Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA)

 - Class of 1945

Page 1 of 48

 

Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1945 Edition, Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collectionPage 7, 1945 Edition, Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 48 of the 1945 volume:

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I, ,MI-WI I , ' - I I I .- A I... -V -.1 .' -' -' -, . . ' -. my - -- - v- . ' 'Fi . II .I,I..I I I I . ,I I I . , I ..III..I I I I . I ,I I II ,II C , .- -I . . - -' - 1- . -j .. . I- 1,1-,. -I ,4 f A ' . ' - . - '-,-Q., -1 . A - .:- .. ' .- I Q 1,I If , I I- H II - II V I I .J . I - I - I. - .5 . I1 Ii. -- -.. af II - - '- ' -- . lf .s-'fig-A 1 . X. 1. ,I- 1-52' . ' .,III. .I V My .I ,r ,-,II'I:f.I,'Ij I V .Y w a- -. 1 ' -17--1: 'sf . f - If 'ji 2..',+.' '- - -. 5 L .I I. , Q-QA .A ' .1 'PHE CIi0SSli0 ll VOLUME I JUNE, 1945 NUMBER 1 The Crossroacls Stan' May field SCIIOOI LORELEI CRAIG-Editor-in-Chief CLAIRE SULLIVAN-Assistant Editor Literary Editor PATRICIA DUFF '45 Sfaf fW6111bf'1'J Sports Editor ANN ATTWOOD '45 ANN FITZGERALD '47 JOSLYN CRILLY '45 Business Manzzgers . DIANE O'HAClAN '45 MARY' ANITA WIIEALTON '46 MARGARET BUHLIG '46 flrt Photography LORENA JARRETT '45 JULIA DOLESHAL '46 CLASS POEAI - ADDRESS - - FACLYLTY - - SENIOR PICTURES SENIOR STATISTICS CLASS XVILL - - CLASS PICTURES ONE I LOST - Faculty Advisor MOTHER MARY VVILFRID - PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE - - PAGE - - PAGE lei iQ' 5 x is 'S'I?gC.i! tl 4 i'5415 lfvzic v. 10+ STUDENT COUNCIL - - 9-V55 S0 CONTENTS 2 CROSSROAIDS STAFF 3 CROSSROADS IJIARY 4 6 HONOR ROLL - 13 SCHOOL TEAMS - 14 CLASS PROPI-IECY 15 PATRONS - - 20 ADVERTISERS - PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 TIT? CZPOSSPOOJS 1 Pa CROSSROADS We do not need a painted sign To point the way to gog These are the paths we can divine, These are the roads we know. A Iithe tree at our crossroads stands With green and gracious leaves In which the wind with gentle hands Her soft direction weaves. And here we meet-and here we part, For each must go her way, And disregard the mourning heart, The heart that begs to stay. -Patricia Duff, '45 IQ45 The Cvossroads ' addfzess fo llie qfzaduafing Glass P R o E M This year, the years of patient and prayerful toil which have gone into the establishment of Mayfield have their fruits in the graduating class of l945. With pride do the parents and sisters alike look upon you, the graduating class. You have been molded and shaped to an image which you must always be conscious of. By your training at Mayfield, you have been taught certain ideals. By your life at Mayfield you have been char- acterized with certain marks. You are the class to whom there can be truly applied the compliment of being a Mayfield Girl. THE MAYFIELD GIRL The Mayfield Girl is thoughtful and considerate. In her heckt she honors truth, kindness and simplicity, She is ready always for self-sacrifice and in the midst of trials she keeps a cheerful heart. She is Mary and Ruth - for her soul is pure and always she real- izes that she stands in fields of alien corn - that her home is never here to the exclusion of that other home which her training has told her is over on the other side. She is deep and not shallow. She knows the temptation to vanity, but she is strong enough to resist it. She knows the pull that is always on her to be of the world and she answers that by being more of Christ. She is in all things a lovely child of God - pure of heart, sweet as the saints are sweet, rich in beautiful traits of character. The world badly needs the Mayfield Girl, so go into it and may God go with you and may Mary be your guide. -Reverend Thomas J. McCarthy, Ph.D. Page Three TLIQ CZFUQSFOYIJS FACULTY ? Sfanding: Mother Mary Wilfrid, Mother Mary Bertrand, Mother Mary Aquinas, Mother Mary Thaddeus, Mother Mary Eusface, Mother Rose ofrLima, Seated: Mother Mary Urban, Mother Mary Canisius, Reverend Mother Mary Gerard, Mother Mary Febronia, Mother Mary of Lourdes. Page Four 1945 . The Cvossroads FACULTY First Row, left to right: B Miss Adelaide Jenkins, Mademoiselle Christiane d' Elloy, Miss Luvenia Brooks. Second Row: Miss Joan Babcock, Robert Heger-Goetzl, Ph.D. Absent: Mr. Victor Dial, Mrs. Beatrice Collenette, Mrs. Paul Fitzpatrick, RN. Page Five Tlwe Cvosswoafls IQ45 ANN ATTWOOD If 'we do nzeetagain, why, we shall smile. Pasadena, California