Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA)

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 316

 

Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 316 of the 1942 volume:

l X ' JUC tOlii if .jCSy 1 0 11 h. A C y - ' f ' p th- ! f y Y 6 ; X. ' •■A i; . I am fus I )tf2 (makL {db of julaooxu (S mK -t« JOHN WATERHOUSE EDITOR IN CHIEF DAVID DAVIS ASSOCIATE EDITOR BILL McDONOUGH ART DIRECTOR ROBERT COCKLE BUSINESS MANAGER facult j faces X.elancl flZcHuL ' 1 better known as Mac to the 4,000 male students of PJC, has long held a unique position among the faculty. Augmenting his official jobs, such as swimming coach and former head of the Golden Gloves Tournaments, with sound counselor advice, he has gained the unofficial title of Assistant Dean of Men. He went to Baker with CAA boys. Odd Lj. Oakc) has handled the photography department on the West Campus for years. Over a long period of time he has seen it grow from a tiny shack with a handful of students to one of the most progressive and best equipped departments of the school. Mr. Baird is a recognized national authority on dark-room work and its chemistry. He is at present teaching a night class at Art Center. U ' i. j aptcsc)oii tCcPXCiSC O I returned to his Alma Mater three years ago to be- y V come Chairman of PJC ' s Social Science Department. In that time he has succeeded in developing an outstanding section of the school. Acting as teacher, counselor and friend to his thousands of students, Dr. Longsdorf has become a popular figure on the campus. He is playing a large part m PJC ' s defense preparations. ?72.«.« P, 00 y one of the youngest and most popular teachers in renowned business department, left his West Campus classes February to serve in the U. S. Army. A graduate of USC, he brought with him the latest teaching devices. His pleasing personality and ever ready wit kept his classes constantly filled. One of his most interesting classes was built around the subject of consumer education. fieien flun i has long been a favorite of art students at PJC. Her crisp patter and ever-present smile keep her classes filled to over-flowing. She handles the float designs every year for the Tournament of Roses. Even though the 1942 Parade was just a dream, she looks forward to the day when the thoughts of PJC students will again turn to the creation and design of the floats of beauty. C ( tc(Vt aH Ll ' rrt-wXCrXClw Van has succeeded in developing the • Geology Department of PJC into one of the most interesting and active sections of the school. Through his energetic teaching and tireless cooperation he has instilled his interest in the earth into minds of many of the students. At present he is busy establishing course in prospecting for National Defense. U ' l. be M.aubeiilel. To say that Dr. de Laubenfels is one of the most popular teachers in the Junior Col- lege would be a gross understatement. His lecture and lab classes are always filled long before registration day. Through his work as advisor of the Host Club he comes in contact with a majority of the student body and is present at many of the club ' s parties. C ecil (JL. Hotie IS playing an ever increasing role in defense training efforts at PJC. As instructor of the Smith-Hughes course in automotive mechanics he turns out thirty to thirty-five highly trained mechanics every semester. Since the course runs four hours daily and lasts for two years, Mr. Potter is kept more than busy. He visualizes the day when mechanics will be full-fledged technicians. i 1 i fi I 1 ■Jii B Llc)minishaiicH I facuii V U ' L. jfolivi w. rtawescH i hlndbai Rufus Mead James P. O ' Mara D, cans Audre L. Stong Catherine Robbins John A. Anderson Work ol PJC ' s seven Deans is constant and indispensible. As Dean of Men, Audre L. Stong plays a large role in the many activities carried on by the AMS. Catherine Robbins, on the East Campus, and Olive Kelso, on the West, keep the affairs of the AWS running smoothly. Their offices are constantly filled with girls who come for advice, help, or just a friendly chat. Dean of Records John A. Anderson, besides his regular duties, is the friend and counselor of all those participating in extra-curricular activities. Ida E. Howes and Archie Turrell, as Dean and Associate Dean of Guidance respectively, are constantly behind the scenes working in nearly every phase of PJC life. As Curriculum Coordinator, Glenn L. Lembke is in direct charge of courses, old and new, at Pasadena Junior College. Ida E. HaweG Archie Turrell Glenn L. Lembke Olive Kelso dnin emo ium David W. Reidy l liHcipal s LyouHcd Defense Committee, left to right: Norman Jarvis, Stuart Fitch, Carol Harford, Ed Davis, Dan Meub, Nicky Curren, John Allen. Additional member: Larry Wallace. First row: Betye Monell, Marylee Gilloon, Kathryn Alser (secre- tary), Margie Alser (chairman, first semester), Betty Bloom, Carol Harford, Margaret Theiss. Second row: Mabel P. Ashley, Hedley J. Reeder, James M. Linley, Clinton O. Bay, Paul S. Flahive, Linn W. Hattersley, Dorothy E. Motsinger (second semester chairman). tuaeni JoOe nmeni I tiulent ijod V Robert Heublein (Semester I) Ernest Raymond Davis (Semester II) l ieAnU Ijoa c) Of Kepiesentatioes First row, left to right: Kay Beasley, Associate AWS Pres. II (WC); Ernie Blumberg, Asso- ciate ASB Pres. II (EC); Gayne Burke, Associate AMS Pres. I (WC), Rep. at Large II; Nicky Curren, Rep. at Large I; Edward P. Davis, Associate ASB Pres. I (EC); Marie DuShane, Clerk oi Board II; Dorothy Goertz, Rep. at Large I. Second row: Bob Harrison, Pres. Class of ' 44, Rep. at Large II; Dale Hiestand, AMS Pres. I; Bill Humphrey, Senior Class Pres. II; Gloria Johnson, Rep. at Large I; Vmnie Heublein, Pres. Class of ' 45; Peggy King, Rep. at Large II; Jim McCaffrey, Junior Class Pres. I; Third row: Marjorie McChesney, Associate AWS Pres. I (WC); Betye Monell, Clerk of Board I; Jim Nash, Rep. at Large I, Soph Class Pres. II; Bob Perkins, Junior Class Pres. II; Marilyn Phillips, Rep. at Large II; Sue Saunders AWS Pres. I; Louis Saxby, Soph Class Pres. I, AMS Pres. II. Fourth row: Sei Shoda, Rep ' at Large I; BUI Simmons, Associate ASB Pres. II (WC); Betty Jean Schneider, AWS Pres. II; Hilly Stong, Rep. at Large II; Larry Wallace, Associate AMS Pres. II; George Zillgitt, Senior Class Pres. I; Bob Heublein, ASB Pres. I. Additional members: Charles Menning, ' Frosh Class Pres. I; Bob Glasgow, Associate ASB Pres. I (WC); Ernest Raymond Davis, Rep! at Large I; Marjorie Evans, Rep. at Large I; Mitsi Chapman, Rep. at L a r g e II; Sig Sand- strom, Rep. at Large II; Bob Fletcher, Pres. Class of ' 46. Nash Makes Resolution to First Semester Board tuc)eHi ouhi y ' rfc44UiN$ First row, left to right: Earl Favor, Attorney General; Wallace Scott, Minor Court Justice II; Tom Cozzens, Student Prosecutor 1; Don Barry, Minor Court Justice I, Superior Court Justice II; Bill Humphrey, Minor Court Justice I. Second row: Norman Kauff- man, Student Prosecutor II; Charlie Doehier, Deputy Prosecutor I; Suzanne Chute, Minor Court Justice II; Dick Fox, Minor Court Justice I; Don Logan, Deputy Prosecutor 11. Uat(W I ' mM Mr HI 4.- r. i First row, left to right: Jackie Berry, Public Health 11 (WC); Harold Bosaki, Men ' s Athletics II (EC); Dick Busik, Men ' s Athletics I (WC); Mitsi Chapman, Notifications 1 (WC); Francis Dahm, Women ' s Athletics II (EC); Jeanne De Garmo. Clerk of Cabinet I; Gladys Delancy, Organizations II (WC); Jim Eley, Activity Co- ordinator I and II. Second row: Stuart Fitch, Elections Commissioner (E); Marilee Gilloon, Notifications II (EC); Carol Harford, Oral Arts I and II (EC); Jean Hartman, Organizations I (WC); Jack Hassinger, Oral Arts I (WC); Bettv Hetherington, Social Affairs I and II (WC); Cloyde Howard, Activities I (EC) Betty Jo Hyatt, Public Health I (EC). Third row: Madelyn Pyle, Records II (WC); Dorothy Porter. Social Affairs II, Organizations I (EC); Mary Ellen Murchison, Activities II; Evelyn Morick, Women ' s Athletics I (EC) Gwen Morgan, Music I and II (WC); Jean Miller, Handbook Editor I; Lois Link, Clerk of Cabinet II; Dell Hunger- ford, Pep Commissioner I (EC). Fourth row: Joe Rensch, Athletic Publicity II (EC); Glenn Ri ley, Public Relations II (EC); Mildred Rodstrom, Public Health I (WC); Ruth Rodstrom, Public Health I (WC); Eva Ross- bach, Social Affairs I (EC); Audre Sumrall, Oral Arts II (WC); Margaret Theis, Music I and II (EC); Bob Thompson, Men ' s Athletics I (EC). Fifth row: Norbert Verbeck; Chronicle Editor II (EC); Lore Voseipka; Organizations II (EC); John T. Waterhouse, Campus Editor (EC); Siebert Weissman, Finance I and II; Jane Webster, Records II (EC); Bob Weisenberg, Elections Commissioner II (WC); Noel Young, Editor Huddle I (EC); Olga Znojil, Women ' s Athletics I and II (WC). First row, left to right: Dick Fox. Second rov : John Moreland, Steve Tiberg, BUI Krause Lewis Saxby (President II), Larry Wallace, Bill Price. Third row: Doug B y 1 e s, Eugene Parker, Louis Falconi. Fourth row: Bob Weisenberg, Harold Bosacki, Jim Robinson, Joe Rensch. Additional members: Dale Hiestand (President I). Q. m. . First semester AMS activities were handled by Dale Hiestand, who strove for better representation for the men students. The stag, under his supervision, was held at Tournament Park, featuring eats and enter- tainment. Lewis Saxby, president second semester, gave PJC male students one of the most unusual stags ever held.. Presented in the East Campus auditorium, the show A Night In Harlem, featured all colored entertainment. Acts included in the show were a small blues band, George Brown and his orchestra, jitterbug dancers, t w o chocolate shakes, and a bass rendition of Old Man River. Big chalk marks on blackboard tell of coming Stag. Behind-the-scene gab-fest results in action. Interested spectators mug for camera Something new in a Fashion Show — and pipe the sailor with the baloon in the first row, on the ground floor to the right 1 1 1 V 1 t I w JL First row, left to right; Margie McChesney, Tillie Munushian, Kay Beasley (President, W. C.) Betty ' Schneider (President, E. C, second semester), Claire Carter, Jean Patterson, Mary Nakahiro, Anne Mallonee, Helen Davis. Second row: Peggy Maclagan, Ruth Champlam, Margie Hawgood, Bessie Berg, Esther Owens, Mary Lou G u 1 a c k, Sadie Hawkins, Florence Findlay, Betty Musselman, Beth Johnson. Third row: Lorraine Kings- ley, Bernice Nadey, Sue Saunders (President, E.C., first semester), Laura-Lee Voseipka, Dorothy Wylie, Margaret Baker, Jean Horton, Betty May Rinehardt, Betty Johnson, Eloise Paulus. Fourth row: Mary Ellen Hogan, Dorothy Porter, Ruth Smart, Shirlee Hettman, Betty Ogura, Mary Faith Martin, Esther Bemmer, Anne Kammsky, Britta Sundberg. a w. . Sue Saunders, AWS Prexy, first semester, kept the girls busy with such events as the Coed Party, Club Tea held at the Vista del Arroyo and Coffee Hours. The Backwards Dance, under her jurisdiction was held with much success at the Civic. AWS officials had a two-day conference at the Vista, discussing problems and plans. Second semester ' s president, Betty Schneider, also had a busy schedule, with the Mother-Daughter Banquet, a Coed Party, featuring a fashion show and a coffee hour for graduating high school seniors. enici K cuHcil % First row: Bill Humphrey (Prexy), Mary J. Ritner, Jack Simison (Vice President), Seibert Weissman, Kay Gibbs, Bob Weisne- barg, Betty Hetherington, Glenn Riley, Joe Rensch, Ed Roeth. Second row: Del Hungerford, Harold Bosaki, Barbara Parsons, Vera Evelin, Tom Baxter, Cloyde H o w ar d , Wynana Burnett. Third row; Laura-Lee Voseipka, Pat Friend, Claire Carter, Mar- garet Snyder, Betty Arthur, Sarah Jayne Kress. Fourth row: Celeste Clauser, Roberta Eager, Ruth McBurney, Julienne Hall, Doris Burns, Rufus Blake, Jack Weller, Alton Pryor, Jim Sanford, Jim Redding, Norbert Verbeck. J-unloh. K cuHcil Left to right: Bob Perkins (President), Betty Jo Adams, Bettye Monell, Beverly Lynn, Helen Chisholm, Roger Wood, Ted Steell, Lois Link. •« ? m cpkcmCie k ouhcII h First row, left to right: Jean McCune, Lewis Saxby (President I), Jim Nash (President II), Mary Faith Martin. Second row; Eloise Paulas, Betty Mae Rinehart, Betty Knight, Ruth Ison, Esther Brem- mer. Third row: Al Chapman, Jack Hughston, Dave Kilmer, Don Reed, Clair Kirk, Don Henney. fiCi U K ouncd First row, left to right: Jane Webster, Jeanne Boone, Beverly Thompson, Beth Dushane, Betty Johnson. Second row: Nancy Veale, Jean Woods, Nelda Erichsen, Jean Hawkins, Barbara King, Nadine Ostlund. Third row: Richard Petterson (advisor), Kenneth Hiestand, Hilly Stong, Russ Cramer, Cliit Sharp. Fourth row: Duke Cox, Dave Monsen, Vincent Heublein (President) Jim Herndon, Jack Weigand (Vice-President). J Ganlzcdions k ono a xi Cu IJ -I ' t iHiy. i First row, left to right: Jeanette Beinhart, Sue Sanders, Betty Schneider, Dick Lord, War- ren Allen, Kay Beasley, Evelyn Morick, Evangeliene Sandstrom. Second row: Joe Bosch, Iim Eley, Robert Walter, Bill Humphrey, Eugene Ober, Cloyde Howard, Dale Hiestand, Tamio Fujimoto, Dick Fox. Third row: Ernie Blumberg, Larry Wallace, Noel Young, Bill Simmons, Jack Weller, Dell Hungerford, Dave Davis, Bob Heubem, N o r b e r t Verbeck, George Zillgit. Ifiad aixb Ui CLCiCi IS the highest honor obtainable at PJC. Its J members must pass rigid qualifications, which include at least three semesters ot outstanding service to the school. New mem- bers are inducted at the last assembly of each semester m an impressive tapping cere- mony, such as the one pictured below. Presidents were Warren Allen (1) and Dick Lord (II). Dr. Harbeson congratulates OMD tapees on East Campus Qlt lta iCaffa h M au First row, left to right: Lorraine Kmgsley, Nora Belle Sheppard, Pauline Layher, Mrs. Lorrayne E. Calkins (advisor), Anne McKesson (President), Martha Girvan, Madalynne Smith. Second row: Helen McFarlond, Margaret Hall, Betty Lou Potts, Katharine Stew- art, Lois Brooks, Marilyn Huddy, Virginia Babbitt, Eunice Handy, Lois Shannon. Qlfka Kapfa li Celt national secretarial sorority, has for its members the cream of the West Campus school of business. One of the organization ' s many functions is to provide secretarial work for worthy causes, whether on campus or within the community. Above, the girls are pictured efficiently running Leland Pryor ' s office while the boss is out to lunch. Left to right: Spencer Crilly, Norbert Verbeck, Noel Young, David Davis, John Waterhouse. Additional members; Larry Casey, Bill Anthony, John Allen, Wilson Hole, Margaret Utz, Lois McNab, Sylvia Gunnarson, James Marugg, Bill McDonough, Dorothy Hanson, Kieth Savage. I eia Plii G CcPV%PVtCi national honorary journalistic fraternity, re- f vived this year with new members and Larry Casey as president. Members of the fraternity distinguished themselves in compe- tition at University of California convention by winning two of three possible first places,, and one second place. Above picture was snapped at a recent informal meeting of club. First row, left to right: Nancy Gillies, Marian Sprott, Kay Gibbs, Rachel Reid, Cloyde Howard. Second row: Phil Alexander, Tom Baxter, Lindsay Workman, David Browne I « Delta A; 0, PW ClCl ' honorary dramatics fraternity, presented its y annual play May 1 before an appreciative audience. Heading the cast of Mr. Pim Passes By were Cloyde Howard and Eleanor Prosser, with Lindsay Workman in the title role. Others in the cast included Marion Sprott, Tom Baxter, Rachel Reid and Vera Evelm. Miss Elizabeth Keppie, advisor, was director. First row, left to right: Marlene Martin, Barbara Schuebel, Betty Bloom (President II), Carol Harford, Marquis Evans, Sue Saunders. Second row: Ernie Blumberg (President I) Mary Moody, Don Barry, Jean Campbell, John T. Waterhouse. Pki Rl Pi national honorary forensics fraternity, vv ' as organized at PJC to promote inter-school debate, in the fields of oratory, extemporaneous, and after-dinner speaking. Bill Humphrey brought back a first- place tie from the National Contest held in Missouri last April, when six outstanding stu- dents in field of