Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA)
- Class of 1939
Page 1 of 294
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 294 of the 1939 volume:
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SP - ti - V ; ,j!i ;; .-,..- V) - c - -5i SV I n30 ' i UaS -s: o -CO JCOA. , £i KJ .aV ' ) ylMj rZ- •9 A (A M I N I S T A ' t I O N ( K C T I V I T I E S A ' H L E T I C S ORGANIZATIONS MILITARY TRAINING SCHOOL OF NURSING GRADUATES CAMPUS LIFE t! V FREDA GROFF EDITOR-IN-CHIEF DOROTHY HAYWARD ASSOCIATE EDITOR JACK GRIFFIN ART DIRECTOR DALE CLAYTON COPY EDITOR D I D I CHI n i To the spirit of informality which we have tried to portray in your Campus, we dedicate this book. We have endeavored to show you as you are, mak- ing a more realistic record of your life at jaysee. n e I w n n Striving to picture you as you really are, to show you informally doing the things you do day by day, to put into visual form your traditions and your memories that they may live, has been our aim. rj:prco m '  n V F -- - ' . - r V- . -. ' :.+ ■i.. .; -.. ' ., ' ' i A U::-. ifc ' mm jMb-4tl mlX: IM! ' [AMF1S Possessor of five modern and architecturally perfect buildings, spacious grounds and an enrollment that was staggering, it was at first difficult for those on the Hill and Colorado cam- pus of the Pasadena Junior College to grasp the idea that they had acquired six more build- ings, more grounds and a more staggering list of enrollees, when the unprecedented merger of John Muir Technical High School and Pasadena Junior College went into effect with the be- ginning of the school year. However, with a more complete understanding of the merger, one campus took the other to heart, shared publications, social life, clubs, activities, student admin- istration and all with their brothers who comprise the West Campus, high up on Lincoln Avenue. ' Ml ■M .•- vu ' ' - X-s Famed for her lofty traditions, admired for her loyalty and school spirit, Muir Tech, in her effort to make for perfect unity, brought to the merger, her student body, her student admin- istrators, her heritage and practices, gave them freely to a new and greater Junior College, forever to be designated not as East or West but as One. The Lincoln Avenue campus pro- ffered courses never before included in the curricula, tendered her School of Business, and at mid-year presented to the wide world a gracious and beauteous Queen for the Golden Jubi- lee of the Tournament of Roses, along with three of the six Princesses. Enriching what is now her alma mater is only one of the many things that West has done to merge with East. kfetti M ifiHl tail •u 5 k.kkk; f tfcte ■I Li - [AMPiS I Probably the most outstanding trait of Doctor John Wesley Harbeson is his ability to act wisely and to enforce his educational ideals of student administration. Friend, diplo- mat, leader, and counselor to his students is Dr. Harbeson. Varied activities and the personalities who have distinguished themselves in them play an integral part in the routine of any great college, therefore we present in the following pages, photographs which portray accurately, vividly, and color- fully the zest and the spirit which is a reflection of Life on the Bulldog Campus. 1 — POLITICS-BALLOTS, VOTING, VICTORY AND THE TASK OF RULING-THESE ARE THJi LOT OF THE STUDENT ADMINISTRATOR WHO IS PLEDGED TO SERVE GREATER PjCj ACTIVITIES— MUSIC, DRAMA, PUBLICATIONS, AND FORENSICS— FIELDS FOR STU- DENT PARTICIPATION, TRAINING IN THE ARTS AND THINGS EXTRA-CURRICULAR. CLUB LIFE— SOCIAL WHIRL, INNUMERABLE DANCES, FORMALS AT FAMOUS NIGHT SPOTS, MEETINGS OF HILARITY MIXED WITH SERIOUS PURPOSES AND HIGH IDEALS. NURSES— GIRLS IN WHITE WHO TRAIN, PRACTICE AND STUDY A PROFESSION DEDI- CATED TO HUMANITY. THEIRS IS A NOBLE WORK, EMBODYING HOURS OF VIGIL, MILITARY TRAINING-STUDENT CADETS MARCHING WITH MACHINE-LIKE PRECI- SION, DRILLING, FENCING AND IMBUED WITH THE IDEAL OF FUTURE SERVICE. irrirri GRADUATION THE SEAS OF MORTAR BOARDS, THE HUSHED SILENCE OF THE ROSE BOWL, THOUSANDS OF SPECTATORS AND TERMINATION OF JUNIOR COLLEGE DAYS. CAMPUS LIFE-TRIVIAL, EASILY FORGOTTEN MOMENTS MADE FOREVER MEMOR- ABLE BY THE CAMERA, SHOTS WHICH DEPICT THE PANORAMA OF THE CAMPUS. mu nmuiun Pictured informally, presented in the same manner, are the students who have rendered themselves outstanding this year. Selected from seven thousand candidates are eighteen students whose work in extra- curricular activities merits recognition. This, as in all matters of select- ing small numbers from a great mass, has not been an easy task. We are aware that many who deserve like honors have been left out, that there will be those who feel that theirs should have been a similar dis- tinction, therefore Campus asks not for praise of this section, but merely approval of its efforts to create a new and living tradition, an incentive to students to work toward and to achieve even greater heights. Top. Ut Y. E PRO Bo VF. u OBr -. - OWard cr . COATES I L C O X FRANK S P R A T T ' iB HERB MCDONALD DENNIS GIBBS LLOYD BEARDSLEY OPIIS PIRSyAllIIES DEXTER ABBOTT JEANNETTE EASTMAN u I 1 : J .j ,i ■' - % ?) -M? ' Ov ir ; ' ' H- ,)( X ' r f Y y a ' ,; ' ? n liinyiiii I L) 1 II il 1 i U H Governing some 7,000 students, issuing court tickets, and producing campus publications are duties of JC ' s student ad- ministrators. Each year over two hundred student leaders are produced, and taught democracy through experience obtained v hile in political positions. N A L D Undoubtedly the most fair-minded and outspoken president ever to rule the Associated Students, Bob Coates, filling the highest student position at JC for a second term, took office at the beginning of the year, shov ed wisdom and foresight in managing an enormous student body. Then, at mid-term one of the most hotly contested elections over a period of years took place, with more student interest aroused than previously and campaigning hitting a new high, via posters and word of rnouth. Result of the presidential contest spelled victory for Herb McDonald. Not to be outshown by the record of Bob Coates ' reign, Herb brought more enthusiasm and conscientious effort to the office than any of his predecessors. To weld the two compuses into one har- monious element was Herb ' s dream and Howard Clapp, serving as Associate President with both Bob and Herb, put forth every effort to make the goal realized. Just and all encompassing were Howard ' s efforts to make for democracy and it can truthfully be said that his tol- erance spells victory where defeat might easily have won. The var- ied ideas and aspirations of the three Student Body leaders are res- ponsible for a proposed new form of student government and the in- ter-campus interest displayed on the part of the entire student body. n II i El I SOB! he of the dry wit and impeccable oppearance is twice-ruler of PJC. First as Secretary of Publicity, then as Chief Justice and finally as Student Body prexy, ' Robbin ' has served in student politics for two years. Fearlessly outspoken, just and poised, he can easily be tabbed the all-around, ideal fellow. 5 enthusiastic, tireless and bent on serving, was once AMS prexy, Secretary of Athletics and during football season was Yell King. Well versed in politics, rich in experience, he acted with infinite ease as No. I Man, strove to create new tradi- tions, revive old ones and to attend every student affair. he of the winning smile and tolerant manner, is interested in practically every activity. Art, extemporaneous speaking, organizations and political affairs claim his interest. Student ruler of the West Campus for one year, he finds time to be a regular fellow, good club brother, and a conscientious leader, n I S I D I i T S Top. leh to right: BOB COATES, ASB President I; HOWARD CLAPP, Associate President I and II; HERB McDonald, ASB President II. Below, left to right: LLOYD BEARDSLEY. Senior President I; WARREN DORN. Senior President II; BILL GOODLOE. Junior President I; BOB BRADEN. Junior President II; PAT KENNEDY. Sophomore President IL Second row: RED ROBINSON, Sophomore President I; PAT KEN- NEDY. Freshman President I; NORMAN STANGER. Freshman President II; JEANNETTE EASTMAN, AWS President I; BETTY WILCOX, AWS President IL Third row: VIRGINIA NEWMAN, Associate AWS President I and II; BUD CHILD. AMS President I and II; DENNIS GIBBS. Associate AMS Pre- sident I; SAM MARDIAN. Associate AMS President II; MABLE PROUTY. Clerk of the Board, I and II. Faced with the fact that the old form of student government could not be applied to the greater PJC, with her two campuses and different ways of governing, the Board of Representatives, with Dean Catherine J. Rob- bins set about forming a temporary type of administration to be used this year only. Leaving the student offices the same as before, the Board set up corresponding positions to be filled on the West Campus and de- creed that students holding these offices should be dubbed ' associate ' . 1 Above, first row, lei- to righit DICK SHANNON, LORRAINE ALTON, LOIS LITTLE, LOUIS IRWIN, Associate Justices I. Second row: JOE MORIN, BARBARA McCOLM, JOAN BATHRICK, JERRY GREER, Associate Justices IL Third row: JOYCE REES, MARY WATT, Clerks of the Court II; BURTON BURGESS, MARILYN COX, Clerks oi the Court L Lead by two progressive and energetic Chief Jus- tices, the Court this year enforced discipline, insisted upon adherence to rules, and issued tickets on both campuses. Aided by a double crop of Spartans and Lancers, the Justices arose early, tried hundreds of cases, collected fines and fixed sentences. Aside from the Chief Justice, there are four Associates. BOB BRADEN CHIEF JUSTICE I RED ROBINSON CHIEF JUSTICE II [ A B I 1 E I Largest Cabinet ever to handle individual school activities was this year ' s. Appointive offices were doubled with the advent of twin officers, one having the title of Secretary, the other Associate Secretary. Chosen and appointed by the Board of Representatives are the Cabinet members, whose duties in- clude the overseeing of some one activity rather than those of a larger scope, such as the Court and Board. Problems of bud- get making were solved by Finance Secretary Sam Mardian the first semester, by Bob Coates the second, while other secre- taries planned dances, assemblies, social affairs, athletic events and music programs. The social affairs committee was responsible for the famous Backwards Dance held late in the year, the organizations secretaries took charge of the Atten- dance Contest, sponsored Club Days. Newly created offices were Secretary and Associate Secretary of Women ' s Athletics. LEFT PAGE. First row, left to right: PEGGY LOU ANDERSON, Secretary of Publicity L- MURIEL STEVENS, Associate Secretary of Publicity I; NORMAN BENNETT, Secretary of Publicity II; HASMIG EVKANIAN, Associate Serrelary of Publicity II; RHEA SIEGEL, Secretary of Records I and II. Second tow: PHYLLIS RICHMOND, Secretary of Organi- zations I; BARBARA McCOLM, Associate Secretary of Organizations I; HELEN SHARP, Secretary of Organizations II; JEAN MILLER, Associate Secretary of Organizations II; JOHN KELLN ER, Associate Secretary of Records I. Third row: ELEANOR SMITH, Sec- retary of Music I; EDWIN WOODSIDE, Associate Secretary of Music I; IDA MAE JESSEN. Secretary of Music II; DOROTHY LOOS, Associate Secietary of Music II; BEVERLY HAM- MOND, Associate Secretary of Records II. Fourth row: HOWARD VOS£, Secretary of Activities I; BEVERLY BEACH, Associate Secretary of Activities I; PETER DUCKER, Sec- retary of Activities II; GENE ERICKSON, Associate Secretary of Activities II; VIRGIL HINSHAW. Secretary of Oral Arts I and II. RIGHT PAGE. First row, left to right: SAM MARDIAN, Secretary of Finance I; BOB COATES. Secretary of Finance II. Second row: EDiTH HENGER. Secretary of Social Affairs I; BETTY WILCOX, Associate Secretary of Social Affairs I. Third row: MARION DURHAM, Secretary of Social Affairs 11; PHYLLIS RICHMOND, Associate Secretary of Social Affairs II. Fourth row: HERB McDONALD, Secretary of Men ' s Athletics I; JOHN KELLNER, Secretary of Men ' s Athletics II. Fifth row: MARY ANN MOSS, Secretary of Women ' s Athletics II; ALBERTA RIDENOUR, Associate Secretary of Women ' s Athletics II. Sixth row: LAURENCE GRANNIS, Secretary of Public Relations I; REX DANNEBAUM, Secretary of Public Relations II. Seventh row: BETTY MUELLER. Clerk of the Cabinet I and II; ADELAIDE RUSSEL, Clerk of the Cabinet II. Ay First row, left to right; ANN ROHRER, EVELYN BRADFORD, lEANNETTE EASTMAN (President I), BEVERLY JANE GRAY, MARION COLDWELL, KATHERINE McGRATH. Second row: VIRGINIA SPAHR, KITTY EASTMAN, PATTY JOHNS. BETTY RADFORD. Standing: BARBARA PLACE. LOIS LITTLE, JEANNETTE MELLEN, DOROTHY LOOS. Seated on steps: BETTY WILCOX (President II), VIRGINIA NEWMAN (Associate President I and II), MICKEY lONES, DEE DEE COPE. Not in photo: DEAN CATHERINE J. ROBBINS. ASSO- CIATE DEAN OLIVE W. KELSO (Advisors). Combining forces and good ideas with AMS, the Associated Women Students helped spon- sor an assembly and dance featuring Larry Kent and his orchestra at the beginning of the spring semester. They also planned the Football Banquet, Mother-Daughter Banquet and the Coed Party or Fair, which featured pink lemonade, a roving interviewer and clowns. Ac- tivities were not limited to campus, however, for members of the board and cabinet treked off to the Vista for a convention, spent a week-end comparing notes and plans for coming events. Jeannette Eastman, Betty Wilcox and Virginia Newman headed AWS activities for the year. Ani[unD iiiEi noiiiis II The AWS Convention at Hotel Vista del Arroyo brought out the lovely coeds over ivhich BETTY WILCOX acts as host- ess. Right: MABLE PROUTY and MURIEL STEVENS cycle madly off on their bicycle built for two. heading for the AWS Fair and pink lemonade. Left to right: MARY ANN MOSS. JEANNETTE EASTMAN and VIRGINIA NEWMAN borrow Dean Robbins ' office, lay plans for a greater Associated Women Students year. DEE DEE HENGER. BETTY WILCOX. PHYLLIS WILSON. MARION DURHAM and others who convened at the Vista for a week-end devoted to AWS affairs. Left: DENNIS GIBBS and SAM MARDIAN confer over AMS busi- ness. Right: SAM MARDIAN. BETTY WILCOX, and BUD CHILD take the air at the AWS-AMS assembly featuring Larry Kent and Band (shown in background) whose vocalist made 10 ' Deep Purple ' conscious. Left to right: WALT CLUBB, BUD CHILD. PETER DUCKER. BYRON LOUGH. SAM MARDIAN glimpsed in an off moment on the East Cam- pus front steps. Stag supreme was that held at Su- preme Dairy Farm, featuring men only. Here WALT CLUBB. BUD CHILD, and ' JAYSEE ' CLARK watch as Dean of Men STONG proffers his plate to the right m an. First row. left to right: GORDON SPIVEY, BYRON LOUGH. DENNIS GIBBS (Associate President I), BUD CHILD (President I and II;. SAM MARDIAN (Associate President II). BILL CURLAND. Second row: ARSEN DEVIRIAN. ARDEN BASS. ALBERT PAGE, ED SUD- RALA. KENNETH SPIVEY. Standing: BILL DINJUN. BILL LYON. WAYNE MORRISON. Seated on s;eps; STAN KORELL. NORMAN BEN- NETT. Not in Photo; DEAN AUDRE L. STONG (Advisor). Most famous events in AMS history this year were the two gigantic Stags tossed by Bud Child, blond president. The first, at the Supreme Dairy Farm, offered plenty to eat and became a haven for the candid camera fiend. The second, held m Sexson Auditorium featured a mo- tion picture and other entertainment. Knowing v hat the male element from each campus de- sired in the way of a real get-together, the peppy Bud, assisted by Denny Gibbs in the fall and Sam Mardian in the spring, broke all attendance records for stags, made fellows feel at home. First row, left to right: LLOYD BEARDSLEY (President I), WARREN DORN (President II). DOROTHY RIGGS. DON NEILL, MIRIAM PURDON, ANN ROHRER, ANITA LOUISE HALL. Second rov : GEORGE GOOD, DON THORPE. BOB GILLETTE, JOE MORIN. Seated on step::: GORDON SPIVEY, KENNETH SPIVEY. Music by Johnny Lucas and his orchestra. Thus the keynote to the most suc- cessful of the many afternoon dances held this year, the Senior class ' Jackrab- bit Jig. This dance was given in coordination with the Sophomore class, pre- vious to Easter vacation. Always a spectacular affair is the graduation prom, given for over 1000 seniors, following the impressive graduation ceremonies in the Rose Bowl. One of the excruciating duties that must be performed by sen- iors, due to compulsion, is the task of missing several days of school to practice graduation at the Rose Bowl. Lloyd Beardsley organized the class first semes- ter while Gordon Spivey second semester acting president planned the prom. n i I R [ins I Left to right: GRANVILLE LEE. ELIZABETH FARRIS, JACQUEY NANNESTAD, DOROTHY WOODWARD, JEAN FORD, PATRICIA MAE ALLESE, RONALD JEANCON. Standing: DICK WHITE, BOB BRADEN (President II), WEN- DELL THOMPSON. Sitting on steps: NEVILLE RUCKER, BILL GOODLOE (President I), MARTHA WILLIAMS. Charged with action by their prexy leader, Bob Braden, the Junior class officers second semester social criterion was their well-attended dance the latter part of May. First semester work included the construction of a float in the annual Homecoming Pageant, held in the Rose Bowl. Another activity of the latter half of the term was the entry of a booth in Mast and Dagger carnival ' s Dogpatch International Exposition, May 5. Preparation for the more exacting tasks of the Senior year is found in the work of the class officers who lead the Juniors. Bill Goodloe, Fall president and Bob Braden, Spring leader chose Councils from both East and West Campuses, called meetings to plan for Junior class activities. ] n I R n .U S Left to right: BARBARA DOUGALL, JEAN LINDSAY, DIXIE STROMEYER, PAULINE MAPES, BARBARA BATES, BETTY GORMLEY, PAT KENNEDY (President II). Sitting on steps: RED ROBINSON (President I), JULIA OGRADY. This June ' s Sophomores will probably be the last ever to be graduated from the Rose Bowl. Faced with the possibility that their graduation might be elimin- ated this year, in view of the amalgamation of campuses and the abolition of any high school activities or graduation in the future, the Sophomores aban- doned hope for the awaited event in the Rose Bowl, their photo in the annual and other graduating events. However, it was decided to proceed as in the past, and class members entered with enthusiasm into the Senior-Soph after- noon dance at the Civic, while West Campus Sophs sighed with relief, saw they had not worked in vain for what was to have been their Senior graduation. s Hi 1 1 1 n lUU Left to right: FERNE DIERDORFT, PAUL DARROW, MAVIS COCKERY, JEAN LINDSAY, KITTY EASTMAN, JEAN WHITSTINE, NANCY REEL. Standing: CHARLES HAVER, NORM STANGER (President II), BILL ODONNELL. Sitting on steps: ROSS BROWNE, BOB LIPKING, PAT KENNEDY (President I). Pinning on the befuddled Frosh a badge bearing ' 43 Fresh, the Associated Students this year fostered more school spirit and inter-class interest with this simple gesture than has been stirred up in many a year. The Freshman, m.ade to feel that he was a part of the Bulldog institution, worked on the Council, while aspiring activity girls joined the Frosh Women ' s Club. Scene of the Fresh- man dance, April 14 was the Vista, and a nautical theme brought back mem- ories of a too recent jaunt during Easter week. Kitty Eastman created a date bureau for the dance, helped Frosh fellows in securing dancing partners and aided Norm Stanger as vice-president. Pat Kennedy was first semester president. F n s H I .H n H S n I I I R s 5 First row, leit to right: BARBARA BURTT. Chronicle Editor II, HAR- OLD SHAFER, Chronicle Editor I. Second row: PHYLLIS RICH- MOND, Organizations Handbook; FREDA GROFF, Campus Editor. Third row: RUTH NELSON, Stu- dent Handbook; GEORGIA HANES, Vo-Mag Editor. Two student body publications, Chronicle and Campus, a vocational guidance magazine, Vo-Mag, and two hand- books were the five student publications to appear this year. The fifth, an Organizations Handbook was some- thing new, while the change of Vo-Mag from a student body project to a vocational guidance magazine was made effective. Winning recognition and honors, Chron- icle presented adequate coverage of the two campuses. II riJDLlLilllUlllj Reaching staggering circulation proportions, pub- lications on campus this year were designed for a larger student body. From the Monday morning Bulletin to the weekly Chronicle and finally the yearly Cam- pus, the printed page reached every student, conveyed news of every event. km w ui« m ftuun F K E Throwing mildewed traditions which govern yearbook making to the four winds, the Campus Executive Staff this year inaugurated a new form of annual. Informal where possible, limited in its amount of written matter, abundant in pictures is Campus 1939. Forgetting every editor ' s pet supposition that photographs should be the same size as those in preceeding books, that things should be arranged exactly as in years before, the staff ordered large pictures, decided that color should be used on division pages and throughout the book. Flattering pictures and dressed up copy gave way to natural photos, true and frank copy. Battling with heart and soul and finally defeating a proposed change that would have meant that Campus would become a quarterly magazine with a paper cover, nothing more or less than a glorified pictorial maga- zine, the staff, accepting the proposal of the student board that the book be informal, worked in the hope that this year ' s Campus would meet with approval, establish such faith that students would desire to retain their annual as it now stands, continuing one of PJC ' s oldest traditions. LOYD JENKINS DOROTHY HAYWARD DALE CLAYTON JANE DELANTY SHAVENAU CLICK STELLANNE LOTZ ILSON HOLE BILL SAMWAYS PHYLLIS HINDERKS DON COURTIER HELEN COCHRAN ALICE WILSON ' :% 1 . ' - CAMPUS STAFF: DOROTHY HAYWARD, Associate Editor; DALE CLAYTON, Copy Editor; STELLANNE LOTZ, Organizations Editor; SHAVENAU CLICK, Mens Sports; WILSON HOLE. Photography of Athletic Section; LLOYD JENKINS, Photo Montages used as sub-division pages, Balboa, Dances; BILL SAMWAYS, Football Photography, Campus Life, Drama; PHYLLIS HINDERKS, Sophomore Editor; HELEN COCHRAN, Restrictive Clubs; DON COURTIER. Campus Life; ALICE WILSON, Photo Editor; MARY JANE DELANTY. Adminislralion. [ ' ■■rttS: - [AifBS JCh HROIHIE HAROLD SHAFER EDITOR I BARBARA BURTT EDITOR II The PJC Learning by Doing motto has been carried to its full- est extent this year on the Chronicle, campus newspaper, as stu- dent journalists have experimented with make-up, policy, writ- ing style, circulation and other divisions of newspaper work. Guiding the weekly publication during the school year were Edi- tors Harold Shafer and Barbara Burtt, who were responsible for making the Chron a strong influence on the Bulldog Campus. First row, lelt to right: RALPH NORTON, JOHN BECKLER. ELAINE PEARCE, JOHN LUCAS, DALE CLAYTON, GILBERT SCHLENDERING. Second row: FORREST DUKE. JON SLOCUM, PAT MELLON, RUSS WALKER, BEVERLY JANE GRAY, SHAVENAU GLICK, STELLANNE LOTZ, BILL SAMWAYS. [fl|{|lil[lE fl-iU Dealing with the