i942 - l945 Class President, '45 Member of the Student Council '45 Assistant Prefect of the Sodality, '44 Child of Mary, '44, '45 Crossroads Staff, '45 Spring Play, '42, '43, '45 Christmas Play, '44 Volleyball Junior Varsity, '45 Dance Committee, '44, '45 Class Volleyball Team, '44, '45 Class Basketball Team, '44 Page Six 1945 MARY BURNS Life is too short for any distant aim And fold the dull reward of future fauna Pasadena, California 1944 - 1945 Tl1Q CPOSSPOO S Prefect of Sodality, '45 Member of Student Council, '45 President of Athletic Association Child of Mary, '44, '45 Spring Play, '45 Basketball Varsity, '44, '45 Glee Club, '44, '45 Chairman Dance Committee, '45 Class Volleyball Team, '44, '45 Class Basketball Team, '44, '45 -lille Crosswoacls IQ-45 JOSLYN CRILLY HCJIII' by om' the l'!l5I'IlIl'71f.l' mtrh, ' llfr' drmms ,N'71l'Ilfh Ihr' silwry thatrhf' Altadena, California l945 Crier Staff, '45 Crossroads Staff, '45 Basketball Junior Varsity, '45 Class Volleyball Team, '45 Class Basketball Team, '45 Page Eight i945 PATRICIA DUFF I built my .foul ll lordly flfllillfl' housr lflhfrfin at mst' for zzyr to d1clf'll. San Marino, California i943 - l945 Tl-li CPOSSPOU S Class President, '44 Editor of the Crier, '43, '44 Literary Editor of the Crier, '45 Literary Editor of the Crossroads Spring Play, '44, '45 Volleyball Junior Varsity, '44 Class Volleyball Team, '44, '45 Class Basketball Team, '44, '45 -I-l'lQ CPOSSPOGJS Student Council President, '44 Member of Student Council, '44 Child of Mary, '43, '44, '45 Vice-President of Athletic Association, '44 Art Editor of Crossroads, '45 Spring Play, '42, '43, '45 Glee Club, '44, '45 Volleyball Varsity, '44 Volleyball Junior Varsity, '45 Basketball Junior Varsity, '44 Class Volleyball Team, '44, '45 Class Basketball Team, '44, '45 Page Ten 1945 LORENA JARRETT For mannrrs arf' not idlr, but the fruit Uf loyal nature and of noblz' mind. Pasadena, California l942 - 1945 Tl19 CPOSSPOUCIS DIANE O'l-IAGAN fl book of z'w'xz's IH1Ilt'flll'Hfh Il boughf San Marino, California i944 - l945 Class Librarian, '44, '45 Crossroads Staff, '45 Spring Play, '45 Christmas Play, '44 Dance Committee, '44, '45 Class Volleyball Team, '44, '45 Class Basketball Team, '44, '45 Glee Club, '45 Page Eleve Tl'lQ CPOSSPOOIlS Student Council President, '45 Member of Student Council, '44, '45 Sodality Pretect, '44 Child of Mary, '43, '44, '45 Assistant Editor of Crossroads, '45 Assistant Editor ot Crier, '45 News Editor ot Crier, '43, '44 Spring Play, '43, '45 Christmas Play, '44 President of Athletic Association, '44 Student Chairman of Building Fund, '44 Glee Club, '44, '45 Basketball Varsity, '44, '45 Volleyball Varsity, '44, '45 Class Basketball Team, '44, '45 Class Volleyball Team, '44, '45 Dance Committees, '44, '45 P g Twelve IQ45 CLAIRE SULLIVAN Thr zvorlzl is wry beautiful and I run wry young. Pasadena, California i943 - 1945 1945 The Crossroo s SENIOR STATISTICS Mast Individual Blast Talkatifve - Mast Canseientiaus Mast Argumentatifue Mast Athletic - Mast Executive - Quietest - Funniest Calmest - - Mast Reliable Mast Obliging Mast Sentimental - Mast Cangenial Blast Gullible Mast Serious - Witti'est - Best ZVaturea' Blast Stylish - Blast Outspalzen Most Versatile Blast Bflusical Mast Loyal - Happiest - - Mast Temperarnental Blast Vague - - Mast Frifvalaus Mast Dramatic Mast Artistic Best Sport - Mast Lafvable - By Vote of the Class - PATTY DUFF ANN ATTWOOD - PATTY DUFF CLAIRE SULLIVAN MARY BURNS CLAIRE SULLIVAN - PATTY DUFF LORENA JARRETT DIANE O'HAGAN LORENA JARRETT DIANE OBHAGAN MARY BURNS DIANE OBHAGAN CLAIRE SUI.LIVAN - PATTY DUFF JOSLYN CRILLY LORENA JARRETT J0sLYN CRILLY 'ANN ATTWOOD CLAIRE SULLIVAN LORENA JARRETT MARY BURNS CLAIRE SULLIVAN ANN ATTVVOOD LORENA JARRETT JOSLYN CRILLY DIANE O'HAGAN JOSLYN CRILLY - PATTY DUFF JOSLYN CRILLY Pag Th t -l-lie Crossroads IQ45 THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT of the Senior Class We, the class of the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and forty-five, and of the Independence of the United States, one hundred and sixty ninth, being of sound mind and sound body, do hereby set forth our last will and testament, and do hereby bequeath To the Sisters: Our sincerest thanks and deepest gratitude for all the sound advice and priceless guidance they have given us. To the First Seniors: Our experiences, good and bad, that they may profit by them and that they may persevere for