Oral Arts journeyed back to represent PJC. Adviser is Hedley G. Reeder First row, left to right: Bill McDonough, Marian Sprott, Kay Gibbs (President II), Grace Nord, Charlotte Martin. Second row: Lindsay Workman, Tom Baxter (President 11), Phil Alexander, Harry Chamberlain, Cloyde Howard. lUa RLc Pi honorary radio fraternity, has in the past written and produced several series of shows, one of which was broadcast over Mutual-Don Lee network. They have also cooperated in producing shows for the Red Cross and Pasadena Preferred. The club generally utilizes the facili- ties of Pasadena ' s two radio stations, KPPC and KPAS, for their dramatizations over the air. First row, left to right; Jeanette Bemhauer, Joe Bosch (President II), Barbara Webb (Presi- dent I), Helen B. Hunt (advisor), BUI McDonough, Shizuko Nakamura, Shirley Schaetzel. Second row: Inez Carver, Betty H. James, Betty Day, Betty Hayes, Phyllis Spurgeon, Mar- yellm Kates, Margaret Walters. Third row: Millard Carpenter, Albert Mason, Edward Crandall Norton, Charles David Kratka, Mr. Richard Petterson (honorary member), Ken- neth Martin, Joseph Eto. jLfiiia Jamma HUi honorary art fraternity, is primarily a service organization, and centers its ac- tivities around a program of assistance to civic and campus groups. Occasionally, Zeta exhibits the work of its members in the third floor art gallery. Many graduate members of the organization have gained fame and fortune in the fields of commercial and fine arts. First row, left to right: George Formar, Doris Martens, Lois Brooks, Suzanne Chute (Pres- ident I), Lorrayne Calkins (advisor). Second row: Robert Br y do If (President II), Kay Beasley, Shirley Gray, Artie Lee Page, Mildred Welborn (advisor), Ted Felbeck. Addi- tional members: Frank Price, Alysonne Hales, Wilma Erickson, Shirley Duckworth, Nicky Curran, Gloria Anderson. QifLa § ma CciVlPPlCt - KLtWlii national upper division scholar- f J ship society, is open to all students who can make 32 grade points a semester. Permanent A.G.S. membership, highest PJC scholastic honor, is awarded to graduates who have held temporary membership for three upper division semesters. Members here are pictured at their usual pastime. First row, left to right: Helen Sopp, Eloise Paulus, Mary Faith Martin, Dons Amlm, Sec- ond row: George Morzov, Hilly Stong, Bill Knauss, Steve Weller, Jr. e.c.f. California Scholarship Federation, requires 44 grade points or all A ' s a semester for membership. Permanent membership in C. S. F. is gained by temporary membership for three lower-division semesters and elec- tion by a faculty committee. Shown above are the club officers at one of the occasional dinner-meetings. Pins are awarded at a semi-annual dinner early in each semester. Zye oi choice £ ance First row, left to right: Dale Hiestand (President II), Steve Waller, Sei Shoda, Bob Weisen- berg, Alton Pryor, Larry Wallace, Louis Murillo, Tamio Fujimoto, Dick Fox (President West Campus). Second row: Lewis Saxby, Bill Humphrey, Harold Bosacki, Warren Swanson, Norm Stanger, Jack Simison, Ed Montgomery, Cranston Montgomery, Dick Ransom. Third row: Joe Rensch, Norbert Verbeck, Don Klopfenstien, S e i b e r t Weissman, Lee Writer, Armor Killingsworth, Bob Thompson, R. W. Blake Jr., John T. Waterhouse. Fourth row: Dell Hungerford, Bob Ford, Jack Riddle, Ed Roeth, Harvey Yegge, Calvm Y e g g e , Leo Dunavan, Kenneth Haley. Fifth row: Ernest Raymond Davis, Frank Clement, Bob Per- kins, Jack Reynolds, Stuart Fitch, Jim Sanford, Bob Harrison. Additional members: Ernie Blumberg (President 1), Jim Nash, Bob Heublem, George Zillgitt, Noel Young. . -• ' --y - ----- ' - ---.- ... S ' i ifaws First row, left to right: Bernice Naley, Jean Miller, Dorothy Ikeda, Shizuko Nakamura, Marie Dushane, Evelyn Morick, Madelyn Pyle, Mildred Rodstrom, Nicky Curren, Margie Mc- Chesney. Second row: Lorraine Kingsley, Betty Httherington, Marie Lambert, Peggy Maclagan, Myra Collette, Suzanne Chute (President I), Betty Schneider, Erma Myers, Mary Ellen Dahm. Third row: Jeanne Adams, Jeanette Adams, Joan Gladstone, Marylee Gilloon, Jeanne DeGarmo, Margie Evans, Betty Smith, Frances Dahm, Lucille Nutt. Fourth row: Virginia Rooke, Carol Damrin, Celeste Clauser, Laura-Lee Voseipka, Margie Clark, Lucille Harrell, Kay Beasley, Shirlee Hettman. Fifth row: Mary Lou Gulack, Betty Bloom, Carol Harford, Sue Sanders, Jane Tucker (President U), Mary Ellen Hogan. Q t. cnau ti First row, left to right: Earl Holder (advisor), Louis Weidner, Jim E 1 e y (President I), Earle Wilson, Louis Richards, Colbert Nakata, Jack Kleckner, Bill Price, Tamio Fujimoto (Presi- dent II). Second row: Stanley Juleen, Seibert Weissman, Leland Harder, Myrna Heffner and Lydia Comstock (honorary members), Paul Egigian, Ralph Johnston, Fred Owen. Thirdrow: W.E.Wilcox (honorary advisor), Stuart Fitch, Virgil Arklm, Pete Carr, Paul Couch, Harrison Baker, Rodger Wilcox. Fourth row: Bill Humphrey, Bob Grind, Bill Gibbs, Jim Heywood, Tom Sahm, Mike Downing, Bob Simpson. Ljuaic) ' . First row, left to right: Max Moore, Robert Fessenden, Bill Anthony, Robert Little, Edmund Mastrolia. Second row: Jean LeVeque, Robert Van Wye, Bob Adrian, Tom Roberts, Roy Gonzales. Third row: Richard Gilbert, Dick Sranklm, Bill Schneider, Sam Weiss. }iosti First row, left to right: Jeri Kidd, Richard A. Davis, Martha Marshall, Joe Anne Hendrix, M. W. de Laubenfels (advisor). Second row: Bill Shields, Rosella Potter (President II), Jim Eley (President II), Suzanne Clubb, Jay L. Dav son. Third row: Georgette Mason, Esther Bemmer, Mary-Evelyn Estus, Esther Ames. Od lalians First row, left to right: C. T. Eckels (advisor), Ruth Widner, Joan Jones, Roberta Jones, Lucille Harrell (President), Adelle Jones. Second row: Roberta Bradshaw, Mary McElrath, Sue Saunders, Edith Le Vitt, Pat HoUingsworth, Evelyn Phillips, Additional members: Betty Jane Horning, Dorothy Hawes, Saye Kawagucki, Mildred Rodstrom. J Z ' doe Z i Oe r cleen First row, left to right: Raymond Swanson, Harry Ehlers, Gene Burt, Kenneth Sheets. Sec- ond row: Steve Poszpis, Robert Backus, Floyd Humphrey, Eugene S w 1 1 z e r , Mrs. Lois Ramey. Third row: Jack Thurber, Robert Watson, Fred Owen, R. F. Rockhoff (advisor). Fourth row: John Riedel, Robert Evans, William Bolle, Jim Blakesley. ' l itcH V CUHcil First row, left to right: Kathryn demons, Charlotte Sydnor, Suzanne Chute, Emily Russel (President), Mary Lamber, Beryl Feltch, Thelma Turner. Second row: Norma Landeck, Beverly Thompson, Patricia Maxwell, Eloise Ruegg, Wieler Emmy, M y r a Gollette, Peggy Madagan. Third row: Jane Webster, Pat McGhie, Mary Lou Gulack, Claire Carter, Sylvia Cramer, Margaret O ' Connell, Betty Arthur. Additional members: Dotty Brainerd, Betty Bemis, Leone Ericksen, Beverly Lynn, Dot Miltmore, Harriet Reynolds, Eva Rossbald. f Icn-Keshictioe ISp t( ' c) awe) Oade First rov , left to right: Dick Franklin, Louis Weidner, George Fox, Sam Weiss, Larry Casey, Doug Byles, Jay L. Dawson, Ed Drew. Second row: Wilson Hole, William Humphrey, Hov ard Fager, Wallace Scott, Robert Brice, James V arren, William Anthony. Third row: Robert Little, Don Loughery, Ed Van Kopp, Tom Roberts, Milton Frincke, Robert Kimberly. Fourth row: Tom Hissey, Milton Blakeman. ?2 ewman First row, left to right: Madelyne McMahan Gloria Woloson, Alta Hurt, Pat Kayser, Barbara Blake, Mary Beliveau, Helen Swinimer, Mary Brazzale. Second row: Florence Batkin, Pauline Berg, Marilyn McMahan, Rena Valensi, Moter Mohanay, Patricia Davidson, Gerry McHale, Gail Reeves. Third row: Walter G. Wilcoxson, Jr., Bob Malneritch Richard S. Patterson, Manuel Perry, Richard A. Davis (President), Nadine Finke, Lise Cossette. Fourth row: Howard Joyce, Dick Watts, Jim McLaughlin, Bob Banaugh, Charles Grave, Bob Brice, Pat McDonald. ( I I iHl K csmopoliiaH First row, left to right: Ted Kistner, Dr. F. Viqoureux (advisor), Marie Bernays, Joanne McClure, Natalie Correll, Shirley Rea (President), Adele Gerow, Jean Westeyn. Second row: Frances Boniols, Brigida Herrnstadt, Brenda Underwood, Valerie de M e y , Agnes Watson, Luchia Alcott, Elizabeth Furlong, Mary Jean Boniols. Third row: John A. Collett, Marianne Fink, Mishael Hernandez, Edgar Magney, Bob Dickerson, John Morgan, Arisride van Heusden. T iianon First row, left to right: Marion Wetzel, Deloris Bottin, Nadia Smith, Barbara Bulgey, Lor- raine Kingsley (President II), Katherine Kucera, Betty Ernest. Second row: Lorraine Pound, Pauline Layher, Mary Henry, Jane Tucker (Pesident I), Bettie Moss, Avilla Henry, Gretchen de Graaf, Leila Pound. H fi Ci ( 0  - w ReiC iCSi First row, left to right; Don Jackson, Betty Jo Bateman, Frances Arnet, Reno Valensi, Mary Ellen Dahm, Shirlee Hetteman (President I), Barbara Sutton, N a d i n e Timmons, Barbara Webber, La Verne Hubbard. Second row: Tamio Fujimoto, Jean Owen, Barbara Kallam, Betty Jo White, Margaret Dushane, Man e Dushane, Betty Smith, Evelyn M or i c k , Bill Humphrey. Third row: Carol Harford, Betty Bloom, Betty Manning, Mary Faith Martin, Norma Bailey, Jeanne DeGarmo, Mane Lambert, Myra Collette. Fourth row: George Ro- lens, Jim Butler, Melna Scott, Berta Unarte, Hilda Vallentyne (advisor), Patricia La Monte, Louis Richards, Bill Price. c. e. a. First row, left to right: Ardys Baird, Winona Wyland, Margie Clark, Gayne Burke, Betty Hetherington, Nicky Curran. Second row: Betty Bloom, Marian Huddy, Betty Gail Rymer, Sue Sanders, Joan Gladstone, Madalynne Smith, Kay Savard, Carol Hartford. Third row: Ernest Lidell, Bob Ford, Mr. Hoist (executive secretary). Bill Newell, Bill Eley. a i ' i t % eseus First row: Mildred Young, Jane Ford, Joyce Faber, Bob Harbison (President II), Jane Strasser, Jane Flick, Isabelle Neal. Additional members: Mr. Floyd (advisor), Doug Byles (President I), Jack Smith, Hugh Blumshire, John Hawes, Dorothy Wardwell, Elmer Wasson. Second row: Justine Cheshire, Dick Collier, Virginia Mankins, Lois Norman, Bee Jay De Vault. Third row: Dick Franklin, Virginia Paterson, Bill Anthony, Bob Carter. Fourth row: Sam Weiss, Jay Clark, Deane Bennett, Bob Adrian, Eugene Weston, Larry Casey. First row.ieft to right: Earl Young, Berta Uriarte, George Rolens (Vice-President), Vera Scott, Don Jackson (President), Jeannette Adams, Gordon Holleman, Jeanne Adams. Second row: Ward Helman, Roberta Roberts, Pat Conn, Patricia Blumve, Melna Scott, Edwin Drew. Third row: Carol Youngren, Robert Walter, Mary Lou Gulack, Jim Butler, Betty Bloom, LaVerne Hubbard, Carol Harford. ijitiica - ' ' C n Gmeehxna First row, left to right: Tamio Fujimoto, Neil Beckman (President II), Shirli Allen, Richard Wines burg (President I), Arthur G. Gehrig (advisor). Second row: Homer Simmons, John Vandebur, Louis Falconi, Bob McAnlis (Vice President I). Third row: Bill Branstetter, Colin Bury, Howard Taylor. Additional members: Doug Locke (Vice-President II). fabioliaH First row, left to right: Marjorie Neese, Marion Odekirk, Donna Rickard. Second rdw, left to right: Nadine Finke, Ethel A. Fisher (advisor), Alice Hanft. Third row: Gloria Johnson, Florence Wallace, Eleanor Mae McKay, Phyllis Dobra (President). Addi- tional members: Joyce Murphy, Patricia Roberts, Nancy Hyatt, Patricia Moore, Jane Flick, Mono Bittencurt, Carmen Pray, Eliza- beth Hoehn, Peggy Postal. X.ecal ccie V First row: EUi Keenan, Evelyn Kern, Wallace Scott, Don Barry, Norman Kaufmann, Marilyn Harger, Suzanne Chute. Second row: Don Logan, Edwinna Dodson, Don Boyce, Pete Carr, Bill Hull, Gloria Viney. Third row: Robert Miles, John Harrison, Loren Barro, Lanty Joyner, R. L. Delager. Ija LXiicciaticn First row; William Humphrey, Edwinna Dodson, Marilyn Harger, EUi Keenan, Suzanne Chute, Don Barry. Second row: Loren Barre, Don Logan, John Harrison, Wallace Scott, Robert Miles, Charles Doehrer. ns asj m. aana s iu a First row: Lee Writer, Bob Cockle, Fletcher Swan, Wallace Erick- son. Second row: Jim Eley, Robert White, Harold J. Schofield, Charles W. Moore. Third row: Gordon Jones, Gayne Burke, Sei- bert Weissman, Earl Holder (advisor). Additional members: George Lich, Milton Thorn. I jpoaiabli j First row, left to right; Jolin Paige, Donald Longstreth (President), Lionel Benner. Second row: Steve Poszpis, Howard Wysatta, Douglas Smith, Clifton Foulkes, Don Chambers. Third row: J. M. Barker, R. F. Rockhoff (advisor), Henry Haynes, Wm. Dittmar. Jo ' iedi V First row, left to right: Arthur Cole, Dan Hawk, Emil Koledin (President), Robert Gough, Bill Fuller. Second row; Mr. Boll, Charles Fish, Gerald Sopp, Lloyd Johnson, Robert Kischel, Mr. Kohner (advisor). Third row; Wayne Risher, Jim Moore, Eugene Montgomery, George Rolens. if-uniCi L lassical X.eaa eaaue First row, left to right: Jean Rehrson, Mary Louise Lean, Mar- garet Cox, Betty Henderson. Second row: Beth Johnson, Mary Hildebrand, Ina Mae Scott, Walter Wilcoxson. Third row: Lois Spauldmg, Carol Swasey, Lucille Coviello, Martha Fledderjo- haun. Fourth row: Elizabeth Tarr, Margaret Sether, Jack Reitzell, Phyllis Buchan, Sara A. Talbott (advisor). LLU It . Q. G. First row: Barbara Webber, Mary Ellen Dahm, Frances Dahm (President II), Margaret DuShane, Margaret Dahm. Second row: Tony Keys, Bea Lockhart, Bette Evans, Betty Smith, Ruth Chris- topher. Third row: Eula Goertz, Mary Kalb, Eleanor Vernon, Mary Jean Owen, Suzanne Robertson. Additional members: Norma Landeck. KVcmen s X ett Q First row: Anita Runze, Barbara Webber, Fern Cook, Mary Ellen Dahm (President), Nadine Timmons, Margaret Dahm, Betty Schaefer, Ruth Christopher. Second row: Lillian Randall, Mary Randall, Frances Dahm, Evelyn Conklin, Madelyn Pyle, Evelyn Morick, Betty Smith, Janice Long. Third row: Esther Owens, Barbara George, Bea Lockhart, Ruth Banks, Bette Wans, Bar- bara Sutton, Shirley Cartwright, Elaine Newton. Fourth row: Pam Carr (Associate President), Mary Kalb, Violet Gough, Gayle Snell, Eleanor Vernon, Jane Stock, Martha Rowlands, Virginia Musacchia, Eula Goertz. ' i| 5 31 D 1 j£i9tiaJi«« 3li HR19V Jios hW, omen First row, left to right: Kay Wallace, Sally Taylor, Betty Johnson (President II), Jeanne Darrow, Peggy Harriman, Virginia Lee Steitz. Second row: Beverly Thompson, Janice Powell, Marge Ewing, Rosalind Stapleton, Jean Sledge, Beth Henger. Third row: Anne Scott, Florence Fussel, Jeanne Boone, Glendora Cline, Le Clair Bertrand, Orilla Daggett. Fourth row: Frances Alex, Beth Johnson, Kay Cambell, Phoebe Lind, Marjorie Houston, Jean Woods. Fifth row: Nancy Veal, Peggy Brazier, Barbara King, Nadme Ostlund, Mane Gaberlic, Gretchen Sammis. J-uixiCi VV( omen First row, left to right: Ladell Piwonka, Carol Hamrin (President), Nadyne Lockwood, Helen Davis, Margaret Schultz, Dorothy McLaurin. Second row: Francis Come, Eris Carruth, Millie Came, Shirley Gray, Betty Jean Biltmg, Patricia Hanigan (Vice- President). Out ol ide First row: Martha Berdahl, Barbara Oster (President), H. S. Lewis (advisor), Kathleen McCarroll, Lula Baranovsky. Second row; Mary Kathryn Sharp, Elizabeth Furlong, Lloyd Freburg, H. Lowell Knopp, Lois Chnstensen, Luchia Alcott. Third row; Dale Stephene, Ed Kuhn, Jim Flatt, Paul Rumbaugh, Blanche Linhart, Leola Whitescarver. Fourth row; Arislide van Heusden, Edwin Zorel, Sheridan Conklin, Peter Darnells, Dan Nolan. Lleic lecli First row: Don Ransom, Bob Schadel, Bill Welsh, Glen Seltzer (President II), Stewart Rinker, Bob Dickerson. Second row: Nor- man Schultz, Jack Shaw, Dick Artunian, Stan Pohl, Jim Cart- wright (President I), Clarence Woodhurst. Third row: Dick Biedebach, Jack Keinath, H. S. Lewis (advisor), Carl Gordmier, Willis Thurston. Cfa 6u First row; Bob Swan, Juonita Lusby, Florence Findlay, Betty Schrack, Meoriden Johns, Dick Remy. Second row: A. D. Cam- eron (advisor). Bill Brandstetter, Dale Allcock, John Chambers, Clifford Lance, Ken Milette, Bob Lawrence. Additional members: Marion Cooper, Bob Diemer, Ted Felbeck, Don F o r k e r, Dick Gallyon, Robert Gonter, Jerry Hiatt, Dick Hollingshead, Art Killian, Stuart Killian, Francis Kirkpatrick, Max Lincoln, Bob Malcho, Ted Steell, Bill Spelius (President), Jack Scott, Vivienne Walter, Barbara Conn, Phil Young, Larry Thackwell (Coach). I iUe CU First row: Leota Mae Cato, Barbara Bascom, Doris Martens, Donna Rickard, Marjorie Neese, Myrtle Roach, Gloria Holton, Barbara Moore, Helen Elliott. Second row: Ernie Lister, Mildred Chapman, Gladys Jeanne Berkompas, Shirley Aydelotte, Bar- bara Jones, Dorothy Skeeters, Royal Taylor (President WC), Marvin Dodge, Raymond Wilson. Third row: Grace Howie, Vivian Kronquist, Mary Stambach, Pauline Berg, Grace Ehlig, Lorna Owens, Florence Wallace, Joan Robinson, Corinne Siek- mann. Fourth row: Wilma Erickson, Betty Anne Verme, Evelyn Mae Thompson, Betty Royal, Virginia Nicholson, Jeannie Arnold, Herbert Dyke (President EC). Fifth row: Ralph Stanford, Gloria Johnson, Genevieve McClay, Inez Lochbaum, Elsie Johnson, Lois Hildebrand, Ruth Jeffs, Dorothy Thompson, Shirley Duckworth, Malcolm Tucker. Sixth row: Joanna Montgomery, Lorraine For- see, Eleanor Kline, Bettie Rea, Gladys Freburg, M a r g a r et Fordyce, Marion Odekirk, Eleanor Mae McKay, Helen Adell. Seventh row: E. F. Goodhew (advisor). Hardy Langworthy, Bruce Pardue, Dick Beal, Sam Nicholson, Q u e n t i n Howard, Clarence Welliver, Miss Ross (advisor). - ■ 5 ij i (11 ' ■1 i-J ■■ ' ■ a 1 ' r iij ' ® j n P I TJ 1 r- CR I p ioscemum First row: Peggy Brasier, Marilyn Harye, Sheilah Colbert, Jean Zediker, Yettagene Rauly. Second row: Jeanne Mainwaring, Barbara Tyler, Madeline Hoffman, Mary Patrick. Third row: Nancy Whitney, Patricia Rogers, Esther Ames. Fourth row: Francis Evans, Helen Lemweber, Katharine Kester (advisor), Patricia Ring, Ruthonna Miller. Hlaxteis ' Juiw First row: Charlotte Meidell, Barbara Willcox, Shirley Davis, Marion Kiesselbach, Janet Safford, Janet Lambert, Lorraine Har- mon. Second row: Judy Miller, Elizabeth Schwieger, Barbara Turner, Pat Reid, Bill Humphrey, PrisciUa Hannah. Third row: Alvm Wirick, Eleanor Prosser, Lindsay Workman, Vera Evelin, Gene Killam, Grace Nord, Jane LiUig, Dave Mackie. Fourth row: Phil Alexander, Tom Baxter, Win Batchelder, Herbert Hertel, Cloyde Howard. Women Keshictioe •A) r Jibiacac)ab First row, left to right: Edith Fredericks, Miriam Hoefer, Betty Lynn, Dorothy Champion, Eleanor Lou Miles, Roberta Eager. Second row: Marjorie Sundstrum, Betty Houts, Betty Pond, Jean Tracy, Audrey McClellan. Additional members: Helen Frindt (President I), Charlotte Gibson, Elizabeth AUensworth. First row, left to right: Marjory Streeter, Virginia Rains, Bridget Pfeiffer, Alice Graham (President), Phyllis Anderson, Joan Mark- ing. Second vow. Jean Donaghu, Janet Frayne, Jackie Cook, Dorys Elloodbury, Sheila Kemp, Maryln Lake, Mary Sommerville, Eva Rossack. Third row: Esther Hole, Helen Chisholm, Isabel Saunders, Margaret Newland, Alysene Hales, Betty Jeanne Devin. la Lieoli eouan Hibibetes GlfL omeia t First row: left to right: Patti Wood (President II), Phyllis Church- man, Mary Hammond (President I), Jackie Williams, Cathleen Clark, Bettye Monell. Second row: Marvis Hill, Jayne Whitmer, Gracehelen Phernambucq, June Rew, Bessie Liljenwall, Sophie Liljenwall. Third row: Zerta Russell, Margaret Hitchcock, Gerry Griest, Kay Stewart, Melba Chambers, Barbara Neville. Addi- tional members: Marilyn Wortman, Mary Margaret Williams, jean Broderson. First row, left to right: Betty Musselman, Janice Bidwell, Jan At- kins, Marjorie Fletcher (President II), Jane Terry (President I), Pat Frier, Jane Shockley. Second row: Margaret Burke, Dottie Vin- ten. Randy Voss, Hazel Farris, Virginia Clarke, Norma Landeck, Mildred Miller, Helen Hallet, Dodie Merchant. Third row: Pat Anderson, Helen Wollcott, Norine White, Pat McGhie, Gerry Beckman, Muriel Clemens, Marjorie Kirst, Additional members: Helen Pool, Dale Fleming, Mary Taylor. First row, left to right: Donalda Lindsay, Zella Shepp, Mary Alice Miller, Bette Jane Good, Betty Groash (President), Donna Carter, Lorraine Walker, Jerry Evans, Peggy O ' Neal. Second row: Pa- tricia M. Piopkins, Peggy Leech, Shirley Osborn, Grace Arthur, Eileen Rosenberg, June Desjardiens, Ruth Smart, Betty Tadd, Ar- line Voboril. Third row: Margaret O ' Connell, Annabee Small, Betty Arthur, Sylvia Cramer, Pam Alexander, Charlotte Anne Sutterley, Irene Zacharias. First row, left to right: Marellin Kates, Jean Nebelius (President I), Miss Doris Coventry (advisor), Betty May Rinehard (President II), Carolyn Cook. Second row: Julienne Hall, Jean Hendricks, Frances, Conn, Betty Bugbee, Betty Lou Scott. Third row Jean Hartman, Merlyn Gulden, Lucile Chisholm, Dotty Holmes. Addi- tional members: Barbara Colligan. fdcqiaH yJuinake fa mile It 0 ne First row, left to right: Ruth Carpenter, Patti Wiseman, Louise Bohn, Patricia Clark (President I), Mary Steer (President II), Elizabeth Scales. Second row: Phyllis Daggett, Jeanne Simmons, Virginia Simmons, Barbara Remy, Inez Herrill, Carolyn Peyton, Marilyn Young. Third row: Laura M. Elder (advisor), Sally Burge, Mary Faith Martin, Eileen Frantz, Nancy Holsinger, Gloria Ruth Place, Additional members: Margaret Fletcher, Rosemary Mason. First row, left to right: Junette Duebbert, Dorothy Brainerd, Claire Carter, Alice Chisholm (President), Mary Babcock, Catherine Babcock. Second row: Virginia Mullins, Eleanor Lamb, Sally Tearse, Emily Russel, Caroline Collins, Pamela Gustin, Doreen Howes, Betty Van Name. Third row: Audrey Rice, Gerry Ward, Alison Graham, Beverly Allegro Lynn, Mildred Gage, Clara Brainerd, Patty Kanavel. Additional members: Mary Lou Gu lack, Patricia Lee, Virginia Richardson. I -sscg V N V l amplnL First row, left to right: Pat Murphy, Eleanor Clark, Lois Grubbs Ramey (Adviser), Pat Friend (President I), Leone Ericksen, Vir- ginia Rooke. Second row: Sue Record, Barbara Conn, Salley Porter Hagenbush, Joan Muirhead, Joanie Winkler, Margaret Snyder, Peggy King, Cornelia Skiles, Phyllis Smith, Helen Che- ahan. Third row: Rosemary Prouty, Kay McConaghy, Betty Granger, Gertie Stevens, Eunice Alder, Margery Bell, Jean Pat- terson, Patti Hunt. Additional members: Connie Lewis, Dottie Lusk, Suzanne Chute, Janet Bird. First row left to right; Gladys Young (Adviser), Carleen McCuddy, Dorys Jean Fletcher (President), Barbara Brakensiek, LaVonne Peckham, Marilyn Morgan (President II). Second row: Helen Smith, Mildred Riks, Gloria Johnson, Jean ne De Garno, Catherine Townsend, Belva Lucas, Dorothy Goertz, Betty Lou O ' Hara. Third row: Robin Henderson, Betty Jo Adams, Norma Gossel, Doris Christensen, Marilyn Phillips, Beatrice Boettiger, Doris Colt, Mary Feddersohn. Additional members: Katie Hubbard, Barbara Neely, Susie Walker. Pl evux Pkikh lan cielL First row, left to right; Jayne Kidd, Dorothy Fabry, Eileen Ireland, Jamie Van Loon, Ruth Gerpheide, Betty Bliven. Second row: Betty Flatt, LaDelle Piwonka, Myra Collette, Alyce Kelderhouse, Betty Morse. Third row: Kathryn Alser, Eula Goertz, Mary Cor- inne Stanley, Jean Cannom. Additional members: Helen Mc- Connell, Jerry Cotton. First row, left to right: Barbara Forbush, Claire Seoggett, Evelyn Boschke (President 1), Mrs. Lorravne Calkins (Adviser), Patricia Macfie (Social Chairman), Beverly Gorrill (Treasurer). Second row: Jeannie Olivera, Lois Link, Betty-Jo Hyatt, Lourayne Blatz, Dorothy Stevenson (Secretary), Laurie Boyle, Peggy Lou Wil- liams (Secretary). Third row: Betty Mae Allm (Historian) Marjorie Evans, Barbara Dickard, Marsha Sieberg, L a u r i n e Von der Heide. Additional members: Billie Jenks, Lenore Polk, Johnnie Lee Rodgers (Vice-President), Mollie Hill. I First row, left to right: Jean Uhlig, Julie Nocerino, Justine Day, Carol Haas (President), Nita Nocerino, Thelma Nelson. Second row: Barbara Jannock, Lois Wilson, Ruth McBurney, Betsy Sny- der, Jane Englert. Third row: Marjorie Leach, Eunice Handy, Helen Decker. Additional members: Celeste Clauser, Mary Jane Wood, Rosemary Zufall, Miss Lillian Healy (Adviser). First row, left to right: Gerry Shaw, Judy Stone, Bette Jones, Fran- ces Swift (President), Lucille Nutt, Lorraine Frank. Second row: Patty Calloway, Jeanne McCune, Clare Blackwell, Lolita Hay, Jane Shields, Virginia Hall, Martha Entler, Kay Johnson. Third row: Mary Stuart McCament, Yvonne Sheridan, Betty Jane Pick- ler, Carolyn Aberle, Gene Wilfong, Tone McClung, Ann McDuf- fie, Katie Thomas. Additional members: Frances Wood. I ana % li loaa 9 First row, left to right: Betsy Long (Treasurer), Barbara Parsons (2nd Vice-President), Evangeline Sandstrom (President), Jean Elder (1st Vice-President). Second row: Betty Schrack, Audrey Sumrall, Arline Bundorf, Lenore Harding. Third row: Betty Heth- erington. Colleen Ellis, Gladys De Lancey, Mary Louise Hunt. Additional members: Betty Bates, Betty Endicott, Frances Kirk- patrick, Doreen Moore, Virginia Smith, Jean Sharp. V. .O. First row, left to right: Doris Elizabeth Berry, Barbara Sinclair, Ruth Bachmeier, Eleanor Winans, Betty Phelan, Rosina Raybe. Second row: Eleanor Ludgate, Margaret Adcock, Margaret Solum, Marjorie Hall, Virginia Smith. Third row: Betty Bye, Dor- othy Fischer. Additional members: Miss Robinette (Adviser), Marge Hale. m i«.i 9 it •• 5 . ff j I Veha First row, left to right Doris Radcliffe, Virginia Shafer, Kay Gibbs (President I), Eilen Harmon (President II), Lois McNab, Charlotte Martin. Second row: Marian Sprott, RaeEstelle Sprott, Mary Jane Peeble, Nancy Gillies, Loan Pittendrigh, Doris Mies, Elizabeth Schwieger, Mary Ellen Murchison. Third row: Jane Rice, Rosella Potter, Vera Evelin, Mary Louise Condie, Francelia Welch, Inez Carver. Additional members: Mary Lou Alton. I iJimpltion First row, left to right: Eugene Weigand, Ed Vath, Stewart Favor (President I), George Eidson. Second row: Paul Goldman, Dale Allcock, Bob Diemer, Art Nelson. Third Row: Dick Reynolds, Lambert Baker, Clifford Lance. Additional members: Earle Favor, Alan Perne, Mr. Berry (Adviser). a leobi f First row, left to right: Jim Frederick, Nash Anderson, Dale Hie- stand (President I), Steve Tiberg. Second row: David Rubsamen, Amur Killmgsworth, Alfred Boeke. Additional members: Jack Maiben, Don Winton. IjuCC V Firsi rcKiT, ien lo nc ' h.L; Bill Marzcv, 5ua rosier. Bin hiizcr.e— vFresi- dent I], Wadly Dean, Wcillv Bates. Second ro-w: Charles Wells, Jack Creahon,. EL rrenc±L, John Cert. Third rc-A ; Zd Srr-Lr.ders Frank K- — -- leu Urdahl, Qem Drake, Bill Lu!ly. Additional meiTLbers; Sid Srhiss-er ,ce rCTA ' lr.a Dies; Rcr er:s Boies Elliott. D. a e. First row, left to right Hugh V. Penton, Richard Frank, Robert Lambert CPreadent) , Jiin McCoiierey , Blodn Haskett, Don Henney . fecond row: Lkive Buckingham. Roger Wook, Neai Long, Jim Pul- liam, Frank Price, Charles Early, Des Strongman, Dcug McDon- ald, Tom Buckingham.- Third row: Harry E. Terrell, Bob Streff, Dave Kilmer, Bill Nodme, Dick Bone, Don Engen, Don Reid, Stuart Weber. Additional members: Ronald Jeacon, Ned Chapin Ijacc V First row, left to right: Bill Marzov, Bud Foster, Bill Mitchell (Presi- dent I), Wally Dean, Wally Bates. Second row: Charles Wells, Jack Creahan, El French, lohn Cort. Third row: Ed Saunders, Frank Kilmer, Lou Urdahl, Clem Drake, Bill Lully. Additional members: Sid Schissler, Joe Pawling, Dick Roberts, Bates Elliott. D. a. e. First row, left to right: Hugh V. Penton, Richard Frank, Robert Lambert (President), Jim McCofferey, Blain Haskett, Don Henney. Second row: Dave Buckingham, Roger Wook, Neal Long, Jim Pul- liam, Frank Price, Charles Early, Des Strangman, Doug McDon- ald, Tom Buckingham. Third row: Harry E. Terrell, Bob Streff, Dave Kilmer, Bill Nairne, Dick Bone, Don Engen, Don Reid, Stuart Weber. Additional members: Ronald Jeacon, Ned Chapin. First row, left to right: Fred Long, Jack Miller (President I), Bill Heimann, Mr. Allen Cameron (advisor), Curtis Olsen, Bob Wood- ford. Second row: John C. Packard, Bob Bloomingdale, Lionel Gillmore, Dick Friend, Charles O ' Hara, Wm. Donovan, Alvin Nikirk. Third row: Dexter Jackson, Chuck Lauderbaugh, Johnnie DeNoon, Johnnie MacNeil. Additional Members: Jim Mead, Don Kane, Robert Smith, William Lewis, Johnny Heimann, Forrest Johnson, Don Garnet, Bob Simmeral, Gerald Shook, Jim Garner, Warren Rowland. D.c. e. m. 0. . First row, left to right: David Smith, Dick McClure, George Zill- gitt (President I), Norbert Verbeck (President II), Ed Wilson, Bud Knudson. Second row: Bob Chaffee, Jim Nash, Steve Weller, Jackson Supple, Jack Weller, John Scotty George, Bob Hatcher, Winthrop Higginson, Jack Follis. Third row: Bob Phelps, Ken Simpson, LeRoy Haines, Kenneth Hunter, Lewis Saxby, Oliver Holt, Bob Harrison, Al Chapman, Kern Feidler. Additional mem- bers: David Ganssle, Bob Dagget, Jake Cline, Lee Darrow, Bill Pond, Rod Abbott, Mr. Fred Young (advisor). 0. e. D. J icn First row, left to right: Barney Blanc, Milton Emerson, Earl Moore, Bill McDonough, John Waterhouse. Second row: Jack Barton, Calvin Lee, G. C. Brown, Don Goodwin, Charles Winter. Third row: James Link, Bill Newman, John Schaefer, Jack Smith, Clif- ford Hays. Additional members: Rod Bacon, Al Mitchell Reed Elliot. First TOW, left to right. Bob Weisenberg, Mike Spooner, Glenn Riley (President), Dick Strombom, Harold Bosacki. Second row: Don Fried, Dale Plehn, Edgar Parsons, Larry Garland, Bob Law- rence. Third row: Charlie Pme, Jerry Jones, Ronald Munsey, Joe Rensch. Additional members: Herb Kalmbach, Sam Dalzell, Lynn Dallenbach, Bill Curland, R u d Shrader, Duke Rinaldi, Stilson Wray, Roy Marsden, Bob Barrett, Wesley Hollinger, Paul Car- roll, Al Sievert, John Seibert, Buck Eaton, P. H. Motsinger (Ad- visor). miciCH First row, left to right: Don Reichert, Howard Dickson (President), W. A. Walton (advisor), Steve Tusler. Second row: Richard Remy, Bruce Reagan, Wayne Roe, Robert Devenish, Russel Kel- ler. Third row: James Stewart, Jack Devenish, Fritz Kretzschmar, James Koltz. Additional members: Bill Livingston, Howard Willis. o. .t First row, left to right: John Redmond, Bob Thompson (President 11), Norm Stanger, Alton Pryor, Roy Gardner. Second row: Bob McCarthy, Don Loynd, Dwight Harper, Dick Krenz, Jack Crehan, Bill Fletcher. Third row: Chuck Chambers, Charles FoUis, Ward Bursh, Bill Stapleton. Additional members: Bob Glasgov . 