIS Cast : Senior Play 4 Senior Forum 2, 3. 4 Debate Team 3. 4 Manager 4 World Friendship Club 3. 4 Cabinet 4 Chemistry Club 3 Spanish Club 3. 4 Ice Skating Club 3 JENKS. ELEANOR Music Club 2 G.S.G. 2. 3. 4 JENSEN, HELEN Girls ' Rifle Team 3. 4 Scholarship Society 2 Lyric Club 4 Senior Forum 2. 3. 4 Players ' Company 3. 4 Junior Forum 1, 2 World Friendship Club 3 1. 1 152 T H E A R T I S A N W JOBE. EDWARD Manual Sguires 2. 3. 4 Safety Committee 4 JOHNSON. PAULINK Glacliola Club JOHNSTON. CAMPBELL A.B.S. Cabinet 4 Treasurer 4 Senior Hi-Y 4 Class B Basketball 2 Prep Hi-Y 2 JONES. EARL Aeolian Club 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 1. 2. 3, 4 President 4 Manual Four 3, 4 Boys ' Octette 4 Music Club 2, 3 Junior Orchestra 4 President 4 R.O.T.C. Band 1 KASHUBA. LUCILE Lyric Club 4 A Cappella Choir 3 World Friendship Club 4 KATAYAMA. WILLIAM Class C Football 2 KATZMAN. IDA Commercial Club 2. 3. 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Home Econt)mics Club 2, 3. 4 KELLY, HORACE University High School, West Los Angeles. California Albuquerque High School. Albuquerque, New Mexico KILLINCSWORTH. RUTH KING. MARY Aeolian Club 2 Accompanist 2 String Ensemble 4 Junior Orchestra 2 Music Club 2. 3. 4 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 3, 4 Accompanist 4 Girls ' League Committee 2 KLEIN, ALEX Big M Society Debate Team 2. 3, 4 Tennis Team 3 Weekly Staff 4 Scholarship Society 3 Senior Forum 2, 3. 4 River Rouge High Schtml. River Rouge, Michigan KNADJIAN. WILLIAM Cast : Senior Play 4 Bryant School. New York City, New York S E X 1 U K S 133 KOSLOWSKY. ROSKMARY Girls ' Rifle Team 3 Secretarial Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 G.S.G. 1. 2. 3 Citizenship Committee 4 Girls ' LeaKue Representative Natural History Club 2 KRAMER, LILLIAN Roosevelt HiKh School, Los Angeles, California Girls ' Rifle Team 2 Treasurers ' Association 2 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 1 KUHN, MARGARET Gladiola Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 3 French Club 2 LANG. MARIE Corona High School, Corona, California Alhambra High School. Alhambra, California Scholarship Society Girls ' League Committees Home Ecomonics Club LARSON. WILLARD LAWRENCE, ESTHER Scholarship Society 1, Senior Orchestra 1, 2 G.A.A. 3 Lyric Club 2. 3, 4 Chemistry Club 2, 4 Music Club 3, 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 LEE, LEONE Secretarial Club Commerical Club Girls ' League Committee LEGARRA, PHILIP Senior Aye Cabinet 4 Vice-President 4 Aeolian Club 2, 3, 4 Vice-President 4 Players ' Company 3, 4 Boys ' Court 3 Council 1. 2 LEVEY, IRWIN Big M Society 3, 4 Tennis Team 3 Gym Team 2, 3 Class C Basketball 1 Class B Basketball 2 Ice Skating Club 2, 3 B.S.G. 4 LEWIS, MYRTLE Gladiola Club 3. 4 Natural History Club 3, 4 Girl Reserves 4 LINDEBOOM. TRINA Rhys Hooge Burger School. Dragten, Holland LIPPMAN. LEO Artisan Staff 4 154 THE ARTISAN W 33 LIPPMAN, ROLAND Officers ' Club 4 Non-Corns ' Club 2. 3 Natural History Club Drill Squad 4 Artisan Staff 3. 4 LIVINGSTON. EDITH Scholarship Society 3 Council 2 Girls ' Rifle Team 3 Secretarial Club 1. 2. 3. t Girl Reserves Commercial Club 1, 2, 3, 4 LLOYD. WENDELL LOCKHART, WILLIAM Ice SkatinK Club 2. 3 German Club 2, 3 Class C Basketball 1 Class B Basketball 2 LOTT. ARTHUR A.B.S. Cabinet 3 Secretary 3 Golf Team 3 Class C Track I Council 2 LOVE. GEORGE ANN Senior A Cabinet 4 Vice-President 4 Senior B Cabinet 3 Secretary 3 Lyric Club 2. 3. 4 G.A.A. 2. 3. 4 Senior President 3 LOYAN. RUTH Scholarship Society 3 Chemistry Club 2 Latin Club 1 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 LUCAS, ELEANOR R. Girls ' Junior Glee Club 1 President 1 Tri-Y 2 Gladiola Club 2, 3 President 2 Secretary 3 LUCKE. BILL EDELMAN. SARAH LUDWIG. IRMA Scholarship Society 2. 3 Chemistry Club 2. 3. 4 Spanish Club 1. 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League Committees 3, G.S.G. 2. 3 LUGINBUEHL. MAURINE, Scholarship Society 3, 4 Girls ' UiK M Society 4 G.A.A. 3. 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Commercial Club 3, 4 SENIORS 155 LUNDBERG. LORETTA S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Girls ' JxidKe 4 Girls ' League 2. 3 Vice-President 2 G. A. A. 2. 3. 4 Senior Forum 4 Council 4 G. S. G. 2. 3. 4 Girls ' Court 4 LUTHI. VIRGINIA LUTTES, HOWARD Hi-Y 2. 3, 4 A. B. S. Cabinet 2 Treasurer 2 Safety Committee 4 B. S. G. 3. 4 Citizenship Committee LYNCH. TOM Senior Forum 4 Weekly Staff 4 Aviation Club 3 Press Club 3 McBRIDE, RALPH Hi-Y 3 Class B Track 1 Varsity Track 2. 3 Box Office Manager 4 Squires 4 Secretary 4 McCAGHREN, UILLIE JEAN Girls ' Rifle Team 3, 4 Gladiola Club 4 Natural History Club 3 Commercial Club 2. 3. 4 McCALLIE, EARL Box Office 4 Commercial Club 3 McCAMBRIDGE. RHODA Secretarial Club 2. 3, 4 Commercial Club 2, 3 Natural History Club 2 McCLAIN. MAXINE Gladiola Club 4 G. S. G. 2 Natural History Club 2, 3 Commercial Club 1. 2 Secretarial Club 1 McCLUAN. JIM Varsity Track 2 Cross Country 1 Varsity Football 1 Council 2 McCOMB. HAROLD B. S. G. 4 Council 3 MacDANIEL. EVELYN M. Home Economics Club 3, 4 President 4 World Friendship Club 3 Euodia Club 2 Girls ' League Committee 4 156 T H F. A K T I S A N V ' 3o McDonald, mary Girls ' Rifle Team 2. 3, 4 Girls ' Leaixue Committee 4 McINTYRE. WALTER B. S. G. 1. 2. 3 MeKlNLEY. DENICE Santa Monica High School. Santa Monica. California Stamp Club 4 Home Economics Club 4 Natural History Club 4 McMANUS. JOSEPHINE G. S. G. 2 Commercial Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 MacNEILL. JOHN Officers ' Club 4 President 4 Non-Corns ' Club 2. 3 Officers ' Drill Squad 4 Sergeants ' Drill Squad Captain 4 MADSEN. DON Natural Histary Club MASON. JOE Squires 4 Varsity Football 1. Gym Team 1 MATHER. LUCIEN Manual Knights 4 Senior Hi-Y 4 Senior Forum 3. 4 Aeolian Club 2 Senior Orchestra 2. 3 Big M Society 4 Class B Football 2 Haad Yell Leader 3. 4 Players ' Company 3 MAULDING. CLYDE MAULHARDT. HERMAN S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Manager 4 Board of Finance 4 President 4 Class C Track 1 Class B Track 2. 3 Class C Football 1 Class B Football 2. 4 Council 4 Senior Forum 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 MAY. VIRGINIA E. G.A.A. 2. 3. 4 Scholarship Society 4 Girls ' League Committee 2 Gladiola Club 2. 3. 4 Secretary 4 G.S.G. 3 MEISINHELTER, RUTH s I-: N I O K s r MEROLA. ELIZABETH Girls ' Rifle Team 3 G. S. G. 1. 2 Commercial Club 3 Secretarial Club 3 Natural History Club 2 Girls ' League Committee 1 MICHKA. BERNICE Latin Club 2 Music Club 2 Treasurers ' Association 2 G. S. G. 2, 3, 4 Citizenship Committee 4 Girls ' League I MILLER. DOROTHIE Roosevelt Hij h School. Los Angeles. California MILNER. SARAH MAE MITRANI. FORTUNA Commercial Club 2, 3 Secretarial Club 2, 3, 4 French Club 2, 3, 4 World Friendship Club 3. 4 MOODY. LEONARD Stage Crew 2. 3. 4 Ice Skating Club 2, 3 MORENO. ISAAC De Witt Clinton High School. New York. New York MUELLER. AUREL MUNDAY. CAROLINE French Club 3. 4 Natural History Club 2 Council 2 Chemistry Club 3 G. S. G. 2, 3, 4 MUNRO. LEONE Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 MURRAY. Tri Y WINONA Music Club Junior Orchestr.i Girls ' League Committee NATHAN. SOL Mission High School. San Francisco. California Senior Orchestra 1. 2. 3. 4 Junior Orchestra 1. 2. 3 String Ensemble 1. 2, 3, 158 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 NELSON. EDNA Treasurers ' Association Secretarial Club 1 Natural History Club 1 Euodia Club 4 NELSON. GRACE Gladiola Club 3. 4 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 3. 4 President 3. 4 Music Club 2. 3 Spanish Club 1 World Friendship Club 2 Natural History Club 1 NEWTON. PHYLLIS G.A.A. 2. 3. 4 Secretarial Club 4 G.S.G. 4 Girls ' League 2 NICOLETTI, LILLIAN MARY French Club 1 Girls ' Lea@:ue Committee 2 NORBERG. ELIZABETH Secretarial Club 1. 2. 3. 4 Gladiola Club 2. 3 Commercial Club 1 OBANDO. BERTHA Gladiola Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' Junior Glee Club A Cappella Choir 4 Spanish Club 1. 2. 3. 4 G. A. A. 1, 2, 3 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 O ' CONNER. PATRICIA Players ' Company 3. 4 Secretary 4 Commercial Club 4 World Friendship Club 4 Latin Club 4 Phrenocosmian Society 4 Girls ' Leaf ue Committee 4 ODANAKA. EMY Roosevelt High School. Los Angeles, California PAGE. JERRY PARENICKA. EMILY Washington High School. F ast Chicago. Indiana A Cappella Choir 3. 4 Music Club 2. 3 4 Girls ' League Ci mmittee 3, G. S. G. 3 PARKER. DON I ' ASAROW. AVERILL Weekly Staff 4 Asst. Sport Editor 4 World Friendship Cluh 3 Class C Football 2 Stamp Club 1. 2 SENIORS 159 PATTERSON. ARLEBETH G. A. A. 2, 3. 4 Latin Club 1. 2. 3. Chemistry Club 2. 3. Girls ' League Committee 4 PAULES, EARL Officers ' Club 4 President 4 R. O. T. C. 1. 2. 3. Officers ' Club 3. 4 Safety Committee 3 B. S. G. 2 Chemistry Club 2 PAUSCHERT. BETTY Girls ' Leagrue 2 Secretarial Club 2 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 2 Girls ' Rifle Team 3 PEARCE, FRANCES G. S. G. 2, 3 French Club 3. 4 Gladiola Club 3. 4 World Friendship Club 3. 4 PEDERSEN. RODERIC Aeolian Club 1, 2, 3. 4 Vice-president 2 President 3 Senior Forum 2, 3. 4 Boys ' Court 3 B. S. G. 2. 3 Council 1. 2 PERATIS, MALA Home Economics Club 1 Gladiola Club 3 Stamp Club 2 Commercial Club 3 Girls ' LeaKUe Committee 2 PERKINS, BOB PETERSON. FRITZ Collegio Champagnate, Cienfuegos. Cuba Lincoln High School. Los Angeles. California Jefferson High School, Los Angeles, California PETERSON, PAUL CoUegiu Champagnate, Cienfuegos, Cuba Lincoln High School. Los Angeles, California Jefferson High School. Los Angeles, California PETERSON, VIRGINIA Central High School, Fort Worth, Texas PHILLIPS. BERTRAM Officers ' Club 3, 4 Non-Coms ' Club 2 PHILLIPS. HERB Varsity Football 1. 3 B. S. G. 1 160 A R T I S A N W • 33 PICONE. SAM S. B. O. Cabinet 4 B. S. G. President 4 Senior B Cabinet 3 Treasurer 3 Weekly Staff 3, 4 Manual Knights 4 Manual Stuiires 4 Senior f ' orum 4 Scholarship Society 1. 2 Council 1. 2. 3. 4 Safety Committee 4 PICOT, JOHN S.B.O. Cabinet 4 A.B.S. President 4 Senior Forum 4 B. S. G. 3 Sanior B Yell Leader 3 Council 2, 4 Class C Track 1 Class C Basketball 1 PLANTAMURA. LENA Scholarship Society 1, 2. Commercial Club 3 Secretarial Club 3 PLAX, WILLIAM Non-Coms ' Club 2. Chemistry Club 2 Military Police 4 Harmonica Club 2 Officers ' Club 4 Weekly Staff 4 B.S.G. 3 POLLOCK, ALTHEA Music Club Girl Reserves Natural History Club POWELL. GEORGE PRATT. MARGARET G.S.G. 1 PRICE. ELI Chemistry Club 4 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 3. 4 Spanish Club 2 Harmonica Club 4 President 4 PURPLE. MAUSITA Tri-Y I. 2. 3, 4. French Club 4 Girls ' LeaKue Committee 4 RAMSEY. FRANCIS Washington High School, Los Angeles, California Harmonica Club 4 RANDOLPH. VETA Natural History Club 2 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 2 World Friendship Club 1 Girls ' League Committee I REESE, IMOGENE Lyric Club 4 Latin Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Music Club 1, 2. 3. 4, Girls ' Junior Glee Club 1, 2, 3 SENIORS 161 RIDGWAY. BOB Artisan Staff 2. 3. 4. Features 2 Assistant Editor :i Managing Editor 4 Aeolian Club 2. 3 Players ' Company 4 Weekly Staff 4 Feature Writer 4 Scholarship Society 4 RIME. EDWARD Commercial Club 4 President 4 Class B Baseball 2 RITCHIE. ELAINE Mt. Angel High Schnr.l. Mt. Ansel, Oregon G.A.A. ROBEY, VIRGINIA Girls ' Court 3 Clerk 3 Natural History Club 4 Girls ' League Committee 2 Gladiola Club 4 Spanish Club 2, 4 ROCOVICH. PETER ROSEN. MARION Commercial Club Spectator Staff Secretarial Club G.S.G. ROSEN. SANFORD Fremont High School. Los Angeles, California ROSENSTEIN, ESTHER Weekly Staff 3 Features 3 Girls ' Big M Society 3. Artisan Staff 4 G.A.A. 2. 3. 4 Yell Leader 4 French Club 2 ROSSITER. DESERY Class C Track 1 Class B Track 2 Varsity Track 3 Big M Society 4 ROUSE, RITA Lyric Club 4 Cast ; Senior Play 4 Players ' Company 2, 3. President 3. 4 Cast : Red Lamp Her Radio Romeo Pot Boiler.s Senior Forum 3. 4 Commercial Club 3, 4 Phrenocosmian Society : ROYSTON. ■WILLIAM Alhambra High School, Alhambra, California RUBINE, CHARLOTTE G.A.A. 2, 3, 4 Senior Aye Cabinet 4 Secretary 4 T H I-: A R T I S A N W ' 33 liUPPRECHT, CARL Treasurers ' Association 2 U.S.G. 2 SANBORN. AVERIL SANO. HELEN Commercial Club 2, 4 SCHEID. WALTER Aviation Club Safety Committee SCHWELLA. FRANK SCHWIMMER. JIM SCOTT. MORTON Latin Club 1 Stamp Club 1. 2 Chemi.stry Club 2 SECRES. DON •SHEALY. WILLIAM Senor Forum 4 Chemistry Club 4 Spanish Club 3. 4 B. S. G. 3 SHEEHAN. LEO Memphis Tech Hiph School, Memphis. Tennessee SHOWALTER. FRANK Senior Hi-Y 1. 2. 3 BiK M Society 3. 4 Varsity Foothiill 2. 4 Captain 4 Sfiuires 4 SINCLAIR. HARRY Salem Hiph School. Salem. Massachusetts Ice Skating Club 4 SENIORS 163 SISSON. MALVERN SKOURAS. SOPHIE Artisan Staff 4 StenoKrapher 4 Natural History Club 3. 4 Gladiola Club 3, 4 Secretarial Club 1, 2. 3. 4 Commercial Club 1, 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League 2. 3. 4 SLOAN. BILL S.B.O. Cabinet 2 B.S.G. President 2 Merit Board 3 Big M Socity 3, 4 Squires 4 President 4 Manual Knights 2, 3. 4 Senior Forum 3 Class B Football 2 SMALLEY. FRANK Manual Knights 4 Big M Society 3. 4 Varsity Track 2. 3 Varsity Football 2 Squires 4 SMITH, ELEANOR Weekly Staff 3. 4 Feature Writer 3 Associate Editor 4 Artisan Staff 4 Feature Writer 4 Press Club 3. 4 SMITH. ESTELLE Commercial Club 2. 3 Secretary 4 Gladiola Club 3, 4 Natural History Club 3. 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League 1. 2. 3. 4 World Friendship Club 4 SMITH. MILD SMITH, RICHARD Weekly Staff 3. 4 Sport Editor 4 Assistant Sport Editor 4 Artisan Staff 4 Sport Editor 4 Press Club 4 SMITH. VIRGINIA S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Girls ' Vice President 4 Senior Bee Cabinet 3 Girls ' Vice President 3 Merit Board 4 Board of Finance 4 Senior Forum 4 Players ' Company 3, 4 SNEL. ELVINA M. Commercial Club 4 Chess Club 1 Harmony Club 2 Secretarial Club 4 SNYDER. FRANCIS Scholarship Society 3 Treasurers Association 1. 2 Cross Country 2. 3 Chemistry Club 2 Spanish Club 1 SPRINGER. LEE Officers ' Club 3. 4 Chemistry Club 2 Treasurers Association I Military Police 1. 2, 3. 4 Ice Skating Club 2 Latin Club 3 164 THE ARTISAN W 33 STAMAN, PEARL G.S.G. 3, 4 German Club 1. 2, S, 4 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 1 A Cappetla Choir 1, 2 Chemistry Chib 2 STEIN. MARY German Club 1. 2. 3, 4 Music Club 3. 4 Home Economics Club 4 Commercial Club 4 Girls ' League Committee 3. 4 STEWART, WARD STILWILL. LEONARD STINES. LEROY SWEET. MACK Council 1. 2 Natural History Club 2. 3. 4 Class B Baseball 2 B.S.G. 4 TABOR. VINCENT Hope High School, Providence. Rhode Island R.O.T.C. Band Senior Orchestra Non-Corns ' Club i atin Club French Club German Club TAKAHASHI. TOSHIO Boy.V Junior Glee Club 3 Ice SkatinK Club 1, 2 Treasurers ' Association 1, R.O.T.C. 1 TARABOCHIA. THELMA Spanish Club 1 Commercial Club 2. 3. 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 TARR. GERALDINE Scholarship Society 4 Natural History Club 4 Gladiola Club 3. 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 3. 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Girls Junior Glee Club 3 TAUROG, ALVIN Scholarship Society 1, 2, Boys ' Vice-President 4 Chemistry Club. 2. 3, 4 Chemistry Team 3 Senior Forum 4 C. F. S. Award 4 German Club 3, 4 TAYLOR, CALVIN J. B. S. G. 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 4 R. O. T. C. Band 2, 3. Chemistry Club 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 4 Officers ' Club 4 Safety Committee 4 SENIORS 165 TAYLOR. FRED TEMPLE, CELESTE San Fernando Hijih School, San Fernando. California Music Club 4 G.S.G. 4 Euodia Club 3. 4 THERIOT. FRED Scholarship Society 2, 3, 4 Officers ' Club 8. 4 S?nior Forum 4 Chemistry Team 3 Chemistry Club 2 President 2 Council 1 Drill Squad 2, 3. 4 THOMAS. JACK Cast ; Senior Play 4 Senior Orchestra 3. 4 President 3 Toiler Club 3. 4 Field ManaEer 4 Music Club 3 Class B Basketball 2 Cross Country 1 THOMAS. LORENE Belmont Hi h School. Los Anpeles. California Girls ' Leatjue Committee 3 Modes and Manner Club 3 THOMPSON. BREHN Long Beach Poly Hitrh School. Long Beach. California B.S.G. 4 THOMPSON. DOROTHY HELEN Commerical Club 2 A Cappella Choir 4 Secretarial Club 2, 3. 4 Natural History Club 3 Gladiola Club 2 TIMES, ELLEN TOM, GLADYS Commercial Club 2, 3 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Natural History Club 2, 3, 4 World Friendship Club 2, 3 Modes and Manner Club 2 G. S. G. 2 TOWNSEND, ROBERT Scholarship Society 2, 3, 4 Senior Forum 4 Varsity Track 2 Chemistry Club 3 Latin Club 1 B.S.G. 2 TRAPP. BOB S.B.O Cabinet 4 Major 4 Officers ' Club 3. 4 Senior Forum 4 Scholarship Society 4 Chemistry Club 2. 3. 4 Manual Knights 4 Drill Squad 2, 3, 4 Captain 3 .ijf .-_ j) — - - TROUP, AL 166 T H E A R T I S A X W ' 33 Ml iM ' , «- UNDERWOOD. LAURENCE Senior A Cabinet 4 Treasurer 4 Class C Football 1. 2 Class B Football 3 Class C Track 2 Scholarship Society 2, 3, 4 Latin Club 2. 3. 4 Chemistry Club 3 World Friendship Club 3, 4 UNRUH. CHARLES VAN LEER. STUART VIRGIN. MARTHA Council Treasurers ' Association Lyric Club President Commerical Club Secretarial Club Secretary WALLACE. MARIE J. Secretarial Club 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 2, 3, 4 Natural History Club 1. 2 Home Economics Club 3. 4 ' V .d k a ' fs. ' MM .h m dk WALTON. JAMES Aeolian Club 2. 3 Chemistry Club 2 French Club 1. 2. 3 Cast : Senior Play 4 WARREN. CHARLES F. Roosevelt Hi h School. Seattle. Washington Cast: Senior Play 4 Council 4 R. O. T. C. Band 3. 4 Commercial Club 4 WARREN. JAMES WARREN. RUTH Latin Club Girls ' League Tri-Y WEIGAND. JACK Players ' Company Treasurers ' Association Latin Club Chemistry Club B.S.G. Cast: Senior Plav 4 Cast: At 2 AM WELKE. ROSE WELLS. TRENT Ice Skating Club Cross Country 4 SENIORS 167 WESTLAKE. THAYER Senior Forum 3. 4 S.B.O. Cabinet 4 Scholarship President 4 Adelphic Cabinet 3 Scholarship Society 1, 2. 3. 4 C.S.F. Award Spectator Staff 2, 3 Editor 3 WHALLEY. TOM Merit Board 3. 4 President 4 Big M Society 2. 3, 4 Senior Hi-Y 3, 4 Manual KniKhts 3, 4 President 4 Class B Football 1 Class B Baseball 1 Varsity Baseball 2 Varsity Football 2, 4 WHEELER. MARY LOUISE WHITAKER, DOROTHY Tri-Y 3. 4 G.S.G. 3. 4 WHITAKER, ROY WHITE, CLIFFORD R.O.T.C Treasurers ' Association WHITING, RENEE Gladiola Club 3. 4 Natural History Club 3. 4 Secretarial Club 2, 3 Girls ' Rifle Team 2, 3, 4 Home Economics Ciub 4 WILBER, HAROLD German Chib 1, 2 Chemistry Club 2, 3, 4 B.S.G 2 WILLIAMS, EVELYN Scholarship Society 3, 4 Tri-Y 1. 2, 3 Girls ' League Committee 2 French Club 4 WILSON. DON WILSON, ELIZABETH WISOTSKY. MAX Northern High School. Detroit. Michigan Stamp Club 2. 3 Treasurers ' Association German Club 3. 4 Ice Skating Club 4 0 tY 168 THE A R T I S A N W ' 3o WOLFE. LOUISE Commerical Club WOOD. FLORENCE HELEN Commercial Club 2. 4 Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3 Scholarship Society 4 Gladiola Club 2, 3. 4 YELLEN. SYLVIA Girls ' Leanrue Cabinet Girls ' League Committee Safety Committee YOKOYAMA. LAURA McKinley High School. Honolulu. T. H. BEACH. ELLSWORTH Cross Country 2, 4 Class 13 Track 2. 3 Commercial Club 4 Stamp Club 3. 4 FROST. MARJORIE Commercial Club 1. 2 Secretarial Club 1. 2. 3 Camera Shv BROWN. BETTY BRYAN, ELSIK FENSTIMAKER. HAL FRASER. THURLOW GEIER, DONALD HORTON. BYRON LAHTl. LEONARD LENAHAN. MICHAEL CORSON. RUSSEL RIDER. GERTRUDE SCHOONOVER. BERNICE SMITH. LESTER SPILHOLTZ. MANUEL WEISS. VICTOR SENIORS 169 Class History (g Bv Catherine Goe ATHERED TOGETHER TO spend three years at Manual, we were installed as BlO ' s in February, 1930. Winter ' 33 seemed so far in the future that it was hardly thought of. However, with such fine examples as the classes of Cavaliers and Spartans before us we aimed high in all undertakings, with the hope that our school life might be as happy and successful. Knowing that school life was something that couldn ' t go on forever, there was no hesitation about entering the activities of the many organizations. Bv the time we entered the eleventh year it was possible to predict future ath- letic stars for both track and football seasons, for our fellows certainly couldn ' t be called slackers! Fine scholarship had not hidden itself either, and when we came up against the English Ex we downed it nicely after spending a long afternoon in Room 253. The feature of the All term was the first step toward organization, . fter that, class spirit was never lacking. The big social event was the All party, and with the aid of James Hall and ' irginia Smith, everyone had a fine time. The end of the term brought before us much to look forward to, and we eagerly prepared to meet every obstacle in our path. The B12 Semester After being successfully launched in homeroom 265 in English Hall, our first victory was gained bv defeating the Athenians, our ominous rivals, in the Veekly contest. Officers were immediately elected to guide us to future successes. Those chosen were Glen Baker, president; Virginia Smith and Bill Etter. vice-presidents; George Ann Love, secretary ; and Sam Picone, treasurer. Our advisers were Miss Sykes, Miss Arbour. Mr. Drake, Miss Frisius, Miss Lockwood, and Miss Swerd- feger. We appreciate how they worked with us and for us until we at last left Manual. Events ran very smoothly, while all the time excitement was piling high in con- cern for approaching Senior Day. Colors were the interest, although we had some good hints after voting from smart looking color combinations. Finally all the big dark secrets were let loose — Spanish tile and beige are the colors and we are the Pilots. Henceforth, We lead, others follow. Although it wasn ' t generally admitted by the opposing forces, we led in the field events. Our formal initiation into the Adelphic Society lieing completed, all efforts were centered on the coming Senior Bee Dance. A great deal of hard work culmi- nated in the most effective and successful sport affair, carrying out in the motif of Spring, while unusually peppy entertainment was enjoyed. Track season called jjersistently. and the Senior Bee class responded nobly, presenting the student body with a good majority of stars. Much well deserved 170 T H E A R T I S A X W ' 33 interest was taken in tlie R. ( ). T. C. during the Honor Campaign, and we were proud to have officers from the Pilot class help in gaining Manual the second high- est rating in the Ninth Corps area. Next in the interest of the progressive Pilots was the cry of On to South Park ! the object being a hilarious time and good food. The picnic was undoubtedly a success, for after encouraging appetites by indulging in strenuous games such as baseball, races, and the art of cramming pies as appetizers, beans dis- appeared in alarming numbers, accompanied by other featured victuals ! Outstanding students brought Manual honors during the interesting term. Most signficant, perhaps, was the recognition of the National Educational Associa- tion. Marian Dix won first honors in the annual editorial contest, while a member of the Athenian class received third place. Two places out of a possil)le four from the wh(jle nation were certainly outstanding. The debate team was almost entirely composed of Pilots. The two who de- bated with Franklin were Arthur l-lslick and . lex Klein. They were victorious and Art was chosen the honor si)eaker. Later, two more Pilots debated with Franklin. They were Marian Dix and Ellis James, and they too were awarded the victory for Manual. Gaining third place among eleven schools in the Southern California Debate League, Alex Klein shared honors with an Athenian. Alto- gether, the debate season was entirely successful and the Pilots were ] roud of their members. The term wouldn ' t have been com])lete if we hadn ' t had to encounter the snag Civics Ex. Scholarship was outstanding in all undertakings. The Pilots were exceed- ingly well represented in the ])ublication of the Weekly. Those on the staff were: Marion Dix, Esther Ko.senstein, James Hall, Stod Herbert, Sam Picone, and Dick Smith. Many unusually fine assemblies were given and the Pilots were well represented in them. The end of the term brou.ght a long summer before us and a realization that our school years were sli])ping fast. The A12 Semester With memories of the great Olympic Games behind us, and a greater appreci- ation of living, we started our final term with many new resolutions. Missing our original opponents in homeroom 253 across the way, we prepared to have the new class there recognize our leadership. The Weekly con- test again was won bv our class and elections were held. Through his capable leadershi]) of the past term. Glen Baker was unanimously elected as our presi- dent, (leorge Ann Love also remained in the cabinet, moving to vice-presidency, sharing that position with Phil Legarra. Diminutive Charlotte Rubine became secretary, while Lawrence Underwood became our treasurer. Soon our minds ccntrred nn (Acinful Seninr I );iy ;ind i1k ' linu ' when u r uniild of l ' ici;dly recognized the members of iiomeroom 253 as seniors. We learned that they were to be the Mariners and would wear sweaters of jade green and white, and so SENIORS V KZI . J •1 A y VX K ' lMJ ' WsKV Pilots in the Making 172 T P I E A K T I S A N W ' 33 it was. ' e were victorious in the field events, and although it was necessary to reluctantly give up the Adelphic Society, the mutual friendliness with the Senior B ' s took its place. The Faculty-Senior A Reception had long been anticipated. Tuesday after- noon, Novenil er 1, the faculty entertained us in the south gardens. The affair was a gay one, as it was carried out in Spanish motif. This semi-annual social event has become a tradition at Manual, but of all that have been held, we believe ours was one of the best. Each Pilot left it with another happy memory and a picture of the class to treasure. Believing that variety is the spice of life, we swiftly changed our spirits of a more formal nature to a most carefree spirit as we invaded South Park! Making good use of the great open spaces, the fellows indulged in a more or less free- for-all football game, while the slightly less timid girls cheered. Basel)all was not forgotten either. Clothing, but not spirit, was rather dampened in a nautical atmos- jihere game! It not lieing considered safe to neglect our ap])etites any longer, chow was featured. Hot dogs, pie, and ice cream made u]5 the menu, all of which produced a remarkable amount of energy for im])romptu vocal numljcrs, yells, etc. Anyway, everyliodv was happy and it was agreed that everything was ( ' K. Manual ! Time shpped along until the Senior A dance. It was oui last social event and the very best was made of the few hours. -Ml the while King Football accounted for each Friday afternoon. The Pilot class provided fine players and good attendance throughout the season. A most successful campaign for the continuance of the Artisan was waged, and what fine results it brought ! The problem of the Community Chest confronted us, and every one responded admirably. Armistice Day brought memories and fur- ther resolutions that we might educate ourselves against repeating such a catastro- ])he. The .Senior )ilav, Dulcv, was the grand success to which every one looked for- ward. When practice marching for Commencement and Rally Day was started, the spirit of graduation pervaded homeroom 265. Comradcshi]) bound us together as a class for the last time. On the evening of commencement, we, as members of the Pilot class, marched into the auditorium for the last time, to the grand music of ' erdi ' s March from Aida. the Processional. The girls in pastel dresses, the boys in dark suits bordering them made a most imi ressive sight. The subject of the Commencement speeches was Our Changing World and we were happy to realize the advantages we have had to help us make this a better workl. Mr. Reynold Blight delivered the parting advice. We left Manual with kind memories. May the lessons we have learned in the first short journey at Manual hell) us make better Pilots in the journeys of life. We lead, others follow. |g||j: ,; :.,:%... - - jif. J; ■ lA nesBowen ' i- i Violet lson Davidson PhilipGiesecke iPhilip Lyman i ' i v! 1 Joseph Rose a Kose .