brighter days to come. To the Second Seniors: The blessed relief that comes after passing through the suffering stage. And do hereby bequeath to our successors, the class of one thousand nine hundred and forty-six, all good fortune, good counsel and a good year. To Nancy Austin, we do will Lorena's curls. To Dotty Bailey, we do will a glee club solo. To Anita Barry, we do will Ann's giggle. To Peggy Buhlig, the annual tussle with the College Boards. To Mia Cano, Polonaise in A Major . To Lorelei Craig, we do will four new tires. To Beverly Davis, we do will a tan. To Julia Doleshal, Lorena's driver's license. To Frances Fraser, we do will Mary's blazer. To Ruth Eisen, we do will Diane's sunny corner of the patio. To Aloyce Kanne, a few of Joslyn's inches. To Patricia Kearney, a place on the Honor Roll. To Mary K. Mackin, we do will Ann's Hawaiian souvenirs. To Sarah Ann Perry, Diane's pink lightning. To Madelon Werweiss, we do will Ann's System. To Mary Anita Whealton, Claire's mathematical skill. Page Fourteen IQ45 -I-lie Crossroacls THE FOURTH SENIOR CLASS Class President: Ann Attwood Standing,Ieft to right: Mary Burns, Ann Attwood, Claire Sullivan, Lorena Jarrett, Diana O' Hagan. Front Row: Patricia Duff, Mother Mary Wilfrid, Joslyn Crilly. P g rff 2 -lDl'lQ CFOSSPOGJS THE THIRD SENIOR CLASS Class President: Dorothy Bailey Standing, left to right: Frances Fraser, Ruth Eisen, Lorelei Craig, Dorothy Bailey, Patri- cia Kearney, Mary Anita Whealton, Madelon Werweiss, Anita Berry. Kneeling: Beverly Davis, Margaret Buhlig, Sarah Ann Perry, Maria Cano. Sitting: Nancy Austin, Patricia NcNamara, Mother Mary Eustace, Mary Kathleen Mackin, Julia Doleshal. Absent: Aloyce Kanne. Page Sixteen -I-l1Q Crassraacls THE SECOND SENIOR CLASS Class President: Jacqueline Jelly Standing, left to right: Ann Fi'rzGerald, Barbara lckes, Jacqueline Jelly, Jacquelyn Brown, Pauline O'NeiI, Louise Havekorst. Sitting: Diana Davies, Joan Herbold, Mother Mary Canisius, Joan Regan, Jacquelyn Stettler. Absent: Mary Jane Hughes. P Q S T C -H19 Crossroads THE FIRST SENIOR CLASS Class President: Mary Ann Frauenheim Standing, left to right: Carol Roberts, Margaret Havekorst, Nancy Downey, Inez Berger, Charmaine Dion, Mary Patricia Meyers. Sitting: Joan Holderrnan, Judith Newhoff, Mother Mary of Lourdes, Marilyn Regan, Gwendolyn Munger. Absent: Paula Hill, Mary Ann Frauenheim. P Q Eghf Crlossmacls THE JUNIOR scHooL Sitting, left to right: Mother Mary Febronia, Susan Hotchkiss, Maria Warner, Diane Sinclair, Rita Maloney, Louise McNeil, Jane Bolinger, Mother Mary Bertrand. Second Row: Natasha Guiglia, Maureen Sullivan, Sheila Twohey, Georgia Nibley, Ann Quigley. Third Row: Nancy Newhott, Patricia Fitzpatrick, Marlene Craig, Marion Ubil, Ann Have- korst, Myra Johnson, Therese Bannon. Fourth Row: Barbara Kassebaum, Patricia Caughlin, Virginia Hotchkiss, R uth Alice Frauenheim, Marlowe Boyes. Fifth Row: Louise Leddy, Coralie Close, Dorothy McNeil, Josephine Doleshal, Kathrine Randall, Erdine Musselman. Page Ninetee T CPOSSPOGJS, ne Q fast Reason told me that I did not know the tall, dark girl. Yet, as I watched her running with lithe grace over the basketball court, I seemed to know her. I rejoiced in her skill, even as she used it to defeat our team. She evaded our guards. She also evaded the strong outposts of school spirit and of that feeling that is not school spirit at all but a kind of hysteria. Without warning she darted into my heart. Why should I care so much for her-a girl that I had never met and probably never would meet? What was there about her that I seemed to remember? She smiled at one of her team-mates. She reminded me of a picture in a book I loved--a picture of Cardinal Manning, drawn when he was young. Her lips were like his. Lips like Cardinal Manning's-that was itl Katherine had had lips like that-thin, delicately formed lips. The strange girl was Katherine. There, running about on the basketball court, was the Katherine who for me had died four years before. Suddenly I was glad I would not meet her. It had been enough to lose Katherine once-or rather, twice. The way, I remembered, had been long and hot. It was a First Friday morning, and Katherine and I were still fasting as we walked home. I was a little sick. Perhaps actu- ally I was just depressed. This was the end-the end of eight years at the parochial school, the end of having Katherine. No, it was not really the end of having