fields of science and industry, Vo-Mag, vocational guidance magazine, came off the press but once this year with a larger, more extensive issue. Adopting the offset manner of printing, Vo-Mag presented color, and articles as well as features by outstanding authorities in their specific fields, in a greatly enlarged sixty-four page edition. GEORGIA HANES EDITOR BOB GILLETTE ASSOCIATE EDITOR BETTY MOSHISKY ART EDITOR First row. left to right: JOHN PIMLEY, ALICE GERTMENIAN, KIM.KO FUKUTAKI, PEGGY LOU AN- DERSON. ETHEL RICE, SONIA MINDLIN, DON NEILL. Second row: JU ANITA WOOD, HOSMIG EVKANIAN, JEAN HIGLEY, DORIS BURR, JEAN LINDSAY, JACK CLEELAND. Third row: DON HART- WELL, SHIUCHI OGURA, ROSS BROWNE, NORMAN BENNETT, FORREST DUKE. This group handled all campus publicity for dances, plays, parties and meetings. Peggy Lou Anderson first semester and Norman Bennett second headed the committee. Big job of the committee was t he management of the campus bulletin boards. Material posted on these had to be checked, posted, and later taken down by the committee members. PBUKIiy RIIHTKIIS First row, left to right: BILL LEE CRAWFORD, DORIS BURR, KIMIK.O FUKUTAKI, JOHN T. PIMLEY. Second row: SHIUCHI OGURA, REX DANNEBAUM, NORMAN BENNETT, FORREST DUKE, JACK CLEELAND. Relations of the PJC student body with other schools, business con- cerns, civic groups and individuals were handled by the public rela- tions committee. Under the leadership of Shorty Grannis the first se- mester and Rex Dannebaum the second, the committee wrote letters, attended meetings and banquets, publicized PJC happenings, spread PJC ' s good will to all corners of the Southland. Football season crowds of as many as 45,000 spectators were drawn largely by the constant efforts of this willing group, advis ed by Dean of Men Audre L. Stong. ' , ' T Under the capable direction of George Edwards during the first semes- ter and Bill Walcott during the second, the press bureau kept Pasa- dena Junior College constantly in the public eye. News stories and features concerning the student body, the academic departments and the administration were prepared by press bureau workers and re- leased for publication in many Southern California newspapers. Co- operative newspaper staffs recognized the good work of the press bu- reau by printing a great many of the releases, often with photographs. Right, top to bottom: BILL WALCOTT. PEGGY LOU ANDERSON. LYLE NASH. RUSS WALKER. PRESS II B n n t Jm V i fl i] IJ 1 U Pride of PJC is her Bulldog Band which travels all over the coun- try, adds color and showmanship to the Tournament of Roses Parade. Proud also of her singing organizations and her Christmas nativity play, Gloria, the jun- ior college boasts of perfection in all fields of music whether vocal or instrumental. P Jl S H I E i A Known officially as the Pasadena Tournamen has gained nationwide attention for its striki edy type of stageshow. In June 1937 and ago states of California, Nevada, Idaho, Utah, and was a highly successful engagement at the fa were adopted this year. Responsible for the Stong, who came to PJC ten years ago, bringi bands. Apple of every bandsman ' s eye this t of Roses Band, PJC ' s versatile Bulldog Band ng marching drills and sparkling musical com- in June 1938 the bondmen made a tour of the Oregon. The climax of each of these tours mous Rose Festival at Portland. New uniforms band ' s success is dynamic leader Audre L. ng with him new, big ideas for collegiate year is the trip to the New York World ' s Fair. i U I L OJ E A 1 D , LHIil Twin casts, giving opportunity to more students, were used in this year ' s presentation of the Christmas choral play, Gloria. A total of over 400 students participated in the five perfor- mances given under the joint auspices of the drama and music departments. Students in dra- matic roles included Henry Lien and Stewart Palmerson as the Prophet-Priest; Lament Johnson and Willard Polhemus as Obed; Richard Hamilton as Judah; Paul McNaughton and Fred Smith as Saradan of Chaldea, Miriam Purdon and Moble Prouty as Elizabeth. Singing parts in the pro- duction were taken by Elijah Hodges and Rodney Munson as the Prophet; Barbara Bryce, Marian McGrew, Josephine Merrill, Miriam Shoop and Virginia Throop as the Heavenly Mes- sengers; Mary Erickson and Julia Feeler as the Madonna; James Arnold and Edwin Pfaff as Joseph; Jay see Clark, George Grassmueck, Walter Reid, Raymond Valois, R. T. Williams and Harold R. Young as the Three Kings. Aiding in choral effects were the Nysaeans, Euter- peans, A Cappella Choir, the Men ' s and Women ' s glee clubs. Laura M. Elder supervised costumes and costume design and Patsy Peter was in charge of makeup. Dorothea Streib was student director. Scenic effects, designed by the stage technology class, showed great imagination in their breathtaking splendor. This year ' s performances of Gloria marked the fifth anniversary of that pageant, which has become a Pasadena Yuletide tradition. All per- formances played before a full house, attesting t o its tremendous popularity. The drama, written by Drama Instructor Katharine Kester, is played in many parts of the United States as a Christmas pageant. Lula C. Parmley, head of the music department, arranged the music. A uniiik Participation in the California-Western Music Educators Conference at Long Beacli and in Gloria were high spots in this year ' s program for the A Cap- pella Choir. In addition, the choir has sung in the Sexson Auditorium and at many civic meetings during the school year. The choir is led by Miss Mabel Cakes, voice instructor, and includes both men and women students in its mem- bership. Many members of the choir are active in other musical organizations, such as the sextette. One of their most unique activities was the Christmas ca- roling, conducted in the halls of both the East and West Campus the day be- fore the winter holidays began. The group also participated in singing be- fore the audience of the Tuesday Evening Forum at many of the 24 lectures. A CAPPELLA CHOIR MEMBERS: BARBARA ANDERSON, PAULINE ANDERSON, ELSIE ALLAN, BEVERLY AR- NETT, MARGARET BAKER. MARGARET BACON, NANCY BEST, LOIS BROWN, BARBARA BRYCE. BARBARA BUT- LER, MARION BYRNE, EVELYN CASH, LOIS COLLINS, JUDITH CONDON. JERI CUTLER, LEONE De BOYNTON, MARGARET De VAULT, MARGARET DRESSLER, JEANNE DUNN, ELIZABETH EWING, KATHRYN EDDLEMAN. MARY ERICKSON, JULIA FEELER, HELEN FISHER, WILMA FLORA, BETTY GARRISON, BETTE GAINES, LEONORE GOAD, KATHLEEN GOBLE. NATHALIE GOETZ, GEORGIE LEE GRIPP, ROSE HALAJIAN, YVONNE HANCOCK. CHRISTINE HANKS, JANE HAMLIN, BEVERLY HAMMOND, MARJORIE HAYDOCK, RUTH ANN HARTMANN. RUTH HAYES, MARY LOU HECKMAN, MARGUERITE HINKLEY, JUNE HUTCHINSON, JEAN JOHNSTONE, BARBARA JONES, DOROTHY LOOS. BETTY MAYFIELD. MARGARET McKERRAL, DORIS McMANNUS, VENUS MELKONIAN, RUTH MIGENT, PHYLLIS MORLEY, MIRIAM MOODY, JO ANN MORRIS, HELEN MURPHY, ANNE ORME, BAR- BARA ORR, CARMEN PENWARDEN, MARY LOUISE PERDUE, BETTY REEVE, BETTY REMBOLT, JEAN RIOENS. BARBARA SAINSBURY, ELSIE SCHERMERHORN, ELINOR SPENCER. AVIS STOLLAR, WANDA TALMADGES, NANCY TAYLOR, VIRGINIA THROOP, THELMA THURSTON, CAROLE VINCENT. CHARLOTTE VINTON, HELEN WADSTROM, JEAN WEEKES, AMY WHITAKER. PATRICIA WORTMAN, MURIEL ZAHLER, JOHN ALDERSON, JAMES ARNOLD, BRUCE BERGER, WESLEY BOWERS, ROBERT BURNS, CHARLES CARLSON, RODRIC CUTH- BERTSON, ERWIN CLARK, ALLEN DeLAND. OLIVER DIGGINS, HAIG GIRIDLIAN. BILL GOODLOE, RALPH HILBERT. CARL BUSCH, JOHN DOWNEY, EARL DAVIS, DICK HAWORTH, CHARLES HOGLE, THEODORE KISTNER, WIL- LIAM MACKIE, DOYLE MATTSON, DON McANLIS, PAUL McNAUGHTON, DANNY McKEEVER, CHARLES MAR- CUS, MARCOS OROSCO, JEROME PETERSON, ELWIN PFAFF, WILLARD POLHEMUS, WALTER REED, CARL REHFELD, MARCUS SILVERA, PAUL SILER, DOLSON SMITH, JOSEPH SOULANILLE, BOB TYNER, CHRIS TOL- ENAARS, STEVEN TRUHAN, CHARLES WILBUR, RODNEY WHITLOW, R. T. WILLIAMS, RAY VALOIS. JACK WICKLAND. p. , , ,, ,„ .„, ,. rTFNN TRIFFITH DONALD CLARK. DONALD MORRISON, NED SW ANSON, FORREST CALKINS, BILL r RoT HUCH DICK DAVIDSON MTHURH SMITH, DONALD THORPE, ROBERT McFAUL. Second row: EUGENE ScAif HENRY SllS rIcHARD TWYEROSS. JOHN GALLAGHER, CECIL TARPLEE, WILLIAM LEE MAYS PHH ? H ARRIsbN Erv5?rH P™ TAJIMA, TIMOTHY HARRISON, ELIJAH HODGES, IR. Third row: GENE Swr?gHx ' Sk DAl1el™ ' nORM™kiI KEENAN, NORMAN MOORE, KIHBY CHE f «0|: , - «° FIELD, ORIEN BENNETT, WARREN BASORE. FRANK MONTGOMERY LEROYHEANp.FouHh.ow: BRUCE M HUNTINGTON, JOHN LANIER, JIM LEASINE, GRANVILLE E. LEE PRESTON BBELI. EARL ROULACRICHA ARTHUR NORRIS, BOB BIRDSALL. F.fth row: IA.MES DOUGHERTY HAMILTON WILLIAMS RO STREET. ISOBEL SMITH (Director). JAMES ARNOLD (President). HAROLD HARTSOUGH, ROBERT HNDLEY MORGAN, JOHN WINTHROP NEWTON, PAUL McNAUGHTON, CHARLES O. CARLSON. woiEi ' s mmu un urn First row. left to right: LOIS BROWN. BEVERLY HAMMOND, RUTH MIGENT, DOROTHY LOOS. CLAIRBEL SILVERMAN. IRENE MURPHY, MARJORIE HINKLEY, BARBARA LOYNACHAN, CLORON CRAIG. JOYCE LOACH, LILA JANE LOCKHART. MARJORIE HENION. DALETTA McELWEE. Second row: MARILYN COX. SALLY JEAN BIELE, ELLEN MAE PRYOR, PATT TURNER, RUTH ROBINSON, BETTY GORMLEY, BETTY MARKHAM, MARGUERITE BASS, VIVIAN ANDERSON, CHARLOTTE HUMPHREYS, ELI- ZABETH BRUFFETT, MILDRED REES. PATRICIA WARD, LUCILLE LANDECK. Third row: BARBARA JEAN BUILER (Accompan- ist). DOROTHY CROGAN, LEFONDA ROGERS, IRENE JACKSON, THELMA AUDREY COOKE, LEIGH NELSON, VELMA ROH- RER, BETTY BOUTTINGHOUSE, MARILYN WORTMAN. ELLEN LANGSTRETH, ALICE DEANNE. ALMA MARTIN. MILDRED TROUTMAN, BARBARA WATSON. Fourth row: LUCILLE LOVE, BARBARA ORR, IRENE SPRINGER. MERODINE JOHNS. KATHRYN W. BARNARD (Instructor), CELESTE CLAUSER, ESTHER STYERWALT, BETTY TRIPP. DOROTHY TRIPP. 1 1 u f, y s First row. left to right: BARBARA JEAN BUTLER, ELSIE MAE SCHERMERHORN, KATHLEEN GOBLE BETTY RE ANDERSON, AMY WHITAKER, JOANNE MORRIS. CHARLOTTE VINTEN PATRICIA WORTMAN DORIS Mc ERICKSON. Second row: JULIA FEELER. LEONE De BOYNTON. PHYLLIS MORLEY. LOIS COLLINS. NATHALIE GOETZ. VIRGINIA THROOP, RUTH HAYES. MARJORIE HAYDOCK. MURIEL ZAHLER, ELIZABETH EWING. DORIS CORBETT. niRfso n ' A AJS ' .If ' ' JoV f ' i, ' PFAFF, JOHN ALDERSON, PAUL SILER. BOB BURNS, RODNEY WHITLOW, WALTER C. REED, SS IL Jll ' ? - ' ES ARNOLD, HAIG N. GIRIDLIAN, CHARLES ROBERT MARKUS. R. T. WILLIAMS. JR. Second row: Sm Lmt, J P, ,:,. , McNAUGHTON. BRUCE BERGER, DON McANLIS. DANNY McKEEVER, DWIGHT NICOLEN, JOSEPH n?y, ,, T,?o . J °JllP,. „ ° ' ' WOOD, LAMONT JOHNSON. Third row: JACK DOUGLAS. RALPH HILBENT. FRANK apn  BwoD?x ni„?E ° ' ' ARTHUR HOMER McINNES. MARCUS SILVERA. CHARLES N. HOGLE. JOHN CLARK, RICH- ARD HAWORTH. ROBERT O. RANDALL, JIM LIGHTCAP, LLOYD J. WYATT. PHILIP PEATERSON. CiOR First row, left to right: IVAN NICHOLS, KAZUE B. SHINGU, MARGARET KOZAK. Second row: EARL DAVIS, BETTY GORMLEY, MARJORIE BENNETT, EUGENE MORGAN. Third row: JOHN GALLAGHER, MARY BLAKELY, PEARL BROWN, DON MORRI- SON. Fourth row: GERALD ADAMS, BERNICE WILLIAMS, JOYCE BUTLER, PHILLIP HARRISON. Fifth row: FRANK MIDDLE- TON, MILDRED LUTES, RUTH ROBINSON, ELIJAH HODGES. Sixth row: CARL ANDERSON. MARGARET SIMMONS, CLAIRBEL SILVERMAN, TIMOTHY HARRISON. Seventh row: WILLIAM NON. ALMA MARTIN, BETTY BOUTTINGHOUSE. HAROLD SCHULTZ. Eighth row: FRANCES SMITH, ISOBEL SMITH (Directors), WINIFRED REVO, FRED VISSER. miuu SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA MEMBERS: William Adam. Nancy Ann Arrison. Nancy Baker, Max Barsh, Norman Bartold, E. Francis Bordeaux. Elmo Brooks, Miriam Brooks, Berkley Bryant, Barbara Butler, Charles Carlson, Thornton Chamberlain, Margaret Chester, Betty Clarke, James Codron, Marilyn Cox, Alvalee Dahlstrom, Catherine Damon, Etty May Duce, Lorraine Ehrhardt, Harry Eisen, Jose Fortville, Lillian Jean Francis, Martha Jane French, Marian Fuller, Paul Hall, Margaret Hannah, Edwin Hem- inger, Michael Hemandes. Jacqueline Herrill, Emily Herrman, Hal Holway, Jack Howe, Jeanne Hughes, Robert Ingram. Gene Jacobus, Billie Jenks. Shirl ey Jewett, Merton Kilgore, Walter Laurensen, Albert Leeming, Lucille Lentz, Leroy Renee James Light- rap, Dorothy Loos, Annette McDonald, Marion Marshall, Everett e Mathews, Alcide Micheli, Mary Miller, Dorothy Moore, Barbara Mueller, Mildred Myers, Nina Norris, Barbara Orr, Lloyd Otto, Gordon Overholtzer, Lucille Peterson, Betty Radford, Rose Jean Rasey. Jean Rivers, Jean Robertson, Mary Robertson, Fernando Rodriques, Helen Roe, G. Neville Rucker, Margaret Russell, Franklin Sabin, Ameta Mae Sanman, Bette Sayers, Agnes Schmiedeberg, Angus Schmiedeberg, Harry Schmidt, Paul Schuster, Evelyn Searcy, Howard Siegel, Viola Soule, Elsie Starkenburg, Jimmy Thomas. Lawrence Thompson, Lee Van Buskirk, Dwight Webben, Edith Yates, Virginia Yocum, Helen Yost, Mr. Milton C. Mohs (Conductor). f)tt0m - ( , Latest musical group of the Pasadena Junior College, the Sextette, arose out of the need for a small group of girls to go caroling last Christmas Eve. Com- posed of two first sopranos, Betty Reeve and Lois Collins, two second sopranos, Beverly Hammond and Amy Whitaker; and two altos, Virginia Throop and Dorothy Loos, the girls are entirely self-rehearsed and self-organized. Exper- ience has been gained by all six from work with the A Cappella Choir and the Nysaeans. Through their own efforts the girls have secured concert dates First row. left to right: BETTY REEVE, LOIS COLLINS. ViRGINIA THROOP, AMY WHITAKER. DOROTHY LOOS. BEVERLY HAMMOND. Constantly in demand for musical entertainment at dinners, breakfasts, meet- ings and luncheons of both student and civic organizations, the male quartet has been a popular branch of the music department this year. R. T. Williams Elwin Pfaff, George Grassmueck and Walter Reed, the four troubadours who composed the group, had important parts in Gloria, joint music-drama pa- geant held at Christmas time. Miss Carrie M. Sharp directed the singers, and under her tutelage their songs ranged from chants to romantic ballads. First row, left to right: ELWIN PFAFF, R. T. WILLIAMS. JR.. GEORGE GRASSMUECK, WALTER C. REED. The Melody Maids, a girls ' string group selected from the symphony orchestra, has performed at many banquets, recitals, meetings and festivals during the school year. Included among their many activities were short programs before the lectures of the Tuesday Evening Forum Series. The group includes five vio- lins, a viola, a cello, a bass and a piano. Vocal refrains are sung by a trio. Char- les Carlson rehearses the group and leads it during programs, while Milton C. Mohs ' orchestration class contributed many special arrangements for the Maids. First row. left to right: PEGGY HANAH, SHIRLEY, lEWETT. LUCILLE LENTZ. MARY ROBERTSON. KAY DAMON. Second row: IDA MAE JESSEN. BARBARA JEAN BUTLER. ELSIE STARKENBURG. NANCY BAKER. RENEE }.E ROY, ANNETTE McDONALD. Additional members: MARGARET CHRISTE, BETTY REMBOLT. A III A A 11 U L) 1 L L L n Becoming a mecca for aspiring young thespians, the Drama Department this year staged more student written, por- trayed and produced plays than in years past. Drama-musicals, comedy, radio hours and one act plays were conceived, written, presented and applauded. h m u- m m mi iiiEy n ; ( Setting a school precedent of presenting an annual all-student musical comedy, Run for the Money was presented December 3 and 4, Jim Cassity wrote and directed the fast- moving show and Dee Dee Cope assisted, Dale Babcock wrote the music, Bob Henry ar- ranged the sets, and they, along with Bob Stapleton produced the show. Alhambra ' s so- iijano Beth Kosse, Jacque Foley, Vernie Lief and Areop Bill Stuart played leads supported hv Ernie Sloman, the Hindu mystic and Warren Ream temperamental clothing designer. n ium BUI un n Sponsored by mythical Grumbles Soup Company, Crafty Music Hall Radio Hour was re- ed enthusiastically by packed auditoriums January 26 and 27. Jaysee Clark and Ro- ger Tierney wrote and produced it, and highlights were songs by the Areops led by Jim Williams, Jaysee ' s singing of You Are Music, and the Stapleton-Holmes comedy team skit. Deep Purple, theme of the show, and FDR Jones were the songs featured by Qharles, Carlson, who furnished the music. Ben AH players gave a dramatic sketch. GEORGE GRASSMUECK, MABLE PROUTY. FORREST DUKE. GEORGE GRASSMUECK, ROGER TIERNEY, BOB COATES, JAYSEE CLARK COiEO!- iHy TIE lilO M Delta Psi Omega ' s successful three-act play presentation for this year was Rachel Crothers ' Mary the 111, a comedy dealing with the love problems of today ' s bewildered youth. Miss Elizabeth E. Keppie directed the play, and the cast included Miriam Shoop as Mary I; Dorothy June Thompson, Mary 11; Jacque Foley, Mary 111; Beverly Beach, Letitia; Joseph Pyle, William and Lynn; Ed Budd, Robert; Frederick Smith, Richard and Hal; Warren Ream, Mat. Above, left to right: BEVERLY BEACH, FREDERICK SMITH, JOE PYLE. JACQUE FOLEY, WARREN REAM. Below, left to right: DOROTHY JUNE THOMPSON, JACQUE POLEY, MIRIAM SHOOP, DICK HAMILTON. ED BUDD. r n First row, left to right: VINCE ERICKSON, FRANCIS BRADLEY, GENE ERICKSON, ROBERT E. HULL. Second row: GEORGE GRASSMUECK. JOHN COLBERT, JOE LANDISMAN. Pasadena Junior College ' s debaters and orators competed in many west coast and na- tional tournaments this year, winning the following awards; debate — third fourth and fifth at Bakersfield in October; third at Stockton in February; second at U.S.C. in March; first in the biggest west coast tourney, at Pasadena in March; and first in the Phi Rho Pi tourney. Outstanding Oratory students this year included Dick Moore, Joe Landisman, Bob Gil- lette, Don Wierda, Virgil Hinshaw, George Grassmueck, John Colbert and Frank Clement, who were responsible for capturing the following honors: Oratory — first and second at Ba- kersfield; third at Stockton. Progressive speaking — first and second at Minnesota meet. First row. left to right: JANET TATE, JOYCE FABER. WHITEHELD GAEBELEIN, GENE ERICKSON, VIRGIL HINSHAW, JOE LAN- DISMAN, MARY SANFORD, BOB STAPLETON. Second row: BETTY COCHRAN. EDWARD DIDDY, JOE RISSER, ROBERT W. GILLETTE, EDWARD BUDD, HOWARD CLAPP, JOHN T. HOLM AN. Third row: MISS NELLE MARIE REMSBERG, MRS. IRENE S. PETERS (Advisors), FRANK CLEMENT, MR. HEDLEY J. REEDER (Advisor) BOB NAISMITH. HARRY MURAKAMI. First row, left to right: MISS ELIZABETH E. KEPPIE (Director), RUTH ANN HARTMANN, MABLE NIKICK, DOROTHY JUNE THOMPSON, PEGGY lEAN PACKER, TED F. COMBS. Second row: GERALD SHEARS, DANNY McKEEVER. PAUL McNAUGH- TON, ROBERT FINDLEY MORGAN, ROBERT MUND. Choral verse speaking is an unusual form of interpretation, but at PJC the Verse Speak- ing Choir has been functioning for ten years. Verse choir programs consist of poetry spoken by the group in unison, by solo voices and choral accompaniment and by part speaking. Programs have been given at the Shakespeare Club and Occidental College. The Student Forum has been giving attention to such social, economic and political pro- blems as Thirty Dollars Every Thursday, the Sino-Japanese War, the Jewish refugee pro- blem and the Anti-Picketing Lav of the last election. These topics have been presented by prominent speakers, in open discussion and in debate, with students participating. First row, left to righ t: GEORGE GRASSMUECK, JOHN COLBERT, JOE LANDISMAN. BILL DODSON, ROBERT HULL. Second row: FRANCIS BRADLEY, VINCE ERICKSON. ERNEST SLOMAN, JOHNNIE GORDON, GENE ERICKSON. First row, left to right: ROBERT MORGAN, DOROTHEA STREIB, ELDA PAULSON, MISS ELIZABETH FLINT (Advisor), HAROLD WOLFF (President II), TONI MERRILL (President I), FREDERICK SMITH. Second row: RACHEL REID, DORIS NORSTAD, JANIS LEATART, CHARLES HOOD, ROGER TIERNEY, DORIS BALDWIN. Third row: BUCK STONE, GENE MERRILL, PAUL McNAUGH- TON, DOROTHY JUNE THOMPSON, WARREN REAM. Besides taking third place in the Pasadena Commuinty Playhouse Annual One-Act Play Tournament in The Command Performance, Players ' Guild presented Sinclair Lewis ' three-act play, It Can ' t Happen Here and two different groups of three one-act plays. The purpose of the Guild is to create dramatic appreciation among the Bulldog students. West Campus Doorstep Players, newly organized dramatic group, presented a number of one-act plays during the school year. The Devil Takes a Whittler, PJC ' s entry in the Playhouse drama tourney, was given by the group, both in the tourney and in a num- ber of extra performances. Miss Dorothea Fry, drama instructor, organized the group. First row. left to right: GLENN GRIFHTH, lONE WARREN, PHYLLIS BLINN, LUELLA JARVIS, PAULINE CLARKE, CLIFF KIPERS, HELEN BERGMAN. GLADYS HORWITZ, MISS DOROTHEA FRY (Advisor), YOLANDA CICARILLL VICKY PLATTE, Second row: RAYMOND BOLIN, ANNA BELL GRANENBERG, MILDRED LUTES, JOYCE REES, EUGENIA MAE PULLEN, lOHN NELSON, ANNE DIAMOND, HARVEY CHAMBERLAIN, BETTY ERWIN, IVAN NICHOLS. Third row: DOROTHY IKEDA, MARGARET HOE- VEL, MAXINE NEVINS. WILBERT FiSHER, DORRIS LAMB, PHIL FORTHUM, FALETA SHIRY, ALBERTA HOLLAND. UUlDillilj Ii keeping with its standing as the largest junior college in the nation, Pasadena was represented by the outstanding junior col- lege football team in the country. Drawing support from 100 per cent of the stu- dent body, the Bulldog gridders fostered school spirit and much gridiron rooting. PEP [liiinifli Special train to San Francisco was the event that climaxed the work of the pep commission during the 1938 football season. Shown in the pic- ture are the yell and song leaders as they appeared shortly before the trip began. Under the supervision of Warren Dorn for the fall semester and Johnny Walker for the spring, the commission, including Herb Mc- Donald, Dexter Abbott, Norm Stan- ger, Art Sherman, Jerry Cockins, Merva ¥ ilson, Micky Jones, Helen Vaughn and Helen Parker supplied the pep necessary for school activi- ties. Assemblies found them much in evidence promoting school spirit for the Rose Bowl football games, and those in attendance supported them in all their varied activities. PEP COMMISSIONERS WARREN DORN JOHNNY WALKER Left to right: girls on top oi car, JERRY COCKINS, MERVA WILSON, MICKEY JONES, HELEN PARKER. Fellows, left to right: ART SHERMAN, HERB MC- DONALD, NORM STANGER. DEXTER ABBOTT. w I J - T Left to right: HELEN PARKER, MICKEY JONES, HELEN VAUGHN, JERRY COCKINS. MERVA WILSON. Herb McDonald, yell king, led his team of three lively yell leaders all over the stage of the auditorium on various occasions, and all along the concrete section of the Rose Bowl at the victorious games that Pasadena played. With support from his five beautiful song-leaders, v ho were right in there swinging through all the songs played by the band, McDonald and his team inspired pep in all the P. J. C. followers who attended the games. All members of the pep commission are also extremely active in school affairs, holding important offices and spending much valuable time. Left to right: DEXTER ABBOTT. HERB McDONALD, NORM STANGER. iflMi f Hsin ni !nu COACH TOM MALLORY CAPTAIN FRANK SPRATT Pasadena Junior College ' s greatest foot- ball team sparked by its greatest indivi- dual athlete, Jack Robinson. That ' s what critics were saying of Coach Tom Mal- lory ' s 1938 gridiron juggernaut after the Bulldogs won 1 1 straight