-4i r JManella Rose 174 THE A RT I S A N W • 5?, Of Machinists . . . Henry Ford m 1)V Eleanor Smith .lll ' XEN ' ER THE XAAIE of Henry Eord is mentioned, people in every ])hrase of life recognize it as being the name of a successful pilot. A Pilot is a leader, one who goes forth on his own initiative and illumes the way so that others may follow. Among such men Henry Ford is out- standing. With a firm hand and steady purpose he piloted the way to success in machinery. The countless masses of people who ride about in automobiles today scarcely realize the mathematical precision of the mind that made possible their automobile by calculating each step in the development of machinery. What gave rise to Ford ' s interest in machinerv ? What incident caused him to disagree with the standardized popular conception of machinery and forge ahead with new ideas of his own? It may be said that the idea of the Ford motor-car originated from a watch. One Sunday morning, little Henry Ford was looking with delight at the real watch which a bo -friend was proudly exhibiting. Oho! said little Henry. Your watch isn ' t going. Let me see if I can ' t set it off. Here was the opportunity he had always longed for — to see the inside of a watch and discover for himself what caused the movements of the little cogs and s])rings. So the two youngsters hied themselves to the farm shop — forgetting time, church, supper, and family in the fascination of experimenting. Yoimg Henry was interrupted by an.xious parents at the crucial moment, howexer. and he hotly declared, I could finish it if folks ' d only let me be ! From that time on he began to experiment with all the clocks and watches within reach, until, as Mr. Ford expresses it, every clock in the house shuddered when it saw him coming. Tools impressed him as being hands trained to special work, needing only the mind to direct the effort. He applied himself to the task of learning the use of these tools, devouring machinery books as though they were the most thrilling of story books. The turning point in his train of thoughts — when he de])arted from the accepted order of things and delved into the unknown — came when he saw a steam-driven fire-engine go puffing down the street in Detroit. Such waste, he muttered to himself. More than half the power is used in carrying that huge boiler of water about ! Could a simple, practical engine be run by gasoline — he wondered? That was the beginning. Step by step he piloted the way. Where he led, mil- lions have followed. The tiny pathway that he trod has become a broad highway, reaching all around the world, covered with scores of automobiles — not all Fords, of course, but 1)y-products of the Ford brain-cell. And traveling off from the road of machinery are smaller roads, each of which leads to its own ])articular port. One of these ])orts is to be found at the machine shop of Manual Arts High School, ll is the Port of Opportunity for young men who avidlv seek to learn the funtlanu-ntals. There are not many short cuts in the road. Machinerv is not the simple elementary thing that it was when it first came under the notice and control of man. It is the utilization of complex forces, and the diverse actions of countless machines which are gradually taking the place of man in industry. 176 THE ARTISAN W 33 The Merit Board An important, even a vital part of. Manual ' s self government system, is the Merit Board. Although th.is hoard deals only with the few unruly memhers of the school, nevertheless it is widely known for its work with the students. The purpose of the board is to interview students who have received twenty or more demerits, and discover, if possible, why the student is receiving so many demerits. The members of the Board, in a friendly manner, attempt to point out the student ' s mistakes and give advice as to how he can make a better record ; also, to show the student the necessity of maintaining a good merit record. The board acts in the capacity of an advisory council. With each term, the importance of the Merit Board grows. It has had the fortune this year to be successful in a number of cases. The officers for this se- mester were : Tom W ' halley, chairman ; and ( )wen Colby, vice-chairman ; James Hall and Piill Etter conijileted the personnel of the board. F E A T U R E S 177 Ephebians As the ten-week mark of each semester rohs aniund. the entire campus in- dulges in speculatiiin as to who the new E])hehians will be. Much interest is shown l)y the student liody in this award, the highest honor which any Los Angeles city school can bestow. Based on leadership, character, and scholarship, the Ephebian award is given to those outstanding Manualites wliom the faculty and Senior Aye class think are the most worthy. This term nine students were chosen as Ejihebians. A glance at the lijiheliians ' records jiroves their ri,ght to the honor. Glen Baker was ]iresident of his class in both the Senior Aye and Senior Bee terms. He is a Manual Knight, a Manual Squire, and a varsity letterman in both track and footl)all. James Hall was president of the student body, a Manual Knight, a Manual Squire, and was long active in class and club activities. Arthur Eslick was editor of the Manual Arts Weekly, a Manual Knight, jjres- ident of the Senior Forum, and a jirominent speaker in forensic activities. He is a C.S.F. Gold Seal Graduate. Bill Etter was boys ' vice-president of the Senior Bee class and vice-president of the student l)ody. Thayer Westlake was president of the Scholarship Society and a Gold Seal Graduate. Thelma Bain was a Gold Seal Graduate and was active in Senior class work. George Ann Love was secretary and later girls ' vice-president of the Senior class. Virginia Smitli was vice-president of the Senior Bee class and girls ' vice-presi- dent of the studt ' ut 1)odv. Marie Chick was girls ' self-government ])resident. 178 THE A R T [ S A N W ' 33 Senior Play Thursday and Friday, January 1 and 20, 1933 The Class of Winter ' X Presents Dulcy A Three Apt Comedy r.y Marc Connelly and George S. Kautnian L ' nder the Direction of H. d. Donnell Tmk Characters j yl(,y _ . . . Marian Dix Gordon Smith, Dnlcv ' s luishand ■ ■ James Walton Mr. Patterson . ' ■ Charles NVarren Mr. Van Dvke ..C} ?. ' . ' ' ' ■ Mr. Forbes • W ilham Knadjian Mrs. Forbes ■ ■ ■ I ' ta Kouse Angela Forbes Betty Hutchison Bill, Dulcv ' s brother Jack W eigand Mr. Sterret , f - ' ' J Mr. Leach • ■ J?ck Thomas Henry, the butcher ■ ■ ■ Kdward Jobe Beautiful. Ijluudfrin- Dulcv tcmk Manual liy t(irni. Imu- three hilarious acts the oriijinal l)eautiful hut ilunil) y()iui,L; la l - convulseil her aU(Hence with the im- possible situations into which her unthinkins; acts plunged her household. Marion Dix ]ilaye(l the capricious younsj matron in a manner so vixacious. so free of restraint that at hoth performances she was hailed as one of the outstanding actresses to appear in several years at Manual. The title role was alilv supiiorted hy the wliole cast in general. ' I he characteri- zations tliev .gave of their roles were fini.shed. and not :il all like the crude inter- jiretations that attend so many higli school ])lays. l ]•; A T I ' l E s 179 Dulcy ' s husband is a young man who is anxious to enter into a partnership with Mr. Forbes, a prominent jeweler. It is Smith ' s idea to invite the Forbes to his house for a week-end affair that will give him a chance to talk business. Of course, the unthinking Uulcy invites a sizable crowd, and from the ery outset the fidgety Mr. Forbes finds himself in the midst of unwelcome confusion. It begins to dawn upon Smith that his wife has not acted cleverly in the matter. Dulcy thoroughly disgusts Mr. Forbes with her chatter and aimless confusion. Alas, his peace of mind is due for a greater shock. Angela, his daughter, has been wooed and apparently won by Mr. Leach, a theatre man who is among Dulcy ' s guests. Angela plans to elope, and makes Dulcy promise not to tell, but Dulcy man- ages to betray the whole plot to Mr. Forbes. A cloak of fury desceiuls upon the harassed jewler, and he renounces his whole family. Mrs. Forbes takes recourse to hysteria. Her frank remarks concerning Dulcy ' s intelligence are quite brittle. Smith, haggard at the collapse of his plans, is amazed at a Inisiness (jf fer from Mr. Van Dyke, one of the guests. Van Dyke is a millionaire, and not only does he casually make Smith his partner, but he grants a high-salaried position to Air. Ster- rit, a young man whom Mr. Forbes regards as a suitable son-in-law. Happiness begins to peep coyly in at the window of the Smith household. It seems as though Dulcy has not bungled so badly, when Mr. Patterson appears. He is Van Dyke ' s cousin, and the real millionaire. ' an Dyke, it develops, just thinks he has control of the business. He has no fortune whatever. Forbes hears little of the Van Dyke affair. He wants to go home, but Dulcy informs him that his daughter has eloped with Mr. Leach, and has used the Forbes automobile to further her wild schemes. Forbes is forced to spend the night at the house, and sleeps on a couch in the drawing room. His lumbago begins to torture him playfully. All is not well in the Smith establishment. In the final act Dulcy ' s rainbow begins to glisten at last. Angela returns home, married, but not to Mr. Leach. Dulcy ' s brother. Hill, has fostered a series of vile plots anrl emerged with the lady-fair as his lawful spouse. Mr. Forbes zigzags back to good humor. He knows not that Van Dyke is unbalanced, and still con- siders him a millionaire. Believing that Smith, to have received a business offer from ' an Dyke, must be a valuable partner, he dickers for Smith ' s assistance, and Dulcy, suddenly blessed with brains, inveigles Mr. Forbes into granting Smith twenty-five percent of the Inisiness. That the play drew much of its success from the smooth manipulation of scene- ry and curtains there is no doubt. The stage crew did not mar the performance with one false move. The scenery itself was the work of the stage arts classes at Manual. Many dif- ferent groups aided in the presentation of the play — business groups, make-up artists, costumers and others. Their efforts in every case were attended with the utmost success. 180 T H E A R T 1 S A N W ' S3 RALLY DAY PROGRAM Class of Winter 1933 Manual Arts Auditoriuui Wednesday, February 1. 1933 Chorus: Praise To the Lord ...... Christiansen Girls ' Lyric Club, Buys ' Aeolian Club Miss Ina M. Davids, Director Beatrice Turpin, Leonard Stein, .-Xccompanists Symposium : This Chant ing World First . ssembly : Young Italy Betty Donan Second Assembly; The Youth Movement Thelma Bain First Assembly: N ' inlin S ilo. Cv ' psy Airs .... Sarasatc Vincent Labor Mary King, Accompanist Second Assembly: Piancj Ensemble, ' larche Hongroise . . KoKUilski Aberta Harvey, Sara May Milner, Mary King, Grace Xelson Sym])0siiun : This Changing World First . ssemby: Radio in Our Changing World Averill Pasarow Second Assembly; Politics In a Changing Wnrld Alex Klein First Assembly ; ' ocal Ensemble, Morning Hymn . . . Hcnsclwl Mildred Blatherwick, P2sther Lawrence, Helen May Damier George Ann Love, Dorothy Dennis, Catherine Goe, Imogene Reese, Fdna Nelson, Martha ' irgin Alberta Harvey, Accompanist Second Assembly: (Juartette. Build Thee More Stately Mansions . Maltliez ' S Edna Xelson, Esther Lawrence, William Fitter, Ren Sachs Imogene Reese, Accompanist Recessional . . . . Kil Uuii-DcKovcn Betty Foster, Conductor Presentaticin of the Class Gift Lawrence Cnderwood, Treasurer nf tlic Class Acceptance of the (iift Intrdduction (if Eiihebians Dr. Albert E, Wilson Awarding of California .Scholarshii Federation Seals Miss Jessie Ray Hanna Awarding of Certificates of Deiiartmental Honors Mr. C. P. Fonda Presentation of .Awards fur Citizenship and Perfect . ttendance Mrs. Helen . Peasley Presentatiim (jf ( ia ' el In the President nf the .Senior 1 ' Class Glen Baker, President .)t ' the Class of Winter l ' ).li AcceiJtancc of Gavel Merrill Knox, President of the Class of Summer I ' .i? Alma Mater Cleveland- Al ' lu tt Class of Winter 193,3 .Sol Nathan, Conductor F E A T U R E S 181 COMMENCEMENT rRO(;kA.M Class of Winter 193.3 Manual Arts Auditorium Thursday Evening, February 2, 1933 Sakuntalla Overture Cohkvork Manual Artb High Scliu;il Senior Orchestra Mr. F. StiHwell Moore, Conductor Processional: March from Aida Verdi Earl Heverly, Conductor Chorus: ' Praise to the Lord Christiaiiscii Girls ' Lyric Club, Boys ' Aeolian Club Miss Ina M. Davids, Director Beatrice Turpin, Leonard Stein. Accompanists Symposium : This Changing World L The Modern Family Shirley Drips Two Pianos: Polonaise, Opus 26. No. 1 Cliut ' iii Arranged for two pianos by Celeste Temple Celeste Temple, Imogene Reese, Pianists Symposium : This Changing World II. The Machine, Our Master or Our .Servant . rthur Eslick Trumpet Solo: My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice From Samson and Delilah Saiiil-Saciis Earl Jones Manual . rts Senior Orchestra. Accompanying Address to the Graduates Mr. Raymond E. Blight Former Member of the Board of Education Recessional Kipling-DcKovcn Class of Winter 1933 Gertrude Crosby, Conductor Presentation of the Class of Winter 1933 Dr. Albert E. Wilson Principal of the School Conferring of the Dii:)lomas Mr. Arthur Eckman Member of tlie Board of Education . cceptance of the Diplomas Glen Baker. President of the Class Alma Mater ....■•• Class of Winter 1933 Don ll;irt. Conductor Clcviiaiid-.ihbolt 1S2 T HEAR T I S A N W ' 33 The Cabinet Manual Arts is justly proud of the self-government system that over twenty years ago marked the school apart and has made Manual Arts synonomous with democracy in school administration. The dejjarting caliinet surely has furthered the reputation of the school for intelligent administration 1)_ ' students. President Jimmy Hall faced difficulties that are seldom the lot of an S. B. O. president, but his original thought and fine executive ability enabled him to in- spire his cabinet to progressive activity. Jimmy ' s merit council work deserves special mention. Bill Etter, vice-president, was in charge of student body elections, and shouldered a good deal of the responsibilties that arise during the football season. In general he was handy man for the president. Charming Virginia Smith continued the good work she began as vice-pres- ident of the Senior Bee Class. }Ier friendly spirit was one of the things that made this cabinet so cooperative with each other. Marie Chick and Sam Picone headed the self-government groups. The sound reorganization of their departments and increased success of self-government was one of the highlights of the term. Correlative with self-government are the judges, Loretta Lundberg and Cross Bedrosian. They conducted the trials in a fair and satisfactory manner. The Weekly editor bears one of the heaviest burdens. Arthur Eslick. com- paratively inexperienced, took over editorial duties and provided an attra ctive newspaper all this semester. Major Bob Trapp led the crack Manual R. O. T. C. this semester and imbued the corps with his own efficiency and high motives. His preparation for the forth- coming honor inspection was complete. Herman Maulhardt handled school finances to perfection: No complaints — no errors. That ' s a niightv fine achievement in such a hard position as that of man- ager. Secretary Esther Hindcn was one of the most useful memljers of the cabmet. Not only did she carry out her own multifarious duties, but she gave a helping hand to others. Girls ' League President Dorothy Allers kept her de])artment on its same high l)lane. Tt was her duty to supervise the work of Manual girls ' committees at the ( )rthopedic 1 tosjiital and the Ann Street School. The boys ' organization ; known as the A. B. S., was directed by Johnny Picot, who attemjited a so und reform in that lagging department, and success attended his efforts. The brains of the cabinet was Thayer Westlake, Scholarship president. It bespeaks a high caliber of work to (|ualify for this office, and Westlake ' s work this term has been indicative of an even higher degree of efficiency. flCeSSIOKlIi 1 of jur falK-rs, ton cf i i- .;rl cf jur far-flun i fatlk-lm;- ■™;= Dtnail ' iiKi; aiiful Kml  ■; Kid i ' Djiniiiicn citr falmanl fin; lioriiicicF rjih.Kftitl ' U5 yet. [ cit ttcfcrjct-lcit KcffTjJt! . ani tk 5|i;utiin di o - ( k uiftains anliklini; s dcfart- -till ;lanl ' ra; auvictil - auifut, ' In hunili; and a icntril; iuart . LadiiJdcf ! sh.K ivtti ' u id. Utst tt ' tfcrjtt-kstn ' jforjct! ar :all;d cur navi;5 mdt awai - On dun; and kadkind sink Ik firc- U;. all our fcmf ;f uittrdai . h en; witH ' cv; and urc! ludc c cf tk ! ' at ;ni.:rar; ui vd, 1 l ciU ' cf!tjct-k t iicfcrjct! If. drunk iUli Mjbt cf fcu ' cr. wc Ice;; vlJild tcnjucs tliat liar; net i k; in aw; .-u;|i t ' cailinj as tk dcntik: uic iirl;55cr kteds i ' itK ' ut tk ua«- Ucrd i;Odof i jjti.fci ' itl ' usyet. tet ii ' cferi ;l-lest iclcrael! )Elr katkn kart tbal pts ber trust )J 1nr;;Mn:ituK and railcard - m valiant du;t tl ' at Iruildi cu dun :M pardinj call; Ckc net te juard- fer frantic teast and feeli;! ' uord , Glif 0 r« onClH ' Pecflc.lverdl ]inen. U . 184 ' i HE ARTISAN W 3i Of Writers . . . O. Henry By Bob Ridgway | l ' :iTHER THE BEST NOR THE WORST of American writers was J -| ( ). Henry. Genius of a sort was his. His works bear the stamp of a single X7 | mind, and are set apart from the scrivenings of mere writers, liut in his mind there burned no such devouring flame as caused Poe to pause in the midst of a besotted life to pen the desolate lines of The Raven. It is not as a literary. as a man of letters, that Americans know O. Henry, but as a story-teller. The printed page becomes blurred in the hands of his readers, and down from the clouded mountain-tops of Death he comes to speak of the people he passed on the streets of the city. The reader becomes a listener ; the writer becomes the teller of tales. He was something of a ])ilot, this man, this quiet soul whom the jjeoiile knew only as a name. He charted a course that was followed by many. The O. Henry vogue brought down upon .America a host of imitators, some better than the worst, who tried valiantly but without success to touch the master chords upon which their master artist played to American hearts. O. Henry wrote of the masses. He wrote, not as De Maupassant and others had written, with a cynical thrust or a condescending aloofness, but with tolerance. He was the first of short-story writers never to condescend by word or feeling to any of his characters. Tran(|nillity had not been his, and from the .lull sod of his own ex])ertence had freshened and bluomed the flower of sympathy tor the unfor- tunate. O. Henrv ' s leadership was not so narrow that it served only as a heacon for writers. It illumined the i athway to democracy for all the people. O. Hein-y ' s mass- es were not alone the sho| girIs and bootblacks. He was not the ordinary type of democrat who scorned the upper classes with the contempt of aristocracy for the shovel-man. When he wrote it was to both the shovel-man and the banker, and therein lay the secret of his universal appeal. He wrote feelingly of a wide range of i eople, and a wide range of readers welcomed his stories. His narratives have been jirinted in de luxe editions ; they have been translated into foreign tongues; they have appeared in cheap volumes for the mediocre lives of whom he wrote so well. Long ago the sales of his books passed the three million mark. Much that is ill has been said of his writing. Some said that he was no genius lint only a half-educated iirovincial whose peculiar style caught i)o])ular fancy and was olisolete at the time of his death — just as there were others who scarcely waited the necessary ten years after his death before recomiuending him for the hall of fame. Genius or not, he was loved hy the people. It is a wonderful thing to have that love. 186 T HE A R T I S . N W ' ii Index Frontispiece 5 Table of Contents 6 Foreword, by Bob Ridgway 7 Ahna Mater 8 Artisan Staff 17 Woodrow Wilson by Killie McFaddcn 20 Organizations 21 Tlie Principals , .... 23 Faculty 24 S.B.O. Cabinet 27 A Cbanging World, by Catberine Goe 38 Clubs 39 ■■Jdbn Marshall by Marian Uix 48 School Life 49 Calendar SO Parties 60 Luther Burbank, by Bob Ridgway 62 Drama and Music 63 Fugcne O ' Xcill by Billie McFadden 78 Athletics 79 Tlie Coacbes 80 Football Teams 82 Athletic Clubs 84 Football Players 86 Football Games 92 Girls ' Sports 100 R.O.T.C. 102 Thomas Alva Kdison by Arthur KslicU 108 Story and Verse 109 Prep, by Bob Ridgway 110 Sting Ray, by Fred Schwanskovsky 116 On the Yangtse Kiang, by Robert Hummel . 118 Moro, Sequoia, by Jane Deolin 120 Tarpon Fishing in (julf Waters, by Fred Taylor 123 John Sterrick, by Thayer Westlake 125 The Bottom Drawer, by Marian Dix 127 James G. Bennett, by Arthur Eslick 132 Seniors 133 Senior Cabinet 135 Senior Advisers 136 Senior Bee Cabinet 137 Songs and Yells 139 Class History 169 Baby Pictures 171 Henry I ' nrd, by F.leanor Smith 174 Features 175 Merit Board 17(i Ephebians 177 Senior Play 1 78 Commencement Program 181 Recessional 183 O. Henry, by Bob Ridgway 1S4 Humor 185 l ' inis, by I ' .nli Ridgway 202 HUMOR 187 With bowed shoulders Horace Smith entered his house. His dra. giiit - feet scuffed their way through the front liall and into the kitchen, where his wife was preparing the evening meal. The smile faded from Mrs. Smith ' s face as slie noted the woel)egone appear- ance of her better half. Horace! she cried. Slumping into a chair Horace Smith stared straight ahead with dead eyes. Tell me, darling, pleaded his wife. She came over to Horace and lifted his chin with her iiand. Horace wet his lips with his tongue. The worst, he said, has happened. No! cried Mrs. Smith, aghast. Yes! said Horace. This afternoon, just liefore quitting time, the boss came in and gave me the business. I see tlie jury acquitted the girl who killed her em]ilover on tlie ground of insanity. Yes, and (|uite right, too. . nybod_ - wh i kills an employer these days is cer- tainly crazy. Eslick : Boy, what a time I liad at Dot ' s party! Klein: Mmh? Who were there? Eslick : Dot and I The rising generation retires about the time the retiring generation rises. What is rigid economy? A dead Scotchman. Tommy Lyncli : Do you think it would be foolish for me to marry one who was intellectually inferior? Beggar (at the do(jr) : I ' ve lost my right leg. Underwood : It ' s not here. What is a kiss? It is an anatomical juxtaposition of tw(j arbicular mu.scles in a state of contraction. I wouldn ' t call my Ford ' )iiportunity ' . No. why ? Opportunity knocks but once. Your father looks very distinguished with his snow-white hair, said the elderly man. Oh, yes, agreed the wild son ])roudly. He ' s got me to thank for that. 188 T H E A R T I S A N W 33 Ca t ruitijOTLCciriftar ICE CREAM Being Served In Your Cafeteria We Know You Will Enjoy It ' s Superior Quality i Carnation Company 1639 No. Main St. I I I l,.| 1 1 III! III! ml iiii „|| 11,1 11,1 11,1 „„ 11,1 „„ „„ „„ 1,11 ,1,1 „„ „„ „„ „„ „„ „„ „„ „„ „„ „„ 11,1 „ , Teacher: Can ynu define nonsense. ' Saj)])} ' Sam Picone : ' ' Yes, teacher — well, for instance, an elei)hant hanging over a cliff with its tail tied to a dais -. Guns, Fishing Tackle Athletic Goods DUVALL ' S SPORTING GOODS Vermont Avenue at 42nd Place One Block South of Manual + Was that sandwich you sold me c)uite fresh? asked Boh Ridgway accusingly. Quite, sir. Each one is wrapped in trans])arent, airtight paper. I wish, said Ridgwav moodily. I wish I ' d known! + .„. LEATHER WORKERS For Over Thirty Year.s Ww LEATHER SUPPLY COMPANY Has Furni.shed the Leather Worker with All His Needs 1 012 Broadway Place, Los Angeles 1 Catalogue TUeker 736.5 Samples Ppll llll U III! III! III! Mtl—  l lilt •III III nil llll. llll llll — IIII.. IIII. IIII 1111. 1111 nil IlltJ, 1 1 LI iM O li 18 ' -) I WEAVER PHOTO Portraits Groups General Photographic Service 1041 W. 42nd PL Day or Night AD. 7747 1 4. Mather: Nice girl ymi had at the hoj) Friday. Does she work? Whalley : She ' s an expert window dresser. Matlier : I didn ' t ask ahout her personal hahits. I want to know it she works. The El May Beauty Shoppe Complete Beauty Service 5603 South Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, California Leah Ptirniann, Proprietor PLeasant 3926 +• ■ M — ntj Farmer; See here, young feller, what ' re you doin ' in that tree. ' ' Johnny Picot : One of vour jjears fell down and I ' m trying to ]iut it hack. PRINTING STATIONERY JLmMH PRINTERS A STATIONERS TWinoaks 6133 1 .5404 S. Vermont Ave. j 190 T H I-: A R SAX ' 3;i Mary had a little dress, Dainty, chic and airy. It didn ' t show the dirt a hit, ] iit ffosh, how it shf)wed Mary. liride: 1 want a pound of mince meat — ])lease take it from a nice younj;- mince. Ahie : ' { ' aj a. what is science? Papa: Don ' t he dinii like Ikey ; it dem thini s -ot says, Kcc]) off de ,L;ress :.. I She: And don ' t vou dare come to m - house at 93,? est Claremont, first house on the right side of the street, between eight-thirtv and nine-o ' clock. lie: I wish I hafl enough money ti get married. She (blushing) : ' A ' hy? He: I ' d spend it traveling. COMMENCEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS that smack of quality and ra- diate personality— produced by Craftsmen whose pride in their work is reflected in their pro- duct—whose keenest joy is the joy of doing— priced right be- cause made right by the pre- mier school announcement makers of Los Angeles — STATIONERS CORPORATION School Supplies— Engravers— Printers 525 South Spring Street Los Angeles 6365 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood 1040 Sixth Street San Diego Said a golfer to his partner: Just look at that girl dressed like a man. What are her parents thinking of, anyway? It ' s disgraceful. That, sir, is mj ' daughter. replied the partner. I beg your pardon. I didn ' t know you were her father, was the apologetic reply. Im not. I ' m her mother. and the golfer wilted. Tommy, can you tell me one of the uses of cow hide? Er, yessir. It keeps the cow together. Cannibal Prince (rushing in) : Am 1 late for dinner? King : Yep, everybody ' s eaten. hat ' s the difference between a snake and a piano? (live it up. Xone. ini write both with a ' b ' What — snake and piano? No— ' both ' . Dad (sternly) : Where were you last night? Legarra: Just riding around with one of the boys. Dad : Well tell him not to leave his hair-pins in tlie car any more. H U M O 191 ,._+ 4.,, — 4 Phone TRinity 3626 PACIFIC WHOLESALE GRO. CO. Wholesale Grocers 761-763 Terminal Street Los Angeles, California ! 1 +-.. BIRELEY ' S FRESH FRUIT PUNCHES They ' re the Best Hollywood, Calif. Gr. 2106 Phone CAp.tol 9377 Lingle Bros. COFFEES :: TEAS :: SPICES ROASTERS - WHOLESALERS Restaurant Service exclusively 1 1231 N Broadway, Los Angeles, Calif | Phone ADams 0595 Compliments of PEERLESS GARMENT CO. 4313 South Vermont Ave. Los Angeles, Calif. Colonel (returning home) : Bridget, where are my wife ' s whereahouts? ' liridget: ( ' 111 1 put em in tlie wash. 4. +.. Euclid ' s Red Cap Candy Bar ' Known the World Over ' 4. +, 1 I I I +- MANUAL HIGH FOUNTAIN LUNCH We Cater To Manual Arts Students 4150 South Vermont Under New Management She: Time surely separates the hest of friends. He: Quite true. Fourteen years ago we were both eighteen. Now I am thirty- two and vou are twenty-three. + ZIEGLER LAWLESS CO., Inc. WHOLESALE FRUIT and PRODUCE The Best in California Products 935-947 SAN JULIAN STREET TUcker 1844 VAndike 3328 Cable Address ZIEGLAW 4 ml— u« — II. T Courtesy of WESTERN THEATRE BEST TALKING PICTURES IN TOWN Western at 39th 192 THEARTISANW 33 .}•„ „„ „„ MM III. Mil nil nil nil nn nil iiii nn nii nil nil nn nil nil iin nil nil nil iin nn iin iin nil nil— Tailor-made Gowns to Order Phone PRospect 2421 INDEPENDENT TOWEL LINEN SUPPLY CO. Satisfactory Personal Service We service Factories, Offices, Stores, Restaurants and Beauty Parlors J Sanitary White Professional Toweis for Doctois and Dentists j 1710 Griffith Avenue Los Angeles | + 4 Courtesy of SPINNER-DEIST CORPORATION A California Corporation SCHOOL, CHURCH, AND THEATRE FURNITURE 6518 Avalon Boulevard Los Angeles Telephone: PLeasant 4181 SPEED AND MORE SPEED Driver (to guest rider) ; That ' s an attractive village we ' re cnniing to. wasn ' t it ? 1 I The Favored Shops of Prep and College Men PHELPS-TERKEL Clothing - Haberdashery - Shoes 3450 University Ave. 1045 Westwood Blvd. Unexcelled Quality and Fla or CHALLENGE CREAM AND BUTTER ASSOCL TION 929 East Second Street Los Angeles, Calif. H U iM ( ) R Compliments of TENNANT COFFEE AND DONUT SHOP Best donuts and coffee in town 270fi South Figuei-oa St. Phone PR. 3745 -+ pen. It isn ' t sanitary. ' prutestcd the traveler, tn have a house liuilt (iver a iioi; I (hinnci. replied the native, we ain ' t lost a ho.L; in fifteen vears. +- ! I I THE TWO BLACK CROWS An unu.sual glimpse of Moran and Mack without their make-up, taken on Educational lot between .scenes of their latest comedy, As the Crows Fly. ' Charlie Mack wants ! his Milk-Nickel stick I sent back to be recov- ] ered. j ANOTHER GOOD THING ABOUT MILK-NICKELS I is the fact that each one contains the food value of fresh, whole milk and is 30 ' , richer in proteins, mineral salts and vitamins than ordinary ice-milk. Help yourself to health — with a Milk-Nickel every dav ! GOOD HUMOR ICE CREAM COMPANY . rt Msliek ( ]jhonint; from hotel room): . ' it;ht clerk Snap] v clerk: Well, what ' s hitin;; ' yon? Mslick : That ' s what I want to know, WM. LANE CO. 509 West Washington Blvd. Los Angeles, California Sporting Goods and .Athletic Equipment . — + i I I 1 I I . — 4. THE ARTISAN W ' 33 + More Users in Southern California Tlian Any Other 1914 W. Slauson Ave. Vermont 0061 _.._„ . . ■■ — ■ — ■ + He ' s so conceited. Yes, on his birthday he sent a telegram of congratulations to his mother ! II M nil HIJ ADAMS-GOODMAN CO., INC. SPORTING GOODS The Equipment That Makes Champions SPORT HEADQUARTERS YOUR GOLF, TENNIS, BATHING SUIT, AND VACATION KNIT WEAR AT YOUR SCHOOL DISCOUNT! 