Katherine. That had come long before. As slowly, gaily, surely, the chunky little girl had come into thequiet round of my days and made them noisy, excited things, so slowly, surely she had slipped out again. After that, we had been in the same class. We had gone to the same parties. We had played the same games. But we had done these things separately. We had been friends, but not companions. What we had talked about before I can no longer remember. School affairs, probably. Surely we must have had some common bond. For me a new, romantic world was opening up. I was often carried away by my interest in it. I tried to make Katherine see and feel. Perhaps she did. Surely our relationship was colored by a flaming, lovely thing that belonged ordinarily to neither of us. Whatever it was, it made Katherine the most fascinating, the most lovable playmate I had ever had. We drifted apart after awhile as we parted on that last day, because circumstances forced us to somehow. Our homes were on different streets. Our natures went in different directions. A chance had brought about this last walk together. Necessity ended it. We said good-bye and went our diverse ways-alone. The next time I saw Katherine she had already begun to grow up. Like so many people in growing up she was losing an elusive quality-perhap it was imagination. She no longer heard the horns of elfland faintly bIowing. More and more she had come to rely on sources outside of herself for amusement. Once she had pretended that she was a duchess. Now she had to read a book to capture romance. I had been learning some of the tragedy of growing up, myself. I was clutching wildly at that queer magic thing that was slipping away. To see Katherine and to talk to her -when we did talk--made me sad. Along with the bonds of school and of comradeship, another bond had been broken. It was made of more delicate stuff. It was, nevertheless, stronger--and more necessary. People can be divided into three classes--those who talk about other people, those who talk about things and those who talk about ideas. Katherine talked about people. All my life I had been trained, all without my wishing it, to talk about ideas. People, perhaps, are more interesting, but those who concentrate on them alone lose the world of adventure. They forget, somehow, that romance comes from within. Those who talk about ideas never wholly lose the hint of magic, They never become wholly immersed in commonplaces. In that lay our difficulty. Katherine and I were too young, too intolerant to make the necessary compromise. We could not force our worlds to meet, so there was nothing to talk about just then. The vital bond had been broken. Perhaps the symbol of that brjeaking lay in Katherine's lips. She was wearing lipstick. Voluntarily, she was making ordinary, undistinguished lips out of her beautiful ones. Page Twenty -I-I lQ CPOSSPOCI S She was indeed growing up , but she was also throwing away a gift that had been hers. She was a high school girl now. She had forgotten the charm of a child. Or maybe she now thought that that charm was a thing compounded of round cheeks and dimples and ringlets. Maybe she had already forgotten the secret of the spirit. ll wonder sometimes if the forgetting hurt her, as it was then hurting me.l Yes, Katherine had died, the Katherine I knew. The other Katherine, the half adult Katherine, I did not really know nor really care to know. She was dull to me and I to her. -Oh, terrible to say it-I dreaded, a little, meeting her on the street. I hated the mockery of what had once been a living, lovely thing. It was as well we went our separate ways. Katherine, my Katherine, was dead. Yet, there on the basketball court, she lived again. Just as she used to, she was playing beautifully, gathering to herself some of the romance of a jousting knight. Gallantry, gaiety, the lust for-no, more than that, the very essence of-adventure all Iurked in her action. Again I saw her as a member of a race of heroes, of demi-gods. It didn't matter much that our team was losing. Mortals may not contest with Olympians and win. That is a child's wisdom. Perhaps the mortals are fortunate to lose at such hands. The game was over. We had lost. There had been a kind of bond-the technical name is probably coordination-that defied defeat. It had been a mixture of skill and of spirit. The girl who looked like Katherine had been responsible. The time had come to