Santa Ana Junior College - Del Ano Yearbook (Santa Ana, CA)
- Class of 1935
Page 1 of 166
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 166 of the 1935 volume:
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Business Manager C91 Layout Editor S Ana, California . ' ' fi? Q! gf y if f X , 62' fp, i f K7 1 'X ' Z ?'-eu! 5674 Z, T FOREWOIQD Symbolizing a connecTing linlc wiTh The heriTage oT The Don and The memory oT The pioneering CaliTornians-The Franciscan FaThers, and par- Ticularly Fray Junipero Serra-SanTa Ana iunior college graphically pre- senTs a chronicle oT This year oT her pioneering on a new campus. The cor- dial associaTion oT The college wiTh The mission San Juan CapisTrano, Fray Serra's liTTle jewel, appropriaTely suggesTed The Theme Tor This Del Ano, The TuTiliTy oT any TranslaTion inTo Things maTerial oT The memory ThaT is The greaTesT Treasure oT CaliTornians is admiTTed. BuT The ThoughT is peren- nially apparenT ThaT ouT oT our eTTorT may be breol a new respecT Tor These men oT God and consequenTly, a nobler concepTion oT ourselves and our inTeresTs. W. CONTENTS PICITCDRIAL ADMINISTRATION FACULTY STUDENT CLJASESES SOPHCMCRE FRESHMAN ALUMNI V REXXIEWV CDF TIIE N'E ACTIVHWES I-IONORARY SERVICE FINE AQTS PUBLICATIONS DRAMA MUSIC ART PCRENSICS ATHLETICS MEN'S WOMEN'S DEDICATICDN For 'ren years of leadership fha? have wirnessed Jrhe expansion of 'rhis ins'ri'ru- rion, i1's developrnenl inio a college in lacl as well as in name: For 'ren years of un- selfish service Jro The end +ha'r more men and women be filled for a higher manner of life, we 1'he s+uden+s of San+a Ana Junior College do dedicale Jrhis book oflhe year 'lo Dean Fisk, our fellow in learning. 'J dz PM , J-4,51- ',f- .Aft-a'i:7 V, A a.-5... ,. ,ff Lv. 5: QQ: ,'7 '1'fK fi' .,.,,,,.. i .',,' 151, -, at '1- 5 'Jill E V I F ff? , 5. Qi -.' 5 ' a '.-- '. ' X S ' V ,v . - jr . . ' , -'I-.LL -1' , -f V . '-, ,V ' : 45, ,r . '14, ,P ' , -Q . i , ' N: , ' . .AY-M -.7 1, 1 . . ,.,,, 'Af' Q i 5, 1, 5 N 4. 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Ill, 3, 5 --I ,5-35.15-4-,Qpi-1qq5:,.gE-'aifsga .-N 1' 'gQgLf?7' 415- x l ' AI, A ' P 'nv 454 --r vip: 521 ' 'I QF1 , .,.m.-Q 'gg . f, I ,QR 1, Z' A V q.:,'5,, 'ff A , f5.I4:3,f'. 'fxif1v fmw f . . f :ff?vt'.+ ,A-4 ,' 9- dv Al: 7-N uv- L ,pq -, 9Pfqgq:Ll,s.,w,1,, W, X f 1. .1 p, 5-egg' .gg , V, , .:--1 - - A+-I .QQ 3 nip-,W ,..ffg,4.., . 4 . f-gf .QM 1 - , , x , ,ch ' 2 . 3,-6, ,,. - ' F.. f , .. , ... - nw-1 .VW -, nj: 'f -'-'Lf F: f, ' V1 I, ' - . ' ff' ' . x A ' 'Q , . qT. 'i7FIaR1'ffF1-i ' .4 .- -1. . '--'51, 'fnwrggie . A .,..,,--M 'lg-' yy. 1 'lip xJg5j15w..,xiw, Q-.i2,q ', 'f 3, '- g.'g3g. .. , f ' y ,., , .',, .I ,. 'avg l - Kr ,i ' ' 4 1 g- . A .,, , 4- Ui Y fu i.j.i15 ,. i if '4,LQg,f'. .- T' f '2ff'f'?'3E ' ' '- + . fisffif fp'- v' ,A .,3xkV'4'.3Qf5w.ll.f,.'fg.!. f if -,k5Zf 1.g,f r - --f2:..f' 53.13 TTia:.agfQF+fP?Qf,-' ' ,I N Dwi'-NI. .-4' .'fW-'bn' --?fP 'N- , . ' -4' 'HT - - fag-..A -ff-ff 11 9 95 L ' M135 ' '--Q 'sr '- -. 5'1 2 4:-4' ' '.iQii5'5j1-.ji r -1. 4- - ' r - - '-. ' - f--yy -.:. ,Qui ' 1' , 7'.X19'f X - 'yi 2' f 'J- A' I ,? ' ' - 3 .135 4i51g:'.:f'f F . -V' '75 i'.: f,, Q, ' r -L -.A . f af H 1 r X ig , , ' 'gf'-9 - 'f -'ie SJ. -Ng x f' 'V 'f-T. -- J ' V- 4- Q wav:-Q . - A . 'A-'U 'L -, ' 1 'M f , 'f'f '!5V - ' . Q, X ,,., , any 4 , .-. H- , -...wx ,,:ga4il.'-'bm 51 .ui , ,W , A U . P K , V. A 2. L - fr-1 AQ i5.5,.,. ..-1. f. K .3171 4' I N' ' ' pay A ', . ' 'X X P, .. . '. .- - .. -L . - ' M W -- Q' ' fmif, 'ff I .gif 1. -,' l,f.v 1 -1, ' ' ' I ' ' It 3,4 lg 71 '-'T N, Xa -' '-+L. f'1'SQ,f-' -. V .Q V V- - if lsr- x ' ' ' -Y 'X ' A ' ,- Y. ig , . - V- ' .' ' .gm-.. 5' .3 R ...gl ' 'fx '4 'fF-4 -QQ., , .. . . qr , 4? -j, P f ,I ' 'fi fn Y -li '-C 14 ,F la . v. x,' W r 775' I , .. f' P' . .1 3, . s wi' 5q1si3l6' at.. ., +-.e'- , - A 31. Q mm, I5 HM - - wy- v ' 4 'ffi-' ' F 4'-diss , 1 , if! 'fi' A . ,-. s 51' - Ei . 3, '52 me - 29 ' iz, 1 t.. 1, .... ,...l..,,, -v J 'N ,. -f S .ky Q F. L . W, E, 112, v . 15 1 14, 4' l gf f A 4,41 vw -- - C HSA,-P,,, 4 is v ..,,2.,,.-,7 4. ADMINISTQATIQN J 53329 'I-.f'TlT. 133.73-... . , N I A x . A. ZXXFX3-1' in 1-U':.1.. NVWN wa. Uflf in - ...sv L -Q-----f J' Q .4 F- sw' 1 I VIII f ..3 ,.,,.i. 'N -1.-.., . ..,1 N . Ix ,f 11 +f .. J 1 C n I 'L' .-f ' Jw iid' .xl We ,- .,,-1. , EV.. , v ff' '. 'V .L - 'mn'- . .:.:::g- . , f , -, wg ,ll K 1 'Q ' , , ig W- ,, . 1 Z1 w 1 I 'W -II'1 : IfZiQfQ'f'Ii A?F ' !Il!i! .I CGI I PGI: ADM I N ISTQATICDN I FRANK A. HENDERSON For fhree years Frank A. Henderson has served capably in fhe office of Cify Superin- fendenf of Schools in Sanfa Ana. During fhis fime he has especially allied himself wifh fhe iunior college fhrough his genuine inferesf and concern in fhe developmenf and success of fhe school. His co-operafion has been invaluable in fhe launching of fhe college on fhe new campus. and his inherenf genialify and undersfanding has made of fhe closer confacf a pleasanf relafion- ship. Prior fo his posifion here, Mr. Henderson filled fhe office of Superinfendenf of Schools af Burbank for a number of years. D. K. HAMMOND As Dean of Sanfa Ana iunior college in I9 I 5, Dana King Hammond firsf displayed fhaf qual- ify of dependable leadership fhaf has charac- ferized his presidency for ninefeen years. His is a leadership of idealism fempered by wis- dom. He has ever sei his ideals high, and in sfriving fo achieve fhem has inspired fhe youfh of fhe college who have learned fo follow his sfeady guidance which exfends. beyond fhe school fo The communify. Sanfa Ana iunior college. a monurnenf fo his personalify and abilify, has come fo be a paf- fern for similar insfifufions all over fhe sfafe. LELAND AUER BAND. ORCHESTRA DR. MURRAY BATES HYGIENE L. L. BEEMAN POLITICAL SCIENCE RUFUS G. BOND MECHANIC ARTS J. RUSSELL BRUFF ZOOLOGY, BOTANY ETTA MAY CONKLE CHEMISTRY A. J. COOK PHYSICAL EDUCATION HAZEL D. DAWSON HOME ECONOMICS DOROTHY DECKER MERCHANDISING LILLIAN LEILA DICKSON LIBRARIAN FRANCES WOOD EGGE ART CALVIN FLINT ORIENTATION. HISTORY FACULTY McKEE FISK EssenTially an execuTive. Dean McKee Fisk compeTenTly manages The adminisTraTive aT- Tairs of The college, direcTs The organizaTion oT sTudenT acTiviTies, and yeT finds Time To insTrucT accounTing and business law classes. AlerT To every opporTuniTy Tor advancing The school. Dean Fisk is one of The pioneers in uTilizing psy- chological TesTs Tor The beneTiT oT sTudenTs wiTh laTenT possibiliTies. , His concern in The sTudenTs' welTare has made The AssociaTed STudenTs a more imporT- anT organizaTion aT SanTa Ana Than in mosT iun- ior colleges. Dean Fisk has been offered 'Fellow- ships in several universiTies since his alliance wiTh The college in I926. MRS. ELEANOR NORTHCROSS As Dean oT Women. Mrs. Eleanor NorTh- cross daily comes inTo conTacT wiTh The women sTudenTs oT The college, and aids Them in many ways. I-ler inTeresT in The problems oT many in- dividuals in boTh academic and personal maT- Ters and in club and social aTTairs has always proved beneTicial. Through her posiTion as chairman oT The commiTTee on F. E. R. A. proiecTs she has made iT possible Tor many sTudenTs To conTinue Their college careers. Mrs. NorThcross is also adviser of The AssociaTed Women STudenTs and in- sTrucTs several English classes as well as being prominenT in many communiTy aTTairs. FACULTY THOMAS HALL GLENN ENGLISH GEORGE B. HOLMES COMMERCE GENEVIEVE HUMISTON SECRETARIAL PRACTICE HARRY P. JACKSON COMMERCE ZENA LECK PHYSICAL EDUCATION JOHN H. MCCOY JOURNALISM, PUBLIC SPEECH MYRTLE ANN MARTIN MUSIC AGN ESS TODD MILLER ENGLISH EDWARD M. NEALLEY PHILOSOPHY, PSYCHOLOGY ERNEST CROZIER PHILLIPS DRAMA BYRON F. QUIVEY MECHANIC ARTS ALAN A. REVILL MUSIC RUTH ROWLAND HOME ECONOMICS H. O. RUSSELL PHYSICS, AVIATION H. A. SCOTT GEOLOGY MARY SWASS SPANISH MRS. JENNIE L. TESSMANN HISTORY. ASTRONOMY MRS. ELIZABETH THOMAS ART CHARLES L. TIBBETS MILL CABINET LELLA B. WATSON FRENCH. GERMAN MABEL GERTRUDE WHITING MATHEMATICS THOMAS E. WILLIAMS PRINTING CAROL A. ERSKIN E SECRETARY VIOLET M. JOHNSON SECRETARY FACULTY Q -as n Y 1 STUDENT ADMINISTIQATIGN at fg M 5 IW 2- - . ' Sl .rm 3, , l ' T ' 9 ',,f'ff ' xl ?5,cfX J D T, lx, ,',' , HX A5 YQ! r I ll f' Qs' lr RP . rw ', VT, 1, K ,lg A XX X rjlxf- , :xx JT L I IAVV L! ,Y 5 X. ,. ' Q A . RX . ,gf I ,Cf .K j QS, A jd F lWi1, lf- '11, Dx A xg, 4 Xfx, ,Jfx , f I X- fx tmp! Q1 P Iv O ,Ogjll ALJ' xl ,T Un fx' Q AJ' V' ff - ,- -I U ' T ' . f S, N ' , P Inv ty 1 im! If M! Nl W Mx.. T ,C Tj If ,Qflvl jkj fl, lk, B VMI, j 'gn All 35? 1 1 QQ, fe-A ' 'airy' 'T T lzewm wr' , xj ' M J A , , ,f T 1 1 T T T T 1 T, lr ASSCDCIATED STUDENTS During The TirsT semesTer The College ExecuTive Board under The leadership oT RoberT Tannen- baurn, AssociaTed STudenT presidenT, reorganized The sTudenT governing body aTTer The removal To The new campus. The Don DineTTe, a sTudenT cooperaTive c:aTeTeriag as esTablished by The board. Assishng Tannenbaum on The ExecuTive Board werehis oTTicers, T nHenderson,vice-president Eleanor Bowyer, secreTary7 and Cleo Smi+h, Treasurer: and Th coin l'SjQf'lgf'S, l-Tarold Woodard, Tor- ensics and produc:Tionsq Jane CrawTord, social: ClaudeOL si, en? hleTicsgYeTive Blanlc, women's aThleTics: Fredda SawTelle, EI Don: Jack Pegues and Chafjxs Qgfr,1ief?aDel Ano. The adviser Tor The group was Dean McKee Fisk. JT f4,af7'S'! PGIJHIIPB Assocmrm srunrnrs George Roberlson, Associaled Sludenl presidenl for The second semesfer, wilh his Execulive Board sellled Jrhe ioollaall leJrJrermen's swealer confroversy wirh salisfaciion for all groups inleresled. The Board also successfully worked in The appoinlmenr of managers for The Fiesla, Orpheo Troupe, and opera. Rober1'son's assisianls were Medora Smilh. vice-presidenlg Marfha Tulhill, secreiary: and Wayne Wilhile, Treasurer. Commissioners were Vernon Mansur, forensics and producliong Marian l-lawlc, soc- ial: John Rape, men's alhlelicsg Mary Wallace, women's alhlelicsi Jane Crawford, El Dong Jack Pegues and Charles Downie, Del Ano. Dean Fisk also acled as adviser during The second Term. LEM THKIIZUCM F l'l52HIiHiLKlEUill1Qf4DilA1.2h'Hl CLASSES fx 355 Q 'N 3 nga ,ia Al. ' -aww. r V -f V'5E5 5'E'EQ!rv .,.'v 3,, ,K A 1.1.1-4, :V 'T'r' . ivfqwll-I, J , I 171, 1 x 1 7-w iii, , ,-sigwbq V- - 1 Y in -- .. -- - ,.-.4 'Z -.i ,A 1 -1- g.,,,- ...JL cdhiav Lk adv, 'H A-lim' ' A ,.-f.u.5Q,.filg5K5,-psi. ir1E1.Eii il GFQADUATIQIXI The class of '35, iirsr Sanla Ana junior college class To graduare from The new campus on Norih lvlain slreel, held i'rs commencemenr exercises on June I3 following lhe baccalaureale sermon on JunelO. Those of us who wore lhe caps and gowns looked baclc wilh mingled regrel and pride over Jrwo happy, acrive years of iunior college li1fe.WiJrh a new campus in our second year if had been our pleas- urable duly io lead in The selling of new slandards. We fell regrel because we knew Thai we were leaving friends whom we mighl never see again. Bur lhere was pride and hope because we fell Thai we had added To Jrhe ideals of The college and Thai if in relurn had given us an experience which would cause us loiwrry our chins iusr a lillle higher and lo srep iusl a lilile more confidenily in our 'iurure walks of life-.l It 1 3 jg , tri., Q H N , jiri 4 inf. 'libs' MA mi 'in Mx Nj . 'Ri pf 1 GRADUATES SECTION CLASS PRESIDENTS fully direcfed fhe Sophomore class in ifs welcome fo fhe in- coming Freshmen during Freshmen Days and af fhe Soph- Frosh Dance. l-le was succeeded by Claude Owens, former Freshman class presidenf, who fulfilled fhe confidence which his class placed in him when fhey elecfed him class execufive for fhe second fime. SCDPHOMOIQES During fhe firsf semesfer Presidenf Glenn Bishop was assisfed by Lucian Wilson, vice-presidenfg Marian l-lawlc, secrefary: and Agnes DeBuslc, freasurer: in puffing info effecf fhe official dufies of fhe class. Second semesfer acfivifies of fhe graduafe class were carried on under fhe leadership of Claude Owens wifh Lucian Wilson in fhe vice-presidency, Jane Crawford as secrefary, and Offo Grigg as freasurer. .lZSEl3! E!'lEAhf15f92'lllS 0lTL'E3?5f'flf3iR32Li21Eifl7-S14lLaif H!!'nklK'KX':!d'Bd RE As firsf semesfer class presidenf Glenn Bishop success- GRADUATES HARRIETT ELIZABETH ABRAMS CADETT A. BARNES Newport Harbor High School 1933 Orange Union High School 1933 Education Letters and Science Beta Gamma 3, 43 Spinsters 1-4: Y. W. C. A. 1, 2: American Association of Engineers 1-4 Sigma Phi Sigma 1-4: Women's Octette 1, 2: Girl of the Golden Gulch 2: Orpheo Troupe 2, 4, Dona 25 Smilin' Through 4 RYVERZ LYNUWUL ALLEN MARIANNA BAXTER Huntington Beach Union High School 1932 Santa Ana I-Iigh School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science Alpha Gamma Sigma 2: Gauchos 3, 45 O. K. Club 4 Spinsters 3, 4: Alpha Gamma Sigma 2, 4: Phi Theta Kappa 3, 4: Assistant Class Editor Dol Aiio 2: A. W. S. Advisory Board 2 CLIFFORD J. BAXTER GORDON BEISEL Sa.nta,Ana. High School 1933 Santa Ana High School 1033 Letters and Science Letters and Science 1 Alpha Gamma Sigma 43 Football 4 Alpha. Gamma Sigma 2-43 Phi Theta Kappa 3, 43 Orange County Research Project 3, 43 German Club 2: Pi Mu Gamma 1-4: Eastern Research Award 1 W. KENNETH BEARD MARGARET BINGHAM Santa Ana High School Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Commerce Alpha Gamma Sigma 2, 3: Phi Theta Kappa 35 Phi VV. A. A. 1-4: A Capella Choir 3, 4: Girl of the Golden Sigma Alpha. 2-4 Gulch 25 New Moon 4: Basketball 1, 33 Life Saving 1, 21 Baseball 2: Swimming 1, 2, Hockey 2 V W' '7 LV' ,JAN . V - '-.1 ,x,x?.-.6 .pi fl Q QLD wtf' tif' , ,V iz! A0 x lQ'.Xl '7'Z! ,- .D .' A K if .1 ' A ' , ,,,, 'bf ,iff-x 5 ff-1 ul'- x 61 Jia fffuffggf ,yY7cL,,,,- 40 ffzee-we h ff, 4 ,M zf' . :,,,,2 j A A V 6 4' Q lf, .Q-cow P91 f' 5 N will f 52-ie we-W g , 'fo f' z i C5 IQ Pi D I E SDM M-fhkwmj it .f,f,,Qff,2, fffflzf JAMES CLYDE BIRDSONG JR. Lone 1-'ine Union High School 1932 Commerce Football 3, 45 Baseball 1-4 GLENN ELLIS BISHOP Santa Ann. High School 1933 Letters and Science Beta Gamma 3, 4, Prexy 3, 45 Bachelors 1-4, Prexy 45 Alphn Gannna. Sigma 1-45 Phi Theta Kappa, 1-4, Prexy 3, 45 Debate Team 2-45 Don Dinette Mztnztger 35 Soph- omore Prexy 35 Freshman Secretary 25 Don 2 ELEANOR BOWYER Orange Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Beta Gmnnm 2-45 Associated Student Secretary 3: Y. W. C. A. 1-45 Feature Editor El Don 25 Spinsters 1-4, President 35 Phi Theta. Kappa 3, 45 Alpha Gamma. Sigma 2-45 W. A. A. 1-45 Associate Editor Del Ano 3, 4 JAMES K. BOYD Long Beach Polyteclinic High School 1932 Engineering Avis BLADES Santa Ana. High School 1933 Letters and Science Moavs 2-4, Vice-President 4 YETIVE BLANK Tustin Union High School 1933 Education Beta. Gamma 2-45 XV, A. A. 1-4 1-45 E1 Club Cervantes CHISHOLM BROWN University of Kansas 1933 Education Buccaneers 4 RAY O. BUSCH Santa Ana. High School Letters and Science , President 35 Spinsters S i E 5 E F! 3 Q i 5 Xl 5 'I ii Q09 '54 1 my . . ,qxxlxwxqg 'O . . Q' 00, xv E., ,lm C miox Ja MILFORD G. CARMAN Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Phi Sigma Alpha 3-5: Gauchos 4, 5, Alpha Gamma Sigma 3: Sigma Phi Sigma. 53 Tennis 1, 33 Varsity S Club 4, 5: Tavern Tattlers 5: Y. M. C. A. 1, 2 ARTHUR W. CASEY Santa Ana High School 1932 Letters and Science Class Plays '34 and '35, Operas '34 and '35, Tavern Tattlers 3, 43 Tavern Post Prose Prize 2 ALBERT CLARK Orange Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Tavern Tattlers 2-4: Gauchos 4: Track 2, 4, Varsity S Club: Art Editor Tavern Post 3 RICHARD THEODORE CLARK Santa Ana High School 1932 Letters and Science Buccaneers 3-5, President 4: Baseball 2, 4 BARBARA ANNE CHARLES Long Beach Polytechnic High School 1929 Letters and Science RUTH CHRIST W'ilton High School, North Dakota 1932 Education Y. VV. C. A. 1-4: Phi Sigma Alpha 4: Alpha Gamma Sigma 4, Orphan Kiddies 1, 25 Tavern Tattlers 2-4: Las Gitanas 3, 4, A Capella Choir 1, 25 Associate Editor Tavern Post 3: W. A. A. 3, 4, Del Afio Staff 3, 4 FARLA NELL CLAYTON Santa Ana High School 1933 Tavern Tattlers 3, 4: Las Gitanas 3, 4: L'Hotel de Rambouillet 2-4: Feature Editor El Don 1: French Club 3: Assistant Editor Student Directory 3, Editor Frosh Bible 3: El Don Staff 1-4 CLARENCE COMPTQN Orange Union High School 1932 Letters and Science Gauchos 1-6, Y. M. C. A. 1-4, President 3, 4: New Moon 6 A , .0 f A XM f I f IM, , Q QW pk . lffi Q Aff RAYMOND CRAFT - CARL NORRIS CURTIS Orange Union High School 1933 Orange Union High School 1933 , Letters and Science Engineering Track 2, 4 Junior Lions 1-4g College Weather Bureau Director 4 JANE CRAWFORD LILA DAVIS Orange Union High School 1933 U. C. L. A. 1932 Letters and Science Education Beta Gamma 3, 4: Alpha Gamma Sigma 3, 4g W. A. A. Spinsters 1-4, Orphan Kiddies 3, 4, Y. W. C. A. 1-4 1-4: Sophomore Class Secretary 4: Las Meninas 1-4, President 4: Editor El Don 4: Associated Student Social Commissioner 3 MARY DENNI CHARLES DOWNIE Anaheim Union High School 1933 Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science Y. VV. C. A. 1, 2: German Club 3, 4: Orphan Kiddies Beta Gamma 3, 4: Sports Editor E1 Don 2: Associate 3, 4: Moavs 3, 4: Basketball 15 Hockey 2 Editor Fiesta Magazine 2, 4, Co-editor Del Ano 3, 4: Junior Lions 1-4 JANET EVELYN DIEHL GAROLD E. DOWNING Santa Ana High School 1933 Tustin Union High School 1932 Letters and Science Letters and Science Spinste-rs 1-4: Beta Gamma 3, 4: President A. W. S. Junior Lions 3-4 3: Tavern Tattlers 2-4: L'Hotel de Rambouillet 3, 4 GRADUATES RALPH W. DRENNAN RODNEY ENGEL Tustin Union High School 1932 Santa Ana High School 1932 Commerce Letters and Science Tavern Tattlers 5, 6 JACK H. DUGAN CARLOS ENOCHS Orange Union High School 1933 Orange Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Engineering RENA MAY EWING GEORGE DE ESTINE FINN Corona High School 1933 Santa Ana High School 1932 Commerce Letters and Science Alpha Gamma Sigma. 