1041 South Broadway Los Angeles California Do you think I look all right in my new gown dear? she asked. Hm! yes, replied her husband. Init I would suggest that if possible you get in a little farther. , — , — . MANUAL ARTS DRY GOODS CO. DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, FURNISHINGS BUTTERICK PATTERNS Allen A Hosiery 4217 South Vermont Ave. ♦ . . ■+ MANUAL ARTS HARDWARE Automobile Parts for All Makes of Cars W. P. Fuller Paints, Oil, Glass, Duco, Lacquer VErmont 1181 4221 South Vermont Ave. HUMOR 195 Do yuu know Bob Trapp? No, what ' s his name? Who? What did you say? I didn ' t say anything. That ' s what I thoiis, ' ht. I didn ' t hear ou. Rita (kK)king at picture of actress.) She has quite a large repertoire. Jack Weigand : Yes, and that dress makes it look all the worse. Operator (after drunk had placed nickel in pay phone) : Number, please? Drunk: Nimiber? Pop! Come on. girlie, whersh m ' peanuts? Little Willie : Yah, I saw you kiss my sister. Sister ' s Friend (hurriedly) : Ah — er — here ' s a quarter. Little Willie: And here ' s ten cents change. One price to all. That ' s the way I do business. Slicker: Isn ' t that overcoat rather loud? Country Hoy: Oh. it ' s all right when 1 wear a muffler. A judge asked a negro in court. WViuld vou like a lawyer? No, suh, I don ' t want no lawyer, liut I suttinly could use a couple good wit- nesses. Abie, dollink. speak louder — Papa ' s eating. Judge: What were you doing in that place when it was raided? Locksmith : I was making a bolt for the door. So you sent your boy to college? What ' s he doing there? Ageing. Walton: I want to try (jn that suit in the window. Clerk: Sorry, sir, but you ' ll have to use the dressing room. Marie : Only foi:r more weeks and we graduate. Loretta : Is that all? It seems like a month to me. She: Can you drive with one hand? He (passionately) : Yes ! She : Then pick up my glove. Do cow ' s give milk? ' No, vou have to take it from them. 196 THE ARTISAN W 33 + f Toilet Articles and Perfume Fountain Specials HOTZ DRUG COMPANY Vermont and Santa Barbara Republic 9440 • ♦ Don ' t you think, airily suggested the new jiartner, that xou ought to hrush up on your correspondence? Use big words; they add dignity. Perhaps you ' re right, admitted the other, cahnlv studying the end of his cigar, hut while eschewing mediocrity of expression thru platitudinous phraseo- logy, it liehooves one to beware fif pondersity, and to be mindful that pedanty, being indicator}- of an inherent negalomania. frustrates its own aim and results merely in obnubilation, PRospect U67 BROWN PECKHAM COMPANY 407 East Pico Street Los Angeles DESIGNERS AND MAKERS OF ENGRAVED STATIONERY Invitations, Announcements, Programs Problem: To prove that Shakespeare was a football fan. (jiven : Shakespeare Proof: Down! Down: — Henry ' l A touch! A touch! I do confess it. — llamlet More rushes. — I k-nr - ' l I ' ll catch it ere it comes to the groinid. — Macbeth Let him not pass, lint kill him. e must have blood ' noso and cracked crowns. --Henr ' I P)Ut to the goal. — Winter ' s Tale Therefore Shakespeare was a football fan. — Ex. Compliments ol ' ICY CLAIR CORP. LTD. MANUFACTURERS OF BIG BEAR BARS In Appreciation of Your Patronage NOrmandy 4201 ;3408-10-12 Glendale Blvd., Los Angeles, California ,{... — .. , ,„, U U M (I K 197 To the Winter Class of 1983: Compliments of the Independent Printers Supply Company, Inc. NeM ' and Used Printing Machinery and Complete Composing Room Equipment, Type and Printer ' s Supplies. Dee-dee : ' What a tiny cat ! T. WaltDii: Well, vou see, 1 liniu,L;ht it up un cciiulensed cream. Telephone TRinity 8674 NEW ENGLAND MEAT CO. WHOLESALERS Meats, Fish, Poultry and FAMOUS NEW ENGLAND CORNED BEEF 706 Ceres Ave. Los Angeles, Cal. Bedrosian : ( lUess this riddle. What has four legs, fur, says ' meow ' and has nine lives? Esther Hinden: A cat. Bedrosian : . w. someone told von ! . — + LOS ANGELES BARBERS ' BEAUTY SUPPLY CO. Beauty Parlor Equipment and Supplies 555-7-9 So. Los Angeles St. TRinity 3734 + Maulhardt : • I ' hinking- cjf me ' Hindin: ( )h. was I laughing? I ' m .so sorry. San Francisco Oakland SUR-VAL BOX LUNCH CO., INC. 602 Mateo St. Los .Angeles FA. 11 7(; Long Beach — + i M. A. Hoffman President Box Lunches Sandwiches For All Occasions 198 Good Candy THE ARTISAN W ' 33 ,+ R. M. CROSS Popular Numbers Thank you for your Patronage Congratulations to the Class of S ' 32 Mother: I don ' t think the man upstairs wants Johnny to play his fh-uni. Father: Why? Mother: Well, this afternoon he gave Johnny a knife and asked him if he knew what was inside the drum. + 1 PAUL BURGESS— SUNSHINE STUDIOS EVERYTHING THAT ' S PHOTOGRAPHIC GREETING CARDS 4207 South Vermont n — iiii Jimmy Hall (in swimming) : Are you quite sure there aren ' t any crocodiles about here? Negro on shore : Yes, sah ; de sharks done chased ' em all away, sah. PACIFIC PLATINUM WORKS, INC. REFINERS AND DEALERS Platinum, Gold, and Silver 814 South Spring St. ,!•„ „„ „i. What was the name of the last station we stopped at, mother? I don ' t know. Be quiet, I ' m trying to work out a cross word puzzle. It ' s a pity you don ' t know, mother, hecatise little Oscar got off the train there. + 1 Dependable Prescriptions Exquisite Perfumes CHARLES DRUMM, DRUGGIST Courteous Service Fountain Lunch HUMOR 199 , — , „._., ._.+ VErmont 0174 Open Till 9 P. M. We Handle Our Own Contracts V-8 4 10 Successful Years Los Angeles Vermont at Fifty-Second ■ The minister called at the Etter home on Sunday afternoon, and little Bill answered the bell. Pa ain ' t home, he announced. He went over to the golf club. The minister ' s brow darkened, and Bill hastened to explain. Oh, he ain ' t gonna ])lav any golf. He just went over for a few highballs and a little stud poker. NEVERSOIL RUBBER PRODUCTS CO. j Manufacturers of j Chemistry Aprons Sleeves Matting Gloves j Laboratory Coats Raincoats Mats Tubing j 609-11-13 Santa Fe Avenue Los Angeles, California J Mr. Justived: What did you do to the meat? It has such a funny taste. Mrs. Justived : Oh, nothing. It did get a little burnt, but I fixed that — I applied unguentine at once. With the Compliments of 1 CALIFORNIA FLORAL COMPANY j 106 South Spring Street TUcker 3421 Graduation Flowers EAT MORE POP CORN Nothing Better To Eat It Produces Lots of Energy STAPLES AND RUSLING School Pop Corn Service Popped in the Seasoning 531% Santa Barbara Avenue Phone ATlantic 8376 200 T J-1 E A R T I S A X W ' 33 Aha! The Editor Speaks Bv Bdli RiDCW A ' LI. DURING THE SEMESTER the pour ..Id editor % iL-els and stagjjers under his load, cheered only li ' the . thou,t;ht that he can t he imprisoned for editing a hum Artisan. He has a staff, which is to sav that he has fif- teen or twenty good friends who are willing to have their pic- tures on a s])ecial page if they don ' t have to do any work. If the editor dies they serve as ])all-hearers. ' hen the Artisan is about done the editor gets real angry and writes some some libel against his staff, which is censored. So the editor has to write something real nice about his staff to fill bob ridgwav up a blank page, but he really feels very frothy. ( Hark! I hear the staff liaving in the distance ! Ridgway will hang tonight. ) This .semester Don Cook was assistant editor. Hon is a .Senior Ik-e and is a real nice l)o -. .Stod Herbert drew ])ictures. when he wasn ' t bragging. He is antJther nice boy, and the pictures are rather snarky. eh? . nd Mr. Eslick is just as clever as his picture indicates. When he wasn ' t bus)- editing the Weekly and being photo- graphed he was a big hel]). He loaned me a pencil one day. too. The rest of the staff was a wow at injecting wim, wigor and witalitv into the Artisan. P)ob Welshons was really a wonderful help, being an editor in ex ' erv re- spect e. ce])t in name. He ' s an All; may I recconimend him for editor ? Mr. Hansen devoted many hours to proving that my ideas were wrong. He also gave me instructions in bullying the staff, but I was a poor pui)il. My hat is off. and I speak sincerely, to Mr. ( Ireenup, chairman of the printing de])artment, as able a ]5rinter and as fine an advisor as these tired eyes have spotted s])t)tted in lo, these many years. He scared me horribly every week, but he certainl) ' deserves credit for heli)ing to make ye Artisan a success. Mr. XelsiMi, printing instructor, did a lot of the hartlest work and supervised the rest. He contributed a great deal of his spare time to .Artisan work when time was short. If you like the Artisan cover, mail your orchids to Mr. Reeder, who super- ised the binding. Mr. .Schwankovsky ' s was the busy mind behind the art work. (Iroup photo- graphs were taken by Mr. Woods. Lettering was under the directii n of ] Iiss Jones. To you. Madame and Mes.sers. go great goi)s of orchid . T ' oor old King Hamill is the next editor. Let nie gi e him some s])ace be- fore he begins to suffer. He ' s a fine fellow. .Manual, and ought to put out a classy book. II L ' Al () R • 3)1 JMaiiual is uni(|Uf in that all phases of senior hook production, cxrept ]ihoto- engraving, takes place within the school. The following is a list of student printers and liinders who aided in making this . rtisan a good (jue. except one ( Ireek lellow whose name has heen copyriglited hy a cross-word puzzle syndicate: George . cki-i-, (.ross Hedmsiaii. Rubcrt liuriis. .lack Cutler, William Dii-ksoii, Clarence iJcmnelly, William Kccles. Raymiind (inttschar. C.us Hall, Bob Johiisdii, Steve Kemioy, incem Kuskey, Ray McDaiiiel. Alford Xclsoii, Warren Peterson, .-Xllan Roberts, . l Spires, Mark Staten. Clifford Tabb, Robert Thorstens. . rthn r Wasson, Robert Welslions, Frank Engle. Lonie Acosta, Robert Bazell, Cbarles Cope, Don Cook, (leorge Co.k , David Kdwards, Jack Downs, Leonard Krickson, Arthur Kslick, Israel Eskenazi. Ward Faoro, Bernard (Jreen, Mel- cbeor Groven, King Hamill, Rowland Howe, Ray Marken, Milo Marken, Jim McBride, Wil- liam Xighswander, Bob Ridgway. I,ouis Rizzn. Ricliard Rnndle, Bill Shealy, Jesse Sbetley, Richard Smith. Jack Trethewey, Duane Wilce. Martin Bassist. Jack Beattie. Clinton Benell. Bill Bleick. Harold Clinton, Bill Comerford, Roy Covington, Bob Engstroni, Joe Farley, Xorman Forsberg, Ben Frenkle, Robert Ground- water, Clarence Harnick, Kennetb Hayes, Flarl Hebard, Harold Jones, Roy Kennedy, Eddie L ' Honunedieu, Bob . larineau, Sam Picone, Bill Plax, Milton Schuck, Bennie Spitzer, Darrell Tanner, Wesley W inchell, Robert Romaine. Oliver Anderson, Gerard Adams, Clinton Benell, F l vard Cruse, Tom Covington, James Davis, James Gardner, Theo Gerber, tariff Ginthner. Clarence Harnick, George Hicks, Chester Ingham, Handy Moore, Lareon Moore. Cliarles Patilkj. La Mar Payne. Carl Posey, Everette Ruckman. Laurence Rippengal. FIddie Safady, Jesse Sbetley. Manuel Spilholz, George Swahn, Leonard L ' nruh, Robert Walsh, Tom Walton, Marvin Westfall. Arthur Anderson, Jack Calhoun, Jack Gervais, Jennie Herstine, Dayton Hoefelmeier, Edward Jobe, Gwen Lucas, William Xigbswander, John Picot, F verette Ruckman, Edward Safady, Harry Sinkowsky, Robert Townsend, Jack Thomas, Max Wisotsky, George Hicks, Gerard Adams, Ralph Rosemond, Marvin Goldstein. Israel Bessonny, Bill Bleick, Edward (ioldman. Ray Gottschar, Clarence Harnick, Martin Jackson. Bob Johnson, Don James, Roger Kobler, ' incent Kuskey, Charles Patillo, Warren Peterson. Jack Rosenberg, Robert Thorstens, . lbert Toledo, Everett Oshier, Dan ' an Meter, Booth Woodruff, Fred Wolf. Cross Bedrosian. Jim Chancellor. Don Cook, Sam Patterson, Don Lankton, Wilbur Fel- nagle, Arnold Burghardt, Maneos Scolinos, William Dickson, Melvin Erickson, Oscar Rivera, Elliott Jemmett, Charles Knox, Ray Gruber. Ray Marken, Howard Davis, Allen Roberts, Tbeodore Gerber, Jack Tretheway, Tom Covington, David White, . rt Satterfield. Fldward Bresnik. Mario Bustamente. Bert Davidson. Jack Downs, . rthur Dennis, Leonard F ickson, Xorman F ' rosberg, Thurlow Eraser, Robert Hamer. James Hendricks. George Cox. Walter Mclntyre. Don Parry, Archie Pieper, Eddie Polo, Edward Riggs, Al .Spires, Mitsu L ' sui. Katsumi Yuki. 202 • T H E A R T I S A N W 33 Finis Bv Bob Ridgway rHE CURTAIN COMES DOWN upon the last act of drama; the con- ■ ductor ' s flourish brings the symphony to a smashing finale; so to most things come finis, but not to that creed, that philosophy of pilots and adventurers. Nor sword nor fire nor fall of monarchs ever quenched man ' s spirit of adven- ture. There were always those who looked toward the horizon, since some shaggy brute of a primordial race led his people southward before the glacial flow. For every great crisis there is a leader. It has always been so. Some have failed, as must be the case when leader is ])itted against leader, but no man ' s failure ever discouraged the true pilot. Pilots are men who expect adversity, for if there were no hardshi])s the ]3eo])le would ask no one to assume leadership. This age is a challenge to pilots, and to all the lore and cunning that men have acquired through the ages. Man have set up edifices that have usurped the majesty of mountains ; they have soared into the stratosjihere. burrowed beneath the crust of the earth, explored the ocean floor and spoken to each other from opposite ends of the world. The very elements have been robbed of dignity and put to servile tasks. Now by tile very complexity of their civilization, men find themselves con- fused. The past is a succession of marvels ; the future waits the lifting of the veil, and men pause irresolute, seeking the weapons with which to combat future terrors. Now let young men prove the foundation of Western civilization, select the proper weapons, and lead the new advance of nations toward the Utopia which they envision. Let the young men and young women, the greater part of whose life has been spent in absorbing the knowledge unfolded by their predecessors, prove the soimdness of the Amercian edcatioiial structure and confort the problems of this and future years with confidence and success. Let the Pilot class of Manual Arts High School evince a clear concept of the duties they will be called upon to assume, and arm themselves against the rigors of later life by adding to find their fund of knowledge at every opportunity. Let those who follow the Pilot class to leadershi]) within this infinitesimal ].)ortion of the world embrace their own opportunities for education. Let them recognize the su- preme importance of this tiny world of Manual Arts, and the tiny worlds that surround it, to the future of this nation and mankind in general. V ■tJ y ■ v- ) ' r ( xhwes 0% i t h V - - oiM. ' i ' C - ! ,- - - -.- - ' = ' K- tgitatures ignatiuTS -f A r A ■■ .. , ■•tit; ■7-- ' i-:fr:;;j ' ■-.-yi-v. ■ ' :i ' a w ?i EF 5§ jt; aL • ' Si.L- ' .?.. ■-■ r LKr ■s py iii ' j ivmnv M lll ' S M ' } % V 1 ...--.. W r f% ' f .mMx cvi:.-c- .- -7t cy .. A This Artisan ' ipi issiidd al Manual Arts High School. ' 9. 1933. )v the class oj ' r ' 4 ' ciity-sci ' cn liundrcd sch ooUs—RuJiUsh inn bK Y r j - ? lKi VT MANUAL ARTS 4-IIGH SCHOOL LOS T N ELES c-ALIFOR N l-A ' H (TU ' CJ H- a t- L. ■ C-t t C - TAIUJC OF CONTIuVTS FfJKF.WOUD Alma Mater Seniors ORaANfzATlOiV Athletics ■ wlcrgrfc AND Dkam ' a d ? . iMlHTARY ; Features School Life iiUMORTAND Advertisement Index V ' f i - IaU tacee .V. IIAVK ArX)PTI ' :D a fine name for the c6 rTlK- master the sea is one emlKxlying strent th. courage, cliances cJk the sea call individual traits which mnstr con forever he eath the triumphant seas. The recent disas tew ' j the Maijiner lass, met it trial and acf|uitt ' the student hocli ledlV the Majfmer lass, met This spirit has ' llso flt)V l)int6 thisfciopk, % m he unnoted. - ( H L , it a value which otherwise would c:-, Another tharactel-istic of th(fSe.ivfe -fctfU ' ilV3i?a T it self-confidence and indcV idencj inherent witl rtfieir Inxlies. nWver. for all this self-reliance, at i« tiSdoes tl(e )ea-r(lWk)se his position H relation to the rest of the world. W ith- nit the Viii ' lahc of hiV Nlart. comi a!« anfj log. the course of the captain would he nmless.-|iKl ins voyage folly. Tlfe adventure of life has often been com )ared to an ocean v.i|:igc. The example set for us is a good ono- iwfli)alhy. tolyrance. and sing them well, |Safe pas- lica). kW intelligei ' lt effort are mdicalors for all humanity. B, Ua ' e s ' ])rohal)le, and a (luH- ' t harhor inevitable. ■ ' e have not gained tfiS use. of tljtse q in our high Whool Jife _ u grad- on does ,notvC«dow us wg th v sdomY)rAiMerstan ling. .ViT .eiMcatlcjn we may hav beeji forluiia ' enough to nVikcy orV;own is ' ipigiJe. aiiXiteniiwrary. . jtem-l ty om ill-jilanjW yesteivJay, alm Ikrom an 1 lTsTTi-e s into di tsta h hd uiVc ' rtli ' Jjty. j[ - uii(j[yr for weep sliip ..,.... .-„- . t 1 EntbusiasticV jargon, at ? is dl tressAg Jeriod, is mockery. Mrx-. l) n Tfcai)ped for lack of inti ' lhuVi; ■ rtti ' aty his diitress before. stvjdArts ' afeienlering Mo life h ndTcaiiped tor lack o lin . Tn n)anv. the conveiTlHinal f)latitudes established as a i oiy ' seem inadequl e an superficial. What then, is the way loi| raiting fotHhi yojiYg ' vigor and energy? n exhaiistofl w ersliip which i nly for tremendous (j hope of the early expii ' to ]nish our banners ward the realization ijf edge. The seas arc frie he new courage, the fresh n supi)ly. There i.s much w fpund only in the willin tlMfied with J;oday ' s se ecedented horizons. Let •rei hHniajih j nd an advan •hVdares fling out his sails 7 THE ARTISAN EDITORS King Hamii.i., Maxacixg Editor Alex F. Hansex, Advisek Clarence Harnick, Associate Editor Ella Marie Karr, Art Iumtor Paul Burdick, Associate Editor SIB GELDBERG ADVERTISING DOROTHY VOOD CLASS HISTORY KENNETH MURPHY ' DRAI-tAT!CS ELLEN YEAKEL GIRLS ' SPORTS ROBERT HAMER LtTTERTNS RALPH JONES SNAPSHOTS GEORGE HUCK PHOTOGRAPHY CHARUSMACPHERSON HUMOR RUTH AfERS STENOGRAPHY Night, Leading Lights ) £ . t - L J ..i coA L.- . -- tJ 7 - - y Z.- , -r -. 7 mii To Walks among the Flowers - -t s - ' Tr. ' ' .Jta -O J J S Victory Lane TO THE MARINERS Hail to the mighty Alariiiers. Long- may their fame endure. Their shiji is safe and homeward liound Success is theirs for sure. Far on the Ijriny storm-tossed seas. They fought the fight and won. They braved the worst of hurricanes. Withstood the tropic sun. Once back in port no one will need. To know how they will fare. The future rests upon the past. There is no cause for care. 18 T H E A R T I S A N S ' 33 SENIOR PRESIDENT ' S AIESSAGE It is not without a great deal of regret that we l)i(l our last sad adieu tci Manual. During the past three years we have enjoyed many pleasures, formed many friend- ships, and learned many things which will be of great value to us in living our lives. We are now about to enter a new world — a strange environment — where we will have to establish new relations, form new friendships, and learn many of the real lessons of life. It is my most sincere wish that each member of the class may be able to meet his problems with the same determined spirit that the Mariners have alwavs shown when confronted 1j_ ' difficulty. Merrill Knox S E K I O R S 19 THE SKMOR A CABINET Merrill Knox. President John Doto, Vice-President Eloise Russell. Vice-President Viola Beisner, Secretary William Tweedy, Treasurer 20 THE ARTISAN W ' 33 THE SENIOR B CABINET Booth Woodhiuk. PKF.smKNT RussEU. Nkwman. ice-Prf.siiik.nt Mary Lee Kelley LeOra Leahy, Secretary Robert Johnson, Treasurer SENIORS 21 THE ADVISERS Vernon Hodhe Florence Ames Edith Bruckman Iris Fields Paul Mitchem Herman Hess 22 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 ABERG, MARGARET Secretarial Club 2. 3 Commercial Club 2, 3 G. S.G. 2 Spanish Club 2 Treasurers ' Association 2 Home Economics Club 3 ACOSTA, F. LOUIS A. B. S. Cabinet 4 Treasurer 4 Weekly Staff 1. 2 Circulation Manager Character-Citizenship Committee Officers ' Club 4 President 4 Council 2, 3 Treasurers ' Association 1, 2 Non-Com Club President Serg:eant-at-arms Boys ' Court Bailiff 4 Military Police 1, 2. 3, Boys ' Self Government 3, 4 ADDIS. MARGARET Euodia Club 2.3,4 Natural History Club 2. 4 Cammercial Club 3 Secretarial Club 3. 4 AKIMOTO. MARTHA AKIMOTO. NED Chemistry Club 3 Class C Football 2 Class B Football 3, 4 ALLEN. MARY JANE ALPAUGH. WALTON ANDERSON. CARL Manual Knights 4 BiK M Society 3. 4 President 4 Varsity Track 3.4 Cross Country 3 ANDERSON. CLAUDIA Belmont Hish School Tri-Y 4 Commercial Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 Gym Club 4 ANDERSON. RUTH Jefferson High School Commercial Club ARNOLD. RICHARD ARUNDEL. ADELIA AYERS. RUTH C. S. F. 4 Scholarship Society 2, 3, 4 Artisan Staff 4 Latin Club 2. 3 Euodia Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 Girls ' League 4 Ann Street 4 Vice-President 4 ANDERSON. VINCENT Lyric Club 4 Natural History Club 3 Gladiola Club 3 Secretarial Club 2 Secretarial Club 2 SENIORS BACHMAN. EVELYN BAER. LILLIAN G. A. A. 2. -i. 4 Girls ' Court 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3. -1 Girls ' League 2 Gym Team 3 BAKER. ALTHEA Inglewood Hitxh School 2 World Friendship 4 Latin Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee House of Representatives 2 Modes and Manners 3 Secretarial Club 3 BAKER, GERALDINE BARBER. DOROTHY BARNES. WILLIAM S. B. O. Cabinet 4 President Senior B Cabinet 4 Boys ' Vice-President Council 4 President Manual Knights 4 Merit Board 4 Board of Finance 4 Senior Forum 4 Character Citizenship Com. 4 Varsity Basketball 4 Chemistry Club 3 BARR. PAUL Fremont High School BAUDER. DOROTHY Commercial Club Secretarial Club Natural History Club BEACH. ELEANOR G. A. A. 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 Secretarial Club 3. 4 Girls ' League 3. 4 Euodia Club 3. 4 Scholarship Society 4 BEAM. LAWRENCE BEETHAM. MIRIAM BEISNER. VIOLA Senior A Cabinet Secretary 4 Senior B Cabinet Secretary 4 Players ' Company 3, 4 Scholarship Society 4 Latin Club 2. 3. 4 Secretary 3 Girls ' League Ann Street Committee 2, 3 Secretary 3, 4 Chemistry Club 3 Cast: When Horns Blow 3 BELDEN, CAROLINE Spanish Club 2. 3 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Commercial Club 3 Euodia Club 3. 4 School Beautiful 4 BELL. PHYLLIS Lincoln High School, Polytechnic High School A Cappella Choir U s 24 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 BENNETT, NORMA CATHERINE BERGER. BARABARA LEE Santa Ana Polytechnic Hiph School Latin Club 4 BERRYMAN. EDWARD BIUWELL. ROBERT BIGGS. ELBERTA Spanish Club 2 Latin Club 4 Euodia Club 2, 3 BIXLER. OTTO Scholarship Society 2. 4 Chemistry Club 3. 4 R. O. T. C. 2 Safety Committee 4 Chess Club 3. 4 Secretary-Treasurer 4 BLEVINS. RALPH Austin Hieh School. Austin, Tex. Childress High School Childress. Texas BLYTHE. MINOR BOOMER, HECTOR BRACA. ALBERT BRADLEY. DOROTHY Euodia Cub 3. 4 World Friendship Club 4 Natural History Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee 3 A Cappella Choir 3 BRAND. DELAVAN BRENT, ARTHUR BREUNIG. JACK Weekly Staff Assistant Sports Editor 4 Artisan Staff 4 Sports Editor 4 Varsity basketball 2, 4 Varsity Track 4 Stamp Club 4 Traffic Committee 2 SENIORS 25 BRISCOE, WINIFRED Commercial Club 3 Secretarial Club 3 Orthopedic Committee 3 Ann Street Committee 3 BRISTOW. THOMAS N. BROWER, HERBERT LEONARD BROWN. AUSTIN Artisan Staff Letterer BROWN, ELEANOR Gladiola Club 2. 3 BROWN, MARIAN BRUCE, BOB Aeolian Club 3. 4 San Bernardino, High School BRUNNER, ANNA German Club 3, 4 Euodia Club 2, 3. 4 Music Club 4 BURDICK, PAUL Scholarship Society 2, 4 Artisan Staff 4 Latin Club 2, 3 B. S. G. 2, 3 Chemistry Club 3 Junior Forum 2, 3 Treasurers Association 2. 3 Safety Committee 4 BURNS, JIMMIE Class C Track Class B Track Varsity Track Latin Club Ice Skating Club German Club Huntington Park High School BURKS. PAULINE LOUISE BUSTAMANTE. MARIO S. B. O. Cabinet 4 A. B. S. President 4 A. B. S. Cabinet 4 Senior Forum 3,4 Manual Knights 4 Class C Track 2 Class B Track 3 Varsity Track 4 Class C Football 2 Class B Football 3 A. B. S. Council 4 CADDOW. GILBERT R. CADRANEL, JOSEPH L. Scholarship Society C. S. F. Award R. O. T. C. Officers ' Club Treasurer B. S.G. Cabinet Boys ' Court Council Senior Orchestra Chemistry Club Chess Club 26 THE A R T I S A N S ' 33 CALFAS. HELEN CAMPEROS, DENA Girls ' BiK M 4 G. A. A. 2, 3, 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 G. S. G. 2. 3. 4 Commercial Club 2, 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee Ann Street. President 3, 4 Orthopedic Committee School Beautiful Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Citizenship Committee 4 CANFIELD. DOROTHY SecreUrial Club 2. 3. 4 Secretary Vice-President Girls ' Lyric Club 3, 4 Treasurer G. A. A. 3 Commercial Club 3, 4 Girls ' League 3. 4 Ann Street Committee G. S.G. 3. 4 CANFIELD. RAY CARL. NATHAN Chemistry Club 3 Scholarship Society 4 CARTER. ETHEL L. Senior Orchestra 2. 3 Lyric Club 4 Euodia Club 2 Music Club 2. 3. 4 Stamp Club 2 Girl Reserves 2 A Cappella Choir 2. 3. 4 Secretarial Club 3. 4 CASSELL. VIRGINIA Weekly Staff 4 Scholarship Society 2, 3. 4 C. S. F. Pin 4 Senior Forum 4 G. A. A. French Club 2, 3. 4 President 4 Ann Street 2 Hospitality 4 Friendship 4 Chemistry Club 3 Junior Forum 2. 3 CAYWOOD. WILLIAM CHAUSSE. FLOE World Friendship Club 4 Natural History Club 4 Girls ' League Committee 4 CHERRY, ROBERT CHICKERING. GERRY Aeolian Club 3. 4 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 3 President 4 Aviation Club 3. 4 CHUDACOFF. BESSIE CLARKE. EARL CLARK. WILLIAM Spanish Club 2. 3. 4 World Friendship Club 4 R. O. T. C. 2 Stamp Club 2 Physics Club 4 Natural History Club 2 SENIORS CLEMONS. EDWARD NEIL Prep Hi Y 2 Treasurers ' Association 3 World Friendship Club 3 Aviation Club 2. 3 Chemistry Club 3 Physics Club 4 CLIFFORD. MARGARET Commercial Club 2 Spanish Club 1 Girls ' Leatiue 2 Hospital Committee Council 2 CLINTON. HAROLD Varsity Football BiK M Society B. S. G. CLOUGH. ROSEMARY Alpena Hif?h School. Alpena, Michigtan COBURN. FLORENCE G. S. G. 2. 3. 4 Cabinet 3. 4 Secretarial Club 3. 4 Girls ' Leaeue 3, 4 COHEN, ABRAHAM COHEN. PHIL B. S. G. 3 Bii; M 4 Roosevelt Hifrh School 2 Spanish Club 3 Senior Forum 4 Chemistry Club 3 A. B. S. 3 Treasurers ' Association 3 Ticket Seller 4 COHEN. VICTOR C. Natural History Club 2 B. S. G. 2, 3. 4 Aud Committee 2. 4 Latin Club 3. 4 COHEN. ZELDA Secretarial Club Commercial Club G. S. G. Spanish Club COLBATH. EDWARD Treasurers ' Association Aeolian Club 3, 4 Cabinet 4 Players ' Company 3, 4 Publicity Manager 4 Club Director 4 Cast Pot Boiler Taming of the Shrew COLBY. OWEN Merit Board 3. 4 President 4 Senior Hi-Y 3, 4 Scholarship Society 4 B. S. G. 3, 4 COOK. CHARLES B, S, G. 3. 4 A Cappella Choir 3, 4 Toiler Club 4 Stage Crew 4 R. O. T. C. 2 COPSON, HARRY Football Band 2 Chemistry Club 3 CORDOVA. ISAAC B. S. G. y 4 28 T H E A R T I S A N S ' 33 CORRIE. MARGARET S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Secretary 4 Senior Forum 4 Players ' Company 3, 4 Council 4 Secretarial Club 4 Character. Citizenship Com. 4 Girls ' League 4 G. S. G. 4 CORTELYOU, CATHRYN Scholarship Society 2. 3. C. S. F. Award Lyric Club 3. 4 Senior Forum 3, 4 Junior Forum 3 COUTS. LOUIS Class B Football 2. 4 World Friendship CRAMKK. ALBKRTA CRANDELL. DAVE Varsity Track 3. 4 Council 2. 3 CRAWFORD, JOSEPH Eastside High School, Paterson. New Jersey Hoover High School. Glendaie. California CRIBBS. LUCY Girls ' League Committee 2 Natural History Club 2 Gladiola Club 4 CUBITT, DOROTHY Secretarial Club Commercial Club CULLEN, BETSY G. A. A. 3. 4 Merit Board 4 Citizenship Committee 4 CULNAN. ROBERT Chemistry Cluh 3, 4 Radio Club 2, 3 Latin Club 2, 3 Key Department 3. 4 Manager 4 CURTIS, FRANCES CURTIS. EMMA LOU German Club 4 World Friendship Club 4 Natural History Club 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 CUTTS, BILL Senior Hi-Y 2. 3 Manual Stiuires 4 Stage Crew 2. 3. 4 Toiler Club 2 B. S. G. 2 Safety Committee 3 BABCOCK, PEARL SENIORS 29 DAHLIN. VIOLET DANKY. PHIL R. O. T. C. 2. 3, 4 Non-Com Club 3, 4, Military Police 2. 3. 4 Spanish Club 4 Polytechnic High Los Angeles California 2 DAUGHERTY, RAY Prep Hi Y 2 President 2 Vice-President 2 Stage Crew 3. 4 DAVIDSON. JEAN G. A. A. Girls ' League Commercial Club Secretarial Club DAVIS. DORIS DAVIS, IRENA DAVIS. HELEN Secretarial Club 4 Commercial Club 2. 3, 4 Home Economics Club 2 DAVIS. JOHN Aeolian Club DAVIS. JOYCE Lyric Club 4 Modes and Manners 4 Secretary 4 Secretarial Club 3. 4 School Beautiful 2 DE FAZIO. JOHN Commercial Club 2 B. S. G. 4 Class B Track 4 Traffic Committee 4 Council 3 DETWEILER. FRANCES Scholarship Society 2, 4 C. S. F. Award Senior Forum 4 Latin Club 2, 3, 4 G. S. G. 3. 4 Chairman Aud Committee House of Representative 3 Council 4 A Cappella Choir 4 President DEVLIN. JANE Secretarial Club 2 Girls ' League Cabinet 4 Orthopedic Committee 3. 4 Chairman 4 Hospitality Committee 4 Chairman 4 G. S. G. 4 Scholarship Society 4 Ann St. Committee 2. 3. 4 DEVORKIN, HOWARD Scholarship Society 3, 4 Chemistry Club 3. 4 Chemistry Team 3 German Club 2. 3 Chess Club 3. 4 DICKEY. FRANK Chemistry Club 3. 4 Non-Com Club 3 Chess Club 2 R. O. T. C. 2. 3 A. B. S. 2. 3. 4 30 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 DIDAK. EMIL Chemistry Club 4 Prep Hi-Y 2 DILDINE. DICK Roosevelt High School, Des Moines, Iowa 2. 4 DINGMAN, DOROTHY Junior Forum 3 G. S. G. 3 Girls ' League 4 Council 3 DICKSON. LILLIAN Stripling High School. Fort Worth, I ' exas Centennial High School, Pueblo. Colorado DOOLITTLE. JEANNE G. A. A. 3, 4 Senior President 4 World Friendship 3 Hollywood High School, Hollywood, California DONALDSON. HAROLD Manual Knights 4 Manual Squires 4 Senior Forum 4 President 4 Schoter|Up Society 3. 4 Junior l orum 2. B. r President SeniiT Brchjitra 2. 3. 4 OfJifers ' Ofit 4 stamp Club 2 Chess Club 2. 3 Chemistry Club 3 DOYLE. HAZEL Loretta Academy. Toronto. Canada Secretarial Club 3, 4 Orthopedic Committee 4 Commercial Ciub 4 G. S. G. 2. 3. 4 DURAND, KENNETH Treasurers ' Association 2 R. O. T. C. 2 Stamp Club 2 Chess Club 3 Chemistry Club 3 A. B. S. 3 EDWARDS. JOSEPHINE Spanish Club 2 Girls ' League 2 EDELMANN, DELBERT German Club 2, 3. 4 Chemistry Club 3, 4 SENIORS ELLENBERG, HARRY ELLSWORTH. HELEN Council 2 Natural History Club 2 Commercial Club 3 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 Secretarial Club 3, 4 ELLSWORTH, RALPH B. S. G. Treasurers ' Aassication World Friendship Club ERBSEN. JOHN Commercial Club Commercial Office Manager Treasurer Treasurers ' Association Vice-President A. B. S. Aviation Club ETO. HITOKO EVANS. GERTRUDE LUCILLE EYER. STERLING G. S. G. 2 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 Spectator Staff 4 FARMER. VIRGINIA Scholarship Society 2. 3. G. S. G. 2 French Club 2 Ann Street Committee 2 31 V FARRIER. MILDRED Girls ' Rifle Team 4 Natural History Club 4 Girls ' Glee Club 2. 3 FELNAGLE, WILBUR FERGUSON. BETTY Weekly Staff Scholarship Society C. S. F. Award Press Club FIEDLER. ALYCE Junior Glee Club 2 Music Club 2. 