0. .11 A eaasui 5 First row, left to right: Clair Kirk, Bob Moore, Durell Adams (President I), Harvey Striplin (President II), Dave Wood, Harry Gobrecht. Second row: James B. Gibson (advisor), Keith Mc- Kinney, Bill Farrar, Kenion Cardwell, Lyle Scheline, Ray Lusby. First row, left to right: Noel Young, Bill Emerson, Paul Flahive (adviser), Ernie Blumberg (President), Jack Wiegand, Bill Meeks. Second row: Art Tuverson, Ken Moyer, Roy Gardner, Jack Simi- son, Ray Walker, Bill Hutchings, Harold Smith, Harry Tracy, J. Elliot Henson. Third row: Earl Blume, Larry Wallace, David Walker, Sig Sandstrom, John Stanton, Bob Milton. Additional members: Jack O ' Neil, Tom Conn, Duane Miller. First row, left to right: Jack Scott, John O ' Grady, Roger Cook (President I), E. Roy Davis, Tom Ames. Second row: Kenny Kel- logg, Fred Wood, Clay Reavis, Jack Blackwell, Gaylord West. Third row: John Morgan, Bob Olson, Jordon Reifel, Joe Jewett, Paul Crawford. Additional members: Bob Heublein, Guy Wood- ward, Gene Pitzer, Wes Babbage, Cecil Stewart (advisor). eauoia 1 First row, left to right: Dick Ransom, Bob Barry, Dick Fox (Presi- dent), Joe Hetzer, Jim Sanford, Mike Marincovich. Second row: Bob Ransom, Jim Long, Ray Hovard, Ed Keene, Dick Croskrey, Don Whetstine, Larry Cavell. Third row: Ted Preston, Dick Houle. Bill Grund, Darrell Agler, Jack Hughston, Dick Busik. Additional members: Seward Richardson, Walt Self, Mr. Arthur S. Wiley (advisor), Ed Pampeyan. z ama HkaiiaH First row, left to right: Phil Alexander. William Humphrey (Presi- dent), Cloyde Howard, Ken Wagner. Second row: George Riser, Winthrop Batcheldu, Keith Dahle, Ronnie Davis. Third row: Art Leekband, Leon Begin, Richard Winesburg. Additional mem- bers: H. Stanton Hill (advisor), Allen Landsedd, Harlan Brand, Jack Sanders, Andrew Phillips, John MacCillan, Raymond Valois. Norbert Verbeck as the newly elected president of the Restrictive Inter Club Council re- lieved Tom Ames, last year ' s president, of his duties and started the ball rolling. Francis Swift was chosen vice-president and automatically became Women ' s R i c c y president. The second semester found Bill Glenn Riley holding the reins and Alice Graham as vice-president. i- kaiian First row, left to right: Phil Alexander, William Humphrey (Presi- dent), Cloyde Howard, Ken Wagner. Second row: George Riser, Winthrop Batcheldu, Keith Dahle, Ronnie Davis. Third row: Art Leekband, Leon Begin, Richard Winesburg. Additional mem- bers: H. Stanton Hill (advisor), Allen Landsedd, Harlan Brand, Jack Sanders, Andrew Phillips, John MacCillan, Raymond Valois. i r jXS0 Norbert Verbeck as the newly elected president of the Restrictive Inter Club Council re- lieved Tom Ames, last year ' s president, of his duties and started the ball rolling. Francis Swift was chosen vice-president and automatically became Women ' s R i c c y president. The second semester found Bill Glenn Riley holding the reins and Alice Graham as vice-president. Kicc j Hiesideni I V Norbert Verbeck ivccu Hiedheni 2 ' 1 William Riley Llctioitie HuulicaticHS The 1942 Campus b r i n g s to PJC students their first fuli- sized yearbook since 1940. The editors have endeavored to keep some of the more out- standing improvements of last year ' s life-styled magazine, while still bowing to tradition. Biggest change in the book is the increased use of white space throughout, and three- color division pages. Assisting Editor Waterhouse were Betye Monell, associate; Bill McDon- ough, art; Tom Kipp, sports; Dave Davis, Life section; Bill Anthony, ROTC section; and Margaret U t z , editorial as- sistant. Walton, photographer. Bill McDonough Betye Monell a p ' ambu m Dave Davis, Bill McDonough, Wayne Hodges, Jim Marugg, Bill Anthony, Tom Kipp, John Barker. Missing: Margaret Utz, Betye Monell, John Waterhouse. Norbert Verbeck y momci A modified PM makeup, with eight pages of pictures and featurized copy, marked The Chronicle ' s first semester und- er Editor Dave Davis. Second semester ' s Chronicle was edited by Norbert Verbeck, with renewed emphasis upon sports and better coverage. Greatest improvement of the year took place on the West Campus, where an enlarged staff provided better written and more abundant copy than ever before, due largely to the efforts of Miss Pinkham, advisor. West Campus Staii Bill Anthony Lois McNab Don Gleason Noel Young Sylvia Gunnarson Keith Savage John Allen Margaret Utz Elinor Jones Dorothy Hanson John Waterhouse Jim Eley Larry Casey Tom Kipp Jim Marugg a sscciaie C aitois 8 h Chronicle staff associate editors on both East and West Campuses were under the direction of Dave Davis the first semester and Norbert Verbeck the second semester. Dorothy Hanson headed the West Campus staff, with Elinor Jones as her city editor and Harlan Paepke and Kieth Savage as Sports editors. On East Campus the copy desk was directed by John Allen, Larry Casey, Noel Young, and Bill Anthony. Anthony was also East Campus city editor the first semester, being relieved second semester by Margaret Utz. Feature editors were John Waterhouse, Lois McNab and Sylvia Gunnarson, Tom Kipp and Jim Marugg were sports editors, second semester, and Verbeck, before his appoint- ment to the editorship, directed sports page for a semester. Circulation was handled by Spencer CriUy and exchanges by Don Gleason. Henley, Cockle, and Eley, business mgrs. I usi.e. m Chester Brunson, Ralph Schaeter, Murray Granger Don Henley Robert Cockle First row, left to right Julia Kibby, Mary Hire, Maryellm Kates, Mary- lee Gilloon, Virginia Pixley. Second row: Charlie Doehrer, Ted McLean, John Harris, Harlan Blake, Mike Spooner. WHS First row, left to right: John Paull, Mike Spooner, Glenn Riley, Ed Isett, Don Fried, Second row: Bob Lawrence, Joe Reosch. to , Noel Young, ambitious editor of the Huddle, earned much praise for his work on the magazine, tiis new ideas embodied in the publication brought record breaking sales at the football games. On several occasions, when new copies ran out, fans bought second hand ones. Among those aiding Editor Young were Tom Kipp and Jim Marugg, ace sports analysts and handicapper, Dave Davis, feature writer, Norbert Verbeck, assistant editor, and Frank Clement, sports editor. Noel Young, Tom Kipp, Frank Clement, Norbert Verbeck D .ama ( laku Hall annual PJC variety shov , was successfully produced this year by versatile Cloyde Howard. Always the entertain- ment high of the school year, Crafty is a take-off on a radio show. High-lighting this year ' s program was a dramatic skit, starring Nancy Gillis and Phil Alexander. The show was started off with the proverbial bang by a pre-show skit arranged by Bill Mc- Donough, and featuring the Sunshine Trio. The Trio, composed of McDonough, Dave Davis and John Waterhouse, did an old-time soft-shoe song, dance and gag routine. Mu- sic for the show was provided by Bob McFee and his orchestra, featuring the voice of lane Ford. Tune hit of the show was Among the Embers, written by trumpet-playing Brinley Bethel. Others in the cast included Tom Baxter, Harry Chamberlain, Pat Reid, Yvonne Cummings, Linsay Wortman, John Street, Barney Blanc, Earl Moore, Wyn Batch- elder, and Kay Gibbs. Packed auditoriums on both East and West Campus greeted cast. Producer C 1 o y d e Howard (opposite page) surrounded by cast beauties. Cloyde Howard (right) as Master of Ceremonies. Above, left to right: Nancy Gillies, Lindsay Workman, Phi Alexander. Hi Delta Psi Omega ' s Spring Play starred Lindsay Workman as Mr. Pim (upper right) and Marion Sprott (lower left). Others pictured in the center photo- graphs are Tom Baxter, Cloyde How- ard, Eleanor Prosser, Rachel Reid, Pat Reid, and Elizabeth Keppie (advisor). ItaL f afzesvealean w, inneis First rov , left to right: Pnscilla Hannah, Lorraine Harmon, Shirley Davis, Ruth Farris Mary Cogswell, Barbara Turner, Robert Shaw, Second row: Jeanne Stewart, Mary A. Patrick, Mae Newcomb, Esther Ames, Jane Lillig. Third row: Herbert Hertel, Albert Salter, Tom. Baxter, Eleanor Prosser, Grace Nord. ff Suspicion and mystery hung heavy over the Players ' Guild production A Murder Has Been Arranged and held the audi- ence tense throughout the course of the drama. Those ap- pearing in the play were, Janet Lambert, Jack Hasslinger, Pat Reid, Cloyde Howard, Kay Gibbs, Barbara Thomas, P h i Alexander, Jerry Hawes, and Eleanor Prosser. The play was directed by Harry Chamberlain, first student ever to direct the annual three-act play which was presented in November. Tom Baxter signals through window oi the booih. 2ii § CcUlO Under the supervision of Vincent Parsons, faculty member, and Lindsay Workman, the Radio Division classes featured an experimental p r o - gram every Monday night on KPPC. In conjunction with the Pasadena Junior College Chronicle they produced a program called Presenting Pasadena for Pasadena Preferred. The program featured Pasadena History, and Lindsay Workman acted as narrator. Stu- dent directors for the series were Barclay Hodgkin, Irving Zelinka and Kay Gibbs. Since the inauguration of KPAS, the Radio Division classes have been on the air a half hour every Monday night featuring various musical and dramatic groups. Among activities of the Radio Division classes the La Verne contest at La Verne Col- lege was outstanding. Representatives from Junior College were Lindsay Workman, Tom Baxter, John Street, Eleanor Prosser, Marion Kiesselbach, Shirley Davis. Left to right: Gene Killam, John Street, Pat Reid, Elizabeth Schwieger, Francis McLauren, Shirley Davis. First row, left to right: Sue Saunde rs, Corinne Sickmann, Mary Ellen Murichison, Betty Bloom, Margie Evans, Barbara Schuebel, Carol Harford. Second row: Don Barry, John Osgood, Jim Redding, George Martain. keis Iji (2 l) CilZ ht m JL%Q iJL Organized for defense speaking in colabo- - I ration with the Pasadena Defense council, the Speakers Bureau numbers over 200 speakers. Members speak on defense to various or- ganizations all over the city. On call at any time, the bureau is under the supervision of Betty Bloom, student chairman, and Dorothea Fry and Hedley Reeder, faculty advisors. UiatCi V Among the major activities of the Oratory classes three local con- tests were prominent. The first of these was the Arnold Extempor- aneous Speaking Contest. The second was the Davis-Hall Oratory Contest held in May. The last was the Intramural Speech Contest. Competing for the prizes of the later were various members of clubs and organizations. Aside from the cups given to the boys and girls clubs individual medals were also awarded to winners in the various divisions. Left to right: Don Barry (Manager of Debate), Barbara Schuebel (Oral Arts Publicity), Margie Evans (Manager of Extemporaneous), Tom Baxter (Manager of Radio), Pris- cilla Hannah (Manager of Drama), Betty Bloom (Manager of Oratory, Manager of Speakers Bureau). niusi usic M ' f . . ' I Time out for a dance — the way grandma used to do it. IjullclcG Ijanc) IQQ i ClPtO in 1941-42 has been carrying on with patriotic programs, J football games, military parades and other musical ac- tivities in spite of the fact that nearly all the band ' s seniors have gone to the N a v y band school in Washington, D.C., or into the service. There have been about fifteen hundred boys go through the Bulldog Band since its inception thirteen years ago, and this year two hundred and ten boys with six especially selected P.J.C. girls have gone through the rigors of the band training and playing. The band gained National mention New Year ' s day when twenty-six members ap- peared at the Tournament of Roses parade starting point and marched the parade route giving and keeping up the fifty-third annual New Year ' s parade. Priorities on bus tires, the government ' s commandeering of all special trains, forced the band this year to abandon its trip to the camps west of the Mississippi, which had been approved by Campshows, t h e sub- sidiary of the U.S.O. However, the band has made fifty-two performances over Southern California this college year, and was forced to refuse many invitations to play the sold- iers camps, high schools, colleges and im- portant gatherings because of lack of time and tires. Enough Brass here to make Dorsey jealous. Band members try hard to concentrate on music while the girls strut their stuff in one of the many shows presented. Ijanc) flooelil ( along with classics the band played original ar- rangements in both humorous and patriotic veins. Assisted by Robert Frame, a characterization of President Lincoln was put on. Miss Lura Sears, lyric soprano. Celeste Clauser, Barbara Turner in South American dances, Jane Wells m toe tap, Janis Long and Carolyn Montgomery in acrobatics, Robert Duncan in tap specialties; Gordon Johnson, Eugene Keith and Arthur Nelson in t h e Glockenspiel trie- Jack MacLeod, Robert Pattison, Harold Smith and Jack Pettit made up the harmonica en- semble; Tom Hissey, Darrell Danielson and Dick Reynolds in the trumpet trio, all added to the smartness of the band ' s programs. Arrangements by student arrangers Arthur Nelson and Hugh Scovell were used. Hot sax and harmonica quartet give off with a few licks. Band in a fifteen minute intermission during a strenuous dress rehearsal. Perhaps the most beautiful number of the season was the band ' s interpretation of the Blue Danube Waltz with special arrangements by Nelson and Scovell and the girls in Vienna costumes dancing a routine schooled by Miss Celeste Clauser. Management of the Bulldog Band this year was m the hands of Lyle Scheline, as chairman of the Band Executive Council, Durell Adams and Robert Moore as business and personnel managers, Hugh Scovell, William Hammond, and Spencer Kmgsley, librarians; Don Clark, Robert Strong, Roger Stone, stage managers. 0 ck sti a Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Milton Mohs, spent a busy season. Besides the several school assem- blys the band played at graduation, in a Boys ' and Girls ' Week broadcast over radio staton KPAS and at Los Angeles City College music festival. Music was also provided lor graduation exercises held this semester in the Sexson Auditorium for mid-year grads. Milton Mohs, Conductor Highlight of the year was the Southern California Mu- sic Festival, held this year at PJC and participated in by nearly all the outstanding Colleges and Junior Col- leges in Southern California. A portion of the orchestra provided incidental music for several school plays. j itiU vmhkonu Left to right: Bill Cole, Dick Moore, Barbara Spencer, Joan G o d d a r d, Eugene Ober, Viola Soule, Roberta Bradshaw, George Sabin, Molly Ann Loos, Rebecca Wallace. Left to right: Barbara Spencer, Artie Lee Page, Doreen Lawson, Marilynn Moulton, Shirley H a y m a n , Phyllis Anderson, Jean- nette Joy. fUaU iluaiiet Left to right: Eric Layne, Keith Turner, Robert O. Randall, Harlan McCallum. Ct K abelL ' Cc First row, left to right Margaret Archibald, Marie Robinson, I AUine Ely, Betty Grattidge, Joe Anne Hendrix, Jobetty Hebbits, Art Chapman, Lindsay Workman, Miss Mabel Oakes, Rodney C o 1 v i n. Bob McAnlis, Keith Turner, Clint Tavwater, Geneva Ducey, Pat Hawkins, Janet Lambert. Second row: Leita Gruwell, Leula Emley, Jane Strasser, Ruth Johan, Evelyn Arnold, Joe Simpson, Merril Kendrick, Harlan McCallum, Bill Graham, George P. Folk Jr., Eyris Larson, Grace Park, Nolo Grattidge, Jeanne Adams. Third row: Ruth Luster, Peggy Maclagan, Kathleen Goble, Esther Kendall, Mary A. Patrick, John Johnston, Marshall Hattersley, Donald J. Combs, Charles E. Price, Carolyn Blaine, Christy Palmer, Pauline Cheney, Jeanne Carter, Joyce Samson. Fourth row: Barbara Laney, Gwen Morgan, Mary Stanley, Dorothy Heist, Anita Marie Sievert, Catherine Brown, Jim Jones, Dorothy Porter, Barbara Joirs, Doris Kromann, Lois Klme, Jeanne Eisan, Armida Gryalva, Sally Newton. V n V saeans First row, left to right: La Delle Piwonka, Margaret Archibald, Frances Robertson, Cather- ine Brown, Miss Lula Claire Parmley, Barbara Graham, Geneva Ducey, Shirley Callahan, Betty Wilson. Second row: Mary Ruth Haynes, Pauline Cheney, Vernelle Wickland, Joanne Carter, Kathleen Goble, Leita Gruwell, Lois Graham, Jane-Ellen Kmgman, Jane Ford, Jeanne Risen. Third row: Jeanne Cannom, Esther Kendall, Mary Patrick, Margaret King, Christy Palmer, Doris Kromann, Jean Baker, Sally-Jean Newton, T r e s s a Mehre ns, Jerry DeHuff. rt ' i7l iV| ' -fvf ' f i fJ ! •■ C uieip cans Front; Marion Auw. Left to right: Clint Tavwater, Wes Alderson, Donald J. Combs, Bob McAnlis, Harlan McCallum, Robert O. Randall, George Eidson, Rodney Colvin, John Johnston, Miss C. Sharp, Bill Moody, Ronald Munsey, Keith Turner, David Earl Whitney, Albert Salter, Eric Layne, Herbert Dyke. Uiilit ai j an A j a Ueiense zo.i.e.  Major E. Scott Holbeck Captain Lawrence E. Ballard Sgt. Edward Dixon Asst. PMS T ROTC Instructor Asst. Military Property Custodian Sgt. Carl T. Singley Sergeant Instructor r (10. I.e. Colonel Herman Kobbe PMS T Among other distinc- tions, to t h e Reserve Officers ' Training Corps of Pasadena Junior College belongs the rating as the largest junior u n i t in the Ninth Corps area. Organized as a regiment, com- posed of three battalions, and nine companies, the PJC ROTC has a total enrollment of 540 cadets. For the first time in history the ROTC has been under the direction of three commissioned Army officers at the same time. Commandant of eleven Los Angeles high school units, Colonel Herman Kobbe was appointed Professor of Military Science and Tactics at junior col- lege. Skillfully aiding him are Major E. Scott Holbeck, assistant PMS and T, and Captain Lawrence Ballard. Colonel Weiss Lieutenant-Colonel Walter Maior Weitzel First Lieutenant Weidner om banyj a. First Lieutenant Colav Captain Smith Captain Pember First Lieutenant Melzer Second Lieutenant Fessenden C om paHii e. First Lieutenant Fager Second Lieutenant Little Captain Anthony --Secana LieutettGmt Byle, Second Lieutenant Garland K cm pan j t Captain Hole Second Lieutenant Dennison K ompanv J. Second Lieutenant Casey First Lieutenant Roberts om pan j a. Second Lieutenant Burkholder Second Lieutenant Franklin om bami L lJ«S.