4: Orphan Kiddies 1-41 WV. A. A. Longfellows 1-43 Men's Chorus 1-5: Girl of the Gol- 1-4: Basketball 25 Hockey 2, Baseball 29 Archery 2: den Gulch 3: New Moon 53 A Capella Choir 53 For- Phi Sigma Alpha 3, 4 tune Teller 1 LORRAINE FARRAGE EMELINE JANE FLINN Santa Ana. High School 1933 Newport Harbor High School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science 1 Basbetball 1-23 Hockey 3: Swimming 23 Baseball 4 Spinsters 2-4: Drama 1, 2: Beta Gamma l-'lays XVomen's Chorus 4 X, if Q . , 1 W' 3' MQ iwshwwi' 'X Q NUS' ig 'i SEX 3 'i EQ fl? N XM ici xx lsgxg 5 1 se in ve Q Xl A W We Te E S 1 SX X NNQBYT X N lic 1 X Vx , fell, K ,vw-l N DORIS FLIPPEN GRACE JEAN FOX I, 'M Orange Union High School 1933 Santa Ana High School 1931 if Letters and Science Letters and Science ' Las Gltanas 1-4 Phi Sigma Alpha 3, 4 ALMA GARTHE VINCENT E. GEREN Santa Ana High School 1933 Santa, Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Engineering Alpha Gamma. Sigma 3 LORIN ROY GILLOGLY DONALD GRISET Oceanside High School 1933 Tustin Union High School 1933 Engineering Engineering Orphan Klddies 1-4: American Association of En- gineers 3, -l OTTO H. GRIGG DOROTHY MILDRED GUTZMAN Santa Ana High School 1933 Santa Ana High School 1933 Commerce Letters and Science Bachelors l-4: Freshnmn Class Secretary 1: Freshman Sigma Phi Sigma 2-49 Alpha Gamma Sigma 2 Class 'l'reasLlrcr 23 S01mhomm'c Class Trczmsurex' 4 cs Q A D UfRiAT',ElSI J, -'K , xv' , i. VIRGINIA LEE HARPER MARIAN HAWK Orange Union High School 1932 Letters wand Science Sigma Phi Sigma 2-4: Moavs 2-4, President 5: El Club Cervantes 2: Three Cornered Moon 35 Orpheo Troupe 3: VVomen's Octette 4, 5 Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Spinsters 1-4, President 4: Beta Gamma 4: Associated Student Social Commissioner 45 Sophomore Class Sec- retary 3: Tavern Tattlers 3, 4: W. A. A, 2-43 Alpha Gamma Sigma 1: Swimming 2, 4 MILDRED ELIZABETH HASKELL JACK HAWKINS Santa Ana High School 1933 Santa Ana High School 1933 Commerce Engineering Moavs 1-43 Orphan Kiddies 1-4g W. A. A. 3, 4: Swim- 1 giuccaneers 1-4: American Association of Engineers ming 3 - EULALIE MARIE HEAD JESSE HESS Garden Grove High School 1933 Letters and Science Tavern Tattlers 3, 45 Orphan Kiddies 25 Phi Sigma Alpha 3, 4 San Diego State College 1932 Phi Sigma Alpha 3, 4: International Relations Club 4 JOHN W. HENDERSON RUDY HOLMAN Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters :and Science - Associated Student Vice-Prexy 3: Junior Lions 1-4, Prexy 3: Beta Gamma 2-45 Alpha Gamma Sigma 2-41 Alpha Mu Gamma 43 Pi Mu Gamma 2-43 Football 1, 3: Fiesta Play '34 and '35 Orange Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Track 1, 2, 4, Junior Lions 2, 3, 4 S . r i l JGQADUATES PHILIP N. HOOD JR. LEO L. JOHNSON Santa Ana High School 1932 Huntington Beach Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science Gauchos 3, 4 AMZA JOHNSON RUTH JOHNSON Tustin Union High School 1930 Tustin Union High School 1933 Commerce Education WENDELL KANAWYER WILLIAM S, KIRK Huntington Beach Union High School 1932 Tustin Union High School 1932 Commerce Letters and Science Baseball 2, 4: Buccaneers 1-4 Junior Lions 1-4, President 4 RALPH C. KENNEDY LOIS KISER Santa. Ana. High School 1932 Tustin Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science American Association of Engineers 2, 4 Las Meninas 1, 2, 8 GQADUATES THOMAS L. KISTINGER Santa Ana High School 1932 Letters and Science Buccaneers 1-4, President 4: Golf 2-4 EVELYN C. KOGLER Crange Union High School 1933 Commerce MARY CATHERINE LIPPINCOTT Tustin Union High School 1932 Commerce Y. W. C. A. 2, 3 JAMES W. LOGAN JR. Bakersfield Junior College 1934 Letters and Science Alpha Gamma Sigma 1, 2: Ph ternational Relations Club 1, 2 l Sigma Alpha 1, 2: In- FRANK RAYMOND LANSDOWN Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Swimming 2, 4 JAMES MAURICE LASH San Bernardino Junior College 1934 Letters and Science Orphan Kiddies 1, 2: Boxing 1, 2 HELEN M. LOGUE Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Alpha Rho Tau 49 L'I-Iotel de Rambouillet 31 Del Ano Art Staff 4 LOREN LUKENS Anaheim Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Varsity Football 1-4: Track 1-4: Medical Association 3, 4: Varsity S Club 3, 4: German Club 3, President 3: Bachelors 1-4 l 1 V, . , 'f 4 I, - yr F4 I' .4 fjj' , Q ' f ' ' f V . , if .- ,f lv, , f 1 A I 5 ,f X .ff .4 -. 1,-4 C - M i- iffg. -1--if 1' 114- '-4 J f' 1 -- Ji' iff- V , 4 If . fr ffl ! !f X 5-.ff 1,1 1 , -4, f ff , . if .4-4.-f'4 'f, -4 ,eg - V 'Q 'iff . ' 'Z ' ' ,- 11 .4 - , ef' I--ff - of ' ff ' f ' ,Y Z-'- 1 ' 1 41 . X ff .K - V, , -,1', I Z ,, , 4 , ' , A -,f 1 I X '- K ' ff' i ' ' Z ..-PA-Avi' .79 174' 'XIX ' ,-- TAL-V-s-.7--,fi , . ,if . , 'L' X AV, , . f 'Q V . H, A, 4-,A K ,Q ,eff - -Q-24-fi --we 'L 'Q '- - . I. - ,f' I, X, V. f1f,.fj.,3,-, 4'-1--' --' Y ,f ,L K ,V 1 .Y ' ,, ,. If . f ,. 5, . I W VV: X3 I .W .. . . 25.5, V AA A:,,. ,f . I. 'LlV,,,, HAROLD R. i.u'rEs ,' 'JAClS,M6CARTY Santa Ana High School 1933 5 A wSanta Ana High School 1932 Letters and Science ,- Commerce Gauchos 1-4: Del Ano starr 2, ag Y. M. c. A. 2, ag Band A ' 3,4 Bachelors 3, 4: Tennis 1g Longfellows 1-43 Radio Com- mittee 3: Copy 45 Woman Who Understood Men 49 Men's Glee Club 3, 43 Orpheo Troupe 4 GORDON MCALLISTER VIRGINIA MCCLELLAN Huntington Beach Union High School 1932 Newport Harbor High School Engineering Commerce Swimming 2 JOHN CAREY MCFARLANE ALICE ELIZABETH MARTIN Santa Ana High School 1933 Santa Ana High School 1933 Engineering Commerce Junior Lions 1-4 MARY MALSED Orange Union High Letters and Science Moavs 3, 4: Wo1nen's Octette 1-4: A Capella Choir 1-41 Sigma Phi Sigma 1-4, President 35 Orpheo Troupe 2, 43 Alpha Gamma. Sigma 2-4: Phi Theta Kappa 3, 49 Girl of the Golden Gulch 25 New Moon 4: L'Hotel de Rambouillet 3, 4 LYNN MAYNARD School 1932 Santa Ana. High School 1932 Engineering GRADUATES LETITIA MORGAN CLAUDE M. OWENS Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Moavs 2-4: Y. W. C. A. 1: Women's Chorus 4g W. A. A. 3: L'Hote1 de Rambouillet Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Sophomore Prexy 4: Freshman Prexy 2: Associated Student Commissioner of Athletics 3: Debate Team 1-4: Bachelors 1-4, Prexy 35 Phi Theta Kappa 3, 4: Alpha Gamma Sigma 2-4: Beta Gamma 2-45 Phi Rho Pl 4g Phi Sigma. Alpha 1-4 ARDEN MURRAY JEANNE H. FAXTON Tustin Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Moavs 1-4, President 35 A. W. S. Advisory Board 13 Sigma Phi Sigma 2-4 Santa Ana High School 1933 Commerce Las Gitanas 2-4: Y. W. C. A. 1-4 JOHN E. PEGUES THOMAS POTTER Santa, Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Junior Lions 1-43 Sports Editor El Don 1, Editor E1 Don 2: Co-editor Del Aho 3, 45 Beta Gamma 2-45 Tavern Tattlers 2-4 ALBERT T. POTTER Rising Sun High School, Rising Sun, Indiana 1933 Letters and Science Excelsior High School 1933 Letters -and Science Phi Sigma Alpha 43 Tavern Tattlers 3, 4: Alpha Gamma Sigma. 4 HERSHELL C. POUNDS Memphis High School, Texas 1933 Commerce 1 Swimming 1, 25 Phi Sigma Alpha 3, 4: Longfellows ihwawwmiw f i 1 i WI 'M iii WWMMWM' ADUATES MERRILEE ANNE RANKIN MABEL F. REID Santa Ana High School 1933 Las Cross High School, Wisconsin 1915 Education Letters and Science Alpha Gamma Sigma, 2-4: Phi Theta Kappa 3, 4 JOHN A. READE GEORGE M. ROBERTSON Fleming High School, Colorado 1932 East High School, Wichita., Kanasas 1932 Engineering Engineering Tennis 2: American Association of Engineers 3, 4: Associated Student Prexy 4g Orphan Kiddies 1-4: Orphan Kiddies 3, 4: Golf 4 American Association of Engineers 2-4: Junior Lions 2-45 Alpha Gamma Sigma 2-45 Phi Theta Kappa 3, 4: Beta Gamma 43 Tavern Tattlers 4 DORIS ROCKWELL ELOISE SCHRIER San Pedro High School 1933 Santa Ana. High School 1933 Education Commerce Beta Gamma 3, 4: Las Gitanas 1-4, President 4: W. A, Las Meninas 1-4, Secretary 35 Alpha Rho Tau 1-4, A. 1-4, President 33 Y. W. C. A. 1-45 Woxnen's Athletic Secretary 35 W. A. A. 3, 4 Commissioner 33 L'I-Iotel de Rambouillet 2, 3 FREDDA DELL SAWTELLE HAZEL SETTLE Anaheim Union High School 1933 Orange Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science Alpha Gamma Sigma 2, 31 Phi Theta Kappa 3, 45 Women's Octette 1, 2 Moavs 3, 43 Editor El Don 3: Associate Editor E1 Don 2: Tavern Tattlers 2-43 Associate Editor First the Blade 4: Associate Editor Tavern Post 4: W, A. A. 1-43 Y. W. C. A. 1, 25 Press Club 1-4 GRADUATES KATHRYN HAZEL SEXTON LILLIAN SHELTON Santa Ana High School 1933 Fullerton Junior College 1932 Letters and Science Letters and Science Spinsters 1-4, Secretary 4 RALPH WILLIAM SHANNON DAVID LOYD SHEPPARD Garner High School, Iowa 1933 Idaho Falls High School 1933 Letters and Science Commerce Alpha Rho Tau 1-45 Del Ano Layout Editor 3, 4: Del Afio Business Manager 3, 4: Orphan Kiddies 3, 4 BEN L. SLAVIN MEDORA SMITH Michigan City High School, Indiana 1930 Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science Track 23 Football 1, 3g Baseball 2, 4: Orphan Kiddies Spinsters 1-4: Alpha Rho Tau 2-4, President 3: Beta 2-4: Varsity S Club 3, 4 Gamma 4: Associated Student Vice-President 43 Del Ailo Art Staff 2, 4 CLEO E. SMITH RALPH BERT STIMPLE Huntington Beach High School 1933 Orange Union High School 1933 Commerce Letters and Science Beta Gamma 2-4: Gauchos 1-43 Men's Quartet 1, 3: Tavern Tattlers 2-4 Girl of the Golden Gulch 2: New Moon 45 Associated Student Treasurer 3: Don Dinette Manager 4 ,KD JJQQJ' G-QADUATES iw? mfinigx ELEANOR JEAN WALTER Washington High School, Indiana 1933 Letters and Science Las Gitanas 1-4: Tavern Tattlers 1-4, President 39 Editor Tavern Post 2: Editor First the Blade 4: Alpha Gamma Sigma 1-4: Phi Theta Kappa 3, 4 DEE McLAlN WESTMORELAND Huntington Beach Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Longfellows 1, 25 Camera Club 2 GERTRUDE BAKER Santa Ann. High School 1933 Education RICHARD BESSE Rok Fall High School, Illinois 1932 CARO ANNA COGAN Letters and Science Tustin Union High School 1933 Letters and Science Spinsters 1-45 W, A. A. 1-4 JUANITA CRAFT Orange Union High School 1933 Commerce ROXANA DALES Garden Grove High School 1932 Commerce R. WAYNE WILHITE East High School, Wichita, Kansas 1932 Junior Lions 1-45 Orphan Kiddies 1-43 Associated Student Treasurer 4: Wrestling 1-4 LUCIAN HEWITT WILSON Santa Ana High School 1933 Commerce Bachelors 1-4: Beta Gamma 3, 43 Track 2-4, Captain 45 Fiesta Chairman 4: Freshman Class Vice-President gl Syogholnore Class Vice-President 3, 4: Varsity S U , LAVONA DAVIS Santa Ana High School 1932 Commerce ERIC EASTMAN Santa. Ana High School 1932 Letters and Science BETH FLIPPEN Santa Ana High School 1932 Commerce LILLIAN GRISET Santa Ana. High School 1933 Letters and Science ' ' Y. W. C. A. 1, 25 Orphan Kiddies 1-33 International Relations Club 3, 4 CATHERINE HULL Orange Union High School 1932 Letters and Science Moavs 2-5: Phi Sigma Alpha 4, 5: Y. W. C. A. 1, 2: L'Hotel de Rambouillet 1, 2: Alpha Gamma Sigma. 3-5 GQADUAQM x ALlCE STONER JOHN THOMPSON Orange Union High School 1933 Newport Harbor Union Hugh School 1933 Letters and Science Letters and Science Moavs 1-4, Secretary 3 Bachelols 1 4 Phi Sigma Alpha 3 4 Tiack 2 ROBERT TANNENBAUM SAMMY TUCKER Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Associated Student Prexy 43 Associated Student Treasurer 3: Freshman Prexy 2: Phi Theta Kappa 2-55 Beta Gamma 3-5: Buccaneers 1-5: League Champion- ship Debate Team 1, 5: Phi Rho Pi 2-5, Prexy 4: Phi Sigma Alpha 2-5, Prexy 5: Tavern Tattlers 3-5 MARTHA TUTHILL Ramona Convent 1933 Letters and Science Beta Gamma 4: Las Meninas 1-4, President 3: Asso- clatied Student Secretary 45 Alpha Rho Tau 3, 4: W. A. A. . 4 KENNETH ULRICH Tustin Union High School 1932 Engineering Buccaneers 3, 4: American Association of Engineers 1-4, President 4 GRADUATES EDWARD WICKERSHEIM Santa Ana, High School 1933 Engineering JAY WOOD Huntington Beach Union High School 1933 Commerce Gauchos 1-4: Tennis 2, 43 Swimming MYRA LAKE Arizona State College Commerce ED LANSDOWN Santa Ano. High School 1932 Letters and Science CORINNE LECRIVAINE Huntington Beach Union High School 1931 Letters and Science EUGENE MCMILLAN Santa Ann. High School 1933 Letters and Science VIRGINIA MEANS Santa Ana High School 1933 Commerce HAROLD WOODARD Santa Ana High School 1933 Letters and Science Freshman Class Vice-President 1: Buccaneers 1-4 Beta Gamma 2-4: Associated Student Commissioner of Forensics 3: Debate Team 1, 2, 4 BETTY WOODS Santa Ana. High School 1933 Letters and Science Las Gitanas 1-43 Phi Sigma Alpha. 49 Del Aho Art Staff 2, 49 Del Ano Art Editor 4: Y, W. C. A. 1-43 Alpha Gamma Sigma. 35 Alpha. Rho Tau 1-4 MARJORIE MORGAN San Peglro High School 1933 Education EULABELLE SMlTH Orange Union High School 1932 Letters and Science Moavs 1-5: L'Hotel de Rambouillet 1, 23 German Club 3, 4, 5: Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, Alpha Gamma Sigma DAVE L. STYRING Santa Ana High School 1933 Commerce Tennis 2, 4, Baseball 4 VELMA TERTROU Taft Union High School 1928 Letters and Science JAMES TORRENS Tustin Union High School 1932 Letters and Science Editor E1 Don 35 El Don 1-3: Press Club 1-4 Tavern Tattlers 4-6 :::::' 1 'IIHIEEEE ii! A. 'iam -9' - . JI? G'TH EQ CLASSES W Jcfiiw B 'X vysQN V frlhbll PRES!-IMEN To Vernon lvlansur. 'ralenfed frosh from Orange. wenf The honor of adminisferinq fhe firsf fresh- man class of fhe new campus. Elecfed fo serve wifh Presidenf lvlansur were Bill Dunsfon. vice-presi- denf, from l-lunfingfon Beach high school: Nolan l-lasson. secrefary, also from l-lunfingfon Beach: and Ralph Cornsfoclc. freasurer, ex-Anaheim foofball sfar. Confidence was again expressed in Dunsfon as an exe ufive wifh his elecfion fo fhe presidency fhe second semesfer. Ofher vicforious spring semesferc ndidafes were Vernon Koepsel,vice-presi- denf, from Newporf Beach: Louise Sexfon, secrefary, fro nfa Ana high school: and Dick Moore, freasurer, anofher l-lunfinqfon Beach looy. If is an annujl c f rn for The freshman class fo supervise graduafion exercises, and fhis was fhe chief dufyb nd ice of fhe second semesfer officers. f 'F 4 . J '-Xi ,. if X? ALUMNI The Alumni AssociaTion concluded. whaT is believed To be iTs mosT acTive year wirh The annual alumni meeTing welcoming newlyygraduaTed sophomores inTo The AssociaTion, conducTed immed- iaTely Tollowing graduaTion ceremonies. PresidenT oT The AssociaTion This year was Fred l-lumisTon, '30, l-lumisTon was The chieT en- gineering TacTor in The AssociaTion's seryice proiecTs, conducTed ThroughouT The year. OTher oTTi- cers included Marion Parsons. vice-presidenT: KaTherine Spicer, secreTary: and Miner WhiTTord, Treasurer. All alumni oTTicials are selecTed Tor The enTire year. Services oT The AssociaTion included. TirsT, conducTing an lnTormaTion Bureau To aid sTudenTs in regisTering during Freshman Days: aiding aT The FaculTy Receplrion Tor new sTudenTsq publishing and mailing To abouT IUOO ex-Dons a special Alumni ediTion oT EI Don. Many aTTended The ChrisTmas Dance aT l-lunTingTon Beach. Q., .....s.. .,...1-ri-L-:wx-.H '-5 .mm m.::f.:':v :- -H -4- 1 Q-if-:eu '11 l .w. : -i-..u.w,v.-,m 1.54.3211--1,. -- M- -.rfs '.,, :.c'.v.-,' - vi- uri YEAQ IN QEVIEW -um- 11.i3,,-A-FA1 K-W,--ln: 'gg'-x':ui4,.' - .:'xL'ir.x.:gA Mv.jg qi AN-5 lj, fqvau -gGf-l.fA1f.,i1f--- ...efmrj ,- r.. H.. ,. f-HIM Q 'O in r . : 5101 V1 .,. , i an., ff.w.gg . :jLflfr5.'.1-H,z1:f4.l5W.:,-5.1-,Qx1-rg-a1':H-xsvuubV-., Ju ' 1.1 ,-H, Te- rf'-fx.-f 4--:5:?1:f7f ml- Y' wi! :, vizh'-if,.-Z-.,y1 g:-.Quiz N N ' '- . w f,,'3 u5-5 .agfiif ' MS- f f.m+ 155irQ'f..,g A' A Ani? 'P-, - 13' V7.1 wr- --3.,..V ' ' ' VU 4- -' ,w,,C,., .gk,,L...1 , 'af' v.- :vw Q' ,H l M, .jf-2 ,V . ,-Ts, -w'..: f 'J-' 2 , JL. 1.,,J.,,. V -vi ....-Q . 1 I... V 1 44'- .fi lg, ,,,,,,g , flh- .lgfllu ...' - w .M J ,A F I - - x gf ,145 5-'z,f'fEfg'i9pL42L ' Lv aff ' ,-- - JN HR gh-will 5,511.7 3 R gp W 53 gdlfhir il' sz- P2 54 gre? Tp -- 1-i 5: nm? 5 -,J ,R .41-,H , W. is R 5'x J1y? QA 3 bu M W 31 5 WMM C'm.'a?5flIL Q mt. ill-pfmwqg.. 3' 3-alas E.,-g,,. R In Q? Q 3' E Q ' ' ' up ing' ws 1 'i U It A B ' A A- 11.4, .Jil PEW N' S.. 'H .X , in ' A L. - if-,LIT H , ,in ! ' Q ig QL , A QL!! - . 