3 Spanish Club 2. 3 Secretarial Club 4 Modes and Manners 3 FIKE, VIRGINIA Weekly Staff Secretarial Club Home Economic Club Ann Street Committee School Beautiful Committee Hiph School. Portland. Oregon FIELDS. LENA Girl Reserves 2. 3 Secretary 3 Committee Chairman 3 32 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 GENTILE, ANNA LIVIA Secretarial Club Commercial Club GENUIT, CHARLES Miami Beach High School, Miama Beach, Florida Chatham High School, Chatham, New Jersey Irvington High School, Irvington. New Jersey Washington High School, Los Angeles, California Weekly Staff 4 GERVAIS. JACK A. B. S. 3 Treasurers Association 3 GHARET. ETHEL French Club 2 Euodia Club 2, 3. 4 Vice-President 4 GILBERT, EDMUND Gym Team 1, 2, 3 Big M Society 3 Symphonic Orchestra 3 Senior Orchestra 1. 2, 3 String Ensemble 1, 2 Harmony Club 1, 2, 3 Instrument Trio 1. 2. 3 Stage Crew 2, 3 GIUSENEZ. ANTIONETTE GLENCROSS, DOROTHY Girls Judge 4 Players ' Company 4 GOLD, MARVIN Bennett High School, Buffalo, New York Scholarship Society 4 B. S. G. 2, 3. 4 Chemistry Club 3. 4 Chess Club 3, 4 Treasurers Association 1 GOLDMAN, HELEN Commercial Club 3, 4 Secretarial Club 3, 4 Girls ' League 2, 3. 4 Cast: Pied Piper of Hamlin 2 Dancing Club 3, 4 GOODRICH, MARY E. GOLDSMITH, BERNICE Lyric Club Commercial Club 2 Girls ' Rifle Team 3 GOLDSTEIN, HERBERT Council 2 Varsity Golf Team 3 Big M Society 4 Senior Forum 4 GOURLEY, FRANCES GRANDALL, CHARLES Non-Coms ' Club 3, 4 R. O. T. C. 2. 3, 4 SENIORS 33 GREEN. BETTY Scholarship Society 4 Girls ' League Committee 3, Spanish Club 3 A Cappella Choir 2 GREIDER. BLANCHE V. GRIFFITH, BETTY Los Anj3:eles HiKh School Music Club Secretarial Club Junior Orchestra GUTTERMAN, ELIZABETH Washington High School Los Angeles High School Lyric Club 3, 4 Secretary 4 A Cappella Choir 4 Hospital Committee 4 GUZMAN, SALVADOR Spanish Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Vice-President 2 President 3 Music Club 4 World Friendship Club 2, 3. 4 Vice-President 4 Stamp Club 2, 3 Chemistry Club 3 Cross Country 4 Varsity Track 4 Prep Hi Y 2 HABIF, ELIAS HALL, ANNE ESTELLE HALL, LIZZETTA Tri-Y 4 S_ ' cretarial Club 4 Commercial Club Secretary HALLETT, DOROTHY Commercial Club 3 HALVORSEN. ROY C. HAMER. ROBERT Artisan Staff 4 Lettering 4 Assistant Photographer 4 Stamp Club 3 Natural History Club 3 B. S. G. 3 HAMILL, KING Artisan Staff 4 Editor 4 Scholarship Society 4 Class C Basketbell 3 Class B Basketball 4 Chemistry Club 3 Yell Leader 4 HANON, FERN BEATRICE HANSEN, RAYMOND 34 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 HANSEN, MARJORIE Tri-y Council Girls League G. S. G. HARE. ROBERT C. S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Weekly Staff 4 Editor 4 Aviation Club 2. 3, 4 Senior Forum 4 Class B Track 3 Chemistry Club 3. 4 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 2, 3 President 3 Council 4 HARNICK. CLARENCE Student Manager of Publishing:, S ' 33 Artisan Artisan Staff 4 Assistant Editor 4 Weekly Staff 4 Class B Track 3 Press Club 4 Scholarship Society 4 HARNSBERGER, JANE Treasurers Association 2, 3 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 Girls ' Gym Club 3 Girls League 2 House of Representatives 2 HARPER. LA VONNE HARTLEY, MILBERN HALEY, FRANK HECKENDORN, MARY Spanish Club Secretarial Club Girls League House of Representatives School Beautiful HEIGES, RALPH HELSEL, ROLLAND Aeolian Club 3. 4 President 3, 4 Senior Forum 4 Boys ' Court 4 Cast: Pied Piper of Hamlin Manual p our HENDERSON, S. E. Los Angeles High School I Polytechnic High School 2 HENDRICKS. JAMES HENRICKS. WILDA M. G. A. A. Treasurer President ,g M Society ' Secretary Secretary G. S. G. Artisan Staff Girls Sports Editor ■RZBERG. JACK Golf Team 4 Commercial Club 4 B. S. G. 4 Chemistry Club 3 Junior Forum 2 Toiler Club 2 SENIORS 35 HESS, DOROTHY Euodia Club 2. 3, 4 Natural History Club 1 Secretarial Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 2. 3 HEYWOOD. GLADYS WILSON Scholarship Society 2. 3 Senior Forum Latin Club Euodia Club G. S. G. Chemistry Club Junior Forum Spectator Staff HILLMAN. JOHN HODSON, CHARLES Aeolian Club 4 Gym Team 2 Boys Junior Gle e Club 3 HONEYCUTT. DONALD HORN. ROBERT W. Aviation Club 3, 4 Chemistry Club 2 Senior Orchestra 3. 4 Stage Crew 3. 4 HOWE, HOWLAND Gym Team 2, 3, 4 Hie M Society 3. 4 Class B Track 3 Class B Football 4 Varsity Track 4 R, O. T, C, 2 HORTON, BYRON HORTON, JAMES World Friendship Club Gladiola Club Natural History Club HOUSE, EDWIN S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Manager 4 Treasurers Association 2, 3 Box Office Crew 4 HOWREY, LA VONNE Senior Orchestra French Club Music Club String Ensemble Evanston Township High School Evanston, Illinois HUCK, GEORGE Aviation Club 2 B. S. G. 3 Artisan Staff 4 Photography 4 HUDSON, HOWARD ODELL Motion Picture Club 2, 3, 4 President 3, 4 R. O. T. C. 3, 4 R, O. T. C. 3, 4 Non-Coms ' Club 4 Junior Orchestra 4 HUG HES, RUTH 36 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 POPEYE. THE MARINiiR No biography can do justice to the illustrious careers and fame of the renowed line of the I ' opeyes. Their sturdy individualism and democracy can he traced through the most difficult periods of English and American history. They stood on the slippery decks with Raleigh and Drake for the glory of England and the downfall of Spain. They sailed with Captain Paul J(5nes to victory over the I ' arhary Pirates. They were on the battleships that liottled u]) a Spanish fleet in Culia. anil in the World War everyone is familiar with their great achievements and honors. The family came to California and added more lustre to its name by aiding in the arts of life and peace. A number of the F opeyes came to Manual Arts to grace that great school and to graduate with the Class of Summer ' 53. When the s]jirit of Popeye of Mariner fame was made the inunortal symbol of the Seaman of S ' 33 during that trying quake time, the week of March 10, the school and class were in safe hands. At the Senior A picnic (jn April 10. Popeye was officially introduced and almost forgot the simjjle and ]ihiloso])hical life in the greatness of the holiday. Many of the school ' s prominent organizations, the Knights, Squires, and Big M Society have elected him to their membership. Perha])s his grammar isn ' t always perfect, and maybe he does enjoy once in a while the spirit of fighting in a real cause, hut his is a true heart of gold, often heard of luU seldom found. Always a chamjjion of the less fortunate, a big brother to all the children, a lover of lil)erty and life, Popeye the homely philoso])her stands for the best ideals of youth and a mighty class, and they have given him first place in their hearts. SENIORS 37 FISHER. JACK FLAWS. VALENTINE Secretarial Club 3, i G. S. G. 3 Aud Committee World Friendship FLEISHMAN. DOROTHY Commercial Club 2. 3 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Dr. Wilson ' s Secretary 4 FRAMPTON, ORVILLE FREEDMAN. SOPHIE Spanish Club I, 2 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 1, 2. 3 G. S. G. 2 Orthopedic Club 2. 3 FRIEDMAN. DORIS Commercial Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 Music Club 1 FRIEDMAN. BELLA Roosevelt HiKh School. Los Anffeles. California Inplewood Hiph School Inplewood. California A Cappella Choir 4 Euodia Club 4 Music Club 4 FRIES. EDWARD Latin Club 2 Natural History Club 2 Drill Squad 4 Non-Com Club 3, 4 R. O. T. C. 2, 3, 4 German Club 4 FROST. HILDA Natural History Club 4 Orthopedic Committee 4 Gladiola Club 4 Euodia Club 4 Home Economics Club 4 FULLER. HELEN Lyric Club 3. 4 President 4 Senior Forum 3. 4 G. S. G. 3. 4 G. .S. G. Cabinet 4 Secretarial Club 4 Latin Club 2 Committee School Beautiful 2 FUNDER. FRED F. GALEOTTI. HARRY Senior Orchestra 3 Junior Orchestra 3 Commercial Club 4 GELDBERG. HERBERT Senior Forum 3. 4 Scholarship Society 3 Junior Forum 2, 3 Treasurer 2. 3 Chess Club 2. 3, 4 Secretary-Treasurer 3 President 4 GELDBERG, SID Latin Club 2 Junior Forum 2. 3 Chess Club 2. 3. 4 Chess Forum 4 Treasurer 4 Senior Forum 3. 4 Treasurer 4 Artisan Staff 4 Advertising Manager 4 38 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 HUGHES. JEAN Artisan Staff 4 Senior Forum 4 Scholarship Society 2 Latin Club 2. 3. 4 Treasurer 3 Junior Forum 2, 3 Ann Street Committee 3, 4 Treasurer 3 HURST. PHYLLIS John C. Fremont Hinh School Los Anpeles. California Scholarship Society 2. 3 Senior Forum 4 G. A. A. 4 Players ' Company 4 World Friendship Club 4 ILLINGWORTH. LELAND S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Scholarship Society 2. 3. 4 President 4 C. S. F. Award Senior Forum 4 Manual KniKhts 4 Safety Committee 4 Chemistry Club 3, 4 IMBS. MURIEL Latin Club 4 Euodia Club 3 Scholarship Society 4 Orthopedic Committee 3 Girls ' Junior Glee 1 JACKSON. EOLINE World Friendship Club 3 Secretarial Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 Natural History Club 3 O. G. A. Award 4 JACOBS. DOROTHY G. S. G. 2. 3 Girls ' League Committee 2. 3. 4 JACOBSEN. MARIE GeorBe Washington Hillh School Girls ' Rifle Team 3. 4 Secretarial Association 4 Commercial Club 4 Girls ' League 3 JARDEN. PEARL Tri-Y 4 Girls ' League 4 G. S. G. 3. 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 JACKSON, SARAH JOHNS. ALBERT Chemistry Club 3 Big M Society 4 Varsity Basketball 3 Class B Football 2 Varsity Track 3 JOHNSON, ROBERT JOHNSON, DOROTHY Spanish Clul) Commercial Club Chemistry Club Secretarial Association JOHNSON. WALTER German Club 2, 3, 4 Chemistry Club 3 Boys ' Junior Glee 2 A Cappella Choir 3 JONES, RALPH Aviation Club 4 Artisan Staff 4 SENIORS KAISER, EDMOND KALICK. AUDREY Latin Club 2. 3 Commercial Club 3. -I Girls ' Leacuc 2, 3, 4 ChemistryClnh 3 Secretarial Club 3, 4 KAPLAN, RUDOLPH Roosevelt HikH School Garfield Hich School KAPRIELIAN. HARRY Latin Club 2 Prep Hi-Y 2 KARR. ELLA MARIE Artisan Staff 4 Art Editor 4 Council 1 G. S. G. 3 Aud Committee 3 Girls ' League 3 Friendship 3 Hospitality 3 Girls ' Rifle Team 3 Natural History Club 2 Chemistry Club 2 Music Club 4 French Club 4 KARR, HORACE M. Chemistry Club 4 Ireton High School Ireton, Iowa Scholarship Society 4 Aeolian Club 3 Safety Committee 4 C. S. F. Award KAUFFMAN. JEROME KAUFFMAN, NORMAN KEITH, LOIS KELEHER, DOROTHY KEMP, JAMES KIRBY, JUDITH Latin Club 2. 3 World Friendship Club 4 Gladiola Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 Commercial Club 4 Girls ' Leaeue 4 KISTNER, CAKL German Club 3. 4 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 2 Chemistry Club 3 KLEIN, RUTH Girls ' League Secretarial Club Junior Forum Commercial Club Treasurers ' Association G. S. G. Modes and Manners Orthopedic Committee 39 40 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 KLEIN, KENNETH KLING, JEAN Home Economic Club 4 Secretarial Club 3 Commercial Club 3 KNODEL. ARTHUR Scholarship Society 2. 3, 4 C. S. F. Award 4 Junior Forum 2, 3 Senior Forum 4 Chemistry Club 3. 4 Spectator Staff 4 French Club 2. 3. 4 KNOX. MERRILL Senior B Cabinet 4 President 4 Senior A Cabinet 4 President 4 Squires 4 Manual Knights 4 Council 2, 4 KODAMA, HENRY KOHLER. ROGER KOMAI. DAN Class C Football 3. 4 Class C Track 4 KOON. DOROTHA WashinKton High School 3 Hollywood HiKh School 2 World Friendship Club 4 Commercial Club 4 Gladiola Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 Girls ' League 4 KOSKEY. THOMAS T. KRAUS. ELLA Commercial Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 G. A. A. 2. 3 Spanish Cluh 2 KRENEK. ARNOLD Aeolian C ' ub 3, 4 Manual Four 4 A Cappella Choir 2. 3 President 3 R. O. T. C. Band 3 Milby High School, Houston, Texas KRULL, HELENE ,ACY. ZOE G. S. G. 2, 3, 4 Modes and Manners LA MOTTE. CAROLINE Senior Orchestra 2. 3 Latin Club 2 Junior Orchestra 2 SENIORS 41 LAND, ETHEL Music Club 2. 3, 4 Home Economic Club 4 LANE. LEANORE Scholarship Society 2, 3. Secretary 3 C. S. F. Award 4 Senior Forum 4 Lyric Club 3 G. A. A. 4 Latin Club 2. 3. 4 Music Club 2. 3. 4 Friendship Committee 4 Hospitality Commitee 4 LATHAM, ELYNORE San Diego High School, San Diego, California LA VERNE, JUNE A Cappella Choir Secretarial Club G. S. G. Tri-Y Commercial Club Girl Reserves LEACH. RUTHLEE Artsian Staff 4 Players ' Company 2, 3. 4 Secretary-Treasurer 2 Vice-President 3, 4 Spanish Club 3 Junior Forum 3 Radio Club 4 Natural History Club 3 Cast: Where the Cross Is Made Alice in Wonderland Ramonce Is a Racket Taming of the Shrew Merchant of Venice LEFEVRE, ELSIE Commercial Club 2, 3, 4 Secretarial Club 3, 4 LEONARD, WALTER LEONARD, MARY Tri-Y Commercial Club Secretarial Club Home Economic Club Latin Club Girls ' League L. A. Catholic Girls ' High School LEVY, MEYER LIBENGOOD, ROBERT LLOYD, CAROLINE G. S. G. French Club LONG, DOROTHY LOWRY ' , ALEX Scholarship Society 3 German Club 2, 3, 4 Traffic Committee 4 Chemistry Club 3, 4 Treasurers ' Association 2, 3 LOYND, HAROLD Treasurers ' Association 3, 4 Class B Football r 11 E A R T I ' S A N S ' 33 LUESCHEN, WILLANETTE LYNCH. MARGARET Weekly Staff 4 Artisan Staff 4 Senior Forum 3, 4 Natural History Club 4 Spectator Staff 4 Art Editor 4 LYNN. NORMA Commercial Club 2 Tri-Y 2. 3 Radio Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 Orthopedic Committee 4 MacINTYRE. ELMER S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Boys ' Vice-President Merit Board 4 Squires 4 Senior Forum 4 Manual Kniphts 4 Council 2. 3, 4 Character Citizenship Com. ■ MACPHERSON. CHARLES MANELLA, FRANCES Scholarship Society 2, 4 Weekly Staff 4 Publicity Committee 4 Latin Club 2. 3 Chemistry Club 3 Girls ' Leaeue 2, 3. 4 Orthopedic 3 World Friendship Club 2 MARINO, HARRY Varsity Track 4 Senior Orchestra 3. 4 Junior Orchestra MARTIN. GORDON Rifle Team R. O. T. C. Band Non-Com Club Secretary Miltary Police Treasurers ' Association Treasurer R. O. T. C. MARTIN. ERNEST Belmont Hiiih School. Los Angeles. California Scholarship Society MARTIN, PAULINE Scholarship Society 3 Spanish Club 2 Friendship Committee 4 Ann Street Committee 2 Chemistry Club 3 Junior Forum 3 MARTINAOE. DOROTHY Secretarial Club 2. 3. 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 G. A. A. 3, 4 Girls ' Court 4 MATHEWS. MONA Collingswood High School 3. New Jersey French Club 4 G. S. G. 4 Home Economic Cluh 4 Tri-Y 4 MATOT, JOYCE MATTHEWS. MIRIAM S E N I O k S MATBUSOW. JEANNE Lalin Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League 3. 4 Modes and Manners Orthopedic Committee World Friendship Club McCONAHEY. AUDKEY LEE Council Girls ' Leat ue McFADDEN. lilLLIE Spectator Staff 2, 3, 4 Editor 4 Artisan Staff 3 Weekly Staff 4 Senior Forum 3, 4 Girls ' Vice-President 4 Girls ' LeafTUe Com. 1. 2, 3. 4 Chairman 2, 3, 4 Scholarship Society 1, 2, 3, 4 C. S. F. Award Girls ' Merit Board 3 Players Company 2. 3. 4 McNeill, martha jane MELTON. MILDRED Polytechnic Hifrh Scho MICHALSKI, RAYMOND MILBURN, HARRIETT Commercial Club Secretarial Club Girls ' Rifle Team MILLER. BERNICE MILNER, MARGARET Stamp Club 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 MILLS. VIRGINIA French Club 3, 4 Music Club 3. 4 Natural History Club 3 Chemistry Club 3 Scholarship Society 2, 4 Franklin High School 2 Los Angeles, California MIZERA. ANNE Chemistry Club 3 Latin Club 2 Girls ' Junior Glee Club French Club 4 MOLE. WESLEY E. MONTGOMERY, DON Scholarship Society 2, 8 Chess Club 2, 3, 4 Latin Club 2, 3 MOORE, LOUISE Clovis High School Lyric Club 4 44 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 MOORE, BARBARA Scholarship Society 2. 3 Latin Club 2. 4 Euodia Club 4 G. S. G. Aud Committee 4 Chemistry Club 3 A Cappella Choir 4 Ann Street Committee 3, 4 MOORE. EILEEN Lyric Club 3. 4 A Cappella Choir 3 MORRIS. GRANVILLE Aeolian Club 3. 4 Music Club 2. 4 A Cappella Choir 4 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 2. 3 Ice Skatinn Club 2 Class B Track 2 MOSER, OWEN REILEY MUCCI. AL Senior Hi-Y 2. 3 Varsity Football 2. 3 Stage Crew 1. 2. 3 MUELLER. PAUL Belmont Hiph School MUGLESTON, ALBERTA G. A. A. 2. 3. 4 Senior Merit Board 4 G. S. G. 2. 3 Rifle Toam 2. 3 MURPHY. KENNETH S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Cadet Major 4 Players ' Company 3. 4 President 4 Manual Kniirhts 4 Officers ' Club 4 Non-Com Club 3 Cast: Society Notes Taminp: of the Shrew The Flattering Word Where the Cross Is Made Artisan Staff 4 NACE. FERN G. S. G. 2 School Beautiful 2 Secretarial Club 4 NARAHARA. SHIZUKA Snanish Club 2. 3, 4 World Friendship Club 2 House of Representatives 2 Commercial Club 3 Secretarial Club 3 Scholarship Society 3. 4 C. S. F. Award NAUMANN, VIRGINIA G. A. A. 2. 3, 4 G. S. G. 2. 3. 4 Merit Board 4 Lyric Club NEAL. ERNEST Student Store Manager 4 NELSON. LOUISE Scholarship Society 3, 4 C. S. F. Award Tri-Y 3 NELSON. THADA Polytechnic High School. San Francisco, California Alameda High School. Alameda. California Lyric Club 4 Secretarial Club 4 Orthopedic 4 SENIORS 45 NESSA. VILMA Junior Forum 1, 2 Lyric Club 2. 3. 4 French Club 1. 3 Spanish Club 1. 2 G. S. G. 1. 2. 3. 4 Girls ' Court 4 Players ' Company 3. 4 G. A. A. 2, 3 Council 2. 3 NEUGEBAUER. IRMGARD Latin Club 2. 3, 4 German Club 4 Scholarship Society 2. 4 Chemistry Club 3 A Cappella Choir 4 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 2 NEUTZENHOLZER, KATHRVN NEWTON, KATHERINE NIMTZ. EDITH LOUISE NISHIO. KlICHI NOONAN, PEGGY G. S. G. 3 Girls ' League 3 Girls ' Rifle Team 3 NOWACK, JACK B. S. G. 4 Traffic Committee ■ C. S. F. Award Senior Forum 4 Chemsitry Club 3. 4 Vice-President 3 Chemistry Team 3 Junior Forum 2, 3 German Club 2. 3. 4 President 4 O ' CONNELL. CATHERINE O ' DONNELL, ELIZABETH OLIVER, JAMES Council 3 Squires 4 Safety Committee 4 President 4 Ice Skating 2 Traffic Committee 3. 4 OLSON. FINDLAY Traffic Committee 4 Radio Club 3. 4 President 3 Loud Speaker Committee 4 ORSBURN. MAX WILLIAM OSAKA. KENJI 46 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 OSHIER. EVERETT Oakland High School 2 OTA. MARY World Friendship Club 2. 3 Chemistry Club 3 Spanish Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee PAEZ. ADOLPHE Spanish Club World Friendship Club PARKER. JACK Gym Team 2. 3. 4 Press Club 4 Spanish Club 2 PARSONS, EDMUND Student Store Manager 4 PAULES. CHARLOTTE Senior Forum 2, 3, 4 G. A. A. 4 Weekly Staff 4 Friendship Committee 4 French Club 2. 3. 4 Chemistry Club 3 PENNINGTON. JEANNE G. S. G. 2. 3 House of Representatives Euodia Club 3 Home Economic Club 4 School Beautiful 4 Ann Street Committee 4 PENNINGTON. HELEN G. S. G. Ann Street Committee Euodia Club School Beautiful Home Economic Club PERRY. EUGENE Class C Football 2 Boys ' Junior Glee Clul) 2 Varsity Track 4 Cross Country 4 PETERSON. BETTY Secretarial Club Commercial Club Girls ' League PIAZZA. JENNIE Secretarial Club 3. 4 French Club 2 Commercial Club 3. 4 PIAZZA. ROSE French Club 2 Secretarial Club 3. 4 PIEPER. ARCHIE PITMAN. LILLIAN P. SENIORS 47 POMMER, LOUISE POTTER, ELEANOR Scholarsip Society 3. 4 French Club 2. 3. 4 Chemistry Club 3 Friendship Committee 4 PRIETTO. CARLOS Spanish Club 2. 3, 4 Treasurer 2 Vice-President 3 President 4 World Friendship Club 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 2 Junior Orchestra 2 Music Club 4 B. S. G. 3. 4 R. O.T. C. 2. 3 PROOD, VIRGINIA Lyric Club 4 G. A. A. 3, 4 G. S. G. 3 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 3 A Cappella Choir 4 Secretarial Club 2, 3. 4 Treasurer 4 Vice-President 4 PROSS. GEORGE Latin Club 2. 3, 4 World Friendship Club 2 B. S. G. 2.3. 4 Secretary 4 Vice-President 4 Council 2. 3 Chemistry Club 3 Safety Committee 4 Citizenship Committee 4 PROSSER. ARLINE Treasurers ' Association 2 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Commercial Club 2 Girls ' League Committee 2 PYLE. JULIA EVELYN PYOTT. RUTH PALMERA RACHAL. RUTH Natural History Club Jefferson Hip:h School RANDOLPH. DOROTHY JANE RAPP, BETH Rifle Team 4 G. A. A. 3. 4 Girls ' Court 4 Secretarial Club 1.2. 3. 4 Treasurers ' Association 1 Commercial Club 4 Merit Board 4 REINWALD, AGNES Commercial Club 2 Secretarial Clu b 2 REVITZ. JOE Varsity Tennis 3 BiK M Society 3. 4 B. S. G. 3 Senior Forum 4 Prep Hi-Y 2 Latin Club 3 Chemistry Club 3 Treasurers ' Association 2 RICHARDSON. GLADYS Secretarial Club 2, 3, 4 Natural History Club 3 Commercial Club 2, 4 G. S. G. 3 Euodia Cluh 4 48 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 RICHARDSON, LEE ROY Officers ' Club 4 Owensmouth High School German Club 2 Non-Com Club 3 Military Police 3 Aviation Club 2, 3. 4 President 4 R. O. T. C. 2. 3. 4 RIGGS, EDWARD Latin Club 3 Treasurer 4 Chemistry Club 3 Class C Track 2 RIORDAN. MANICA RITCHIE. VALERIE Scholarship Society 2, 3, 4 0. S. V. Award Big M Society Girls ' League Cabinet Senior Forum G. A. A. French Club Girls ' Court Chemistry Club RIVERA. OSCAR Big M Society 4 Class B Basketball 2 Varsity Basketball 3. 4 Chemistry Club 4 ROACH. KATHERINE S. B. O. Cabinet Girls ' League President Council G. S. G. 2. 4 Big M Society 4 G. A. A. 2. 3. 4 Junior p orum 2. 3 President 3 Senior Forum 3,4 French Club 2. 3. 4 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 3 ROBERTS, BURTON Junior Forum 2 Senior Forum 2 Treasurers ' Association 2, 3 B. S. G. 2. 3 Officers ' Club 4 R. O. T. C. 2. 3. 4 Non-Com Club 3 ROBERTS. MARGARET ROBERTS. BILL A. B. S. Cabinet 3 Senior Forum 3. 4 Big M Society 3. 4 Vice-President 4 Scholarship Society 4 Gym Team 3. 4 Captain 4 ROCK. PERRY RORISON. JAMES Manual Knights 4 President 4 Manual Squires 3. 4 Varsity Football 3. 4 Varsity Trac k 3. 4 ROSAND. ELEANOR MARION ROSENBERG. JACK Head Yell Leader 3. 4 Senior Forum 3. 4 Toiler Club 2. 3, 4 Field Manager 3 B. S. G. 2, 4 Class C Basketball 2 ROSENBLUM. SIDNEY SENIORS 49 2, 3 ROSENSWEIG. FLORENCE Commercial Club 1, 3 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Orthopedic 1 ROWE. STEWART Roosevelt Hijrh School, Chicagro, Illinois Beverley High School Treasurers ' Association Cross Country 2 RUBIO. AURELIA M. RUSSELL. ELOISE Senior B Cabinet 4 Girls ' Vice-President Senior A Cabinet 4 Girls ' Vice-President Senior Forum 3, 4 Junior Forum 2 Council 2. 3 Players ' Company 3, 4 Scholarship Society 2 Latin Club 2. 3. 4 President 3 Girls ' League 3 House of Representatives 2. 4 FRANCES H. RYDER RICHENS. WILLIAM RYDER SADY. EMIL S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Boys ' Judge Senior B Cabinet 4 Treasurer Squires 4 Class C Football 2, 3. 4 Captain 4 Gym Team 2. 3. 4 Council 4 Senior Forum 4 B. S. G. 3, 4 Citizenship Committee 4 SAHARA. HAROLD Davis County High School. Kaysville, Utah Long Beach Polytechnic H. S. Long Beach, California Commercial Club 4 SAITO. KAZUO SALVE, BEULAH G. S. G. 3, 4 Latin Club 3. 4 Girls ' League 3 Commercial Club 4 Class B Football 2 Squires 4 B. S. G. 2 Safety Committee 3 SALVE, SYLVIA G. A. A. 2. 3 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Commercial Club 3 Spanish Club 2. 3 Modes and Manners 2. 3 SALLADA, WILLIAM German Club 1 Aviation Club 1 Redondo Union High School 2 Radio Club 3 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 3 Aeolian Club 3 SANCHEZ. ARTHUR Gym Team 2. 3. 4 Class B Track 2. 3 B. S. G. 4 Council 4 A. B. S. 2. 3. 4 Safety Committee 4 SCHILLING. LEONORA Catholic Girls ' High School G. S. G. Natural History Club Art Club 50 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 SCHOrlELD. MARY Girls ' Junior Glee Club Music Club Secretarial Club SCHULTZ. ORBAY Big M Society 3. 4 Toiler Club 3. 4 Gym Team 2. 3, 4 Manager 3 SCHWIMMER. MILDRED Senior Forum 4 G. A. A. 4 Scholarship Society 3 Spanish Club 2 Friendship Committee 4 Chemistry Club 3 Junior Forum 2, 3 Secretary 3 Ann Street Committee 2 SCOFIELD. BILL SCOTT. FRANK Toiler Club 4 Squires 4 Varsity Gym Team 2. 3 Manager 4 SEABLOM, BEVERLY Gym Club 3 School Beautiful Committee 2 SEAGER, HAROLD Squires 4 Varsity Football 3. 4 Senior Forum 3. 4 Safety Committee Chairman 3 Senior Forum 4 Varsity Basketball 3. 4 B. S. G. 3, 4 Junior Orchestra 3 Fremont High School SEEGER. EDNA S. B. O. Cabinet 4 G. S. G. 4 Secretary 3 Vice-President 3 President 4 Girls ' League Cabinet 3, 4 Council 2. 3. 4 Historian 2. 3, 4 G. A. A. 2, 3, 4 Junior Forum2. 3 Senior Forum 4 SHERLOCK. V. LOUISE San Bernardino High School. San Bernardino. California Hollywood High School. Hollywood. California Winner Declamation Contest 1932 Vice-President SHIMIZU. MASARU SHORT. RUEL Squires 4 Toiler Club 3. 4 Council 3 Varsity Football 3. 4 Gym Team 3. 4 Manager 4 SILVERMAN. FAE Commercial Club Secretarial Club SIMON. OLGA Senior Orchestra 2 Commercial Club 2. 3 Modes and Manners 3 SITTIG. FRANCES Weekly Staff 4 Girls ' Junior Glee Club 2 President 2 SENIORS M SKIPWORTH. WILMA Weekly Staff 4 Gladiola Club 3 Scholarship Society 4 Ann Street Committee 4 Euodia Club 3 SKELLETT. BEN F. SLASOR, VALJEAN Senior Orchestra 2, Tennis Team 3. 4 Big M Society 3, 4 Latin Club 2. 3 Chemistry Club 3 SMITH. LEAH Euoilia Club 2. 3. 4 SMITH. MARION Weekly Staff 4 Girls ' League House of Representatives 2, Hospitality Committee 4 Safety Committee Vice-chairman 4 SORG, MARJORIE French Club 2 Commercial Club 2. 3 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Modes and Manners 2. 3 Orthopedic Committee 3, 4 SORIANO, RENETTE R. SPEER. BARBARA Big M Society 4 Treasurers ' Association 3 Girls ' League 2. 3 Vice-President Treasurer G. A. A. 2, 3. 4 Secretary Vice-President Latin Club 2. 3. 4 Secretary SPETH. JACK F. SPRANGER. GERTRUDE Commercial Club 1 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Natural History Club 1 G. S. G. 1. 2 STARR. ALICE LURETTA STEIN, LEONARD DAVID ST. JOHN, ADELBERT R. O. T. C. 1. 2, 3, 4 Non-Coms ' Club 1. 2 Officers ' Club 3. 4 Vice-President 4 Drill Squad 3 Military Police 1. 2, 3 STEWART, WILLIAM R. O. T. C. Band 2. 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 2. 3. 4 Non-Coms ' Club 2 52 THE A R T I S I A N S ' 33 STONER. EVELYN Tri-Y Girls ' League Natural History Club Players ' Company STORA, NORINE STUBBINS. WILLIAM Treasurers ' Association 1, 2 Council 3 STUBBS, FRANK FARRER SULLIVAN. FERN Gladiola Club 3. 4 Commercial Club 2 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Girls ' League Committee 4 SWAHN. GEORGE PAUL SWAN. BEATRICE Scholarship Society 3. 4 Senior Forum 4 French Club 2. 3. 4 President 4 Junior Forum 2. 3 Ann Street Committee 2 Music Club 3 SWANSON. ELSA E. Junior Orchestra 3. 4 Senior Orchestra 3 Natural History Club 4 Gladiola Club 4 TABER. RAY A. Latin Club 2 Chemistry Club Club 3 TANNER. BETTY Latin Club 2. 3 Modes and Manners 3 Chemistry Club 3 Treasurers Association 2, Ann Street Committee 2 TARWATER. JESSE Latin Club 3 R. O. T. C. Band 3, R. O. T. C. 2 Chemistry Club 4 Non-Com Club 3. 4 TAYLOR. ADA L THOMAS. LEONE Ann Street Committee Secretarial Club THOMAS. MATILDA Senior Orchestra 3. 4 Junior Orchestra 2 Council 2 Girls ' Rifle Team 4 SENIORS 53 THOMPSON. EMMA LEE Lincoln High School School Beautiful Committee 4 Ann Street Committee G. S. G. TINKLER. CLANCY B.. JR. Las Vepas High School, Las Vegas, Nevada TITUS, THOMAS Van Nuys High School Eagle Rock High Schuol A Cappella Choir Aeolian Club TONE, LORRAINE Commercial Club 2 Secretarial Club 2 Natural History Club 4 Gladiola Club 4 TRINKLE. HELEN Chemistry Club 4 Julia Richmond High School, New York City, New York TURNER. CHARLES T. TUTTLE. KARL TWEEDIE. BILL Treasurers Association 4 Chemistry Club 3 B. S. G. 3. 4 Senior Forum 4 Senior B Yell Leader 4 Class C Football 3 Senior A Cabinet 4 Treasurer 4 UDKOFF, ANNETTE UDOW, ELEANOR Spanish Club Commercial Club Secretarial Club ULRICH. EDWARD Spanish Club 3 Natural History Club 3 Chess Club 3 String Ensemble 2 VAN BUREN. VEDA Ogden High School A Cappella Choir 3 VANDEN BOSSCHE. HENRY French Club 2, 3 Treasurers ' Association 3 Toiler Club 3 Stage Crew 4 Chemistry Club 3 VAN HUEL. CLEOME George Washington High School French Club 2, 3, 4 Scholarship Society 2 Friendship Committee 3, 4 Secretary Chemistry Club 3 Junior Forum 3 Home Economic Club 4 54 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 VANSLETT. LUCILLE Weekly Staff 4 French Club 3 Tri-Y 4 Latin Club 4 Commercial Club 3. 4 A Cappella Choir 3 Secretarial Club 4 Girl Reserves 4 VARGA. RUDOLPH Latin Club Chemistry Club B. S. G. Aviation Club Treasurers ' Association VARIA. JAMES V. Commercial Club 2, 3 Treasurers Association 3 Council 2 VARON. JOSEPH Overbrook Hip:h School, Philadelphia. Pa. Natural History Club 3 Chemistry Club 3 Radio Club 4 Spanish Club 4 VENABLE, LEWIS Radio Club 4 VIGE. RICHARD A. VILLARINO. JOE Chemistry Club 3. 4 Natural History Club 4 Class B Football 3 B. S. G. 4 VITEN, HARRY Radio Club VON DETTE, RUTH WALKER. VIRGINIA WASHINGTON. CLARENCE Big M Society Varstyi Track Varsity Football WEBBER. PHILIP Scholarship Society 4 Officers ' Club 4 Latin Club 3. 4 Centurio 4 Natural History Club ' !. B. S. G. 3 Chemistry Club 3 Non-Com Club 3. 4 Secretary 4 R. O.T. C. 2, 3, 4 WESSEL, ARLAN Council 2 Toiler Club 2. 3. 4 Vice-President 4 Football Manager 4 Class C Track Manager 3 WESTFALL, FRANCES Commercial Club 2. 3 Spanish Club 2 G. S. G. 2 Treasurers ' Association 2 Home Economic Club 4 Secretarial Club 2. 3 Rifle Team 4 SENIORS WHITE. EDWARD WHITE, EVELYNE WICKERSHAM. VIRGINIA Scholarship Society 2. 3, 4 C. S. F. Award WILCOX. HELEN WILEY. CHARLES Latin Club 3 Chemistry Club 3 Boys ' Junior Glee Club 3 Secretary and Treasurer Junior Orchestra 3. 4 Chess Club 2 WILKE. ESTHER Tr-iY 4 Commercial Club 4 G. S. G. 2 Secretarial Club 4 Girls ' Rifle Team 3. Girl Reserves 4 WILKINS. PAULA Polytechnic Hi h School, Los Angeles, California G. A. A. 3. 4 World Friendship Club 4 Art Chairman 4 G. S. G. 2. 3. 4 Treasurer 4 Cafe Chairman 4 Girls ' Court 4 Prosecuting Attorney 4 Girls ' League 3. 4 Orthopedic 3. 4 Vice-Chairman 4 WILLIAMS. IVY WILLIAMS. REGINALD Track 2. 3. 4 BiE M Society 3. 4 Class B Football 2 WILMS. GLADYS Commercial Club Secretarial Club G. S. G. WILSON. DOROTHEA Latin Club 3. 4 Girls ' League Committee 3. Scholarship Society 4 Senior Forum 4 WILSON. MARION Commercial Club 2. 