-« Captain Hissey Second Lieutenant Jamieson K om panvi f. S -rtei ' - r ' ' ■•ma- Captain Van Kopp First Lieutenant Brice Second Lieutenant Jackson me CH maHcuOeii L amcunaaea umbels Uoei ike top KTMl?- .7 ' . •VTP , ■?© ,: x :. ia:jS  ' ' ' ' , Ueten e I J training at PJC covers all phases of practical industrial education. In the large, modern electrical shop the students learn all of the fundamentals, work on duplicates of high tension wires (above), generate their own power (upper right) under expert direction. In the machine shop training includes the assembling of machines built by other stu- dents (lower left) and operation of larger machines. . lyialtin s PJC ' s Aero-Tech courses include everything from the original draft- ing of the planes (below) to the final assembly (opposite) of the completed plane. The stages in between cover the entire field of air- craft production, duplicating in miniature a modern factory. Many students on completion of this course go on to highly paid jobs in nearby plants. Others take the course in connection with pilot training, such as the seventy boys now taking the Civilian Pilot Training in Baker, California, to become Army and Navy pilots. rtome ficni Students enrolled in defense courses come to school during early morning hours, and seldom leave before dark in evening. In return for many extra hours they put in they receive training that would cost them hundreds of dollars in a professional trade school. The machines that they work with (above) are the finest obtainable, their instructors are experts in the field. PJC is playing a bigger part in defense training than any other junior college. n u ' lSes iuc)eni ijoclu L cuHcil First row, left to right: Pauline Trapp, Helen Peters, Lila Neely, Gloria Secrest, Louise Dobson. Second row: Beulah Matsuhara, Evelyn Lee, Virginia Trapp. ilnie ' imehlaie K iaii First row, left to right: Doris Roberts, Lila Neely, Mary Tokeshi. Second row: Eileen Moss, Pauline Trapp, Virginia Trapp, Evelyn Lee, Lillian Francis: Additional members: Dorothy Douglas, Marian Darling, Betty Hooper, Thelma Haugan, Esther Lundgren, Betty McGuire, Virginia Lesh, Betty Paesechke, Muriel Freuden- berg, Ja Nahn Strand, Barbara Blue, Laura Moir, Alice Seymore, Elsie Sahm, Francis Walker. J-unlCi L cuncil First row, left to right: Beulah Matsuhara, Joy Miner, Elaine Wilkes, Elizabeth Albert, Vivian Bartel, Barbara Van Nest, Lor- raine McDermott, Betty Lou Taylor, Lucy Terracciano. Second row: Esther Wilhelm, Marguerite Cho, Eleanor Burnett, Clara Brewster, Pearl Arnold, Helen Peters, Valicia Shaffer, Martha Jane Hissong, Edith Hill. Third row: Dorothy Miner, Mabel Mur- fee, Jane Abies, Mary Grace Jafraty, Janet Sigworth, Margaret Teater, Dorothy Toon, Beverly Hammond. Fourth row: Doris Anker, ' Lila Lee, Elizabeth Ingram, Elizabeth Anthony, Blanche Segar, ' Florice Kilbourne, Joyce Clansnitzer, Maryelyn Doolittle. ' up eiOiscii First row, left to right: Marie Smith, Maude Mayfield, Francis Rufert, Jean Luhman. Second row: Dorrit Sledge, Elizabeth Pot- tenger, Jean Hawley, Anttoinette Jourdan, Jessie Sclater. Third row: Esther Oberg, Helen Jeffrey, Jean Biggam, Lillian Vosloh. flwises JL(X Life of a nurse in training is a well-regulated one. On these pages, student nurses may be seen in their leis- ure moments, which are relatively few. Members of the Junior Class enter the training school as probationers in September after completing two years of work at Junior Col- lege. After four months probation they receive their caps as an impressive ceremony in January. The rest of the year is taken up with classes, general floor duty, and special services which include surgery, diet ketchen, dispensary and surgical supply. When they are graduated to Intermediate Class they play hostesses to Seniors with entertainment. (3|(et Woik An evening spent at home in a spacious, comfortable living room. Enjoying Sunday morning tea at end of a hard week ' s v ork. l ec eaiioH Home Life in Nurses ' Quarters Bounce Ball for recreation. As Seniors, the nurses spend most of their time in affiliation with other insti- tutions, but also participate in many social affairs, the supervisors ' party, the Intermediate Class reception, the alumni banquet, and baccalaureate and graduation ceremonies. Then with the change from the blue and white uniform of the student to the conven- tional white, the nurses are ready to carry on with their chosen work. Throughout their years in training, the student nurses organize themselves into a student body, with officers elect- ed to uphold the constitution, handle Through the wringer. student jurisdiction and regulate stu- dent funds. The governing body is known as the Student Council and con- sists of Senior, Intermediate and Junior Class presidents, a campus represen- tative, librarian, social chairm.an, and a faculty advisor. Since all nurses must spend some of their time receiving training in other Southern California hospitals, other than the Huntington, temporary officers take over duties of those forced to vacate the council. Ping Pong helps to pass off-duty time. Meals are ample and tasty. fllens Obohii foowall Pet C ■f ommissiCH First row, left to right; George Ennis (advisor), Dell Hungerford (commissioner). Second row: Peggy MacLagan, Dorothy Porter, Ruth Champlam, Gloria Anderson, Audry Sum- ral. Third row: Bill Collins Jr., Jack Reynolds, Rufus Blake, Dick Forehan, George Morzov. Fourth row: Claude O ' Haver, Dick Fox, Charles Ellsworth, Archy Bohnus. cnc X.eaae ' ii Left to right: Dottie Stevenson, Maralyn Phillips, Dot Goertz, Jeanne Olivera, Peggy King W (( JQnas Sam Johnson, Norm Stanger, Bob Thompson T? .. i - ::;- ' i 1 . , • C a s(( V First row, left to right; Elmer Holman, Willie Slayton, Johnny Evans, BUI O ' Donnell. Second row, left to right: Walt- er Self, George Dickson, Ardy Vartanian, Jack Simison. Third row, left to right: Vic Lauricella, Jack Weller, John Brantmon, Harvey Yegge. Fourth row, left to right: Dick Croskrey, Bob Bowman, Floyd McGee, William Meek. Fifth row, left to right: Roy Pizula, Bob Heublein, Joe Pash, Bryan Brown. i oacnes Otto Anders i OWtOVtCt Pasadena JC ' s Bulldog Varsity opened the sea- son with a 26 to win over Pomona JC in the Rose Bowl. Scores came in every quarter of the ball game with Ardy Vartanian, Elmer Holman, John Brantman and Richard Croskey ac- counting for 24 points. An automatic safety in the third quarter gave PJC an additional two points. PJC ' s big, green line showed up particu- larly well against Pomona. Quarterbacks Evans and Dickson ran the team wisely, taking advantage of a slippery field and a wet ball. Jan Thurman Tom Mallory Backfield: Bill O ' Donneil, Ross Wmton, rdy Vartanian, Johnny Evans. Newt Stark t a (2 CcPtvCi J PtCc The Bulldogs did the impossible in their second game, and upset Santa Ana ' s national Jaysee champs, 20 to 7. Bulldog heroes were the linemen, who kept the Dons ' husky backfield under control. Heu- blein recovered a fumble for a touchdown in the second quarter, and a series of success- ful passes brought PJC two more scores in the third. Ace pass-catcher was Willie Slay- ton, who grabbed five during the game. The Dons ' lone score was on a long pass to Fletcher, who ran 64 yards through a broken field for a touchdown. uiiehion TiitlC tiOVi Wi h Fullerton having one of the Southland ' s strongest elevens, the Hornet jinx once again proved a downfall to Mallory ' s team. Pasadena experienced a letdowrn after the Santa Ana victory, and never seemed to get their attack going against the fast Fullerton team. The locals scored first when Lauricella made a beautiful catch of Johnny Evans ' pass to go 25 yards for a score. Ross Winton ' s all-important conversion was wide. A pass from Lewis to LaShell tallied for the Hornet ' s, and LaShell converted to make it 7-6. Though the scoring was nearly even, PJC was badly outplayed. bounced back into the victory column as they were easy victors over the Solons, 21-6. The Bulldogs scored first on a pass from Evans to O ' Donnell. Croskrey smothered fullback Ham Lo in the end zone to make it 9-0 a short time later. In the second half, Elmer Holman went over twice on a fake spinner. The quarterbacking and passing of Johnny Evans was outstanding. Bill O ' Donnell, half, scores first in Sacramento game. Quarterback Johnny Evans downed after long end run £.Q.e.e. On the first play of the LACC game Jackie Fellows tossed a long pass to Beauchamp who went the remaining 45 yards unbothered. The Bulldogs came charging back and were on the Cubs ' 13 yard line when Rex Schroeder, towering end, intercepted a flat pass and went ninety yards for a touchdown. LACC scored again m second and third quarters. Holman went off tackle for the second and final Pasadena score. ieHoai f dale was no match for the revamped Bulldogs. Johnny Evans ripped off fifty yards around end for the first PJC score. A short time later Willie Slayton climaxed a long downfield march by going over from the four on a reverse. Pasadena scored again in the third quarter when a pass from Herb Sagerman to Slayton made it 20-0. The rout of the Vaquero was completed when Croskrey intercepted a desperate Glendale pass and went over untouched. an flanckcc by narrowly edging out San Francisco after a bitter struggle. The Pasadena eleven took advantage of a Ram fumble midway in the second period and Elmer Holman bucked over from the three after a short drive. Pasadena put the game on ice with a brilliant 74 yard touchdown run by Johnny Evans in the third quarter. Turk Terzian, the Ram ' s big offensive threat, ac- counted for the visitor ' s seven points almost single handed. ? V Ci ' Pt m yPtCc U IPtO San Bernardino ' s scalping party b a c k - fired on them when the hot and cold Indians were completely demolished by a highly geared Bulldog attack which accounted for 32 points. Jack Wellar took a pass from Evans for the first score. Evans scored himself a short time later on a 30 yard sideline dash. Herb Sager- man went 37 yards for the third Bulldog touchdown m the first half. The Indians marked up their only score in the second period on a long pass. Holman, fullback, plunges for score against San Bernardino ■f ' |P r«?f ¥ : ' ( ' Half-time frolicks at Compton game. I a twilight game, Pasadena took the Held against Compton in late afternoon slightly favored to repeat against their bitter rivals. An icy wind ffwept through the R o s e B o w 1 and there were few fans on hand to cheer the Bull- dogs as they sought to take their seventh game of the year. Though the Tartars had suffered several defeats and sported a spotty record, there wasn ' t a person in the stands who thought PJC would have an easy time of it — and this soon proved it- self to be the situation. Handicapped by the cold, both teams were practically helpless as untimely and costly fumbles broke up 1 o n g drives and bogged down their attack. After a Comp- ton score, Vic Lauricella took a pass from Evans for PJC ' s first touchdown, and Sager- man converted. Evans slipped around end behind beautiful blocking for a touchdown. Sagerman converted again, and the score stood PJC 14, Compton 7. Pep talk, Thurman style. PtHlt Ci ' Marked by their best team play of the season and re- vamped lineup, the Bulldogs outclassed a hard fighting Ventura club 19-0. Ardy Vartanian climaxed a 53 yard drive in the second period by crashing over from the three. Herb Sagerman ably filled in for Johnny Evans when he tossed a 35 yard aerial to Willie Slayton for the sec- ond touchdown. Evans ended the evening ' s festivities by going 27 yards off tackle for the final touchdown. L p OClCltCS Coach Tom Mallory held his first week of practice with almost an entirely new squad. Lettermen in Captain Harvey Yegge, Dick Croskrey, Leroy Homes and Elmer Holman were on hand to anchor down the key spots, but the blond headed mentor had to look to newcomers for the bulk of his forces. Johnny Evans and Vic Lauricella soon proved to be boys who could do most anything. Evans was selected on the first string All-Southern Cal backfield, while Lauricella took second string left end position. Evans forced out after gain against Compton. ' C ' ,P,: J : Back row; Coach Arnold, Simmons, Nelson, Lankas, Miller, Smipson, Reifel, Hanson, McCowan, Dunovan, Kelly. Middle row: Morgan, Cozzins, Grund, Searles, co-captain. Chase, Heublem, Karelius, Alexakis, Kellog, Wilcox. Front row: Mgr. Vath, Lester, Johnson, Grant, Commerford, Tiji- ma, Martin, co-captain. Bicknor, Whithead, Huff, Mgr. Jackson. Absent: Busik, Long. f ' lCili Jcowall The 1941 Freshman Gridders under the fine direction of Coaches Jacqua and Arnold finished a very successful season with fine prospects for varsity material in evidence among the young warriors. The plebes showed a good deal of promise, displaying a lot of fire and spirit as well as ability throughout the grid year. A fast backfield and a charging line made up the Frosh eleven who suffered only a single defeat in their regular sea- son. This year ' s schedule held a strong challenge to the strength of this squad and their display of ability and sportsmanship gave much en- couragement to the coaches m their never ceasing search f o r a strong future varsity. Bill Bickner brought down allei tiuoi I gum ugamst Santa Monica Pile-up ends Frosh gain against Hoover High Jicsli Jcciball Annexing a tie for the Metropoli- tan Conference championship and crowding their way to the finals of the C. I. F. tournament was the story of last season ' s Bullpup foot- ball team on the record books. Suffering but a lone defeat dur- ing regular season ' s play, and that to San Diego High in their initial encounter of the season, the Pups roared down the stretch, knocking off their eight final opponents by heavy scores and qualifying for the C. I. F. playoffs. Here they upset a heavily fa- vored Santa Barbara team in the semi-finals and, with the cham- pionship of all Southern California at stake, dropped their tilt to Santa Monica High in one of their hard- est fought battles of the season. ' - ' •MiIMbi Outstanding was the sturdy line of Lankas and Johnson at ends, Cozzens and McCowan at the tackles, Hansen and Chase at guards, and Alexakis at center, and the fast- moving, hard-hitting backfield headed by Bickner, Comer- ford, Busik, Tajima, Simmons, and Dunavan. Lineman Bob Chase and Back Bill Bickner were awarded second team ratings on the Helms All-Southern-California eleven for their fine all-season performances in sparking the Pups to their successes. Bickner squashed in Coliseum after long gain. naskewali i. V-4: -f i. Vaisitv Ijasnewall V Assisting P I C in her debut in t h e Metropolitan Conference, Coach Carl Metten ' s basketballers ended the season in possession of third place in league standings. Paced by Armor Killingsworth and Bill Purvi- ance in the forward slots, the Bulldogs split their season with seven victories and five defeats. Don Egbert started in the guard position, while Ray Mc- Lean traded off at center and guard with Bob Blacker. First row: Don Egbert (27), Tom Brown (23), Bob Reed (28), Alton Pryor (25), Jack Weller (18), Bob French (30). Second row: Armor Killingsworth (20), Ray McLean (24), Lonnie Rippy (34), John Irwin (35), Reed Flickinger (21), Bill Purviance (22). ' 1 Purviance (22) watches Rippy score against Vikings. Killingsworth and Purviance led the Conference in points scored. Purviance copped second place honors at the close of the cage period. Killingsworth dropped out of the running to- wards the end of the season due to a face injury. First league game of the season found the Bulldogs boasting a record of six wins and one loss in early practice games. Play- ing as favorites, PJC won an easy 59-53 victory over the weak Lanky Forward Bill Purviance sinks a hook shot Ventura JC live, with the whole squad seeing some action during the game. On the same weekend Santa Monica fell under the power of the Bulldog forwards, Killingsworth and Purviance, who sped the ball down the court with a fast break that kept the Corsairs mystified. The score