games, scoring 369 points, better than 33 per game. Beat- ing San Bernardino, Eastern conference champions, Pasadena gained clear claim to the Southern California jaysee grid crown, although only co-championship, with Santa Monica, of the Western con- ference. Unanimous choice as most val- uable p layer, Robinson ' s contribution was 131 points and over 1000 yards from scrimmage. He was joined by End Ray Bcrrtlett on the all-Southern California eleven, while Tackle Don Winder and Guard Pete Pappas made the all-confer- ence squad. Ninteen seniors who played their last game for last fall ' s Pasadena wonder team were: Captain Frank Spratt, Jack Robinson, Dick Sieber, Ray Bartlett, Don V inder, Torrey Smith, Pat Geyer, George Good, Charley Gibson, Bob Hammond, Tom Collins, John Bre- wer, Al Sauer, Art Reid, George James, Al James, Wes Bowers, Chuck Rasparry. Lines charge as San Francisco puts up still battle to down ball cc PlUilH ] , UUk kU H Starting with the tougher foes first, Coach Tom Mallory ' s eleven bumped off Santa Ana ' s defending co-Southern California champions in its initial game. Sparked by the two Robinsons, Jack and Red, the Bulldogs got off to a 1 7-point lead before the Dons tallied. Jack Robinson ' s 83-yard gallop with Larry Monroy ' s punt was the climax of the Vild-scoring game, while Sophomore Red Robinson ripped the Don line to threads. Capping an 82-yard drive, Lynn Arnett brought Santa Ana fans a thrill with a 60-yard pass to Jim Nunez for a score, but four touchdowns plus Jack Robinson ' s field goal and four conversions were too much for Santa Ana. Another co-Southern California champio rolled to an impressive victory over the S Robinson of Pasadena and Hal Finney of bie for all ten touchdowns. Robinson sco Spratt, Don Winton and Ray Bartlett for down aerials to End Johnny Thompson a Norton. Don Winton, reserve Pasadena were the other stars. San Bernardino wo n fell in the second game as the Bulldogs an Bernardino Indians. Two men. Jack San Bernardino, were directly responsi- red three personally and passed to Frank three more. Finney tossed three touch- nd another on a double lateral to Leland full and John Verdieck, Indian center, n the Eastern conference championship. n H 1) i i 1 11, uuuk fi Making its first appearance in a Western conference game in three years, Pasa- dena ' s eleven easily mangled a weak Ventura team in the third game. The re- gulars scored whenever they wanted points, making the first touchdown after a drive which began on Ventura ' s 33 and ended with Red Robinson taking it over from the one-yard line. After the next kickoff, Al Donnell recovered a Pirate bob- ble on the Ventura 19, giving Jack Robinson opportunity to score. The lithe Jackie also made the last two tallies on gallops of 60 and 14 yards. Ventura, with a fine backfield, scored when Jim Deering sliced over Pasadena ' s left tackle from the 16. P A U i E i H 11, ! U 1 (I Held at bay through the first half, Pasadena rolled over Taft in the second half for its fourth victory of the season. Taft ' s defending state jaysee champions played their best game of the year in crushing the Bulldog line. Pasadena was forced to take to the air to make each of its touchdowns, as Dick Sieber, Captain Frank Spratt, Ray Bartlett and Keith Palm.er brought down aerials for scores. The Cou- gars, led by little Calvin Barrett at guard, chalked up 13 first downs to five, gain- ing 80 yards from scrimmage to Pasadena ' s 14. Ends Eugene O ' Dell of Taft and Bartlett waged a duel for all-conference positions, with honors being about even. P AH i I I A 3 5, n S Al I A fl Eight touchdowns, P. J. C. ' s largest score spree, were made against Visalia, as the Bulldogs rode roughshod over the Hapless Tartars. Visalia subbed for Chalfey, which was originally scheduled. Herb Sagerman and Keith Palmer each made two scores, and Red Robinson, Al Sonn, Frank Spratt, T. D. Floyd one each. P A S A i EI A H , iU A I n I n i Forsaking its usual offensive strength for a powerful defense, the Pasadena for- ward wall played its finest defensive game of the season as it hurled back the Los Angeles City College attack time after time. Coach Mallory ' s smooth-working machine struck early, and then held the battling Cubs behind their own 44-yard line throughout the game. Jack Robinson took a lateral from Red Robinson and ran 83 yards for the initial score. Herb Sagerman next booted a field goal from a difficult angle with only one second left in the half. A pass from T. D. Floyd to End Ray Bartlett brought the final touchdown with a minute remaining in the game. F A n i i i n 2 11, n Hi] Matching the mighty power of Compton with slashing speed, Pasadena ' s jugger- naut thrilled 40,000 fans with a second quarter thrust that netted three touch- downs and victory. The national junior college record crowd sat stunned by the precision that marked the drives of Pasadena after the Tartars marched to a sur- prisingly easy score in the first period. With both elevens at top peak, one man — Jack Robinson — spelled the difference between the two squads. First Bulldog tally came when Jackie went 15 yards, climaxing a 56-yard drive. Almost im- mediately. Jack pulled down a Compton aerial, then passed to Red Robinson for 14 yards and a touchdown. Third score was made on a 45-yard gallop from scrim- mage by the phenomenal Jackie. Unanimous choice as the best player met by the Bulldogs all season, John Berry passed to Dick Home for Compton ' s score. Dick Sieber plunges lor touchdown from one yard line as rambunctious Ram turns tackle into wrestler ' s headlock. uniiy Top row: GEORGE JAMES. CHARLES RASPARRY, HERSCHEL PATTON. Second row: DON WINTON, JACK ROBINSON, JAMES WRIGHT, GEORGE GOOD, TORREY SMITH. Top row: TERRELL FLOYD, PAT GEYER, DON WINDER. CLEM TOMERLIN. WES BOWERS. Second row: MERTON KILGORE. ROSS WINTON. CHARLEY GIBSON. JOHN DOYLE. AL DONNELL. Top row: AL SAUER, TOM COLLLINS. BOB HAMMOND, RED ROBINSON, FRANK SPRATT. .Second row; BILL HOLDEN, KEITH PALMER, ART HEID, HAY BARTLETT, GEORGE HUP, 0 Top row: KENDALL STANGl -f SEHj li ONN DICK SIEBER, AL JAMES, kSORRIS JACKSON. Second row: PETE PAPPAS, AL ESPINOSA, JOHN BRpA ER,|FRfl;I IS GLj ON ' , L im SOWB|; L [ 61 fosin Blond Bill Holden about to nab aerial as Red Robinson and San Francisco ' s Mullins look HHi E i A 49, PI HI II fl Next year ' s varsity was previewed against the invaders from Arizona, as the regulars played but one quarter. Francis Glea- son ' s 67-yard run with an intercepted pass was the longest gallop of the game, although Jack Robinson got off a 65-yard return and substitute quarterback T.D. Floyd raced 55 yards with another punt. PUyilA n, Hi f HiCIHfl II Daytime and San Francisco failed to stop the Bulldogs as they beat the Rams in the only afternoon game of the year. Jack Robinson was a one-man riot as he scampered 76 yards to a score on the second scrimmage play. L ater Jackie went 14 yards for a touchdown and made three conversions for a total of 15 points. Dick Sieber on a center buck; Keith Palmer on a reverse and Ray Bartlett on a pass from Robinson made the other tallies. San Francisco sports writers proclaimed Jack Robinson as the finest back seen in famed Kezar Stadium during 1938, includ- ing some of the outstanding West coast backs. Jackie ' s ball-toting averaged 14.8. P H n I i A 3 3, n 11 D U 1 fi Victory over a rough Glendale eleven assured Pasadena a tie for the Western conference grid championship with five wins and no losses. Playing before 32,000 Homecoming Day spectators, Jack Robinson, held in check for 59 minutes, scampered 85 yards on the last play of the game to climax the conference season. Jack also made the first score. Pete Poppas blocked a Vaquero punt and re- covered in the end zone for the second tally. Dick Sieber and Tom Collins each scored on short runs, while Glendale ' s tally came after pass interference on the one-yard line, Moore plunging over center for a touchdown. By winning this game, the Bulldogs tied Santa Monica for the Western Conference league crown. puyni 3!, [uiniiu iech k Jack Robinson and 16 other seniors rang dov n the curtain on their Pasadena football careers as they walloped cross town rival Cal Tech in the season finale. Robinson ' s closing chapter was a 104-yard run to a touchdown, climaxing the greatest individual career in jaysee history. Charley Gibson also played an im- portant role in the win, the wiry center running two intercepted passes back to touchdowns. Other scores were made by Dick Sieber on a plunge and Pat Geyer and Jack Robinson on passes from Tom Collins. The Beavers tallied on a pass. San Francisco gridders close in on T. D. Floyd in Kezar Stadium. nnmii nnuu .--• ' ? , U - . • Jt It t i « Ik i ' c 4v 1 9 i Led by Captain Tommy Flint, the fresh Class A gridders had a disasterous season, winning only the Armistice Day classic from South Pasadena, 7-6. Tutored by Weary Walton, the frosh placed last in the San Gabriel Valley lea- gue, losing four and tying one. In the opening practice game, the frosh tied Beverly Hills, 0-0, then lost to Loyola and Cathedral. El Monte ' s defending champions handed Pasadena its first league defeat 32-0. Pasadena scored for the first time against Monrovia, losing 13-7. Covina, even- tual league victors, conquered the Pups, 19-0, with Pasa- dena next holding Montebello to a G-0 tie. Then, in the Rose Bowl, the Bullpups won over South Pasadena, when Kennedy passed to O ' Donnell for a touchdown, Flint con- verting for the winning point. The season ended with Bur- bank winning, 7-0. Coach Nor Jaqua ' s frosh B eleven had little better success, winning two while dropping five. They finished fourth in the San Gabriel Valley league. Burt Fitzgerald was captain of the Bullpup lightweights. Left above. Freshman Captain, TOMMY FLINT, below, COACH WEARY WALTON SPHim FHIHU 0 , ■Vr, Playing a nine-game schedule, Coach Carl Metten ' s Spar- tans beat five strong elevens, losing only to Santa Barbara High, 1938 Southern California prep champions. Ocean- side J. C. varsity and Bakersfield High. Santa Monica High was first to fall, 13-6. An Iron Man act came next, when they beat Occidental Frosh and lost to Oceanside J. C. on successive days. Oceanside, using a prayer pass, won 7-6. Glendale J. C. ' s reserves lost, 18-0. Var- sity reserves thumped Cal Tech Frosh, while the regular Spartans were getting walloped by Santa Barbara High, 20-7, the same night. Compton High was beaten, 13-0, and El Centre ' s Arabs tied, 0-0. The season ended as Bakers- field triumphed, 25-14. Lettermen were: Bias, Captain Byram, Carter, Cropsey, Devore, Fagan, Falkenberg, Feld- camp. Finch, Gant, Groendyke, Hanes, Hauke, Heublein, Homolac, Kesler, Knight, Lamprecht, Leslie, J. Matteson, O ' Laughlin, Murillo, Olsen, Paulson, Pickeral, Price, Rich, Siegel, Smithson, Snedeker, Stumbo, Swartz and Yegge. Right above. Sparian Captain CHUCK BYRAM, below, COACH CARL METTEN ■= DA KlIdAlL Picking up where the football team left off, the Bulldog basketball team brought to Pasadena its second league championship. The same fine school spi rit followed the cagers, in spite of the poor accomodations of the home gym, and ardent fans were rewarded with basketball of a superior brand. r n California junior college champions. CLEM TOMERLIN, AL SAUER, GEORG E McNUTT, LES O ' GARA, JACK ROBINSON Top: CARL METTEN (Varsity Coach). Below: JACK ROBINSON (Acting Captain). Coach Carl Metten ' s cagers made it two league championships in a row for Pasadena Junior College when they took the Metropolitan League bas- ketball crown from Compton Junior College. The Tartars were responsible for the only Pasadena league defeat, avenging a previous defeat with a 42-37 victory over the locals. Highlight of the season took place in a pre- season tournament at Modesto where the Crown City cagers went through undefeated to come out undisputed champions of the state. To achieve this, Pasadena downed fo ur outstanding junior college quintets, Placer, San Mateo, Compton and Modesto. The Compton game provided the big thrill, the Bulldogs winning 48-46 after a bitter struggle. After this, the Bulldogs swept into league play, whipping four opponents before bowing to Comp- ton. Coming back after this defeat Pasadena took three more to cinch the title. Only blot on the record of the Pasadena five was a double setback by the great Fullerton J. C. team, Southern California champions. Out at Ful- lerton, the Hornets completely submerged the Bulldogs, 70-55, to halt a 15- game winning streak by Pasadena, for the Bulldog ' s first loss of the season. The second meeting provided the finest game of the year, with the Yellow- jackets taking the decision, 55-54, on Captain Tom Keesey ' s last minute free throw. On the other side of the ledger is the Bulldog ' s great feat of stopping the 83-game consecutive win streak of the U. S. C. Frosh, 43-36. y Top row. left to right: AL SAUER, guard; LES O ' GARA. center. Second row: GEORGE GOOD, guard; BILL LEVEILLE, forward. Third row: JACK ROBINSON, forward; CLEM TOMERLIN, guard. Fourth row: WARREN WILLIAMS, forward; RAY BARTLETT, guard. Fifth row: NEIL REESE, guard; RUSS SHIPMAN. cen- ter. Sixth row: GEORGE McNUTT, forward; DEAN WOOSLEY, forward. % ?r . Ane Pasadena cage athletes began copping individual honors early in the season. Jack Robinson and Les O ' Gara were both named on the all-star five at the Modesto state jaysee tourney. Robinson was the only local to earn a place on the official all-league team while the sensa- tional Jackie, who averaged 19 points per game, also made the all-state selection. O ' Gara placed on the second all-state five, while he and his teammate Al Sauer were on the second all-Southern California quintet. Graduating seniors who will be greatly missed next year are Jackie Robinson, Al Sauer, Ray Bartlett, Clem Tomerlin, George Good and Neil Reese. GEORGE McNUTT, LES O ' GARA, JACK ROBINSON and AL SAUER watch CLEM TOMERLIN jumping with Cub opponent. ff H ' f, . A ' A % 1 ' A ■: First row, leit to right: JOHN THRIFT, ED BAKER, FRANK CARTER, BILL BEARD, CHUCK BYRAM, AL- TON BALLARD. Second row: NOR JAQUA (Coach). BILL STUMBO, MELVIN REED, BYRON LOUGH, TOM BLAKE, BILL HANSEN, DICK REDINGTON (Manager). SPHHi usniiHi Something which even the Pasadena Junior College basketball varsity couldn ' t accomplish was done by Coach Nor Jaqua ' s 1939 Spartan when it whipped the Fullerton Junior College varsity, 35 to 34. This same Fullerton team captured the Southern California championship, and trounced the Bulldog varsity twice. Throughout the season, the Spartans captured 15 games while losing only five. Only two of these games were dropped to other jaysee reserve teams, one to Santa Ana J. C. and one to Los Angeles C. C. The Don ' s reserves lost the first 35 to 24, while winning the next, 33 to 25. Pasadena took the rubber-game, 23 to 1 6. Los Angeles also broke even in a pair of games, likewise losing the first 32 to 24 and coming back later to win, 25 to 23. The Caltech varsity, in the first game of the season, fl K| nosed out Coach Jaqua ' s team, 30 to 28. The Fullerton game, ' jt which came about after a mix-up in dates, found the Spartans tak- ing on the first string Yellowjacket team, and holding the high scor- V ing Fuller ion five to 34 points. The Fullerton reserves were beaten _. ■■, easily in a later game, 37 to 24. The Pasadena Spartans had a re- tmarkable defensive record, holding ten rivals to less than twenty j points. Pomona J. C. was knocked over twice, 38 to 16 and 45 to 1 H 16; Compton J. C. fell in two games, 32 to 15 and 26 to 19; Glen- dale dropped two straight games to P. J. C, 35 to 19 and 22 to 12. Above: NOR JAQUA (Coach of powerful 1938-39 Spartan five). Below: CHUCK BYRAM, (Act- ing captain and ace forward of the Spartans). 1 U 11 U Iv Although in track and field, Pasadena was without its first and only major league championship of the year, Coach Otto Anderson gave Pasa- dena many athletes of whom the school may be proud. The Bulldogs fought val- iantly, both in varsity and frosh competition, coming through better than expected. Left to right: Co-Ccptain JACK HOR- RELL, Coach OTTO ANDERSON. Six Metropolitan League track and field champions were produced by Pasadena Junior College, as Coach Otto Anderson ' s charges barely missed the team crown. Domination in the field brought the coveted league title to Compton with 641 2 points, while the Bulldogs tallied 62. Two Pasadena entrants, John Pimley and James Ruffin, were double winners, while national half-mile champion Bobby Mad- rid easily took the 880 crown. Ray Bartlett, with a tie in the pole vault, accounted for the other win. Defending champion in both the high and low hurdles, Pimley easily retained his crowns. The dimin- utiv e Negro, Ruffin, took the crown in the 100 and 220, upsetting fa- vored Wilbur Miller in the furlong. Although Madrid lost the mile to Los Angeles ' Mel Barry, he came back to easily capture the half-mile. Pasadena ' s dual meet record was highly successful, losing only a thrilling 68V4 to 62 4 decision to Los Angeles City College. Victims of the Bulldog strength were Caltech ' s combined frosh and varsity, the U. S. C. Freshmen, Riverside J. C, Sacramento J. C, and the U. C. L. A. Frosh. The Bulldogs also made favorable showings in the Southern Colleges, Long Beach and Fresno relays. Ruffin gained a second in the open hundred at Long Beach, losing only to the great Clyde Jeffery of Stanford. Pasadena baton teams took two seconds and a third. Jack Horrell, stocky co-captain, took the open 100 at the Southern Colleges event, while Chef Benjamin won the javelin with a new meet and school record. Caltech was the first to fall, being submerged under a barrage of Pasadena points. Double winners Pimley, Madrid and Horrell paced the 69 to 53 victory over the strong U. S. C. Frosh, while later the Bulldogs again faced the Trobabes, beating them in a triangular meet, 79 to 58 to 25 for Riverside J. C. Pasadena whipped Sacramento, 681 2 to 531 2, Rcty Bartlett shining in the pole vault. With Bob Madrid setting a new national jaysee 880 record, the Bulldogs trounced the U. C. L. A. Frosh, 93 to 34. Sweeps were scored in the 100, 220, 440, high and low hurdles. The Los Angeles C. C. meet showed Madrid and Barry meeting in their long-hearalded duals, the lanky Cub winning the mile and Mad- rid taking the hall. Jim Ruffin copped both sprints, while Don Winton came through with first in the shot and discus, while Cub athletes rose to heights in come-through style. JACK HORRELL and JIM RUFFIN racing to lOO-yard dash victory in Caltech meet at Tournament Park. V n s Vaulting high is RAY BARTLETT at the top, with FRANCIS PIERCE striding home in the center, and JOHNNY PIMLEY leading RAY LIDDLE over the barriers in the lower picture. Bobby Madrid, diminutive Spanish-Italian distance ace, was the individual per- former de luxe of Coach Otto Anderson ' s 1939 track and field varsity. Although he met his master in Los Angeles ' Mel Barry in the mile run, Madrid was the king of the junior college runners in the half-mile. To climax his two-lap activi- ties, the little veteran established a new national jaysee record of Im. 55.2s. at I II A c i; FRED MAYES and FRANCIS TUCK- WEILER, lower left shown passing baton; lower right, DON WINTON about to unleash a long throw; mid- dle, Pasadena ' s big three, FRED MAYES, ED CALLAHAN and ULYS- SES ALLEN, in the quarter-mile; top, LYLE DAUGHERTY skimming the low hurdles. U.C.L.A. After this he set up a new Metropolitan League standard in the trials of Im. 56.8s. But the 880 was not all of Madrid ' s work, as he ran in the Coliseum with U.S.C. and brought Pasadena a school two-mile record of 9m. 33s. Chet Ben- jamin, who later became ineligible, made the first new school record when he tossed the javelin out 186 ft. 8 in. in the Southern California relays at Occidental. RAY BARTLETT FRANCIS PIERCE JACK GORDON BOB GILLETTE LYLE DAUGHERTY RAY LIDDLE BILL LAUGHREN DON WINTON BOBBY MADRID ULYSSES ALLEN JIM R U F F I N JOHN WACHTLER ROSS WINTON GERALD ADAMS JOHN RITTERATH WILLIE ANDERSON FRED MAYES ED CALLAHAN F n s H i n nn Pulling several surprises, the frosh track and field team showed exceptional strength at the San Gabriel Valley league finals. Both the Class A and B teams placed second, while the lightweights also garnered second in dual meets. Herb McCoy, crack low hurdler, set a league record of 24.7s. in the low barrier trials, only to lose in the finals. McCoy also tied for first in the league hundred, v hile Ray McLean and Gerald Shook took the high jump and pole vault crowns. The relay team of McCoy, Edell, Bennett and Irving also upset highly favored Covina, to win, giving P. J. C. Frosh 841 4 points to Covina ' s 40. il 4 Top: Coach ' WEARY WALTON. Bottom: Captain HERB Mc COY. First row, left to right: HANS MUSTAD, RUFUS BLAKE.GERALD SHOOK, BILL WALTON, NEIL BENNETT, DON EDELL, WILLIAM IRVING. Second row: RAY McLEAN, FRANK ITO, HOWARD STRAND, CARL ROSSEAU, JACK BLISS, JOHN GEORGE, NORBERT VERBECK. RO D BEMiS, JOHN ANDERSON. Third row: WEARY WAL- TON (Coach), JAMES SHATTO, JOE MUVEHILL (Manager), BILL O ' DONNELL, HERBERT McCOY. RAY MOR- RIS. BILL GADOW, DALE HIESTAND, FRANK MOSIER, STANLEY BALDWIN (Manager), DICK HEATH (Mana- ger). tt tH ' l , . t i il IJ L D A li li True to its long reputation of producing crack baseball players, this year ' s varsity and frosh teams were no exceptions. Just as in the past, the experience gleaned from cavorting for Pasadena Junior College will help send several players into minor league positions and possibly on into the majors. .