4 Secretarial Club 2 Home Economics Club 4 G. S. G. 2 Modes and Manners 4 WOLFE. ELNORA LORRAINE MAYER. DOROTHY 55 jJU. 56 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 WOOLLEY. TUI Scholarship Society 3 G. A. A. 2. 4 Girls ' League Chairman 4 W ' OOLPERT. PHILIPP Class C Basketball 2 Latin Club 2, 3, 4 WRIGHT. FRANCES Commercial Club Secretarial Club G. S. G. WRIGHT, MARIANA WURZINGER, GENE BLANCHE WYNNE. DORIS Roedean Girls ' School, South Africa Home Economics Club YEAKEL. ELLEN S. B. O. Cabinet 4 Girls ' Vice-President 4 G, S. G. 2, 3, 4 Vice-President 4 Girls ' League Treasurer 3 Council 3 G. A. A. 2. 3, 4 President 4 Big M Sociey 3t .4 Junior Forum 3 Senior Forum 4 Safety Committee 4 Character Citizenship Com, 4 Board of Finance 4 A Cappella Choir 3 y t YOUNG. ALBERT CLIFFORD NAGANUMA, MICHIKO Scholarship Society 4 Spanish Club 2. 3. 4 World Friendship Club . ' Natural History Club 4 Chemistry Club 3 DODDS. JAMES ROSS MORTON, BOB Bier M Society 3, 4 Gvm Team 2, 3, 4 B. S. G. 2, 3 R. O. T. C. 2 IVENER, LEONA H. KARP, SEYMOUR LUCKE, WILFRED SENIORS LONG. CHARLES MINGER, ROBERT 57 lELSEN RIENER Class C Track 2 Class B Track 3 Drill Sduad 4 Non- om Club 2. : R. O T C. 2, 3. 4 U. S. G. 3 3. 4 SCHNEIDER. ALMA RICHARDSON. MAURICE CAMPBELL, JERRY Manual Four Aeolian Club Manual Squires A Cappella Choir President B. S. G. Council Boys ' Court Cast: Pied Piper of lianilin Music Club BLACKETT. JEANNE FEHNER. MARY LOUISE Scholarship Society 2. 3. 4 C. S. F. Award Gold Seal Bearer 4 Artisan Staff 4 School Life Senior Forum 3, 4 Players ' Comrany 4 Spectator Staff 4 Latin Club 2. 3. 4 Cast : The First Dress Suit Junior Forum 3 STEVA, OLIVER W. STEVA. LAURA EVELYN BENNETT. NORMA JJLENKE. MARIE HOHANNON. FRANCES BOYLE. MARGARET BRASS, WARREN BULL. JEANNETTE BUTTINE. GEORGIA LEE CALL. NEWELL CAMPBELL. STUART CAYWOOD, CHARLES EARLE, CLARKE COOK, DON CORSON, RUSSELL DENNIS, IRMA DEJAN, MICHAEL DENMAN. GLADYS DOTSON, HELEN DRIVERS. MWRY.F EVANS. JQHK FIELD. JAjtU FRENCH. J%ISE GARCIA, Attic. hardmanT ja HINTON, MRAN HORWITajMG JOHNS, ALIBERT LANGENUERG, ROGER LKCHLEITER, MARY LOU McCALLA, JAMES MICKSCHL, DEE MILLER, WM. MOORE, LOUISE MOORE, EILEEN MOOREHEAD, MATTIE PAGE, BILL PARRY, DONALD PIERCE, MARIE ROADY, JAMES SCHMIDT, PAUL SPITZER, BENNIE TAKAHASHI. ALDEN TATE, BERNICE THORSEN. CARL TILLSON. ARTHUR WEISS. VICTOR WETZEL. SAMUEL WIDOLF. BERTIL WILLIAMS. OPAL WRIGHT, FRANCES 58 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 CLASS SONG Jade green and white Jade green and white These are our colors Let them wave on high forever Just like of old Mariners bold We stand united everywhere With anchors up we sail away. On land or sea All know that we Stand united everywhere Fore ' er ever Mariners. CLASS YELL (Locomotive) M_A— R — I — N — E — R — S! M — A — R — I — N — E — R — S! M_A — R — I — N — E — R — S ! MARINERS ! MARINERS ! MAR — IN — ERS ! CLASS COLORS Jade green and white. CLASS M( )TT() Sailing Not Drifting SENIORS 59 I YALERTE RITCHIK IXJT GLESCROSsJ VIOl.ABEISNER KDNASIOEOER 50 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 (i Underclassmen N A SU ' X ■ M( )KXIXr, in September, 1930. more than 500 BlO ' s L;atlK-reil in thr audit(irinni and listened to the sUident body i resident ' s talk on school loyalty and the necessity for student snp])ort of school ac- tivities. Many of us still remember the words spoken that day. l ' ' urlhermore. it was a cheerful, sincere welcome we received, and a hearty in- itation to join in school life. . s early as the first ten weeks many of our class had earned the right to be- long to the Scholarship Society. Others, more athletically inclined, joined in field activities. We also joined various clubs and participated in the programs. Such was our beginning to the life that lasted for three joyous years. We soon acquired an understanding of the ways and rules of high school and inwardly we promised th at we would try hard to live up to the reputation that others before us had tried so hard to build uj). Senior B ' s Returning to 233. after a summer of laughter and fun. we R12 ' s were feeling erv im])ortant, under the very e.xpert supervision of Mr. Hodge. .Merrill Kno. was chosen president. Bill Barnes and Eloise Russell, vice-presi- dents. ' iola Beisner undertook the duties of secretary and Ivuil .Sady took charge of nmnetary affairs. . lthough the Sr. . yes beat us in getting subscriptions t(j the Weekly, we soon had 100 per cent. We chose for our name Mariners, our colors, jade green and white, and oiu ' motto, ' Sailing, not drifting. After that we settled down to study hard, to an.xiously await the coming of October 27, Adelphic Day. At last it arrived. Arrayed in our .sweaters of which we felt quite proud, we sat in the sun (shin- ing at 99 degrees) and absolutely yelled ourselves hoarse while the Senior Bees walked off with the tug-of-war and the relay. But the Sr. Ayes redeemed them- selves by winning the bucket and the bicycle race, which gave the Pilots the match by one point. The day was com])leted with the Iiee ])icnic at .South Park, where there were races, a pie eating contest, a baseball game, and an extensive treasure hunt. November ])as.sed with many exciting football games and the aid of Thanks- giving vacation. The second social voyage of the Baby Gobs was the Senior Bee jirom. Merrill was host and Eloise was ho.stess. Bill Hall ' s orchestra furnished the music while Johnny Doto sang and the Three Rhythm Riots entertained. There were tiny pom-poms for the girls and sailor hats for the boys. The dance was considered a great success. SENIORS 61 Christmas and New Year ' s Day interrupted school activities at this ])oint, and on lanuar - 3. 1933, everyone returned filled with good resolutions to do Ijetter in the forthconiini; year. Following this was the Squires dance with the Knights as the guests of honor. Soon came the Sr. Aye play Dulcy which held packed houses at hoth per- formances. During all this time, we had hecome a suhstantial ])art in school life. Some one of us was entered in almost all of the activities. Many of our Sr. Bee fellows had earned their letter and had heen in ited into the Knights or Squires or both. Billie McFadden had captured the editorship of the Spectator and Louise Sherlock had run away with first prize in the Declamation Contest. The Debating League was busy thinking up arguments to thrash out with other high schools. And ever so many other interesting things were happening aroimd the campus that it was almost impossilile not to enter into at least one of them. Meanwhile, the end of the term was drawing near. With it came the realiza- tion that after the Pilots left, the new leaders of Manual, those who would set the example for the rest of the school, would be the Mariner class of S ' 33. Senior A ' s It seemed almost incredible that two and one lialf years had flown so quickly. Now all the classes before us had gone, and we too were soon to leave. But there was still ahead of us our last and best term, and we resolved to make the most of our remaining time. Merrill Kno.x was reelected president of our class. The rest of our cabinet — girls ' vice-president, Eloise Russell ; boys ' vice-president. Johnny Doto ; sec- retary, Viola Beisner, and after some delay Bill Tweedie was decided upon to be our treasurer. From the beginning of the term it was made clear to us that the sjiirit of rivalry between the two senior classes was to be abolished and a spirit of friend- liness was to take its place. And so, with this in mind, our last term ' s activities liegan. Adelphic Day, day of all days to the seniors, was to be March 30. There was much peeking around corners and listening from closets on the part of the Ayes in attempting to determine what colors the Bees would choose, but the wary and wise B12 ' s proved equal to the situation. Then, one bright day, what should appear in homeroom but a microphone. Yes, sir, a micro]ihone ! And almost everyone in M.R. 2.xl was on the platform finding out how his or her voice took. Furthermore, in looking around, we dis- covered a background for our stage, designed and ])ainted by Ella Marie Karr. Then came our jolly tin can hops, and those dances held after basketball games, the cans contributed went to the needy. 62 THEARTISANS ' 33 The first week in March we had one of the hest surprises ever. Ralph Cleve- land, who wrote our . lma Mater several years ago, returned to Manual for a visit and to talk to the students. Then came the earthquakes. Little did we dream, as we left schcjol on the afternoon of March 10, that it might be weeks or even months before we should step inside any of the old, familar buildings. We were given one week ' s vacation and told to report on the bleachers at 10 a. m. the following Monday. There the scrubs, beg pardon, the lOtli grade was assigned to Audulion Junior High and the eleventh and twelfth grades to Foshay Junior High, where through the extreme kindness of these schools, we were able to continue with our lessons while repairs on our own school were being made. Nevertheless, our scheduled track meets and other activities were carried out. And it was during this time that Adelphic day arrived. The Senior Bees made a fine showing in their red and silver sweaters although quite a number of Senior Ayes were compelled to gaze upon them through colored glassesfno doubt caused by the direct rays of the sun, or by failing eyesight due to old age). By working hard, the Senior Bees managed to win the three legged race and the 60 vard dash, but the Senior Ayes, not wishing to spoil the Conquerors by let- ting them win too many points, captured the tug of war, the bike race, and the re- lav. The day went t(j the . yes with a score of 3 to 2. On April 10, the Senior Aye picnic was held at South Park. The two novel features introduced were a bike race and a roller skating race. ( Roller .skating had become very jjopular and everyone was doing it.) . cknowledgement for a very successful picnic was due to Eloise Russell and J.hnny Doto, who made all the arrrmgements. F.very few days we would walk by Manual and watch our old, familiar smoke- stack being taken down. As we noticed the progress, it seemed as though hardly any of the buildings would be left. IjUI when jjreliminary repairs were completed, we saw to our relief that our school had not been changed so very nnich after all. The date set for graduation was coming closer and closer. We started to study a little more each night on our sijecially ' hard subjects, for it certainly was a terri- fving tiiought to think we might fkuik in our last term and thus perhaps not gradu- ate. But at last the worst exams were over and everyone was glad of the extra few minutes spent in the preparation of lessons. It was a .sad group of student body officers that had to turn their positions over to the Conquerors, yet they were at the same time happy that they were the ones who had been chosen to do his or her particular work. Our graduation was liut a few hours away. I ist minute preparations were be- ing made with the air that always accompanies the bustle of getting ready for such an event. During the few ininutes waiting our minds flashed back to the times when we had watched other classes being graduated- And still it .seemed only a fancy that we were going through our last high school days. SENIORS 63 The orchestra struck its first note. In a few minutes it was all over. We had listened to words being spoken of our opportunities, of what we might accomplish, of the good we might do to help our fellowmen. And as we walked down the steps, and away to our various destinations, it was with the feeling that from then on, we wunld always strive to he Sailing, not Drift- ing. THE OLD SHIP SPEAKS By Paul Burdick I am a square-rigged clipper ship, I ' ve sailed o ' er all the seas. To many foreign climes and ports, I ' ve gone with sails unfurled. I was built for competition, To win the China trade, To sail the sea in record time, The best boat ever made. 64 T H E ARTISAN S ' . 3 IN MEMORIAM By Paul Burdick We set our sails with crew intact, None stauncher of a kind. We could not dream that there would be Those schoolmates left behind. The setting sun, the liurninsj;- sky We always keep in mind. As frames to hold, the names of gold Of schoolmates left behind. As we sail on through foreign seas And lose those ties that bind. The swishing waves make us recall Those schoolmates left behind. When we return, once more to port At last, again we ' ll find Those who could not continue on — The schoolmates left behind. PHILIP BURKHAUER P ffMOND GARDNER HARRIET HENECKE EDWIN RANDALL FRANK WEEDIER 66 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 All-star lulder crew lOr Manual Arts Daily. Middle — Daily headquarters and crew in quake days. Bottom — Double size crews making covers of this book. 68 THEARTISANS ' 33 THE PRINCIPAL ' S MESSAGE To the Mariners: The recent disturbance of nature in Southern CaHfornia has proved again the old adage that mariners must lie ready for any weather. Here you were pursuing your regular course Ijeneath favorable stars, when suddenly all hands were called on deck and orders given to take to tlie life boats. Fortunately friendl - ships stood by and with all accounted for and aboard, you pursued your steady course to your goal. Good mariners, whether of ancient or modern lineage, have always profited by both favorable and unfavorable weather. Adverse winds and rough seas are but an opportunity to get experience and test good seamanship. Ancient mariners had much to fear from calms when the ship would lie motionless in a glassy sea under a tropic sun for weeks. Even then the order was to keep everything shipshape and ready to take advantage of the slightest breath that stirred. Ships must sail for a puri)ose. In the lull that has come over our economic life, ships are just as becalmed as if no winds were blowing. It is hard for a ship to get out of the har])or now and for the mariner to get started on his life voyage. P.ut unlike the ancient mariner the modern mariner is not dependent on wind and weather. His ship contains within its hold the power for its own propulsion. No doubt there are those mariners among us who will get started despite the econ- omic lull. Some mariners early settle down to a regular routine and a steady course from port to jjort that may not vary in a lifetime. Others are more adventurous, even at the risk of following tramp steamers around the world. All good mariners, no matter what the course or what the port, will be in- defatigable in cooperation and loyalty in order that the journey may be most pleasant and the arrival at port assured and sate. Alkkrt E. Wilson ( ) R G A N I Z A T I O N S 69 THE PRINCIPALS DRAI VILSON PRINCIPAL MR C P FONDA BOYS VICE PRINQPAL MKS RAYHANNA GIRLS ' VICE PRINQPAL 70 THEARTISANS ' 33 I ' RI ' LSIDKXT ' S AIKSSAGJ ' : Manual, work honestly, play fairly, give all you can to the other fellow and you will never lose. Find a friend that you will love and respect and yon will always he happy. With the deepest sincerity, William Barnes. President of the Student Body ORGANIZATIONS 71 THE STUDENT BODY CABINET William Barnes, President Elmer MacIntyre, Boys ' Vice-President Ellen Yeakel, Girls ' Vice-President Karl Tuttle, Boys ' Self Government Edna Seeger, Girls ' Self Government _ ' THE ARTISAN S ' 33 STUDENT BODY CABINET MKOTHYtUNCMSS EMILSADY - ' EDWm HOUSE BOYS ' JUDGE MANAGER BUSTAMENTE 5 KATHERINE ROACH G1RL5 LEAGUE j ILLINGtfOKTH SCHOLARSHIP MARGARET CORRIE ROBERT HARE ' ' ' ' ™ ' KENNETH MURPHY WEEKiy EDITOR CADET MAJOR ORG A N I Z A T IONS 71 THE MANUAL ARTS FACULTY Dr. Albert E. Wilson, Principal Charles Percy Fonda, ice-Principal ; Jessie Ray Hanna, Vice-Principal; Helen X ' inyard Peasley, Registrar ; Mary Bess Henry, Counselor ; Mabel S. Dunn, Librarian. Art Department: Frederick Jolin Schwankovsky, Jr.. Chairman of Department; Florence Ames, Edna A. Jones, Hazel Small Martin, Jessie Sherwood Smith, Ermina Culter Whitney. Biology Department: William James Bovee, Cliairman of Department; Ruth Olivia Jack- son, L. R. Langworthy, Lyman Dalton LaTourrette, Martha Helen Montgomery, Harold Palmer Schroeder, Isabel Svverdfeger. William G. Woolley. Commercial Department: James Seeley Mullen, Head of Department; Fred J. Arm- strong, Maud Lynn Austin, Ida M. Baldwin, Bessie Bergman, Charles Ernest Cargill, Monica Serena Eklund, Lanette Kidson, Clara McCluskey, Alice S. Made, Paul Henry Mitcheni, Ethel Douglas Phelps. English Department: Ethel P. Sykes, Head of Department; Edna Joy Addison, Edith L. Bruckman, Harold G. Donnel, Mae Edwards, Iris C. Crosby Field, Una E. Fowler, Blanche K. Freeman, Agnes Frisius, Lucille Furnas, Ale.x F. Hansen, Anne Ogden Johnson. Margaret Loretta McLaughlin, Guy Clinton Moore, Maude Oyler, William Watterson Payne, Mary Col- ver Trummer. Home Economics Department: Essie Lavina Elliott, Chairman of Department; Jean MacDougal Boyer, Hadassah Beecher Cheroske, Ruby Mildred Hodge, Anna H. Hussey, Eliza- beth G. Newkirk, Sarah G. Hicks Rowe. Language Department : Bertha Rutledge, Chairman of Department ; Gertrude Adams- Fisher. Belle Arbour, Nellie S. Cronkhite, Bertha Drahkin Goodwin, Evarose Griffin Lloyd, Constance Manning Moir, Catharine W. Stewart, Erva A. Taylor. Mathematics Department : Eva Crane Farnum, Chairman of Department ; Martha E. Cilker, George Leon Gardner, Ida Isabella Jones, Willette W. Witmer Juline, Karl Edwin Turnquist. Mechanical Arts Department: Charles Merwin Andersen, Head of Department; Frank James Britts, Walter Edward Coburn, Walter Wilson English, Emil Holtz, Leo Herman Klitsche, Jacob .A. Nelson, Fred Neiderwerfer, G. A, Ohlsson. Meredith S. Reynolds. Mechanical Drawing Department: Walter Allen Woods. Chairman of Department; Herman Hess, John A. Richards. Music Department: Ina Margaret Davids, Chairman of Department; Virginia C. Blythe, F. Stillwell Moore, Elizabeth Rudy Mottern, Roy Harrison Schwieger, R. Lenore Snow. Boys ' Physical Education Department: Sidney Francis Foster, Head of Department; Tames Preston Armstrong, James Joseph Blewett, Herbert E. Lougheed, Charles Toney, .Arthur Elery Williams. Girls ' Physical Education Department: Mae Baird Gephart, Chairman of (iirls ' Divi- sion ; Mary W. Blanchard, Charlotte Albright Caldwell. Laura A. Davis. Lorraine P. Hendry, Mary K. Lockwood, Madge Jacknian Redin. Physical Science Department: George Elbert Mitchell. Chairman of Department; Charlotte D. Cahoon, Vernon Hodge, Isabella Wilson, Robert J. Wells. Public ' tion Department: Campbell Hewitt Greenup, Chairman of Department; Rezin -A. Maynard ; George A. Nelson, William H. Reeder. R. O. T. C. Department: Major R. Wilson, Sergeant Clyde E. Littler. Social Science Department: Rosa Winterburn, Head of Department; Lizzie May Brown, Lulu Albia Brown. Ida B. Davison, C. Maude Ingersoll, Robert S. Maile, Isobel Niven Murphy, Willis T. Newton, Nellie E. Stephens. Leta Josephine Whinery, Lawrence James White, .Anna G. Wiggs. Oefic : Freda L. Michael. Marcia W. Jakeman. Marie C. Jones, Zelah Marshall, Frankie Walton. Clara Mosher, Mary Helen Maynard, Sheedon Barrett. 74 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 (,IR1.S- SKLF GOMiKXMKX ' l ' CABINET Edna Seeger. President Miss Ingeksoll Dorothy Glencross luANiTA Wright fAR(;ARET GuRi.Ani Helen Fuller Florence Coburn ORGANIZATIONS 75 BOYS ' SELF GU HRXMK. i CABINET Karl Tuttle, President D. A. Richards Emil Sady George Pross William Dexeuie Jerome Bellet Joseph Cadranel 4 76 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 L , . ( THK GIRLS ' LEAGUE Kathkrixk Roach. President Ruth Hit.hes, Secretary Ri ' tii Murphy. Treasurer Marjorie Helen Spexcer, ' ice-Prrs. Miss Hanna, Adviser 17 A. H. S. CABINKT Mario Bustamante, President James Armstrong. Adviser Everett Marling. Secretary William Comerford, Treasurer Robert Marineau, Vice-President 78 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 TBI-: WEEKLY STAFF Robert Hare, Editor Dad Maynard, Adviser Betty Ferguson, Feature Editor Lucille Vanslett, News Editor William Eccles, Sport Editor i ORGANIZATIONS I mi: At: I l I i i AlAXAi.l.Rs Ray Elliott, Atiiletk AIaxager Edith Nimtz, Cafeteria Ed Parsons, Student Body Store Robert Cherry, Box Office John Erbser, Commercial Office Albert Braca, Candy Counter 80 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 The Knights 0 m KNIGHTS ENJOY the distinction of lieing the only clul) sponsored i directly hy Dr. Wilson. It is the ambition of every Manual boy to be- Fv come a Knight because of this and the strict membership (pialifications. The Knights act as the senate of club and group activities. Conse- quently, membershi]! in the Knights is secured through active membership in honor school organizations. In addition to the above, candidates are most carefully in- vestigated as to citizenship, scholarship, and character. It is reciuired that every Knight receive the approval of the faculty sponsor of the particular activity he represents. y long with their work in coordinating the school organization activities, the Knights study the prolilems of character building, avocation, health, etc., and en- deavor to be a force in the student body for the development of moral character. The Knights have done much to forward their course during the past term. The officers of the Knights are James Rorison, president; Don Carn, vice-]5resi- dent. Kay I ' .lliott, secretary-treasurer; sergeant-at-arms, Mario Bustamante. Mr. Hodge has acted as facult - representative. ORGANIZATIONS 81 .i S f fUTIT ' ® ' ' The Squires I ANUAl SQUIRES represent various school clubs and other i V unit. Membership is based on scholarship, citizenship, fitness for leader- F ship, and student and faculty approval, and is open to every boy at Manual who can represent the proper qualifications to the member- ship committee. The Squires, in addition their study of school and student prob- lems, try to assist the younger students and to develop leadership among them. Those elected to membership this term were : Joe Adams, Paul Bunch, Jerry Campbell, Billy Coe, Bob Coyle, John Doto, Harold Hirshon, Harold Labriola, Harvey Malcolmson, Clarence McLaughlin, Loren Miller, Russel Newman, James Oliver, Emil Sady, Frank Scott, Ruel Short, Don Skinner, Bill Snyder, Bob Strohecker, Ernest Romano, Eugene Romero, Norman Wagner. The Squire officers are : President, Bill Page ; vice-president, Karl Tuttle ; treasurer, Ivo Rubly ; secretary, Ray Elliott; chaplain. Bill Kirch; sergeant-at-arms, James Rorison. The faculty representative is Mr. Hodge. 82 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 iv The Scholarship Society 0a HE SCHOLARSHIP SOCIETY of Manual Arts comprises a chapter V-g I uf the California Scholarship Federation which was formed October 13, fL 1921. Manual Arts is a charter memher of the organization, drawing Chapter five i y lot. Graduates who have earned gold seals, become life members of the federation, and for this reason, students realize more and more the value of such an affiliation. The society made a promising start with a cabinet composed of Leland Illing- vvortli, ]iresident: Everett Marling, boys ' vice president; Valerie Ritchie, girls ' vice president; I ' Lleanor Lane, secretary; and Robert Scott, treasurer. The membership was unusually large, including forty-five boys and eighty-two girls, of which forty- four were Senior Ayes. There were more gold seals awarded at graduation than ever before. In order to a])prise the new students of the true value of sound scholarship in their school life and to acquaint them with the aims of the C. S. F., speakers were sent to the various I ' .IO homerooms. A party was given as a reward to those students having made their Junior High School Society in their . 9 term. For the first time in its history Audubon Junior High School was awarded the Scholarship Trophy for the superior scholastic and citizenship records of her BIO students at Manual. () R G A i I Z A T I O N S 83 The Seniori Forum 4i Bir HE SENIOR FORUM promised to be most successful at the beginning of the term, for over eighty students tried out for membership and some L fine programs were put on. The semi-annual get-together party was held and was thoroughly enjoyed by ex ' eryone who attended. After the tragic event occurred, some meetings were held at Foshay Junior High. It was decided to hold meetings in the mornings at Manual. Several meet- ings were then held at Manual in conjiuiction with the Junior Forum. One of the most successful meetings of the year was the Declamation Con- test which was held under the guidance of Mr. Moore, the popular Forum spon- sor, and Harold Donaldson, Forum president. The contest was won by Billie Braca and she was presented with a cup at the end of the term. ( )ther outstand- ing meetings were the student-teacher program, the inter-forum debate, and many interesting open-forum discussions. The other officers for the term were, Billie McFadden, girls ' vice-president; Booth Woodruff, boys ' vice-president; Valerie Ritchie, secretary; Sid Geldberg, treasurer ; and Jack Rosenberg, sergeant-at-arms. 84 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 THE MERIT BOARD One of the outstanding features of Manual ' s self-government is the Merit Board. The purpose of this board is to interview and determine in what manner a delinquent student may best be made to realize that success of Manual ' s self- government depends upon the ability of the student to govern himself. While it has been a custom in the past to extend aid only to those whose de- merits exceed twenty, the board achieved considerable success this term with many students whose records were not that bad but whose indifference to their record indicated they would soon be near the danger point. By selecting, as ex-officio members, the leading students of various school organizations, the officers of the board were able to extend to the individual in question a more definite form of aid rather than having to rely upon the students own initiative and desire to become more active in school functions. By virtue of their office, the girls ' vice-president and boys ' vice-president of the student body are secretary and sergeant-at-arms respectively. The student body president was a valuable member of the board because of his familiarity with school activities. This term officers are, chairman. Owen Colby ; assistant chairman. Booth Woodruff; secretary, Ellen Yeakel ; and sergeant-at-arms, Elmer Maclntyre. ORGANIZATIONS 85 86 THE ARTISANS ' 33 LIFE By Lucille Vanslett Strange are life ' s ways indeed, To us bewildered mortals, Its lust, its pride, its greed, Ever at our portals. It brings us joy one hour, Tbe next is spent in pain. One day it brings a flower, The ne.xt it brings the rain. Strange are the ways of men, Hoping, ever striving. They lose and lose again. But still they keep on driving. Life and men — strange together. Lasting but a day. Through dark and sunny weather. Along life ' s changing way. -A r, - , f.Z ? 88 THEARTISANS ' 33 OUR COACHES AT EVERY HIGH SCHOOL, large or small, metropolitan or rural, there are men who dedicate themselves to the athletic and physical education of the students. Manual Arts is indeed fortunate to have upon their coaching staff men of natural aljility and great versatility. To these men, whose personal interest and untiring energy have brought honor to the juirple and gray through the athletic victories of their teams, go the high esteem of the student liody. Sid • ' . Foster. Leading the Toiler coaching staff is Coach Foster, one of the oldest and most experiencefl physical educators in the city. He has made outstand- ing athletes out of many men of mediocre ability. This year he assisted Coach Toney in producing a track team that finished fourth in the final standing of the city meet and tenth in the final standing (jf the .Southern California Track and Field Championships. James J. BIcivctt. Coach Blewett has the honor of directing the destinies of varsity footliall squad and is to be congratulated upon his fine work with the material available this year. During the spring track season Coach Blewett throws his energies into building up a winning Class B track squad. This year the B team under his supervision walked off with the City and Southern California Meet titles. James P. Armstrong. To Coach Armstrong falls the task of guiding the varsity basketball squad. Without a returning letterman he produced a team that finished fifth in the final standings of the City League. Coach Armstrong also holds sway over Class C track. His well coached team passed through the dual season without defeat and then proceeded to annex the city meet title. Arthur Williams. The Manual gym team, directed by Coach Williams is be- lieved to be the strongest high school team in the state. Because of his personal interest in gymnastics Coach Williams produces successful teams. In the fall he coaches B basketball. Charles Toney. Upon the shoulders of coach Toney fall the trials and tribula- tions of creating a winning track team. The ]U ' rformance of our track team this year removes all question of his great ability and versatile coaching qualities. Coach Toney also sjiends his time during football season in building up a strong line. Herbert E. Loughced. One of the most important positions in the school falls upon the .shoulders of this capable coach. His is the job of directing the corrective gym department. When Manual was still an adherent of the national sport Coach Lougheed acted in the capacity of varsity baseball coach. ATHLETICS 89 THE COACHES Sidney Foster Charles Toney James Blewett Arthur Williams James Armstrong Herbert Lougheed 90 THE ARTISANS ' 33 ARSITV BASKETBALL Three games won and three games lost is in brief the summary of the varsity basketball season. Losing to Roosevelt and Poly by large scores in their first two games, the Man- ual team came back to ujiset three strong teams in succession, Jeiiferson, Franklin, and Belmont. In the final of league play the Artisans succumbed to their traditional rivals, Hollywood. Co-captains Oscar Rivera and Gene Romero were by far the two most valuable men of the team. Rivera played an all-around consistent game at forward, while Romero, Arti.san sensation at center, was high point man for the season. CLASS B BASKETBALL. Although averaging seventeen points a game the lightweight squad had rather an up and down season. The . rtisan Babes looked good defeating the Roosevelt B ' s in the first league game. However, they dropped the next two games to Poly- technic and Jefferson, l)oth cbamiiionsbip b()un l teams. The Toilers again showed imjirovement 1) ' defeating Franklin in a tough, hard fought game which found the lanual squad fighting to retain a slim lead when the gun sounded. Displaying none of the qualities that pulled them thru the Roosevelt and Franklin frays the Babes dropped the last two games by large scores. Harvey Malcolmson, pep])y . rtisan forward, was undoubtedly the most out- standing on the team. Alason. a forward, jjlayed a steady game thruoiU the sea- son, while the guarding of Hamill and Lockhart was at times lieautiful to watch. Malcolmson, Mason, Sears, Hamill, Lockhart and Gettamy composed the first string lineU]). These men were the only members of the squad to obtain their num- eral. Notable substitutes who saw action were Duane ilce, Jerry Page, Eugene Linn, and Erwin Alvin Levy. .Shelljy Farnsworth turned in a very good job as manager of the Babes. CLASS C BASKETBALL Throughout the .season the Artisan Cees played steady basketball, although beaten badly by Roosevelt in their first league encounter, edged out by Poly in a 10-9 fracas, and succumbing to Jefferson in another close struggle. Due to the excellent coaching of Ed Straube. former all-city guard from Man- ual, they improved rapidly, until, in the Franklin game the Toiler runts found themselves and literally swamped the Printers by a count of 21-12. Still playing excellent ball the .Xrtis ' ins lost a heart-breaking game to P.elmont. 