Santa Barbara High School - Olive and Gold Yearbook (Santa Barbara, CA)
- Class of 1938
Page 1 of 114
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 114 of the 1938 volume:
“
is KVM 1 ,give iw gig ,Q Q 35 ,K R i Qkw naQw mr?-,V 4 -P 5 0. . :fl lf-Q. THE OLIVE AND GOLD ll ll The Passing Sl1ow of 1938 0 VOLUME XXXI I Published Annually By the Senior Class of the Santa Barbara Higlm Sclwool Santa Barbara, California phyllis hughes .... kenneth arnestad alice feathers .,A.. gerry hoyt ,,,.,, tacla Sheridan .,.. waldo macias .,,, george booth .....w harry stock ..,.. bob hamilton ...Y clan howe ........ glenn Wallace ...... norman Hrestone everett tozier ..,.r. , lawrence Cortez ....., howard eckles .... rnaxine clark ..,. ST AFF director assistant director script editor assistant srript editor art dirertor special cartoon affects f special photograpbir effects technical director business manager ' assistant business managers 1 Q, V, denman ,,,, ,,,,..,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,.., ,,,, . b uszness aa'zf1sor produced bv ward wicart studios ,....,......s,s.s,s,..........f,,. ..., 17 fL0f0g?'Il1Qhy district engraving company ....., .,,,..,ss....i.,..... 6 ngravlrlg sehauer printing studios ,,,.,,.i ...... f rrinling and binding 4 ll E Q Q 96 In the HPassing Show of l938,', the Olive and Gold is attempting to present to you this year in Santa Barbara High School as a passing parade! a continuous show which does not work to one grand climax, but shows life as it happens. We have endeavored to give a continuity to the activities of this school year by showing you in their proper setting, the year's outstanding per- sonalities, its social allfairs, its athletics. its organ- izations, its classroom activities. We have thought that this would give a Clearer and better pieture of the year,s history than does the conventional an- nual wherein these phases of school life are de- partmentalized. In various ways we have suggested the motion picture idea, so that in reading this yearbook. you will get somewhat the feeling of a person who is seeing before him a pageant of the year's activities. Frankly. this is an experiment. We hope you'll like it, and we hope vou,ll excuse any mis- takes we may have made in leaving the beaten path. 5 on 0 Z 0 ur .2 D S- 2 Tu P N on c X .2 : eir Annual Trek Through the Sa ..l: I- c O Ch 0 I- 0 'U fu I . .2 P UI 0 I- 0 .:: o c IU M Ch 0 T' JJ O .: LD cn c O .I 'Wir' ,1 nw' - -ffff K, ,V NAA Ax .. 54? Close Shoi:fGarden of Old Mission. Fade-out. 1 1 i L...l-Q-...Q L..Lg.4 41 EE EEE sid .V .P G . KTLILLE 551 ssolve to: ol. Di gh Scho Hi ng Sl1otwFront of Santa Barbara Lo ut to: C Dissolve to: the Wind. Santa Barbara Channel Keeling Over in x Close Shoh- Star Boats in l Principal Harvey J. Holt ADMINISTRATION AND OFFICE STAFF Rotiom row: Miss Elizabeth Smith, assistant in attendance officeg Miss Frances Gower, dean of girlsg Miss Vinlztta Moorman, library clerkg Miss Zillah Barnett, attendance secretary. Second row: Glenn VVallace, boys' counsellorg Mrs. Ernestine Robson, secretaryg Miss Patricia Arroqui, assistanf in attendance ofFc:g Miss Jessie Churchill. registrarg Mr. Harvey J. Holt, principal. Third row: Earl Murray. curriculum directorg C. V. Denman, head of Continuation High school business managerg Leonard L. Bowman, vice-principal. ,9- School and ENGLISH DEPARTMENT Bottom row: De La Cuesta. Dickerson, Noyes, Murphy. Second row: Tessien. Myers, Kellem, Applegate. Davis. Third row: Rossier. Dewell. Poyntz, Wallace. D59 no QQ DQ do o?o 9.342 no MATHEMATICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENTS Bottom row: Churchill, Moss Thomson, Truesdale. Xlleissend. Second row: VValters. Hughes, Davidson. Third row: Pruitt. Murray, Thompson. -10, COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT AND HOME ECONOMICS Bottom row: Jacobson, Schoenborn, Gerer, Franklin. Second row: Marvin. Bynum, May. Schutte, Dulohery. Third row: Paulin, Thompson. Hilbert, Tonnar. Q32 no A UQ DQ o?o G30 DAQ no SCIENCE AND LANGUAGE DEPARTMENTS Bottom row: Wood, Blair, Bi-amlage, Kellem. Second row: Pruitt. Johnston, Gower. Henry, Moss. Third row: Woods, Lyans. VVickstrum. Scalapino, Turnoff MANUAL ARTS' AND MUSIC DEPARTMENTS Bootom row: VVoods, Ingraham, Carter, Sloniker. Second row: Spooner, Bishop. Third TOYVI VVe1lS. Reidcl. D52 on DQ DQ rio :fo 952 C70 PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENTS' Bottom row: XViese11danger. Cotton, Mueuch. Second row: Turnoff, Schutte, Bishop. NVormssr Aww Z- ,ff :gg '+t'fFw:. O as 79 K 5 'Q S as L f 2 renin' ag- M S P A R T I , H REE I 43:i?Zua 1 ,.,-'Tis-3: '-'.s ' -' E-4 -,M 13 , - - +P-.L 3 '-E 5 E 5 I E - 3 5 ' 5 E A , ' 'ii E E ' 1 nl I L The lights are dimmed and summer fun disappears as the curtains part and Reel I is flashed on the screen on September 13 to pre- sent a new school year in the life of Santa Barbara High School. Not a few students become annoyed at the first clatter of the alarm Besides new students, we find a number of needed additions to the faculty to help take care of them. These are: Miss VVinifred Hoey, formerly of Santa Barbara Evening High School and La Cumbre Junior High School, who is teaching corrective speech, Miss Mary Schoen- Ksjfi I7l0'L'i7Zg and PNP to the right' clock heard in three months, but, after all, find themselves looking forward with anticipa- tion to meeting old friends and beginning new courses with a fresh lease on life. The noisy confusion of over-crowded halls first bursts upon the ears of the new arrival to the school, who, once inside, can hardly hear himself think. He struggles toward the office and elbows his way into the midst of the other new students who are milling around trying to be registered-then waits. Many new things and people are discovered in the course of the first day. First, the one that seemed most apparent to the entering student, is that of the large increase in enroll- ment, which was a jump to nearly 1700 from the 1570 mark of last year. And why this sudden increase? just take a look at the 10B class- nearly twice as large as any other group with its total of 423 students. Yes, if this keeps up and the school isnlt enlarged, the walls must soon begin to bulge. Ya ur nam U, please? born, from La Cumbre Junior High School, who teaches Spanish, Latin, and commercial geography, Mr. Charles Rhoades, from Stan- ford, who is teaching special classes here in outdoor projects, Mr. Charles Rossier, from Wells, Srhoenborn, Rossier, Rhoadrs Q-r Y14.- STUDENT Llii ISLATURE IICZ. Taknsagawa. lime Romer, bherbf-t Rustic. Mac Brewster. wr Newman, Eastman, Falxa, FO H1 to Bot Pineda. King. ornwall. C Russell, , Hill. Clif K TSIIIICH. David, D Miratti, : VVilder, Gordon, Second ro oods Drake. XV VVclml:, Moulds. VVindcr. ugcr, KI Begg, ks. Rnichardi. ll Ba Hartfeldt. man, rock B K llauvcl, Gross, estwick. U w : XV T li i Nl .1-qv ...:::m,:.m.,.:-,..j . bo. 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' .... as .. t. te- 'ka -, :...-use-. - .- . -.......d.. ,, V rmmsa ,, L'T...:L..'7-73' Q .-: ,.....'-'.,v.. ,....'-' - ' .. f.5.'i':'Iii L-.......-'e-11.2 ' ' . zu.:-M W- ' V ': ... ,...2'1.. .: ' 52:-...-.'E-EE ' Wi V-.-:-.u -..L ::.:.':-.7:-7 ' V- v- -s, :Agni E-.