- i i. nnm unmi CAPTAIN NEIL REESE Metropolitan League championship number three was captured by Coach John Thurman ' s Pasadena Junior College baseball team to add to the football and basketball titles, the Bulldogs winning for the second straight year. Don Sch- ulze, veteran right hander, pitched four league wins, while Johnny Patchett, ex-Muir chucker, hurled in the other two. Almost before the season opened the Bulldogs took on Los Angeles City College, winning 1 1 to 6, Schulze allow- ing only four hits. Rod Campbell paced the locals with four hits. Taft J. C. fell to the tune of 29 to 0, Schulze again giving up but four hits. Twelve runs were scored in the first inning. The other northern rival, Bakersfield J. C, was beaten 16 to 4. L. A. C. C. v as taken down for the second time, 1 1 to 3, as Patchett pitched and batted the team to victory. Compton was dumped twice in quick succession, 8 to 6 and 9 to 8. Neil Reese ' s home run with the bases loaded clinched the game for the Crown City nine, and gave Pasadena the third title. COACH JOHN THURMAN ROBIN SPARKY REESE shown sliding into second, as teammate ROD CAMPBELL puts ball on him in inter-team game. Two victories over U. C. L. A. varsity highlighted the practice season of the Pasadena team, as it pounded out fourteen victories against eight defeats. With their crack pitching staff and hard-hitting fielders, the Bulldogs were beaten by only one junior college rival, that a 13-inning thriller to Fullerton J. C, 5 to 4. In the first game with the Bruins, Pasadena com- pletely ruined the dedication of the new U. C. L. A. Westwood diamond, whipping the var- sity, 13 to 6, as Don Schulze, Chuck Byram and Ray Parmenter toiled on the mound. Ted Young led the attack on two Bruin hurlers. Coach Marty Krug brought his Westwood nine to Brookside later in the season and again was set back, this time 5 to 4. Van Wade ' s seventh inning single scored the winning run off Milt Cohen, ace U. C. L. A. pitcher. Sev- eral other college varsities were among the Bulldog victims, namely Whittier College and Caltech. The Loyola University varsity held the Indian sign on the Pasadenans, copping two straight games early in the season, 7 to 5, and 4 to 1. The Lion ' s ace hurler, Billy Booth, won both games, as Lou Carscaden, Bulldog ' s big Indian moundsman, gave up three runs Left to right: IDE RIVERS, LOU CARSCADEN, ROBIN REESE WARREN WILLIAMS, TED YOUNG. i M ' ff ' o. . b, m Left to right: CHET ROBERTSON, JOHN PATCHETT. CHUCK BYRAM, BILL LEVEILLE, ROD CAMPBELL, ,Ar V if] in the eighth to drop the second fray. Whittier was beaten twice, 7 to 5 and 5 to 4, although the Poets were undefeated champions of the Southern California Conference. The U. S. C. Frosh and the Hermosa Beach N. Y. A. teams both gained even splits againts the Pasadenans. The Trobabes were soundly spanked in the initial game, 11 to 1, as ex-prep star Cal Barnes was driven from the mound. But Coach Joe Gonzales ' nine came back in the second game and won handily, 13 to 3, Ed Vitalich allowing only six hits. Pasadena lost its first game of the season when the N. Y. A. club turned in a 5 to 1 triumph. Just two games later, the Bulldogs came back and gave the beach nine a 13 to 4 walloping. The Highland Park Athletic Club also earned an even break in two games with the Bulldogs. Robertson hurled six-hit ball to bring Pasadena a 6 to 3 win the first game, but ex-Bulldogs Stan Gray and George Bodenschot later led the A. C. to an 8 to 4 triumph. Two errors in the thirteenth inning gave Fullerton a 5 to 4 victory, Pasadena ' s only jaysee defeat. Other victories by the Bulldogs over southern jaysee teams were Santa Ana, 9 to and 11 to 7; and Pomona, 1 1 to and 1 to 0. Carscaden and Byram hurled the first two shutouts, while Robertson won the pitcher ' s battle from Pomo- na when Sparky Reese singled Bill Leveille home in the first stanza. Pasadena ' s other four practice games were played on the annual spring holiday tour of Northern California. The first found the Santa Clara frosh winning easily, 10 to 4. The Bulldog nine won from the Calif- ornia frosh, 4 to 3, tallying all its four runs in the first inning. The next day, Pasadena ' s usual hard-hitting team was shut out for the only time during the entrie season. The C and H Su- gar Company of Crockett, California, captured a 2 to contest behind the five-hit pitching of Louie Vinci and Carl Briggs. The Crown City nine took the last game, 11 to 8, from Modesto. Left to right: VAN WADE, MARTY MILLER, CARROLL WINES, DON SCHULZE, JOHN LANSING. % c c ii ' u ' L Top: RAY McLEAN, JOHN KARLI (Co-Captains). Bottom: NOR JAQUA (Coach) ' 1 ri ■r v 1 First row, left to right: RAY CAREY, MEL ATWELL. JOHN SHAEFER, BOB CHOZEN. JACK WELLER, DALE HIESTAND, PHILIP ADAMS. Second row: BUD KIMPLE (Scorekeeper), JIM SHATTO, EUGENE WILHELM, DON CRAVEN, RAY McLEAN, NOR JAQUA (Coach), D:CK EVANS, JOHN KARLI, ELEGIN WILLIAMS (Mana- ger). Additional manager: ALIEN RJOR. After completing a mediocre practice season in which they lost almost half of their encounters, the Pasadena Junior College freshmen baseball team set- tled down to serious play and completed a successful season. Entering the high school division of the annual Pomona 20-30 club invitiational tourna- ment, the BuUpups reached the third round, where they were whipped by South Pasadena High in a close battle, 8-7. After this the Pasadena nine en- tered the San Gabriel Valley league schedule, where they were among the top contenders for the pennant. Nor Jaqua coached the local nine this year. ■f IJ r U n 1 l) Unsung and competing not for the glory but for the thrill of competition are those athletes who battle in the lesser sports of the school — golf, gymnastics, swimming, boxing and tennis. Intra-mural sports help bring sportsmanship to those fellows who do not compete on varsity teams. First row, lolt to right; GEORGE RICHARDS, TOM WHITE, HERB LABENSART, SAM MADLEY. Second row: BUD FORD, JIMMY WADE, GEORGE PEET. GORDON SPIVEY. r n Weakened by transfers and hampered by injuries, Coach Francis Hardey ' s varsity tennis team still showed considerable strength in capturing the major- ity of matches played. In the annual spring trip to the north, the Pasadena Jun- ior College team swept through seven of its eight matches, losing only to the California frosh, ending the tour with a win over the Santa Barbara Tennis club. George Summers and Elmer Fredrickson led the frosh through a successful year, having the best team since 1937 when Freeman and Wade were players. First row, left to right: ED DIDDY, ELMER FREDRICKSON. GEORGE SUMMERS. ED DAVIES, EUGENE HESS. Second row: DURWARD HOWES, RICHARD FRANKE, DON KRAUS, BLAIRE HASKETT, RUDOLPH CASTELLANO. MERRETT UHL (Manager). tfh. M ' fiJ ' J . Jj -:■First row. left to right: EMORY STONE, JACK WALKER, LELAND McAULEY (Coach), TEX McCRUMMEN, SAM SEAMONS. Second row: GEORGE CAYPLESS (Manager), IVAN DUKE, ED HADSELL. EVERETT CAVELL, BOB MENNING, DON NEILL (Manager). Third row: WINSLOW FERNETTE, JACK KEPLAR, FRANK BELL, MIKE SAFANOV, DON WARD, BOB LINDMAN, DICK NEWHALL Dick Lyon, husky 16-year old freshman swimmer, stole the glory of the aquatic season, when he captured the national interscholastic 50 and 100-yard free style championships at Philadelphia. He beat Dave Tyler of Mercerburg, Pa. in 55s. in the hundred. Ivan Duke, Southern California backstroke champion, and Everett Cavell, distance ace, paced the varsity into third place in the dual meet season. Only FuUerton, five times Southland title-holder, and Compton could beat Pasadena. Other Bulldog stars were Frank Bell and Tex McCrummen. First row, left to right: JACK LANSING, ALAN LANSDELL, DICK FOX, ROD COLVIN. Second row: BOB BLUME, GARY CHRISTENSEN, KIRBY REEL, DAVE HINTON, PHIL MELZER, KERN FIEDLER. Third row: MEL CAINES (Coach), BILL KELLEY, MISHEL HERNANDEZ, TED PRESTON, RAMSEY BROWN, JOHN JOHNSTON, CLOYDE HOWARD, PETE HATCH. f 4Jl 1 First row, left to right: BILL MATHIS. CHARLES MATTESON, ROBERT SMITH. WALDO JOHNSON. BOB EDELL. Second row: SAM GEVORKIAN, GERHARD KELZ, BOB TRUMAN. GRENES KRAL, DAVID McBRIDE. ROBERT BINKLEY, KERBIE REEL. Third row: CHARLES CARLSON (Manager), ROBERT BASORE. LANSON MASON. JOHN GOETZ, HARRY HITCHCOCK, CARL METTEN (Coach). Additional members: BOB ROBERTSON, OS CAR MOORE, BOB HATCHER. With Coach Carl Metten able to give full time to his coaching duties of the gym- nastic team, Pasadena Junior College had its finest team in history, losing only meet during the season to Los Angeles C. C. David McBride was team leader. r n - Pasadena, with a well-rounded golfing team, finished third in the Southern Cal- ifornia junior collegiate divot tournament behind the winners. Long Beach and Glendale. Dexter Abbott paced the Bulldogs ' team, placing high in the finals. Left to right: DEXTER ABBOTT. DAVID SMITH, BILL SOLAINI. BRENT NELSON. TOM BLAKE (Manager). Addi- tional players: JAMES ARTHUR, JIM QUINN, AL TABER. First row, left to right: CHARLES JOHNSON, AUGUSTUS SHAW. MILTON SIMMONS, JAMES DUNCAN, PHILIP HARRISON. Second row; ROBERT FARLICE, CHARLES REDDING, BILL COUTON. Third row: JACK HODGES. ALTON BALLARD. THADDEUS JAMES. TIMOTHY HARRISON. Armulites took a clean sweep of the east and west campus football and basket- ball tourneys, as they fought through large entry lists. The Motley Crew in foot- ball was disqualified after being unscored on, which gave Armulites the title. From every standard, the 1939 boxing tournament was the most successful in the ten years it has been on the campus. This year saw more contestants, spec- tators and more thrills. Coach Leland McAuley handled the three-day show. First row. left to right: HOWARD BROWN, JACK CLEELAND, GEORGE SUMMERS, LAWRENCE DE TILLA. Sec- ond row: WALT VOGELSANG, JESS RANKER. LITTLETON CARTER. VERN TIEMAN. Additional winner: BERT MARTIN. If II i L I A I n i L I I L J Skilled in the several women ' s sports are those girls who thrice weekly enter into after school games and com- petition. Beginning as novice, a girl may show ability worthy of a varsity team, membership in Big P or W. A. A. or, deserving of the ultimate — the high point cup. I 1 E 1 ' S Piling up the staggering total of 3,560 points gained through her membership on 10 varsity teams, Jane Baker was awarded this year ' s Ki- wanis cup, the number one and highest honor of the Women ' s Athletic Association. Jane was awarded 410 of these points for leadership. She also wears a gold P pin, a school letter, has received a life pass and won a W. A. A. blanket. JANE BAKER First row, left to right: VIRGINIA ROBERTS, FRANCES DAHM, JACKIE VERMILLION, JEANNE ADAMS, MERCEDES GUITEREZ, JANE BAKER, EVELYN BRADFORD, VIRGINIA PFEIL, VIRGINIA NEWMAN, JEAN WHETSTINE. Second row: ALBERTA RIDENOUR, NADINE MAXWELL, WILMA H « L E 1 1 n ! i n I n Interest and participatiion in the various women ' s sports is fostered and championed on the Bulldog campus by her two athletic organizations, W. A. A. and Big P. Through membership in some women ' s varsity, active participation in after school sports and play days, girls are chosen to membership in these two organizations. Tennis, badminton, baseball, basketball, speedball, riding, hockey and archery form the activity program for the women athletes. Cli- max of the year ' s events is the W. A. A. Banquet, at which time awards are made and the most coveted and sought after honor among athletic-minded women students is awarded — that, the honor of receiving the high point cup, this year presented to Jane Baker, graduating senior. TETERS, EVELYN MARICK, BARBARA DALEY. EVELYN NEWLIN. KATHERINE McGRATH, YVONNE BONSER, JOAN BURROWS. LOIS WOHLWEND. Third row: LILIAN PIZZO. MARGARET ARNOLD, MARY ELLEN DAHM. MARJORIE WILLIAMSON. GLADYS GNE- WUCH, MARGERY GEHRIG, PAM CARR, WILMER HICKAMBOTTOM, MARGIE MAIERS, BARBARA PLACE. First row, left to right: PHYLLIS WILSON, CLARA SLATER, BARBARA DALEY, DOROTHY WINSLOW, MARGIE MAIERS (President), LOIS LITTLE, LOUISE McCASTLINE, BETTY JO WAKEFIELD, VIRGINIA LUND. Second row: MIRIAM BROOKS, MARILYN COX, EDNA FITZPATRICK, MISS ELIZABETH JENSEN (Advisor), BECKIE BRADFORD, MARY ANN MOSS, VIRGINIA McINTIRE, MARGERY GEHRIG. Third row: BARBARA FITCH, BETTIE CLOUGH, ELEANOR HAFFNER, VIRGINIA ROBERTS, ONEZ CHISM, EVELYN BRADFORD, YVONNE BONSER, JOAN BUR- ROWS. Fourth row: HELEN RICHARDS, BETTY MAGATAGAN, TODD BROADBENT, VIRGINIA NEWMAN, KATH- ERINE McGRATH, ALBERTA RIDENOUR, JANE BAKER, DOROTHEA NEUENS. I L L First row, left to right: JEAN WHETSTINE, YVONNE BONSER, BETTY RADFORD, JEANNETTE ADAMS, KATHERINE McGRATH, ALBERTA RIDENOUR, MARY ANN MOSS (President), MARY SANFORD, HELEN RICHARDS, VIRGINIA SPAHR, BETTY JO WAKEFIELD, BARBARA DALEY. Second row: BARBARA FITCH, BECKIE BRADFORD, DOROTHY RUSSELL, DOROTHY CONVERSE, LOUISE MATTICKS, JEAN A. YOUNG (Advisor), MARIE E. LUKENS, VIRGINIA ROBERTS, VIRGINIA McINTIRE, VIRGINIA PFEIL, KATHLYN STOCKLE. Third row: JEANNETTE MELLEN, MARI- LYN COX, ALICE WEINBERGER, HELEN SHARP, MARGIE MAIERS, JANE BAKER, HELEN DECKER, MARJORIE AN- DERSON, LORRAINE ALTON, EVELYN BRADFORD, JOAN BURROWS, BETH TETTERINGTON, JEANNE ADAMS. R Ui lUl Id IS n y I U n A n I L l U D O I p you to the order of Mast and Dagger, these words accompanied by a tap on the shoulder, mark the ultimate moment of achievement in the life of anyPJC student. Supreme among the honor- ories is OMD, but there are six other greek letters, offering fields for recognition. First row, left to right: JEANNETTE EASTMAN. GENE HUXLEY. MAX CAPLAN, JACK PAGE. LILA RENNER. ERVIN WRIGHT, PHYLLIS WILSON BARBARA McCOLM. Second row: PHYLLIS RICHMOND, LAURENCE GRANNIS. BOB COATES. BECKY BRAD- FORD VERNON LEIF. HOWARD CLAPP, SHAVENAU CLICK. Third row: HAROLD SHAFER. HERB McDONALD, AL SAUER. Additional members: JOE LANDISMAN. KIT CARTWRIGHT. VIRGINIA NEWMAN. BOB STAPLETON. JACK ROBINSON. FIRST SEMESTER Lila Renner President Jack Page Secretary Ervin Wright Treasurer Mr. Tames P. O ' Mara Advisor M ' A SECOND SEMESTER President Jack Page Secretary- Max Caplan Treasurer Gene Huxley Advisor Mr. James P. O ' Mara The highest honor attainable at PJC is that bestowed on newly chosen members of Mast and Dagger, at the traditional tapping ceremony held on the last day of each school sem.- ester. OMD is composed of students who have participated in outstanding service to the school and whose scholastic and citizenship record is worthy of recognition. Each year, during the spring semester, Mast and Dagger stages its annual carnival, which has be- come a highlight in the school year and is participated in by all clubs and organizations on campus. This year ' s carnival theme was Dogpatch International Exposition. No limit is put on the number of persons tapped and membership will continue to grow as the stu- dent body of the school increases and students render themselves worthy of the honor. M U I kU D H n R BOB COATES, VERNIE LEIF, KIT CARTWRIGHT, and HAL SHAFER watch as MR. J. P. O ' MARA presents Mast and Dagger pins to HOWARD CLAPP and VIRGINIA NEWMAN (in foreground) who were two of the three West Campus stu- dents tapped at mid-year. BARBARA McCOLM was the third. Twelve students out of 7,000 .were singled out in January, rewarded for outstanding service rendered the junior college, presented with her highest honor, the distinction of being an OMD member. From all the extra-curricular activities students are chosen as members. Tapped on East Campus at mid-year, DR. HAR- BESON and LILA RENNER present nine new OMD ' s. First row. left to right: DR. HARBESON. LILA RENNER PHYLLIS RICHMOND, BECKY BRADFORD, PHYLLIS WILSON, JEANNETTE EASTMAN. Second row: SHORTY GRANNIS, HERB McDonald, ioe landisman, sha- VENAU CLICK, JACK ROBINSON. First row. left to right: SHAVENAU CLICK, FORREST DUKE, JOHN LUCAS, BARBARA BURTT, STELLANNE LOTZ, HAROLD SHA- FER. FREDA GROFF, GILBERT SCHLENDERING. Second row: JOHN BECKLER. RALPH NORTON, MR. W. L. HODGES (Advisor). DALE CLAYTON, HENRY SHATFORD, JON SLOCUM. Additional members: G. MARIE HANES, W. THOMAS SAMWAYS. MISS GLADYS SNYDER (Advisor). FIRST SEMESTER Harold Shafer President Shavenau Glick Vice-President Gilbert Schlendering Secretary Stellanne Lotz Treasurer E % SECOND President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer SEMESTER Stellanne Lotz Gil Schlendering Georgia Hanes John Beckler Members of Alpha Chapter of Beta Phi Gamma, national honorary journalism fraternity, are chosen for their outstanding work on PJC publications and have as their purpose the constant endeavor to achieve the best in journalistic fields. The chapter is closely asso- ciated with other Southern California junior college chapters, holding a yearly conven- tion and numerous dinners for the purpose of comparing and improving school publica- tions. Harold Shafer received this year ' s Beta Phi Gamma award for outstanding service. U k PHI G 1 i i A 4 f t f I v- v U First row, lelt to right: PORTIA SMITH, JACK GRIFFIN, MRS. RUTH E. BISSIRI, MR. YOULDON C HOWELL, MISS HELEN B. HUNT (Advisors), JOY DE LONGE, SETSUKO ITOW, CLIFFORD PROTHERO. Second :ow: MATILDA MANLEY, BETTY MOSHISKY, NA- DINE GUNDERSON, ELIZABETH MADLEY, MARGARET BACON. CHARLOTTE SCHLICHTING, GEORGE SUZUKI, BETH LEWiS, PHYLLIS ANDERSON, PHYLLIS WILSON. Third row. BLANCHE WELLBAUM, MARY FAUST, LILA RENNER, ERNIE ROOK, WARREN ROGERS, CAROL BOSCHKE, LLOYD JENKINS, HOWARD CLAPP. Additional member: DAVID ACEVEDO. FIRST SEMESTER Jack Griffin President Eliz abeth Madley Vice-President Margaret Bacon Secretary Beth Lewis Treasurer Z ro SECOND President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer SEMESTER Joy De Longe Clifford Prothero Setsuko Itow George Suzuki Making posters, producing art directors for student publications, and care of the vocational cases in the main hall are included in the services rendered by Zeta Gamma Phi, art fra- ternity. Members who are art students, chosen for their ability, personality, and sch- lastic standing, and approved by sponsors Y. C. Howell, Miss Helen Hunt, and Ruth Bis- siri, are limited to 25, on both East and West campus. Decorations for the Scriba conven- tion banquet were handled by Zetas, under the able direction of President Jack Griffin. n U Hill PI! First row, left to right: VIRGIL HINSHAW, GEORGE GRASSMUECK, DON WIERDA. RICHARD MiOORE, GENE ERICKSON, ROBERT GILLETTE, JOHN COLBERT, JR. Additional member: JOE LANDISMAN. FIRST S E M Joe Landisman Gene Erickson Plichard Moore Mr. Earl Davis ESTER President Secretary Treasurer Advisor n SECOND President Secretary Treasurer Advisor SEMESTER Joe Landisman Gene Erickson Richard Moore Mr. Earl Davis Alpha Chapter of Phi Rho Pi, national forensic fraternity, recognizes outstanding w- ' ork in the fields of student debate and oratory. National debate and speech champions and many prize-winning speakers are found in the clubs membership list. Members compete with both civic and state organizations and are chosen from contestants for outstanding ,work in the speech fields. Active in promoting interest in forensic activities they were hosts at the Pi Kappa Delta tournament of speech held in March on the junior college campus. P I I II 1 I PI %0 First row. left to right: WANDA HARDER, WILLIAM MADDISON, DENISE FiLDEW, MR. VINCENT PARSONS (Advisor). LA VERNE ERWIN, JOHN RITTERRATH. ESTHER COVERT, RUTH HAYES. Second row: THOMAS PREWITT. VIOLA FREDERICK. VIRGINIA HOUSE. PHYLLIS MORLEY. HARLEY PRYOR. BARBARA BRYCE. FORREST DUKE. FERNE WARNER. DORIS NOR- STAD. Additional members; VIRGINIA LEE BOBO. FREDERICK SMITH, JOSEPHINE MERRILL. RODNEY WITHLOW. EUGENE MERRILL. ROBERT BEN ALL RAY SWARTZ. FIRST S E Bill Maddison Virginia Bobo Denise Fildew Don Fuller M ESTER President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer % SECOND President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer SEMESTER La Verne Erwin Denise Fildew Esther Covert John Ritterrath Offering the student interested in radio production and technique an opportunity to gain some actual experience before the ' mike ' , is one of the activities of this honorary radio fraternity. Highlight of the year for the radio thespians was their presentation in serial form of the history of California, Cavalcade of America over station KPPC which was student written, produced and portrayed. Catching the student ' s eye Theta Rho Pi pre- sented a March assembly at which time they ably portrayed The Ghost of the Gong. 1 U E f il MO PI First row, left to right: BLANCHE MURPHY, NANCY REEL, RICHARD REEL, LOUISE McCASTLINE, VIRGIL HINSHAW, BAR- BARA HAWK, JANE PRiTCHARD, DALLAS JORDAN. Second row: CURTIS WILSON. MARJORIE ANDERSON, MISS SARA TAL- BOTT, MISS MILDRED WELLBORN, MRS. LORRAYNE CALKINS (Advisors), KATHERINE MILLER, MARGARET McEWEN, COL- BERT NAKATA. Tliird row: PETER PAULSON, CHARLES O ' HARA, RAY COLE, TOM MITCHELL. Additional members: HELEN KNIGHT, DICK KENDALL, BARBARA HERSCHLER. FIRST SEMESTER Louise McCastline President Dick Reel Vice-President Peter Paulson Secretary-Treasurer Curtis Wilson Publicity cs F SECOND President Vice-President Vice-President Sec-Treasurer SEMESTER Dick Reel Nancy Reel (E) Barbara Herschler Marion Anderson Lower division students earning either 44 grade points, all A ' s, or a grade point ratio of 2.75 are eligible for membership in Chapter One of the California Scholarship Federa- tion. Application blanks for membership are obtainable in Records office each semester and are turned in there within a week. Permanent membership is gained by twelfth year graduates who have been novitiate members for three-quarters of their lower divi- sion semesters. Citizenship records must be satisfactory before admission to CSF ranks. SEALBEARERS OF CALIFORNIA SCHOLARSHIP FEDERATION Hugh Baird, Martin Barnes, Neil Beckman, Barbara Birch, Phyllis Bowerman, Joan Bur- rows, Doris Butler, Marilyn Cox, Virginia Davies, Richard Fay, Barbara Filch, Betty Fried- son, C. Brooks Fry, Sidney Gaily, Laurence Grannis, Elishewa Gutmann, Barbara Hawk, Virgil Hinshaw, Virginia Horn, Charles Kadley, Paul Kahn, Gerhard Kelz, Dick Kendall, William Lawson, Gerald Martin, Louise McCastline, Katherine Miller, Rosemary Miller, Blanche Murphy, Colbert Nakata, Gordon Overholtzer, Virginia Preston, Richard Reel, Ro- bert Rocke, Jim Rostron, Olga Sievert, Jon Slocum, Clarence Thurber, Ralph Turner, Phyl- lis Wilson, Rosalie Wismar, Beverly Woods, Robert Yost, Rosario Chavez, Lois Collins, Ella Edwards, Peggy Morrison, Douglas Strain, Betty Swain, Katherine Van Horn. FIRST SEMESTER Virgil Hinshaw President Colbert Nakata Vice-President Margaret McEwen Secretary Dallas Jordan Secretary A K I SECOND President Vice-President Vice-President Secretary SEMESTER Barbara Hawk Peter Paulson Dallas Jordan Katherine Miller Paramount among scholastic achievements is membership in Alpha Gamma Sigma, up- per division national scholastic fraternity. Temporary membership may be gained by a combination of A or B grades, completion of 32 grade points exclusive of gym in 12 units, and a satisfactory citizenship record. Membership for three-quarters of the upper division semesters, along with a recommendation by a faculty member on the basis of character, service, leadership, and scholarship is necessary for permanent membership m Alpha. H P H 1 C H I i A S I fi i A OlIIvILIj uLUDij The black sweatered Lancer, the rust sweatered Spartan, symbols of outstanding service, offer incentive to achieve. Leaders are the service club members who enforce discipline, ' Quiet in the Li- brary ' , instill in the hearts of the mass a desire to be found worthy of membership. I A i C I R First row. leit to right: DON TREPP, SAM MARDIAN, HERB McDONALD, MAX CAPLAN. JACK PAGE, ERVIN WRIGHT, JOHNNY BECKLER. BOB BRADEN. Second row: WILLARD KYLE, ROGER TIERNEY, BILL SAMWAYS, BOB COATES, VERNIE LEIF, JACK MARK, BUD CHILD, PETER BURROWS. Third row: NE.L REESE, WES BOWERS. ART KEENE, RAY CANTING, LOUIS IRWIN, HOWARD CLAPP, DENNIS GIBBS, RED ROBINSON. Fourth row: AL SAUER. BOB STAPLETON, FRANK SPRATT, GEORGE GOOD, HAROLD SHAFER. DICK SHANNON, WARREN DORN. Additional members: CHESTER BENJAMIN. FORREST DUKE, JACKIE GORDON, BILL LEVEILLE, BILL REEDER, CLEM TOMER LIN. DON WINTON, ROSS WINTON. BURTON BURGESS, TOM FLINT, GEORGE FREITUS. MEL PEPPING. GORDON SPIVEY, DON SCHULTZ. FIRST SEMESTER Max Caplan President Jack Page Vice-President Ervin Wright Secretary-Treasurer SECOND President Vice-President SEMESTER Harold Shaier Sam Mardian Audre L. Stong Advisor Secretary-Treasurer Jack Marr Advisor Audre I.. Stong Main activity of Lancers, men ' s honorary