7- f . Not being daunted the Midgets took heart and in the last league struggle nosed out Hollywood 10-7 in a close game. Those receiving their numerals were ISillx Coe, honorary captain, Tom Bray. Glen Short, Torn Hirano, George McDon.-ild, I ' rank .Sanada, and Manager Jesse -Shetley. Polytechnic ' s [(jrfeit gave the Cees .500 for the season. A T H L E T 1 C S 91 f r f9 r a f ' ■ J f i I ' ax.t- - H I.ASS R BASKETBAIX ' 1 I ai. i li r. 92 THEARTISANS ' 33 MANUAL-ROOSEVELT, DECEMBER 2 Beginning the season disastrously, the Toiler quintet met defeat at the hands of the Roosevelt Roughriders in the first round of the City League play. Finding the basket with unfailing regularity the Roosevelt five led at the end of the first quarter and were in possession of a seven point margin at the half. Superlative work on the part of Romero and Rivera was not enough to stop the Roughriders, who, led by their outstanding forward, Abe Schwartz, were never headed after the first quarter. Abe Schwartz of Roosevelt was high point man with fifteen points. Gene Romero topped the local scorers with a total of nine markers. The final check-up found the score 30 to 22. POLYTECHNIC-MANUAL, DECEMBER 9 Continuing its losing streak the Artisan squad was overwhelmingly defeated by a superior Parrot quintet. The Toilers were demoralized by the superior showing of the Poly men and failed to count a single field goal thruout the game. However, through the medium of accurate free throw shooting the Artisans were able to score nine points. The Manual quintet was undeniably weakened when Gene Romero, stellar Artisan center, was obliged to leave the game early in the third quarter on four personal fouls. Les Valley, Parrot shooting ace. was high point man, Rallying ten points. The final score revealed that Manual had been defeated by a score of 25 to 9. Incidentally, it was the first time that a Polytechnic basketball squad had de- feated an Artisan quintet in seventeen years. JEFFERSON-MANUAL, DECEMBER 16 Springing the biggest surprise of the season, a supposedly weak Manual five defeated the highly touted league leading Jefferson quintet. Leading by eight points at the end of the third quarter, the Toiler team let up on their defense in the final quarter and were given a scare when the Democrats ran their total from twenty two to twenty-nine entirely on foul throws. The excitement reached an explosive pitch in the last few minutes as Toiler after Toiler left the floor on personals, and foul throw after foul throw swished thru the basket to the Democrats ' credit. Jefferson ' s rally failed by a single point as the gun ended the game. The final score was 30-29. This game will k- remembered for a long time by the Manualites who were fortunate enough to witness it. ATHLETICS 93 FRANKLIN-MANUAL, JANUARY 13 Again surprising the dopesters, a greatly improved Manual quintet swamped the favored Printers by a score of 27-15 to stretch their total of victories to two. Led by the infallible Manual center, Gene Romero, the Toiler five sank baskets from every corner of the court to count thirteen points before a bewildered Pan- ther squad could successful collect themselves to sink a free throw. Though the Manual supporters didn ' t outnumber their team as much as two to one the Franklin rooters had a hard time to make themselves heard. Romero, as usual, was high point man in this game, garnering thirteen mark- ers. The fracas ended with the .Artisan squad again finding the basket from all angles. On the final checkup it was f(jund that every Manual man on the starting lineup had scored. MANUAL-BELMONT, JANUARY 20 Belmont, favored on the strength of the great playing of their captain and forward, Earl Hood, traveled to Manual one Friday afternoon and then took their way home a little later the same afternoon, defeated. The prospective all-city forward, Hood, delivered the goods but it was not enough. Although Hood scored fifteen points to establish himself high point man of the day his team did not support him. Starting to play basketball as they did against Franklin the Toilers rang up nine points before the Belmont quintet was able to break thru the tight Artisan defense. The Toilers grabbed the lead in the first quarter and never relinquished it for the duration of the game, although the Sentinels gave the local five a scare when the half ended with a score of 15-14. However, the Manual quintet came back in the second half to show their superiority and when the game ended they held the long end of the 31-21 final score. Romero again was high point man for the locals with a total of fourteen digits. MANUAL-HOLLYWOOD, JANUARY 26 Although rated an even chance with the Redshirts from Hollywood, Manual failed to pull thru with a win. The redshirts warriors gained the upper hand over the purple and gray early in the first quarter and were never headed, a desperate bid by the locals failing in the third stanza. The final score found the Artisans on the short end of a 35-16 count. The op- ponents ' score might not have been so high but Coach Armstrong decided to give the deserving second string a chance in the last quarter. Gene Romero, well-known Toiler center, was recovering from an attack of the flu and therefore was not capable of playing his usual game. Outstanding players on both quintets were Rivera of Manual, who was high point man of the Artisans, and Paul of Hollywood, tricky Redshirt, who was the main cause of the locals ' downfall. 94 JOHNS THE ARTISAN S ' 33 COHEN SKINNER VARSITY BASKETBALL Oscar Rivera. Cooperating with Gene Romero as captain of the Toiler quintet. Oscar always played a steady all-around game at the forward position. Though never spectacular he could always be counted upon to score from four to six points a game. His superior floor-work was observable in every fracas. Oscar was a product of the second string on the ■31- ' 32 City Championship squad. In his tenth grade year he won his numeral on the B ' s. He will be lost to Manual thru graduation. Albert Johns. Playing the guard position. Al proved that he knew hcjw to play basketball in that memorable Jefferson game. Inserted into the fracas early in the second quarter, he proved a bulwark on defense and contributed greatly to the win by scoring three field goals out of five tries. Al never failed to ])lay a steady de- fensive game while he was in the fray. Unfortunately for the Toilers he graduates this June. Gene Romero. Gene Romero, co-ca])tain of the Toiler basketeers, was out- standing in the City League. Moved to center from the guard position he had filled in the previous year. Romero exceeded expectations and fitted naturally into this berth. He was high point man for the locals with a total of 51 jioints for the season. He was the pep and spirit of the team, and always present in the jnnches. Though Romero was invariably outjumped by men of opposing teams, he easily offset this disadsantage by his extraordinary offensive plaxing. Phil Cohen. As one of Manual ' s defense men, Cohen guarded well his part of the floor and showed some ability on offense. This was his first year on a Manual basketball team. He also leaves Manual thru graduation. Donald Skinner. ( )ne of the best men on the Manual team, Don always pro- duced when the going got hot. His guarding and defensive work were above par. ATHLETIC S 95 LABRIOLA THORSON 4J A VARSITY BASKETBALL Harold Luhriola. Harold Ijelonys tu that very small and select clique of lettermen who win monograms in their first year of competition. This season he held down a guard lierth. In the first three games he saw very little action but by persistent effort proved that he was capable of playing a brand of bas- ketball that could not keep him out of the starting lineup. Great things are in store for Harold if he keeps up the present rate of improvement. Sitiiao Fukiyaina. Sunao Fukiyama was first a C numeralman, then a B numeralman, and now finally he has attained the glory of becoming a varsity letter- man. His fine offensive work at the forward position won him his berth on the Ar- tisan squad. Because of a back injury sustained in the first game of the season, Sunao was not able to continue as a regular. However, in every game he entered, he inspired his teammates with fire and determination by his fight and drive. Fu- kiyama will be lost to the Toilers next year as he is a graduating senior. Campbell Jolinsoii. Coming up from a first string position on last year ' s B team, Campbell slipped naturally into the varsity lineup at forward. Cam, though small, was one of the most feared of the Artisan offensive men. His playing was characterized by slashing drives to the basket, especially on follow ins. Johnson will leave a forward berth vacant for Coach Armstrong to fill next year. Earl Thorsoii — manager. Earl performed the everlasting duties of his man- agerial position in a very creditable and efficient manner. Always cheerful and will- ing to work, he was well liked by the whole basketball s(|uad. Earl intends to leave Manual at the completion of the summer semester. 9(3 THEARTISANS ' 33 THE MANUAL GYM TEAM The completion of the gymnastic season again finds the powerful Manual Arts ' gym team victorious. This fact established the team as city dual champions. The predictions of the so-called dopesters was badly shattered when Manual triumphed by a margin of nine points over the strong Washington aggregation. Such teams as Hollywood, Poly, L. A., Lincoln, and Franklin fell before the ter- rific onslaught of the local boys. Comprising the team were the following outstanding performers: Captam Bill Roberts, parallel bars; Orbay Schultz, horizontal bars; Howland Howe, long horse and tumbling ; Jack Parker, rope and rings ; Arthur Sanchez, horizontal bar ; and Johnnie Truax, rope and rings. Other boys on the team were Emil Sady, Bob Coyle, Ed Gilbert, Roy Marken. Paul Horn, Maggie McGee, Doug Doan, Ray Greuber, Glen Short, and Weber Jensen. Ruel Short was an excellent manager. This year the gym team will receive a new type of letter especially designed for them. Much credit is due to Coach Art Williams who by brilliant coaching, ntade the gym team victories possible. THE YELL LEADERS Real results -were obtained from the student body when that unimpeachable trio of yell Jea il rs, Jack Rosenberg, Billy Coe, and King Hamill, began their antics. Jack Rosenberg, a four star yell leader, acted as king. Billy Coe, a two star man, was again chosen to lead the student body, and King Hamill made his debut this term. Those boys more than satisfactorily filled their positions. The spirit raised from the student body by them and transmitted to the Artisan tracksters was prob- ably accountable for quite a few points during the season. THE TENNIS TEAM With many losses behind them, the Manual Arts tennis team has gone down to defeat as never before. They lost heavily to Hollywood, Los Angeles, Garfield, and Fairfax. However, in the Franklin and Lincoln matches a good deal of excel- lent playing was shown. A strong handicap gripped Manual ' s tennis team when the earthquake struck its devastating blow. Practicing had to be done in the morning, and a whole team could not be gathered at once because of existing conditions prevailing on the Manual campus. The single players practiced when practice was possible and doubles players were only brought together on Saturdays. The racket wielders who played four or more games were : first, second, third, and fourth singles, respectively, Johnny Hillman, Bruce Campbell, Booth Wood- ruff, and Bob McKnight. First and second doubles were: Valjean Slasor and Jack Calhoun; Charles Barnes, and Israel Dunkin. Stuart Hummel substituted. ATHLETICS . , . -i 7 X- iJLt i 4J I 1.1. i.(v. i !;i: t. 98 T H E A R T I S A N S ' 33 CLASS B TRACK Coach Tim Blewett had a bunch of Bees in his Ijonnet this season and they went out and stung the other schools into submission. Ho ve ' er, racked by alisence and sickness the Artisan babies succumbed to Fairfax to lose their only dual meet. The B track squad won the city and Southern California meets by a large score this year. In the sprints Cushnie was undenial)ly a great performer. He was a double winner in the city, annexing the century and the furlong. Lareon Moore placed third in the city 220 yard dash, and Captain Lloyd Helms ] laced fifth in the century in the same meet. In the citv hurdles Lloyd Olson was a double winner. He set a .Snuthern Cali- fornia and school record of 9 and .3 seconds in the high hurdles. The relay team composed of Cushnie, Moore, Helms, and La Fond, set a city record of one minute 8.9 .seconds, and a .Southern California record of one minute, 7 .7 seconds. Frampton may well be considered Manual ' s greatest Class B athlete. In his favorite event, the high jump he established a city record of 5 feet 11 1-S inches, school record of 6 feet and a Southern California record of 5 feet 11 1-4 inches. Closely following Frampt(jn came McDaniels who took second in the city and Southern California meets. Me jumped 5 feet 10 inches on both occasions. CLASS C TRACK Coach Armstrong ' s Toilers of the Cees went out to sea in the track world this season undefeated and also won the city meet for the second consecutive time. With Winstin in the century and Tom and Yamoda in the 50 yard dash, the . rtisans were always assured of points. In the low hurdles there was always battle between little Dan Komai and Tat- suo Anraku with the honors divided. Anraku soared over nineteen feet in most of his broad jumjis. This accom] - lishment gained a fourth ])lace for him in the city meet. Williams and Foley did the honors in the high jum]5. In the city ' illiams soared five feet and five inches to annex first place. Scheffler, the pole vaulter of the squad, was another one to gain a first in the city. He encompassed 10 feet. In the shot put Fujikawa and Bell showed tlicir worth by placing third and fifth, respectively, in the city. Other men who earned numerals were: MaUella, Shogo, Walton, and Town- send. The worth of Coach Jimmy Armstrong as a track coacli is proven by tiie show- ing of his Cee teams in the last two vears. A T H L K T I C S 99 (j 100 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 RORISON FRAMPTON THE TRACK MEN RELAY CARNIX ' AL, MARCH 4, 1933 Mid-season form was displayed ljy the Purple and Gray cinderpath artists when they upset the pre-ineet dope of the so-called experts and breezed into second place in the Annual City Relay Carnival held at Los Angeles High School. The locals bowed only to the L. A. Romans who quite appropriately annexed first place on their own field. The Artisans rolled up points in the four man 440 yard relay class A, in the medley relay class C, medley relay class A, 8 pound shot class C, running broad jump class C, and in the high jump class B, to reach the total points that put them in second place. Although the Romans won the relay carnival the two boys that thrilled the large crowd of spectators were Comerford and Frampton, both proud wearers of the purjjle and gray. In the medley relay, Bill Comerford, leather lunger de luxe, came from behind in his event, the mile, to defeat Waldthausen of L. A. by a good distance, thereby giving the Toilers first place in this event. Frampton, diminutive high jumper, scaled the bar at 5 ft. 1 1 j in. to take second j lace in his event. Hirshon, Burns. Jensen, and Comerford made up the winning medley relay team. LINCOLN-MANUAL, MAU( 11 10 Showing great versatility the Manual tracksters vancpiished the lads from North Broadway by a score of 89 to I?. The Toiler B.V.D. men swept five events, the 440, 880, hurdles, mile, and shot put. First and second in the high jumji were annexed by Frampton and McDaniels at the winning height of 3 feet 10 inches. The Tiger supporters managed to eke out a tie for first in the pole vault and two seconds in the 100 and 220. This meet showed the Artisans to lie weak in the pole vault and not exactly up to par in the 440. Manual displayed exceptional strength in the 880 and the mile. Jensen an- nexing the half in the fast time of 2.06.8 and Comerford breezing thru the mile in 4.39.8. ATHLETICS 101 COMERFORD MOORE YATES THE TRACK MEN LOS ANGELES-MANUAL, MARCH 31 Annexing eight first places and the relay, the powerful Romans from L. A. High crushed the Artisan track and field team hy a score of 70; to 337 . The meet took place on the Toilers ' own oval. The Romans swept the century and the furlong, Adrian Udell. Los Angeles ace, crossed the finish line first in l)()th events. He turned in the time of 10.2 in the 100 and 22.7 in the 220. Burns of Manual, who won the 440 in 52.8, was disqualified because he was paced the last ten yards by an over-enthusiastic Toiler student. Defeat in the feature event of the day marked the complete demoralization of the Artisans. Bill Comerford, running the 880 in place of the mile, was forced to trail Gilmore and Wagner of L. A. to the tape. The two-lap event was won by Gil- more in the fast time of 2 :02.2. In the field events the Toilers showed to good advantage, scoring a total of 19 3 against the 16 made by the Blue and White. MANUAL-FREMONT, APRIL 7 Upsetting all dope the Manual Toilers turned in a decisive 64 to 33 vic- tory over Fremont ' s thinly clads on the Pathfinder ' s field. The unexpected happened when Cushnie of Manual crossed the tape in the 100 ahead of Case and Falvo of Fremont. He accomplished this feat in the fair time of 10.4. Manual also broke into the scoring column in the furlong when Cushnie and Hirshon finished two, three. Jensen and Thaggard showed good form by coasting thru the 880 to take first and second, respectively, in 2 :04. The Pathfinders showed their teeth by making a clean sweep in the pole-vault, clearing the bar at 12 feet 3 inches. However, the Toilers nearly equaled this in the high jump where they scored 8j points. Seven first places and the relay were won by the Toilers. 102 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 HIKSHON CUSHNIE THE TRACK MEN GARFI ELD-MANUAL, APRIL 14 Showing their latent strength the .Manual Toilers heat the (iarfield liulldogs into submission by a score of 69 1-4 to 34 3-4. The meet was held cm the locals ' oval. In the dashes the . rtisans surprised l)y garnering eleven points. Cushnie ot the purple and grey scored eight points, the result of a second in the hundred yard dash and a first in the furlong. His time in the 220 was 23.1. Hirshon was right on his heels in this race. Four more points entered the scoring column when liurns and Cruse finished two, three, in the one lap event. In the 880 yard run Jensen finished first as usual with Thaggard coming up from behind to place third behind Renaud of Garfield. The time for this event was 2 min. 6.4 .seconds. Returning to his old form Comerford ambled around the track four times in 4 min. 42.9. He was far ahead of his teammate, Marineau. who finished second. Eight points scored in the highs and six points in the lows gave the home team a total of fourteen points out of a possible eighteen in both hurdle events. ( )lson, Yates, Moore, and Steffin were the responsible jiarties. The field events produced a total of 21 1-4 jroints for the .Artisans. The ]iole vault gave 2 1-4 points to the total, Ruiz, a former Bee. tying for first with three of his o]iponents. In the high jump Frampton and McDaniels tied for first to clinch eight ])oints. Likewise Skinner and Bunch scored eight points in the broad juni]). The shot i)ut. the Bulldogs ' strong event, found Hawkins placing second. .Showing fair .speed Manual took the relay by a large margin. CARN BURNS CREWS COOPER THE TRACK MEN MANUAL-FAIRFAX, MARCH 24 In the seciind meet of the (Rial season the Artisans lost a close decision to the Fairfax Colonials by a score of 53 3-6 to 50 1-6. Although their morale was shat- tered because of the internal disturlmnces in the school caused by the earthquake, the Toilers, without student body support, fought to a gallant defeat. A high light of the struggle was the brilliant performing of Leslie Watson of Fairfa.x who annexed three firsts, the high jump and both hurdle races, for a total of 15 points. Fairfax appeared particularly strong in the 100, 220, and both hurdles where they scored 31 out of a possible 36 points. These events were the cause of the Artisans ' downfall. The bright spots on the ]jrogram for the Toilers showed when Bill Comerford, followed liy Thaggard and Burns, annexed the 880. when Ned Jensen, followed by Marineau, won the mile, and when Cushnie, running the anchor lap of the relay broke the tape two yards ahead of a speedy Colonial. MANUAL-HOLLYWOOD, APRIL 21 In the concluding dual meet of the season Hollywood High defeated the Toilers 55 1-2 to 48 1-2 by annexing the deciding event of the meet, the relay. Nip and tuck all the way, Hollywood led by only two points when the relay was called. Wentworth of the Redshirts was the only double winner. He crossed the tape first in the 100 and the 440. The outstanding marks of the meet were Big Jim Donaldson ' s put of 51 feet 5 inches, Don .Skinner ' s fine leap of 22 feet 1-2 inch in the broad jump, and Bill Comerford ' s running in the mile, wherein he defeated Ciraves of Holly- wood in 4 minutes 38.5 seconds, the best time thus far clocked in the citv. 104 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 DAVIS HAWKINS THAGGARD McDANIELS THE TRACK MEN CITY MEET, MAY 1 Sweeping everything liefore them, the highly favored Romans of L. A. High easily emerged victors in the city track and field championships by a score of 41 i-7 points. The meet was held on Housh Field, the Roman ' s own oval. Their great strength was apparent from the fact that they failed to score in two events only, the shot put and the broad jump. Point totals of other schools in the order they finished are as follows : Poly- technic, 29 3-7; Jeffenson, 27 3-7; Manual Arts, 19; Hollywood, 16 3-7; Belmont, 16; Fairfa.x, 11 1-3; Fremont, 7 16-21 ; Garfield, 6 6-7; Lincoln, 3; and Franklin, 11-3 points. Two new records were established, namely, the high jump, in which Corny Johnson, of Olympic fame, leaped 6 feet 6 1-2 inches to establish a new national mark. Willard Ward, of Northwestern High School, formerly held the record at six feet si.x inches. And in the shot put Big Jim Donaldson accom])lished a heave of fifty-three feet three and one-half inches, bettering the old mark of fifty-two feet and six and one-half inches by a full nine inches. The Toilers surprised by scoring in practically all events in which they (quali- fied. Thaggard took fourth in the 880, Steffen took fifth in the low hurdles, Yates took fourth in the high hurdles, and Rorison placed fifth in the shot put. In the feature event of the day, the mile. Bill Comerford defeated Waldthausen of L. A. in 4:33.4. Jensen of Manual took fourth in the same race. Don Skinner, broad jumper deluxe, leaped 22 feet 8 1-2 inches to annex first in his event. Don also ran a half lap on the relay team, which, however, failed to place. ATHLETICS 105 SOUTHERN CAL11 -()RNIA MEKT, MAY 13 El CV ' iitro ' s four man team rlefeated the strong Los Angeles High Komans and in doing so took tjic Soutliern California Track and I ' ield Chanipionshi|)s with a total score of 20 ])oints. Los Angeles High finished second with a total of 16 points. The following tahle shows the standing and the score of the other com- peting teams: Jefferson, 14; L. A. Poly, 12; Santa Monica, 10 4 ; Muir Tech, 10; Hollywood. 