-'-'-- - we r..m--r... 1 All the naw.: that is fit to print. The first six column Forge. Above: Dorothy Ulrich, editorg and VVilliam Ashworth. business manager. Below: George Nitholas. columnist: Dave Eberts, sports editorg Glenn VVallace. adviser. Culver Military Academy, who teaches English g and Mr. Melvin Wells, formerly in command of the Naval Communications Reserve in Santa Barbara, who teaches electricity, radio, and stagecraft. Also, Miss Helen Thomson, local history teacher, has returned to us after a year in Norwalk, Connecticut, teaching in the high school there in exchange with Miss Marjorie Child, who taught here last year. An interesting discovery among -changes that have taken place, is that of our newly tinted halls and rooms. Five of the rooms in the north hall have been tinted in pastels and the library and girls' gym offices have been tinted a cream color. These tinted rooms are an experiment on the students to find what their reactions to them are. The theory is that they should stimulate the emotions and produce an urge to work with greater efficiency-we hope. Before very long, home room representa- tives are elected and the first legislature meet- ing called. At a typical meeting of the legisla- ture in the cafeteria, first the roll is called, the missing heads counted, and the minutes read, after which President Wayne MacRostie deals with the old business, Everyone starts to write busily, but after a minute, a few begin to sit back and let their minds drift out of the window or someplace into space. Some just look bored, some try to do a little visiting and a few really try at least to appear intelligent. Mr. Bowman, sitting in back, doesn't look as though he were present in mind but part of the time. President Wayne talks on with little opposition. Some appropriations are proposed--everyone wakes up and starts writing furiously. Presently, there is a call for discussion. Mr. Bowman's name is mentioned-he wakes up from some day dream with What,s that, Wayne? After that he takes more notice of what's going on. Strangely enough, the 10B group seems to be the most attentive. Eventually, Questions from the floor are asked-some quite intelligent. As the time draws to a close, it is surprising to notice how few watch the clock. They are quite well-trained-the bell rings and there is no excitement at all-they just wait more or less STUDENT BODY OFFICERS Bottom row: Viola Hill. Girls' Athletic managerg Ray Kent. Boys' Athletic managerg Margie Eastman, song leaflerg Dick O'Brien, yell leaclerg Ellen Deverman, pianist. Second row: VVayne Nlacllostie, president: Hazel Brewster. vice-president: Frances Romer, secretary: Iohn Falxa, treasurer: Bill Elliott, chairman of the Welfare Council. .MK Caiim- fm Dv ilu -Q., ar' -an 3 QS. Q Abotvz .-l Fl'1IlIl0P'F fIasI1 thai fisslvd, Brlowz 'tfugyrrua.11t foe flffcrlo abazzt to fling our in the Compton grams. calmly till the president says, 'Meetings ad- journedf' On Friday of the second week of school, whoops of joy are heard as the first Forge of the year makes its appearance. And not only were the whoops for the fact that the paper is out, but lo and behold, a six column Forge at last! An enlarged publication has long been needed, what with the steady and rapid increase in the size of the student body and the conse- quent need of more room to tell of the increas- ing student activities. And at last we have it. The football season is off to a good start Friday, September 17, with the 19-2 victory over Fillmore. This also is our Hrst night game with the new flood lights installed by the State College. The college is letting us use them for a certain number of games in return for the use of the field for their games. The victory over Fillmore was duplicated a week later over Compton in a 26-6 victory. For the girls, because of the popularity of tennis, four new courts are to be built on the old R.O.T.C. grounds. Along with their return to school, the girls have brought the usual supply of new fads, particularly beanies. But, woe to the hearts om manv, thev are doomed to a short life as articles for school use--but see them blossom out at the football games! Other attractions