ended 60 - 39. Compton JC cagers brought the first closely contested battle for the Bull- dogs when Pasadena came out on the top end of a 49-41 score. The next weekend gave Pasader;a a victory over Glendale JC 53-35 and a defeat at the hands of Long Beach JC, league winners. The height of the Viking squad proved to be too much for the B ull- dogs who only averaged about 5 ' 11 ! In the next game Killingsworth and Purviance went wild, each garnering high individual point honors with Santa Monica JC, receiving blunt of the blow, losing 66-43. The Ventura-Pasa- dena game was a real thriller with the Pirates winning 47-48. Purviance and Rippy retrieve ball from backboard RippY leaps high for basket. . eascH s Ow Second League dumping was under the supervision of LACC who neatly took the en- gagement 43-30. With Comp- ton JC the close guarding tac- tics of Tex Winter and loss of Killingsworth were too much for Pasadena and they folded completely, dropping the tilt by a score of 53-32. Gaining revenge, Bulldogs knocked off Glendale 61 - 38. Long Beach again won over the Bulldogs w i t h a score of 67-49, and the final game of the season brought a win and revenge when LACC was taken 43-28. Purviance tries an overhead. J ' iCi k Oaskewall Highly touted at the start of the season, the Bullpups failed to materialize into the great team that was expected. When they were hot, they played brilliant ball, but unfortu- nately they got cold also, and this took the glory away from their good games. Top notch game of the season occured when the team traveled to San Diego to meet the tough Hoover and Russ High quintets. Here the Bullpups came through with a close win over Hoover and an equally close loss to Russ. Despite the loss of the nucleous of his team by graduation, Coach Al Weary Wal- ton ' s squad reached the semi-fmals in the C.I.F. playoff before falling before the potent Russ five. Mel Baer and Irv Noren, the scoring twins, led the Pups, with Rod Jordan, center, and Huddy Scott and Bill Jarvis guards, rounding out the lineup. In addition to these five, lettermen included Joe Towner, Bob May, Darrel Agler, Bob Beaver, Ted Eckerman, Ross Handy, Norman Peek, Ray Abbott, and Walt Jaworski. First row, left to right: Bill Lee, Ken Haley, Ted Eckerman, Darrell Agler, Rod Jor- dan, Mel Baer, Irv Noren, Walt Jaworski, Richard Ertell. Second row: Ray Abbott. Dick Forehan, Ross Handy, Norman Peek, Ed Goeppinger, Bob Beaver, Huddy Scott. S 9 P ' Vaisitx Walton good for two bases. Zmk in action at iirst. 1 ' jaseoail -4 ,) . . • . i This one went for three bases. High and inside. Coach John Thurman Seventeen wins and eight losses head the ledger for PJC ' s varsity baseball team, coached by John Thur- man and Newt Stark. In league play, the locals split two games with Santa Monica. Two victories were registered over both Compton and Long Beach. Los Angeles City College proved the one big stumbling block in Pasadena ' s championship hopes, twice winning in routs. Glendale, potential confer- ence title holder at this writing also split with Thur- man ' s boys. Until they fell apart in late season, the Bulldogs boasted a great hitting club. i V . ' rfU Top row, left to right; A r le y Corpe, Ralph Walton, Ken Chestnut, Tom Kipp. Second row: Ray Abbott, Glenn Danielson, Ray McLean. Darrell Agler. Third row: Joe Fash, Walter Ball, Ben Carr, Jack Wellar. Jicsn Ijaseball Advancing as far as the Southern California play- offs, Coach Nor Jaqua ' s f r o s h nine lost a tough battle to Santa Barbara 11-6, to be eliminated from the baseball finals. In their second year of free lancing, the squad closed with 13 victories to their credit. On the other side of the ledger, in red ink, are but four defeats. Captain George Morgan guarded the hot corner and sparked his team to victory with outstanding fielding around third base, and by cracking out his share of hits when batting. Irv Noren ended his season on the pitcher ' s hump with the sensational record of 10 wins as against 2 losses. Hal Stratton, who called the signals from behind his iron mask, and Charles Searles, center fielder, in the estimation of Coach Jaqua, helped to round out one of the best teams he has had in several years. s ' - I ■-h -j,. ,[.. Ji.. . ' % . First row, left to right: Irv Noren, Mike Furlong, Dick Rose, John Adams, Bob Peddy- cord, Reese Davis, Mac Hanson, George Rowe. Second row: Chuck Searles, Wally Gilmore, Dick Busik, Harold Jackson, George Oevanan, Walt Jaworski, George Mor- gan, Hal Stratton. Despite the loss of several key men through in- eligibility, and dropping from school, Coach Otto Anderson, nevertheless, molded together a favor- able track squad that managed to take third place in the Western Conference finals and again the show place in the East-West Conference dual. In the National J.C. meet at Visalia, seven men placed high up for the Bulldogs. Gerald Shook, three-year letter man in the pole vault; Ray Mc- Lean, highjump; John Irwin, shot; Ross Winton, discus; Rufus Blake, broad jump; Stan Prather, half mile, and Ed Fernandes, low hurdles, all turn- ed in convincing performances. Vaisii Riddle leads hack Pasadena again competed in the Long Beach and Fresno Relays, where a select team was chosen. Here the Bulldog relay foursome, of Jackie Riddle, Ed Fernandez, George Eidson, and Stan Prather, ranked along with Compton and Santa Ana as the best mile relay team in the state. In the field events and not in the sprints, a sit- uation new to Pasadena, was where the power of the squad lay. Gerald Shook was the cham- pion vaulter of the Conference, Ray McLean rank- ed within the first three m the highjump, Rufus Blake won the broadjump, and Irwin and Winton v ere the number two men in shotput and discus fiich in the 440. iiL Coach Otto Anderson Hopes were high for a championship squad at the start of the season, but when dusky Frank Batiste, brilliant sprinter and hurdler, was declared ineligible, the stock dropped. Co-captain Frank Mosher, hurdler, delt the second blow as he withdrew from school to work. As if this was not enough, Dave Van Etten, number one shot-putter with a new school mark of 47 ' 2 completed the rout with his departure in the middle of the season. Left to right: Karl Gordovier, John Coleman, Joe Swartz, Tom Putnam, John Irwin, Ray McLean, Gerald Shook, Ed Fernandes, Tom Burdick, Jules Michalski, George Eidson, Fred Hawley, Stanley Prather, Rufus Blake, Jack Riddle. Jicsn I iack Six PJC track men from the BuUpup division qualified in the annual Southern California meet this year. Jack Lankas reached top pole vault record, with George Hayakawa qualifying in the 100 and 220 yard dash. Others participating were Toshio Hayakawa, entered both in the 120 low hurdles and the 50 yard dash. Eugene Lyon qualified m the C division high jump, Howard Thornton in the B division pole vault, and Thomas Kelley in the B division 100 yard dash. Considered crack track man for the year was Jack Lankas of outstanding pole vault record. Harvey Kuykendall, described as most improved track man, just missed qualify- ing in the mile in the divisional meet held at West Campus. Of track meets this season, A division won 3 and lost 3; the B division won 5 and lost 1. ! . ' J S s h S ' Members of Frosh Track Team. Frank Clements, Manager. - y- • ' -r-7 Left to right: Willie Slayton (heavy weight); Bill Morzov (light weight); Don Slatter (147 Lbs.). Absent from picture: David Hardig (160 Lbs.); Hardward M 1 1 1 e r (127 Lbs.); Al- berto Humberto (112 Lbs.); Ed Slattery (135 Lbs.); Ed Gallagher (118 Lbs.). OO S (Jo[ Cjl The 1942 tourney of t h e Golden Gloves was held without it origi- nator, Leland MacAuley, who was acting as an instructor at Baker. Most interesting fight of the en- tire tournament came when Dave Hartig, silver glove winner of two years ago, came up in a heavier weight division to cop the Golden Glove. Action in semi-finals. earn First row, left to right: Vir- gil Arklin, Glen Seltzer, Edwin Ortiz, Jack Barton, Keith Storey, Ted Winn, Tamio Fujimoto. Second row: Cliff Fauchier, Hae Flasel, Gerald Shook, Stanley Pohl, Jack Hollen, Tom Wason, Hugh Porter Wilson, Jim Link, Jack Ro- sandar. Coach Carl Met- ten. Additional member: Mickey Strand. Tamio Fujimoto in action. 1 1 First row, left to right: Rudy Castel- lano, Morris Handberg, Bud David- son, Dick Remy, Freeland Edwards and Manager DeWiese Stevens Second row; Coach Ken Smith, Jim Redding, Bob Swam, Dale Firestone, Norman Dietzel, John Stanton and John Holmgren. 7. tms Continuing along where they left off last season. Coach Kenny Smith ' s netters went on to another undefeated year, which saw them trounce the best PJ ' s in the south land, as well as the college fresh- men in this area. Coach Frank Arnold ' s Bullpups closed mediocre season with a rec- ord of 15 wins and 7 losses. -JB L Jim Redding in an over-hand smash. Women s oP Badminton doubles at West Campus w. cmen $ po k Girl jumps to make return High kick in raucous speedball game Climaxing the fall women ' s sports program, a basketball night finale was staged with Swish taking top honors. The WAA earlier in the year held a Treasure Hunt for new freshmen, sequel to Pal Day for the female athletic department. Archery awards of three arrows were given to Mary Stambach, Mary Randall, and Lilla Rendell for outstanding scores. The local girls swept all honors m badminton at the Southern California shuttlecock tourney, taking every event but the men ' s singles. The play was open to non-title holders in Colleges and Jaysees throughout the southland. Speedball, tennis, baseball, swimming— tennis playday with Compton— we won. PJC also won SC playday at LACC (Baseball). New constitution which eliminates point system was replaced with par- ticipation system, in effect since the second semester. Three highest point getters provide final competition for high-point winner. J aauates George Zilgett Senior Class President I g emcis First row: Jeanne Adams, Jeanette Adams, Mary Jane Allen, Muriel Allen, Shirley Allen. Second row: Eillen An- derso,n, J. Nasah Anderson, Dorothy Andrews, Dorothy A p p e 1, Elizabeth Arthur. Third row Beverly Ashton, Helen Atkinson, Virginia Babbitt, For- est Baker, Walter Ball. Fourth row: Betty Jo Bateman, Dorothy B a u g h, Gloria Beauchamp, Raymond Becker, William Behrs. Fifth row: Robert Ben Ali, Pauline Berg, Richard Biederbach, Eillen Blake, Audrey Boykin. Sixth row: John T. Boggs, Clifford Bradshaw, Jane Brown, Tom Brown, Virginia Brown. Seventh row: Edith Brown- wood, Gayne Burke, Wynona Burnett, Doris Burns, Coin Bury. Eighth row: Gloria Buscaeglia, Betty Bush, Clara Buckman. T o k e y i Yashihaski, Noel Young. I ' Mim ' L km i LTii- ., g H(0 $ First row: Ward Bush, Douglas B y 1 e s , Norma Calkings, Lois Callender, Margaret Campbell, Philomena Campiglia, Jean Cannom, Helen Cann, Evelyn Carlson, Pam Carr, Claire Carter, James Cartwright. Second row: Inez Carver, Jane Car- ver, Melba Chambers, Dorothy Champion, Ruth Christopher, Margaret Clark, Celeste Clauser, Suzanne Clubb, Glenn Coffey, David Coleman, Rodney Colvin. William Commerford. Third row: Velma Connor, Edv in Chandler, John Crawford, Palma Currado, Phyllis Daggett, Francis Dahm., Mary Ellen Dahm, Floragene Davis, Harold Davidson, Clarissa Davis, Marilyn Day, Stuart Deal Fourth row: Louis De Ford, Elizabeth Den- ham, Jean Deniston, Robert Dickerson, Fred Dun- gan. Alberta Duryea, Charles Dyke, Roberta Eager, Grace Ehlig, Norman Elliott, Joe Elson, Jim Eley. Ffth row: Weston Embree, Mary Eva Emery, Mary-Evelyn Estus, Vera EvelLn, Louis Falconi, Marjorie Fiddament, Pat Fitzsimmons, Kenneth Foltz, Julanna Foster, Howard Fountaine, Bob French, Barbara Friend. Sixth row: Pat Friend, James Froyd, Nancy Gallishaw, Herberta Gardner, Donald Gamer, Robert Gerry, Kay Gibbs, Nancy Gibbs, Beverly Gillett, Mary Ellen Gibrane, Martha Girvan, Barbara Gleeson. Seventh row: Mary Lee Goodwin, Betty Good, Carl Gordinier, Stanley Goodell, Selma Gottlieb, Violet Gough, William Graham, Marion Green, Gerry Griest, Robert Grind, Elizabeth Groash. John Grumm. Eighth row: Mercedes Gutierrez, Carol Haas, Margaret Hall, Joe Hamilton, Nellie Hamilton, Margaret Hannah, Leland Harder, Betty Jo Harris, Jack Hasslinger, Dan Hawk, Thomas Haynes, Dorothy Heist. g emo s First row: Betty Lou Henderson. Josephine Hen- nessey, Avilla Henry, Carol Henry, Mae Jean Herzberger, Eugene Hess, Betty Heatherington, Mariella Hill, Ruth Hissong, George Hoffner, Vir- ginia Hooks, Ray Hovard. Second row: Cloyde Howard, Quentin Howard, Ruth Huettlin, Hallie Huff, William Humphrey, Dell Hungerford, Einna Hunt, Betty-Jo Hyatt, Betty James, Josephine Ji- menes, Merodine Johns, Beatrice Johnson. Third row: Duane Johnson, Gloria Johnson, Warren Johnson, Shirley Jones, William Kelly, Barbara Keskey, Jayne Kidd, Jean Kidder, Eugene Kiliam, Emma Kimball, Robert Kischel, Lois Kline. Fourth row: Walter Knott, Robert Kreston, Irwin Kristan, Vivian Kronquist, William Krom, Pauline Layher, Pat La Monte, Mary Louise Lean, Pat Lee, Peggy Leech, Laurence Levy, John Lineback. Fifth row: Ernest Lidell, Robert Little, Geraldine Lotz, Flor- ence Lowe, Alice Lutz, Betty Lynn, Thyme Lytle, Ruth MacMahon, Jane Macy, Robert Malcho, Betty Anne Manning, Doris Martens. Sixth row: Ruth McBurney, Genevieve McClay, Catherine McCollum, Margaret McCown, Helen McFarland, Anna McKesson, Katherine Mecham, Margaret Mellen, Bernice Miller, Duane Miller, Teresa Mitchell, Eugene Montgomery. Seventh row: Mar- jorie Morrall, Ted Morse, Joyce Murphy, Betty Myers, Bernice Nadey, Jewart Neal, Art Nelson, Ernestine Nelson, Lois Norman, Lucile Nutt. Eighth row: Shirley Oglesby, Fred Owen, Alberta Pampeyan, Robert Patten. Robert Pattison, Stan- ley Pohl, Rosella Potter, Jim Potter, Lorraine Pound, Lena Adeline Primafiori, Eleanor Prosser, William Preston. IXV € ' C iil A lmVv ' if r: i ■y i i - ' - .