9; South Gate, S; Monrovia, 8; Manual Arts, 7: Antelope Valley, 5; P.elmont, 5; Hoover (Glendale), 4 ; South Pasadena, 4; Whittier, 4; ( llendale, 4; Fremont Syi; (lardena, 3] ; Santa Barbara, Syi; Jordan, 3 4 ; Pasadena, 3; Fairfax, 3; University, 3; Compton, 3; Inglewood, 2; Burbank, 2; Riis, 2; Santa Ana, 1 X ' : Brawlcy, 1 4 ; Redondo, 1 ; Loyola, 1 ; and Chaflfey, 1. The markers for the purjjle and the gray came when Skinner took second in the broad jum]) with a leap of 22 feet 7 ' 4 inches, and when Comerford finished third in the mile which was run in the exceedingly fast time of 4 minutes, 30.8 sec- onds. Jensen, also competing in the mile, just missed ])lacing. He finislied sixth, behind Mercer of Hoover (Glendale). THE BEST MARKS OF THE SEASON Event 100 yd. dash 220 yd. dash 440 yd. dash 880 yd. run Mile run High hurdles 1 20 low hurdles 220 low hurdles Shot put Broad jump High jump Pole vault 8 man mile relay Athlete Cushnie Cushnie Burns Comerford Comerford Yates Olson Moore Moore Rorison Skinner Frampton Ruiz Meet Fremont Garfield Fremont Fairfax City Fremont Garfield Los Angeles Fremont City State Lincoln Garfield Fairfax Time, Height. Distaiiec 10.4 seconds 23.1 sconds 52.6 sconds 2 :03.2 minutes 4:35.4 minutes 16.3 seconds 13.3 seconds 26.2 seconds 47 ft. 51-2 in. 22 ft. 10 in. 5 ft. 10 in. 1 1 ft. 3 in. 3 :06.3 minutes 106 T H E A R T I S A N S ' 33 THE TRACK MEN Thiiggurd. A 6f)0 man from last year ' s B team. Thaggard showed fine form in the half mile by placing in practically all the meets. Bob Burns. Boh ran the 880 and the 440. His liest time for the year was 52.6 in the one lap event. Harold Hirshon. Harold competed in the 100 and 220 yard dashes and ran half a lap on the relay. Bob Cushnie. Cushnie competed in the 100 and 220 dashes and ran anchor on the relay team. Kenneth ) ' ates. Kenneth retnrned from the 1932 varsity, and showed great improvement. He placed fourth in the city finals. Lloyd Olsen. Lloyd garnered a great many points in the high hurdles through- out the dual meet season. Jim Rorisou. Hawkins and Jim formed our shot put team. Jim improved in every dual meet and then surprised us hy placing fifth in the city finals with a heave of 47 ft. 5 1-2 in. Bill Coiiierford. Bill is considered the best miler in the city. He won the city meet in 4:35.4. Ned Jensen. Ned alternated in the mile and 880 and piled up plenty of points for the Toilers. Lareon Moore. Moore was Alamiars ace in the hole in tlie low lun ' dles. His best time for the season was 13.3 seconds for the 120 yd. lows. Bob Hinckins. Bob was back from last year ' s squad and showed immense nii- [jrovement. He placed first in the shot put on almost all occasions. Jim McDaniel. Jim was the acknowledged niunber two man in the high jump. He scored his share of points during the .season. Orville Framplon. Orv was an important point winner for the squad in liis fax ' orite event, the high jump. iuib Mariiieaii. Bob ])laced in almost all of the meets, in his favorite event, the mile. I ' erc il .Sleffen. Steffen was the surjirise package of the season. He upset the dopesters when he placed fifth in the city finals of the low hurdles. Jim Daz ' is. Although failing to make a letter Jim was a very valuable man on the relay team and sometimes came thru with unexpected points in the 100 and 220 yard dashes. Burns. Burns was just about our best pole vaulter. He scored many points in the dual meets, but not enough for a letter. Don Skin)ier. Don. broadjum])er and high point man of the season, was one of the most vakialile n;en on the s(|uad. lie |)laced first in all the dual meets and then leaped 22 ft. 8 1-2 to annex the City, lie also won the State. ATHLETICS 107 RECORD OF POINTS L:n. Fair. L. A. P ' rcm. Gar. Holly. City Sou. Cal. state Total Skinner .5% 5% 5 5 5% 5 5 4 5 41 % Cnmerford 5 5 1 5 5 5 5 3 4 35 Jensen 5 5 3 5 5 5 2 30 Cushnic 5% 2% 8% 8% 4 291 4 Moore S% 1% 5 5% 5% 5 28 ¥2 Hawkins 5 5 5 4 3 3 25 Yates 3% 1% 1 5 3 4 2 20% Olson 5 3 3 5 D 20 Franiptoii 5 1 ' 3 3 4 2 ISVs Burns 1 1% 5 5% 3% I 17% McDaniel 3 1% 1 5 4 2 161 , Thaggard 3 3 3% 1% 3 2 16% Hirshon 9% % 1% 3% 15% Rorison 3 3 3 1 1 1 12 Cruse 4% 3% 1 1% loyg Marineau 3 3 1 3 10 Burns 3 21 1 1 ' 6y2 Davis 1% 1% % % 1 5 ' Ruiz 2% 3 5% Steffen 3 1 1 5 Katt 3 i i 3% Bunch 3 3 Boye 2y4 2% Fletcher I ' i 1% Nave • 1 y 1% Duarte 1 1 108 T H E R T I S A N S ' 53 GIRLS ' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION The falling mortar and bricks did not daunt the s])irits of the girls in the G. A. A. They have continued having their regular meetings at the homes of the members where all business has been carried on with great success. Although the G. A. A. had not chosen its basketball teams, the girls exhibited their outstanding ability in this sport at the Girls ' League assembly held in the Manual boys ' gym on May 12th. The game was between the Senior Ayes and Senior Bees. The mighty Mariners were victors. The officers this term are to be highly commended for putting the G. A. A. even on a higher plane than it has been before. It has been a real test of their ability and they have come out with accomplishment and success. These officers are : Wilda Henricks, president ; Catharine Gerau.x, vice-president : Mary Durand, recording secretary: Eva Bates, corresponding secretary; Vivien Hill, treasurer; and Misses Lockwood and Davis, advisers. THE BIG M SOCIETY T i be a member of this important organization the applicant must fill the quali- fications of leadership in athletics and in scholarship. Before the awarding of a letter wliich automatically makes the as])irant a member of the society his record in citizen- ship and scholarship is carefull - investigated. If he does not fulfill the re(|uirements he does not receive his letter. Officers for the last term have been: president. Carl .Anderson ; vice-])resident. Bill Roberts; treasurer, Ray Elliott; sergeant-at-arms. Ray Lucke : and secretary, Wilda Henricks. The president of the G.A.A. has a permanent ])osition in the Big M Society as secretary. THE TOILER CLUB The members of this hard working organization found it necessary to continue their work. Why? They managed the athletic ability of Manual. The track and field were kept in excellent shape, continually. Managers were always to be seen labor- iously cleaning out the pits and smoothing runways. Golf and tennis went ahead in practice under the managership of Joe xAdams and Bob Welshons, respectively. Gym team was well handled by Ruel Short. Varsity track manager, Dick Cooper, did an especially fine job with the able help of his assistants. B track was well managed bv Pat Kellv, proof mav be sought amon g the athletes. Bill Wilkerson, Class C track manager, really deserves the most credit of all. And above all these managerships, there is the outstanding figure of Ray Elliott, athletic manager. His dependableness and criticizing eye made events come out on top in fine running order. The officers of the club are: president. Ray Elliott; vice-president, . rlan Wes- sel ; secretary. Bob Welshons ; treasurer, Dick Cooper ; sergeant-at-arms, Jesse Shetley. ATHLETICS 109 THE HIG Al SOCIETY THE TOILER CLUB no THE A R T I S A X S ' 33 MANUAL ARTS AFTRR MARCH lU m its: w V 6, V l ' X cmm 112 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 I ' wa . THE LATIN CLUB Contio again comes through with an eventful year. Since earthquakes are as old as the Latin language, the club has gone placidly on with its plans. As usual, Vergil has received his due honor and still holds high place among the Latins. Inter- esting things have been done in the Cicero classes. Incidentally, we don ' t want our part in the first assembly of the term forgotten. We received a big hand for our Latin singing and we ' re proud of it. The picnic at Exposition Park, attended by all of the language clubs, was a great success. Contio was well represented as usual. One thing of which the clul) is proud is its large attendance at meetings. The officers who have helped Miss Cronkhite, the sponsor, put over a success- ful term are: Everett Marling, consul; Eleanor Newman, praetor; Jean Campbell, censor; Arthur Manella, (|Uaestor; I ' hillip Webber, centinin. CLUBS 113 114 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 rui. ii;ki;s ' assimia i ' I ' jn CLUBS 115 3 rilM lilX (I.UB W 116 THE ARTISAN S-33 i)i;i-iJ iniKNUsiiii ' i 1,1 I CLUBS .17 THE STAMP CLUB TO A HUMMING-BIRD Bv Arthur Knodel That sjieck of life That hangs suspended in vast, sunHt space That in one flash Will once again resume its whirling race Is naught but joy. Is naught but life and Ijeauty. To look and see A play of scintillating, colored light Dart to and fnj In such a wild, ecstatic, courseless flight Is to see God ' s Sweetest, shortest rhapsody. And as it plays In whims with each dawn-tinted nectar cup It ever spells Eternal youth, that always looking up Feels naught but joy . . . Is naught but life and beauty. 118 THE ARTISANS ' 33 VOICE FROM AN OPEN WINDOW Bv Earl Dorsey She is not here, oh seeker, look no more. A year ago she quit this house. How do I know ? I am the window of her house — at least, the house which once belonged to her. She used to frame her lo -e in me. She used my eyes to watch the snow-lit hill fro.m which you always came. She put her heart in mine, but now, my heart is empty. She is not here, not here any more. I saw you say goodbye. You smiled and waved }( in- hand. You walked upon that hill as if the world were just beginnini;. lint for her world ended. One day, the snow melted, but you did not come back. Look in her house no more, lover. Go where the world ' s tears fall together. Perhaps her love is tangled there among them. Sift them carefully, oh man, perhaps you ' ll pass a tear that is no more, no more on earth, but blown among the mountains. She is not here, though, not here any more. m ; : „ fli ' 3 120 T H E A R T I S A N S • 33 AEOLIAN CLUB Whc-n has a semester lieen so full of varied events? Any clul) meniljer will tell yiiu that never has the Aeolian Cliih v(jrked harder, or pulled lietter than in this spring term which was so full of handicaps for everyone concerned. The social events of the semester were climaxed by the spring- lianquet which was the biggest, best, and greatest affair in the history of the club, and also, by the combined picnic with the Girls ' Lyric Club. The singing of these two clubs at the beautiful outdoor graduation, will long remain in our minds as a memorable occasion. Many sacrifices have been made by the club cabinet and adviser, in order that the progress of the clulj could steadily move on. Those responsible for the success of the term are : Rolland Helsel, president ; Ralph Siegel. vice-])resident ; George ' aldes, secretary; Bob Marineau, treasurer; ' ill)er Brandt, librarian; Gordon Seyforth, manager and historian; and Miss Elizabeth Mottern. adviser and director of the organization. THE A CAPPELLA CHOIR The A Cappella Choir of Manual .- rts is one of many A Cappella groups throughout the country and the world which has entered into keen enjoyment of this type of vocal work. This semester the choir sang a group of numbers on the music festival y)ro- gram held at liovard .Auditorium on June 9th. and took an active part in the pre- sentation of selections from Haydn ' s Creation, on this same ]irogram. The black and crimson robes of this organization added materially to the lieauty and gaiety of the scene. The social affair of this group for the term took the form of a picnic at Ex- position Park. Here tennis, baseball, and good food made a good time that will long be remembered. The officers for the term have been Frances Detweiler, president; Bob Mari- neau, vice-president; Wynn Bryce, treasurer; and Estelle Formby, secretary. Miss Ina M. Davids is the musical director and adviser of the organization. THE GIRLS ' LYRIC CLUB The Girls ' Lyric Club estalilished for the purpose of studving and presenting good N ' ocal music and also for the promotinn of friendship and school loyalty has lived U]) to its high ideals. Singing in assembly ])rograms and on Public Schools Night, taking a prominent ])art in the music organizations ' presentation of Haydn ' s Creation in the spring music festival, and taking part in the choral singing for commencement have filled this term with activity. For social good times they have entertained their mothers in the semi-annual Mothers ' Tea, which was held in the beautiful .Spanish court at .Xuduhdn. Thcv also enjoved a jiicnic with the Boys ' Aeolian Llub at Exposition I ' ark, where games and swimming made a gav morn- ing. The officers this term have been Helen l- ' uller, jiresident ; Louise Sherlock, vice-president; Dorothy Canfield, treasurer; Helen Burklund, secretary; and Beatrice Tur| in, accom] anist. The adviser is Miss Ina M. Davids. CLUBS 121 ' ' ' I ■V Sr r m f . f I f f f t -i)l!ifi i 122 THEARTISANS ' 33 MUSIC CLUB The aim of the Music Ckib is to bring together the music loving and musically- minded students and to provide programs which are instructive and entertaining. There is no requirement for membership, beyond that of having an interest in music. The presentation of programs and the participation in them affords many students the opjiortunity to demonstrate their talents and to render school service. In this way gifted students are discovered and brought to the attention of the school. The club was well represented and gave promise of a most successful year when its activities were interrupted for the rest of the term by the earthquake. However, it is hoped that the coming semester will permit the resumption of many interesting plans and it is expected that the organization will take a more prominent ]ilace than ever in the life of the school. (;iRLS ' JUNIOR GLEE CLUB The activities of the tjirls ' Junior Glee Club are varied. Primarily intended for the joy and beauty of part singing, it has served to weld fifty-five girls into close companionship with high ideals of scholarship, loyalty, and consideration for others. The girls are part of the group who helped to make the spring music festival one of the outstanding events of the semester. The officers of the club are; Elizabeth Scott, president ; Marjorie Jennings, secretary-treasurer ; Geneva Scalzo, librarian. The accompanist of the club is Jane Hanks who accompanied for the production of the Creation. Miss Blythe is the sponsor. BOYS ' JUNIOR GLEE CLUB The Boys ' Jr. Glee Club started the spring term with the largest enrollment since it was organized. The stir-up in March dislodged us from our pleasant room in Manual Arts to Audubon and Foshay, where with the boys of the .Aeolian Club and A Cappella Choir, we began work on The Creation, an oratorio by Haydn which was presented on June 9th. All the members responded splendidly to e.xtra time demands. Those elected in February to guide the club were the following : Tom Marineau, president; Ken Yates, secretary; Robert and Richard Elliot, librarians: and Miss Elizabeth Mottern. director and adviser of the club. MUSIC AND DRAMA 123 124 T H E A R T I S A N S ' 33 THE LITTLE SYMPHONY Among tlie music organizations of ALinual Arts, the ensemble or Little Syin- phony has come to fill a distinctive place. The object of a small group such as this is to perform music of a somewhat more intimate character than that usually played by a large orchestra. These students have been working quietly but most sincerely to develop ar- tistic interpretations and beauty of tone coloring. The Little Symphony augmented by a few other instrumentalists, formed the accompanying grouj) for the festival chorus, which sang selections from Haydn ' s Creation at the sjiring concert given liy the organizations of the music department at Bovard auditorium on June 9th. Mr. F. Stillwell Moore at first, and later. Mr. 11. Roy Schwieger, have directed the symphony this semester. Much credit is due to them, and the students who are not interested in doing worthwhile things well. SYMPHONIC BAND It takes more than an earthquake to shake the Symphonic L)an(l folks out of the musical limelight. They have been going ahead as usual, practicing once a week in the Practice House and taking part in programs. On Public Schools Night they made a fine appearance at .Kudubon .Auditori- um, and ])layed over K.F.I.. at the Music Supervisor ' s request on May 29th on (jiie (if the Hollywood Bowl programs. On the ninth of May, the Band furnished entertainment for the Alumni Ban- quet, Bee Tur]iin lieing in charge of the program and adding some variety num- bers which took i lace between selections by the band. The Band has had two directors this term, Mr. F. Stillwell Moore during the first part of the semester and Mr. H. Roy Schwieger during the last. Much credit is due to them both, and the Symphonic P)and members feel that they have gained much musically from their membership. THE SENIOR ORCHESTRA Although the orchestra has been liroken in two. and the parts sejiarated. it goes on with its work just the same. There is something like magic in this, and it might be wondered how it is done if one did not know the fine calibre of the mu- sicians in the organization and their real desire to get something worthwhile accom- plished. For commencement ]: ractice tluv met together in the boys ' gym on Manual s campus, and succeeded in putting on a fine program. Manual could not get along without her orchestra at graduation time, and the Uiembers are to be congratulated on the fine spirit with which they have carried on in the face of real dilTiculties. The orchestra also took jjart in the spring music festival at Bovard auditorium, and acquitted itself with honor. Both Mr. Moore and Mr. Schwieger have done careful, artistic work, and the loyalty which they have evoked is proof of their devotion to the cause of good music. Officers of the organization for the semester have Ijeen Harold Dalton. presi- dent ; l ' d Gilber, vice-president; Kenneth Root, secretary; and Al C.alante, treas- urer. CLUBS 125 126 THEARTISANS ' 33 ROMANCE IS A RACKET The story revolved around a party of tourists in Italy, forced to shelter them- selves in an old inn because of a broken carriage. In an attempt to entertain the guests, the old innkeeper showed pictures and related escapades of his gangster- brother in America warning them that he might show up anytime. Taking advantage of this possible occurence, love-sick W ' allie and Bill proceeded to plan a scare for Nell and Kitty. Luigi. the innkeeper, was inveighled to fire a gun outside several times to represent the bandit attack. At this time W ' allie and Hill planned to rush out and do away with the intruders. The cast was : Miss Edith - Dixie Gray Nell Billie Braca Kitty Ruthlee Leach Angeline - Louise Sherlock Wallie - Irwin Markowitz Bill Smith Earl Dorsey PLAYERS ' COMPANY In no previous term has the Players ' Comiiany been more successful in pleas- ing the older critics as well as the students, and this has been accomplished by comedies and plays of literary merit. After taking first place in L. A. city and county, the play Where the Cross is made by C) ' ' iel took third place in the Pas- adena Community Playhouse, and was acclaimed by dramatic critics. The lighter and humorous side of life was shown in the play Romance is a Racket, a comedy-farce. The cabinet ; president, Kenneth Murphy ; vice-president. Ruthlee Leach ; secre- tary-treasurer, George Valdes ; publicity manager, Robert Welshons ; manager, John Boy ; are to be congratulated. Miss Mae Edwards and Mr. Harold G. Donnel alternated as sponsors and directors of the Players ' Company. Presented in a double assembly on February Zi. Romance is a Racket, by the Players ' Company proved to be the hit of the pre-quake term. STAGE CREW One of the hardest working of all school groups is the stage crew under Mr. Andersen ' s capalile directitjn. Their work in Romance is a Racket and in the preparation of the Mariners ' graduation scenery was commendable. Stage crew members are : William Morrisey. Ray Daugherty, Ernest Ramano, Charles Cook, Ed Kaiser, Ed Gilbert, Mel Hellman, Bob Horn, Jack Hanhart. Jim Edwards, Russell Newman, Al Maiuri, Charles Long, Gus Dimitri, and Howard Hudson. CLUBS 127 128 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 A R AI Y 129 THI ' . R. (). T. C. For tiie sixih consecutive year, the Manual Arts Reserve ()fficers ' Training- Cor]js has won Honor School rating. The notification was re- ceived after this form was on the press. Wednesday. March 22nd. the day of the in.spection, 250 cadets in bright and shiny uniforms answered, present. The review and inspection was conducted l)y Colonel Jerome Pillow, inspecting officer of the Ninth Corps Area. Other visitors were Lieutenant Colonel John J. Mudget, Colonel Brandt, veteran Indian fighter, and Colonel Barry, the head of the R.O.T.C. in Los Angeles City Schools. In the course of the inspection, the unit was presented with a new national flag hy the student body president, William Barnes. Cadet Major Murphy acce])ted on the part of the R. O. T. C. Next. Colonel Brandt presented to the Cadet Major an old army saber that has been handed down from generation to generation of soldiers and will be worn hy the Cadet Major on all state occasions. The new officers were installed. This is usually done in a ceremony at a banquet. This year however, they were installed on the field. All the new officers were lined up in front of the unit. Their oath of allegiance was then administered by Captain Louis Acosta, and at the end of the oath. Cadet Major Murphy congratulated them all. The con- cluding ceremony was an exhibition hy the drill scjuad and the rendition of the Star Spangled Banner by the band. Two organizations that do much to foster good feeling between the enlisted men and officers are the Non-Conimissioned Officers Club under the leadership of Sergeant Paul Philips, and the ( )f ficers ' Club, conducted b ' Captain Louis Acosta. These clubs had many good times throughout the year and their meetings were always enjoyed by those who attended. The N. C. ( ). Club wishes at this time give a sincere vote of thanks to the wonderful help given by its si onsor, .Mr. White. On June second came the night that every cadet lives for — the night of the Military Ball. This year the theme of the ball was strictly military and the gym was decorated to suit the cadets. .All the ladies present received as favors minia- ture sabers. The music, refreshments, and entertainment left nothing to be desired, and when the last dance was over and the gay couples had gone home, they all vowed that it was the best dance they had ever attended. Dave Bohannon ' s orchestra furnished the music. The orchestra, composed of ten instrumentalists, was excep- tionally good. All its members live in the southwest and attend Manual, Fremont and Washington. The next event to come was the Trophy Day exercises. This year the compe- tition was very keen and the units and individuals that won are to be congratulated on their fine showing. Trophv day was followed by the sergeants ' parade and this by the farewell parade in honor of the graduation officers. This year the imit loses by graduation twelve officers and six non-coms. These men have worked hard in their years of service to the R. ). T. C. In conclusion these graduates wish to thank Major Wil- son and Sergeant Littler for the help and guidance they have offered them in their three years of R. O. T. C. work. 130 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 STAFF OFFICERS William R. Wilson, Major, U. S. A. Clyde E. Littler. Sergeant. V. S. A. Kenneth Murphy, Cadet Major Captain Louis Acosta Captain Burton Roberts First Lieutenant Joseph Cadranel ARMY 131 132 T H E A R T I S A N S ' 33 A R U Y 133 134 THEARTISANS ' 33 RIFLE TEAM CoiiTijleting one of the most successful seasons in many years the Manual Arts R.O.T.C. rifle team succeeded in placing second in the Ninth Corjjs Area matches. They placed fourth in the Hearst matches and fourth in the National matches. This is a great improvment over last year when they placed seventh. The last match that the team participated in was an inter-post match among the American Legion. Five men from Manual placed for the American Legion Post No. 8. The team owes its success to Sergeant Littler. Memhers of the team this year are : Hendricks. Uird. Richardson, Miller, Hans- man, Steppler, Fashbaugh, Bratfish, Martin, Rees, Everst, Hagney, Ithomitis, and Fisher. OFFICERS ' DRILL SQUAD The Officers ' Drill Squad has again represented Manual in the completion of a fine season. The squad has performed on many occasions and given the R.( ).T.C. a very good name. The first performance was at Honor School Inspection, which was followed by a special exhibition for Colonel Barry at Manual. The squad was well received at a performance at South Park Masonic Lodge. The largest aud- ience the squad performed to was at the Presidents ' Day Parade in the Coliseum. This was followed by an exhibition at the Shrine Auditorium during Boys ' Week and a drill put on before the entire student body of Fremont High School. During Public Schools Week the squad was on the stage at Audubon Junior High. Led by Captain Tom Mitchell the squad consists of the following members. Ray Mitchell, Hubert DeGonia, Harold Bird, Herbert Malone, LeRoy Richard- son, Maurice Richardson, George Fuller, and Edward Fries. THE R.O.T.C. BAND The Manual Arts R.O.T.C. Band has been doing good service this semester. Since the earthquake they have met three days a week on the field at Manual for practice, and individual members have spent extra time practicing to perfect them- selves in their instruments, under the direction of Mr. Schwieger. Although there have been many conflicts and program difficulties, and al- though many have had to make a special trip to Manual for the rehearsals, these faithful ones have kept the Band together as a unit, and much credit is due to their loyalty and school spirit. On May 20th the Band was augmented by members of the football band to play for the City Track meet, and in their purple and gray uniforms marched to the Coliseum playing The Thunder in great style. Here they joined with several other bands of the city high schools to provide stirring music for the meet. The officers of the band this semester have been Roy Mitchell, captain ; Ed- ward Ernest, Tom Mitchell, Robert Carse, and Nate Moore, lieutenants. Mr. F. Stillwell Moore, during the first part of the semester, and Mr. H. Ray Schwieger, during the second, have been the directors. 136 THE A R T I S A X S ' 33 THE EPHEBIANS Eacli year by the vote of the Manual Arts faculty and the senior class there are selected the students who are, in the o])inion of the school, the most outstanding lead- ers along lines of scholarship and school activity. This select group represents the very highest ideals of Manual Arts. Their duties are to meet and discuss the many ' ital (|uesti((ns which arise in the school term. Their lines of discussion center chiefly upon citizenship and the understanding of a true and great democracy. Once introduced into this society, the membership lasts throughout life. Members of the ? Iariner class who received this most coverted honor are : ' iola Beisner, Margaret Corrie, ' alerie Ritchie, Katherine Roach. Eloise Russell, Edna Seeger, William Barnes, John Doto, Leland Illingworth, Arthur Knodel, Merril! Knox, Emil Sady, Harold Donaldson, and Ellen Yeakel. F E A T U K E S 137 AUDUBUN JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL 138 THEARTISANS ' 33 AT THE END OF THE RAINBOW By Edna Bullas OME DAY, said Ralph Barton as he sat on the steps of the small hut he called home, looking toward the sky after an April shower, 1 am going to find the pot of gold that people say is hidden at the end of the rainbow, and then Emily, we shall have all the money we want. He spoke to his wife who sat on the steps beside him, watching a beautiful rainbow slowly fade away. Paul, their year old son, was sitting between them. Oh, Ralph, replied Emily, if you would only stop dreaming and help me take care of the farm, we could make all the money we need. This land is fertile ; it only needs cultivation. Won ' t you please help so that we can make a decent home for our baby ? Ralph, who disliked farm work, did little or nothing to improve the land he had inherited from his father. If it had not been for his faithful and energetic wife the small family would often have gone without food. It was she who cared for the small garden, fed the few chickens, and worked in the fields, besides doing the house work and caring for the baby. A few weeks after this conversation had taken place, Ralph, with a bundle of clothes under his arm, walked out to the field where his wife was busily engaged in pulling weeds, and told her that he had decided to leave the farm and go out and find his pot of gold. But Ralph, exclaimed Emily in surprise, what will Paul and I do here alone, with no one to protect us ? We are so far from any neighbors you know. Please give up this silly notion and stay with us. No, replied Ralph vifith emphasis, I have made up my mind to go, and nothing can stop me. I will find my treasure even if I have to search the far corners of the globe, and then when I am rich, I ' ll return to you and baby. Come now, walk a little way up the trail with me, to tell me goodbye and wish me luck. She consented and went with him, hoping on the way, to persuade hinr to stay, but by the time they had reached the huge juniper tree, she knew her plead- ings to be in vain. As she could not leave the baby alone any longer, she bade him goodbye, and started back down the trail toward the house. Every little while she turned and waved at her husband, until he had disappeared over the ridge of the mountains. She then hurried on to see if the baby was still all right. As she neared the house she saw an old man sitting on the steps waiting for her. With a cry of joy she rushed forward recognizing, in the silent figure, her father, whom she had not seen for several years. It did not take her long to learn that he had sold his home in another part of the state, and had come to live with them. With the money from the sale of the old home, which her father gladly loaned her, Emily purchased new equi])ment, fertilizer, and seeds. With the help of her father and a hired man, she soon had the farm in a very profital le condition. Often during these times of plenty she thought of Ralph, who it seemed, had walked out the front door, just as his hope and dream of prosperity was walking in at the back. FEATURES 139 As Paul grew older, Emily, being a wise mother, taught him to love work, so that he would not grow up to be as useless as his father had been. He was given a good education, and having inherited his mother ' s energetic spirit, he made use of every opportunity. Being a thoughtful and grateful son, he studied agriculture, so that he would be able to take the burden of caring for the farm on his own shoulders, in order to give his mother a rest in her old age. Let us now pick up the story of Ralph Barton, whom everyone believed to be dead, and see how he had fared during the long years that had intervened since he had left his home and family. It can truthfully be said that he diligently searched for the gold he could never find. He had traveled far, but now after a lapse of thirty years, we find him again in his native state, penniless and hungry, a broken ntan. His greatest wish now, however, was to be reunited to his wife and son, of whom he had not heard since the day of his departure. As he reached the top of the ridge on a rainy day in April, exactly thirty years after he had left, he saw an- other rainbow which seemed to end in the fields of the farm he had once owned. Suddenly he realized that all these years he had not been searching for gold, but for happiness. He hurried on to his home, now a large modern house which in no way resembled the hut he had left long before. He rang the bell, and his son, now a prosperous young farmer with a family of his own, opened the door. The old man asked for his wife, Emily Barton, only to be told that she had been laid to rest, several years before, beside her father, under the huge juniper tree where she had last seen her young husband. Paul, believing his father to be dead, and thinking that the old man was a hungry tramp, posing as his father in order to get some food, fed him, and turned him out into the night. Thus the old man saw his pot of gold — happiness — fade away, just as he had seen that first rainbow do so many years before. MORNING Sing For the night is now over, Swing To your hornpipe so gay. Ring The ship ' s deck with your laughter. Bring in A joyous new day. Trill O ' er the sea with your music, Fill The air full of bright cheer. Chill The sad thoughts in your system. Will you Not brighten the year? 140 T H E A R T I S A N S ' 3i TRIPLE-CROSS By Bill lynn O YOU WANT ME to tell you a story, eh? A true story? About one of my adventures, eh ? Well you ' ve come to the right i)lace ; every nook and Lraiiny in these western mountains has its story. Take this caljin for instance ; it has its story, too. Yes, it happened to me, twenty years ago. No, I haven ' t lived here all the time. Sort of come and go, I do. I ' ve wandered around quite a bit since then, looking for a certain fellow. No, not a grudge; I ' d sort of like to satisfy my curiosity abnut him. It ha])i)cned this way ; 1 did quite a good deal of pros])ecting then. That was when Chrysolite, about a mile down the trail, was a l)Ooming little