are page-bov bobs, Mexican sandals, short skirts, and loud shirts-and howl And so ends Reel I, leaving everyone busily engaged in new work and in numerous plans for the coming month. l THANK you: The Olive and Gold staff wishes to X thank the following people for their con- f tributions to the success of this hook: The Santa Barbara Associates for the scenic photographs used in the open- ing section. Mr. J. M. McAllister of the Santa Barbara News-Press for action photo- Mr. Bob Wormser for his assistance graphs of football games. in covering the tennis activities. Dave Eberts, Forge sports editor, for his reviews of football, basketball, track., and baseball. fe I gi sa? gag? Wllltmxui Q Cc 3 s 7 :J as -41 S E ztf-L 4? rim if U5 ' 'ff' .- 3 R LII T,-sg : I 'ff 'f E'-' 5-Ql'L - - jfg al?-:le.li! snsu:esngf-X 'c 2 gg f ge., '-- -1, T Q j xx ff ' - c S A . e. ' 1 fe- 5-5452 , hi-, -.. ' f X of ---' resid 552' ' gig ,gg ,Fai-if 1 ' : 4-J' T ix- gl f i - -- .. E E a . 5 E ' 5 -5 5: : 7 F - gl H - - 'J ' ' L f E1 E gl 9 1 2 E E The opening of Reel II discloses plans for a much-needed enlargement to the school. A 5lS250,000 pay-as-you-go project has been plan- ned by the Board of Education to provide relief to the poor people who have to 'lsqueeze through not only halls, but classrooms, the offices, the library, laboratories, dressing rooms, and showers. On Thursday the fourteenth, we find most students very happy at having an unexpected holiday in honor of the meeting of the Progres- sive Education Association, which is meeting at the State College. Fifty-some students play human guinea pigs, victims of the conference. In the morning they hold a public conversation, and in the afternoon discuss a movie on human relations. A week later Ends the Cali- fornia Scholarship Federation advisors holding their seventeenth annual convention at El En- canto Hotel. In Mr. Bowman's inner office, YN'elfare Chairman Bill Elliott presides with authority over his council of seven. Jack Wuest is asked to call from the miscellaneous group in the outer office either the monitor who issued the welfare slip, or his victim, if the monitor is not there. It seems that both are expected to be present, but that both seldom are, and often neither one answers when called for. The case is then presented and questions asked by mem- bers of the Council to collect all evidence. The victim is sent out while his case is tried and he is given demerits-not too many, usually. The culprit is called back in, and informed of his knowledge of the law and deliberate diso- bedience. One person was appreciative enough of the Councills efforts toward law and order to say uthank you when told of her demerits. The condemned walks out, and the council gets involved in a heated discussion which has to be broken up periodically by the able man- agement of Mr. Elliott. Marian Moser, secre- tary, sometimes has a rather diflicult time trying to keep records of the cases above the din. WELFARE COUNCIL Bottom row: Caldwell, Pierce. Saunders. Moser. Top row: Elliott, Motto, Tower, XVuest. Eckles. Iune Class Officers: Richards, Tapie, Miratti. Bass. Ianuary Class Officers: Waugh. Peacock, Cobb, Ludlow. When the bell rings, the list of offences is still so long that it is necessary to plan a special meeting. In the work of the classes themselves, many significant changes are taking place. Mr. Peter Reidel's Landscape Architecture class has been given the care of the fifteen-acre Fran- chesi Park by the Park Board, which could not afford its upkeep. Classes are held in the old Fenzi home. In caring for the grounds, the students learn seeding, planting, budding, and pest control, the common and scientific names of plants, and the care of all garden tools. The purpose of the class is to train students by prac- tical