7 2 A L gi. Aki'-:f'. I ' 4 ' - t d s . :I Y 'Q , ' - Fil 'faux -,Q if lava' r L .' ' - K' 'v ' msg Q, 'r ,. ' -! , x X5 t 1 x xrhfk y M' 5 I 4, ,INS i .Il 7, 'iff lj gnu 'xv' x Riff xlfi--ij,.lL Q rg-X. sf., T Qin, ' V, P Rf n IA' 1 . aww 5 ., w J W m 5 '14 ' i K . JL 'X X 1 1 my 5155443 fl j '?Wh!H Wgmffw QWW' ,gf M mm M f M ?,,,f,, W WV Y'E!XR IN QEZVTTZVV SEPTEMBER EnlisTing more Than 400 new sTudenTs inTo The junior college ranlcs, The college year sTarTed wiTh The enTerTainmenTs and merrimenTs oT The Treshman days. The Three days served noT only as inTro- ducTion To The school Tor The new sTudenTs buT also Turnished Those who already knew The ins and ouTs oT college liTe wiTh an inTormal dedicaTion oT The newly rejuvenaTed buildings and campus. For The TirsT Time in iTs hisTory, The SanTa Ana junior college wiTh The occupaTion oT The new locaTion, sTreTch- ed iTs wings and began iTs progress as an insTiTuTion enTirely separaTe Trom The high school. The college hall and The adjoining campus very soon became The cenTer oT all college gaTherings and acTiviTies. The new music hall was laTer planned, builT, and Tormally dedicaTed aT an impressive and charming recepTion. The science buildings, shelTering The rows oT new eguipmenT Tor The sTudenTs, proved en- Tirely adeguaTe and inviTing in Their possibiliTies. The men's and women's lounges were laTer improved and made wholly comTorTable Tor The Dons and Donas. The programs Tor The Treshman days were opened wiTh The regisTraTion oT The sTudenTs and wiTh an assembly held in college hall, welcoming The new sTudenTs inTo The insTiTuTion. Luncheon-Tree To The Treshies-was served laTer in The caTeTeria in The gymnasium building. The oTher days were given over To assemblies and Those joys holy To Treshmen-The apTiTude TesT, The physical examina- Tions, The Tees To be paid. The advisers To consulT, and The Thousands oT Things To be learned. lnnocenTly and sheepishly Tollowing The orders oT Their superiors, The Treshmen appeared on The lgiJ2gLfL,j4 ' 01 0 : ,r-'iv' ,, mo 37x 3 is :Law de YEAR IN REVIEW campus Tor Their TirsT day oT college, carrying Bibles and TaiThTuIIy possessing beanies .The super- iors Themselves hun+ed ouT Their IasT year's noTebooIcs, TounTain pens, and whaTnoTs and Trudged oTT To begin The year's circle oT ioy and sorrow. WiTh The new and Iovely Bowers Museum as a seTTing, The Tormal recepTion of new sTudenTs by The TacuITy was held wiTh The Spanish Theme very appropriaTeIy prevailing ThroughouT The evening shaTTering The popular concepTion oT a recepTion, The TacuITy members were disTribuTed among The various rooms oT The museum and merely exchanged signaTures wiTh The sTudenTs, in place oT The back-breaking and soul-Trying TradiTion oT hand-shaking. The new women sTudenTs were IaTer Iess Tormally inTroduced To one anoTher and The more experienced inmaTes aT The Y. W. C. A. semi- annual dinner dance and The A. W. S. Tea held in The Ebell clubhouse, The IaTTer under The TuTelage oT Ivirs. NorThcross and A. W. S. oTTicers. The dinner dance, aTTended by abouT 75 women, served as a geT-TogeTher-and-have-Tun aTTair Tor The new and old sTudenTs alike. OCTOBER The second monTh oT The Tamous CaIiTornia fall was begun wiTh Two ouTsTanding evenTs: namely. The annual fall picnic-ThaT source oT all ThaT is good and evil-and The campus open house, spon- sored by The Board oT EducaTion To display The new buildings To The public. The picnic was held aT Irvine Park and included games, conTesTs, eaTs, and a dance in The pavilion. all I fyiiif' T 'S kpfiv IU my eff Of! gf X? si' 1 .PX Y' YEAR IN QEVIEW Swinging inTo The TooTball season wiTh a win over Pomona which ThreaTened To be a loss unTil The second halT, The Dons began a hilarious, if wearing, TooTball season oT rallies, serpenTines, caravans. and all The oTher awTul and enTerTaining Things ThaT aTTend TooTball games. A greaT aid To These cele- braTions was The college band under The direcTion oT The new TaculTy member. Leland Auer, who successTully ThreaTened To malce The band an obiecT oT pride Tor The JayseeiTes. The caravan proved a lasTing source oT Tun, probably because oT The sTaTe police who escorTed The lines oT college cars To The ouT-oT-Town games during The season. Plans were also made during This monTh Tor The publicaTion oT FirsT The Blade, a poeTical an- Thology conTribuTed To by all California colleges and ediTed This year by The Tavern TaTTler's sTaTT. NOVEMBER EnTering upon The new monTh wiTh cusTomary viTaliTy.Theiuniorcollege sTudenTs,Through Glenn Bishop. Sophomore presidenT, successTully sTaged The annual Soph-Frosh dance in The American Legion hall. Because oT The excellenT music and The equally excellenT punch, The evening was acclaimed as decidedly enjoyable. AT This dance was also iniTiaTed The policy oT inviTing The oTTicers of oTher jun- ior colleges To college TuncTions. Meanwhile The Don grid sTars were held To a I4-I4 score wiTh The Riverside mudmen and beaT The ChaTTey PanTher To a pulp-a very Thin pulp-wiTh a 6-O win. Raging in whaT was labeled by grey YEAR IN REVIEW beards as one oT The hoTTesT grid seasons in years, The Dons were again held To a O-O score The nexT game by San Bernardino. The pep rally beTore The EullerTon game, wiTh The TradiTional and indes- pensable bonTire was made even more enTicing by The addiTion oT an uproarious TheaTer parTy aTTer- wards. In accordance wiTh The aTTempTs aT sTudenT body pep, The game was won, only To be TorTeiTed To Riverside along wiTh The championship aT The laTer conTesT. I The one aTTair oT The year when The Dons were properly puT in Their places by The Donas was Turnished by The A. W. S. dance. The co-eds did The inviTing. planned The dance. produced The Trans- porTaTion, and did all The oTher chivalrous Things The men should do. The dance. held in The l-lunTing- Ton Beach memorial hall, proved enTirely successTul. The membership oT The service clubs aT This Time was increased aTTer The addiTion oT The new mem- bers To The club rosTers, The men including 63 new members and The women 4-I. This Tollowed The usual TorTuous days oT rushing and pledging. The ban on ioinT meeTings was liTTed aT This Time by The sponsors and presidenTs oT The clubs. DECEMBER The Penny Fair. The beneTiT carnival ThaT boughT radios Tor The lounges. occured The evening oT December 7 amid The pouring rain, The general uproar oT The sTudenT body. The side-show babblers, The conTeTTi, The dance music. and all The Things ThaT make up a regularTair. IT was sTaged in The garage 1 4 ' f YEAR IIN! REVIEW aT NinTh and Main sTreeTs and ThreaTens To become an annual aTTair because oT iTs populariTy. T-TunTingTon Beach memorial hall was chosen as The scene oT The annual ChrisTmas dance, memor- able noT only Tor The good Time had by all buT Tor The unique and aTTracTive programs. Ray Badg- ley's orchesTra, secured by The women Tor Their A. W. S. dance. was also The source oT music Tor The Dons and alumni. dancing amid green and silver ChrisTmas decoraTions. This aTTair culminaTed The march oT evenTs Tor T934-. I And Then, Tossing Their books and Their cares To The winds and displaying peaceTul and em- phaTic expressions oT conTenTmenT, The Dons and Donas leTT The insTiTuTions Tor The longed Tor and, in a Tew cases well deserved vacaTion. JANUARY I-Toward Jones, Tor Ten years head TooTball coach aT The UniversiTy oT SouThern CaliTornia, was The principal speaker aT The annual TooTball bangueT held in The high school caTeTeria. FooTball leTTers were presenTed To The well deserving members oT The grid Team who earned Them very con- vincingly. King's Day. held TirsT in l925, was revived This year by The sTudenTs, and King RoberT Tannen- baum reigned supreme Tor a day. The day is seT aside as The Time in which The reTiring sTudenT presi- denT should have compleTe auThoriTy over everyone in The college. The siTuaTions boTh amusing and Tragic which resulTed are Too elusive Tor mere words. YEAR IN QEVIEW The voTe auThorizing sweaTers Tor gridmen caused serious discussion as To wheTher drasTic slash- ing oT cerTain budgeTs would resulT. Many possibiliTies were TorcasT such as The cuTTing and curTailing oT The springs sporTs program, Torensics. and Del Ano. The Trouble arose when The iniTiaTive measure awarding The sweaTers Tailed To sTipulaTe The source oT money To be used Tor The paymenT. A reTeren- dum issue early in March awarded The sweaTers To gridmen deTiniTely. FEBRUARY T The Bachelors' Ball ThaT gala occasion marked by The good music and good Times, was held This year in The Mission lnn aT Riverside where The Dons danced amid The aTmosphere OT early Spain and CaliTornia. Music Tor The occasion was Turnished by Max Cochrane's orchesTra oT OccidenTal college, an eleven piece ouTTiT wiTh a Trio. Twice during The year, picTures relaTing To SanTa Ana junior college have appeared in The Col- legiaTe DigesT, naTional college publicaTion. The phoTograph oT The Don display window conTaining Davy Don and a very well sTripped ChaTTey PanTher made The grade. and a picTure oT The SpinsTer group also qualiTied. ln The middle oT February, work was launched on The SIOOO landscaping proiecT, headed by W. E. PorTer. A conTesT was held among The aspiring landscaping experTs oT The campus who submiTTed plans Tor The landscaping oT The campus surrounding college hall. KenneTh Beard was The winner, and his plans have been Tollowed as closely as possible by The landscaping commiTTee. if siil'iiii riiiix . li QX X ii ss, Q s fd- ii'r ' . X f x if g . i s i Mk YEAR IN TQEVIEW MARCH The annual Engineers' show was held in Willard iunior high school audilorium Friday evening. March 8. ll proved lo be inlensely inleresling lo lhe scienlilic minded and highly enlerlaining and inleresling in a dillerenl sense lo lhose nol so seriously inclined. The male members benelilled mosl by lhe experimenls. lhe women spending lhe evening asking queer queslions and lrying lo wade lhrough lhe misl ol ignorance hovering over lhem. I Enveloped in a log ol men alhleles-wresllers, boxers, ping pong slars elc.-lhe men's annual inler-club slag galhering was held in lhe Andrews gymnasium. By capluring lhe linal evenl. lhe lug- o-war, lrom lhe Junior Lions, Los Gauchos annexed lhe lamed Lillle Brown Jug , and emerged viclorious lrom lhe shullle. Rivalling lhe men's inler-club slag in promoling good leeling and lriendship among lhe organ- izalions. lhe annual A. W. S. hi-iinlcs was held in lhe Y. M. C. A. lobby lale in March. The women ar- rived dressed in coslumes varying lrom an inlerprelalion ol Groucho Marx lo Lillle Alice Bluegown. Las Meninas was presenled wilh lhe silver loving cup lor lhe besl skil given. Emerging wilh ils second Easlern division debale pennanl in lhree years, lhe iunior college lor- ensic leam, composed ol Claude Owens, Glen Bishop. Harold Woodard, and Roberl Tannenbaum. annexed lhe I935 lorensic championship lor Sanla Ana wilh an oulslanding viclory over lhe delend- ing champion, San Bernardino. The queslion was Resolved, lhal lhe Federal governmenl should im- medialely adopl a plan ol compulsory unemploymenl insurance. 9' liff' -' A-.Q 1 Q-We ia mu J R 1 Q Q YEAR IN QEVIEW I.aTe in March, The iaysee sTudenTs secured by popular peTiTion The righT To sTudy in The iunior college library Three evenings oT The week. WheTher The policy is conTinued or noT in laTer semesTers depends upon The response oT The sTudenTs Themselves. Also The pracTice was begun oT holding The noon dances Trom 2:30 To 4:00 in The aTTernoon. A measure making This pracTice legal was passed aT The beginning oT The year buT noT seriously acTed upon unTil This Time. The annual STudenT Loan BeneTiT dance was held in The American Legion VeTeran's hall This year, sponsored by Las GiTanas. The hall was decoraTed wiTh The club colors and proved To be an aTTair oT The TirsT waTer To Those who danced To The rhyThms oT Glen Evans and his recordings. Glen is almosT an insTiTuTion among The sTudenTs. The Gauchos Spring hop was held This year in The hall oT The BelmonT SurT club. one oT The largesT halls secured Tor a iunior college aTTair. The dance was a program aTTair Tor The TirsT halT and Then became sTricTly inTormal. a policy which proved popular wiTh The sTudenTs. Dancing To The sTrains oT The Laguna ballroom orchesTra, The JayseeiTes wholly approved oT The enTerTainmenT aT- Torded Them by The club. FIESTA Nero had his Tidclle: Napoleon, his Frenchmeng and, PresidenT RoosevelT his alphabeTg buT SanTa Ana iunior college has iTs TiesTal Combining enTerTainmenT and adverTising. The college played hosT 0 is c--.cc,.,.---..---cc.T fe-1 K YEAR IN IQEVIEW To The IOOO graduaTing high school seniors oT Orange CounTy on May IO. Dressed in all The gaieTy oT The dashing dons and daring senoriTas, The iaysee sTudenTs spenT The day in The spiriT oT early CaliTor- nia. y W The morning program was devoTed To acTiviTies oT The Dons and Donas. Classes were dismissed aT Ten o'cloclc and aT IO:3O The long procession oT senors and senoriTas, ledby The Padua l-lills sTring orchesTra paraded Trom College l-lall To The arena behind The board oT educaTion. l-lere aT The arena, we Tound gayly decoraTed booThs operaTed by The various clubs oT The col- lege. WiTh each purchase, a Typical Spanish souvenir was given. The BeTa Gamma booTh sponsored Jose l-lerrera The Olvera STreeT candle malcer. The annual El Don FiesTa magazine, Tilled wiTh arTicles oT early CaliTornia hisTory. and a TeaTure by lv1rs.NorThcross on FaTher ST. John O'Sullivan was sold aT The alumni booTh. Opening The ceremonies. Don Vernon Tvlansur and Dona Agnes DeBusk. elecTed by The sTudenT body To rule FiesTa day, were crowned by FaTher Owen oT ST. AnThony Seminary, SanTa Barbara Mission. Following The colorTul ceremony. PaTher Owen gave a very inTeresTing and inTormaTive Tall: on The CaliTornia missions. One oT The high lighTs of The day was The presence oT The Padua Hills Players who gave songs and dances preceding The inTroducTion oT Carl I. WheaT by PresidenT l-lammond. WheaT, direcTor oT The CaliTornia l-lisTorical SocieTy. addressed The group on ,FaeT and Fancy in CaliTornia's Background. 'Q 'T YEAR IN REVIEW Following more music by The Mexican players, a luncheon, under The supervision oT Arden Mur- ray, was served in The men's lounge. The Padua players Turnished music during The noon hour. AT 2:30 everyone again gaThered aT The arena where They enioyed more music. Dean McKee Fisk inTroduced The aTTernoon speaker. Dr. Owen C. Coy, proTessor oT hisTory aT The UniversiTy oT SouThern CaliTornia and direcTor oT The CaliTornia STaTe I-lisTorical AssociaTion. Dr. Coy spoke on The FiesTa SpiriT. ATTer The inTroducTion oT Tormer Dons and Donas, The Padua players presenTed a Spanish FiesTa program, and The lv1en's chorus sang The Toreador's Song TeaTuring Cleo SmiTh as Toreador. Under The direcTion oT KenneTh VandruTT The hair-raising, breaTh-Taking bull-TighT was held. ConTesTanTs in The beard growing conTesT, sponsored by The O. K. club, were iudged and Bob ArmsTrong, Ted De WolT, Paul ChrisT, and KenneTh STowell were rewarded Tor Their valianT eTTorTs and in a couple oT cases, really beards! The annual essay conTesT Why I like Junior College also culminaTed in The FiesTa TesTiviTies. John Rabe received The TirsT prize oT S5, STanley Wilson 52.50 as second prize and Charles Downie, Third wiTh 52.00. From 4 To 5 p. m. a Tour oT The campus was held conducTed by The Gauchos and GiTanas headed by Naomi Wheeler and l-larold LuTes. Dinner was served aT 5 on The Tennis courTs back oT College l-lall To The visiTing seniors. From 5:45 To 7:30 The Dons. and Donas. and guesTs danced To The music oT Frank Nieman's orchesTra in The American Legion hall. Thr A .. . T 'rjunl ... l IW? . A 'SW T w, . qv E351 i 3 H. 5- Q, . Q sg. E229 A .rv YEAQ IN TQEVIEW The greaT climax OT The day was The FiesTa play Smilin' Through TeaTuring l-larrieT Abrams, Dona oT i934 and John Henderson aT The Willard audiTorium. The success oT The FiesTa cannoT be aTTribuTed To any one person buT much crediT and commen- daTion is due Lucian Wilson, FiesTa chairman: Mr. T. I-I. Glenn, TaculTy adviser: and The very able commiTTee heads. The commiTTee members were Bill Kirk, dance: Sam Gosney, booThs: Arden Murray. luncheon: Mary Wallace. cosTume: AI lvlarkel, consTrucTion: RoberTa TuThill, decoraTions: Glenn Bishop, lDon oT T934-l, program: KenneTh VandruTT, bull TighT1 Naomi Wheeler and l-larold l.uTes. hos- piTaliTy: Eleanor Bowyer, dinner: lvledora SmiTh, publiciTyg Charles Roemer, TickeTs: and l-larris War- ren, FiesTa play manager. To These and all who aided Them The FiesTa is indebTed. DuTies of The FiesTa commiTTee beganearly in The semesTer when Chairman Wilson received his commission Trom The ExecuTive Board. SelecTion oT Wilson came as a resulT oT his record as consTruc- Tion manager OT The I934 FiesTa. T. l-l. Glenn. college English deparTmenT head. has been TaculTy direcTor of every FiesTa, excepT one, since The TirsT carnival eighT years ago. I-lis year oT absence was spenT in Turlough sTudying in France. Glenn pronounced This year's The greaTesT Don FiesTa yeT promoTed. Five sub-chairmen were Treshmen and eligible To succeed Wilson as chieT nexT year. CDIQGANIZATICDNS L f 553' NN :gs Si, -if E H ' n 1 ,Ji we M, asus' Q! 