service organization, has been service this year, rather than policing. Lancers have been on regular duty at all assemblies, have served special duty on registration days, at the spring boxing matches, the A. M.S. stags, the Pi Kappa Delta debate tournament, and Mast and Dagger Carnival, besides many smaller services. Social meetings included a buffet supper at the Dean of Men ' s house, several breakfasts with faculty members, a dinner meeting at the Colonial Tea Room, and a mid- night supper at Hancock ' s Grill after the Homecoming Dance. Regular Lancer meetings were held in the mornings before school alternately on the East and West Campuses. S F A R I A I S First row, left to right: BARBARA BURTT, GEORGIA HANES, ROSA BELLE PERDUE, BETTY WILCOX, MARION DURHAM, PHY- LLIS WILSON, BETTE TETTERINGTON, RHEA JEAN SIEGEL PEGGY LOU ANDERSON, MURIEL STEVENS, OLIVE JANE FRANK- LIN. Second row: MARY ANN MOSS, ELIZABETH KIRKPATRICK, BARBARA BLACKWOOD, KIMIKO FUKUTAKL ROBERTA OGLESBY, MARGARET JONES, FREDA GROFF, MABEL PROUTY, MIRIAM PURDON, JOSEPHINE O ' LAUGHLIN, PHYLLIS RICH- MOND, VIRGINIA NEWMAN. Third row: MARION COLDWELL, BEVERLY JANE GRAY, BETTY MOSHISKY, BARBARA FITCH, BARBARA McCOLM, JEAN FORD, JEANNETTE MELLEN, EDITH HENGER, BEVERLY BEACH, EVELYN BRADFORD. Fourth row: LOIS LITTLE, JEANNETTE EASTMAN, KATHERINE McGRATH, LORRAINE ALTON, LILA RENNER, ANNE McGILL, DOR- OTHY LOOS. Additional members: BECKIE BRADFORD, KIT CARTWRIGHT, MARJORIE CHESNUTT, MONA JOHNSON. FIRST SEMESTER Phyllis V ilson President Marion Durham Vice-President Miss Catherine J. Bobbins Advisor Miss Olive Kelso Advisor SECOND SEMESTER President Phyllis Wilson Vice-President Jeannette Mellon Advisor Miss Catherine J. Bobbins Advisor Miss Olive Kelso The rust and white einblem of honor and achievement, most coveted and sought after among her 3,000 women students, is the PJC Spartan sweater. Every frosh girl knows that only one out of every seventy-five women students can ever obtain the Spartan honor, hopes that one day she will receive the white note of recognition. Working with gusto to- ward that day, she becomes active m the Frosh Club, Class Councils, or S.C.A. wonder- ing v hen the day will come when she must patrol the library, give court summons, serve as aide-de-camp to the Dean of Women and her Associate, and be able to enter into Spar- tan-Lancer activities. She stands high in personality, scholarship, citizenship and service. I i S D I First row, left to right: EUGENE MORELAND, DON PROSSER, STAN MACDONALD, SHIUCHI OGURA (President), MR. WAL- TER E. WILCOX (Advisor), DON THORPE, LINWOOD WILDE, ALLAN E. MAYS, ROBERT D. BROUILLET. Second row: JACK MARSHALL, FRANK PARIS, SIDNEY WARSCHAW. GENE HUXLEY, JULIUS HOFFMAN, HOWARD B. HURST, GEORGE ROBERT- SON, LELAND HARDER, BOB McQUOWN. Third row: HAROLD NELSON, NORMAN HETTMANN, LOUIS WEIDNER, MORRIS GREEN, MILTON BOTTS, DICK JOSYLN, LYLE LAWS, COLBERT NAKATA, WILLIAM ABBOTT. Fourth row: JOE RENSCH, GERARD JOHNSON, DON DUNNING, RONALD BRALEY, ALBERT BROWN, DON NEILL, LLOYD KELLEY, GORDON ROBERTS, ROBERT MUND, RAY NELSON, Additional members: HOLLIS GODDARD, SAM MARDIAN, TOM NEILSON, MARSHALL CHRIS- TEN, ARSEN DEVIRIAN, TOMMY FUJIMOTO, SAM GEVORKIAN, WILLIAM GOODLOE. RICHARD HOLLINGSHEAD, JACK HOWE, FREDERICK LARSON. ART NELSON, JAMES NOYES, PETER PAULSON, ROBERT TILDEN, HAROLD WHITE. Argonauts fill a much needed place in the organization of the student body with their capable handling of the financial side of money-taking siudent affairs. They have as their most important job, ticket selling at football games and other school events. They serve as students of finance and are chosen first as associate members until the time they have proven their interest and ability in financial affairs. After they have shoM n enough active participation in the work they are made active members of the club. Argonauts maintain offices in the Student Union, v rhere they help their advi.sor, Mr. Wilcox with the taking and selling of tickets, handling of change and aiding the Secretary of Finance in all ways. n SI II F p. J. First row, left to right: JACK F. CLARK, VIRGINIA CARPENTER. VERNON LEIF (President I), MIRIAM PURDON, DR. DE LAU- BENFELS (Advisor), BETTE MILLER, JOHN CLARK, ANN ROHRER. Second row: JACK FONES. PRISCILLA NICHOLSON. MAR- GARET DRESSLER. RUBY VINTEN. VESTA STONE, ROBERT MUND, HERBERT WINSLOW. Third row: JiM MORGAN (Presi- dent II), HAROLD WHITE, JACK McCLURE, MARGARET BACON. JOHN PHILLIPS. Additional members: ALICE LUNDQUIST. FRED ASHBROOK, MARTIN BARNS, BEVERLY JANE GRAY, CARMEN PENWARDEN, MONTEQUE WADEY. Host of PJC, service club in its second year, has as its purpose the promotion of better ac- quaintance among the students who are not members of restrictive clubs. During the past year the Host has sponsored a great number of social events, including hikes, pic- nics, steak bakes, dances, old fashioned parties, and other types of entertainment designed to interest the greatest possible number of students. Biggest Host event of the year v as the Circus, held in the Women ' s Gym, and designed especially to acquaint new students. Members serve first as novice hosts, until they have worked actively on at least three events, at which time they may be elected active members and serve as official Hosts. I I H R I 1 First row, left to right: STAN MACDONALD, JACK MARR. JOSIE FORTEVILLE, SUESTEN DOUGLAS, BECKIE BRADFORD, ELIZA- BETH KIRKPATRICK (President), KiMIKO FUKUTAKL JEAN MOSHISKY, MIRIAM PURDON, VERNON LEIF. Second row: PAUL WILSON, BETTY ERWIN, VICKEY PLATTE. EVELYN BRADFORD, MIRIAM BROOKS, ALICE ROACH, MARTHA SIMS, BETTIE CLOUGH, VIVIENNE WALTER, HERB McDONALD. Third row: SHIUCHI OGURA, DOROTHY LEE, BARBARA MUELLER, BETTY MUELLER, JEAN YOUNGSTROM, MILDRED RODSTROM, YOLANDA CICCARELLI, RUTH RODSTROM, ESTHER SMITHBERG, JACK CLEELAND. Fourth row: ARSEN DEVIRIAN, LOUISE McC AST LINE, AVERIL MAY ATLEE, VIRGINIA GATES, JEAN RYPINSKI, VIRGINIA SPAHR BLANCHE MURPHY. MABLE NIKIRK, LOUISE LOBDELL, ERVIN WRIGHT. Firth row: MAX CAPLAN, LLOYD J. WYATT, JOHNNIE WALKER, ROSABELLE PERDUE, RED ROBINSON. Additional members: MAXINE BENSON, BOB BROOKS, EVERETT DOE, HARRY FRANKLIN, OLIVE FRANKLIN, BARBARA HEANEY, BILL NORR, JACK PAGE. Ostiarians, true to the latin origin of their na fill an increasingly important position in act important of their duties is ushering at the R day Evening Forum and at Faraday Lectures, sors of programs at PJC, either student or fac in helping at school social affairs. Members to participate in ushering. Consideration is formed their previous duties, their scholast me, which means Custodian or Gatekeeper, ivities by ushering at all school affairs. Most ose Bc ' wl during football season, at the Tues- Ostiarians offer their services to all spon- ulty and have proven themselves invaluable are elected from those who have signed up given the manner in which they have per- ic standing, and their records in citizenship. u I n i n i M I First row, left to right: TWILA JACK. JENNY SNYDER, MARION COLDWELL, BETTE MILLER (President), MIRIAM PURDON, BETTY GARTZ, JEAN MILLER, DALLAS JORDAN. Second row: FRANCES SWIFT, BEVERLY JANE GRAY, JOSEPHINE OLOUGH- LIN, BARBARA HAWK, PHYLLIS RICHMOND, JEANNETTE EASTMAN, VIRGINIA KNIGHT, ELISHEWA GUTMANN. Third row: MARY ELLEN DAY, ELEANOR THOMAS, JOSEPHINE CHRISTIANSEN, ELEANOR WENNERBERG. CARMEN PENWARDEN, VIRGINIA NEWMAN, ALICE HENDRIX. Additional members: BARBARA BURTT, KITTY EASTMAN, BARBARA HAYES, MAR- GARET LACEY, JEAN LINDSAY, BARBARA MUNN, LUCILLE NUTT, DIXIE STROMEYER, FRANCES STONG, BETTY WILCOX, DOLL WETHERBY, JEAN CANNON. MARION DURHAM, BEVERLY HULT. ARLEEN JONES. MARJORIE MARTIN, MUSE MED- VEDESF, MARION MOWE, RHEA SIEGLE. BETTY JEANNE SMITH. JEAN WHITSTINE. Triton Council, women ' s service club, has been active during the year in its purpose of promoting friendship in the school. The club has sponsored an information booth at the beginning of each semester, has held teas on both campuses for freshmen and women students new to the school, and has inaugurated the custom of holding lunch hours at 1 1:00 and 12:00 in the Social Hall in order to increase friendships. Triton members hold their combined meetings of the East and West Campus divisions once a month in a pot-luck supper at the home of one of the members. Trying to acquaint a greater number of stu- dents with activities of different clubs, and encourage participation in them is Tritons aim. S I I f E R U I! n I First row, left to right: HOMER KEARNS. PETER BURROWS, ARTHUR BURT (President), DR. JOHN McMORRIS (Advisor), GENE HUXLEY. Second row: KENNETH ENDICOTT, FRED SCHLENDERING, RICHARD LONGBOTHAM, JAMES RALPH KANEEN. Ad- ditional members: BOB HENRY, MILTON MOORE, RALPH DEMA REE, NORMAN WEERSING, DEXTER BEGGS. Silver Screen is instrumental in helping to carry out school functions at which technical work connected with stage and electrical effects is needed. Members of the club take care of public address systems, projection apparatus, and other fields of activity includ- ing lighting effects, slide machines, and problems in amplification. Students are taken into the club from many different fields of scholastic endeavor, requiring only a willing- ness to take an active part in the work undertaken and a desire to increase any technical knowledge in connection with the stage and screen which they have already acquired. Arthur Burt served as president for both semesters and Dr. John McMorris as the advisor. I £ 1 I i R i E i ' S First row, left lo right: IVAN DUKE, JACK PAGE, CLAUDE MOSS, NEIL REESE, DON NEILL (President), HERBERT McDONALD. HOLLIS ADAMS, AL SAUER. Second row: MELVIN REED, DENNIS SHILLAM, NORMAN STOLBA, WALDO A. JOHNSON, FRED SUMMERS, VERNON LEIF, JIMMIE ARIMA. Third row: RAY BARTLETT. LYLE FAGAN, WESLEY R. BOWERS, EDWARD LEO CALLAHAN, RED ROBINSON, FRANCIS PIERCE. Fourth row: LLOYD J. WYATT, BOB BINKLEY, FRANK SPRATT, GEORGE GOOD. PAT GEYER, BILL SAULT. Additional members include all men who have received a letter in a varsity sport. Service is the keynote of this year ' s reorganized Lettermen ' s club which is fast becoming indispensable in school activities. Traditional is their help given to new students on Pal Day, and they offer their services to all who need them. Members, all men who have re- ceived their letter on a varsity team, work together to foster good sportsmanship among PJC athletes. West Campus men who made their letter in 12th year high school in the A division and all former Muir Tech lettermen are also eligible for membership. For those in regular attendance at the monthly meetings, the club offers T shirts with Pasadena Lettermen printed on them for sale. Aides of athletic promotion are honorary members. - ' o J - ( n« x - iirS UniilCflH ClUL Endless rounds of teas, polo games, luncheons and soft music played in spacious drawing rooms, form the diet of the female rushee. As neophyte she obeys the ' sisters, ' as member she displays with pride that bit of metal known as the pin, gets dates deluxe. i t l ' •f ' f ' First row, left to right: Dorothy Davis, Letty Ann Loos, Natalie Woestman, Mar- garet Lacey, Charlotte Schlichting (President I), Margery Martin (President II), Miss Ann McCarthy (Advisor), Catherine Mays. Second row: Adelaide Russell, Dorothy Brockelmann, Gladys Collins, Marjory Rohn, Inez Hefley, Mercedes Oak- ley, Virginia MacRae, Viona Rush. Additional members: Barbara Burtt, Betty Emerson, Lora Jean Merriam, Yvonne LeValley, Betty LeMelle, Winnifred Mar- tin, Judy Woodward, Jane Jenkins, Sylvia Cremer, Arleen Vobril, Barbara Mc- Clelland, Corine Randall. First row, left to right: Peggy Lynn Ingham, Barbara Patten, Margaret Williams, Barbara Butz (President), Nancy Streeier, Lucille Edwards, Rosemary Marney, Sylvia Petterson. Second row: Margaret Sloan, Anna Murray, Darlene Kimball, Shirley Welsh, Doreen Holmes, Barbara Hess, Ruth Bandy, Betty McClung, Jane Farlee, Christine Banks. Third row: Sara Lo is Johnson, Barbara Graham, Patty Frayne, Jeanne Doris Nordwall, Norma Clendenen, Julia O ' Grady, Jane Ander- son, Mary Goodloe, Marion Coldwell. Additional members: Binnie Wotton, Bar- bara Fetz, Helen Cochran, Muriel Penton, Barbara Dougall. First row, left to right: Mickey Passage. Mary Catherine Troutman (President I), Crabbe, Irene Cooper. Second row: Joy ley Quick, Dorothy Smith, Jane Jessami Willard. Third row: Gerry Sommerville, Edith Bockenoogen, Roberta Johns, Yvo Beverly Byrnes, Peggy Ellis, Rita Frey, Fr Mildred Troutman, Betty Jo Wakefield, M Miriam Zinc. Jean Towery, Mary Davis, Enid Reed, Harriet Henderson (President II), Janet ce Cayce, Lois Little, Pat Broadway, Shir- ne, Patty Johns, Jeanne Silverthorn, Doris Mary Harold, Joy Allen, Evelyn Newlin, nne Wilkinson. Additional members: ances Goldie, Betty Kerr, Marjorie Nagle, ary Widmer, Mary Margaret Williams, First row, left to right: Hermione Pyle, Margaret Schlmger, Gail Morant, E loise Dorn (President II), Barbara Bates (President I), Ruth Merrick, Ann Sanborn, Char- lotte Reynolds. Second row: Jean Vint en, Jane Vatcher, Dee Dee Cope, Evelyn McBride, Marian Wood, Doris Evans, Marjorie Fletcher, Nancy McFarland. Third row: Phyllis Byars, Jean MacKay, Mary Frances McCune, Annette Findeisen. Additional members: Jo Ann Hammett, Ruth Landeck, Mary Ann Starbuck, Elea- nor Kirst, Merle Rogers, Bibs Speers, Betty Hanes. %a ■hlanes. : A .- s i irst row, left to right: Barbara Blackwood, Joyce Halliday, Margery Shaw, Ann McGill (President), Joan Kellogg, Shirley Thompson. Portia Smith, Geraldine Smith. Second row: Lorraine Walker, Jane Cassidy, Marion R. de Paar, Mary Aitken, Dorothy Long, Betty Hammond, Dorothea Elliott, Dorothy Riggs, Natalie Goetz. Third row: Patricia Stuart, Lucienne Cheely, Betty Mears, Jean McLough- lin, Barbara Sainsbury, Annette Toland, Virginia M. Wilson, Doris Ann Burr. Ad- ditional members: Edith Ann Rohrer, Anne Sellards, Betty Lee Ewing. Charlotte Mann, Beverly Bronger, Miriam Purdon, Doris Gage, Evelyn Angerhojter, Marian Frey. VFirst row, left to right: Margaret Atkinson, Louise Hall, Yit m i y Margaret O ' Leary, Margaret Dake (President I), Eleanor WennerS rg President II), Miss Ruth L. Conrad (Advisor), Kay Sawyer. Second row: Betty Young, Flor- ence Wall, Maxine Dunn, Martha Williams, Mary McCaron, Mary Blahnik, Norma Scarlett, Frances Keeton. Third row: Jacqueline Mallory, Dorothy Hincks, Betty Waterhouse, Miriam Lafler, Gerry Wakeman. Additional members: Ruth Cane, Madge Thurston, Georgette Blanc, Marjorie Smith, Pauline Liebery, Elea- nor Fields, A nn Kerr. f : 1 1 t ( f n fti M ' - % - v -ki ji 0 n JK ' J 9 U rf?fVf lif.I.f i Vw 4fe First row, left to right: Ruth Larson (President II), Helen Brockway, Emma May Hopwood (President I), Miss Laura M. Elder (Advisor), Elsie Miller, Orletha Muntz, Elsie Allan. Second row: Elberta Hutchinson, Donna Lambert, Rosabelle Muntz, Margaret Baker, Margaret Sandstrom, Va Loy Lambert, Martha van Stone. Ad- ditional members: Carol Shoemaker, Jacquline Herril, Bernice Hutchinson, Betty Brengle, Kalherine Sheldon, Kathleen Stringer. KjtJa uw h jk First row, left to right: Helen Archbold, Mary Watt, Peggy Eck, Lucille Kane, Helen Miller (President I), Mable Prouty (President II), Betty Wilcox, Barbara Waara, Ruth Nelson. Second row: Anne Graham, Joan Bathrick, Nancy Robb, Portia H. Greene, Virginia Scott, Nan Cordner, Mary Ann Moss, Coralee Burson, Eleanor Rydbeck, Louise Scheu. Third row: Patricia Hops, Stellanne Lotz, Jean Scott, Pa- mela Gaze, Juanita Hanson, Lorraine Gilman, Jane Russell, Nancy Cunningham, Jeri Cutler. Additional members: Bede Corbin, Eleanor Robinson, Mary Lou Gra- ham, Betty Henry, Dorothy Kay, Jean Lindsay, Barbara Munn, Barbara Pearman, Dixie Stromeyer, Betty Beauverd. . . r. A « -, a- I ■■■o i E3 I o o o |o o o o o .o First row, left to right: Helen Bohri, Genelle Olson, Carolyn Morrow, Barbara Swift, Barbara Hayes (President I), Twila Jack (President II), Mary Ellen Day, Marlyn Nicholson. Second row: Barbara Jeanne Nelson, Frances Dunham, Mary Kay xpThiele, Anita Arnerich, Betty Anne Smith, Esther Fromm, Maribeth Mowry, Bar- ' - bara Clark, Phyllis Nash. Third row: Elizabeth Whitney, Renee Marquardt, Ann urit, Seena Wopschall, Peggy Lou Anderson, Janet Swift, Edith Henger, Phyllis i Wilson, Jeannette Eastman. Fourth row: Jean Christensen, Catherine Harrington, ' ■pinski, Muriel Stevens. Additional members: Louise Brazelton, Janis Le- to ii hj: Pauline Giffen, Sheila Hughes, Ida Mae Jessen, Jane Lewis B t Rohrer, Clair Elmer (President II) , Doris Johnson, Miriam iecond row: Elinor Moran, Harriet Bacon, Beverly Hammond, Ruth Knud- ine Anderson, Dorothy Goble, Bettie Anna Biren, Rose Ann Crotty. Third Jeane Cortner, Pat Thurber, Ruth Chase, Shel Irwin. Additional members: inabelle_J_;and, Marjorie Williams, Ruth Barber, Doris Butler, Marjorie Cooper, Phyllis Summers, Lois Cornelius, yMdtrgaret Jones, Helen Duffy. First row, left to right- JangtPart ti, Druscilla Eileen Roach, Jeanette Branch, Mar- jorie Cook, Janice De Boynton (President I), Janet Tate, Addie Belle Harris, Shir- ley Schoenleber. Second row: Betty Ellen Evans, Bettie Clough, Betty Winters, Marianne Gardner, Barbara Jean Butler, Nancy Richardson, Ruth Woodward. Third row: Dons Northway, Alberta G. Miller (President II), Mary Arnold Mace, Virginia House. Additional members: Jean Edwards, Mary Jane Stone, Doro- thea Hogeboom, Andrea Crehan, Olive Brochiero, Lenore Wright, Nancy Tay- lor, Mable Dye. First row, left to right: Frances Orr, Gerry Cockins, Carlyle Smith, Frances Dil- worth, Beatrice Barnett (President), Merva Wilson, Bernice Attridge, Charlotte Barnett. Second row: Jane Koffard, Margaret De Vault, Josefa Wenter, Carol Boschke, Gertrude Arthur, Mrs. Lorrayne Calkins (Advisor), Lois Wahlwend, Helen Murphy, Jean Wilson. Additional members: Barbara Anderson, Beverly Arnett, Beverly Jenks, Alice Ann Kennedy, Marjorie Landis, Joan Miller, Betty Mae Moberly, Helen Morrison, June Quisno, Betty Reeve, Jane Ruth, Wanda White. A cv% r f .C r n — I A? i First row, left to right: Jane Albriglit, Elizabeth Farris, Nadine Gunderson, Eleanor Thomas (President II), Helen Parker (President I), Nancy Balch, Elizabeth Lucas, Sidney Eaton. Second row: Louise Lob dell. Nan Wallace, Helen Hein, Mary Webster, Mary Anne Hearte, Diane Dean, Sally Ketchum, Paula Fiedler. Third row: Nanci Rogers, Nancy Pier, Shirley Jacobs, Margaret Schmitz, Mary May Hamlin, Ann Shannon, Marian Butler, Dollie Rees. Additional members; Hope B ' Graverson, Helen Knight. First rov;-, left to right: Evangeline Sands trom, Barbara Whitmore, Beverly Beach, Margaret Burnett (President II), Virginia Wood (President I), Helene Epperson, June Land, Helen Holeman, Margaret McKerrol. Secon i row: Dorothy Adkins, Eileen Thomas, Jane McKerrol, Ruth Kadley, Betty Peterson, Doris Attrill, Marion Durham, Bettie Curland, Janet Howell. Third row: Phyllis Hinderks, Esther Lane. Olive Jane Franklin, Pat Mills, Margaret Hayes, Lillian Kozak, Juanita Parsons. Additional members: Lorraine Hobson, Helen Marie Lilly. Jeanne Kramer. i:: , ' e 5 P « (4 ' 6) ,0 l First row, left to right: Ruth Carpenter, Alice Wilson, Marjorie Prucha, Arlene Ro 1. (President), Barbara Hunzeker, Betsy Berry, Virginia Eubanks. Second row: Betty - Schlatter, Marie Segner, Mary Jane Read, Pat Mellon, Virginia Betz. Additional members: Bettie Evans, Barbara Goddard, Marian Tieber, Gladys Hadley, Eve- lyn Betz, Caroline Bugg. ill ' s inillCTIfE Um P.p exe..sHee.o„„ pledge, mighty member — such is the life of a club man. As rushee he is gener- ally rushed about, as pledge he affords amusement for the ' brothers ' , and as member he is revered by the freshman, who hopes one day to join the clan. First row, left to right: Don Scherff, John Sumner, Jay Lloyd (President), Warren Mesick, Bruce Ashton, Ed Davies. Second row: Lloyd Tunham, Ted Fisher, Bob Truman. Additional members: Dustin Mathews, Dick Pember, Joe Siebert, Bob Terbeck. First row, left to right: John Gordon, Forrest Duke, Jack Griffm, Bob Wilson (Presi- dent I), Gene Erickson (President II), Johnny Beckler, John Pimley, Don Reukem. Second roiw: Jack Gillies, Harlan Erickson, Bill Stewart, Don Wierda, Vince Erick- son, Graham McBride, Chet Benjamin, Jim Williams. Additional members: Bob Stern, Norman Bennett, Pat Kennedy, Don Winton, Ross Winton, Ray Bullock, Shavenau Glick, Watson Burns, Bob Gillette, Bob Miller, Gene Merrill, Bob Che- verton, Granville Lee. First row, left to right: Eugene Webb, Keith Robbins, Bee O ' Connor, Bob Cissna (President II), Tenney Williams, Jr., Robert K. Galbraith, Fred Wichman. Second row: Stillman Nichols, Lee Withrow, Thomas Elliott (President I), Dwight Willard, Jack Carson, George McClintock, Alan Duffield Burke. Third row: Jim Joyce, Dick Ellingwood, Keith Yetter, Matt O ' Connor, Bill Bridgeman. Additional members: Valdimar Olson, Bob Daggett, Leon Wilson, Dave Roe. First row, left to right: Cameron Allen, Dick Woodard, Jack Brown, Dick Biles, Lloyd Wyatt (President I), John Kirkpatrick, Bill Holmes, Bob Stapleton, Pat Trimm. Sec- ond row: Bob Coates, David N. Bowman, Doug Christensen (President 11), Jim Woodard, Jack Maddock, John Williams, Bob Hauk, Dan Tyson, Max Coplan, Don Thorpe. Third row: Bob Rohde, Jim Kemper, Roger Tierney, Dud Hall, John Broomfield, Leonard Coldwell, Stan Schuster, Bill Goodloe. Additional members: Wesley Viet, Standish Penton, John Lorringer, George McKinney, Phil Grant, Tom White. First row, left to right: Gene Pleger, Frank Towner, Lucian Bruner, Mr. Keith Peters (Advisor), Paulson Wopschall (President 1), Bob Strutt, William Hill, William Allen. Second row: Jim Garner, Harry II iff. Bill Wopschall, Forrest Johnson, Rob- ert Thoughton, Thuel Schuhart, Harry Hitchcock, Sanford Sawyer. Third row: Bill Kelly, Sherrill Locke, Oscar Terrill, John Clark, Howard Hill, Doug Maple, Bill Francis, Dick Tyson. Fourth row: Don Tobias, J. Loren Cook (President 11). Addi- tional members: Warren Swanson, David Mills Beckett, Don Kane. .1 .rycPa ' CH. ;i7oact. . First row, left to right: Harrison McDonald, Richard H. Reel, Bill Reeder, Charles Ferry (President II), Ray Anderson (President I), Dick Shannon, Harold Shafer, Joe Porter. Second rdw: Robert Braden, Tom Allen, Laurence Grannis, Clarence Dunham, Newt Gillespie, Dexter Abbott, Howard Vose. Third row: Brent Nelson, Rod Abbott, Bob Wathe, Bill Messick, Bill Solaine, Laurence Hendrickson, Jack McConnagby, Harry Cavanaugh. Additional members: Jerry Greer, Dick Braley, Tom Blake, David Ganssle, George Zilliget, Paul Dorrow, Bob Chapman, Bevis Clark, Wally Grant, Larry Ball, David Smith, Jack Collins. n ' :ir K I. f f. . t- f. t f. t %r ' ' W ' Jj y A aMl4 First row, left to right: Charles Matteson, Jr., David Acevido, Dick Joslyn, Gene Headrick, Charles Packard (President), Warren Williams, Bob Barnes, La Verne Boyer. Second row: Mr. Tom Mallory (Advisor), Donald Hayes, Charles Ras- parry, Charles Moran, Joe Raid, Pat Hollywood, Roland I. Cerny. Third row: Wil- lard Brown, Howard Wurtz, George Middleton. Additional members: Jack Kalten- bach, Don Ward. . • 7 .MM ' ; First row, left to right: Herb McDonald, Howard Clapp, George C. Kozak, Mr. Otto Anderson (Advisor), Warren Dorn (President I), Dale Babcock, Vernon Leif, John- nie Walker (President II). Second row: Fred Felberg, Harold Spriestersbach, Walt Vogelsang, Jimmie Arnold, Joe Kienholz, Garth Daniels, Mel Pepping. Third row: Harry Sanders, Red Robinson, Dave Babcock, Jack Morlan, John Krenz, Bob Menning. Fourth row: Joe O ' Laughlin, Jack Kadera, Jim Cassity, Joe Morin. Ad- ditional members: Wendall Robinson, Chris Tolineris, Bill Curland, Harrison Bemis, Dennis Gibbs, Louis Irwin, Dick Maizy, Si Miller. First row, left to right: John Colbert, John Dronberger, Roger Armstrong, Alex Coo- per (President I), Howard Hotaling. Second row: Grenes Krai, Francis Bradley, Dick Fretter, Clarence Jamison, Ray Bru baker. Additional members: Arthur Reid (President II), Ned Windsor, King Huntington, Bruce Mallery, Arthur Ford. h V- u A First row, left to right: Marshall Hoyt, Fred Ashbrook, Earle Rugg, Mr. Stanton Hill (Advisor), Jim P. Morgan (President), G. Gordon Sanford, Maurice E. Fuller, Har- old Simpson. Second row; Paul A. Brown, Bob L. Turner, Herbert G. Alder, Gra- ham Edwards, William A. Rogers, Warren T. Rogers, Leo A. Strelsky, Raymond L. Valois, Joseph R. Hobson. Additional members: Bob Basore, Marlow Marrs, Ted Newman, Bill Rogers, Jim Rose, Albert Shirley, Harold White. First row, left to right: David Elliott, George McRoberts, Bob Fey, Lloyd Beardsley (President), Fred Rice, Joe Morgan, Earl Roulac, Bill Camp. Second row: Bob Heublein, Frank Nick, Pat Waldron, Doug McClelland, James McRoberts, Frank Beardsley, Fisk Phelps. Additiional members: Neville Rucker, Joe Jones, John Lanier, Bob Groendyke. Q| - , y O. First row, left to right: Phil Frier, Lee Nelson, Chuck Crawl, Warren Yetter (Pre- sident 1), Henry Brantley, Bob Staib, Herb Hull. Second rov : Harry Withrow, John Snyder, John Lansing, Bni_podson, Hewson Lawrence. Additional members: Paul Love (President II), Gus Dallas, Bill Gleason, Harry Pame, John Yeager, Bob Blodgett, Milt Irving, Jess Ranker, Paul Snyder, Charles Sharp, Charles 0 ' Hara, _ Bill Green, Jack Douglas, Chuck Kadley, Ray Abbott, Phil Saylor. ,( y, - ' .s P TAA First row, left to right: Bob Gollatz, Gene Cortwright, Brydon Wyman, Dolson Smith (President I), Paul Reiter, Robert Plummer, George R. Riser, Stephen D. Downey. Second row: Rowley Walker, Robert Mosher, John Ritierrath, Dick White, Dave WoUam, Forrest Calkins. Third row: Harold Lacy, Ed Harding, Jr., Dave Batterson, Kenneth McGallian. Additional members: John Hansen (President II), Allan Thompson, Ted Young, Floyd Brown, Paul Tucker, Marshall Harris, Ken- dall Stanger. First row, left to right: Bill Leveille, Hygop Altunian, Claude Moss, Bob Hammond (President I), Jack Graves, Clem Tomerlin (President II), Kenneth Johnson, Frank Greedy. Second row: Edwin Baker, Dick Brown, Bill Sault, Byron Lough, Olin Finley, Frank Carter, Jack Page. Additional members: Less O ' Gara, Dan Whistler, Russ Shipman, Bob Kimpel, Jake Reid, Dick Schute, Jess Anderson, Rod Campbell, Robin Reese, Tom Taft, Roger Tierman, Neil Reese. . lii-UnilCflH iUU UnU.e .he .es.ncH.e, and open to more than a chosen few, is the Non-Restrictive club. Serving a defin- ite purpose, it acquaints both men and women students with various fraternal activities on campus, sponsors dances, hikes and allows for mixed membership. r n First row, left to right: Max Ireland, Gloria Secrest, Mary-Martha Moreland, Frank- lyn Gardner (Presid ent), James R. Patterson, Gerry Sommerville, Marjorie Adams, Stephene V. Patterson, Nina Giridlian. Second row: Robert K. Hiatt, Bob Shaver, Margery Gehrig, Doretta Failing, Janet Pownall, John Wiley, Janet Partch, Paul Kahn, Miss Ruth L. Conrad (Advisor). Third row: Robert L. Neville, Bob Wray, Jeannie Darby, Barbara Mueller, Robert Kavinoky, Betty Mueller, Marjorie Will- iamson, Lela Swanson, Olga Siebert. Fourth row: Jack B. Lester, Robert S. Rocke, Don M. Wright, Peter A. Hammersen, Richard Crooke, Glenn Vivrette, Betty Baker, Beverly Bronger. First row, left to right: Norman Severson, E. Wescott Lange, Meade Walker, Paul Nordberg, Henry Bremer, Elmer Carvey, J. Wesley Theisen. Second row: Harlan Frye, William Hill, Armen Sivaslian, Richard Winn, Russell Razee, Palph Pierson. Third row: Jack Wmchell, Ward Theisen, Robert Caikins (President), Robert Eick- staedt, Fred A. Strelsky, George Strawbridge, Leo Manning. First row, left to right: Edith Yates, Kathryn Butcher, Doretta Failing, Carol Embree (President), Jean Moshisky, Ruth Anderson. Second row: Ruth Harrison, Doris Youngstrom, Janet Pownall, Phyllis-Marie Bone, Mildred Thomas, Elizabeth Will- iams. Third row: Miss Mildred Poorman (Advisor), Evelyn Ireland, Dorothy Guinn, Barbara McCasland, Jeanne Schulz, Mary Lou Jones. First row, left to right: Mabel Asburn (Advisor), Betty_Le Melle, Arline Soule, Mari- lyn Roberson, Evelyn Alpaugh, Margaret Sandstrom (President). Second tow. Phyllis Marie Bone, Mary Louise Jones, June Kline, Mary Jane Ketridge, Emily Herrmann, Frances Moore, Emile Childs. Third row: Maxme Jensen, Dorothy Har- ris, Ruth Voget, Peggy Lanier, Betty Eyerdam. First row, left to right: Alice McMorris, Gladys Blomquist, John Geddes, Miriam Steed (President), Betty Heaton, Mary Ellen Slater, Frances Walker, Whitefield Gaebelein. Second row: Albert Leeming, Elizabeth Williams, Miriam Heaton, Mildreth Tinkham, Agnes McAndrew, Jean Weeks, Arline Hershey, Frances Mc- Morris, Jessie Geddes. Third row: Eleanor Johnson, Jeannette Hoffner, Marguerite Wolbert, Clara Slater, Ethel Hartzler, Jane Brooks, Frances Jackson. Fourth row: Miss Ross (Advisor), Virginia Hoffeditz, Evelyn Strickland, Laurence Martens, Ray- nard Wilson, Bernice Hodgin, Dorothy Miner, Josephine MuUer. First row, left to right: Margaret Combs, Lawrence Fobes, Frances Whitley, Ger- ald Shears (President), Margaret Dressier, Oakley Phillips, Stephene V. Patterson. Second row: David Belilove, Montague M. Wady, Karl Hunrath, T. Duane Price, Hewson Lawrence, Joe Rostron. Third row: Eric Wilson, Lorenze C. Lowe, Dick Cavanagh, Harry Arnold, Don Maxfield, Ed E. Davis. Fourth row: Mr. George W. Josten (Advisor), Robert S. Rocke. C — First row, left to right: Paul Erb, Arsen Devirian (President W.C.), Robert Rocke (President E.G.), T. Duane Price, Jack Morgan. Second row: Willard Shuler, Henry Lien, Burton Burgess, Karl Kipp, Bob Harbeck. Third row. Fred Owen, Montague M. Wadez, Jim Rough, David H. Belilove, Jack Kertz, First rdw, left to right: Jess Andersen, Paul Wallace, Logan Yount (President), Robert MoUenhauer, Ted Sowerby, Mr. Charles R Herr (Advisor), Paul Beau- mont, John Hansen. Second row: Robert Jackson, Dick West, Kenneth Johnson, Charles Ward, Cliff Thorn, Travis Manning, Lawrence De Tilla. First row, left to right: Kenneth Knabb, Bob D. Cartwright, Edward Potter (Presi- dent), Mr. F. McGough (Advisor), Carl Runge, Ivan Wheeler, Albert James. Sec- ond row: Leland Lorton, Alton Jenks, Jay Kimple, Hubert Bowman, Hubert Stormes, Vincent Graham, Ervin Reeder. First row, left to right: Donald Cooper, Bob Clark (President II), Mr. Arthur G. Gehrig (Advisor), Lyall Goldie (President I), Warren Ludwig. Second row: Dale Harding, Sidney Gaily, Charles Wuest, Robert Beebe. Third row: Elmer Hatch, William Rogers, Robert McLean. First row, left to right: Beulah Petersen, Lucy Terracciano, Grace Hardin, Ethel A. Fisher (Advisor), Phyllis Williams, Dorothy Gnad. Second row: Jane Munns, Eve- lyn Neely, Dot Watkins, Barbara Blue, Dorothy Eloise Smith. Third row: Barbara Brunt, June Whitlatch, Effie Belle Hinds, Carole Raab, Opal Denny, Ruth Town- send. First row, left to right: Edward Schuliz, Norbert Ramirez, Bob Binkley, Raymond Abbott, Ray Moon (President), Norman Smith, Norma Nelson, Celia Lewis, Tom Collins, Jack Grave, Everett Sanderson, Robert Burnham, Keith Kelly. Second row: Mark Hammer, James R. Pratley, Shiuchi Ogura, Stanley Kellogg, Ed Hanks, Arlie Staigh, Ed McKelvy, Darold Laub, Bob Pierie, Bob Beverly, Warren Dodge, Jack Doley, Robert Lord, Nolan Kiner. Third row: Eugene Headrick, Tom Taft, Eu- gene Moreland, Burke Young, John M. Phillips, James O. Bonney, Carl Fiebelkorn, Mr. Ball (Instructor), Ed Hadsell, Jack Thrift, Jack Rogers, William Kohner (Ad- visor), Bill C. French. Fourth row: Roland Cerny, George Middleton, John Goetz, Halsey H. Milton, Oscar Durand, Dick St owe, John Silva, Jack Terry, John Eiken- bery. La Verne Tieman, Jack Dunford, McCellan Bell, Ralph Didriksen, George Voight. First row, left to right; Betty Lee Ewing, Nadine Bublitz, Georgiann Brewer, Doro- thy Kay, Dixie Stromeyer (President), Virginia Rains, Pat Lee, Virginia Dodge, Claire Carter, Charlotte Smith, Pat Friend, Nancy Reel, Alice Graham, Irene Mor- gan, Margaret Snyder, Randalni Voss, Second row: Charlotte Mann, Sue Record, Virginia Smith, Betty Peterson, Jayne Terry, Jayne Burke, Marianne Rogers, Jan- ice Broadway, Sally Hazenbush, Janet Pooler, Helen Savory, Jean Rowley, Bar- bara Pearman, Betty Henry, Jean Lindsay, Esther Trynin. Third row: Barbara Bechler, Barbara Munn, Virginia Burns, Arline Voboril, Merilyn Gulden, Laura- Lee Voseipka, Helen Arnerich, Suzanne Brace, Patricia Lawrence, Hope Graver- son, Jackie Nannestad, June Eaton, Lillian Davie, Marjoria Hale, Julienne Hall, Joan Tanner, Virginia Roberts. Fourth row: Roberta Eager, Kitty Eastman, Bar- bara Poore, Elinor Lou Miles, Sylvia Cramer, Norine Fix, Camille Minton, Martha Girvan, Ruth Reber, Ricky Kirkpatrick, Beverly Melovidoff, Edith McCallum, Con- stance Lewis, Mary-Leighton Taylor, Mrs. Helen M. Stone (Advisor). First row, left to right: Kenneth Spivey, Bob Corrado, Ronald Braley, Sam Mar- dian (President), Doug Whitfield, Frank Tucker, Stan Mac Donald. Second row: Robert Wilson, Gordon Spivey, Roy Peterson, Stanley Korell, Bob Coit, Howard Gough. First row, left to right: Shirlee Sweetman, Mrs. M. H. Dunn (Advisor), Marjorie Chesnut (President), Charlene Boyd, Marie E. Lukens. Second row: Barbara Mc- Clure, Luceal Welsh, Helen Decker, Carole Vincent, Virginia Lee Smith, Margie Schmidt. Third row: Pauline Clarke, Mary Sanford, Miriam Brooks, Carroll Snell, Charlotte F. Smith. First row, left to right: George H. Edwards, John Lucas, Dale Clayton, W. L. Hod- ges (Advisor), Whitefield Gaebelein, John Clark, Jon Slocum, Carl Palmberg. Sec- ond row: Donovan Courtier, John Traub, Genevieve Nunner, Lois Brown, Amy Whitaker, Dorothy Wiley, William Maddison, Bill Buttler. First row, left to right: Don Heme, Gene Edwards, Tilpher Thompson, Lyle Nash, Ronald Braley (President), Doris Northway (President), Rolland Ritzman, iMary Jayne Snyder, De Witt Galloher, Neville Rucker, Ervin Clark. Second row: WaU Valentine, Homer Kearns, Rosanne Reed, June Rice, Marian Nixon, Ruth Soothoff, Lois Ijams, Waneta Moline, Mary Vanell, Priscilla Nicholson, Janet Johnson. Third row: OlethaBlackwell, Helen Malm, Dorothy Haines, Audrea McMorran, Dolores Jenewem, Hyacinth Mingle, Gladys Fiory, Amy Peckham, Bernice Kistler, Cecilia Fransen, Shirley Jacobson, Ada Bowdish . Fourth row: Lester C. Fisher, Oliver Lin- daas, Wallace Jones, James Lightcap, Ivan C. Malm, John P. Forbes, Jr., Jerome T. Peterson, Robert Wilson, WaU Beck, Charles Shoulders. First row, left to right: Maxine Jensen, Jean Moshisky, Mrs. Mary Louise Grow (Ad- visor), David M. Orswell, Joyce Faber, Betty Moshisky, Hesta Kelsey. Second row: Don Neill, James F. Drake, Mary Lou Jones, Jane Munns, Wayne Conklin, Bob van der Veen. Third raw: Bob Corrado, Peter A. Hammersen, Robert Walter, Rowland Walter, Bill Goodloe. First row, left to right: Raymond H. Brubaker, Bat Shaver, Lelia Belle Rubey, Amy Stahlmann, Harper W. Frantz, Jane Harkins, Janice Lamer, Grace Hardin, Vir- ginia Davies. Second row: Walter Atrill, Karl Hunrath, Warren Ludwig, Frank Faris, T. Duane Price, Gerald Shears, George Groth, Bob Coit, Everett Doe. Third row: Robert S. Rocke, Lorenz C. Lowe, Mr. George W. Josten, Mr. W. D. Leech, Mr. O. G. Dressier, Mr. G. E. Clme, Mr. F. L. Newhart (Advisors). FIRST SEMESTER OFFICERS Dick Reel (Boy ' s President), Betty Jo Wakefield (Girl ' s President), Dick Kendall (Boy ' s Vice-President), Elizabeth Lamb (Girl ' s Vice-President), Barbara White, Bob Metcalf (Secretaries), Louise McCastline, Chic Helvey (Treasurers), Ruth Anderson, Doris Wirth, Sam Genorkian (Membership Chairmen), Pat Atwood, Brooks Fry (Publicity), Lois Little, Virgil Hinshaw (Program), Mildred Thomas, Jim Spears (Recreation), Mr. L. W. Hattersley (Advisor). SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS Kenney McGallian (Boy ' s President), Elizabeth Lamb (Girl ' s President), Dick Ken- dall (Boy ' s Vice-President), Louise McCastline (Girl ' s Vice-President), Ruth An- derson, Brooks Fry (Secretaries), Doris Wirth, Joe Hattersley (Treasurers), Mary Ford (Membership Chairman), Russ Walker (Publicity), Mirriam Lafler (Program), Sam Embree (Recreation). First row, left to right: Tommy Tierney, Wayne Westling, Marc Williams (Mana- ger), Raymond Peters, Don Trepp, Arthur Lorenzim, Bob Stromach, Harold Rich- ardson, Mr. Fred L. Latshaw (Advisor). Second row: Adrian H. Heggem, Doy Ray Smith, Jack Stowe, John L. Sullivan, Audress Dunn, Miles Miller, Jev ell Clark. Third row: Edward R. Bush, Dick Lord, Glen Blankenbiller, Wallace Home, Virgil Simp- First row, left to right: Betty Mae Brown, Katherine V. Miller, Alberta Cameron, Lillian Brown (President), Alberta Chisholm, Betty Jane Gutwein. Second row : Ellen Weaver, Donna Morrow, Marion Chisholm, Nancy Taylor, Emilie Childs. First row, left to right: Iko Tanzawa, Dorothy Ikeda, Tommy Homma, Kaye Miku- riya, Teiji How, Yoshiko Homma, Setsuko How, Marian Kobayashi, Eiko Yoshi- hashi. Second row: Kimiko Shimizu, Hiroko Fujiwara, Yoshi Hashimoto, Masako Shida, Hisaye Kawaguchi, Mary Tanamura, Kazue Shingu, Masako Kurokawa, Mary Watanabe. Third row: Ruth Kirita, Helen Namaki, Mako Uchida, Shig Mat- sumoto, Lowi Iriye, Hiroko Matsumoto, Yoshiko Kurokawa, Fumiko Takeshige, Mary Sato. Fourth row: Bob Ikari, Akira Shimoguchi, Ted Tajima, Ray Iriye, Shi- geyoshi Fujimoto, Daniel Fukushima. irri n F - First row, left to right: Evelyn Betts, Yvonne Hancock, Kathryn Eddleman, Betty Young, Jewel BuUer (Advisor), Martha Williams (President), Dorothy Riggs, Portia Smith, Barbara Conzelman, Romona Frost. Second row: Marion Coldwell, Mar- garet Baker, Dorothy Olsen, Edna Smith, Shirley Stewart, Josefa Wenter, Carol Boschke, Lelia Belle Richey, Edith Crandall, Betty Waterhouse. Third row: Marie Segner, Dorothea Elliott, Gloria Secrest, Kay Sawyer, Virginia Grondahl, Laura Lentz, Margery Martin, Natalie Woestman, Gladys Colliers, Anita Louise Hall, Leola Crandall. First row, left to right: Dick Pember, Pat Trimm, Frank Moore (President), Doug Carruthers, Harold Lacy, Robert D. Brouillet. Second row: Rosario Chavez, War- ren Vesper, Anthony Stonert, Jack Boyer, Lucius Jones. First row, left to right: Charlotte Bowers, Marjorie Day, Marion Keinath, Sally Biele, Mildred Choy, Jackie Vermillion, Jeanne Thomas. Second row: Eleanor Pootjes, Evelyn Hansen, Marjorie Williamson, Jean Youngstrom, Celeste Clauser Peggy Lanier,, Frances Moore. I L) I It ll I) U H 1) l) L Third campus to the junior college is the Huntington Memorial Hospital, where women students interested in serving hu- manity may train lor the nursing profession. Classes, student government, actual duty in surgery, and other phases of medicine are taught and practiced here. D I n n n s Leit to right: D. D. SLEDGE, Director of Nurses; SARAH THOMPSON, LILLIAN VOSLOH, Instructors. HPEHISOn The affiliation of Pasadena Junior College and the Pasadena Hospital School of Nursing was first made in September, 1924. Since that time many changes have been made in the original plan. At first women students enrolling in the school lived in the nurses ' home at the Pasadena Hospital, getting ward practice, nursing theory and s tudy hours in the morning, and attending Pasadena Junior College in the afternoon. The nursing school grew steadily in importance until in 1930 it be- came the Nursing Department of the junior college. Salaries of the nursing school instructors were then placed under the Pasadena Public Schools department. In 1931 a new plan was adopted, whereby nurses-to-be had to spend one year in pre- medical training at the junior college before entering the hospital. Bacteriology, physiology, anatomy, chemistry, psychology, nutrition, English and physical edu- cation were the subjects that made up the required course. This plan is the one in use today. During this first year the students spend only two hours a week at the hospital learning hospital procedure. When they have successfully completed all of these heavier courses they are enrolled in the nursing school for their three year training period. The benefits of this new plan are many: student health is protected by elimination of the strain caused by their studying heavy courses along with act- ual training; expenses for the course are borne by the city taxpayers, opening the field of nursing to more girls; students receive a good grounding in fundamentals before getting their actual experience and are thereby better able to understand the work; and the nursing school is more closely connected to the college of which it is a part. When nurses have completed the three year training course at the hos- pital, they are given a diploma which credits them with two years of upper division work. This is especially useful to those who wish to go on with a university course. The traditional capping ceremonies, looked forward to by all, from Neophyte to Sen- ior, the Baccalaureate Service, and other Senior Class activities form a memor- able occasion in the life of the one time pre-med. When each nurse is training to attain the goal of her choosing, they are all working together for one common cause — to ease the suffering of mankind and to expand the great field into which they were led by the immortal lady with the lamp, Florence Nightingale, who in the eyes of each young nurse is the symbol of what she herself hopes to attain and stand for one day, wherever and whenever she is called upon to fulfil her pledges. First row, left to right: NORMA SUSSEX, MAUDE MAYFIELD, ANTOINETTE JOURDAN, LOIS SPAULDING. Second row: BARBARA ALLEN, MARIE SMITH. HELEN JEFFREY, JEAN BIGGAM. SI D n f U n i [ 1 1 Student body officers, three class presidents, a campus representative, a faculty ad- viser, a librarian, and a social chairman make up the student council. It is the duty of this body to uphold and enforce the constitution, handle student jurisdic- tion, and regulate student funds at its monthly meetings. Since it is necessary for the nurses to receive some of their training in other Southern California hospitals, acting student body officers are elected to replace any temporarily vacated post Leit to right: MRS. SARAH THOMPSON, lONE KINNICK. KATHERINE KARSTENS, PATRICIA BLUE, HELEN HARFORD, RUTH QUIST. J B I M I! n 1 s s Perhaps the most thrilling experience of any nurse during her training is the cap- ping ceremony that follows her four month probationary period, during which she must pass rigid tests in work, obedience and scholarship. After she has received her cap, she takes up junior class work. She spends an average of four hours a day on duty and four in classes at the hospital. During her three years training she must spend six weeks in the emergency room, four weeks in the dispensory out- patient department, six weeks in the diet kitchen, three months in the surgery and three months in the maternity department practising routine nursing duties. First row, left to right: KINNIE MONDEN, CAROLyN LESTER, VIRGINIA BURNHAM, HELEN SHOII, HELEN MINNER, MABEL MARLING, BERNADINE HAGEMEYER. Second row; HELEN ASHBY, DOROTHY HAY, DOROTHY ZIMMER MAN, HARRIET MILLS, MARIAN SALISBURY, MRYA NOLTIMIER, DOROTHY DAVIS. Third row; PHYLLIS HATCH, HELEN HATCH, FLORENCE EBERLY, RUTH HURD. IRMA BOYER, lONE KINNICK. Fourth row: NORAH NIGHTIN- GALE, ELMA SCRIBNER, CLARA ELIOT, ELIZABETH PRIDHAM, DOROTHY WOLF. FRANCES BRYANS. IIIIIdlDIHE UAH When a nurse joins the intermediate class she wears two chevrons on her sleeve. She keeps regular classes during the first semester, but replaces these in the sec- ond half of the year with brief stays at various specialized hospitals in Southern California, where she receives a broader training than she would get in Pasadena. She studies contagion at the Los Angeles County Hospital and children ' s diseases at the Hollywood Children ' s Hospital then returns to her Huntington medical studies. First row, left to right: RUTH QUIST, MARIAN SIEVERT, LOUISE MORSE, BARBARA DAVIS, MARGARET GOFF, WINI- FRED JONES, VIRGINIA DONNER. Second row; MARGARET HOBSON, JEANETTE MOORE, LUCIA POWNALL, SARAH ESHELMAN, AMY JORDON, RHODA MUSSER, lEANNE BITTER. Third row: JANET BAIRD, FREDA FULMER, HELEN HARFORD, MARGARET DORGAN, LORRAINE THORSON, KATHERINE KARSTENS, MOLLY MILTIMORE, MAR- CARET HILLER, SHIRLEY HENZLER, JANE MOSHER, RUTH LAYNE. ,1 On receiving the third chevron which denotes her promotion to the senior class, a nurse immedi- ately replaces all of her classes with clinics. She takes up public health, getting her experience and training at the Pasadena Public Health Center, and studies mental cases at the Compton Sani- tarium. By the time a nurse has reach ed her thirdyear she has completed most of the heavy courses necessary and needs mostly to gain experience and practice. Many traditional activities including VERNA BADER RUBY BERGSTROM PATRICIA BLUE JANE EATON LEOTA HAUCK|. ' ,: PHYLLIS RALSTON ADELA TISSOT RACHEL HELVEY KATICA ZABHISKIE PRISCILLA LANDGRi- 1 n II H E special social affairs and impressive ceremonies made this year pleasant for the graduating senior. Outstanding are the show put on near the beginning of the second semester to earn money for the class gift, the graduation dance and the beauti- fully impressive graduation ceremony in the famous Rose Bowl. DA LOGS RANGES RU DON ESTHER OBERG FERT CLARA KARP JEWEL LEASURE HILDA JOHNSON UUU IIH ku nuuu n I U . I . L . Shrill orders, strict attention and military discipline are only a small part of the local military training school. Here military-minded young men are taught Army tactics, are drilled, and are offered an opportunity to prepare for service. The R. O. boys also enjoy social life m their clubs, Attica and Theseus. unui uuiiu The Reserve Officers Training Corps is designed primarily to give the student preliminary training in military science and tactics, at first as a private in the ranks and then through the successive steps toward his commission. This training is carried out through United States Army instruction and funds, the instructors being officers and men of the United States Army. The course of training includes drilling by squads, platoons, companies, batallions and even peace time strength regiments. In addition there is instruction in the Manual of Arms, as drill is conducted with rifles; classes in patrolling, and other studies necessary in military