experience to become efficient gardening foremen for job gardening and all other types of work in this field. This course is offered in no other high school in the United States. Mr. Earl Murray is experimenting with his period II trig class, using field trips instead of books, and giving gradeless examinations. Candid-man' Harry Stock. Mr. Roscoe Lyans has a special period photography class, the purpose of which is to teach some of the more technical angles of photography. It is one of the most popular special period groups. Several new joint courses are being offered this year. Miss Jeanette Ellison is teaching a two period class combining tenth grade history and tenth grade English. Mrs. Ethel Myers and Mrs. Mildred Weissend are teaching eleventh grade history, llB English, and American literature. Each teachs the same group of stu- dents one period, keeping the subject matter articulated. Mr. Howard Walters is teaching a two-period class combining eleventh grade history, 11B English, and civics. Miss Ethel Moss is teaching a single period class in Ameri- can Citizenship. Mr. Earl Murray, curriculum director for the school, is teaching a non-math major geometry class, in which he is attempt- ing to show how the principles of geometry may be applied to life situations. Mr. Charles Rhoades is teaching a two-hour course in out- door projects which includes gardening and general shop work. Friday the eighth we find we have as guests on the R.O.T.C. field, the General Mo- tors Parade of Progress caravan, consisting of twenty-four trucks, nineteen passenger cars, and sixty-two men-plus families. All students are dismissed fourth period to go down and see eggs fried on a cold stove and other wonders in the Circus of Science, and inspect the side- shows. Most notable among October assemblies is the Scholarship Society's television assembly on the eighth, presenting Mr. Hoskins and his equipment. We find most of the clubs getting under way this month. Quill and Scroll announces tryouts for membership, offered for the first time. The Press Club has election of ofiicers with Marna Warren as the new president, and initiates its new members. The French Club -13- has its initiation social. A new girls, horseback riding club, the 'iEquestriennes.,' has been or- ganized under the sponsorship of Miss Mildred Gerer. The Alpha Club meets to elect ten new 10B members. John Joe Ricards is elected president of the 12B class. with Jean Tapie as vice-presi- dent, Patsy Bass, secretary, and Edward Mirat- ti, treasurer. A short time later. the 12A class elects Wlalter Waugh president, Dorothy Pea- cock, vice-president, Lois Cobb, secretaryg and Harry Ludlow, treasurer. The successful start made by our football team is carried on in the lO-O victory over Ventura. The next Saturday brings a O-O tie with Pasadena, followed by a 28-7 victory over Inglewood. Next on the list we find the Santa Maria game, preceded by Olive and Gold Day, Oc- tober 23. Today. a large percentage of the student body is decked out in school colors in every imaginable combination. A number of gadgets are sold by the G.A.A., notably felt and satin beanies. large and small pompoms, corsages. large and small penants, and S.B.H.S. felt letters. The events of the day start in the stadium with a rally and miniature parade sponsored by all the roll-calls and organizations. The big afternoon parade of floats and cars seems un- usually large as it goes down State Street and back up again. Following this parade is another rally in the auditorium where the prizes are awarded for the best floats and costumes. And the day winds up with a dance in the gym, at which time the i'Big Apple is introduced. To justify all the work and enthusiasm of Olive and Gold Day, the Golden Tornado brings a 28-O victory home from