'J 2 I-1 Jw. Uhr L, 4 ' P 1 56 H .rf al! fc X Q If cf Q b inf' In VXJJX' fad, h A M V Lip.. +5 ' IJ!-of lv A , , V All W. ,ofnj 1 IV 7 Y, -. I' x l L1 WEE + I-I O N CD R SGCIETIES JHL? 5:04291 IAS 56077 joan If Pfam ilk owl Cfq-U-, Kpffff ' fvcl V Lf 4. 71,-,gg dgdlg ffm' H ff j 5,..H,fx7 245' fl ID A I gxfkfib yy' we TT' til M if M9 I 'X H . iklilfil fi' K, y' pp ggi' , , fig? lx ALP!-IA Rl-ICD TAU Alpha Rho Tau, arT socieTy, was organized in 1927 Tor The purpose oT creaTing a greaTer inTeresT in The Tields oT arT. Membership is elecTive and is decided by The acTive members. IT is largely a social club alThough sTudy is someTimes combined wiTh Tun when The club Takes skeTching Trips. MeeTings are held Twice a monTh. one business and one a social. AcTiviTies oT The club each year include The sale oT ChrisTmas cards which are made by members oT The Alpha Rho Tau. Also The organizaTion Takes care oT The show cases in The halls and in The li- brary, and new displays are puT in by members each week. The main acTiviTy oT The second semesTer is The Tea held in connecTion wiTh FiesTa. AT This Time The club enTerTains visiTing sophomores and holds an exhibiT oT work done during The year. Also members oT The club in cooperaTion wiTh The arT deparTmenT helped make decoraTions Tor various evenTs such as The Alpha Gamma Sigma convenTion. OTTicers Tor The Two semesTers were: presidenTs. Medora SmiTh and CliTTord Lee: vice-presidenTs. Dave Sheppard and DoroThy PeTTiTg and secreTaries. Eloise Schrier and MarTha TuThill. Miss Frances Egge and Mrs. ElizabeTh Thomas are The club's advisers. 45-w PRESS CLUB Membership in The Press club is open To anyone inTeresTed in journalism wheTher he is Taking or has had courses in iT or noT. The club was organized aT The TirsT of The year wiTh Francis GilberT as president Fredda Saw- Tell. vice-presidenT: and Farla Nell ClayTon, secreTary-Treasurer. AT The November meeTing a represenTaTive Trom The naTional honorary iournalisTic TraTerniTy, Alpha Phi Gamma. spoke, and inviTed members To become charTer members oT a chapTer oT The na- Tional group. The plan failed, however, as The maioriTy were unable To ioin. The annual Press club proiecT. The STudenT DirecTory, was ediTed and prinTed under The direcTion oT a commiTTee composed oT KenneTh l-lunT, Farla Nell ClayTon, and PresidenT Gilbert The book conTains names. addresses. and phone number of sTudenTs and TaculTy.'and names of clubs and Their advisers. Among The acTiviTies oT The club were Trips made To newspaper planTs. ln The spring semesTer. members iourneyed To Los Angeles To visiT papers There. Also The club and members oT The TirsT and second year iournalfsm classes Traveled To Long Beach where They were shown Through The enTire pub- licaTion oTTices of The Press-Telegram and Sun. John l-I. McCoy, adviser, accompained The group. . , Y' ' 7 Tl ' ' -. ' - Y ' ' - '62 75.-'TNQQ fi'r7.f 7f1'f-1-3i 7i,-Y 1 ,T ' s A g, ' ' . . . , L., T , , x r , 'Jw 'A ffi' ni gpm T A :.L'n.z ORP!-TAN KI DDIES The O. K. club was organized in T928 To provide a social conTacT Tor sTudenTs living away Trom home. O. K. sTands Tor Orphan Kiddies. As The club is purely social. The rneeTings which are held once a mon+h are almosT always parT.ies. The moTTo oT The organizaTion is: LeT There be no blemish on our ideals. and may our expecTa- Tions be TulTilled in such a manner as To bring crediT To The insTiTuTion and command an aTTiTude oT respecT and admiraTion Trom Those who Tollow in ourTooTsTeps. The ouTsTanding acTiviTy oT The club is The sponsorship oT The annual beard growing conTesT held in coniuncTion wiTh FiesTa. Prizes are awarded aT The FiesTa dance. This year The Orphan Kiddies were responsible Tor enTerTainmenT aT The spring picnic. OT The seven sTaTes oT The Union represenTed in The club, Kansas is The leader. PresidenTs Tor boTh semesTers and The Treasurer Tor The TirsT hailed Trom ThaT sTaTe. AcTiviTies Tor The year were under The direcTion oT The Tollowing oTTicers: presidenTs, George RoberTson and Bob ArmsTrongg vice-presidenTs, BeTTy Ryherd and Lula Jim Kelly: Treasurers, Wayne WilhiTe and Ryverz Allen: and secreTary, Lila Davis. Advisers are lvliss DoroThy Decker and l-I. A. ScoTT, who was new To The club This year. pf . yArQsiTY f' H cLua VarsiTy S club, alThough iusT reorganized This year, is an old and acTive organizaTion. IT was Tormed a number oT years ago as The LeTTermens' club. . The purpose was To promoTe good Tellowship among aThleTes and To sTrive Tor beTTer college Teams. To carry ouT This laTTer goal, members conTacTed and enTerTained aThleTes ThroughouT The counTy To acquainT Them wiTh The advanTages oT SanTa Ana iunior college. Special inviTaTions To The annual FiesTa were senT Them by The club. The club was reorganized aT The TirsT oT This year, a charfer was secured Trom The AssociaTed sTudenTs, and a program similar To The Tormer one was adopTed. In order To become a member a sTudenT musT have been awarded a leTTer Tor parTicipaTion in any of The men's sporTs and be voTed in by old members. T 0TTicers were: presidenT, Sam Tuclcerq vice-presidenT, Lucian Wilson: secreTary-Treasurer, Ken- neTh VandruTT: and sergeanT-aT-arms, Miles NorTon. Members were: l-larold Youel, Bob Schwarm, Miles NorTon, KenneTh VandruTT, Dick Clark, Lucian Wilson, Frank Kroener, Ray NowoTny, Sam Tucker, Raymond Sides. Bob MiTchell, WalTer GunTher, MilTord Carmen, Paul Perinich, Wilburn Anderson, Louis Madden, Ben Slavin, l-larry MaTsulcane, Ray CraTT, Rudy Holman, Jack Reade, and l-larry Nissley. Dui sieMA ALPHA Phi Sigma Alpha is a social science honor socieTy, organized in l932. Membership privileges are given To Those who make aT leasT a B in six uniTs oT social sciences. lv1eeTings were held Twice monThly aT The homes oT members or adviser. This year The club had 32 members. To achieve The purpose oT The club, To gain inTormaTion, a speaker was secured or a discussion planned on some currenT Topic Tor each meeTing. Following are some oT The programs enioyed by The club: Claude Owens and RoberT Tannenbaum, members of The college debaTe Team and oT The club. led a discussion on The muniTions quesTion: Terrance I-lalloran, head oT The Orange counTy S. E. R. A., Talked To The club on his work: Ronald Cruickshank, lawyer, spoke on criminal procedure: Frank- lin WesT,' aTTorney, Told oT his experiences in law pracTicep Dr. Edward L. Russell. AssisTanT CounTy healTh oTTicers, lecTured on his work: and RuperT T-l. lv1cArThur, Tormer iaysee sTudenT, Talken on indian relics. OTTicers Tor The Two semesTers were: presidenTs. l-larry Nissley and RoberT Tannenbaumg vice- presidenTs, KenneTh Beard and James Logan: and secreTary-Treasurers, CaTherine l-lull and Grace Fox. L. L. Beeman. head oT The social science deparTmenT is adviser Tor The club. I I I I I I I I I i I I PI MU GAMMA Pi Mu Gamma is The honor socieTy Tor pre-medical sTudenTs. IT is one oT The newesT clubs on The campus. being organized only lasT year. This yearwomen were admiTTed To The group. IT is sTricTly a seminar Type oT club, wiTh no social acTiviTies. Members are selecTed Tor scholarship in pre-medical curriculum. Several sTudenTs are acTively engaged in research worlc under direcTion oT The adviser. and one s+uden+ has won a research prize Tor a published paper. MeeTings were held This year once each monTh in The oTTices oT The club's adviser. Programs con- sisTed oT discussions and demonsTraTions using all The TaciliTies available To The proTession. Those in The club have had access To The Barlow Medical library, Los Angeles, and Thus could obTain conTacTs wiTh The Los Angeles General, ST. VincenTs, WhiTe Memorial, and l.os Angeles Or- Thopedic hospiTals. Members were John l-lenderson, ArThur Sperry, Loren Luclcens, l-larold l.uTes, Gordon Beisel, Seward Fields, Alma C5arThe, ElizabeTh STurTevanT, and BeTTy WolTe. The execuTive chairman. who arranged all meeTings and Trips were Gordon Beisel and Allen Winslow. Dr. Willis P. Baker. sponsor oT The group. was an insTrucTor in The UniTed STaTes army medical school and was in charge oT The Army Medical Corps laboraTories in SouThern France in l9l7-I9 l 8. Q lf X I Qui!! , sf, 5' ,gf 6,14 , A W S f The AssociaTed Women STudenTs, To which every girl in The college auTomaTically belongs. spon- sors several imporTanT acTiviTies every year. Probably The biggesT evenT was The annual women's choice dance which was, as usual. The besT aTTended oT all iaysee social TuncTions. IT was held aT I-lunTingTon Beach Memorial hall November 30, Ray Badgeley's orchesTra providing The music. The Theme was Spanish. The acTiviTies performing The greaTesT service were The Teas given aT The beginning oT each se- mesTer Tor new women sTudenTs. The TirsT was held aT The Ebell club and The second was aT The home oT Mrs. Eleanor NorThcross. The annual l-li-iinx was held March 20 in The gym. Las Meninas won The loving cup Tor presenTing The besT sl4iT. an amaTeur show, and Barbara Charles was given The award Tor The besr cosTume. OTher evenTs on The A. W. S. calendar were The MoThers' Tea in The second semesTer aT which moThers oT boTh men and women sTudenTs are enTerTained, and The convenTion aT Laguna Beach in The Tall. OTTicers Tor The year were: presidenTs. JaneT Diehl and RuTh Warner: vice-presidenTs, Barbara CrawTord and RoberTa TuThillg and secreTary-Treasurers, DoroThy Gowdy and Mary Lou McFarland. Mrs. Eleanor NorThcross, dean oT women, is The associaTion's adviser. b Wg, Y. W. C. A. Y. W. C. A. is a prominenT organizaTion on The college campus, all girls being eligible To ioin. Members perTorm an imporTanT service To The sTudenTs in operaTing a book sTore on The campus where second hand TexT books may be boughT and sold. Regular meeTings are held on The second and TourTh Mondays oT each monTh. A dinner is usually Tollowed by a speaker and program. This year all The Talks have been on inTernaTional aTTairs and Tor- eign counTries. Mr. Calvin C. FlinT. spoke on Turkey: Mrs. Calvin C. FlinT. Music and l-low Coun- Tries have lnTluenced lT: Mr. W. J. SuTherland, China: and Mrs. Jennie L. Tessmann, Germany. Services oT The club included giving baskeTs oT Tood aT Thanksgiving, and Toys and necessiTies To children oT The Orange counTy Tuberculosis ward aT ChrisTmas. OTher acTiviTies include a Tormal dinner dance Tor Treshmen in The Tall. an Asilomar beneTiT Tea, and The reTreaT aT Emma OTis in The spring. This year Naomi Wheeler, RuTh ChrisT, and Mildred Kemper were senT To Asilomar. OTTices were: presidenT. Naomi Wheeler. vice-presidenT. Doris Rockwell: secreTary. Suzanne Clark: and Treasurer, RuTh ChrisT. Chairmen were Tood, Lila Davis: booksTore, BeTTy Woods and Lucille 6riseT: social, Eleanor Bowyer: Tinance, Jeanne PaxTon:worship, Francis Torrence and DoroThy GuThrie: program, Mildred Kemper: and publiciTy, RuTh Warner. I ALPI-lA GAMMA SIGMA Alpha Gamma Sigma is The sTaTe honor organizaTion sTarTed in l923 oT which SanTa Ana was The Omicron chapTer. IT is purely a scholasTic socieTy. and membership gualiTicaTion is a Two poinT aver- age Tor The semesTer previous To elecTion. This year The ouTsTanding acTiviTy was enTerTaining The sTaTe convenTion oT The honor socieTy here aT SanTa Ana on April 13. RepresenTaTives oT TiTTeen iunior colleges aTTended. RoberT Tannenbaum, local presidenT, auTomaTically became presidenT oT The sTaTe organizaTion. This was The second Time The SanTa Ana chapTer had held The convenTion. The day's program included The general session and discussion groups in The morning aT College hall, a luncheon aT The Ebell clubhouse, and dancing and cards in The gym lobby. Dr. Owen C. Coy, vice-presidenT oT The UniversiTy oT SouThern CaliTornia, was The principal speaker oT The day. Those responsible Tor The success oT The convenTion were RoberT Tannenbaum and Miss Lella WaT- son, adviser, and Eleanor Bowyer. luncheon: Mary Wallace, recepTion and regisTraTion: Jane Craw- Tord, publiciTy and correspondence: Gordon Beisel, general session program: Claude Cwens, lunch- eon program: and Marianna BaxTer, decoraTions. OTTicers Tor The Two semesTers were: presidenTs. Gordon Beisel and RoberT Tannenbaum: vice- presidenTs, Ed Ewing and Claude Owens: secreTaries, Merrilee Rankin and Eleanor WalTer. Miss Lella B. WaTson, language insTrucTor, is adviser. Pl-ll TI-IETA KAPPA Phi TheTa Kappa is a naTional honor socieTy which resembles The Phi BeTa Kappa oT Tour year colg leges. Membership is awarded by The TaculTy To sTudenTs who have an average oT 2.5 grade poinTs per uniT of work Tor one semesTer or a 2 grade poinT average Tor Two consecuTive semesTers. The SanTa Ana chapTer. Alpha BeTa oT Phi TheTa Kappa. was The TirsT To be granTed in CaliTornia. and was organized in November. I929. The ideals oT The socieTy are embodied in The Greek words phronium. Theumos. kaTharoTes. meaning TruTh. wisdom. puriTy. There are no social TuncTions. excepTing The semesTerly Tormal iniTiaTions. and The annual ban- queT. This year Phi TheTa Kappa aided in The esTablishmenT oT Alpha Mu Gamma. naTional language honor socieTy. and gave iTs supporT To The Alpha Gamma Sigma convenTion. OTTicers Tor The year were president Glenn Bishop. and secreTary. Evelyn Richardson. Members were Marianna BaxTer. KenneTh Beard. Gordon Beisel. Eleanor Bowyer. Ed Ewing. Dick Gilliland. Mary Jackson. Alice MarTin. Merrilee Rankin. Evelyn Richardson. George RoberTson. Eredda SawTelle, Everard STovall. Reed SuTherland. Eleanor WalTer. Peggy ApplegaTe. RoberTa Ap- plegaTe. KaThryn BolTon. Alice CompTon. Jane CrawTord. Oris Davis. John Golden. John Haskell. CaTherine I-lull. Mariorie Lauderbach. Allen Mackay, T-lelen ElizabeTh MarTin. ArThur Pargee. Louise SexTon. and Hazel Spencer. BETA GAMMA Considered one of fhe highesf honors offered iaysee sfudenfs. membership in Befa Gamma. exfra-curricular honor sociefy. is limifecl fo five per cenf of fhe sfudenf body, 'rwo-fhirds of whom musf be sophomores and one-'rhird freshmen. Members are chosen for fheir oufsfanding and unselfish service fo fhe college in exfracurricular acfivifies, and musf mainfain af leasf a C average. Freshmen are nof considered unfil fheir fourfh quarfer. By way of inifiafion, new members musf give a fhree minufe fallc on an assigned subiecf be- fore old members. Every year if is fhe cusfom of fhe club fo give a S25 award fo an oufsfanding sfudenf af com- mencemenf fime. The winner is selecfed by fhe club members as fhe mosf oufsfanding in abilify, lea- dership, acfivify, and scholarship. Carolyn Mueller, Marian Parsons, and Kay Bemenf have won if in former years. Acfivifies of fhe club are mainly for fhe purpose of earning fhe prize money. This year if sponsor- ed an evening of plays, a pay assembly, and a dance. Members also operafed a parking lof a+ fhe Sanfa Ana bowl during foofloall season. Also several social and business meefings were held during fhe year. Officers for The year were: Glenn Bishop, presidenf and Eleanor Bowyer, secrefary. Mrs. Jen- nie l.. Tessmann is adviser of fhe organizafion. ENGINEERS Membership in The American AssociaTion oT Engineers is IimiTed To Those enTering some Iine oT The proTession and evidencing abiIiTy To become successful in iT. ITS purpose is To promoTe engineer- ingand science knowledge in The college and To encourage Tellowship among engineering sTudenTs. IvIeeTings held Twice monThIy TeaTured programs by The members Themselves and IecTures and demonsTraTions by prominenT engineers or by represenTaTives oT indusTriaI IaboraTories. The cIub's ouTsTanding evenT is The annual Engineering show held This year aT The Willard audi- Torium on March IO. The show, wiTh George Roberlrson, acTing as chairman, TeaTured demonsTraTions worked ouT by The members. The club made Two Trips during The year, one each semesTer. The TirsT was a Three-day iourney To Boulder dam during Thanksgiving vacaTion. The second was an inspecTion oT The ConsoIidaTed STeeI pIanT and The Lockheed AircraTT TacTory on May 2. OTher evenTs oT The year were a ioinT meeTing wiTh oTher iaysee chapTers in The spring and a Tarewell picnic and sTeak bake aT Irvine park in June. The Tollowing oTTicers Ied The club in iTs acTiviTies: presidenTs, Sam Tucker and Ed Ewing: vice- presidenTs. George RoberTson and Charles Roemerg secreTaries. Ed Ewing and John Ramirez: and Treasurers. Jack I-Iawkins and William Graupensperger. I-I. O. Russell is The adviser. -354 ,f 06044113 ,ZZLVD X fx fl viz!!! Jgiymlf eddy, sfufggyg f izwwi fQw44,a.V,fj,4gf442 aw. iw we , , 'ai' ffZa,f,-JU10 T WV ' ,5 fm ' TAVERN TATLERS Tavern TaTTlers consTiTuTe The college liTerary socieTy in which membership is based on inTeresT and creaTive abiliTy. The club meeTs Twice monThly wiTh one lecTure meeTing a year open To The pub- lic. lTs ouTsTanding acTiviTy is The publicaTion oT The Tavern PosT each s'emesTer, which is a boolc oT original poeTry and prose conTribuTed by iaysee sTudenTs. Phyllis l-lannah was iTs ediTor The TirsT se- mesTer and Ed Ewing The second. This year The TaTTlers underToolc To ediT and publish FirsT The Blade, inTercollegiaTe verse anThol- ogy, which is published by a diTTerenT college each year. lT conTains The besT oT conTribuTions oT poeTry Trom many CaliTornia colleges. lTs publicaTion here was decidedly an honor Tor The college. Eleanor WalTer was iTs ediTor and Reed SuTherland iTs business manager. OTher acTiviTies oT The club were beach parTies aT Dana PoinT each semesTer. an annual banqueT in May To which alumni were inviTed, a Trip To The l-lunTingTon library. and aTTendance aT The pro- ducTion oT lrish plays by The Abbey TheaTre group. OTTicers Tor The Two semesTers were presidenTs, Eleanor WalTer and Fredda SawTelleg vice-presi- denTs, JaneT Diehl and Phyllis l-lannahq and secreTary-Trasurers, Eredda SawTelle and RuTh Warner. Thomas l-l. Glenn is adviser oT The club and iTs publicaTions. J jx,-TJ fdfffwfrwfmlfb- ' 'Zan-'ffzf -15446 7404! ., if fdlf' war'-A' ,140 J H2 V-V25 ' SIGMA PI-II SIGMA Sigma Phi Sigma is an organizafion of fhose college sfudenfs inferesfed in music. lfs purpose is 'ro esfablish a greafer appreciafion of classical music among club members and college sfudenfs. A new plan of choosing new members was inaugurafed fhis year. Candidafes were asked fo per- form before fhe club and members vofed on fhem on fhe basis of fhis performance. Meefings were held on fhe firsf Thursday of each monfh. and programs were secured from fhe falenfed sfudenfs of fhe organizafion. No popular music was included in any of fhe performances. The oufsfanding acfivify of fhe club was fhe formal concerf and dance af fhe end of fhe year. Leaders for fhe years acfivifies were: presidenfs, Alice Marfin and Marjorie McDonald: vice- presidenfs, Virginia .Lee l-larper and Jack Runnellsg secrefaries. Philip l-lood and Agnes DeBusl4g and freasurers. Agnes DeBuslc and Beafrice Granas. Miss Myrfle Ann Marfin, head of fhe college music deparfmenf. is adviser of fhe club. Members were: Alice Marfin, l-larrief Abrams, Cleo Smifh, l-larold Lufes, Philip l-lood, Agnes De- Buslc. Arden Murray, Dorofhy Gufzman, Beafrice Granas, Doris Flippen, Lois Murray, Lillian Talle, Mar- jorie McDonald, Jaclc Runnells, Dick Key, Nelson Rogers, Bill Friend, Louis Sarfor, Imogene McCauley, Milford Carmen. Marfin Bowman, and l-larold Pofforf. 