say good-bye again, to go again along different ways. This time the parting was not sad. The girl was lost in a crowd of green gym suits. The crowd moved away. That was all. Suddenly there was a singing in my mind-the germ of something that suggested a poem. It had been a long, long time since poems sang themselves to me-almost as long ago as the time when I had first known Katherine. The words were repeating themselves: I love thee for the shadow that thou art Of one I lost so many years ago That just a hidden corner of my heart Guards now the flaming love I used to know. Yet I see in thy face-thy lips, thine eyes, That old and lovely image live again. I watch thee, happy in my swift surprise That such a perfect likeness should remain. In thee still burns that soft, enchanting fire That now has died within my childhood friend. O shadow, thou canst yet arouse, inspire The joy of which thy substance made an end. Comparing thee with Katherine-of the two, Thou art more truly she I loved and knew. -Patricia Duff, '45 Page Twenty one TIW9 CFOSSPOOCIS THE CROSSROADS STAFF Editor: Lorelei Craig. Assistant Editor: Claire Sullivan. Standing, left to right: Ann FitzGerald, Diane O'Hagan, Ann Attwood, Joslyn Crilly, Lo- rena Jarrett, Julio Doleshal. Sitting: Mary Anita Wheolton, Claire Sullivan, Lorelei Craig, Patricia Duff, Margaret Buhlig. PgT tyt I9-45 The CPOSSPOOIJS foolzing gaclz Crossroads Diary as kept by the Seniors 1944 September I4 - Opening of the school - Tans clad in brown. September 22 - First edition of the Crier - Summer review. September 27 - Welcome party at E'lane McCaffery's - Splash! October 6- Mass of the Holy Ghost - Mayfield began the year with prayer. October I4 - Pet and Flower Show - Ferdinand sat and smelled the flowers. October I7 -Joey Luckie's talk - Contact! October I9- Hallowe'en Dance - Witches rode on batons. October 26 - Marymount game at Mayfield - A lasting friendship was begun. October 3I - Concert for Reverend Mother Provincial- Gone,alas,like our youth,too soon. November I l - Volleyball Playday at Ramona - lt rained! November I4---Volleyball game at Saint Andrew's - We are from Mayfield School. November 2l -Volleyball game at Anokia - Victory! November 28 -Volleyball game at Marymount - Where are the nuns! December 7 -Sodality Reception -.A thrice happy day for the Children of Mary. December IO-Alumnae Tea -The Bishop beautifully described' Holy Child Spirit. December Il -Crespi Club Concert - Tender hymns of gladness raise. December I2- Father Ryder's Lecture - We felt closer to Russia than ever before. December I9 - Christmas carolling - Lo, how a rose e'er blooming .... December ZI - The Christmas Play - Junior actors to the fore. December 22 - Sodality Tableaux - Pictures and poems. December 27-Christmas Dance - Candlelight - a fireplace - holly and mistletoe. 1945 January 8 - School reopens. January I7---Second edition of the Crier - Holiday gossip. January 20- School song written - Memory will keep you always with us, And back to you our hearts will turn. January 22- Fourth Senior Party for School - Skits, songs, and melodrama! January 30- Fourth Senior Outing - Birthday Celebration for Claire. February 7 - Flintridge-Sacred Heart Game - Basketball season begins with Victory. February I3 -Prefect's Feast - The hearts of your children, dearest Mother, overflow with joy today. February 20- Trip to Huntington Library - The Fourth Seniors celebrate Patty's and Lorena's birthdays at the Huntington. March 4 - Oratorical contest at Loyola - Does the Pope have a right to speak on peace? March 6-Marymount basketball game - By the court, by the basketball court. March 9 - Playday at Pasadena Junior College - Deflation! ! March I9 - Bishop's Concert- As the Holy Child, in welcome, turned to greet St. Joseph. April IO - Pride and Preiudice - Success! April I3 - Fourth Senior Week-end - Bathing and basking at Balboa.