town; it ' s dead now, like most of all the gold towns. Jim Scanlon and Jim Roshloe were my ]iartners. They were a few years younger than I was, and tough chaps, even for those days ; I guess I was just about as hard, mvself. The two Jims could never get along together, though. I tried to keeii the peace, but I was scared all the time that they ' d push each other into Pow- der River Gorge. You see, they both loved the same girl down in Chrysolite. We had (|uite a bit of dust down near the cabin, and both boys were anxious to pull out of the country. Things came to a head that night, and they got to quarrel- ing about the girl. They wanted to fight it out. I talked them out of that ; but I couldn ' t sto]) them from gambling for her. That was one trouble, tlumgh, they were both too good at cards, couldn ' t trust each other to play a straight game. They de- cided to draw straight through the deck. If one of them drew the ace of diamonds only, he would receive two shares of the gold ; and the other fellow, who would ha e drawn the ace of hearts, would get the girl. If one of the Jims drew both the ace of diamonds and the ace of hearts, he would get the girl and one share of the gold ; the other Jim would get nothing but his own share of gold, since only the two red aces would count as the valuable cards. I didn ' t like the idea, but I couldn ' t do nuich about it. They were both as mean as wolves by that time and they told me to shut u]) and get out the cards. I was plenty worried about my own share of the gold; how was I to know that one of them wouldn ' t try to get away with my third, too? While I shuffled and cut the pack, Roshloe and Scanlon never took their eyes off each other; never trusted each other for even a second. They faced across the table ; and as Jim drew, he flicked a glance at the card and put it face down in front of him. I watched both of them closely, but their faces might have been masks for all the ex]5ression they showed ; if either one knew that I was there he gave no sign. But if I thought that I had been forgotten, I was sure mistaken, because things started happening just then. I remember looking down at the table and seeing that every card had been drawn. That is all I do remember, though, because somebody gave me an awful whack between the eyes, and I went out for the count. When I woke up it was morning; and what T had feared had happened. One of the Jims, disap])ointed because he had not gotten a red ace, had ] illed the otliei ' Jim and had left with all of the gold and the girl, too. F E A T U I E S 141 I found where the body had I)een dragged down tlie trail and thrown into the Gorge. If j ' ou ' ve ever seen the Gorge, you will know that the body was never found. Of course, I hurried into town, but I was too late — the girl and Jim were both gone. Which Jim, you say? Well sir. that ' s just it; I don ' t know which Jim it was, because I don ' t know which Jim was murdered. Nobody saw the girl when she left. She just left a note saying that she had eloped with Jim, but nol)ody knew which Jim she meant. Ves, I know what you are going to say. You were going to ask me why I didn ' t look at the two ])iles of cards an l see which Jim had drawn the two red aces. Well, ordinarily, that would have been a good idea, because the murderer, in his haste, had forgotten aliout the cards. The truth of it is, though, that I knew, without looking, that neither pile contained a red ace: Scanion and Roshloe each thought that the otlier had drawn both aces. You see, when I shuffled those cards, I was careful to take out both the ace of hearts and the ace of diamonds — I too loved the girl. CONQUERORS l ' . • I ' .ooT?! Woodruff Hark to the beat of tramping feet! The Conc|uerors are marching on : Their 1)anners gay, in bright array. Herald the coming dawn. Each foeman yields on bloodless fields ; To conquer strife their plan: Their battle cry rings clear and high. The Common Good of Man ! A Ijrother ' s hand in every land Their goal, when the day is done ; Justice and right will banish might When their last fight is won. Then war shall cease and world ' s wide peace Will cheer every Conqueror ' s heart ; , nd in that day may each one say, I played a hero ' s part. 142 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 THE MAN IN THE CAVE By Earl Dorsey He is sitting in the mouth of his cave. Behind him are shelves of books, the ac- cumulated theories of mankintl throughout a small part of their existence. His five fingers, surgeon-sensitive, trace figures in the sand. He sits in the sand, from morn- ing until evening, tracing strange patterns and then effacing them with an im- patient twist of his hand. There is a procession that he cannot see, and yet it is always with him. The sea- sons rise and fall, the elements are furious or pacific — it makes no difTerence to him. He is consumed with a liurning that will not let him be in peace. Somewhere, hidden within those grains of sand is the answer to man ' s failure to be a diety. Below his cave, walking the sun-trampled road, is a caravan. The sun has risen, gathering strength for a new assault of fury upon this way. It will be night in the course of the hours, but this thought is not uppermost in the minds of those who lead this journey. Their faces are toward the market place in the far-off city. The men and women plod on, the children dance and sing, and the dogs run off the trail, investigating strange smells. Each passes by the other, neither looking up. There is but a small band who walk the desert which stretches between. WHY ( To the Person Who Wondered ) Have you seen the peaceful oxen As they feed upon the hill ? Wandering slowly into nowhere At a dull, instinctive will? They saunter to the end of grass. And then come back again. They have no time to hunger. Their life ' s safe and sane! Have you seen the quiet graveyard Where the dead are pleased with life? At last, here is society Without a bit of strife. And the epitaphs are courteous — The flowers are so fair — And everyone is silent. Disintegrating there. The dead all seem so peaceful. And the oxen are so brave, I think I want a hunger. And a word beyond the grave. saooLLiPe 144 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 Monday, Feliruary 6 Bam! Oh! Sorry— gotta run to get signed up! Amid Mariners setting sail for graduation, the hest of Manual ' s population run helter skelter to register in classes. Tuesday, Fehruary 7 Scrubs ' Ijevvilderment increases as class attendance begins. Enrollment Count is 3,273 Toilers. Cabinet introduced to Student body neat. Of Barnes, not seen But his daintv feet. The start of school The students run To get signed up. A lot of fun. Wednesday, February S Ho hum ! Back to the old routine of the regular schedule. I)oth Senior classes an- nounced 100 per cent subscription to the Weekly. Thursday, b ' ebruary 9 Student body gets a double treat. Senior A sweaters and text books are in evidence. Friday, February 10 Thus ending the first week of S ' 33 term — with more books I Monday, February 13 Teachers ' stamps are playing like drum sticks on stiff jirograms, and club meet- ings l)egin. Tuesday, February 14 J leart-shaped greeting cards are being passed about, while a more stern and practical campaign is begun by Bill Barnes. Clean halls for Manual ! Old Ironsides Calls Manualites. The trip recalls ( )ur Xavy ' s plight. SCHOOL LIFE 145 Wednesday, Feliruary 5 First Weekly of the term distributed to everyone as a samiile of I ' .ditor Hare ' s fine endeavors. Thursday, February 16 Stunts of all kinds amuse in the term ' s first assembly which had as its purpose the introduction of student body officers to the BlO ' s. ( )ur jilayers ' group Wins 3rd | lace seat With drama ])lay In contest meet. ' ehruarv 17 Big and Little Sisters continue their party from yesterday and pronounce it great fun, while our varsity track team competes in a practice meet. The orchestras. Our interests hold Playing pieces New and old. The call for track Lures many boys For field events To all hold joys. Monday, Feliruary 20 Old Ironsides, historic vessel of the War of 1812 wins for us a half day of vacation in order that we might visit her. And are we taking advantage of the opportunity ? So long — see you on deck ! Tuesday. Feburary 21 Halls are full of the Departed Ones — Pilots, Trojans, and even Spartans are coming back to visit and to say, Now when I was going to Manual — 146 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 Thursday. Fehruavy 23 Romance Is a Racket jiresented by Players ' Company in assembly. Thrills, pistols, bandits, and laughs galore mark the performance. Athletics reign today. Reports of Manual ' s gym team winning from U.S.C. team yesterday, set tongues wagging. Monday. February 27 Spring is in the air. Just look at these tennis rackets, it ' s a sure sign. Yes. the tennis preliminaries are lieing played. Adelphic day, The A12 ' s beat The Senior Bees And win the meet. Tuesday, February 28 B and C teams have a practice meet with Beverly Hills, and yell leaders ' try- outs go on in ]ireiiarati(in for Thursday ' s selection. On swings and slides The seniors play. They eat a lot ()n ]iicnic day. Thursday, March 2 Amid Double M ' s and T-o-i ' s a yell leaders ' asseml)ly is being conducted. Jack Rosenberg was elected Yell King, with Billy Coe and King Hamill his two peppy assistants. Mr. Edward Burwick, noted peace advocate, is our guest and will speak to both assemblies. As if this was not enough, Ralph Cleveland, author of our own Alma Mater is present as we stand in asseml)ly to sing it. New Knights, Sciuires, Chests expanded. In these two clubs Thev ' vr just l;in led. SCHOOL L I F E 147 1 ir K L ' - ' - JQ Jt r41 - Th ' ' i pL Sr ' 5 ' i ' VT S PS £ ' ■i j. 3 liP Mj- lmsB V L M i S«r «7 0i M pf Tin can liop helps Boys by chance, So many girls To ask to dance. Friday. March 3 This third day of the. third month of the thirty-third year is drenched in a drippy fog, but the day is saved by a tin can hop sponsored by the Knights and Squires. Tuesday, March 7 Girls in the Senior honieroum twinkled their eyes and powdered their noses when Cecil B. De Mille. the famous motion picture director, ])aid the Mariners a visit. Mr. De Mille was looking for atmos- phere however. Friday, March 10 6:55 Bum-m-mble Bong ssh — bong — then it was over — that earthquake that snatched the breath from over 125 humans, and also badly damaged Manual Arts. Easter — earthquake vacation. City schools being repaired. Monday, March 20 M.A. too badly damaged for occupancy. Assembly held on M.A. bleachers for Post earthquake day. The teachers carry Books from lockers Do not tarrv. ( )ur plans are changed In every way, By damage done On earthquake day. instructions and assignment of tenth graders to Audubon and eleventh and twelfth graders to Foshay. It took a big shake to wake uj) the Manual Arts Daily but it plays an impor- tant part in the new school system. The faculty men had a big job carting books and so on frcjni 3,600 lockers. 148 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 Tuesday. March 21 It was like jnilling teeth for most of us to extract ourselves from junior high. Now here we are hack again. Too-three or four Ijad. l)Ut it couldn ' t he heljjed. The Daily ]irinted castastro|ihical news today when assignments appeared for various classes. Staving in homeroom from 1 :30 to 3 :30, instead of regular classes isn ' t so pleasant as it sounds. Wednesday, March 22 Slicked up like a million — shoes polished — suits pressed, hadges shined — The hahy Daily Makes a show. Its peppy front P roves a go. the R.O.T.C. passed in review at 9:00 a.m. hefore Colonel Jerome C. Pillow for the annual Honor inspection. Homerooms have heen rearranged so that recitations may he carried on in the homeroom, instead of assigning each student to :i homeroom on the old Manual Arts hasis. Roller skating Proves a craze. .Ml fall for it In many ways. Thursday, March 23 Tiiev come to school on ' em — rolling their trouhles away on roller skates. One may see some pretty Manualites fall on their past tenses ! Friday, March 24 I ' ied-l ' iper in the fnrni (if l ' airfax lead the Toilers to destructinn to tlie tune of 53 to SQ. Piack again to Childhood lays lunior high . ' nd childish ways. S C H U U L LIFE 149 Up and (liiwii liil Due for a spill. Awkward squad Is verv cute. Monday, Alarcli 27 Instruction classes started today after school. ' idiursdax . March . 0 They saw red — so they came, they saw and lo ! and hehold ! they did not conquer the Senior A ' s. The Bahy Conciuers in their hrush woo!, lido-red and silver sweaters were defeated on Senior Day and were their faces red ! ! Tuesday, April 4 Artisan pictures are heing taken at Manual in the morning. Wednesday. April 5 Regular classes were resumed today at Foshay and Audubon. School keeps from 12:1. till 4 :,iO — only si.x periods. Monday. April 10 A month ago today the old days ended and the new began. Dim days of yore, with assemblies, lunch in the arcade, and cheers for the warflag raising are a memory. M 1 k OM  § w M jijf £ !.? - ' . , s Cj x J wt J V KftRi The U cards come The first of May. Sullen students Dim the dav. Assorted sizes Made to su it Awkward squad Is very cute. Mighty Mariners rush to their long- awaited picnic. Chief feature a bicycle race for girls ! Tuesday, April 11 Consternation among the ranks ! Mem- bers of the faculty ride bicycles to school daily. Wednesda)-. A])ril 12 A fond farewell to our i)ride and joy — the smokestack on the old campus is demolished. We salute thee, old friend! 150 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 Thursday, Ai)iil 13 A cheering crowd on Wilsuii Field greets tracksters in Garfield meet. Vic- tory and heaming faces! Friday, Ai)ril 14 Teachers and students lose composure as continual booming, crashing, and slam- ming make a miniature quake every time the workmen shove a brick off the roof at Foshay. Monday. April 17 Mariner column makes appearance in Daily. Latest news and senior business. yy m ( s i ' f v j Baseball nine Of G. A. A. Shows effort great Their day of play. Wednesday, x ' Vpril 19 When the sun begins to fade in the west, and darkness comes creeping on, graduation exercises will be held on the bleachers. Nature furnishes the back- ground. Thursday, April 20th Back to the ' ' Gay Nineties, ' the girls wear puffed sleeves and ride little Ijrother ' s hicvcle. Museum class Draws statue art. The artist ' s touch They must impart. Monday, .April 24 Doctor W ' ilson addresses Manual-at- Fosiiay via the Daily columns and ap- plauds the work. Tuesday, April 25 Where the Cross Is Made lirings glory to its alma mater by winning third place in the Southern California one-act ])lay tournament. Hats off to the cast! The army men Desert their foes To dance upon Their partner ' s toes. S C Jl ( ) O ]- 1.1 !•■ !•: 151 W cdncMlay. April 3i On girls ' athletic field fair daiiiscls put Babe Ruth to shame. Thursday, April 17 W ith much clanging and hlciwing nl sirens, the city fire department arrived at South Park anticipating fiery blazes. Alas and alack, it was only a few hundred Senior B sweaters gathered for the Con- i|uerors ' picnic. The lettermen prove They can prance At semi -yearly Lettermen ' s dance Friday, April 28 Spelling contest waxes wariu, but six Alanualites refuse to be downed — they ' re preparing to enter the radio contest. Pub- lic Schools Week celebrated at Audubon tonight by program — drill squad, sym- phonic band, a play and everything ! Sunday, April 30 In appreciation of his actions since his 1 IIJL ll ll 1 Jyj ll 91 ffl liJJ HB ,i  - T Bi% it-v- ' . H vllr ' l I;, r 1 H il V-;, ■;.••,;,■ ill Kii,ly Turning over offices Quite a sad event Causes great emotion Many tears spent. The Artisan Comes into view Acclaimed by all A great debut. inauguration, the people of the United States celebrate President ' s Day. Alonday, May 1 Boys take the reins of the city govern- ment, and all civic organizations in Boys ' Week. Bee and Cee trackmen bring home the bacon in City League titles. Varsity in fourth place. Tuesday, May 2 The weather : Foshay fields miniature Santa dust ! and Audubon Anas — dust ! — 152 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 Wednesday, May 3 Cotton graduation for the Mariner ' J hursda_ ' , May 4 The talkative Mariners — have their day — Senior speech tryouts. Thursday. May 18 Scoop! Manual is used as a movie set by Paramount studios who move in and get atmosphere. Friday. May 19 Senior Bee dance Saturday. Ma_ - 20 Squires and their ladies dance to soft lights and sweet music at their semi-an- nual dance held in the hoys ' gym. Saturday. May 27 With couples dancing ' midst clouds of balloons, the Secretary-Treasurers ' dance was a complete success. Friday, June 2 Spurs clanking, skirts sweeping the floor — Ah yes ! The Army ball ! Saturday, June 10 Girls ' League and A. B. S. hop. Wednesday, June 22 Strains of the Recessional, lovely flower-like gowns, a colorful group of graduates against a background of be- loved buildings and campus with the glowing light of sundown over all ... . The Mariner out-of-do(jr graduation be- longs to history B 1 ' jS BI B V nIbm W i [fj n n 1 E Speech tryouts For senior Ayes Leaves the writers In a daze i ii 3f Mn The graduates Aloha cry. Commencement day At last is nigh. ; ' . ' H 1 aB HM Mi W 1«JM0R 154 THE A R T 1 S A N S ' 35 CONTENTS Frontispiece 3 Forwanl, By Earl Dorsey 5 Artisan Editors 6 Alma Mater 8 ' To the Mariners, By I ' aul Burdick ..... IC ' Seniors .... 17 Officers 1 ' Songs and Yells 58 Baby Pictures 59 History 60 In Menioria. By i ' aul Burdick 64 In Menioria 65 Views of the Printshop and Binde ■y 66 Organizations 67 The Principals 69 The Student Body Officer 71 The Faculty 73 Life, By Lucille Vanslett 86 Athletics 87 The Coaches 89 Basketball Season 90 Track Season 98 Athletic Coaches ..... 109 Clubs ...... 111 Voice from an Open Window, By Earl Dorsey 118 Drama and Music .... 119 Old Ironsides 128 Military 129 Staff Officers l.SO Line Officers 131 ABC Companies 132 Features 135 Ephebians • 136 Audubon 137 At the l ' nd of the Rainbow. B) - I .dna I ' .uIIas 1, 8 The Trijile Cross, By Bill Lynn 140 Conquerors, By Booth Woodruff 141 School Life . . . ■ . 143 IlnnKir 153 A Word of Thanks 155 Alma Mater 165 Finis . 172 H U M D R 155 We Thank You (H ) Sll)l ' :KIX(i I ' lll ' . iKin.li- (. ' a|)s. tlic Artisan lias l)eeii most succfssful in preparing its imges for pul)lii-atinn. It IHE FIELD Of KNOWLEDGE takes a major catastroi)he to make the workers snap out of it. and consider- ing our quaint shakes we can well be proud of this Artisan. The Artisan Staff takes this op- portunity to express to Mr. Greenup, Mr. Nelson, and Mr. Reeder of the printshop and bookbindery resi)ectively their appreciation and gratitude for their imselfish interest and devotion in making this semi-annual a success. For his cooperation in handling so efficiently the photography of more than five hundred and fifty seniors and numerous other individual pic- tures, we wish to extend our thanks to our genial pliotographer, who cer- tainly made us all smile, Mr. Cagle. The artists have been untiring in their work. Hayden Engstrom and Bernice Hubbard did the overlays. To Joe Catapano goes the credit for the nautical cover design. Margaret Lynch and Robert Marine were very successful in their clever division plates. To Ella Marie Karr, the art editor, goes our sincere thanks for the work she has done in preparing all the art work for the book. For his skillful lettering. Robert Hamer is given special mention. Phil Danky did most of the Army Department and his work is greatly appreciated. To the students of the printshop and bookbindery goes our heartfelt thanks: Ned .Akimoto, Arthur Anderson, Robert Bazell, Owen Colby, Howard Davis, Melvin Erick- son, Marvin Goldstein, George Matsuura, William Nighswander, Sam Patterson, Art Satter- field, Abe Shone, Glenn Smith, Bob Thorstens, Mitsuo Usui, Rudolph X ' arga, Fred Wolf, George Jones, Bob Organ, David White. David Bradley, Carl Bratfisch, Elmer Burke, Mario Bustamante. Jack Calhoun, Gus Hall, Jack Downs, Ray (iruber, Monroe Horowitz, Steve Kennoy, Roger Kohler, ' incent Kuskey. Bill Lucke, Don Parry, Maurice Richardson, Jack Rosenberg, Hans Vogel, Charles Wiley, , rt Wilhelm, Ernest Martin. Don Cook, Kenneth Culwell, Harold Dalton, William Dickson, John Doto, Jack Gervais, Marjorie Hanson, Dayton Hoefelmeier. George Hicks. Keinieth Klein, Wilbur Mar, Art Mason, Virginia Naumann, Virginia Prood, Beth Rapp, Stanley Raptogel. Vernon Trider, Maneos Scolenos, George Takauka. Jack Tretheway, William ' argo, Felix Zelenka. Harold Clinton. Bob Burns, Sam Camptis. Tom Covington. George Cox. Rex Ehrhart, Theo Gerber, Charles Goldstein, Roy Halverson, Robert Hamer, James Hendricks, Leiand LaFond, Kenji Osaka, Robert Reeder, Leonard Stein, Don Wicklander, Katsumi Yuki, Ray Don Nellan, Don Lankton, Emniett Jemmett. 156 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 Lankton. Emmett Jemmett. Charles Cope, William Dickson. Clarence Donnelly, Frank P2ngle. Ward Faoro, Norman Forsberg, Charles Gredvig, Gus Hall, S. E. Henderson, George Hicks, Don Honeycutt, Bob Johnson, Steve Kennoy. Merriman Maxwell. Raymond McDaniel. Gotham Miller, .-Mford Nelson, Charles Osborn, Jesse Shetley, Al Spires, George Swahn, Bub Wadlington. Clarence Washington. Arthnr Wilhelm. Bill Bleick, Bob Bnrns. Harold Clinton, Don Cook, James Davis, Bill Eccles, David Ed- wards, Bob Gronndwater, Melchor Groven, Jimniie McBride, William Nighswander, Joaquin Norris. Warren Peterson, Irving Revitz. Bill Richardsnn. Ed Safady, Joe Scheck. Glen Smith. Towne -Snyder. Biago Terrano. Robert Thorstens. Clancy Tinkler. Jack Tretlieway. Artliur Wasson. Robert Welshons. Louis Acosta. Gerard Adams. Jack Breunig. Sam Campos, Roy Covington, Tom Covington. George Cox. Phil Danky. Bob Engstroni, Theo Gerber, Robert Hare. Earl Hebard. Bob John- son. Harold Jones. Robert Kirk, Ed L ' Hommedieu. Ray Marken. Allen Roberts. Milton Schuck. Earl Sinclair. Mark Staten. Darrell Tanner, Lon alton, Duane Wilce, Fred Wolfe. Oliver Anderson, Robert Bazell. Bill Brodie, Elmer Burke, Bill Comerford, Edward Cruse, Jack Dawns. Joe Farley, Jim Gardner. Griff Ginthner. Robert Cjugisberg. Clarence Harnick. Harlan Heet, Howland Howe. Bob Marineau. Handy Moore. I aurence Ripengal, . be Slione. Leonard L ' nruh, Marvin Westfali. Harold Wright. FOSHAY lUXIOR HIGH SCHOOL PATRONIZE THE ADVERTISERS IN THE ARTISAN! GO A DISTANCE OUT OF YOUR WAY, IF NEED BE, TO PATRONIZE THE FIRMS WHOSE NAMES APPEAR IN OUR BOOK. READ AND REMEMBER THE FOLLOW- ING PAGES. THE SUMMER 33 ARTISAN ADVERTISERS Let ' s Boost them. Show your appreciation of their support. I I i f i 4 H U iM O R ' ARTISAN PORTRAITS P.v Jchn W. Cagle 157 ' + DISTI XTI E — UXUSUAL Your Portrait. Done by a Portrait Artist Accentuating the Charm of Your PersonaHty, Growing More Priceless as Time Goes On. Bridal Portraits— Children ' s Photography At Home Church, Unexcelled Or at the Studio. 4707 South ermont . ve. Southwest Studio ADams 8857 J 158 4. . THE ARTISAN S ' 35 Guns, Fishing Tackle Vermont Avenue at 42nd Place DUVALL ' S f I Athletic Goods j i One Block South of Manual Pity the poor college freshman, who, after htiying a raccoon coat, a broken down Ford, covered with smart cracks, a slicker ditto, a saxophone, a ukulele and several pairs of red and green suspenders, died of a broken heart because every one thought he went to high school. BIRELEY ' S FRESH FRUIT PUNCHES They ' re the Best Hollywood, California GR. 2106 + Meet Your Friends at the HOTZ DRUG CO. 937 West Santa Barbara Home of That Famous Supreme Ice Cream Soda, 10 Cents Stout Lady: Conductor, help me off this train. Conductor : Surely. Stout Lady: You see, I ' m stout and I have to get off the train backwards; the porter thinks I ' m getting on and gives me a push. I ' m five stations past my destination now. LEATHERCRAFT WORKERS For over Thirty Years the LEATHER SUPPLY COMPANY Has Furnished the Leather Woi-ker with All His Needs 1012-14 Broadway Place 101.3 South Main Street Catalogue TUcker 7365 Samples Mr. H odge: ' hat is the most outstanding contrihutinn that chemistry has given to the world? Sady: Blondes. CARL ENTENMANN Manufacturing Jeweler Class Pins, Rings, Medals, and Trophies 61.5 Jewelers Exchange Bldg, 747 South Hill St. Los Angeles, Cal. VA. 9229 I I i I All Work Guaranteed I Manual Arts Shoe Hospital I Men ' s Rubber Heels, 25 cents Ladies ' Rubber Heels, 15 cents R. SPANO, Prop. 1008 West 42nd Street I HUMOR 159 ,i- (iil— 111 iiH— Mil— -III lilt— .i - iiii nil Kii III! nil 11 nil ir nil iiii mi— .n. —nn nn iiii iiii vu nii— iiii- iiii — nn— nt|t NEVERSOIL RUBBER PRODUCTS CO. Manufacturers of Chemistry Aprons Sleeves Matting Gloves Laboratory Coats Raincoats Mats Tubing 609-11-13 Santa Fe Avenue Los Angeles, California Illma Valadiif fovitchskioffsky : So Ivan Ninespinskie died in battle. You say he uttered my name as he was dying? Aggravated Teacher: Listen here, young man, arc you teacher of this class? PACIFIC PLATINUM WORKS, INC. REFINERS AND DEALERS Platinum, Gold, and Silver 814 South Spring Street Los Angeles, California Outspoken One: No sir, I ' m not. A. T. : Well then, don ' t talk like an idiot. + LOS ANGELES BARBERS ' AND BEAUTY SUPPLY CO. Beauty Parlor Equipment and Supplies 555-7-9 South Los Angeles St. TRinity 3734 Doctor: You ' ll be dead by morning. Eskimo: H ' m, three months more, by gosh. - ' + Telephone TRinity 8674 I NEW ENGLAND MEAT CO. Wholesalers MEATS, FISH, POULTRY, AND FAMOUS NEW ENGLAND CORNED BEEF 706 Ceres Ave. Los Angeles, California i n —i ' — i ' —  — — ■ ' ' ' ' i i MANUAL ARTS DRY GOODS CO. i DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, FURNISHINGS, GREETING CARDS BUTTERICK PATTERNS Allen A. Hosiery 1217 South Vermont Ave. j , , . ' •!• 160 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 FOX FIGUEROA THEATRE 15c FOR ALL STUDENTS EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT ■— ' — Unexcelled Quality and Flavor 1 • T I 1 i I I I CHALLENGE CREAM AND BUTTER ASSOCIATION 929 East Second Street Los Angeles, California PRINTING STATIONERY j [ Dependable Courteous I j Prescriptions Service I I CHARLES DRUMM Druggist INCORPORATED j j PRINTERS-. STATIONERS | j Exquisite PL. 9300 5404 South Vermont ! j Perfumes Fountain Lunch PHELPS-TERKEL ' The Favored Shops of Prep and College Men CLOTHING — HABERDASHERY — SHOES 3450 University Avenue 5518 Wilshire 1045 Westwood Blvd. + - i ADAMS-GOODMAN CO., INC. SPORTING GOODS The Equipment That IMakes Champions SPORT HEADQl ' ARTEKS YOUR GOLF, TENNIS, BATHING SUIT, AND VACATION I KNIT WEAR AT YOUR SCHOOL DISCOUNT! | j 1041 South Broadway Los Angeles, California j 4,,, , 4 H U M O R 1,,1 CARNATION ICE CREAM The Name That Stands for (luality Being Served in Your Cafeteria Tell the Folks at Home about It Carnation Company 1639 North Main Street CApitol 14131 They cure Scotch people of stuttering by making them talk over the long distance telephone. To the Summer Class of 1933 : Compliments of the Independent Printers Supply Company, Inc. New and Used Printing Machinery and Complete Composing Room Equipment, Type, and Printer ' s Supplies. I + I don ' t like the tone of your radio. That ' s no radio ; it ' s our washing machine. CLUB PINS Distinctive Insigna for your Society can be secured for a small cost. Write for designs or a new price on your present pin. THE T. V. ALLEN CO. Makers of Pins, Rings, Medals, Announcements. 810-16 Maple Ave. Los Angeles. +.™ 162 THE ARTISAN S ' 33 EVERBRITE AWNING CO., Ltd. PORCH lAWNINGS s f ■ M Ii3 ■ ' 1358 WEST TWENTY-FOURTH ST. Phone PArkway 3512 Under Personal Attention, FRANK MATHEWS FOR ESTIMATES Call Your Nearest Sears ' Store Awning Factory For Sears Roebuck Co. llar(jl(l (J: Lend nie ten doliars to buy a hair cut. Bill: Here ' s the ten, hut what do you want with the other nine? Harold O : Buy a liat to conceal the hair cut. MANUAL ARTS HARDWARE AUTOMOBILE PARTS FOR ALL MAKES OF CARS W. P. Fuller Paints, Oil, Glass, Duco, Lacquer VErmont 1181 4221 South Vermont Ave. Near sighted old man(eating a box of loose-leaf reinforcements) : Well, heck, these Life Savers don ' t taste like they used to. +. — HI-GRADE FOOD PRODUCTS SCHOOL LUNCHES AND SANDWICHES 613 Santa Fe Avenue TUcker 9627 -+ hy -.+ i I I I HUM () R 163 4. With Sincere Appreciation of Your Patronage ICYCLAIR CORPORATION LIMITED Manufacturers of BIG BEAR BARS BEAR CUBS BOX CARS CONFECTIONS OP MERIT 3410 Glendale Boulevard NOrniandy 4201 I +._„„ WM. LANE CO. 1 509 West Washington Boulevard Los Angeles, California SPORTING GOODS AND ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT Was your friend in the habit of talking to himself when he was alone? Well, to tell the truth, Judge, I was never with him when he was alone. f More Users in Southern California than Any Other 1914 West Slauson Avenue VErmont 0061 Rcras , tgttatures n ' i Signatures ■y i-L ' J Jlu iAy U e ' • -- c Signatures 4 ' ■ -f ' .-■• ' ' ■% - ' V, ;.. . ' • T ut Y ' mmk -_ pK ,T« ■ ' fs : ' ' ' JA- A ' V V The South Garden ■: ' ' ' j;« ,: ii The Rose Arbor The Long Arcades , x( « mm. i ffiW, MM] M, |i: ' ' . ' m% ' i 4 f ¥ ' 1 I ' llilil N Vlrjiil


Suggestions in the Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) collection:

Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

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Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

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Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Manual Arts High School - Artisan Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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