0 1-go' M V1 N KJV. , ,J , f U, A,., u X I, -R ,gl V' f ff! yr L-fl il! 1 ij T il f X O ll ' I 1 If l 'l J X 'J ff ff I - in T ! jljf-L fx I, r-jj! I VQJ' ,L 141' J, Ve, I J I f X ff! , X 1 xg, I' 1' -' 'J ff A J, A ..', , I. ' 'ff J ff ' . i fi, ff' f 5 ' 5 , , 1 ' if ' ' , 5 f J LJ N I C3 R rl ONS . f T ff :yin VMI , l V ta ,I '. 1 'UI' T . V, VVVA lffykiyx jf rf by 73 I I f WK, 1, A If Lg V A M T ,ig --ff IH, ,T ' ff pf' ,J if ,fr A li ,V l' I W f f, ! -, ,I ,.f ,fi iff ,R - lv, I X y boy fl fl 1 J ,gi The Junior Lions is a service club whose purpose is To serve The Qollege, cooperaTe wiTh oTher clubs in Their proiecfs, and promofe friendship and loyalfy. The club was organized in I928 and is one of many dens all over The counTry. The annual Junior Lion BeaT-FullerTon bonfire and rally was held This year November 28, on The circus grounds on souTh Main sfreef. Gerald Wesfon was general chairman for The pep affair which feafured The new iaysee band and new college song. Orange Women's clubhouse was The scene of The annual dinner dance held March 29. OTher social acfivifies included a l-lallowe'en barn dance. a New Year's parfy, and a faculTy dance. The club was also hosT To The Junior Lion council meefings in April. fXcTiviTies were arranged by The following officers: presidenfs, John Henderson and Bill Kirk: vice-presidenfs, Jack Pegues and John MacFarlane: secreTaries, George RoberTson and Dale Smifhg Treasurers, Charles Downie and John Henderson: Tail TwisTers.X my Charles Kiser and Charles Roig? , and licpggfamers, Gene Erberayy TrauT and Russell Abklgeiif X N A Nfl Sq K2 . QQ' QTMNX xx? s9'fTwi,iTl . XNfboY'SJSJ!g5Q QPR LLPXXT' T 'VEEEEEESEEEEEE f-, ' ' ' .-. 625555552 ..: - J ' 'BEESE J i' 44. ' I. N na' gd .. 'M , .yy 1 'FE '3g,5g5:515f 2 ' ff cf mfg? L. E535 gi' 15 ig 5Zi:EZ2iiizi SEQVICE C I U B S 1 ' f fs ,T X of r v n iv, V K J' 1 ' i T' if A . 1 f J ik, t V . 0.1! fi f 'T N I if fsf AU .1 1 i' f J Nw U N ' ruklpnv ..:i'Y-it ai i li 1 i i if if er' ' X i Y. , -FT lf' l'Tl'i T T Kr fl E , ' -' ,i f. L! - Ml! :Af lv ffl PM gif v l l ' h ,inf ln.-1 h , gl , v 1. lfidk THQ t, ,N .u 1 , V: -5 . F 'fx' lqkylirlyfiiffji liff- f.,f'lj' T T ' 2 A if ,fr l. A S G I T N S XJ li lv if . xl, if Las Gifanas, which means fhe Gypsies, is fhe newesf of fhe women's service clubs, being organized in l93l. Membership is limifed fo 25 women chosen for fheir willingness fo cooperafe and fo serve fhe college. The club's oufsfanding acfivify is ifs annual Sfudenf loan fund benefif dance. This year if was held in fhe Sanfa Ana American Legion hall on April 5 wifh Glenn Evans' amplifying sysfem provid- ing music. Beffy Woods was general chairman. The affair neffed SIS profif for fhe loan fund. Among ifs ofher services were serving for fhe freshmen days luncheon, acfing as hosfesses for Fiesfa. and helping wifh enferfain- menf af fhe fall picnic. lfs social acfivifies included a formal dance on May 4, an infor- mal beach parfy, ioinf meefings wifh fhe Buccaneers and Los Gauchos, and rush and inifiafion parfies. Officers were: presidenfs, Doris Rockwell and Suzanne Clark: vice-presidenfs. Beffy Woods and Dorofhy Coe: secrefaries, Jeanne Paxfon and Doris Flippen: and freasurers, Naomi Wheeler and Mary Paxfon. Advisers are Miss Carol Erskine and Mrs. Elizabefh Thomas. LGS GAUCI-IGS Los Gauchos is The largesT men's service club on The campus. This year The club sponsored The Penny Fair. an evenT which will probably become annual. lTs purpose was To beneTiT The lounges, and radios Tor boTh lounges and The caTeTeria were purchased wiTh The proTiTs. Clubs on The campus conTribuTed booThs, The proTiTs of which wenT To The Tund. Success oT The original aTTair was due To The work oT The Gauchos under The leadership of Their adviser, Cal- vin C. FlinT, and The cooperaTion oT oTher clubs. The club gave iTs annual sporT dance, or EI Jaleo, aT The BelmonT SurT club in BelrnonT Shores on April I2. Frank Nieman's orchesTra played. A privaTe dance was held March I aT The Worne-n's club- house in CosTa Mesa. OTTicers were: presidenT, KenneTh VandruTT, vice-presidenTs, Ryverz Allen and Roy Seaverg secreTaries, l-larold l.uTes and STephen BruTTg and Treasurers, Jay Wood and Lewis WeTherell. Mr. FlinT, adviser, was new To The club This year. ill Vi ef yfymviflvsh ANN i . .ass 11' l QFD flidfl LAS MENINAS Las Meninas. which means ladies in waiTing To The queen, is a service club wiTh membership limiTed To 25 women. This year The club abandoned T'1e shorT rushing season and has Taken new mem- bers ThroughouT The year. AccomplishmenTs oT The club Tor The pasT Two semesTers include winning The Penny Tair cup Tor malcing The mosT money, aTTaining The highesT scholasTic sTanding oT all service clubs, and winning The loving cup Tor The besT slciT aT The A. W. S. l-li-iinx. In The way oT service To The college, The club arranged The dances Tor boTh. Treshmen days and The Tall picnic, served aT The UniversiTy Women's club STudenT Loan Tund beneTiT bridgei pre- pared The Tood Tor The spring picnic, and decoraTed Tor FiesTa. The club's big social evenTs were The MoThers' Tea held during The ChrisTmas vacaTion and The Tormal dance. OTTicers were: presidenTs, MarTha TuThill and Jane CrawTord7 vice-presidenTs, Marjorie Lauderbach and Agnes Bradyg secreTaries. Eloise Schrier and Eleanor Leihy: and Treasurers, Jane CrawTord and Rosalie SmiTh. Advisers are Miss Genevieve l-lumisTon and Miss DoroThy Decker. Zyczgwhwx ' V., 70ww1- ,pf-M, ,WMA QQ BUCCANEERS 'fgzzf Buccaneers, a men's service club, was organized in l93l, and has a membership limiTed To 25. IT is The purpose oT The club To ren- der organized service To The college and aTTord members an op- porTuniTy Tor social conTacT. This year The club sponsored iTs second annual lnTer-club sTag. IT was held in The gym March I8 wiTh The Tour clubs compeTing in such evenTs as boxing, wresTling, rope-climbing, and Tug-oT-war. The Gauchos won The I.iTTle Brown Jug which lasT year was won by The sponsors oT The aTTair. AnoTher ouTsTanding evenT was The annual yachT parTy sTaged May 25. For This evenT The Buccaneers charTer a yachT and mem- bers and guesTs Take a cruise To nowhere. ln addiTion To iTs reg- ular meeTings held The TirsT and Third Monday oT each monTh, The club sponsors oTher social evenTs. Ship's oTTicers Tor The year were: skippers. Dick Clark and Tom KisTing,er: TirsT maTe. Marvin Spicer: keepers oT The scribe and booTy, Sam Tucker and Jack l-lawkinsg and bos'ns. l-larold Felbaum. Jack Hawkins and Charles Gard. T. E. Williams is The adviser. .X lr, x JL fm VD fw- I ' 1 V! ,I fi if K' f V3 I x - kf . Aff, fuffglkif'-X, - L, X, fy T A,,i ,vLff5'r'2 . 1 i f ,,.l-pl V, 'U b'l,r,Q.pCff, K5 ll-TCQX . . 1 Jyzjwvff ifslj--' ii mmf i, fi T g ii T TI.M,iM ll l J MCDAVS The Moav club is a service organizaTion whose members are selecTed on The basis oT personaliTy and scholasTic sTanding. Mem- bership-is limiTec To 30 women. , Services To The college during The year included ushering in as- sembly Tor Treshmen days. serving on The dance commiTTee Tor The Tall picnic, working on The A. W. S. Teas, conTribuTing booThs Tor The Penny Fair and FiesTa, and handling The FiesTa day luncheon. The club's big social evenT oT The year was The Tormal buTTeT supper dance held This year aT The Orange Women's clubhouse on April 6. Ray Badgley's orchesTra played Tor The aTTair. The club also held an inTormal ChrisTmas dance aT The Y. M. C. A. OTher social acTiviTies included rush parTies and iniTiaTions, ioinT meeTings, and The regular meeTings held Twice a monTh. OTTicers were: presidenTs, Arden Murray and Virginia Lee l-larperg vice-presidenTs, Mildred I-laslcell and Avis Bladesg secre- Taries, Alice SToner and Alice MarTin: Treasurers, l.eTiTia Morgan. and MargareT I-Till: publiciTy chairmen, BeTTy STaTTord and Edna Wilson. Advisers are Misses Mabel G. WhiTing and Mary Swass. x if yr MO ww, ul VW .eil Bficusions T iff' will BroTherhood oT Bachelors, TirsT service club on The campus, was organized in l925. Members are chosen Tor Their service To The college in aThleTics. exTra-curricular acTiviTy, or scholarship. The BroTherhood Tollows The cusTom oT wearing red windsor Ties and darlc glasses on Bachelors' SabbaTh which is The TirsT and Third Tues- day oT each mon+h. The big evenT oT The Bachelors' year is The annual Ball, held This year aT The Mission lnn, Riverside, on February I6. Max Cochrane's orchesTra provided music Tor The dance in The Galeria Tollowing The dinner Tor members and Their guesTs. Services oT The club included providing enTerTainmenT beTween halves aT home TooTball games, serving aT The Tall picnic, washing dishes Tor The Treshmen day luncheon, and building Tires and seTTing Tables Tor The spring picnic. OTTicers Tor The Two semesTers were: grand exalTed, Claude Owens and C5len,Bishop1 senior exalTed, OTTO Griggg iunior exalTed. John Thompson and Bill DunsTan: keepers oT wriT, Glenn Bishop and 'Vernon Mansur: and bouncers. Miles NorTon and Loren Lukens. Dr. Murray BaTes is The adviser. , Mai' wad 'T rfffCV T' E , kglffudrrrfyh jd - A I f i w 1 l ' AAA! W MTL' Ti' ' ,ar Avila.. 0114 CO' SisTerhood OT SpinsTers is a women's service club organized in I93O. This year The membership limiT was increased Trom 30 To 33. The TirsT and Third Tuesday oT every mon+h is SpinsTer Wash Day and is observed by The wearing oT green and whiTe checked aprons and colored glasses. ' Among The services performed by The club This year were: play- ing hosTs during Treshmen days, preparing Tood Tor The Tall picnic, serving as punch commiTTee Tor The inTer-club Tea, decoraTing Tor The Alpha Gamma Sigma convenTion. preparing The FiesTa dinner, and arranging The dance Tor The spring picnic. lTs social TuncTions included rush parTies, iniTiaTions, ioinT meeT- ings, and The annual SpinsTer Spree. held This year on May 4. Those in charge oT The club acTiviTies were: Supreme SpinsTers. Eleanor Bowyer and Marian l-lawkq Sub-supreme SpinsTers, lvlarian l-lawlc and DoroThy Gowdyg Keepers oT The BuTTon Box, Barbara Dun- Ton and Medora SmiTh: Keepers oT The Quill. Caro Cogan and KaTh- ryn SexTong and lvlenders oT The Sox, l-larrieT Abrams and Caro Cogan. Mrs. Velma SundguisT is The adviser. IIINEARTS av , e.. ,F Lg, ..,1,- ,,-g 5x.4. A nn 1 -1 - 4 ll ml 'Q 4 A f F 1 3. :Y .SU f ' v ,V , f .gf .A 2 1.511 ., . ki - . Hr t. . 1 L'lFJV'TlnKZ.K ,Pdikl -,,.u,n , .11- w-..-Jw' f 'EP' ' -LL: -1 f-,,. I' G, V! rf Qi ' M I 1 1 aqyq- 4-, ff l.ll'All'9Z'1llZLlYl'H1lIli , ' wif QMS! 1 Id Sign- 1 149 1 w tu. . ,.,.-.M . l WXWJ f WZ! f MM J ,QE-,'531'DDJS i A' A if PUBLICATICDNS SECTIGN 1 EL DON'S YEAR During The year EI Don was enfered in Three newspaper conTesTs and won many awards. AT The iaycee press convenfion aT Los Angeles iuniorcollege in November, El Don placed sec- ond in The besT fronf page and besf all-round paper divisions and won firsf place in The fea- Ture conTesT. The iunior college weekly was also enfered in The annual Newspaper Day conTesT aT The Universify of Soufhern California April I3. Awards were also given EI Don aT The spring iunior college press convenfion aT Padua l-lills May 4. Chaffey iunior college was hosT. The second annual iunior college iournalism banguef was held aT The Green Caf Cafe May 24. Edifors and advisers of high school news- papers and annuals were guesfs of El Don. Awards were made aT This Time To oufsfanding Orange CounTy high school publicaTions and To EI Don sfaff members. El. DON .XM , 4.1 ' Breaking a TracliTion of several years sTanding, Fredda Sawfelle became one of The few women edifors-in-chief of EI Don. college weekly, for The firsT semes- Ter of This year. Miss Sawfelle before becoming El Don ediTor was feaTure ediTor of The Anaheim high school paper, The Anor- anco, associaTe ediTor of EI Don lasT year, and a member of The iournalism classes. She plans To affend The Univer- siTy of California aT Los Angeles affer her graduafion here and may confinue wiTh iournalisrn There. During lvliss SawTelle's ecliforship of EI Don she published Three special edi- Tions: The Freshman Day issue, Alumni ediTion. and The TenTh Anniversary ediTion. Jane Crawford succeeded Fredda Sawrelle 'ro 'rhe edilorship of EI Don and acred in ihal posiiion during rhe second semesler. She was formerly associale edilror of rhe Orange high school Reflecfor and served for Jrhree years on lhe high school annual. She has also been a member of ihe iournalism class since eniering col- lege here. Miss Crawford iniends To en- roll al U. C. l.. A. where she will go on wilh her iournalislic career. A special issue of EI Don was pub- lished by Miss Crawford for The Alpha Gamma Sigma convenlion in April. Dur- ing her period as ediror-in-chief of El Don she also inauguraied a wearherfore- caslr. wanl ads, and mail delivery 'ro 'rhe homes of srudenls. - l a'j'.- , ., , V Q ix I RY, g xy ny!-,,,-,.Q 'gs,i.,U k ' if V L MJ lf... X1 P V ,,.f'a g V 4 F 5.4.1 xy .ll L,-I V X, M- J -rf' ,J -.-Vx C., . A gx , J i fee MT , my guueeff 1 3 , ,We fe -fr ' . . A r U N N y V . Q N . .yn .,.Jx..Q 5 V'i'lS,.k,s UN -- y g .Q H x-U. XJ' .c,. , qfg- c:-'51 if Ci' E V Pb- A l Q -Q . If.'x-I ' 1, I J y, , ,ua ,C . . J J J J N r'g,,f,,,-,',, J'-f- L u V ' iigc.e4L--' :fer-sf if EL DON STAFF U Assislring Miss Sawlelle, EI Don edilor dur- ing Jrhe 'lirsl semesier, was 'rhe edilorial slaff composed of Marvin Spicer, sporls eolilorg Kennelh l-lunl'. 'fealure edilorg Wall' Bandick. circulalion manager: John Rabe, adverlising manager: and Jaclc Pegues. edilorial wriler. Members of ihe second year iournalism class in ediiing acled as assislanl or news edilor. ediied ihe back page, and read proof. A Vir+ually 'rhe same srafi also assisied Miss Crawford, edilor during The second lerm wilh Wall Bandick, associafe edijrorq Marvin Spicer. sporlrsg Kennefh l-luni, fea+ures7 John Rabe, ad- verlisingg and Jack Pegues, edirorials. Sludenis of The firsl and second year iour- nalism classes wroie +he copy for ihe paper as aclual laboralrory experience. John l-l. McCoy, iournalism insiruclor, acl- ed as facullry adviser for Jrhe publicalrion Jrh roughoulr Jrhe year. EI. DUN Jaclc Pegues and Charles Downie co-ediTed This, The TiTTeenTh volume OT Del Ano. IT is The TirsT dual ediTorship in The hisTory oT The publi- caTion. David Sheppard, layouT ediTor, busi- ness manager combined The duTies oT These Two imporTanT oTTices wiTh almosT phenomenal suc- cess. Edna Wilson, assisTanT ediTor who will pro- bably succeed To The ediTorship nexT year, is The auThor of The publicaTions and Tine arTs secTion. Eleanor Bowyer, assisTed by Marianna BaxTer, handled The graduaTes' secTion, compil- ing The acTiviTies, records and arranging ap- poinTmenTs wiTh The phoTog raphers. Jane Craw- Tord assembled The diTTiculT organizaTions sec- Tion. ElizabeTh Woods, under The direcTion oT Miss Francis Egge, headed The very capable arT sTaTT, mosT oT which reTurns To The college nexT year. George B. l-lolmes, TaculTy dire-cTor OT Del Ano, on who's worry wearied shoulders all grieT and diTTiculTy ulTimaTely Talls, coordi- naTed The various deparTmenTs inTo The worlc- able uniT ThaT produced This book. ni ii J ii K L -4 'ii il r M. v ii. 1- li q -Q 11, TTS ' 3 Ts l T lg i ii- i T Q ,H rs in ml ll T T ll T Til JJ rx fl 5 T Mfr J-Qi Tl ,gl lg lar fl 5 , ix Wk Q T' if T if la it R3 fu 'Tm la T f -i . Y Y 5. il, a .J .fl f , di-::-W -Q T'+,pN-.LxL'AM!'x:L AA if ug!