Santa Maria. For the last game of the month, the Dons travel to Phoenix for one of the hardest games of the season. but come home with a victory of l3-0. which earns them the right to enter the C.I.F. play-offs. This is the tenth successive year the Olive and Gold of Santa Barbara will be represented in the colorful California Inter- scholastic Federation championships. In the meantime. the sophomore football team, coached by Skip Winans, seems to be having its downs', as well as its upS.', In its first game of the season, Carpinteria proves considerably too strong, defeating the Donlets Taj? left: fohmzif' Costas if to a 707l1f7 avomtd right end in the first Ventura game. Top right: I71t!'7fI'1'C71L't' fermiazg for Mm by Latina' Gullatte. Lower left: Santa Maria fech1z1'qnr--grab 'em by the pants. Lower right: Stage Craft ria.s.t's float in Olin' and Gold parade .., S f 2 Close up of Man MOIl11fUi1I,, Me1'lo in Ifzglrufond game. Valmzfiuo snags one in thc Whittirr gamr. 32-2, but they make good the next week by winning 7-0 over the Los Prietos C.C.C. team. Their luck continues October 15 and Ventura is defeated 6-0. But in meeting Carpinteria again they are defeated 19-6-but that shows improvement, at any rate. For the first time in the year-long history of fencing in S. B. High, fencers from the R.O.T.C. battalion are entering an out-of-town tournament. Ten boys in the fencing team go to the Prep Foil Bouts in Hollywood, October 15. Again, on the twenty-second, four cadets go to Hollywood to participate in the Prep Epee Bouts. Honorary First Lieutenant Jack Murphy is the only one to reach the semi-Hnals. Turning to tennis, the Santa Barbara High School Tennis Varsity, with a select group of six girls and six boys, defeats Taft Saturday, October 3-fifteen matches to none. The News-Press and City Recreation De- partment Hnish off the month with a bang, by putting on a major Halloween party in the stadium, Saturday night, October 30, keeping 3500 kids occupied, entertained, and out of the streets. Games and contests with prizes spon- sored by various clubs include pie-eating, cos- tume contests, pillow-fights, greased pole shin- nying, pushball, tug-of-war, apple-bobbing, and obstacle races. And Reel II closes on October as the crowd of weary youngsters gradually dwindles. VARSITY FENCING TEAM Bottom row: Captain Carpenter. Rhodes, Ashworth. Firestone, Fraser, Thornsberry. Second row: Harnett. Lockrum. VViley, VVa1ker, Tozier. Murphy. . i . t ., , ..,.av:f-Q.-fa -, r .51 f x of is he 3 .5 is Y ' 'G' 4 J S' H si 'F ... 1 , 123 s has-'i ' Ig. X . if - - 5 ji T l ii l ii lr ffl iv? Q A. 'I V , 'Y V S i I il A Q V I V I S A ee T, 1--f , . V 'N-J . ,,,, ,t , Hggc O , .,l,q I-lil llg ln -l. l !' -S 19 gig 2235 Z5 I r E I 5 Lf Reel III discloses the first plans for the 1938 Olive and Gold, with the appointment of Phyllis Hughes as editor and Norman Fire- stone as business manager. Within a week we find the staff completed with Kenneth Arnestad and Gerry. Hoyt as assistant editors, Alice Feathers as copy editorg Tada Sheridan as art director, and George Booth, photograph editor. Assistant business managers are Howard Eckles, Lawrence Cortez, Everett Tozier, and Maxine Clark. Soon after the completion of the staff, the photographic contract is granted to the Ward Wicart Studio. The eighteenth of the month, Miss E. Louise Noyes, head of our English department, prepares to shuffle off to Buffalo' to the annual convention of the National Council of Teachers of English to be held during the Thanksgiving holidays. She will present a paper on Builders Together,', an English project she is conducting here. Among our interesting classes we may take notice of lVIr. Melvin Wells' classes in electricity and radio. In his electricity class, the common laws of electricity are studied in order to learn the principles of electrical safety. The radio Miss Noyrs .vfrakx ai national L'0JII'l'IIfI0!!. 