science. Drilling is divided into close order and open order drilling, the former used on parade grounds, the latter on the battlefield. Theoretical and practicdl train- ing includes interior guard duty, scouting and patrolling, map read- ing, musketry, combat principles, rifle marksmanship, infantry wea- pons, military history, map sketching, administration and physical training. During the fall semester one batallion was found sufficient to contain all of the men enrolled in the course, but by spring 450 men signed up, and a new batallion was formed. Sore spot this year has been locker accomodations for the 450 men. It is hoped that the projected new gym, with space alloted for R.O.T.C. lockers and drill floor, will solve the problem. The department attempts to train men not only for commissions in the reserve force and entrance into the m.ilitary academies, but also to develop leadership, self-respect and stability, respect and loyalty to recognized authority, and to im- prove the student mentally, morally and physically, no matter what vocation he may elect to follow. Major Frank E. Bertholet and Ser- geant Lawrence Parsons are in charge of this Reserve officers unit. Top to bottom: MAJOR FRANK E. BERTHOLET. SERGEANT LAWRENCE B. PARSONS, LIEUTEN- ANT-COLONEL JAMES MOFFAT. MAJOR MASON HAMILTON. MAJOR CHARLES HOGLE, LIEUTENANT-COLONEL ROBERT M. HUBBS. [lyM- S ' - Jii ' ' omP kr J mmu nmm inn Pasadena Junior College ' s Bulldog batallions are headed by Cadet Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Hubbs, with Cadet Major Mason Hamilton under him in command of the First batallion and Cadet Major Charlie Hogle of the Second. Eight companies, with 450 men, comprise P. J. C. ' s unit. Cadet officers of these companies are all included in the Shield and Eagle, R. O. T. C. officers club. Members are pledged to further the R. O. T. C. in school and civic life. One of the outstanding nev military activities this year was the fencing team, which won many matches from Southern California universities and colleges. The rifle team has also been active, entering and winning several competi- tions. R. O. T. C. social clubs are Attica and Theseus. Membership in them is restricted to chosen pledges and girls interested in R. O. T. C. work. Theseus is a new club which was formed early in the second semester to replace the former Order of Sentinels. Ma- jor Frank E. Bertholet is adviser to Attica and Sergeant Lav rence B. Parsons to Theseus. First row, left to right: LOUIS MELZER. JACK VOCKRODT, BOB HUBBS, SAM HORTON. KEITH PLEHN. Second row: DOUG MITCHELL. JACK HOLMAN, PETERS BURROWS, DUDLEY HAl-L, LE ROY LUSHER. FRANCIS BORDEAUX. uni ini l v First row, left to right: SAM HORTON. DOUG MITCHELL, JACK VOCKRODT, KEITH PLEHN, FRANK BEltTHOLET. J ' , R.B.I. [. Sllff First row, left to right: LEE NELSON, MASON HAMILTON, MAJOR F. E. BERTHOLET, ROBERT HUBBS. Second row: WILLIAM GEIGEH, CHARLES MACNAM, NED WINDSON, MAYLON DRAKE. . yC ' i C - ' A - 5 First row. left to right: NED WINDSOR, ISABEL MOFFAT, KEITH PLEHN, PETER BURROWS, CHARLES MACNAB. Second row: ' KATHLEEN GOBLE, DUDLEY HALL, LE ROY LUSHER, JANE JENKINS, BETTY MUNNS, SAM HORTON. iTtff First row, left to right: JEANNETTE aBaMS. JEANNE ADAMS, HOLLIS ADAMS, AL BAILEY, FRANK BERTHOLET, DORIS BUT- LER, THELMA GLATTS. Second row: MARJORIE LANDIS, BERNICE JOHNSON, BILL FORESTELLE. JAMES THOMAS, JANE MONROE, VIRGINIA GATES, FRED HARTLEY. Third row: STILSON WRAY, BILL GOODLOE, GALE HERSEY, MASON HAMIL- TON. JACK VOCKRODT, DICK PEMBER, DON DUNNING. A ' l f ' ? a. 14 a .i«i p f. !?• . ??iki „fS RJ.I.f. Ufl Student officers, above, left to right- JAMES MOFFAT, MASON HAMILTON, CHARLES HOGLE. Voau, 9 to wL ix«k u WM ILmW -cwrw-EfcLu. a.A- cctw . -tvt 3 -{i C v Mrl ' uLMw. ' TljM UK ceiJU2 t LAi-e 0-CYWJ2. 4W.0W h o m i ' :yn ' Hi :;- ' : -f L) Li 111 i U n u Climax of four years of collegiate life comes each June when the capped and gowned Senior walks across the Rose Bowl, for the last time. Gone are his Jaysee days, remembered forever are the good times, the many laughs and tears, the spirit and traditions of life on a great campus. pnsionn if ihi LLOYD BEARDSLEY Congenial and intellectual Lloyd Beards- ley set about organizing the Seniors in September, groomed them for the coming graduation. Having not too many political irons in the fire, Lloyd gave sincere thought to his position and was instrumental in re- taining the oldest graduation tradition on campus, that of receiving a regular year- book, rather than the proposed quarterly magazine. Presidencies, seeming to be typical of t he Beardsley personality, netted Lloyd a top ranking restrictive club posi- tion when he was elected Sequoia presi- dent, an office which he retained for one year, in addition to his class presidency, which consisted of overseeing 500 students. [ins Of 1 n 9 Versatile might well be the word for acti- vity-minded Warren Dorn. Completing his first semester posts of Pep Commissioner and President of the Inter-Club Council, he took up the duties and prestige of Senior class leader during the second half of the year. Graduation activities, the Senior Prom and Breakfast, metriculation in the Rose Bowl, in addition to Board meetings and club functions claimed the attention of the wavy-haired Warren. Aside from class duties, inspiring pep at football games, and guiding the several clubs through a successful semester, Dorn was an active member of the Lancers men ' s ser- vice organ ization and restrictive club OSF, n I I n s FIRST ROW: Ted Adsit, Evelyn Aldridge, Barbara Anderson, Jess Andersen, Ray Anderson, Sarah Anderson, Stanley Andersen, Vivian Anderson, Jimmie Arima, Harry Arnold, Fred Ashbrook, Ber- nice Attridge. SECOND ROW: Walter Attrill, Jane Baker, Merlene Ballard, Martin Bor.nes, Beatrice Barnett, Ray Bartlett, Jean Baughman, Lloyd Beardsley, Paul Beaumont, Walter Beck, John Beckler, Robert Beebe. THIRD ROW: Barbara Birch, John Birch, Edna Bixby, Oletha Blackwell, Mary Blahnik, Muriel Blayney, Burl Blue, Virginia Lee Bobo, Henry Bolinger, Yvonne Bonser, Carol Boschke, Beckie Bradford. FOURTH ROW: Eve- lyn Bradford, Jeannette Branch, Henry Brantley, Betty Brengle, Carol Brinton, Margaret Brock, Miriam Brooks, Robert Brouillet, Jack Brown, Lil- lian Brown, Lois Kathryn Brown, Berkeley Bryant. FIFTH ROW: Edward Budd, Bob Bugbee, Charles Burgess, Alan Burke, Linnea Burman, Peter Bur- rows, Barbara Burtt, Robert Calkins, Luther Card, Virginia Carpenter, Robert Cartwright, Ralph Cathey. SIXTH ROW: Joseph Chalmers, Dorothy Chamberlin, Frances Chapman, Margaret Ches- ter, Mildred Choy, Douglas Christensen, Charles Clark, John Clark, Gloria Clements, Dean Cline, Florence Cline, Onez Chism. SEVENTH ROW: Bob Coates, Helen Cochran, Samuel Coffman, Letha Cole, William Conners, Eugenia Corbett, Robert Corrado, Lois Couch, Donovan Courtier, Virginia Cox, Leola Crandall, Andrea Crehan. EIGHTH ROW: Bill Cropsey, Margaret Dake, Virginia Davies, Marjorie Davis, Owen Davis, Janice De Boynton, Wilma Lee Dean, Mary Jane DeLonty, Opal Denny, Harry Depew, Margaret DeVault, Robert Diamond. NINTH ROW: Edward Doak, Everett Doe, Frances Doll, Warren Dorn, Betty Dorsey, Violet Doubleday, Jane Dougherty, May- Ion Drake, Verbie Duebbert, Eleanor Duncan, Frank Faris, Don Farr. L f i ' k ' S ' ft ,3LJh- 9 % . ' B ' a n 1 1 n FIRST ROW: Jeannette Eastman, Kathryn Eddie- man, Manon Edmonds, Robert Eickstaedt, Gard- ner Eikenbery, John M. Eikanbery, Thomas Elliott, Eugene Erickson, Richard Fay, Charles Ferry, Paul Ferguson. SECOND ROW: Jack Fones, James Ford, Audrey Jean Fox, Rita Frey, Esther Fuku- shima, Marion Fuller, Maurice Fuller, Jack Fulton, Whitefield Paul Gaebelein, Sidney Gaily, Allen Garber. THIRD ROW: Margery Gehrig, Jack Gil- bert, Albert Gill, Caroline Glasgow, Mary Rose Glassey, Shavenau Glick, David Gosnell, Toshi- hisa Goto, Priscilla Mary Grane, Beverly Jane Gray, Stanley R. Gray. FOURTH ROW: Helen K. Greaves, Virgil Greenlaw, Freda Groff, Virginia Grondahl, George Groth, Jean Guthrie, Betty Jane Gutwein, Marion Haffner, Raymond Hahn, Doro- thy Haines, Anita Louise Hall. FiFTH ROW, Paul R. Hall, Sylvester Halminsky, Ruth Hampton, John Charles Hanks, William Harker, Jane Harkins, Timothy Harrison, Yoshiye Hashimoto, Clariece Hauer, Barbara Hawk, Frank Hayami. SIXTH ROW: Dorothy Hoyward, Ruth Hempel, Mirian Claire Henderson, Beth Henry, Doris Jennie Henry, Rose Mane Hill, William Fosdick Hill, Ef- fie Belle Hinds, Virgil Hinshaw, Helen Holeman, Merle Charlotte Honn. SEVENTH ROW: Samuel W. Horton, Jr., Howard Hotaling, Virginia House, Janet Verneal Howell, Wetel Hudson, Sheila Hughes, Bette Hull, Herbert M. Hull, Gene Huxley, Esthel Ikenberry, Shel Prince Irwin. EIGHTH ROW: Berniece H. Janh, Alethe Jahr, Gordon O. Jaroch, Alton Jenks, Roberta Johns, Elinor A. John- son, Waldo A. Johnson, Lucius D. Jones, Louis Jones, Colleen Jordan, Dallas Jordan. NINTH ROW: Alpha Lou Judd, Jack Kaltenbach, Shigeru Kawai, John M. Kellner, Joan Kellogg, Mary Jane Ketridge, Celeste Killeen, Kenneth Knabb, Jane Koffard, Albert T. Koyama, Robert Hubbs. In Memoriam i ' M l f ft n i M n FIRST ROW: Margaret Kozok, Harry Kumagai, Arthur Kuzon, Va Loy Lambert, Joseph Landis- man, Ruth Larson, Phyllis Ruth Lawton, Albert Learning, Norman Harry Leonard, Bill Lewis, Jane Lewis, James Lightcap. SECOND ROW: Kenneth Little, Lois Little, Bill Lockwood, Georgia Lodter, Don Long, Olaf Lorntsen, Stellanne Lotz, Eliza- beth Lucas, John Lucas, Warren Ludwig, Virginia Lund, Mary Arnold Mace. THIRD ROW: Zena Mackie, William Maddison, Matilda Manley, Sam Mardian, Jack Marr, John Marshall, Bernice Cece- lia Martin, Gordon Martin, Jeanne Mather, Calvin Mathiew, William Delmar Mathis, Nadine Max- well. FOURTH ROW: Barbara McClure, Helen McCoy, Herbert McDonald, Margaret McEwen, Marian McGrew, Audrea McMorran, Marjorie McNeil, Beverly Medbery, Venus Melkonian, Vir- ginia Meyers, Anita Miller, Berne Miller. FIFTH ROW: Eddie Miller, Elsie Miller, Katherine Miller, Martha Mitchell, Robert Mollenhaver, Ray Moon, Betty Moshisky, Mary Ann Moss, Shizue Mura- shige, Mitsuko Naito, Minnie Negoro, Donald Neill. SIXTH ROW: Dorothy Nelson, Ruth Nelson. Eve- lyn Newlin, Robert Nicholas, Priscilla Hart Nichol- son, George Nikaido, Marian Nixon, Takao Nogu- chi, Ralph Norton, Raymond Olson, Charles Pack- ard, John Paulson. SEVENTH ROW: Barbara Pat- ten, Amy Lou Peckham, Carmen Penwarden, Melvin Pepping, Beulah Peterson, Jerome Peter- son, Fisk Phelps, Francis Pierce, Nora Polsky, Ora Lea Porter, Edward Potter, Edwin Prugh. EIGHTH ROW: Ellen Pryor, David Pugh, Edward Quint, Carole Raab, Jess Elwood Ranker, Bette Rasmus- sen, Jean Redington, Enid Reed, Robert Reeve, William Rehor, Betty Frances Rembolt, Don Miles Reukema. NINTH ROW: Phyllis Richmond, Alicen Ann Roach, Druscilla Roach, Virginia Roberts, Robert Rocke, Robert Rohde, Ann Rohrer, Ernest Rook, Robert Ross, Earl Roulac, Jesse Rowe, Aud- rey Rue. v lr I ' X :fi k ff A ' k 19 iSnH 1- J L„ n i I n s FIRST ROW: Carl D, Runge, Adelaide Russell, Lillian A. Ryder, Michael Safonov, Harry W. San- ders, William Samways, Marguerite Saunders, Kay Sawyer, H. Kendrick Schlatter, Charlotte Schlichting, Margaret Schlmger. SECOND ROW: Martha Ann Schmidt, Melba Schweinbold, Will- iam Seavey, Corrine Jane Sharpe, Charles E. Sharp, Gerald Shears, Dennis Shillam, Kimiko Shi- mizu, Charles G. Shoulders, Harold Simpson, Martha Sims. THIRD ROW: James Skinner, Jon Slocum, Betty Sue Smith, Dorothy Eloise Smith, Ilo M. Smith, Portia Smith, Robert W. Smith, Ida May Snyder, Mary Jayne Snyder, Gerry Sommer- ville, Vernon C. Sorensen. FOURTH ROW: Joseph F. Soulanille, Marjorie V. Spiegel, Gordon Spi- vey, Kenneth Spivey, Amy A. Stahlmann, Helen Standing, Miriam J. Steed, Elmer De Barth Steele, Edwin L. Sterling, Shirley J. Stewart, George Stin- son. FIFTH ROW: Jeanne Loroine Stone, Ruth Mae Stone, Vesta May Stone, Hubert Stormes, Jr., M. Carolyn Stover, Janet L. Tate, Jim L. Thompson, Cliff Thorn, Virginia Throop, Jeanne Tinker, Marie Margaret Tomaschke. SIXTH ROW: Tatsuyuki To- moyasu, Jean Towery, Robert Truman, Frank C. Tucker, Margaret Twining, Margie Turner, Mako Uchida, Kathryn Von Horn, Velita Veale, Wesley Veit, Ruby Vinten. SEVENTH ROW: Jack Vock- rodt, Betty Jo Wakefield, William Walcott, Johnnie Walker, Mead N. Walker, William Sherrill Wallis, Charles Ward, Ellen Weaver, Eugene Webb, Percy Mae Wells, Josefa E. Wenter. EIGHTH ROW: Dick West, Donald R. Wheeler, Winifred Wheeler, Helen Whitelaw, Betty C. Wilcox, Dor- ris Willard, Clifford Willcox, Charlotte L. Williams, Martha H. Williams, Phyllis Williams, Alice H. Wilson. NINTH ROW: Eric Wilson, Robert J. Wil- son, Robert S. Wilson, Verna Wilson, Dorothy Winslow, Herbert B. Winslow, Marvin E. Wright, Warren Yetter, Bette Yarbrough, Frank W. Zatzke, Joe Zito. I uUfllUMUnljIJ Culmination of high school careers, beginning oi college days is the Sophomore graduation. Here the twelfth grader looks upon the mortar board of the senior, visualizes a day two years hence when the black cap will be his, along with the farewell to the Bulldog campus which it signifies. punonn if iii RED ROBINSON Stepping up from his Sophomore class pre- sidency to the second highest elective of- fice, that of Chief Justice, Red Robinson car- ried out a dual political career this year. As Soph leader, he launched the class on a sea of activities and social life, the cul- mination of which is Rose Bowl graduation. Largest Soph class, due to the added gra- duates from West Campus was that lead by Red, while political history was made by the red-haired Chief Justice when he reprimanded club brother — student body prexy McDonald for issuing, what to his mind, were too many court summons. Red ' s social life is with OSF, his service to JC with Lancers, men ' s efficient service group. [ I u s n nil Trading his Freshman gavel for that of the Sophomore class, Pat Kennedy took over the presidency of the Sophs at mid-term. Not green at politics and profiting from his fall semester as Frosh prexy, Pat showed amazing ability in choosing and organizing his council which included re- presentatives from both East and West Campus. Notable among his choices were those of secretary to the class — choosing none less than the Rose Queen herself from the West and the most widely publicized and naive Soph girl on campus, Dixie Stro- meyer, from the East. For functions frater- nal, Pat turned his pledging task, his in- terests and his dues towards the Areops. PAT KENNEDY L ' M . I A- A S SBfBlliHn FIRST ROW: Kendrick Adargo, Dorothy Adkins, Don Adler, Mary Aitken, Jane Stevens Albright, Rita Alig, Dottie May Allaback, Claude Allen, Elizabeth Allensworth, Lorraine Alton, Bette Lou Andersen, Marjorie Andersen. SECOND ROW: Carl Anderson, Elaine Anderson, Kenton Ander- son, Pauline Anderson, Peggy Lou Anderson, Phyllis Anderson, Ruth Anderson Lois Ellen An- gleton, Ann Archibald, Anita Arnerich, Margaret Arnold, Nancy Arrison. THIRD ROW: Walter Ata- manuck, Averil May Atlee, Patricia Jeanne At- wood, Harriet Bacon, Miriam Kathryn Bachman, Velma Marie Backs, Julia Frances Bailey, Charles Baker, Ruth Barber, June Barnum, June Bartlett, Dorothy Bate. FOURTH ROW: Joan Bateman, Barbara Anne Bates, Joan Bathrick, Lawrence Battershall, Sterling Beam, Frank Beardsley, Con- way Beaver, Jeanne Becker, Barbara Beckley, Neil Beckman, Virginia Beckwith, Virginia Beick. FIFTH ROW: Jeanette Beinhaver, James Bell, Jr., Robert ben Ali, Florence Bensco, Ruth Bergren, Helen Berman, Elizabeth Berry, Betty Bertell, Sally Jean Biele, Bettie Anna Biren, Bill Birk, Marion Birnie. SIXTH ROW: Betty Blackstock, Georgette Blanc, Pat Blockburger, Gladys Blomquist, Ruth Alice Blue, Patricia Boadway, Muriel V. Boer- ner, Barbara R. Boersma, Helen Bohri, Phyllis Marie Bone, Arlene Bonner, Phyllis Bowerman. SEVENTH ROW: Ralph Bowers, Carolene Boyd- stun, Lucille Boye, Bettie Bradbury, John Breiner, Marion Brickert, Mildred Brinley, Dorothy Brockel- mann, Mary Bronson, Bernice Evelyn Brook, Elmo Brooks, Betty Mae Brown. EIGHTH ROW: David Michael Brown, Doris Brown, Pearl Brown, Arvy Browning, John Broy, Minnie Bubach, Lil- lian Elizabeth Buckwalten, Caroline Bugg, Wat- son Burns, Lillie Mae Burton, Frank Burke, Cora- lee Burson. NINTH ROW: Doris Butler, Mary Jane Byard, Beverly Byrnes, Forrest Calkins, Ruth Cal- vert, Alberta Cameron, Marjorie Campbell, Hope Carleton, Ruth Eleanors Carpenter, William Carr, Vivian Carr, Millard Carpenter. fji ' v ■il - a ' . WW HRST ROW: Dorothy Ruth Cartwright, Juanita Caruthers, Evelyn R. Cash, Jane M. Cassidy, Alice Castaneda, May Celani, Suzanne Chapman, Catherine M. Chase, Pat Chase, Ralph Chase, i j ' t- vC UO .,4- . Lucienne Cheely. SECOND ROW: Marjorie Ches- U L- y-t V ' - ' - -nut, Mildred Chilver, Alberta Chisholm, Marshall O ' jAA i - Christen, Barbara Clark, Pauline Clarke, Roderick N Clayton, Erma Cline, Mildred Cline, Wayne Cod- dington, Angela Coil. THIRD ROW: Charlotte Coil, Zena Colburn, Leonard Coldwell, Ray Cole, Noreen Collins, George Constantian, Norma Cook, Jock L. Cooper, Mary Louise Cooper, Theo- dore Cope, Doris Corbett. FOURTH ROW: Betty Irene Cordner, Richard Crooke, Geraldine Cro- well, Tom Crump, Harriet Culley, Ernest Cun- ningham, Jeri Cutler, Peggy Daley, Frances Danby, John P. Dancy, Garth C. Daniels. FIFTH ROW: Rex Dannebaum, Verlene Darling, Hazel Dartt, Gwynne Dougherty, Ray Ivan Dougherty, Joe Davis, Mary Davis, Betty Day, Alyce Deanne, Leone De Boynton, Edward Decker. SIXTH ROW: g_G armo, Betty Louise De Gregoriis, Alber- 0 JmLt ' deHoan, yonne DeLey S.illian Dell, Betty j DeLonge, Helen Denholm, Jack Denton, Marion Paar, Margaret Derby, Anne Diamond. EVENTH ROW: Lilyan Diamond, Bernard E. Dickey, Norma Dixon, Mildred Marie Dobes, Wil- liam Dootson, Donald Dorr, Barbara Dougall, Frances Douglass, Suester Douglass, Arlene Duebbert, Dorothy Duke. EIGHTH ROW: Helene W Dyer, Ruth Eaton, Sidney Eaton, Hazel Eber- hart, Eleanor Ellingsen, Betty Elston, Carol Em- bree, Shirley M. Engel, Harlan C. Erickson, Mar- jorie Ernst, Virginia Eubanks. NINTH ROW: Doris Evans, Hosmig Evkanian, Joyce Faber, Jane Far- lee, Philip Farmar, Mary Frances Faust, Made- lynne Fergoda, Luada Ferris, Wendell Feuer- helm,| aula Fiedler, Eleanor Fields. JJ . td 4j 1 «i c. . - ' 3 fC ,0 -Jfe ' 1 ' iMii i£l. i PBIMORn FffiST ROW: Betty Fischer, Madeline Fisher, Ruth Fisher, Levi Flanagan, John Forbes, Jeanne Forte- ville, Josie Forteville, Maria Fortier, Stewart Fox, Dorothy Frandsen, George Fratus. SECOND ROW: Patty Frayne, Betty Friedson, Muir French, Marion Frey, Paul Frey, Ruth Friedlander, Rich- ard Friend, Phil Frier, Esther Fromm, Brooks Fry, Koji Fukutaki. THIRD ROW: Doris Gage, Mabel Gage, Lawrence Garland, Betty Gartz, Mary Gash, Margaret Gaskill, Thelma Gates, Thelma Gavel, Pamela Gaze, Jessie Geddes, John Geddes. FOURTH ROW: Sam Gevorkian, Elizabeth Gil- bert, Betty Jane Giles, Joan Gill, Nina Giridlian, Gloria Gi swein, Louise Glasgow, Wesley Glass, Dorothy Gnad, Kathleen Goble, Wallace Godwin. FIFTH ROW: Edward Goldsworthy, Anita Gor- don, Betty Gormley, Barbara Graham, Eleanor Graham, George Graham, Laurence Grannis, Katy Grant, Wiles Gratz, Anna Bell Gravenberg, Portia Greene. SIXTH ROW: Jerry Greer, George Griffith, Robert Grouch, Nadine Guggisberg, Eli- shewa Gutmann, Gladys Hadley, Thomas Hager, J ' B Halajian, Margaret Hall, Joyce Halliday, nf Yia heTine Hoisted. SEVENTH ROW: Rita Hal- f 1 sted, Tadashi Hamane, Janine Hammer, Peter fy ' ammersen, Betty Hammond, Beverly Hammond, UJ l lJ da. Harder, Keith Harding, Mary Hargett, K Arthur Harmer, Dorothy Harris. EIGHTH ROW: Marshall Harris, Ruth Harrison, Darrell Harshbar- ger, Harold Hortsough, Marjorie Harper, William Hart, Betty Haskins, Warren Havell, Marjorie Ha- vens, Erma Haver, June Hayashi. NINTH ROW: Marjorie Haydock, Betty Hayes, David Hay ward, Mary Lou Heckman, Melvin Heflinger, Lawrence Hendrickson, Edith Henger, Marjorie Henion, Martha Hennessey, Nina Pearl Henry, Aileen Hern. i JDfB n FIRST ROW: Emily Herrmann, Arline Hersey, Gale Hersey, Jack Hertz, Beverly Hess, Wilmer Hickambottom, Ralph Hilbert, Vernita Hilde- brand, Howard Hill, Marie Hill, Mary Scott Hill. SECOND ROW: Gloria Hill, Phyllis Hinderks, Lor- raine Hobson, Barbara Hodgkins, George Hoff- man, Dorothy Hogeboom, Dorothy Louise Hold- redge. Alberta Holland, June Holmes, Le Roy Holmes, Doris Hollis. THIRD ROW: Helen Hollis, Evelyn Hopkins, Virginia Horn, Elinor Horning, Margaret Houghton, Jack Howe, Margaret Hub- bard, Martha Hubbard, Jean Huber, Emma Jane Huddleson, Jerry Hughes FOURTH ROW: Myron Hunt, Margaret Joy.ne Huntley, Moxine Arline Hurthle, Ruth Her, Peggy Lynn Ingham, Ruth Alice Irving, Setsuko Itow, LaVerne Iverson, Twila Jack, Weldon Jackson, Yvonne Jackson. FIFTH ROW: Shirley Jacobs, Doris Jacobson, Ger- trude Jacobson, Phyllis James, Luella Jarvis, Jane Jenkins, Lucille Jenks, Gladys Jensen, Maxine Jensen, Shirley Jewett, Berneice Johnson. SIXTH ROW: Helen Johnson, John Johnson, Marilynn Johnson, Jean Johnstone, Bobbye Anne Jones, Daisy Jones, David Keith Jones, Mary Lou Jones, Jim Jordan, Richard Joy, Frances Judd. SEVENTH ROW: Doris Junso, Charles Kadley Paul Kahn, Margaret Karl, Yoshiye Kawaguchi, Shingu Ka- zue, Homer Keorns, Frances Keeton, Suzanne Keffer, Rosemary Keffer, Cecil Kellam. EIGHTH ROW: Louise Kelley, Frances Kelly, Hesta Kelsey, Gerhard Kelz, Catherine Kendall, Dick Kendall, Phoebe Kepler, Sally Ketchum, Caryl Key, Mary Kimata, Grace Kingan. NINTH ROW: Willa Kirk- patrick, Eleanor Kirst, June Kline, Marian Knapp, Helen Knight, Henry Kondo, Betty Kowarsky, Lil- lian Kozak, Jeanne Kramer, Ralph Kramer, Paul Kreinbring. JUajUc : — 7 ta-ci-Aj -( -y M w I f II I i H I S% FIRST ROW: Harold Kruzan, Mary Kueneman, Robert Kugler, Jane Gray Kyle, Margaret Lackey, Harold Lacy, Miriam Lafler, Elizabeth Lamb, Gale Lamb, Constance Lambert, Virginia Lambert. SECOND ROW: Lucille Landeck, Jack Landis, Ruth Landeck, Marjorie Landis, Esther Lane, Harry Lone, Jeanne Langford, Donald Larsen, Mary Lu Last, Janis Leland, Betty Le Melle. THIRD ROW: Laura Lentz, Lucille Lentz, Janet Lindell, Marian Lieberg, Pauline Lieberg, Dorothy Lilly, Frances Lishner, Bette Lita, Lilla Jane Lockhart, Virginia Logan, Waldene Logan. FOURTH ROW: Helen Ruth Logsdon, Carrie Long, Ellen Long- streth, Letty Ann Loos, John Lord, Lorraine Lott- man, Bernice Loudon, Betty Loughran, Dorothy Lowther, Stanley Lundgren, Alfred Lurie. FIFTH ROW: Mildred Lutes, Annette Macdoncdd, Jean Mac Kay, Jeanne Mac Kenzie, Frances MacLach- lan, Keith Mahaffey, Belva Maier, Jacqueline Ma- jor, Helen Malm, Marilynn Marriage, Marion Mar- shall. SIXTH ROW: Hiroko Matsumoto, Gwen Mattecheck, Francess May, Alve McAfee, James McAndrew, Jean McAndrew, Louise Mc Castline, Mary Mc Clung, Catherine Mc Collum, Rex Mc Connelly, Barbara Mc Colm. SEVENTH ROW: ire Mc Crossen, Margaret Mc Crossen, John Donough, Virginia Mc Dowell, Lois Mc Endree, neth Mc Gallian, Katherine Mc Grath, Mar- garet Mc Kenzie, Jean Mc Loughlin, Doris Mc Mannus, Frances Mc Morris. EIGHTH ROW: Lucy Melluzzo, Marjorie Jane Melin, Ray Mendenhall, Robert Menning, Lora Jean Mernam, William