-.. J vi., iigfxis-'-Q -'C l'I': Tigris D E I. A N Q - s QA i fi-f4,--- c, ' ,sm ,,,. ,iw 4 -.fu -... ,X W' 4-1 glib D - U . , ,LL T ,., f.,iJ, 1 , ' L, ..- , yi 4 , 1'- f A Q -ii Tips i 1 H Q5 ii- 'Q UQ ' T' 'T' lf-i Qi da! ,V I :W K ' rzil.--LQ-s wx -- .4 Marvin Rocky Spicer, ace of a long line of Sanla Ana iunior college sporls reporlers, ediled Del Ano's sporls deparlmeni. Johnny Henry and Duncan Clark also conlribuled io lhe sporfs pages. Henry wrole arlicles on wresl- ling and Clark did 1'he Jrrack slory. Yelive Blank, one-lime head of The Women's Alhleiic Asso- ciaiion, compiled Jrhe women's sporis seclion. Rulh Chrisi, gradualing soph, and Frances Was. freshman. uniled Their efiorls +o 'rurn ou'r The Year in Review. Siewarl' ivleece and Siephen Bruif shared pholographic duiies. Meece is re- sponsible lior many ol: lhe fine Fiesia pholos. Figuring in Elizabelh Woods all-slar ari slaff were lvledora Smilh, Dee Pe+'ri+, and l-lelen Logue, who conceived Jrhe novelly inserls. Ar- mand l-lanson, a rising young characier ar'ris'I', drew carloons for minor seclion pages. Mrs. Eleanor Norihcross, who's piclure appears on anolher page, direc'l'ed lhe worlc of 'rhe lilerary siaff. Thomas E. Williams advised +he prinling of +he book. DEI. ANG f'f'j,Lf 1 fife- I ff J M f N sf X f ff ff I I, gf ! 4 f,,,,.. JV!! 5 124461 M if I ff , K ' 4 ff 'T C xX ' 'i' STUDENT DIRECTORY The TourTh annual Junior College DirecTory, spon- sored by The local Press Club, was published early This year and issued To The AssociaTed STudenT mem- bers. KenneTh l-lunT served as ediTor-in-chieT oT The direcTory and was assisTed by Farla Nell ClayTon and Francis Gus GilberT. John l-l. McCoy, adviser oT The Press Club. acTed as TaculTy adviser and Thomas E. Williams oT The prinT shop Took care oT The me- chanical supervision. The direcTory was composed oT a lisr oT The ad- visers oT The exTra-curricular acTiviTiesg names, ad- dresses. and Telephone numbers oT The members oT The Board oT EducaTion. oT The iunior college TaculTy, and oT The sTudenTs who were enrolled during The TirsT semesTer oT The year. NEWS SERVICE Founded lasT year Tor The purpose oT sending ouT publiciTy and news oT The junior college To surround- ing communiTies, The News Service conTinued To TuncTion This year. Several news sTories were senT ouT each week To high school and communiTy papers giving inTorma- Tion abouT The doings oT The iunior college sTudenTs and adverTising college acTiviTies such as aThleTic conTesTs, plays, The opera, and dances. All news- paper publiciTy Tor The annual FiesTa Day was Taken care oT by The News Service and arTicles and pic- Tures were senT To all Orange CounTy and Los An- geles newspapers. During The TirsT semesTer, Jack Pegues acTed as sTudenT chairman oT The enTerprise and Edna Wilson as assisTanT. Miss Wilson laTer was sTudenT chairman and was assisTed during The second Term by James Torrens. STUDENT HANDBOOK EdiTed Tor The TirsT Time in iTs hisTory by a woman sTudenT. The annual sTudenT handbook, popularly lcnown as The Frosh Bible, appeared aT The opening oT The college year. The handboolc. a publicaTion oT The Young lvlen's ChrisTian AssociaTion, was ediTed by Farla Nell ClayTon and was prinTed aT The iunior college Fine ArTs Press under The direcTion oT Thomas E. Williams. The boolc conTained greeTings Trom PresidenT D. K. l-lammondg Dean McKee Fisk: lvlrs. Eleanor NorTh- cross, dean oT women: Clarence CompTon, presidenT oT The Y. lvl. C. A.: and Naomi Wheeler, presidenT oT The Y. W. C. A. Besides These welcomes There were wriTe-ups OT The men's and women's service clubs, language clubs. honor socieTies, and oTher campus organizaTions. A reporT oT The publicaTions oT The college, social TuncTions, campus conducT and TradiTions. and oT- Ticers oT The AssociaTed STudenTs was included. TAVERN POST ' Tavern PosT, a liTerary magazine, appeared Twice This year, in March and in May. IT is published by members of Tavern Tafflers, campus liTerary organ- izaTion, and ediTed by a sfaff selecfed by The club. The magazine is composed of original wrifings of local sTudenTs and is prinTed under The direcfion of Thomas E. Williams aT The iunior college Fine ArTs Press. Tavern PosT was edifed The firsT semesfer by Phyllis I-lannah, ediTor-in-chief: Edgar Ewing, Rufh ChrisT, James Torrens, and RuTh Warner, associaTe ediTors: Rodney Engle, business manager: and AlberT Clark. arT ediTor. The second semesTer sTaff was com- posed of Edgar Ewing, ediTor-in-chief: STewarT FleTcher, Fredda SawTelle, and Edward K. Robinson, associaTe ediTors: James Torrens, business manager: and Jeanne Lieve, arT ediTor. BoTh sfaffs were assisf- ed by Thomas I-I. Glenn, faculfy adviser. FIESTA MAGAZINE The Fiesfa Magazine, annual publicafion of EI Don, iaycee weekly, was ediTed This year by Jack Pegues. The magazine appeared May IO, FiesTa Day, and was issued To AssociaTed STudenT members and all high school seniors aT The affair. Pegues was assisTed by Charles Downie, assisTanT ediTor: WalTer Bandick, business manager: and John Rabe, adverTising manager. John I-I. McCoy was faculTy adviser and Thomas E. Williams supervised The prinTing aT The Fine ArTs Press. As cusTomary, prominenT people in The field of California hisTory were inviTed To wrife for The pub- licaTion. The magazine conTained I-low Los An- geles GoTs lTs Name by Marion Parks: Adobe Daubs, by Ed Ainsworfh, sTaTe ediTor of The Los Angeles Times: FiesTa by Mona Summers SmiTh, of The Sanfa Ana Public library. FIRST THE BLADE FirsT The Blade, California college anfhology of sTudenT verse, was prinTed here This year aT The Fine ArTs Press under The supervision of Thomas E. Wil- liams. Eleanor Wal+er served as ediTor-in-chief of The book. She was aided in her work by Fredda SawTelle, associafe ediTor: Reed Sufherland, business manager: and Thomas I-I. Glenn, faculTy adviser. This verse anThology was issued May I for The eighTh successive year and conTribuTions from sTu- denTs in forTy-five California colleges were included. ApproximaTely 300 copies of The book which con- Tains IO4 pages of all Types of poeTry were prinTed and subscripTions from all over California were re- ceived. Some work of local sTudenTs was included in The issue. More Than one Thousand conTribuTions were received from sTudenTs represenfing almosT every California college and iunior college. GJVW Z5 T LJ 'I . Wgh,,,9.I 725515,- jf .4 r 1 wx .f , . X , X fi l ifgfd 'J I N 2 if f f , f ,Q 4 ,J ff , zz W4 w , , fx f fx J ,f 1 ,w 137-' 1 D R A M A SECTICDN hire ii? jfgfs x 4- , J' ':. fu E.- VI . ' .I .hi 4- H- 1-j' DRAMA Norman Mennes as Jrhe coward, in an unmenlionable play, was like a pail ofice wafer on a hol day. Shocking. The play was given over l'he radio wilh all male characlers. Wilh Jrhe above menlioned opening The dramafic season, lhree olher one-acls were presenlecl in rapid succession. l-larriel Abrams and Arr Coleman, acling solo in a skil of poverly. showed plenly of power of characler porlrayal. Lighler plays were Jrhe rule, however, wilh John Henderson vs. lvlargarel Sawyer drawing 'rhe bouguels. Nelson Rogers. Frances l-lammonlree. and Sam Gosney led lhe way in characrer porlrayal. Nel- son ranged lrom The bully parl lo lhe broken old man in his aclion while C-Bosney drew 'rhe younger parls playing Jrhe Cockney in one piece and Willie in anolher. l-lammonlree was an experl' al making a small parl Jrhe mosl remembered bil' of a play. . V sl WW 'UN 4 9' .J J ff ,fqfvidf ,acc f Ml 'V .44 i DRAMA Milford Carman and Lois Pranlce look leads in several shorr plays wirh Rufh Warner, Jack Mc- Carly and Alice Brady in supporling roles. Smilin' Through , a romaniic comedy in lhree ac'rs and a prologue, was 'rhe oulsianding achieve- men'r of Jrhe drama deparlmenl This year. Ernesl Crozier Phillips, for 20 years head of ihe iaysee drama deparlmenl, guided The produclion which was presenied as 'rhe annual Fiesla play. l-larriel Abrams and John l-lenderson were The slraring players, boih playing a dual parl: Miss Abrams appeared as Kalhleen Dungannon and Moonyeen Clare wilh l-lenderson as Kennejrh Wayne and Jeremiah Wayne. These were supporled by Arr Coleman as John Carlrerelg Nelson Rogers as Dr. Owen l-lardingg Frances l'-lammonlree, Ellen: Samual Gosney. Willie Ainsley: Margarel Ellen Saw- yer. Sarah Wayne: Agnes Brady, Mary Clare. Wedding guesls in The play were Lois Marie Pranlce, Blanche Gaslcill, Milford Carman, Jaclc Mc- Cariy, and Norman Mennes. QNMMH v X M U S I C SECTIQN MUSIC lvliss MyrTle lvIarTin, head oT The music deparTmenT here since I926. This year direcTed The men's chorus, men's quarTeT, woman's ocTeT, and The women's chorus as well as insTrucTing The many music harmony and voice classes. Alan A. Revill insTrucTed piano classes This year in lJoTh beginning and advanced work. Leland Auer, an insTrucTor new To The campus This year, direcTed The band and orchesTra. This group played aT The TooTball games. Tor The opera. and provided loeTx-feen-The-acTs music Tor The FiesTa play Smilin' Through. The men's guarTeT, composed oT William Friend, Cleo SmiTh, Jack Runnells, and Dick Key, Tilled many engagemenTs and proved very popular. The women's ocTeT was especially acTive during The TirsT semesTer and iTs members were l-lazel SeTTle, RuTh Souder, Mariorie McDonald. Bonnie l-lamilTon, Virginia Lee Harper, lvlariory Morgan, ',,,f --T-. . lghii- , - I L MUSIC Alice MarTin, and Agnes DeBusl4. individual soloisTs, Agnes DeBuslc, Mariorie McDonald, Lynwood Young. and Cleo Smi+h, appeared wiTh The Orpheo Troupe and on various oTher programs. New Moon. lighT opera by Sigmund Romburg, was The TeaTured performance of The music deparTmenT This year. The opera was presenTed in The Orange high school audiTorium. April 25 and 26. Agnes DeBusk as Marianne and Cleo SmiTh as RoberT co-sTarred in The musical producTion.They were supporTed by a casT of SO. Comedy relief in The play was Turnished by MarTin Bowman as Alexander and Beulah Engle as Julie. OTher ouTsTanding characTers wereihlorman Mennes as Devaulg ArT Casey, The villain, Riband: Jack Runnells as Jacques: Marquise Hare, Phillippeg Mariorie McDon- ald as CloTildi1 Bill Marshall, FansheTTeg Nelson Rogers as Dolemere: Lynwood Young as The buTler: Milford Carman in The role oT BruneT: Franic Lansdown, The Spaniard: Sam Gosney, Beaunoirg Clar- ence CompTon, Besace: Simon Taclle, CapTain Degeang and Joseph Langland, The innlceeper. IN Q Q QV! 65,3 1 fl EiiQ :ai?ET: :gi ,TT : ,1afE A I2 T SECTION -is R Service To The college is one of The chieT TuncTions oT The arT deparTmenT. Members oT The deparT- menT arrange displays and exhibiTs in The library and show cases, make posTers To adverTise all major school evenTs, presenT exhibiTs Tor The Alpha Gamma Sigma convenTion and FiesTa day, and design and make Tavors and decoraTions Tor convenTion. ArT sTudenTs also planned layouT. page design. spacing, grouping oT phoTographs, and Type selecTion Tor Del Ano. The conTemporary arT class under Miss Egge presenTed exhibiTs oT commercial and indusTrial design Trom The ArT CenTer, Los Angeles: reproducTions oT modern painTings Trom Phil Bernay's, Los Angeles: an exchange exhibiT wiTh CiTrus junior college: and original painTings by local arTisTs. ' Field Trips were Taken by The painTing class To Irvine Park, Laguna Canyon. and Lemon l-leighTs Tor ouTdoor landscape slceTching, and To Los Angeles by craTT classes To sTudy Tine craTT work. Miss Frances Egge, deparTmenT head, and Mrs. ElizabeTh Thomas insTrucTed The arT classes This i E ,1' 3.,..- . year: lvliss Egge The painTing and drawing, leTTering, sTrucTure, commercial design, appreciaTion, his- Tory. and conTemporary arT classes, and Mrs. Thomas The craTT classes. Live model slceTching is done by The drawin'g and painTing class using members oT The class and oTher junior college sTudenTs Tor models. ArT sTrucTure classes sTudy The applicaTion oT arT in various Tields, arT elemenTs. and sTudy modernisTic eTTecTs oT absTracT design. LeTTering classes work on Types oT alphabeTs and The suiTable use oT diTTerenT Types, layouTs, and The design oT leTTered pages, and The Technique oT pens and brushes. Perspec:Tive, color, and c:omposiTion, are Talcen up in The commercial design. ArTappreciaTion sTud- ies The absTracT principles: arT hisTory Tollows The developmenT oT arT Through The hisTory oT civiliza- Tion: and conTemporary arT sTudies The use oT arT in all Tields. CraTT classes make poTTery, leaTher work, Tiles and glazing. FCDQENSICS S E C T I O N FOTQENSICS UndeTeaTed in league depaTes This year, The SanTa Ana junior college Torensics Team won The EasTern Division SouThern CaliTornia conTerence championship. The Team debaTed on The same quesTion in all league debaTes. Resolved, ThaT The Federal gov- ernmenT should immediaTely adopT a plan oT compulsory unemploymenT insurance.They won on boTh The aTTirmaTive and The negaTive. The TirsT debaTe was held in SanTa Ana againsT CiTrus junior college and The SanTa Ana Team com- posed OT Glenn Bishop and Claude Owens won The aTTirmaTive. In The second debaTe. The same Team oT Bishop and Owens won on The negaTive aT Pomona junior college. During The second semesTer, SanTa Ana deloaTed wiTh San Bernardino junior college Twice Tor The championship. BoTh The aTTirmaTive Team oT l-larold Woodard and RoberT Tannenbaum and The negaTive oT Bishop and Owens won Their conTesTs. John l-l. McCoy served as TaculTy adviser and clebaTe coach during The year. Awards were pre- senTed The debaTers aT The annual junior college bancjueT in June. - ,,.. .--, - i- ..- V .j l - i i 1 aj -Q j l i i l i l l FGTQENSICS Besides winning The league championship: The SanTa Ana iunior college Torensics deparTmenT was acTive in oTher conTesTs. A debaTe Team composed oT'Glenn Bishop and RoberT Tannenbaum and OraTor I-larold Wood- ard enTered The annual Pi Kappa DelTa lnviTaTional TournamenT aT The College oT The PaciTic aT STocl4Ton in February. The SanTa Ana iaysee Team parTicipaTed in six debaTes on The quesTion, Re- solved, ThaT The naTions should agree To prevenT The inTernaTional shipmenT oT arms and muniTions. They won Trom UTah Branch Aggies, Cedar CiTy: lVlodesTo junior college: and Arizona STaTe college, FlagsTaTTg and losT To Weber college, Ogden, UTah: Glendale iunior college: and The College oT The PaciTic. Woodard compeTed in Two rounds oT oraTory and delivered an original oraTion, Penny Wise and Pound Foolish. RoberT Tannenbaum represenTecl SanTa Ana in The annual S75 Kneeland OraTorical conTesT spon- sored by The ClaremonT colleges May IO. l-le spoke on Causes oT War. ' The debaTe Team also appeared beTore a luncheon meeTing oT The SanTa Ana Lions club May I6. ATHLETICS 4,.,1-M 1 v 'Z' 'L vs fxfs T fic! -.',. W , . , 'i 1:5 ' i 2 4 bb ..--rf inf' 23 ' VP AA at W ?. ...J ll? 1 S If .fb .- 41, -.,,.,..x, 'Vick 'ful-i fe'-45: - ' - f1mgg'.f+ff'.wf' f f + -1,.a'.5if5i2'?? ,F 1, sryylos ,H L' fl' ,- . W X V -x A . 1 1 4 011 , V A .' ...J . , .- . n , 1 I , 2,40 .1'Q 3 , 4 1 X nw.: .lm J r f if I 1 r r ..' H -.rs ' Q ki 4 fx, ,e ' K , x ,.,v '.-- . x ...xy -Q ,,gg,- 242: m Ewan A A'v5.i2': ax A , AY- J , W 253.2 Qi ' 3 - 'az - ' sg H xx ,. . ml. wr, J-iv.-gf X F- un--.... --5iiii3-- unu- nun 2 nu. , llll 3 - un Q 1. ,f - 1. Q 2 z , , .Q 0-4' X? b M Q '- .',. 