- 4 • -- ' ' «%«• L il ] l k flS t -: ? )?y ■ - i V  v mA% . minmA emcis First row: Gwendolyn Pruitt, Ella Pugh, Kathleen Pulling, Alton Pryor, Charlotte Rahn, Warren Ran- kins. Don Ransom, Kenneth Rawlinson, Eugene Real, James Redding, Laurence Recher, Rachel Reid. Second row: Rosemary Reece, Jacqueline Renfrew, Mabel Renfroe, Joe Rensch, Jack Rey- nolds, June Rice, Louis Richards, Violet Ridgeway, Glenn Riley, Stuart Rinker. George Rolens, Vir- ginia Rooke. Third row: Betty Ross, Jean Roun- tree, Leonard Ruoff, Doris Rush, James Sanford, Kieth Savage, Robert Schadel, Lyle Scheline, Gladys Schmidt, Marjorie Sether, Glenn Seltzer, Edmund Sevadjian. Fourth row: Nora Sheppard. Kenji Shigetomi, Charles Shippey, Gerald Shook, Zora Shurtz, Jack Simison, Betty Simmons, Wil- iam Simmons, Isabelle Simmons, Virginia Sim- mons, Paul Sleeth, Robert Smith. Fifth row: Mad- alynne Smith, Virginia Smith, Margaret Snyder. Miriam Spence, Marion Sprott, Norm Stanger, John Stanton, Kay Stewart, James Stiles, Jack Stumbo, Florine Sweet, Helen Thayer. Sixth row: Evelyn Thompson, Robert Thompson, Kathleen Thompson. Margy Thompson, Milton Thorn, Wil- lis Thurston, Stanton Towner, David Troncoso, Pat Tubman, Jane Tucker, Pat Turner, Chieko Tsu- chiyama. Seventh row: Jane Tyler, Mary Tyler, Ed Vath, Laura Lee Voseipka, Dorothy Wardwell, Ray Walker, Lorry Wallace. Francis Warner, Ella Belle Watson, Evelyn Webster, William Welsh, Siebert Weissman. Eighth row: Dorothy Wie- gand, Louis Weidner, Robert Weisenberg, Del- wyn Wilde, Agnes Wieland, Howard Willis, Flor- ence Wilson, Raynard Wilson, Lee Writer, Mary Yoder, Earl Young, Irla Zimmerman. Llc)c)iticHai zy o J ac)uaia FEBRUARY GRADUATES— WEST CAMPUS Louis Fernando Acosta, Doris Elnora Anderson, Florence Alta Bowden, Rose Madeline Burch, Del- pha Irene Deushane, Robert Nicholls Glasgow, Lowell Royden Hopper, Elizabeth Lucille Houts, Pat- rick Edward Killian, Walter Louis Kroneberger Jr., Paul Monroe Lowthian, Donald Robert Morrison, Richard Pember, Virginia Sownham Prucha, Elea- nor M. Sanders, Kenj Shigetomi, Frances E. Wilcox, Ruth E. Williams, Harvey H. Love. JUNE GRADUATES— WEST CAMPUS Herbert Allison Axxe, Thomas Brown. Betty Louise Bugbee, Fred Paul Burns, Margaret Katharine Cash- man, Robert I. Cockle, Anthonia Hermanna Daams, Wallace A. Erickson, Richard Paul Evans, Charlotte Elaine Gibson, W. Blair Haskett, Mary Constance Hayes, Ernest Joncar, Esther C. Johnston, Gordon Richard Jones, Lorraine Kingsley, Donald Klopben- stein, Barbara Isabelle Lang, William R. Madden, Helen McConnell, Virginia Alice Moore, Mary Ann Mulhern, Elaine Fannie Newton, Georgene A. Orr, Orpha May Pitman, Leila M. Pound, Patricia M. Proctor, Conchita Ramirez, George W. Retzer, Mor- ley Ritcha, Zoe Joyce Scribner, Betty Louise Sey ler, Dorothy Virginia Sims, Virginia Ellen Smith, Ken- neth Wagner, Fitch Allan Winchester, Celia Wong. Gilbert Hisami Yamamoto, John Bailey Young. FEBRUARY GRADUATES— EAST CAMPUS Roderic M. Abbott, Robert John Andrino, Sanford Ash, Bartold Gabriel Norman Bartold, Francis Eve- rett Bossier, John William Beard, Raymond John Becker, Earl Thomas Blume, David G. Brady. Dana Boardman Braislin, Albert James Brown, Warren Arthur Burlison, Juonita Caruthers, Ray Evans Cho- pin, Kathleen L. Christie, Clark William Clemens, Edwin Robert Copeland, Albert H. Crocker. C. Rus- sell Crozier, Albert Cowles Daley, Josephine S. De- Priest, Robert W. Devenish, Maurice Austin Down, L. Jack Dunbar, Carlyle Wesley Falkenberg, Wil- liam Wayne Farrar, William Arthur Fuzoli, Marjorie Mae Fletcher, Gordon Eraser, Euphrocyne Emma Frye, Charles LeRoy Haines, James Thomas Haley, Leland Thome Hardor, Helen E. Hawks, Lois N. Heaney, Robert M. Heublein, Miriam L. Hoefer, Nor- ma Holway, Warren J. Howland, E. Lamont Johnson Jr., Betty Delores Klank, Arnold Baird Livingstone, Raymond D. MacKenzie, Herbert C. Magney, Robert Mather. Bill H. McGraw, Pauline Virginia McKeen, Ray Willis Mendenhall, Albert Earl Mitchell, Lois Marie M o a k, Donald N. Montgomery, Sally-Jean Newton, Phyllis Eloise Moffet, Robert O d a Taka, Yoshike Ozono, Louis Poppas, Alfred Ellerton Par- ker, Tom A. Phare, Barbara Jean Pierson, Irwin F. P ' oshls, Claude Joseph Radamcher, Violet Amelia Sanderson, Bette Ann Soales, Elizabeth D. Schwie- ger, Robert T. Simeral, Shirley West Snyder, John William Smithson, Robert Chandler Stevens, John E. Vanderbur, Jim Fred VanHorn, Arline M. Voboril, John Herbert Wachtler, Lorraine Eleanor Walker, Jack Dudley Wiegand, Donald Albert Winton, Mari- lyn Elaine Wortman, K. James Otsuka. FOURTEENTH YEAR GRADUATES SUMMER SCHOOL— AUGUST 8, 1941 Arthur T. Ahrons, Charles Edward Allen. John Luth- er Breiner, Mary Frances Bronson, Frederick Virgil Buge, Eldene Lay Bush, Arvilla Davies, Eleanor Fields, Olm D. Fmley, John W. Gamby, Bette Gru- elle, Henry Joseph Hardin, Robert Hogarth, Forrest L. Johnson, Harold Scott Jordan, Dorothy C. Lane. Billy Burke Laughren, Howard D. Meirter, Helen Marie Morris, Thomas O. Morrison, Arthur Emil Nel- son Jr., Mary Louise Oakley, William Wheeler Parks, Robert Lincoln Pierce, Edward B. Pelhemus, Wilbur S. Sackett, Katherine C. Seager, George Trunk, Walter Glenn Vogelsang. Donald Owen Ward, Mary Elizabeth White. FOURTEENTH YEAR GRADUATES SUMMER SCHOOL— SEPTEMBER 18, 1941 Raymond Elamore Ford, Francis Harvey. H hitional z i Lj ' iaauates JUNE GRADUATES— EAST CAMPUS Virgil Parnag Arklm, John B Ashmore,, Ruth E. Eackmeier, Julia Frances Bailey, Robert Peter Ba- roynaugh, Gailand M Barger, David R. Barnhart. Donald Leroy Barton, Elizabeth May Bates, Neil Beckman, Frederick Albert Behrens, Mane Louise Besse, Alfred Anton Boeke, Virginia Mae Bower- man, Dana Boardman Braislin, David Michael Brown, Gertrude Louise Buehler, Donald Loyd Burk- holder, William Richard Cobb, Harold G Cole. Takeichi Wesley Chinen, Mary Louise Condie, Charles L. Corbett, Betty Ann Crosby, Dorothy James Datter, Justine Day, Nellie Marie Delp, Paul R. Dennison, Jack Wylie Dougherty, John E. Dough- erty, Rosemary Dryer, Junette Duebbert, Charles A. Dwyer, Lorraine A. Ehrardt, Margaret A; Eiland, Sylvia Jean Elder, Charles M. Erichsen, Eloise Ew- ing, Claire C. Fairhurst, Clifford Ernest Fauchier, George Finkel, Glenn C. Fife, Robert Hertel Eraser, Virginia Jane Friend, Carroll Friswold, Willard F. Ganther, Edward R. Gaul, Manfred Geisler, Bar- bara E. Gerschler, Charles A. Giboney. Winifred Anne Gilchrist, Marcia R. Goldberg, Muriel B. Gott- lieb, Robert Edward Gough, Alice Jane Graham, Frances E. Graham, Carol Elizabeth Gray, Elinor B- Grayless, Hobert Greenawait, L e i t a L. Gruwell, Julienne Marie Hall, Virginia Lee Hall, Mary Ellen Hammond, John W. Harris, Howard Austin Harvey, Geo rge Buckley Hawes, Helen Elizabeth Hawks, Richard H. Hayes, Mishael E. Hernandez, George Hidalgo, John James Hilburn, Robert W. Hilde- brandt, Robert House Hippe, John Anthony Hislop, Elsbeth Ruth Hoehn, Robert F. Hughes, William J. Ibbert, Lois Ella Ihle, Ivan Ishiguri- Dale Miller Jahn, Wilbur S. James, Irving R. Johnson, William A. John- son, Harold Scott Jordan, Allan W. Keith, Dorothy May Kerns, Emil Micheal Koledin, Charles David Kratka, Virginia Mae Kumer, Ralph R. Langley, Mel- vin Leavenson, Peter N. Lee. Jack Foy Lester, Ralph R. Le Vitt, Gordon C. Lingren, Eraser Lovett, Bette Jane Lucas, David J. Mackie, Thomas W. Macklin, Maurine A. Maclagan, Thomas Le Breton MacLeod, Edith B. Marrs, Marlow Marrs, Marjorie Ann Martin, James Marugg, Avis May. Alvira May McBride, James Raymond McLean, Raymond M. McMana- man, James A. Milne, Marguerite L. Minassian, Phyllis Eloise Moifet, Cranston Parker Montgomery, Edward R. Montgomery, William Edwin Moore, Ann Elizabeth Moran, Honora Rosemary Moriarity, Bar- bara Jeanne Morse, Mary Howell, Arthur Fred My- ers, Jo Frances Nation, George Walker Neill, Theo- dore M. Nelson, Virginia Nicholson, Alvin Nikirk, Julie G. Nocerino, Keith L. Olson, Dorris Catherine Ottjes, Edward Pampeyan, Melvern Earl Ponkratz, James W. Park, Virginia Lou Paterson, Catherine Ann Peterson, John T. Pettit, Gracehelen Phermam- bucq, Charles Edward Phillips, Betty Jane Pickler. Ross Nelson Pierce, Stanley Theodore Prather, Jack Prenderville, Robert O. Randall, Bill Kendall Reece, Douglas Edward Reeder, Don Robert Rice, Elmer H. Rice, Edward H. Roeth, Ernestine Ann Rogers, Paul E. Russell, Bette A. Scales. Edgar George Schoelz, Bertha Mae Schrack, Elizabeth D. Schwieger, Albert W. Shirley, Kenneth J. Simpson, Wayne Kendall Simms, Robert G. Skinner, Claire M. Sloggett, Jack R. Smith, H. Virginia Smith, Laura Margaret Solum, Doris Lee Somerville, Eugene M. South, Mike Ed- ward Spooner. Dorothy Jane Stevenson, Edgar Howard Stoner, Jane Ursula Stuessy, Betty June Tadd, John Edward Taylor, Ross Jones Thomas, John D. Timmo.ns, John W. Ulrickson, Adolfo A. Vargas, Donald K. Veale, Norbert Verbeck, James Vivona, David F. Walker, Florence Wallace, Stanley Dick Ward. James Anthony Warren Jr., Clarence L. Wel- liver, Orland W. Wilcox, Earl Woodrow Windsor, Alan S. Wood, Harvey O. Yegge, John K. Young, Philip George Young. Stanley Clough. I flui e Jlac)uate First row, left to right: Herma Berger, Yetta Berkowitz, Florence Bliokenstaff, Sylvia Bors- vold, Virginia Brockmueller. Second row: Marjorie Currier, Louise Dobson, Phyllis Evans, Alice Hager, Helen Hessey. Third row: Thelma Larkins, Rachel La Rue, June McCoy, Doris Mclnnis, Aline Peterman. Fourth row: Carol Raab, Gloria Secrest, Peggy Shaw, Margaret Smith, Ruth Townsend. Fifth row: Margaret Tupper, Kathleen Wallentine. Ad- ditional graduate: Jean Herbert. f : l V TfL ' 7 e f r obL cmoies Jim Nash Sophomore Class President II Lewis Saxby Sophomore Class President I cbh cmciei First row: Queenie Abajian, Jane Ab- bott, Raymond Abbott, Betty Adams, Virginia Adler. Second row: Sidney Aitken, Dorothy Alms, Frank Aleshire, George Alexander, John Allen. Third row: Dorothy Alley, La V o n n e Al paugh, Lenora Altunian, Marian An- drew, Gladys Anderson. Fourth row: Alice Apramian, Evelyn Apramian, John Arima. Roy Armour, Dora Mae Armstrong. Fifth row Jeanne Arnold, Frances Arnet, Arthur Artinian, Shirley Ayer, Mary Babcock. Sixth row: Mar- ion Baker, Howard Baldwin, Eleanor Balch, Marilyn Barnett, Paul Barn- house,. Seventh row: Helen Barnum, Marcia Bear, Doris Beck, Virginia Be- dell, Joe Belilove. Eighth row: Mary Beliveau. Genevieve Benadum, Esther Bemmer, Leslie Berman, Jacqueline Berry. U ML Jm. m. 9 ]?■ fl plt cmcies First row: Beverly Best, Audre Beck, Bill Biller, Claire Blackwell, Edwin Blake, Pat Blalack, James Blakesley, Betty Bliven, Betty Bloom, Pat Blough. Fat Blume, Florence Blume. Second row: Glenn Boekenoogan. Ruth Bower, Betty Bohanon, Helen Bowman, Betty Bogert, Mary Box, Clara Brai- nard. Myrtle Briggs, Betty Brooks, Bill Brown, Gordon Brown, James Brown. Third row: Bar- bara Brennon, Joyce Bryant, Barbara Bulgey, Margaret Bundy, Arline Burdorf, Virginia Bums. David Bush, David Busik, James Butler, Betty Bye, Marie Calahan, Mildred Cameron. Fourth row: Kenion Cardwell, Carol Karkeek, Alice Caruthers, Dolores Carroll, Robert Carroll, Evelyn Cass, Ru- dolph Castellono, Betty Cazel. Charles Chambers, Phyllis Chamberlain, Mitzi Chapman, Hortense Chavez. Fifth row: Kathleen Cheal. Pauline Cheney, Albert Chapman, Wyvona Chapman, Dons Christensen, Kathryn Chubbuck, Denver Clark, Eleanor Clark, Helen Clark, Jay Clark, Edwin Coats, Mary Cogswell. Sixth row: Oscar Cohen, Florence Colburn, Gertrude Colburn, Mar] one Colwell, Myra Collette, Joan Commer- ford. Jack Commerford, Raymond Commerford, Barbara Comomile, Evelyn Conklin, Russell Conklin, Grace Corbett. Seventh row: Frederick Cornett, Carolyn Cook, Fern Cook. Harold Cook, Jacqueline Cook, Ruth Cook, T h e 1 m a Cooke, Aileen Cooke, Tom Cozze.ns, John Grain, Lillian Christoff, Dorothy Cridland. Eighth row: Spencer Crilly, Lorraine Cuoton, Nicky Curren, Berna- dette Cutler, Glendal Custer, Madeline Daley, Mary Darkes, Gerald Dahl, Louise Dickey, Joan De Leveille, Jeanne De Garmo, Jerry De Huff. plt cmoKei First row: Valerie De Mey, Marjorie Dinwiddie, Helen Dixon, Phyllis Dobro, Edwinna Dodson, Charles Doehrer, Dale Dodge, Dorothy Dring. June Dorlond, Dorothy Dessert, Frances DuBois, Geneva Ducey. Second row: Shirley Duckworth, OUie Dunham, Adolph Duran, Mary Durant, Leo Dunavan, Doreen Eckloff, Paul Egigian, Elsa Ehlers, Charles Eidson- Ermal Elliott, Ray Ellis, Shirley Ellwood. Third row: Ruth Engle, Nancy Epton, Margaret Erickson, Eilma Erickson, Geral- dine Evans, Marjorie Evans, Robert Evans, Mary Evergreen, Madelyn Eves, Dorothy Failing, Bob Farmer, Delia Farmer. Fourth row: Margaret Farquhar, James Farrell. Hazelle Farris, Marjorie Fellman, George Felbeck, Shirley Fenton, Dor- othy Fisher, Florence Findley, Marianne Fink, Charlotte Ficker, Stuart Fitch, John Flannery. Fifth row: Grace Floy, Ed Flynn, Earle Favor, James Foley, Barbara Forbush. Robert Ford, Mar- garet Fordyce, George Forteville, Martha Fox, Bob Frame, Richard Franklin, Lorraine Frank. Sixth row: Janet Frayne, Roy Frederickson, Sally Freese, Eileen Frantz, Elizabeth Furlong, V i r - ginia Fuller, Lorraine Gadon. Mildred Gage, Armida Garcia, Bettye Garber, Virginia Gert- menian, Rosemarie Geisler. Seventh row: Bar- bara George, Edith Gibbs, Frank Gibbs, Betty Gibson, Bettie Gibson, Thelma Gibson, Beth Gidley, Florence Giese, Marcus Gilbert. Bill Gil- ger, Marjorie Gillmore, Wanda Girty. Eighth row: Harry Gobrecht,, Dorothy Goedhart, Eula Goertz, Raymond Gonzalez, Dorcas Gooden, Arlita Goodson, Robert Gordon, Norma Gossel. Marcella Graf, Nancy Grant, Ralph Loren Grass- mueck, Jeanne Gray. l cbL cmciei First row: Betty Lou Granger, Marian Green, Dorothy Grose, Mary Gulack, Maxine Guthert, Stephanie Gutenberg, Marianne Gutmanne, Genevieve Hadley- Virginia Harden, Henry Haynes, Norman Halajian, Alysone Hales Second row: Kenneth Haley, Virginia Hall, Alice Hanft, Ruth Hanks, Barbara Hannah, Priscilla Hannah, Carol Harford, Dvifight Harper, Anna Harrison, Robert Harrison. Wilma Hartley, Ruth Hart. Third row: Ruth Hartsough, Alice Harvey, Homer Har- vey, Elsie Hasard, Carleton Haskett, Barbara Hassett, Dorothy Havell, Dorothy Haver, Jean- nette Haver, Fred Hawley, Lolita Hay. Marilyn Hayes. Fourth row: Tatsuo Hayakav a, Gordon Heaslip, Barbara Heather, Robin Henderson, Anne Hendrix, Jean Hendricks, Julia Henning, Donald Henney. Viola Hernandez, Arthur Her- rington, Herbert Hertel, Mavis Hill. Fifth row: Mollie Hill, Bill Hill, Ralph Hippert, Lucille Hoe- vel, Robert Hoffner, Erma Hoggan, Gordon HoUe- man, Douglas Holman. John Holmgren, Darlene Holmes, Evelyn Holmes, Rosamond Holmes. Sixth row: Oliver Holt, Pat Hopkins, Ernest Ho- vard, Richard Hove, June Howard, Rebecca Horn. Maye Hawley, Fred Houghton, Richard Houle, Mary Hauke, Adolpho Huerta, Dolores Hughes. Seventh row: Jack Hughston. James Hutchins, Betty Hutton, Dorothie Hutton, Mary Anne Hut- ton, Dale Huson, Phyllis Huss, Lois Ickes, Kiyoshi Ikeda, Ruth Ison, Bettie Iverson. Ethel Jacobson. Eighth row: Ruth Jacobson, Jeannette Joy, Robert Jensen, Gordon Johnson, Lois Johnson, Kathryn Johnson, Myrtle Johnson. Paul Johnson, Joyce Jordan, Yvonne Jardine, Edna Jones, Elinor Jones. S € 7i i 1 l f i Scflt cmCies First row: Marjorie Jones, Virginia Mae Joy, Shir- ley Elizabeth J u d d , Cornelia Kallos, Marjorie Joan Kalmbach, Betty Lou Kammann, Richard Stanton Kanavel, Patricia Kanavel, Irene Minnie Karst, Margaret Naomi K a s h i m a , Maryellin Kates, Yoshi Kato. Second row: Francis Peter Kaufmann, Martha May Keaton, Phylis M. Kee- nan, Elli Keenctn, Betty Mae Kellan, Virginia E. Kelby, Jean Marilyn Keller, Roger Meritt Kelley, Kenneth Kellogg, Eugene L. Keith, Mildred Louise Kennedy, May Ruth Kerfoot. Third row: Evelyn Faye Kern, Donald Eraser Keys, Julia Beach Kibby, Elizabeth Ann Kidder, Barbara Jeanne Killgore, David Kooke Kilmer, Peggy Frances King, Barbara Anita Kinney, Jack R. Kleckner, Jane Roswith Klein, Ursula Elizabeth Klos, Betty Jean Knight. Fourth row: Emma Louise Knight, William Keith Knauss, Richard Berndt Knudsen, William Albert Koester, Dow- nine Koffard, William Allen Kohl, James Greeley Koltz, Nick Kostos, John Karanjian Jr., Ruth Eileen Krause, Winnie Lou Lambert, Norma Jane Lan- deck. Fifth row: Donald E. Langille, Edward Frederick Larson, Marilyn Joy Laurin, Hazel Irene Laursen, Bradford Clair Lawson, Donna Shaul Lawrence, Nancy Ann Leach, Albert B. Levy, Bonnie Jean Lewis, Bessie Matilda Liljen- wall, Sophie Louise Liljenwall, Theodore Mc- Guire Lilley. Sixth row: Peter P. Linder, Donald K. Lindsay, Blanche Frances Linhart, Ernest Everett Lister, Grace Anna Litz, Lucille Elizabeth Lipman, Ralph Charles Linville, Janice Elaine Long, James Allen Long, Erva Ruth Long, Lor- etta Marie Laughran, Mary Eleanor MacDonald. Seventh row: Donald N. McLeod, Kenneth C. Mallory, Bob Malone, Noel Manton, D a r 1 e n e Markham, Patricia Marks, Nancy Martel, Albert Martin, George Martin, Mary Martin, Merlene Martin, Edmund Mastrolia, La Verne Mathews. Eighth row: Audrey McClellan, Antoinette Mc- Clung, Thomas McCowan, Kathleen McConaghy, Caleb McCormack, Helen McCuddy, Jeanne Mc- Cune, Janet McCullough, Dorothy McCulloh, Patrick McDonald, Ann McDuffie. opL cmcies First row: Mary McElrath, Pat McGhie, Geraldine McHale, Edward Mcintosh, Theodore McLean, James McLeod, Wayne McMurray, Lois McNab, Kristine McNary, Marjorie M c N a b b, Leighton McNiff, Phyllis McShane. Second row: Robert McWilliams, Norman Meager, Warren Meacham, Mary Menon, Dan Meub, Evelyn Meyer, Kenneth Milette, Phylis Middlelon, Katherine Miller, Mil- dred Miller, Marie Miller, Doris Miltimore. Third row: Catherine Miquiff, Margaret Mockbee, Con- stance Montgomery, Robert Moore, June Mont- gomery, Max Moore, Gwendolyn Morgan, John Morgan, Virginia Mogensen, Betty Mortensen, Joan Mortimer, Martha Mowe. Fourth row: Fred Muller, Alfred Munk, Mary Murchison, Joan Muir- head, Gordon Murphy, Jean Murphy, Virginia Musacchia, Ayako Nakata, Jim Nash, Dorothea Neely, Mary Ann Astrid Nelson, Emelia Anna Nelson. Fifth row: Mae Newcomb, Bernard Nich- olls, Verla Grimm Nichols, Barbara Nix, Bessie Lou Nobles, Lewis Norton, Patricia Nybye, Mar- ion Odekirk, Caroline Offutt, Claude O ' Haver, Carolyn Olsen, Virginia Olsen. Sixth row: Mil- dred Olson, Edwin Ortiz, John Osgood, Mary Otis, Marjorie Otte, Eugene Overholt, Elizabeth Ortiz, Jean Owen, James Pace, John Paige, Christy Palmer, Dorothy Palmerston. Seventh row: Charles Parker, Earl Parillo, Grace Parna- kian, James Paschall, Evelyn Pastre, Laura Payne, Edward Perez, Marjorie Peterson, Marilyn Phillips, Mary Phifer, Charles Pierson, Fred Pink. Eighth row: Jean Pittendrick, Gloria Place, Karl Potter, Betty Pond, Dorothy Porter, Bonnie Pau- lus, Jerry Peterson, Frances Powers, Frank Price, Margaret PuUen, Mary Pulling, Ronald Quick. Lf r ZyopL cmc e First row: Doris Radcliffe, Herbert Langman, Vio- let Resey, Cheryl Rask, June Rautert, Elizabeth Lovelace Raymond, Edward Reed, Mary Reeves, Donald Reid, Eleanor Reid, Patricia Reid, Betty Remick. Second row: Barbara Remy, Lorraine Rew, Innes Reynolds, Richard Reynolds, Durand Riccardi, Virginia Richardson, Norman Riggle, Elizabeth Rinehart, Fred Roberts, Frances Rob- ertson, John Robertson, Aurelia Robledo. Third row: Bruce Robbins, Beatrice Rodriguez, Elsie Roland, Georgia Rose, Eileen Rosenberg, Eva Rossback, John Roubian, Lois Rough, Natalie Rowell, Martha Rowlands, Jonathan Royce, El- liot Rosman. Fourth row: Elizabeth Rubly, Mar- garet Ruether, Paul Rumbaugh, Wayne Sackett, Anna Mae Salomon, Betty Sample, Merle Samp- ley, Dorothy Sandberg, June Sandiforth, Sig Sandstrom, Richard Saul, Louis Saxby. Fiith row: Eleanor Scharer, Dorothy Scherr, Hope Schlinger, Alice Schoeppe, Eldred Schammahorn, William Schneider, Adrienne Schwarz, June Schnee, Betty Schaefer, Nancy Schrock, Barbara Schuebel, Donald Schulz. Sixth row: Melna Vera Scott, Lura Sears, Francis Seefurth, Jeannette S e 1 p , Mae Vellon Sewell, Barsom Shakarian, Lenore Shannon, Virginia Shafer, Frank Sharp, Kenneth Sheets, Zella Shepp, Jane Shiedls. Seventh row: Berge Sarkis Shirvanian, Sei Dan Shoda, Dar- lene Siebken, Constance Silvestri, Jerry Servais, Elaine Skleba, Janice Slater, Dale Smith, Doro- thy Smith, Douglas Smith, Elwood Smith, Erwin Smith. Eighth row: Joyce Smith, Johnetta Smith, Louis Smith, Marian Smith, Robert Reynard Smith, Raymond Smith, Wilma Smith, Glen Sny- der, Dorothy Solms, Florence Sorensen, Shirley Jane Stansbury, Barbara Stephens. %.aT1 mLLMm - ' ' M C I 0i L ' £i Sopli omoiei First lo ' w. !. ' :rr.