- May 2-Third edition of the Crier - New Building plans announced. May IO- Reverend Mother's Feast - Thank you, Reverend Mother. May l6 -Confirmation - Juniors choose Senior-Sisters as sponsors. May 20-Alumnae Tea for the Graduates - The beginning of the end. May 26 - Glee Club Luncheon - Singers Rewarded. May 30- First Edition of the Crossroads - Hallelujia! June 4 - Graduation - Page Twenty-Three The CP05sPoafls--l- -1 STUDENT COUNCIL Front Row, left to right: Dorothy Bailey, Third Senior President, Ann Attwood, Fourth Senior President, Claire Sullivan, Student Council President, Mary Burns, Soclal- ity Prefect, Jacqueline Jelly, Second Senior President. Second Row: Mary Ann Frauenheim, First Senior President, Mary Patricia Meyers, First Senior Representative, Jacquelyn Brown, Second Senior Representative. Page Twenty-four l945 The Cvossroafls THE HONOR ROLL Standing, left to right: Mary Patricia Meyers, Margaret Buhlig, Jacquelyn Brown, Ann FitzGerald, Lorelei Craig, Gwendolyn Manger, Judith Newhoft. Sitting: Dorothy Bailey, Claire Sullivan, Patricia Duff, Mary Kathleen Mackin. Absent: Margaret l-lavekorst. Page Twenty-f T CFf,lSSPOUClS SCHOOL TEAMS BASKETBALL VARSITY Standing, left to right: Claire Sullivan, Ann FitzGerald, Lore- lei Craig, Miss Brooks, .loan R e g a n, Patricia McNamara, Jacquelyn Brown. Sitting: Jacqueline Jelly, Mary Ann Frauenheim, Mary Anita Wlwealton, lnez Berger, Nancy Downey. Page Twenty-six Sitting, left to right: Claire Sullivan, Mary Burns, Dorothy Bailey, lnez Berger, Mary Ann Frauenheim. Standing: Mary Anita Wlweal- ton, Jacquelyn Brown, Miss Brooks, Lorelei Craig, Madelon Werweiss. VOLLEYBALL VARSITY IQ45 The Crossroads Til-IUE MAYIFIIIEILD CRIIIER Number 4 Iune. 1960 Volume XIX CLAIRE SULLIVAN, who for years now has kept the air waves hot with her argument- ative discussions of the news, last week reaped the harvest of her labors - the Henry Adams Award. Holding the shiny medal up for news pho- tographers, the tall, slimish commentator for the first time in her life was speechless. Taken by surprise she could only murmur- I don't think I deserved it. LORENA JARRETT, new- comer to U. S. artistic circles, put on a one-woman exhibi- tion of South American can- vasses. The collection of lei- sured landscapes and large- eyed Madonnas drew large crowds to the Chicago Art ln- stitute. Miss Jarrett, herself not unlike one of her paintings, appeared infrequently, spent most of her time resting from arduous three years occupied in getting material for the show and traveling in South America. ALUMNAE COMMENT PATRICIA DUFF last week resigned her position as fash- ion editor of La Mode, retired to the country to study Social- ism. Abandoning her long battle to convert American women to long skirts, she is taking up the new branch of reform with enthusiasm. ANN ATTWOOD, genial character actress, opened last week in her own revival of The Corn ls Green . Critics and first-nighters, expecting a nostalgic reproduction of the Barrymore role, were surprised to find that five years stage experience had given actress Attwood maturity and depth, and a brand new interpretation of the part. MOTHER MARY CATH- ERINE BURNS, tiny foundress of the Mission Sisters of Our Lady, stepped off an airplane in San Francisco last week. The vivacious nun was return- ing from five years of unre- mitting labor among the Chileans. Back now in the United States, she hopes to raise funds to build an orphan- age for her South-of-the-Bor- der charges. JOSLYN CRILLY, tall, chic authority on phonograph rec- ords, last week revealed that she had presented her great collection of rare recordings, one of the best in the U. S., to the Smithsonian Institute. The gift, which represents nearly twenty years of avid collecting on the part of Miss Crilly, will arrive at the Institute, careful- ly crated, some time next month with the blessing of the donor. DIANE O'HAGAN JOHN- SON, screen writer, author of Various and Sundry, arrived in New York last week accom- panied by her handsome, six- foot husband, three children, two maids, a nurse and a gold- fish. Under the little author's generalship, the whole party encamped at th e Waldorf Astoria to await the Broadway opening of the newest O'Hagan opus-the stage play, A LET- TER FROM DICK. Page Twenty-seven -be Crossroads 1945 PATRONS Mr and Mrs. Ruel K. Attwood Mr. and Mrs. Castle C. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Paul Buhlig Mr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Craig Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Doleshal Mademoiselle Christiane d'Elloy Mrs. Beatrice Fraser Mrs. George Hoffman Mr. and Mrs. Burton lckes Mr. and Mrs. Harden H. Jarrett Mr. and Mrs. Earl C. Jelly Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Mackin Miss E'Lane McCaffery Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. McNeil Mr. and Mrs. J. E. O'Hagan Mr. and Mrs. Phillip R. Regan Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R. Sullivan Compliments of the First and Second Juniors Compliments of the Third and Fourth Juniors Mayfield Athletic Association COMMERCIAL PATRONS Compliments of the Huntington Hotel Compliments of the Abbey Rents Compliments of Munger and Munger Plumbers Compliments of R. E. Dyer, Wholesale Fruits Page Twenty-eight 2: .... .... Q'i1s:,,:.r,' A-1-:az-:v:-,-. Q SX. - xp. 5., m.. 4:f:+,hl., 24:-:':-zr:-:-: 5.29 , nu Gown K -Z A 1 4 ,V ff if l 2' fl XX f M f 7 QM WXWZJVW f Z XZ! fan - ' it W ? Coats and Suits by eg 1 V t L 2 5 !f:fi5fisf.