4- - M E N' S ATHLETICS If l l ff 1 . -X fl fl J .fm api N xy N CCDACI-IING STAFF Since Coach A. J. lBilll Cook Took over The reins as TooTball coach aT SanTa Ana iunior college, The school has become prominenT ThroughouT The sTaTein This popular sporT. Cook is now recognized as one oT The greaTesT gridiron menTors in junior collegian circles and holds Two conTerence TiTles and one SouThern CaliTornia championship in his shorT coaching career. l-le has also guided The Track squad To high honors. ln his TirsT year as an assisTanT TooTball coach and head man in baske+baII and baseball, Blanchard BeaTTy proved himselT capable oT handling The desTinies oT local aThleTes. BeaTTy is well acquainTed wiTh Cook's s+yle OT play as he played under The sTocky leader Tor Two years as a Don before going To S. C. When Bill Cook picked his all-Time Don eleven Tor El Don This year, BeaTTy was honored wiTh The quarTerback berTh on The TirsT sTring. AT The Trojan insTiTuTion BeaTTy ranked behind only such men as Gaius Shaver and Orv Mohler. ln The minor sporTs Calvin FlinT, local insTrucTor, handled The Tennis squad, while wresTling and swimming had sTudenT coaches. Bill Cook TosTered The gohcers in addiTion To his Track and TooTball oluTies. AThleTic managers are l-larry lvlaTsukane. l-lenry lvlacary, and PresTon Piper, TooTballg Francis Davis, baskeTball: and Duncan Clark, Track. IICDCDTBALI. SANTA ANA I2-LONG BEACI-T 6 ATTer The Two elevens had baTTled Through The TirsT halT on even Terms Bob Phipps, rangy righT halTback, received a perTecT pass Trom QuarTerback Bob lvliTchell early in The second halT To beaT Rocky Kemp's Long Beach Vikings, I2-6. The beach ciTy boys claimed a moral vicTory in ThaT Their six counTers marked The TirsT Time a Long Beach iunior college grid aggregaTion had crossed The local goal since aThleTic relaTions were esTablished in l928. SANTA ANA 22-POMONA O ATTer Trailing 3-O ThroughouT The TirsT halT, The Dons demonsTraTed Their oTTensive punch in The second canTo by pushing over Three Touchdowns and scoring a conversion To geT OTT To an auspic- ious conTerence sTarT againsT Pomona. lvliTchell romped oTT righT Tackle To score The TirsT Touchdown sTanding up. Four plays laTer. Guard Loren Lukens recovered a Cossack Tumble and Wilburn Anderson wenT over Tor The second score. Dick Moore sprinTed around end Tor The Tinal counTer. SANTA ANA I4-RIVERSIDE I4 ConTaining more Thrills Than a dime novel, The Don-Riverside I4-I4 deadlock was characTerized by brillian+ aerial play and sparkling running maneuvers. The Bengals led unTil The Third guarTer when Cook's condoTTieri cuT loose. Two Touchdowns in rapid succession gave Them an apparenT winning lead. BuT Riverside again knoTTed The score. WiTh less Than a minuTe To play, SanTa Ana launched Two passes and a running play ThaT appar- enTly puT The ball over The goal line. The oTTicials ruled oTherwise. ,lm-i:,.,,s..H, ,ma Val Ln, .. .. . :A-.s.4,,-g!g,,1,,s ,A IIOCDTBALI. SANTA ANA O-SAN BERDOO O ' The Tie ThaT binds became more in evidence beTween SanTa Ana and The oTher EasTern division Teams when San Bernardino drew wiTh The locals O-O. The game was sTricTly a baTTle beTween Two sTubborn defensive ouTTiTs ThaT broke up all aTTempT- ed oTTensive sallies which coupled wiTh a damp Tog made The game miserable To waTch. BoTh elevens advanced The ball wiThin The shadow oT Their opponenT's goal posTs only To have The oTher ward OTT a Touchdown. SANTA ANA 6-FULLERTON O AnoTher Thrilling chapTer in The engrossing saga oT TooTball relaTions beTween SanTa Ana and FullerTon iunior colleges was wriTTen The nexT week on The greensward oT The new Yellowiaclxei' sTad- ium. The Dons came ouT on Top. 6-O. Wal+ GunTher, hero oT The l933 Tracas, sTarTed The ball rolling by inTercepTing a l-lorneT pass and rambling 36 yards. The locals wenT 32 yards in Tour running plays wiTh Fullbaclc Anderson bucking over The single Touchdown. A 1 , l .iff ,I-. . ,V I ' Vi ' ' .4 Q IICDOTBALI. SANTA ANA O-CITRUS O A surprise awaiTed The Dons when They engaged Al Clayes' men, who resembled-more a pack OT Tenacious bulldogs Than a Tlock oT TaciTurn Owls. For The second sTraighT SaTurday The Spanish avengers had To be consoled wiTh The playing sTa- TisTics. ATTer Tour quarTers oT eerie TooTball, neiTher Team had scored and The game ended O-O. The deadlock was made doubly insipid by The injuring oT Wilburn Anderson and Dick Moore, The squad's Two besT Tullbacks. SANTA ANA 6-CI-TAFFEY O Failing To be impressed by Coach BurT l-leiser's razzle-dazzle TormaTions and The aTTirmaTion oT The ChaTTey squad ThaT They were ouT To geT SanTa Ana, The Dons nonplusseol The invaders 6-O. Supposedly one oT The sTrongesT Teams oT The conTerence, The PanThers ouTgained The Cook- men in yardage, buT when They reached dangerous TerriTory. The Padres would rise up in all Their mighT and smack The T-leisermen back. The vicTors scored when Kroener caughT a pass Trom MiTchell. :un-v'-vi' -- r . i s f l i , ' i R FCDOTBALI. SANTA ANA O-RIVERSIDE I2 Foofball fifles are usually decided before fhe final week of play, buf fhis year if fools all seven weeks and a play-off game fo inclicafe fhe winner of fhe Easfern conference gonfalon. ln fheir second clash of fhe year, Riverside clearly removed all doubfs as fo fheir superiorify over fhe Dons by annihiliafing fhe locals I2-O on fhe Fullerfon neufral field. ' Merle l-larris, Riverside's all-conference quarferbaclc, personally accounfed for IO firsf downs. SANTA ANA 37-LA VERNE FROSI-l 7 Showinqi real susfained driving power, fhe fhundering cleafs of fhe Don iuggernauf beef a rapid faffoo on fhe Bowl gridiron and baffered a lefharqic La Verne freshman feam info submission. 34-7. 'The yearlings were foo lighf and inexperienced for fhe roused Cookmen and served only as a subiecf on which fhe locals could polish fheir offensive facfics. Alfhough reserves were used in mosf of fhe firsf and fhird quarfers fhe Dons scored almosf af will. 1755.8 a ' .. mi i E in I FOCDTBALI. Alfhough dominafing fhe second half and engineering a 70-yard specfacular drive fhaf nearly neffed six poinfs. Sanfa Ana's defending Soufhland champions dropped fheir firsf fesf of fhe sea- son fo 'rhe powerful Compfon Tarfars, 6-O. Willourn Anderson, veferan ball carrier, and lvlaior Anderson. former speed king of fhe Sainfs, shared fhe offensive spoflighf. Bofh made numerous brillianf runs. Sammy Tucker, Ben Slavin. and Miles Norfon sfarfed fheir aggressive play fhaf was fo lafer earn fhem all-conference honors. SANTA ANA O-U. S. C. 7 ' Taking advanfage of a five-yard offside penalfy, awarding fhem a firsf down on fhe Don's I3 lafe in fhe firsf quarfer. Jeff Cravafh's Trobabe club pushed over a fouchdown in six plays and con- verfeol fo eke ouf a 7-O win over Bill Cook's foofballers. The game. which was 'rhe debuf of Bruce l-larnois in fhe role of an elusive-running quarferbaclc, was played as a preliminary fo fhe Washingfon Sfafe-Soufhern California exfravaganza af fhe Coli- seum in Los Angeles. I DICK MOORE. . . Full back . . . freshman. MAJOR ANDEDSON. ,Sf . Ouarferback . . . fresh man. JAMES CLYDE BIRD-ff SONG . . . halfbaclc . . gradualing. FOOTBALL CHARLES ROEMER . .. Freshman cenler a n d guard. NELSON ROGERS . . . Freshman regular Tackle. BEN SLAVIN . . . End on all-conference second Team lwo years . . . end on Coolc's all-'rime eleven. HAROLD POTTORF . .. F r e sh m a n subslilule guard and end. HAROLD YOUEL . . . Cenlrer . . . has anolher season of iunior college foolball ahead of him. RALPH COMSTOCK . . . Halfloaclc . . . freshman. BRUCE MARTIN . . . Cenler . . . has one year of eligibilily lelbr. WALT GUNTI-IER . .. Premier pass-snarcher . .. end and quarlerback . .. gradualing. BRUCE I-IARNOIS . . . Honorable menlion all- comference quarlerbaclc . . . freshman. WILBURN ANDERSON ... All-conference honor- able menlion . . . quarlrer- Ierback and 'fullback . . . gradualing. FOOTBALL FRANK KROENER O n e of conIerence's leading ends . . . gradu- aling. LOREN LUKENS . . . Guard on CooIc's all-lime Don Ieam . . . graduaring. SAMMY TUCKER . . . All-conference honorable menlion and guard on CooIc's all-'rime Don eleven . . . graduaiing. ,WILSON SEACORD . . . Freshman aII'ernaI'e guard. PRESTON PIPER... head manager a+ large . .freshman MILES NORTON ...All- conference I'acIcIe for second year. . . Iaclcle on Bill CooI4's all-Iime Don Ieam. Coach Blanchard BeaTTy's call Tor cage prospecTs was answered by abouT 20 aspiranTs.OuTsTand- ing oT The TurnouTs were Bob Schwarm, guard Trom lasT year's Tive, and l-larold Youel, leT'Terman Torward. WiTh These men as a ToundaTion BeaTTy began Trom scraTch To mould his Team. A combinaTion oT Tom Lacy, who placed on The prep all-CoasT Team while aTTending SanTa Ana high school. Fred Erdhaus, Towering cenTer who received his earlier baslceTball Training in lowa and aT The local high school, and Johnny l-lenry, WichiTa, Kansas TransTer who up To This year had never played organ- ized baskeTball, shaped up wiTh Schwarm and Youel as The ablesT quinTeT. Bruce l-larnois, Vern Brower, and l-larold PoTTorT ranked as The besT among The subsTiTuTes. WiTh his eye To The TuTure, BeaTTy l4epT a larger reserve squad on hand Than was The usual prac- Tice. Men who are counTed on To carry on nexT year are Gaylord Colle. Charles Kiser, Paul ChrisT, PresTon Piper, Cliff Lee, and l-larry Owings. Forward Tom Lacy was high scorer oT The quinT and an all-conTerence selecTion. Fred Erdhaus was close behind Lacy in scoring honors. l-larold Youel, who usually Ted The ball To Lacy and Erdhaus, sank a Tield goal in The lasT 20 seconds oT play To beaT FullerTon. The veTeran Schwarm's cool play- ing aT guard oTTen sTeadied The Tive when The going became exciTing. John l-lenry was an able goal guarder whose accuraTe passing accounTed indirecTly Tor many poinTs. Erdhaus, Lacy, Youel, Schwarm, I-lenry, PoTTorT, and Brower were awarded monograms by Coach Blanchard BeaTTy. BASKETBALL , M lr i i l ll' as l ' 1-'ai 7--- tr ,ii 'ki -, 4 .gf . '54 63.5, '- H Q 'av -' . Wi' U, 4529. lm' , M, Rfx ' Q X is TX BASKETBALL AlThough dropping Tour ouT oT six leagueigames and ranking in The conference sTandings only one noTch above The cellar. The local baslegbfjl guinTeT's season was considered a success among The local sporTing cliques because oT a lvin over FullerTon's champions. - Coach Blanchard BeaTTy in hisATirsTry of guiding The TorTunes oT The cagers meT wiTh beTTer success Than is indicaTed on surface- a pearances. The blond menTor, a proTege oT Sam Barry aT The UniversiTy oT SouThern California, employed a modiTied Troian sTyle oT aTTaclc coupled wiTh a zone deTense. X Faced wiTh The disconcerTing siTuaTion oT only Two reTurning leTTermen as a nucleus To build around and a small TurnouT To recruiT Trom, Coach BeaTTy commenced To shape The SanTa Ana repre- senTaTive oT The comcerence. A sTarTing lineup oT Tom Lacy and l-larold Youel. Torwardsp Fred Erdhaus, cenTerg and Bob Schwarm and John l-lenry, guards, became evidenT as The sTrongesT combinaTions. AlThough seTTing a dazzling pace in The second half To ouTpoinT Pomona I5-9, The Dons dropped a Thrilling league opener 36-33. Succumbing To a wild aTTaclc on The local baskeT during The second halT, The Dons losT Their second EasTern conference sTarT 46-2I To CiTrus. NexT Riverside proved Themselves Too good Tor The Padres 4-I-24. ln scoring The maior upseT of The I935 EasTern division cage season BeaTTy's men rose To greaT heighTs To ouTplay FullerTon's YellowiaclceTs and win, 3 I-30. Unable To cope wiTh The rough TacTics used by The ChaTTey PanThers, The Dons dropped Their nexT game. 29-I9. N- 1 . . ,., .fa-.w -' - ,fur 1 x JOHN HENRY . . .guard and relurninq freshman. FRED ERDHAUS...cen- Jrer, also a frosh. HAROLD YOUEL . . forward. sophomore. BASKETBALL BOB SCHWARM . . guard. sophomore. TOM LACY . . . all con- ference forward. HAROLD POTTORF . . . reserve guard. a frosh. LAVERNE BROWER . .. reserve cenler, lrosh. fm -Q? my 253 Mlllpzvif xs:zawdK,2,arfa:, agua A RAY SIDES broad lump and lurlong. - Z KENNE rf. wry FRANK BOYD . . . 440 yard dash, low hurdles, mile-relay. RACK RAY COKELY . . . weiglwls and and mile re- lay. CAPTAIN LUCIAN WILSON . . . high and low hurdles. AL PARR . . .broad jump and furlong. JOE FRIAS . . . mile and lwo-mile runs. RAY CRAFT . . . 880- yard run and mile relay. RUDY I-IOLMAN . . . mile and 'rwo-mile runs Coach Bill Cook paid a Tine TribuTe To The l935 Don Track Team when he said, IT was The besT all-around Track Team ThaT l have ever coached. Led by CapT. Lucian Wilson, who proved himselT To be The SouThland's premier iaysee hurdler, The Dons gave The record books a Trying year. The Track season sTarTed wiTh The annual inTer-class sTrug- gle in which The sophomores walloped The yearlings, 74 To 47. Rudy l-lolman was ouTsTanding as he seT a new school record oT IO: I 2 in The Two-mile. The San Diego college relays was The oTTicial season opener in which The Dons collecTed nine medals Tor Their eTTorTs. On March 2, The Don's popular capTain, Lucian Wilson. ran a briIIian+ l4.9 sec. TlighT oT highs To place Third in The open division oT The A. A. U. meeT aT Long Beach. Ken VandruTT, AI Parr, and a medley relay Team oT Ray Cokely, Ray CraTT, Joe Frias, and Rudy l-lolman also placed. The dual meeT season sTarTed wiTh a 69-62 vicTory over Ernie Payne's ChaTTey PanThers. The relay decided iT as Cokely, CraTT, Anderson, and Boyd esTalolished a new school mark oT 3:3 I .4. AI Claye's CiTrus Owls were The nexT vicTims -by virTue oT a 89 To 4I win. The Tollowing week San Bernardino's Braves were scalped, 73 I-3 To 57 I-3. All oT The Don Trackmen came Through wiTh sTerling perTormances as The Cook cohorTs ran The gamuT To annihilaTe ArT Nunn's FullerTon YellowiackeTs. 80-5l. Vern Koepsel's double win over Ful- lerTon's STedman in The sprinTs, Frank Kroener's new school record oT 40 TeeT 3 I-2 inches in The shoT and Rudy l-lolman's new mile record oT 4:3229 sec.TeaTured. TRACK E T 1 l A I I I I I I l I I 1 I tag ' ' 2-gpg-F , - -- 'F -agswmssejw '1Q'T 7 ' T J' ' I --. f ',. 5 -4- - .,I.- ' , 4 ' ..- 1 ,. fx- iv ' 1 ', ' gi-.-:ya- -. -1-.1-M Jn- .iw-1. , 1 , - , V-'9 . -5 ,... -, ,,r , ,,. - 2 ' 'slim-f 'RB ' 'N ' '- is -ws fm '-.711-A V . - is -- - , TRACK Sanfa Ana-minus Rudy l-lolman, who was spiked fhe day before fhe meef-scored 44 poinfs fo place fhird in fhe Easfern conference frack and field championships af San Bernardino. Wilson scored IO poinfs as Koepsal and Vandruff counfed 9 and 9 I-4 respecfively. The Don relay feam of Ander- son. Craff, Koepsel. and Boyd sef a new conference and school record wifh a 3:27.45 mile. Gold frack shoes bam! Riverside 67 I-2. Sanfa Ana 63 I-2. Wifh fhe Bengal's Kilday geffing hof in fhe anchor relay lap Coach Bill Neufeld's gang annexed fhe Easfern division dual meef fifle affer fhe Cookrnen had led all day. U Capf. Wilson whipped all fimber-foppers in fhe Soufhern California junior college associafion frack and field meef. I-le won fhe highs in I5 secs. and capfured fhe lows as he sef a new meef record of 23.9. Sanfa Ana placed fiffh buf even so finished ahead of fhe seven Easfern division enfranfs. Hol- man scored second in fhe fwo-mile wifh a 9:58 race. Joe Frias, Kenny Vandruff, placed in fhe mile and high jump and high hurdles respecfively. The relay feam of Anderson, Craff. Boyd, and Koepsel fin- ished fhird. Jusf as Del Ano was going fo press. Coach Cook and nine men leff for fhe Fresno relays fo wrife finis on a successful frack year. Coach Bill Cook named I5 frack leffermen for fhe '35 season: fhey are: Capf. Lucian Wilson, Vern. Koepsel. Ken Vandruff, Rudy I-lolman, Frank Kroener, Frank Boyd, Ray Craff. Joe Frias, Ray Cokely. Al Parr, Loren Lukens, Walf Gunfher, Ivlaior Anderson, Ray Sides, and AI Clark. Prior To This season, wresTling was noT included in The exTra-curricular acTiviTies oT SanTa Ana iun- ior college: however, Through The inTluence oT some Tour aborigines oT The wind swepT plains oT Kansas who won sTaTe championship TiTles Tor Themselves while in high school There. a Team was Tormed This season ThaT was very successTul in iTs encounTers. The Team enTered compeTiTion only Tour Times as a uniT, Three Times in dual meeTs in which They were unbeaTen and The TourTh Time in The Junior N3Tional championships aT Inglewood. CaliTornia.The Team vanquished a powerTul Team Trom WhiTTier college Twice during The season by a decisive margin and Turned in a win over U. C. L. A. In The TournamenT aT Inglewood, Tour oT The men, Wayne WilhiTe. Bob ArmsTrong, Ray FosTer. and Charles Gard. were ousTed via The decision rouTe in The quarTer-Tinal round while l-larold PoTTorT. The oTher member oT The Team, wiesTling in The l43 pound class. won his way To The semi-Tinals where he was deTeaTed by a Time advanTage. For The ouTsTanding individual perTormances oTThe season, boTh PoTTorT and Gard make ouTsTand- ing bids wiTh six sTraighT wins, beTore The TournamenT aT Inglewood, wiThouT a single seT-baclc. NexT in line would Tall ArmsTrong and FosTer who were vicTorious in Tive oT Their six sTarTs in dual meeTs. WilhiTe Turned in Tour wins in Tive sTarTs Tor The season. WilhiTe, Gard, ArmsTrong, and PoTTorT Tormerly aTTended WichiTa high school EasT: FosTer came Trom The Poly high in SanTa Ana. ' fl-y W i W Q E S T ,,.ysfW1i,lf.ir WL A T. fbf 9214 V i A 50431 TM? ,,f fri r refer W Qi - V.- - X Qgff' T 1 PIX! V 7,1 si - - ' ' - V. 'N . 1? 