- Jor.e Edna Stewart, Betty Lee S-l-:r.ger, Kathieen Stone. Stanford Strain, Doris Stroten, Robert Joseph Streff, Florence Ellen Stacky, Ruth Stumfco, Schuyler Gill Sullivan, May Britton Sundberg, Mar orie Sundstrum, Pot- tie-Jone Sutliff. Second ro ' w: Charlotte Sutterley, Harold Swortz, Betty Leu Swafford, Roy T. Su- — aii Charlotte Sydnor, Gladys Sympson, Donald 7arr, Elizabeth Tarr. Kenzo Tanaka, Pat Taylor, Betiie Taylor, Carl Fester Teut. Tiiird low: Mari- lynn Termoat, Margaret Theiss, Jeanne T h i e I, Helen Thomas, Katherine Thomas, Margaret Thomson, Margaret Thompson, Muriel Tiers Ad- rienne Tilondy, Robert Tcokey, Pauline Truss, Arthur Tuverson. Fourth row: WHiiain Tubman. Barbara Turner, Doris Turner, Rita Viola Turner, Ruth Eleanor Twitchen, Jean Uphemia Uhlig, Elizabeth Van Name, Wilton Vannier, Helen Van Note, Robert Van Wye. Virginia Vassar, Mary Louise Villaiobcs. Fifth row: Esther Vega, Elsie Johnson, Winifred Jean Wagner, Jacqueline Wal- ker, JecEine Wcddell, Patricia V olters, Ralph Edward Walton, Barbara Wallingford. Ann War- nick, Clyde Kenyon Warren, Naomi Felicia W ashbum, Agnes Cecelia WaisorL Sixth row: Z cris V atson, Barbara Webber, Virginia V eb- zez, Bemice Weber, Vivien Lois Weber, Donald .Vebster. Ruth Weissman, Clyde Ira V elch, Stevens Weller, Jeanne Shirley Weils, Jean ■ eish, Barbara Jean V est Seventh row: Anita _5e W estman, Eugene Weston EI, }.Imha iVnite. Phyllis White, Cnarles Whit carrer, Barbara Jean Whitehead Betty Lanier Whitney, Betty Rose ViThitney, Donald L. Whetstine, Sylvia Wiedemann, Helen Louise Wikstrom, Walter George Wilcoxson Jr. Eighth row: Evelyn Wid- ner, Barbara WiUccx, }.[c:rcr.e .Vilde, Dolores Aliene WiUiams, Edward Wilson, James Wilson. Alvin Wirick. Tennie Kay Wingren, Helen Beth W olcott, Lester Lewis V oolman, David Gregory Wood, Elaine May Wood. ?opL omCiei First row: Geraldine Wood, Patricia Woolever, Richard E. Wortmonn, Virginia Wright, Bill Jack- son Wright, Howard Allen Wysatta, Calvin Don- ald Yegge, Alice May Yocom, Eileen Emma Zink, Jane Margaret Zust, Mabel Leona Zufall. H itioHal zyoplicmc es FEBRUARY GRADUATES— WEST CAMPUS Mildred E. Addington, Irvin Earl Anderson, Roberta F. Bossier, Edith Louise Biedebach, John Stuart Bowden, June Loraine Bower, Betty Jean Butler, Nettie Esther Cashman, Barbara Kathryn Crosby, Charles Dickie, Roy Edward Dickson, John Thomson Douglas, Stanley Anderson Erwin, Aaron Grant Fairfax, Julie Forhi, Charles Harison Fowler, Robert Willard Frandsen, Douglas D. Goad, Bernard Har- ris, Virginia Barrett Holcumb, Richard Lee Hussey, Chester Otis Johnson, Julia Lottie Jones, William Stanley Kaminski, Edward Kasabian, Nick Kostos, Chester Link, Betty L. Morse, Grace Munushian, Harold Haruo Nishikawa, Jack C. Noble, Robert Eu- gene Norby, Betty Jane Pankiatz, Clare Marjorie Parker, Thomas W. Prince, Elece Raglin, Lucille Elizabeth Ramsauer, Virginia Elizabeth Rowland, Gladys Betty Schaefer, Rudolph Eugene Schneider, Jack William Schultz, Thomas Gordon Seymour, Lucille Dolly Silverman, Barbara Sinclair, Mary Florence Smith, John Lawrence Till, Benjamin Theo dore Vail, Robert Alfred Turner, William Carl Wag- ner, Lydia Walko, Leon Ward, Irving Weber, Glen A. Wenter, Norine Emma White, Lillian Wilson, Mary Louise Chisam. Llc)c)iticHal o pf cmc ' ies JUNE GRADUATES— EAST CAMPUS Carolyn Aberle, Jeanne Partridge Adams, Brent Hamilton Alford, Frank Joseph Arko, Melvin S. Baer, Donald Bagnard, Betty Frances Bailey, David Banks, Michael T. Banta, Edward Russell Bartlette, Robert W. Bateman, Helen Yvonne Bench, Marilyn Lee Benjamin, James Harlan Blake, Shirley Jeanne Boles, Richard Scott Bone, Wyoline Jane Booker, Robert Brickert, John Mark Brillhart, Robert Floyd Burgess, Douglas Caplette, Harold Gustave Carlson, Joanne Carter, Betty Elaine Chapman, Virginia Ann Clark, Robert Theodore Coffland, Janice Alexandra Cole, Richard Lester Collier, Donald James Combs, Pierre J. Cossett, Mary Colleen Crocker, Frank A. Curry, Gerald Varnon Dahl, Lee Hunter Darrow, Marilyn Davies, Coleen Thelma Davis, Ro.nald Carl Davis, Stanley Alan Dawkins, Jay Lawrence Daw- son, Louise M. Deering, Virginia Ruth Dennison, Vir- ginia Devine, Richard Edmund Dorn, Brian B. Dunne, Charles A. Early Jr , Harry Arthur Ehlers, Marston Bishop Ellis, Marjorie Mae Elmore, Norma Ann Ferris Famularo, Robert Arthur Farlice, Ruth Lewise Farris, Ethel Huntington Gibbs, George C. Gibbs Jr., George William Gibson, William Earl Ginn, Eleanor Marie Gorton, Lenore Louise Gorton, Hifumi Steve Goya, Frederick William Grumm, Ed- word Dwight Gummig, Pamela Marie Gustin, Louise Ranghil Halverson, Derald Wayne Hansen, Russell Robert Hansen, Barbara Bain Harker, Oliver Wardwell Harker, James E. Hayward, Winthrop Lee Higginson, Alberta Hilton, Jack John Holloway, Nancy Ann Loraine Holsinger, Mary Louise Hunt, Richard John Hurley, William Howard Hurter, Dex- ter Beal Jackson, Teddy Marvin John, Frank Cam- eron Jamieson, Tom S. Jamieson, William Jansen, Geraldine M. Jones, Robert Eston Jones, Roderick James Jordan, Laurent Albert Jose, Bik Yee Jung, Mary C. Kalb, Jack Kalmbach, David Allen Kanavel, Betty Mae Kellam, Sheila Kemp, William Sherman King, Clair E. Kirk, Marjorie Frances Kirst, Stanley J. Klenk, Richard M. Koslow, Doris Lise Kromann, Eleanor Chambers Lamb, George Ferris Land, Maud Landers, George Arthur Landgard Jr., Mari- lyn Joy Laurin, Walter George Lee, Argyle August Lelievre, Katheryn Leveson, Donald Longstreth, Don Maylon Loynd, Bill Roy Mackie, Harry Madison Jr., Osmer O. Mallan, Vol Mariotti, Patricia Maxwell, Barbara Ann McAbery, James Harlan McCallum, William T. McClelland, Robert L McCullagh, George Robert Mecke, John Menagh Jr., Fred D. Merrick, Frank Ralph Miller, Harlan Elmer Miller, Ray Miller, Albert William Mills, Joan Anne Mil- ward. Esther Georgina Miner, Mildred L. Simmers Miser, Robert E. Moeller, Harlan Stacy Moore, Wil- liam Edwin Morrison, Betty Ethelyn Mortensen, Tom Joseph Nash, Bill E. Neuhauser, Dennis O. Nickel, Melvin Lloyd Oldham, John Everett Oliver, Kenneth Edward Olsen, Mary Lou Orban, Nelson M. Otis, Carleton E. Palmer Jr., Phil Carhart Patterson, Thomas Richard Paul, Mabel Aileen Payne, Carolyn Jane Perry, Arthur B. Pilant, Melvin P. Poole, James B. Price, Clifton Proctor, Roger Avon Pugh, James Pulliam, Norman Quist, Robert Gerhard Ranson, Whitney P. Reeve, Lilla Jane Rendell, John Law- rence Reynolds, Clifford Arthur Rich, Robert John Richardson, Franklin Donald Robinson, James Mitchell Roe, Bruce J. Rogers, Thomas Page Rootes Jr., John David Rubsamen, Zereta Russell, Paul E. Sanders, William L. Sargent, Ralph E. Schaefer Jr., Donald Schoenleber, Vera May Scott, William Bu- ford Shaw, Jack Henry Sheen, Billy Ira Shotwell, Harry Slater Jr., Geraldine Barbara Smith, Reuel Hyatt Smitter, John H. Sparks, David Gordon Steele, Joan C. Steffgen, Glenn Albert Storms, Verris Eu- gene Stutenroth, Barbara J. Sutton, Wilbur Brener Thayer, Leona Irene Thomas, Robert Earl Tinker, Joseph Waggoner Towner, J. Norman Turk, William Leo Unger, Dorothy R. Vinten, Russell Adolph Vo- gel, Frederick Earl Vogelsberg, Mary Suzanne Walker, Paul Glenn Walker, David D. Wallace, Frances Ann Ward, Donald Eugene Weddle, War- ren Calvin Welbourn, Gaylord Devon West, Bill Case Whipple, Robert P. White, David H. S. Wilcox Jr., Ralph Henry Wilcox, Coral Mae Willetts, Mono Mane Willey, Constance Rose Williams, W. Gerald Wilson, Mary Jane K. Winkler, Arnold Luther Wood, Eric John Woodbury, Irene Ruth Zacharias, Charles Barnes Murfee. Llc) iiicHal cpncmcies SUMMER SCHOOL GRADUATES— EAST CAMPUS Catherine Babcock, William Daniel Bolle, Bill Robert Crossen, Peter Kent Doniells Joseph William Hansen, Donald E. Henley, George Hidalgo, Robert Howell, Sarah Jane Kress, Donald Gail Kreis Daniel Richard Livingston, Charles Robert Love, Richard H. Martin, Richard C. Perman, Bette M. Perrault, Eunice I. Ryker, Frances Cady Schultee, Ellis Grant Scott, Virginia May Smith, Romanzer Tyus, William Shigeru Yamamoto. FEBRUARY GRADUATES— EAST CAMPUS Darrell Edward Agler, William Maurice Aizenztat, Permelia Sue Alexander, Helen Marie Alig, Kathryn L. Alser, Samuel Carl Ansorge, Joyce Armantrout,, Melvin Douglas Atwell, Margaret Laurine Babcock, Odessa Bailey, Bob Harold Beaver, Elizabeth Beck- er, Herman David Bess, Peter John Buwalda, Bar- bara Jean Camomile, Delbert Ben Carr, Alice Beiter Cash, Malcom Royal Clement, Donald Arthur Cler- mont, Betty R. Codron, Frances Louise Conn, Thomas V. Densham, George Cyril De Smet, George F. Dewey, Jack L. Dineen, Robert Regnold Ehlers, Elizabeth Joy Evans, Jack V. Follis, Milton Frincke, Lawrence Fusha, Jack Leighton Gaard, Ralph Lincoln Geohegan, Mary Lee Gilloon, Lor- raine J. Grassmuck, William Grund, Walter Wilson Harper, Beverly Hassett, James Nelson Hedenschau, Bill Theodore Heimann, Thomas D. Hennes, William Frederick Hoefer, Richard Harold Houts, Ray Dud- ley Hutchins, Ronald Eraser Johnson, Madeline Kademshian, Mary C. Kalb, Robert Campbell, Kel- ley, Chole Alene Knapp, Marylu Lake, Marie Mar- guerite Lambert, Clifford S. Lance, Charles G. Lau- derbaugh, James Gordon Lewis, Jack L. Mansell, Stanley Markham, Douglas Shaver McDonald, Doris McLane, Jack Franklin McSweyn, Edward William Medler Jr., Kenneth Meguiar, Edward Rowland Miles, Jack Eldon Miller, Bradford McLaren Mishler, Lawrence E. Molt, Berne Hallard Moore, L. Frances Mosher, Bill Franklin Mowry, Ray G. Mueller, Dick E. Munson, Glenn D. Nesheim, Margaret Newland Marsalon Patterson, Robert Saul Piller, William A. D. Pond, Elizabeth Doris Remington, Elizabeth Stew- art Reoch, Esther Richter, Thomas William Roberts, Suzanne Gail Robertson, Beth Rocke, William J. Russell, Hudson Lewton Scott, Vincent Scott, John J. Shippey, Erwin Stuart Smith, Helen Jeanne Smith, Wesley Robert Smith, Margaret Louise Soems, Rob- ert Eugene Strite, Jack Melvin Tallon, Madeline Tar- pin, Er nest Alfred Taylor, Randall C. Thayer, Leona Irene Thomas, William R. Towne, Stephen H. Tusler, James Paul Vandervort, Ed Van Kopp, Eleanor Blanche Vernon, Geraldine E. Ward, Bill Thomas Wilkinson, Lester Lewis Woolman, Ruth D. Wright. Llcl iticHai o P emcees JUNE GRADUATES— WEST CAMPUS Carmen Mary Acevedo, Charles James Adams, Joe Yuzuru Amai, Jerrie Katharine Andersen, Creola Anderson, Marie M. Anderson, Ernestine Andrews, Shirley Jean Aydelotte, Robert Jex Baldwin, Marie Banks, Stephen Angus Barlow, William Richard Beal, William James Bickner, Dorothy Allen Bos- trom, Eugene Norman Boydston, Alice Winifred Brainard, Lois Flora Brown, Dolores Burback, Ken- neth Wayne Carty, H. Eugene Chase, Betty Jean Cooley, Mary Louise Cooper, Norman Lester Davis, Robert Everett Demarest, Walter Peter Donner, Campbell Arthur Edwards, Virginia Erwin, Arthur Fernandez, William E. Flakerty, Mary Ann Gardner, Paul John Gibbel, Ruth Bernice Goad, Robert Nick Gymnaites, Robert E. Haas, Alberta Ann Hainer, Franklin Francis Hannan, Arnold Richard Hansen, Dick Livingston Hardy, Richard Kendall Hatch, Don- ald Frances Hedlund, Elbie Jessie Hickambottom, Grady Hickambottom, John Edward Hogan, Betty Jeanne Huddleston, Eric William Johnson, Jean Avonne Johnson, Joseph Sam Johnston, Wallace G. Karelius, Elizabeth Ann Kidder, Mathew Kilcom- mons Jr., Albert Blake Kirst, Paul John Kluth Jr., Janice Maurine Kugler, Earl Alvin Lake, James Tarleton Lehman, Harleen Lindley, Betty Jean Mad- sen, George W. Mannschreck, Russell Wallace Marquard, Paul Martin, Jerry Bernarr May, James Lowell McAdams, Helen E. Meyers, Harold Dean Morton, Isabel Sarah Murdy, Irving Arnold Noren, Arthur Hugh Patrick, Nancy Jean Payette, Doris Elaine Pendleton, Myron David Praga Jr., Bernard Albert Ramirez, Ernest Ridgeway, Cecil Neal Row- ley, Robert Rubalcava, John Theodore Salvinger, Robert Thomas Shaner, Lois Genevieve Shannon, Stuart Christopher Shaw, James R. Simmons, Phyllis Nina Smith, Robert Burton Snyder, Edward Sotelo, Robert Benjamin Sotelo, Bettie Jean Stevens, Claude Curtis Stine, Stanley Erwin Sumner, Russell Theo- dore Taylor, Darous H. Todd, Louise Lucille Tomp- kins, Elizabeth Rose Tulli, George Link Van Amers- foort, Alfred J. Vatcher, Bernice Julienne Wells, Lawrence Lyle Wescott Jr., Jane Louise Wheeler, Warren Wilde Jr., Raymond Harry Williams, Anna Mae Winzenread, Frederick Witte Jr., Wendell Woodruff, Philip Wright Worcester, Mary Ann Yule, Frances Kathleen Zerega. I J •■ ' u-.. V. ' S-r ' ' ks. e U ' - ; ' fl H H H IL : % v B B ■L v V ■ . 1 1 ■ H 1 see what the boys in the back lot will have Riley entranced by a Scotch lassie and -we, to thrive, did eat oh, what she said . . . champ Stong at Cliink Checkers ' J ■ 1 , JfV- rvM 1 n iV 1 i T ' J H, student retreaters solve prohlems f 1 11 tfl Mil ■ n Davis hands the gavel to genial Boh Dale explains chicken anatomy to Dottie grandma died it carnal T-- . fi ;t-w:. no dance was complete without Boyer ■:elcoine to PJC - and we ain ' t kiddin :. ' i all ProBh have to go through this V . ' -. ' -5 faculty member swings out . .na K M R i lH Bi H 1 H . ir«SBL. .J ' .W- H , MS ' iffMaBk 80 what? did you ever hear of tuns? ■ future father given practice second-hand clothiers advertize dance rfflfaaps lust on the ten -yard line he won first prize with humps pipe the bouncing bite of pulchretude Evans just misBed getting this trophy ya did okay Harvey . , . , J these girls put pep into the game color ceremony on through these portals pass . . . ' . ' - a fifteen minute intermission, boss « ..-- ■ •. . «- ' -is ' r m 4 3 4 jjj, . iMh 1 IE 1 3.f 4 Ih ' 1 , , , , -i ( H B I fjfi W 1 H Hj B 1 V F ' ' ■ ' ' ' F H . 9 K E 1 1 i ' jOrt X r- fmk Sl llll f 1 ; f. iHMIi o ( r ' • .r •c


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Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Pasadena Junior College - Campus Yearbook (Pasadena, CA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945


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