- Q1-E, sv Q, ,Sing '-fm -: 5 I af? it , -designed for the Y Q ',.- , - junior clique ..... V YL.. lk L- xf Smartly tailored in 3 ii 5' : , gafff if 5' ' K' virgin woolg with 1' f ft- 3' I always that 'alittle , Q If-'fad gl A something added , XXXIMM, 3 to match your wide-awake charm. ef' Prices 22.95 to 39.75 ENag:Z:Qfgzgzg:5:5:g::E55:g:5::5:5:, l 1S352555:1-1-1-z.:-:1:4:1:r:r::::::,1, iff' f fl I .32 .. 3 , V 1 ,gr - . ,. ., .g.:.yv, ,- ,fr-' . J.: A, Q N 'f:f' I . xx fi. . iff' 1-Wu M , as -i I 1 i4,- X- ' 5 f 't 5 -K, jg lit jf i Zigiiiififiigilu S We welcome charge accounts I i 1 gi '2555?Ei25:5::.- V 1 Open every Friday and Saturday Q . hrmw A E night until nine ' Q iw l -' E ll a I y y y yy y y i I a Page Twenty-nine CALIFURNIA PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED WE DELIVER 575 South Lake Avenue SY 2-6222 SY. 9-3195 Res. SY. 7-4490 Matthews Realtg Cumpang REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE In Business 20 Years in South Pasadena 1112 Fair Oaks Ave. Ida M. Matthews So. Pasadena, Calif. L. C. BALFUIIR CUMPANY Attleboro ---- Massachusetts Knozvn 7,L'hl'I'I' thvrz' arf' Sfhoolx 8 Cnllftgrs E. C. Trory Mezzanine Floor 555 South Flower Street Los Angeles 13, California Telephone, Michigan 9408 DISTINCTIVE PHOTOGRAPHY SYCAMORE 3-6175 LIFE ACTION CHARACTER GLAMOUR CHILDREN WEDDINGS FRANCES PARKER Pg Thfy M rlle . 1 , W Sli 'Z 505051.03 SHCI 9 4+ Keen'cTeen Tags Basl1a's Apparel 235 EAST COLORADO STREET SYCAMORE 2-1754 Complete 6. Reasonable Li.neofGrcxducrtion Dresses and Suits The Myrtle Vencil Exclu- sives for the teen-age girl who likes to look smartly pretty and attractively feminine .... Dresses Suits Coats F ormals PlayfClotl1es Sizes 9 to 17 and 10 to 20 There ls Always a VENCIL-VALUE for You BEST WISHES TO THE MAYFIELD GRADUATES Ruel Izjllttwulnd Page Thi ty Erie P.Ha11ihurinn, inc. Modern air conditioned offices. Indirect light- ing. A restful atmosphere of modern archi- tecture and coloring. These are some of the features which make this building desirable for tenants who appreciate such features- EUCLID BUILDING l5 North Euclid Avenue Pasadena Office of the Building, Room 200 Telephone Sycamore 3-5621 Pg Th TyT VROMAN'S DUN N INGYS BOOKS STATIONERY 496 EAST COLORADO STREET A A E A D Y , T O - W A A A U Gloves . Millinery . Hosiery . Lingerie DESKS OFFICE FURNITURE S p O R T S W E A A 1271 EAST COLORADO STREET A C C E S S 0 R I E S . 556 East Colorado Street SY 3-1104 SYCAMORE 3-1 171 CNGCIT Madison? COMPLIMENTS OF A A 1 FRIEND Page Thirty-Three BERRY and GRASSMUECK 0 Sycamore 3-7178 RUBERTA HUBERTS ALL THINGS JIIUSICALU Beauty Shop 34 S. Madison Avenue 0 Pasadena 654 ILAST LOLORADO ST PASADENIA SYCANIORE 3 4414 A CROWN CITY A Krieg Church Supplies' N Since 1892 SPECIAL ATTENTION TO RAY H. BECKER, Successor PARTY ORDERS I M Albany 0721 2877-79 W. Colorado HOME OF CROWN SPECIAL BREAD LOS ANGELES 41. CALIFORNI 868 E. WASHINGTON SY 7 4451 A PEB Th ty f ' Q. K N G' ff . ,Q , E! fl ' L - g X 5: r f f 52.3 I N IH K : N ff 1 x C of r , Q-'.:,. R - 5: 22515 'V 4122? - s in I , I' 3- A. g' H- '- ,N .J ? . f' .3 I'- f 1z.'w 1 7 f , f 'I j x ll ,vlt . -6,1 , 0 If .2-EQEEEE I ' .1A. 2 1 Q 'WT N -o NMMA a -div' X Q 51, Hffhffww ff M U-Kmenccm Fashxon CTIHCS Award Wmner for 1944 starch? eyelet pethcocrt tnm on rtryon pongee all m bczlle rm outlme w1th htted bodxce and full G sl-nrt S26 95 lumor sxzes I. Ill. HIHTHER 00. , A' N . 1 1 4 I . , . . I N . X 1 ' , ' o 1 w 1 . I 1 I ' . . I eg 'll .. ,..,, H Q f f - X my - ' 1' ' Q 4 - . Ai?1'WQQQEQEQEQQEQ .' K fm' X 1. in '2?f?i?EiEif4 ' - ' .1 '+ lf :5if33E'f5'1 :.:-.:.12::E525i-. - ? , ,i 'ff-'Q,E 1Z'Q25fE5Ei5i5f52552if523i?EE2Q2QQQ2gig:5,:.?E:I 'A ' 1-sl,72:2-frii'V-fT11--'-IQ'.2iIifif2Q22:ieiiigagig2g5gagsg2ai25552g3.Q, fi x ' : 32:,-I4I:'1Z:III:Z1It':I:f:11I11Z:1:Zn:I:.':. if !l ' V p- ,Q , 1-f4 ,f':'5:'1-:'I'.'1':51:2122E523f4E'51:E12ff1E:52:52EfffiE53,.QIj- it x . ' . , '?4 'ff-1 lfifi:ag.