Messick, Carol Middleton, Ruth Migent, Joan Eli- zabeth Miller, Rosemary Miller, Virginia Ruth Mil- ler. NINTH ROW: Sonia Mindlin, Dorothy Mae Miner, Muriel Minovitz, Tom Mitchell, Ethel June Moise, Bernice Mongreig, Dorothy Monroe, Jane Monroe, Florence Montgomery, Elizabeth Montz, Miriam Moody. opyiHn r U FIR ROW: Frances Moore, Joe Morin, ' VVilliam r M Mprna, Zona Morris, Sally Morrison, Elizabeth jvj J Pmn Mortenson, Velma Mortensen, George Mor- Jy 1 ton, Jean Moshisky, Betty Mueller, Helen Mueller. kJ a second ROW: Jane Munns, Rosabelle Muntz, ' Elizabeth Murdock, Mabel Murfee, Blanche Mur- phy, Seward Murphy, Arthur Myers, Marjorie Nagle, Elizabeth Lucille Nairn, Yoshiko Naka- mura, Colbert Nakata. THIRD ROW: Fred Nash, Phyllis Nash, Helen Nazarian, Elnora Neal, Mer- vyn Neely, Barbara Jeanne Nelson, Maxine Ne- vins, Marlyn Nicholson, Dwight Nicolen, Jean Nicholson, Albert Nmde. FOURTH ROW: Take- shi Nishi, Teruko Nishijima, Mary Alice Nix, Esther ) Nobles, Helen Nomura, William Norr, Philip Nor- ton, A.nna May Oesterreich, Julia O ' Grady, Char- les O ' Hara, Joe Olsen. FIFTH ROW: Ralph Olson, tMlxrwrence Omohundro, Barbara Orr, Jeanne Ous- ley, Dorothy Owen, Mary Packi, Constance Pal- mer, Edward Pampeyan, Kathleen Parker, Wes- ley Parlee, Janet Partch. SIXTH ROW: Helen Pat- ton, Peter Paulson, Maude Peaco, Mary Jane Pea- ler, Muriel Peet, Dick Pember, Stan Penton, Man- uel Perez, Emilie Perkins, Erma Louise Peru, Patsy Peteler. SEVENTH ROW: Marjorie Pettit, Ruth Phelps, Edwil Pickett, Barbara Jean Pierson, Muriel Platte, Eleanor Pomeroy, Eleanor Pootjes, etty Jean Porter, Imogene Porter, Patricia Potts, Oifford Price. EIGHTH ROW: David Raab, Clau- dine Radeke, Rita Betty Radford, Louise Rainbolt, Geraldine Ramage, Gertrude Ramsey, Bernadine Ranney, Betty Ratzloff, Vernetta Ream, Betty Red- ern, Elizabeth Reed, NINTH ROW: Richard Reel, Dollie Rees, Joyce Rees, Betty Reeve Jeanette Rehorst, Joe Reid, Elizabeth Renfroe, Winifred Revo, Virginia Reynolds, Bonnie Rhodes, Lor- raine Rice. iV Mi OPHOiOKn FIRST ROW: Richard Hamlin Rice, Nancy Rich- ardson, BUI Richter, Virginia Richter, George Riser, Robert Ritchie, Harris Rivers, Georgina Robarts, Marilyn Roberson, Donald Roberts, Jane Roberts. SECOND ROW: Mary Florence Robert- son, Tom Robertson, Robert Robinson, Eleanor Robinson, Henrietta Robinson, Ruth Robinson, Virginia Robinson, Wendell Robinson, Mavis Ro- gers, Merle Rogers, Nanci Rogers. THIRD ROW: Robert Rogers, Jack Ross, Grant Rough, Dave Rovi e, Peggy Jean Roy, Dorothy Rubly, John Ruoff, Dorothy Jean Russell, Carl Rynerson, Hito- shi Sameshima, Evangeline Sandstrom. FOURTH ROW: Margaret Sandstrom, Mary Sato, Trudi Sayers, Robert Kenyon Scantlebury, Norma Scar- lett, Wally Schauer, Charlene Schenck, Louise C. Scheu, Florence Schlinger, Mary Schoeppe, Esther Schrock. FIFTH ROW: Harold Schulz, Jeanne Schulz, Alma Searles, Jean Scott, June Seeboldt, Lawrence E. Segur, Edward Sevadjian, Donald Shaffner, Ann Shannon, Dorothy Shap- pell, Helen Sharp. SIXTH ROW: Bo.nnie Lee Shaw, Dorothy Shaw, Elizabeth Sherman, Masako Shida, Betty Shinn, FaLeta Shiry, Olga Siebert, Rhea Jean Siegel, Marcus Silvera, Cloribel Silver- ihan. Bob G. Skinner. SEVENTH ROW: Mary i ii{ ■Ellen Slater, Ernie Small, Earlene Smillie, Betty Anne Smith, Elizabeth Smith, Geraldine Smith, Harold Smith, Marjorie Smith, Esther Smithberg, Tom Smythe, Annette Soghomonian. EIGHTH ROW: Arline Mae Soule, Ed Server, Virginia Spahr, Monty Spaulding, Vernon Spaulding, Jim Speer, Eileen Sprankle, Rose Stalder, George Stanton, Bob Stern, Cecelia Stevens. NINTH ROW: Frances Stevens, Leota Stewart, Lesta Stine, Don Stiles,, Reta Stites, Florence Stockford, Audrey Stone, Nadine Straith-Miller, Bernice Straley, Gloria Streff, Patricia Stuart. RES FIRST ROW: William Stumbo, Sumire Sugita, Mary Alice Sulahian, Phyllis Summers, Helen Suzuki, Rita Swader, Leonard Swartz, Dorothy Sweet, Nancy Switzer, Ida Tack, Carol Tallon, Wanda Talmadge SECOND ROV : Mary Tanaka, Thelma Taylor, Beth Tettenngton, Shirley Thiesen, Eileen Thomas, Newhall Thompson, Shirley Thompson, Kathleen Thomson, Laurence Thorn- burgh, Robert Thorpe, Clarence Thurber, Madge Thurston. THIRD ROW: Paul Tinkle, Marjorie Totey, Dorothy Tompkins, Etsuko Tomoyasu, Wil- Iqrk Trimm, Dorothy Tripp, Robert Troughton, arry Tsushima, Paul Tucker, Maxme Tulloss, Patricia Turner, Cora Turnbull. FOURTH ROW: Eleanor Twogood, Bob Upshaw, Ruth Vaget, Ray- nd Valois, Lee Van Buskirk, Leora Vonderpool, ry Vanell, Ann Vasqwe, Virginia Velazques, nie Vervait, Charlotte Vinten, Jean Vinten. ROW: Marian Voboril, Howard Vose, Jim- ie Wade, Milly Lou Wade, Beatrice Walker, Lorraine Walker, Florence Wall, John Walser, Donald Ward, Marian Ward, lone Warren, Eliza- beth Watkins. SIXTH ROW: Barbara Watson, Mary Watt, Darlene Weber, Stuart Weber, Alice Weinberger, George Weinzett, Marguerite Weis, William Weitzel, Shirley Welsh, Virginia West, Edgar Westdorp, Joan Weston. SEVENTH ROW: Ernest Wennerberg, Barbara Belle White, Charles Whitmore, Elizabeth Whitney, Regena Whitledge, Jack Wiegand, Jean Wigim, Elaine Wilcox, Max- ine Wilcox, Elizabeth Williams, Hamilton Wil- liams, Imogen Williams. EIGHTH ROW: June Williams, Margaret Williams, Evelyn Williamson, Kathleen Willmott, Frances Wills, Harriet Wills, Jack Wilson, Thomas Winchester, Ned Windsor, lona Gerry Wineholt, Charles Winston, Rosalie Wismar. NINTH ROW: Janet Witbracht, David Wollam, Audrey Jeanne Wood, Betty Wood, Ed- mund Woodside, Brydon Wyman, Harvey Yegge, Betty Wynkoop, Virginia Yocum, Muriel Zahler, Walter Zaiss, Milton Zavick. yiiTiflini Hiims Carl Anderson, Frank Arbuckle, Augustin Acevedo, Jack Arenz. George A rndt, James Ashton, Faith Beam. David Belilove, Carl Bennett, Barbara Blackwood, Eugene Broberg, Helen Brockway, Virgil Becker, Blanche Brown, Margaret Bacon, Bettina Ball, Arthur Barr, John Barry, Robert Basore, McClellan Bell, Evelyn Bertelson, Helen Birdsall, Virginia Blackwood, Hubert Bowman, John Brewer, AVilliara Bridgeman, Lorraine Brothers, Mary Brown, James Brown, Scott Brown, Particia Borg, Henry Branchy, Esther Burch. Margaret Burnett, Francis Bur- gere. James Bryant, George Caypless, John Colbert, Harry Campbell, Max Caplin, Helen Carlson, John Carr, Melville Carroll. Robert Casey, Joyce Cayce, Douglas Chase. James Chewning, Margaret Christy. Jose Colon, Lauren Collins. Margaret Combs, Ted Combs, Alice Connor, Donald Cooper, Stanley Cotterman, Wilbur Crater, Constance Carrigan, Bob Cissna, Eldon Cogley, Forrest Duke, Allen DeLand, Ernest Dohnke, Marian Dorland, Frances Dunham, William Donnelly, Szylard Daenitz, Edwin Davies. Murl Davis. James Dean. Joy DeLonge. Barbara Del Pino. Carlo Del Pino. Alice Dennison, Dora Dikran, William Dodson. Evelyn Doe. Jack Dunford. Harvey Dye, Calvin Edinger, Robert EUery, Glenn Embree. Henry Ernst, LaVerne Erw in, Llewellyn Fancher. Charles Farral, Herman Fink. Charles Fisher. Helen Fisher. Lawrence Fobes. Robert Francis. Eugene Friess. Gladys Frye, Kenneth Fuller. Jack Fiskem. Margaret Frownfetter. Franklyn Gardner, Betty Qeyer, Leonore Goad. George Grassmueck. Percy Granger. Charles Goepping, Robert Gage. Howard Gammell, Thomas Garrison. Paulina Griften. Howard Gillette. William Goldie. Robert Gollatz. Emily Gombotz, George Good. Vincent Graham. Lorraine Greth, Phillip Grieger. Edward Hanks. Norman Hinds. Robert Hull. Henry Hall. Addle Harris. Hiroshi Hasegwa. Fent Heim. Earle Hendricks. Jane Hendrickson. Jack Hoagland. Collin Holmes. Eugene Ingersoll. Raymond Iriye. Gilbert Jackson. William Jacobson. .Albert James. George James. Clarence Jamison. Jane Jessamine. Kenneth Johnson. John Joyce. Robert Jensen. Donald Jones, George Kaiser. Marjorie Kammann. Arthur Kenne. James Kemper. William Kimberly. Jay Kimple. Ralph Kirsch. Marian Kobayashi. June Ketchum. Eklward Knox, Stanley Korell. George Kozak. Rnlnii Kuhl. ' , Edwin Latighren. James Latsley. Wescott Lange. Melvin Leaveson. Anna Louise Leavitt. Gene Livingston. Heber Low. L- huMi 1 .11. lih.n. Gordon Lowe, Thomas Lenz, David Lynch. Richard Mazy Harold Meyer. Edgerton Miller, Warren IVriller. George Maker, Robert .M Murata Marvon Moore. William Mackie. Marjorie Maiers. Matilda Manley, Howard Marl =ns. Francis Tartin, John McClure, Bernard McConville. Ellen McFarland. Edward McKilvey. Jan. !. K. nail. Maiiii. .■M. I.on lilii Roberts. AVarren Messick. Kaye Mikuriya. Helen Miller. Douglas Mitchtll. I|c. v u.l .Mn.li.ll, lii.,| .m,,Im Moore. .John Moreau. Howard Morgridge. Anna Murphy. Satoski Nakaniuia, . ..rijia X. l.-dii. Ki.n X.I. imi Mary O ' Leary, Lester Peebles. Alene Peterman. Helen Pettit. Eleanor Ponierj , ' irKiina rte.siuii. .Iu.  -i h l ' . l Norbett Ramirez, Warren Ream. Melvin Reed, Walter Reed, Lila Renner, John Riley, Raun Robinson, Will Ruslie, William Roux, Barbara Rogers, .lohn Rathmell. Donald Read. Irving Read. Clyde Rice. Albert Sauer. ler, Ian Scollick. A ' irginia Shaw. George Shaw. Louise Small, Caryle Smith. Melvin Smith. John Snowdrn. Theodore Sowerby. George Spivey. James Starkey. Howard Steinwintei. Mai S(.i.l ly. Mil. s Si .imm la iK. 1, ' . Ian Swan, KathUin Stringer. August Schade. Ely Somerville. Jack Sorc ii- a, Alaaliua Si.jali.i . 11 :, Tom Tatt. Robert Taylor, Laurence Thompson. Donald Thorpe. Ralph Tuim.i. Mari ir. i Tmiiiiiil, i i: Tucker. Roy Vnn Orden, Martin Veir, Barbara Waafa, Monty Wadey, Paul Wallac.. lia i.l W.all. , Ka- ■AVelilier. Taber Whittlesey, Richard Wieting, Linwood Wilde, James v ' illiams, Jean Wilson, Phylli.-; WiLson. Harold Wolff, Beverly AVoods, Paulson Wopschall. Charles Wuest. Douglas Whitfield. Miriam Wolff. Myneer Walker. Charles Ward, Merrie K Wheeler, Ervin Wright, Wayne Wylie, Logan Yount, Murray Zimmerman, Frank Zwart. ■Shirley Martin, Graham . U Cride, . Shirlie McPhree, George Mc- s. Dorothy Motgomery, Robert iolart Neville, Raymond Olson, ' . Betty Peterson Wendell Hope, am Rogers, Jim Rostron, Sheila Bernard Schemmer, Dale i chuy- .Tames Soetens, Myron Soetens. . ' V Streeter. Betty Swain. Har- I . Bob Spear. Bob Stapleton. ika, Mildreth Tinkham. Frank Ward. Alva Warren. Edward William Winn. Myrna Wohlers. .a ,K. ymiiflin n phi Bin Paul Adams. William Allen. Bill Arnett, Jack Aronson. Eleanor Achey. (iearld . dams. Rot Andi-ison. Felix Alverez. Herbert Alder. Lonia Aldridge. Dorothy Andrews. Nash Anderson, Calvin Bates. Jack Beene. AVilliam Bellonn, Harrison Bemis. Cecil Bever. Clayton Bevi.s Walter Hier lf, v.iUvi n Brp yn Eva Brue_rkner. Frank B rundage. John Burch. Faye Bnrke, J Bartlett. gtaxine BensoiQ Virginia Berg. Frank Bertholet. Una ah Anderson. Alfred Ansell Elwood William Arthur, William Barhite. , Thomas Billups. Nicholas Bosch. I , rr Baker. Clay Barton. Warren Douglas Black, Willis Black, ni.tt. All. rt Blanohard, Lu- i-lai.],, Wali.r Clubb, Willis ' lark. Sam Coleman, John i.n Cuene, J. D. Coffman oil Davidson, Hill. abert Garrison, William I. Mary Goodloe, Anne man, Clara Green, Glenn Adrienne Heggen. Edwin jntFore. KohertTTarlow. JU--_ Tom Blake, Bjorn Bolin. Leland Boyer. George Brewer. Doris Brittain, Marian Butler clan Bruner. David Buckingham. Mary Bossernian. Valene Campbell, Esther Carriker, w 1 Coleman. Hildegarde Campbell. Gerald Capucio. Marjorie Carter. Norman Casserly, Elizal Crawford. Charles Creek. Richard Cale. Gene Cartwright. Doris Carlson, Walter Chamberl Robert Colbert, George Coyle, Paul Chase, Mary Cobb, Arnold Cohen, Bernice Collins, Ra Leslie Davis, Robert Davis. Nina Deck. Hanna h Diamond. Peggy Dorn, Wilma Dorn. John Downey. Burton Duke. Fred Dugan, William Dutro Robert Dalzell. Henry Datter. Diane Dean. David Dewey. Samuel Donovan. Maurice Down. Charles Dubs. William Dubs, James Duncan. Clarence Dunham. Donald Dunning. Samuel Dalzell. Mary DeTemple. Howard Dill. Jack Douglas. William Dobschutz. Jeanne Eppard. Daniel Eto, Frank Evans. Georgia Evergreen, Margaret Eck, Sibley Edmiston. Lorraine Ehrhardt. William Evans. Elizabeth Ewing. Frances Ed- wards. Mildred Eidemiller. Frank Elliott. Jack Emmerson. Thelma Epp. Alfred Espinosa. Arthur Eikenberry, Virginia Eller. Ivan Essayan. Don Eusey ' . Dorothy Ford. Walter Ford. Willis Fallis. Edward Farren. Willard Ferguson, Helen Faeh, Suzanne Farnum, Edward Fehrensen, Ann- ette Findeisen. Gloria FoUand, Adrian Gallegos, Richard Qoddard, Francis Graham. Adolph Garcia, James Game Garrison, Phillip Garwood, Edward Gaul, William Geiger, Ralph Getzin, George Gilling, Haig Giridlian, Rel,. 11 ( Graham. Mary Graham, Portia Greene, Emil Greiveldinger. Jack Grimshaw. Ralph Gaebel, Frank Golden. A ali. i 1 Griffith, ' Delia Grace. Joe Hayashi. James Heard. James Helman. Teiko Hemma. Phillip Harrison. Donald ll.aitM Henderson. Felisia Hernandez. Donald Hollar. Frank Holmes. Mary Hookham. Weston Hall. Betty Hanes. JIary Harold. Warren Harrel, George Harsch. Mary Hearte. Harry Hitchcock. Alfred Hocker. Wesley Hollinger. Walter Hollywood. Hal Holway. Donald Hoover. Patricia Hop.s. AVilliani Hort ' on. Robert Harold. Dean Hauke. Robert Heublein. Vernita Hildebrand. George Hoffman. Richard Home. Margaret Hoopes. John Jacobs. Lloyd Jesseman. Forrest Johnson, Gerard Johnson, Sara Johnson, Charles Johnson. Edward John.son, Sylvia Johnson, William John son. Abbot Jones. Dan Jordan, Gladys Jensen. Aden Jones. Ben Ito. Wiliam Keo-samamian. James Kane. Richard Keller, Gilbert Kenney, Jess Kitchens, Grace Kobbe, Virginia Kungo, Yoshiye Kawaguchi. William Kelly. Everett Kelly. Robert Kidd. Robert Kirst. Estella Kurtz. Alice- anne Kennedy, Rose Koep. Carl Long, Helen Lake, Elaine Landgrigan, Keith Landrigan, Deana Lang, Gearald Leahy, Ernest Leo, Peggy Lewis, Arthur Loreiizini. Robert Lamprecht, Frances Langstaff, Thomas Larter, Rey L.Ecluse. Robert Lehmann, Warner Leinweper, Barbara Lindsay, Roy Lunholm, Flora Lusk. June Land, Ted Liepman, Steve Malin, Laurence Martens, Beulah Matsuhara, Charles Matteson, Victor MeCarter, Barbara McCasIand, Lee McNutt, Peggy Miller Keith Mitchell. Robert Morgan, Wayne Morrison, Darrell Morse, Leila Mack. Elizabeth Magatagan. Bruce Mallery. King Mar-sh. Richard Martin. Ayako Matsumoto. Dick Maynard. George Mc Clintock, Ralph Mc Guire. Marjorie Melin. Louis Melzer. William Michael. Madalynne Miles. Richard Miller. Myriam Mitchell. James Mitsumori. Isabel Moffat. Oscar Moore. Corray Morgan, Thomas Morrison, Barbara Mueller, Rodney Munson, Alice Munushian, Amelia Madera, Edward Martin, Robert Mather, iwary Matticks, Jack Mc Galium, Warren Mc Combs. Robert Mc Mahan. Robert J. Mc Mahon. Donald Mead. John Montgomery. Robert Innlooth, Donald Morrison. Kathryn Morrison. Flora Morsell. Ruth Mosher. Robert Mo.ss, Joseph Mulvihill, Alice Munger, Audrey Murphy, Williaia : lavs, Kenneth McMillen. Miles Miller. Donald Mitchel. Eugene Morgan. Thomos Mowe. Ronald Newman. Mammie Nicolpulos. Har- ol.i X. w. ..In. r. Edward Nemtzow. Edward Newton. Grace Nichols. Helen Nomura. Mary Nomura. John Northrop. Katherine Naylor. Yutaka Oda. Gtil,, ri M| ,ai. Lester O ' Gara. Mary Oakley, Joe O ' Leary. Janet Pownall. Eloise Pyle. Peter Pappas. Ralph Parkes. Wesley Parr. Julius Pas- si 1. .11. Air mia Payne. Grayce Peters. James Phillips. Modesto PiceIla..Tohn Packard. Edward Polhemus. Donald Powell, Elda Paulson, Robert I ' riiii, Jewell Plummer, Rudolph, Potenza, James Quinn, Wilbur Reeder Sophie Rice, Helen Richards, Keith Robbins, Evelyn Roberts, Corinne l iralai. Richard Redington, CJerald Riker. Robert Robbins. Warren Rogers Andrew Rolie. Charles Rook. James Rose. Jean Rypinski. James i;..s. Elvalyn Reynolds. Ethel Rice. Audrey Rodriquez. Thomas ivogers. Arlene Ross. Henry Rankin. Wilbur. Reitz, Robert Sanders. William Scriaefer. Roy Schmidt, Nancy Simon, Helda Solem, Ruth Sommerville, Rodney Sturtevant, AVilbur Sackett, James Scott, Hubert Shii.man. Roscoe Shrader. Willard Shuler. Margaret Simmons. James Smith. O. K. Sommars. Shiyo Suzuki. Clarence Cwanson. Donald Sweet, Sanford Sawyer. Robert Sayers, Elda Saylor, Stanley Scarborough, Leonard Scharer, .Tames Schneider. Paul Schneider. Thuel Schuhart. Rob- ert Schweitzer. Harold Sender. Robert Shaver. Robert Shoemaker. Ray Shultz. Howard Siege!. Mortimer Simpson. Ruth Siren, Paul Sleeth, Charles Smiley, Dale Smith, Oreta Smith, John Smithson, John Snider, Richard Sommerville, Robert Staib, Francis Stanch, Jack Stecker. Jack Steller, Bradley Stewart, Harold Stewart, Emory Stone, John Street, Dorothea Streib, Richard Strelsky, Calvin Swallow, Richard Swanson, Janet Swift, Norma Szel, George Safonov, Richard Schell, William Smith, Mildred Staples, Loren Todd, Norma Todd, Edward Tay- lor. Erving Taylor. Edward Thayer. Jimmie Thomas, Lorna Thomas. Dick Thurber. Gus Tilbury. Robert Tilden. Don Tobias. John Tooker, Craig Tyler. Robert Tyner. Thomas Tierney, Grace Tsugiyama, Thomas Tullius, Thomas Turnbull. Patricia Turner, Oscar Terrell, Ward Theisen, Paul Thiene, Frank Towner, Elizabeth Ulmer, Eugene Van Camp, Fred Visser. Ruth Van ijnn.l Vincenti Donald Warnock. Dan WTiistler. Bette Wight. Ruth Woodward. Rosalie Wismar, Leslie AAajnu... H Shelby Wallis. Robert Walter. Leonora Warden, Jack Washburn. Robert Wear. Dwight Webber. Mai y W. I nier. Howard Willis, Curtis Wilson, Leon Wilson, Lucille Winfrey. Larry Winne, Seena Wopschall, Kath.-rin erine Wallace, Richard Warren, Wayne Westling, Lyle Williams, Floyd Wilson, Richard Woodard. John Y ' oungkrin. Virginia Yelland. William Young. Ralph Zemke. . Robert van der Veen. Carole mlon Waddell. Pi-ancis Walker. Inr. Ivan Wheeler. Mary Whit- Worley. .Tohn Wachner. Kath- eager. Fred Yoshimoto. Frank uin HBHi yyyTH Faythe Friday. Brant Gard, Sidney Hatch. Howard Hani lli. Wilbur Jacobs. Charles Hogle. Harold Li ndmark. Marion MacDonaid, David Mann. Phil Newmyer. Margaret O ' Connor, Faith Searle, Shirlie Shaffer, Catherine Smith, Marvin Telling. Arline W ' ashbm-n. Howard Weakley. .lames Allen. Hygop Altunian. Harold Butler. Evelyn Chase. John M. Clark. Marjorie Ein. Thomas Fisher. Adeline Maeha (o, David Orswell. Otis Williams. Donald Wright. A i p n U F E UillVllUl) LllL Famed for its annual production of Rose Queen candidates, Pasadena ' s Campus is a haven for the candid camera fiend. Crazy photos from even crazier angles, uncomplimentary shots of people eat- ing, shouting, jitterbugging — nothing is sacred before the eye of the camera. PIGSKIN HIGHLIGHTS: Rose Bowl Crowds, Peppy Song Leaders, Peppier Yell Kings, Homecoming Parade, and the Lancer spon- sored Whiskerino Contest. I finKii py DEifli III The sophistocate, Joe College and the average man on the campus — all surrender to the urge to yell, and so we have those who yell loudest and longest — namely the Yell Kings, and those who just yell. Adding to the spirit and uproar we have five Effervescent Song Leaders, all responsible for the pep in the pep commision. Summing up the situation we have en- thusiasm to be topped by none. So with that we give you some of the gridiron glimpses. U ki UlU Above: QUEEN BARBARA DOUGALL surrounded by her Court of Princesses, who are lelt to right: PEGGY LYNN INGHAM, GLADYS HADLEY, BERNICE MONGREIG, ELEANOR WENNERBERG, ROBERTA MAE SCOTT, PEGGY LOU ANDERSON. Below: Queen Candidates; The Queen ' s Float; The Royal Ball. Each December a bevy of beautiful girls parade before judges, and each Decem- ber one girl out of the 3,000 hopefuls is overnight made the most photographed and talked about coed in the nation — Her Majesty, Queen of the Rose Tournament. Literally covered with flowers, the fairest of PJC becomes Queen for a Day. Semi-annual round-up of all activity minded individuals is Pal Day, that day of days when the befuddled, disheveled and slightly awed Frosh becomes formally initiated into the ranks. Introductions, instructions and the guidance of a Pal give way next day to the endless lines of Registration and the waiting, waiting The swing and sway, the exercise and exhaus lar and noble pastimes at jaysee. Not only quote space for perpetration of certain dance togethers, everyone sees everyone, gasps abo other equally popular form of relaxation — drin spirit of the dance as caught by the camera, fror ( nuns n of the dance form one of the most popu- )es the terpsichorean parlor offer ade- 3ps, but it is a mecca for informal get who is with whom, and indulges in an- ig coca-cola. Here then we have the Deginning to end, including intermission. h i i; n • puns uuja lUU c::i ' :f ( O . - ' -T £ ff -- :S 7ti .. Six weeks of teas, luncheons, stags, theatres, and open meetings offer the rushee the most per- plexing month and a half of sheer torture in his life. Finally, after endless sleepless nights spent in making up his mind, he accepts the bid, is swept away to the Acceptance Dinner and then . . . if his back doesn ' t give out or his spirit weaken, after weeks of pledging he becomes a member. But not until he has carried hundreds of books, accumulated millions of black marks, been a laugh- ing stock for the actives. Then, the awaited day, the formal, the pin, the mystic words, and the approving glance of the brothers or sisters, the oath to really let next semesters pledges ' have it. ' r v n I D n i I 1 n R     HE WHK 11 k Ui everyone treks gaily off for the most madcap and most famously talked about week in the year — seven days at Balboa. Each Easter a highly excited female contingent buys out Pasadena stores, stuffs grips with beach and play outfits designed to dazzle the most dapper man — about — Balboa. Here everyone forgets everything, lolls peacefully on Bal- boa ' s golden sands, gets tan, peels, dances at the Rendezvous, makes dates he can never keep, and returns exhausted from a week of Vacation. ' But even the return does not stop the memory, for Easter week is an Institution, and provides a topic of conversa- tion until next year when everyone again heads beachward for the town which has been for ' lo these many years, the by-word of the restrictives, a stamping ground for alums. p n II R A i 1 Jalopies, assemblies, people who walk in the rain, politics, and the every day antics of the multitude — all formulate the pattern of the average coUegianne ' s life, but somehow we couldn ' t classify them under any one title and so the above photos are a cross section of life on the campus — The Panorama. Here we have a little bit of everything — anything — lots of something — and maybe nothing. I I 1 H H: I i First row. left to right: ARCH HAYWARD. JR., Photo Montages and Campus Personalities; PETER GEDDES. JR.. Typographer; DAN TAYLOR, Photo Engravers. Inc.; WAYNE L. HODGES, Advisor. Second row: HARRY McQUAID, Blake, Moffit and Towne, Paper; WILLIAM GEORGE, San Pas- qual Press, Binding and Covers; NED STIRLING, Business Printers. Inc., Division Pages; L. W. GENTRY, Howlett Studios Inc., Group and Por- trait Photography. HI: WILLIAM DITTMAR, Pressman; MISS KATHERINE NOVAK, ANDREW SHIPOV, Howlett Studios, Inc.; JOHN F. TAYLOR, FRANK G. SCOTT, JACK TAYLOR, JOHN CLARK, Photo Engravers, Inc.; MARGARET BA- CON, Restrictive Club pin drawings; EARL BAIRD, and West Campus photo classes; CATHERINE J. ROBBINS, and the Board of Representa- tives, for financial support of the 1939 Campus.
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