4 . ' , ' 'ur .f.4.v-nk. SWIMMING Sans The advanTages oT a coach, The six men who composed The iaysee Tank Team enTered compe- TiTion Tor The TirsT Time as a uniTed group encounTering The squad Trom SanTa Ana high school. The meeT. supposed To be a TesT oT power oT The Don swimmers, Turned ouT To be a miniaTure slaughTer as The Dons earned a liTTle slam, winning all buT one oT The evenTs oT The meeTing. Following The surprise upseT oT The SainTs, The Dons enTered a series oT meeTs wiTh several oT The surrounding high school and iaysee Teams. l-leld aT a disTincT disadvanTage because oT The TacT ThaT They numbered only six, each man was Torced To enTer several evenTs in all meeTs. This proved To slow The men TerriTicallyg however, They were Tairly successTul in Their encounTers. considering ThaT The aquaTic sporT is iusT geTTing sTarTed aT SanTa Ana. The season's ouTsTanding individual perTormer was, wiThouT guesTion, dapper Johnny I-lenry, Kan- sas sTaTe prep diving champion Trom WichiTa. Henry won his TavoriTe evenTin every meeT, and piclced up sTray poinTs in The dashes as well. CarroT-Topped Gaylord Colle, anoTher Kansas lcid wiTh an aTh- leTic complex, swam The 220 and 44-O Tree sTyle dashes. T Nolan l-lasson and Bill DunsTan, ersTwhile l-lunTingTon Beach sTars, were ThaT coasT Town's dona- Tion To The Team. They swam The Tree sTyle dashes. TusTin's Jack Runnels and SanTa Ana's Frank Lansdowne garnered considerable poinTs Through- ouT The season via The back-sTrolce. Q e i Under The able leadership of Coach Calvin FlinT, The SanTa Ana Tennis Team enioyed a success- Tul season. WiTl1 such experienced Tennis players as Lewis WeTherell, Orris Davis, KenneTh Nissley, Dave STyring, and GorTon Davis making up The nucleus oT The Team, iT was like suicide Tor EasTern conTerence opponenTs To aTTempT To deTeaT Them. During The TirsT parT oT The season WeTherell Teamed wiTh Nissley Tor The TirsT doubles while STy- ring and Orris Davis played second doubles. Coach FlinT changed This lineup To Team STowell wiTh WeTherell in The TirsT doubles and GorTon Davis wiTh STyring in second doubles. This combinaTion clicked remarkably well and The Don singles enTranTs also emerged vicTorious wiTh Orris Davis, KenneTh Nissley. Marc Nielson, and Julyan Spencer playing The TirsT Tour posiTions respecTively. FlinT again subiecTed his lineup To changes in The laTTer parT oT The season when he used WeTherell aT TirsT singles: Davis, second: Nissley, Third: and Spencer, TourTh. STyring and GorTon Davis and STO- well and Neilson comprised The TirsT and second doubles Team.This arrangemenT proved more power- Tul Than The TirsT. In The middle oT The season FlinT senT Werherell and Orris Davis To enTer The inTer-collegiaTe singles in The annual Oiai Tourney. BoTh players gave excellenT accounT oT Themselves,'WeTherell reaching The semi-Tinals and Davis advancing To The Third round' before he was elimimhilwddl. SxTanTordfTs John ll K w L 1 Law, who deTeaTed WeTherell, won The TournamenT. Vi- ,Tl , ' .4-'l'f'Ty,kll fy! - y' T , yy, AJ A ., . l , , , ,i 1: fl 1, vw' .iw . I ' , T I y- A 1' I yur 'lf l T i l l . if T I i im V .B h lc, J, Q , . ' : ,,, 'Lf Q ',l a ', fy, iT .Ui TT 5,5 T A by . I M -P' GT l T x - - I l Ji fT' 1 i fl 9 T s T Y i 3 I 1 .. I ,Ma 2 , la P ' 1 F' - ,T T i M ,T' ,li l f TT lu? V .xi T 8 A, 1 1 N, ' ' , V T E gn rl 4715- ,T , ,ani -, xi pfis T Q' if Qi NX -1 il ,1 'i,' 'N h 5-.l yy 7 'T xx ii' ,vfx Q. 3 u 5- '-, . ' T T, , 4' j T ,- ljy- g .gl I ,fi ,T your ,l ii X T l i ,T 1. w Ti- Af' ,M 0- K' ' - , -1 -i - Tv ' A gl pl wi H .,- T ' g - ix X K G , X A F. M l A JJ T T ' kk-jig-in yylll rl' la li ,X 1 IX 1 4 ' Q T yn j n, .Y v l,' T ,Qi K 1 ' -gi ,T A1 N i T T l r T T ' l .l ll ii Y ill' ll 4 , A . Ai U J l 1 T ii ,ax , , X T A H 1 J, i .fl l 'A 'YK ir l I 5-'1q:Lj. :L ' ', ggi '-13 jg Q suv-H ' f , -'fr' 1 .J-Gvv-was-Bassist 'aww .-...-fu GULF LasT year The SanTa Ana iaysee golT Team won The conference gonfalon wiThouT playing a single league maTch. Every oTher Team in The loop TorTeiTed To The local divoT-diggers. Again This year The Dons annexed The conTerence TiTle. l-lowever, This Time iT was superior playing ThaT won Tor The local men. OTT To a slow sTarT. The golTers soon gained momenTum To caTapulT Themselves inTo The league crown wiThouT dropping a maTch. Long Beach deTeaTed The Dons 5 To O in The TirsT pracTice session. AlThough showing marked improvement The Dons dropped Their second pracTice engagemenT To Cal Tech. WiTh only Two pracTice games under Their loelT SanTa Ana enTered league play To beaT Riverside, I2 To 3. San Bernardino TorTeiTed and Pomona was walloped by a sulosTanTial margin To round ouT The season wiTh a clean slaTe. When Del Ano wenT To press SanTa Ana was waiTing Tor The Orange Empire TournamenT which was held aT The VicToria counTry club in Riverside. PresTon Piper, co-capTain and secreTary of The Team, occupied No. I posiTiong CapT. Leo AbboTT played No. 27 and Gene Corson was No. 3. ForresT Neal, Tom KisTinger, Cliff Lee, and Jack Reade made up The resT of The Team. I i It r:--1--- - - f ,X V ' - f W 5 N ,T- Q - A , -,- Abs Qli.. - :,i lf + WCM ENS' ATI-ILETICS V N N E-. l - :E M i is-gil S3 ' Q. Klum Xi Ng if 'ig xiii mb ' 1- Xlsgxl ., fi'-'Q' EX 'f' isfl 3 .x Q, gel .5 Q ' sk -f l 5 f Q ,Qui A Kiel 'SKS X X gg ga xii ixl . xXEx amnesia xi Wm 5 il 5- M in . jx 2' is A 'KA x QR Q. s K Q, X jc VN 'si i ii is X as -5 3: ' X Q QQ? vs, M lk QXLS3 is X Will fi: ZENA LECK Miss Zena Leclc, insiruclor in physical educa- +ion for women. Miss Leck graduaied from Sanla Ana iunior college in I92I To coniinue her school- ing ai ihe Universily of California a+ Los Angeles. Aflrer gradualion she wenl direclrly lo Woodrow Wilson junior high school, San Diego, where she remained +wo years. She refurned in I928 +o Sanla Ana. The college's +ransii'ion from lhe old Walnuf slreel planl To Jrhe presenl siie broughl ceriain changes in Teaching burdens i'ha'r saw. among olher Jrhings. Miss Leclc assuming 'rhe whole iaysee women's alhleiic program. .x, I irfrmff W,,,Wff'7 rw QWMWTWMJ WQQWWVW fm W. A. A. W. A. A. acTiviTies during The year have been augmenTed by The addiTion oT badminTon, a new sporT. AlThough TurnouTs Tor W. A. A. sporTs have been r'elaTively small,The Teams have usually been successTul in Their playday compeTiTion. The TirsT playday oT The year was held aT SanTa Ana. Decem- ber 3, when FullerTon and Long Beach arrived in spiTe oT a heavy rain, To Take parT in unoTTicial bas- keTball and volleyball games. The second playday was held aT FullerTon, March I6, and The lasT and largesT playday oT The year in which all oT The SouThern CaliTornia iunior colleges Take parT was held aT Los Angeles, May I8. W. A. A. social acTiviTies during The greaTer parT oT The year consisTed oT several poTlucks. a Tennis Tea, and a hockey spread, which was given April I2, wiTh Mary Wallace in charge of Tood, Lucille GriseT in charge oT decoraTions. and RoberTa TuThill in charge oT publiciTy. The annual W. A. A. MoThers and DaughTers BanqueT was held May 22, aT The Doris KaThryn Tea room. W. A. A. oTTicers Tor The TirsT semesTer were, YeTive Blank. presidenT: Barbara DunTon, vice-presi- denT: Mariorie Lauderback, secreTary: Jane CrawTord, Treasurer: Mary Lou McFarland. baskeTball manager: Mary Wallace, Tennis manager: Lucille GriseT, swimming manager: and Doris Rockwell, bad- minTon manager. The second semesTer's oT'Ficers were: Mary Wallace, presidenT: RoberTa TuThill, vice- presiclenT: Dee PeTTiTT. secreTary: Doris Flippen, Treasurer: Frances TibbeTTs. hockey manager: Mil- dred Kemper. badminTon manager: Mary Wallace, Tennis manager: and Lucille GriseT. swimming manager. W' ,WW WWW? WWW .- .1 J,Y, 5Ql ' nf. X as ,Q , rf' 1 vf ,... 4'.,gQs.Ef'gg., A L . f .H B-U4 The W. A. A. hockey season This pasT year was a mosT surprising and successTul one. Even Though The popular sporT was Temporarily abandoned because The new locaTion oT our iun- ior college has no pracTice Tield, The populariTy oT The sporT wiTh The W. A. A. women made iT pos- sible Tor Them To hold daily pracTices on The high school Tield. Hockey pracTice sTarTed only Two weeks before The secTional playday held aT FullerTon, SaTurday. March 23, buT The women's enThusiasm and hard work was amply rewarded when They won Their game againsT FullerTon wiTh a score oT 4 To O. Several pracTice games were held on The home Tield wiTh The SanTa Ana high seniors and iuniors dur- ing The Two weeks pracTice period. The annual hockey spread was held aT The close oT The season in The Y. M. C. A. basemenT April IO, wiTh Mary Wallace, The W. A. A. presidenT, in charge oT Tood, Lucille GriseT in charge oT decor- aTions, and RoberTa TuThill in charge oT publiciTy. The decoraTions Tor This evenT carried ouT a sporTs Theme, and ap'proximaTely 25 women aTTended The aTTair. Frances TibbeTTs was appoinTed hockey manager Tor The season, and Miss Zena Leck coached The Team. Women reporTing Tor hockey pracTice were Lucille GriseT, Muriel LamberT, Doris Rockwell, Mar- iorie Wakeham. Frances Was. CharloTTe Mock, DoroThyGuThrie. Blanche lllingsworTh, Eunice Spicer. Jean McAuley, Elsie Kokx, Eva Bergee, Frances TibbeTTs. Jerry GriTTiTh, Mary Lou McFarland, BeTTy MarTin', Virginia Lawrence, ElizabeTh Wassum. RuTh STuTsman. Adelia McVey, Valerie DemeTriou, Mildred Ware, RuTh Kilbourne. DoroThy PeTTiT. Lois Pranke, Merrillee Rankin, YeTive Blank, RoberTa TuThill, and l-lelen Wilkie. W. A. A. baskeTball, The TirsT sporT oT The year, Tound so many enThusiasTic Tollowers ThaT iT was possible To have a second season wiTh a good TurnouT when iT was ThoughT ThaT hockey would have To be abandoned because no pracTice Tield was available. Mary Lou McFarland was appoinTed bas- keTball manager early in The season. Besides Taking parT in The secTional playday held aT SanTa Ana high school, SaTurday, December 8. a baskeTball Team was also Taken To The Junior College Womens' SporTs Day aT OccidenTal College in Los Angeles, February 23, To which all oT The junior colleges oT SouThern CaliTornia were inviTed To bring a selecTed group oT Ten W. A. A. aThleTes. The compeTiTion aT This SporTs Day was dis- Tinguished by Teams made up oT represenTaTives Trom each oT The junior colleges presenT. l-lockey. baskeTball, swimming, diving, Tennis and archery were The sporTs in which The women Took parT. The women. Trom SanTa Ana aTTending This SporTs Day were Mary Lou McFarland, Eunice Spicer, Frances TibbeTTs, Lucille GriseT, DoroThy GuThrie, Doris Rockwell, BeTTy STaTTord. Mary Wallace, RuTh Kil- bourne and YeTive Blank. A The baskeTball Teams were. TirsT Team: Eunice Spicer. capTain, Jean McAuley. Doris Rockwell. Mary Lou McFarland. Frances TibbeTTs. Ellen Frazee, RoberTa TuThill. Lois Pranke, and DoroThy GuTh- rie: Second Team: DoroThy PeTTiTT, capTain, BeTTy Ryherd, Rena Ewing, Barbara CravaTh, Marjorie Wakeham, RuTh Kilbourne, Bernadine Chapman. Ina l-lunT2inger, and Jane McBurney. aAsl4ETBf-xii ' ' D L 1 . ' r. BASEBALL W. A. A. baseball, The lasT Team sporT oT The year, does noT usually have such a large TurnouT as The majoriTy oT The oTher sporTs have. Regular pracTices were held on The Lincoln Grammar school Tield because oT iTs easy accessibiliTy. The TirsT TurnouTs were so small however ThaT some oT The prac- Tices were held in The gym oT The Y. M. C. A. A ConTlicTs wiTh laboraTory hours and Iafe aTTernoon classes made iT diTTiculT Tor The W. A. A. women To reporT Tor regular pracTice. The baseball Team aTTended The annual play day To which all SouThern CaliTornia junior colleges are inviTed. The playday This year was held aT Los Angeles junior college, SaTurday, May l8. Elsie Cock was appoinTed baseball manager by The W. A. A. board and Miss Zena Leck coached The Team. The W. A. A. baseball Team scheduled Two pracTice games wiTh local high school seniors in prep- araTion Tor The biggesT playday oT The year. Their TirsT pracTice game was played againsT The TusTin seniors aT TusTin high school, Monday, May 6, Miss Leck reporTed a good game, buT since The junior college women were unable To keep up The TasT pace Tor The Tull game period, They losT wiTh 7 TusTin runs againsT Their 3. The oTher pracTice game was held aT SanTa Ana high school Wednesday, May 5, when The junior college women played The SanTa Ana senior Team. Women who reporTed Tor baseball pracTice during The season were RuTh Kilbourne, RuTh McBur- ney, Jane McBurney, Elsie Cock, Blanche lllingsworTh, Marjorie Wakeham, Frances TibbeTTs, Wilma PoTTer,'Mary Lou McFarland. W. A. A. swimming is oTTered every sporTs season oT The year. The TirsT season's swimming is given over To insTrucTion and improvemenT in sTrolces and swimming Torm wiThouT any acTive compeTiTion. The second season is devoTed To insTrucTion in liTe-saving, during which Time The women are insTrucTed in The service. rear and under-waTer approaches, The head, hair and cross chesT carries, The breaks, The holds, and oTher essenTials oT liTe-saving. The women are also given an opporTuniTy To pass The various liTe-saving TesTs during Their course. The swimming Team aTTended The annual playday Tor all oT The SouThern CaliTornia junior colleges aT Los Angeles junior college on SaTurday, May l8. The women who enTered The various evenTs aT This playday were Frances TibbeTTs, Lucille GriseT, Blanche lllingsworTh, Frances Was and BeTTy Lee. They compeTed in The Tollowing evenTs: The 25 yard clash Tree sTyle, The 50 yard dash Tree sTyle, The 25 yard dash in breasT sTrolce, racing back, and side sTrolce, and racing back Tor Torm. The women ouT Tor The TirsT season's swimming were Barbara DunTon, Blanche lllingsworTh, Lu- cille Grise-T, Frances TibbeTTs, YeTive Blanlc. Doris Flippen, lvlarTha Turhill, Marjorie Walceham, and Amza Johnson. Those reporTing Tor The second season's liTe-saving insTrucTions were Blanche lllings- worTh, Lucille GriseT, RuTh Kilbourne, and Frances TibbeTTs. Those girls receiving W. A. A. crediT Tor swimming during The year were: Lucille GriseT, Blanche lllings'-forTh, Frances TibbeTTs, YeTive Blank and Barbara DunTon, BeTTy Seeley, RuTh Kilbourne, RuTh C'1risT. SWIMMING l TENNIS Sanfa Ana's W. A. A. fennis 'ream enioyed anofher highly successful year. W. A. A. fennis is an- ofher sporf which is offered every season of fhe year. lf has suffered as a sporf because of a lack of sufficienf courfs for organized pracfice. Af fhe firsf of fhe year regular pracfices were fo be held on fhe Willard iunior high school courfs. buf so few girls reporfed consisfenfly fhaf 'rhe pracfices were given up. A new sysfem of pracfice was fhen infroduced. By fhis plan a girl who wished fo earn W. A. A. credif for 'rennis could do so by pracficing fwo hours a week wherever if was mosf con- venienf. and by regularly reporfing her pracfice hours fo Miss Zena Leclc, fhe fennis coach, or fo Mary Wallace, fheifennis manager. Racquefeers were senf fo all of fhe playdays during fhe year. including fhe Womens' Sporfs Day af Occidenfal. Mary Wallace represenfed Sanfa Ana af fhe laffer evenf. On April l l, Sanfa Ana gave a fennis 'rea af Sanfa Ana high school. Fullerfon. Compfon and Long Beach affended. Firsf and second singles, and firsf doubles were fhe only mafches. Lillian Shelfon and Helena Bailey, playing firsf and second singles respecfively, and Mary Wallace and Roberfa Tufhill, playing firsf doubles, made up 'rhe Sanfa Ana group. Af fhe playday held af Fullerfon, March 23. Sanfa Ana's fennis feam consisfed of Mariorie Lau- derbach, firsf singles: Lillian Shelfon, second singles: Mary Wallace and Roberfa Tufhill.firsf doubles: Beffy Lee and l-lelena Bailey, second cloubles. and Barbara Crawford and Dorofhy Gowdy. 'rhird doubles. AlThough W. A. A. badminTon is an enTirely new experience To SanTa Ana iaysee women, They have Talcen To The new sporl' wiTh a good deal oT enThusiasm. The badminTon women have had no op- porTuniTy To Talce parT in playday TournamenTs because only one oTher school in The EasTern conTer- ence division, Riverside iaysee, oTTers badminTon in iTs aThleTic curriculum. Doris Rockwell was senT To The iunior college women's sporTs day aT OccidenTal college, February 23, as SanTa Ana's badminTon enTry, buT wind prevenTed The maTches being played. AT The Tall playday held in SanTa Ana. December 8, Twila l-leaTh and KaTie Woods, Two ousTand- ing amaTeur badminTon players oT Orange CounTy, played an exhibiTion singles maTch. and laTer play- ed an exhibiTion doubles maTch againsT Doris Rockwell, OT SanTa Ana iaysee and Miss Marion Bruner. SanTa Ana high school coach. Doris Rockwell was badminTon manager The TirsT semesTer oT The year and Mildred Kemper Toolc over The posiTion during The second semesTer. Miss Zena Leclc coached The badminTon women. W. A. A. women reporTing Tor badminTon during The year were Farla Nell ClayTon, Helena Bailey, BeTTy 'Lee. Doris Flippen, Frances Was, Frances TibbeTI's, Mildred Ware, Muriel LamberT. Louise SexTon. 'BeTTy MarTin. RoberTa TuThill, Mildred Kemper, Doris Roclcwell.Adelia McVey. Suzanne Clark,Jeanne PaxTon. and Eloise Schrier. BADMINTCDN I ACKNOWI FDGFMIZNTS Webber-McCrea ..... - ..... Binding Thomas E. Williams . . Direcior of priniing Willard E. Francis . . .... Linolype Jack I-I. Reed . . . . Pressworlc Rabe Sludio . . . Plwofograplwers 1 . 6- x DS - ' ' 'i , X 352, ,ig 19 f 27 ,,. - pm- '- Q, 5526, if A , , fy '1 41 LJ 4 ffxw ,. A aa, 21 fa ff' 1 I A X Cbfy ff if i J? A35 N 2:21- if fax CC ' qvgfaif J W - 2, ' ' Pf? Dx 2 'QS 'gx 'Fx' E 432 ' Z :rl i fa I i 0 'iz A52 E -E 'fx V!!! i I x - -ff Q., -' ' CZ, Q5 '24-L Ag, X X135 E 'S 1 42 5-ix 2 n Ur .. f ,-Lim-A1f'v.f' A .Lb f mx ww--if-1 K L1 il L 1, o-- 4J,, I Q I J v v f 4 Zf'?fz.Q,,V fa,i,,4Jg',,,,,.L, EfQ,f1,gn,f,+., fl ga, ,WL ,ALA bf QL ,, M, - ' A U ' A ' 15 'I M 5' ahff-'gg.'1,'L,f-4,,M, .L-Agqgwz. ,- up-L,.f,,A. jr JEL, ' 'MJ ' . f-fl M, 'f' ' w ., K K lJ,.'4 1 A y4.f1'0v J , N, '1 It ,fy-V' r. KV! v- ' fl! wg, A, L, ,A A W -A-, ,ff U ,mapa ,ff --wp ,fb--fi 1,41 2-' M , . .VLA . 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