-f,Q-222'5i2i222a2,2f11ff-3. Ac. Y eq 'I 12311.51-. f' .Q . 'Avis f:2:ff12Qi5Q-2.1. -T-'.-Q42--1.-.:E:gg2,1f:Q.::1ei1:.rd,ZLL .,g.:.g:,'E5E' ,Qu -L:1E112i1:g'g1g1gF-Q2 .-.-1:la?E3:1.3Egigig:11:If1.'21-513EQ25:13,12zQE131325E5E5:3f2::5:5:115E3E ' U j355,,.. W i '-1112153253555gigE5igE5E3:3:5E,A:15:::5,gg,,-ggi:Qzij-1-1Viggxrzrz5:Q-i:5E5EgE3E5:5:52:5:315 : 5:41 - Q ' M5 .Q an . , A . ,x .bdrm-.f ' . - . ,- -...I 1.,1,:1.,,:g:15.3hj:: .,.. .- 3 1. .,::::,.:.4,:-11 .iz -,.-'1,,.::1::.gl--1g::1:g:g::-1,:: 31:1 12:55-1 -- Q Ps, . X fl , , 4-N-val., . -rig, '5f,,...M-NNW Page Thirty-five I A GIFT . . . ls the essence of thoughttulriess expressed in generosity. Our jewels gre gifts worthy of the giver Shop at PH5!ldP7l!1,S Finest fmcrlry Starr L nulluns B. 8 COLORADO gt MADISON PASADENA Formerly VVALTON R CO. 7- fffeff f I JEWELERS I HOSIERY SHOES PASADENA1 624 E.A ElOLORADO ST. L AND HUNTINGTON HOTEL Los Angeles: lVilshir1' at ll,Vl'.Yf1lI0l'PlIllld, Opporitf' Bullm'l s Beverly Hills: Lobby, Beverly llills llotel 1 gf 4,ggg4,,,A.,,,,,A, , , Eg L,vLs LLLY ,L LLL, , LL, .YLLLLLLV G O R T O N ' S 378 East Colorado Street S P O R T I-I A N D lnfcmts cmd Childrens Wecrr Green from Crgdle to College Gt Oakl d cm Boys to 8 years, i Girls to 14 TENNIS BADMINTON CORSETS ARCHERY cmd LINGERIE Page Th ty s Extending to the girls of MAYFIELD Our Very best wishes Earle M. Jorgensen Cu COMPLIMENTS of the FIRST and SECOND IUNIORS URRIN W. PDX PONTIAC COMPANY AUTHORIZED SALES 6. SERVICE -CoIxIPI.ETE REPAIR SERVICE - BODY AND FENDER METAL WORK - PAINTING, UPI-IOLSTERING - PARTS ANII ACCESSORIES 707 E. Colorado - Pasadena SY 6-9106 EALTEEH PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED 882 East California Street. Pasadena SYCUIH-Dre 2-2 10 1 COMPLIMENTS of William W. Taglur, Jr. En. 30 North Marengo Avenue, Pasadena Sycamore 6-8650 Thirty-eight Jnhn's Bicgcle Shop Since 1909 WE SELL THE BEST AND REPAIR THE REST ALL MAKES BOUGHT - SOLD AND EXCHANGED PARTS cmd SUPPLIES SYcamore 2-4767 SCHWINN BUILT BICYCLES with Lifetime Guarantee Colson Wheel Goods Columbia Bicycles D 0 Il - A - Marge 996 East Green Street Pasadena 1, California Fully Guaranteed - Free Estimates Reasonable Prices Complete Tennis CS Badminton Depts. HEARQUARTERS FOR PASADENA CYCLE CLUB Southern California Representative of Amateur Bicycle League oi America 42 North Fair Oaks Avenue, Pasadena MTS- MCIUG Mudqett SY 6-5773 COMPLIMENTS of S0 ceinnntetfif CONTRACTOR A Page Thirty A IURGENSEN'S I WHITE CAB CU. I FINE FOODS 197 NORTH FAIR oAKs AVENUE HPURVEYORS OF QUALITYH 1 The Service Your Neighbor Will Recommend 1 Domestic 6: Imported Groceries Delicatessen .... Vegetables SYCAMORE 2-1166 I Meats . . . Fish . . . Poultry I 2 Fine Wines and Liquors I 24 HOUR SERVICE o sY. 2-1121 I ' I e 842 E. CALIFORNIA . . . near Lake I CHAUFFEURS ALL BONDED' LICENSED AND IN UNIFORM I ,L LO L L l .1 L HL, - Montana Street Pharmacg 2033 NORTH FAIR OAKS AVENUE Iu11ius Nasatir Pasadena. Calii. 1 Sycamore 7-4131 ERLACH3 2 STORES 464 E, Colorado 1323 North Lake Ave 1 COSTUME IEWELRY INDIAN SILVER JEWELRY Gold and Silver ' Charms and Bracelets Combs I Barretts SCHOOL PURSES Page Forty x rl. ? - :- can 1'M.u1f3f71g,,'v :u-3.3 I 1 .1 ,fi - ': U, .-Sr , Y A J..-: -P ,- .. 4 5 .' s r, ,Zi ff? J , 1 ' S 1,1 E . 4-, , N, 1 .. C A .V Ni E 'v Q- -5 LA ,I V. N, , 1 f--ff.--.5 - - JZ... LK ,,-122 ,-.f.,. V: - 4 ,-. , 2 A 4- ' - .gf , 4. 'B '-.. 4 x , L, .,.. : 'ug4. A ,. ,- m x J' 1 ' ,Q f , . U fi, X , -4 6 ' 1 1 .,1 -x, H41 'k 5. v f ' 3. :YL ,, .- -, . . ' f - 1-if -1 1 ?, 'L than 4 H 4' s'- HA a ,f Jr J' , f M ' err! . ,M ,. , '-P 1 ,QL- .. XX .1 X, 1l '.pwN.'-.- QL, nfl. A 1'-S H , W ei-A4153 vii-h F--'S '.'51'?Ts-i'i1s5fv- 'Tf 5E.f.:'v ' - , . , -pm-.V-z'.J M ,. jux- f , Q,Q,Qr-j.- 4 a'?QJg':K- '-I-, H r. bf N ,wtif in 7 As 1+-ir-gf . , xi 1 .. .. .. 1 ' . '. F ,c f ' 1-1 1 L'.2,.-.xi'5.5-1i-.- 'la ik-'f 2 PK' .ai 1 T'3'4.f 1g.1l? 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Suggestions in the Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) collection:

Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

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Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

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Mayfield High School - Crossroads Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958


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