590 2 O 1 ,fl -t 4, HM E. vw' ir Q l 5 Bly' Ll LII X I' I.. N . Ill! L Ax 11 ll W la 2 fl 1 IW 'ri t:.r't:i..ri, lm Mix ill. t, ' ill ' , x li' , lu! 70 nu 'll In nu .11 i, ffl A N L E l . 1 , I . ,Q t lil. , l yin' ,gi , It liyfff it if , 1 lm 1 'gates ll is 3 X I W EGU int YQ' llllhl 'Rim ,Q class studies the principle of the photo-electric cell, public address systems, and the theory of television, The boys build crystal sets, learn the uses of all parts, and also how to build their own testing equipment. These courses are good preparation for boys planning to enter trade school to specialize in any branch of these two fields. Monday the twenty-ninth, voluntary tuber- culin tests for juniors are begun by Dr. Helen Hart, school physician. The test is positive if there is redness or swelling, in which case an X-ray of the chest will be taken and the disease traced. Hazel Brewster, 12B girl and vice-presi- dent of the Student Body, has been elected as the candidate of the Santa Barbara chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution for the annual citizenship pilgrimage to Wash- ington, D. C. For the most outstanding assembly of the month, we are honored to have on our stage November 22, Bohumir Kryl, famed cornetist and conductor who presents his symphonv or- chestra. VVith him, as soloist, is Miss Mary McCormic, famous soprano of opera, concert stage, and radio. Dr. Hrlwz Hart giving a f!1bE'1'EIl1i71 fest. V Oo do 21-- OLIVE AND GOLD STAFF Bottom row: Howard Eckles. assistant business manager: Everett Tozier. assistant business manager: Maxine Clark. assistant business manager: Glenn VVallace, advisor. Second row: George Booth, photography: Gerry Hoyt. assistant copy editor: Norman Finstone. busi- ness manager: Lawrence Cortez, assisant business manager. Third row: Phyllis Hughes, editor-in-chief: Kenneth Arnestad, assistant editor: Alice Feathers copy editor: Tada Sheridan, art. The first Friday of the month we find the Scholarship Society headed southward on its annual pilgrimage. The gang meets at the Theme Hosiery mills at 9:50 for their first ex- pedition. The afternoon tour is at the Hunting- ton Library and Art Gallery. The outstanding exhibit there is one commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Constitution of the United States, where many original drafts, notes, and manuscripts are on display. Another new club, the Phine Photo Phin- ishers, has been organized by Mr. Roscoe Lyans for boys interested in photography. It plans to be very active in taking excursions, going on Held trips, having speakers and demonstrations, and taking pictures and snapshots for the Olive and Gold. The Hi-Y has a joint meeting and pot-luck supper at the Trinity Church, Monday, the eighth, at which time twenty-three candidates are inducted with an impressive ceremony. The R.O.T.C. battalion is inspected Mon- day the fifteenth by Colonel Ralph Talbot, Jr., Field Artillery, during a parade held on the R.O.T.C. parade ground. The Girls Athletic Association holds a Carnival Dance in the gym the night of Friday Sialbearers: Simmons, VVilbur. Emmens, Bedford, Ericson, Roll- ings. Thompson. F22- M iw 2 QT! ZW, X . v fr A Hg up 1? i fri Ag, odmau. 410 Huwmzm. Benton, T. Sudbury . Meloling. Mille ns, Duff, Ashworth. Jacobs, Kruger. Emma' e. E. urlbut. Mac Rosti H row: Curtiss Bottom 5 Q. P '5 w :H E 3. an 'A ni 5 -J f 11 .2 .-1 :c ua fl- 'C 'F5 Q 3 Lt J L 11 5 if -f A fl' sv 5 N an c In E :: -. 'H E' c G 3- na I! Q f-4 6 xi :J 4.1 A ra L4 ff? 1 o ro 5 5. o Ln ,S .J 5 9 'U 5 U ,IU all ce, Tapie, R, Feathers, Fukuzasva, Endo. Acqwstapa :5 N sv : KX E-1 Q E SE E I : O -.. nd Z E YD .-D' C5 U -I U.. 551- Eu an L5 fu.-D 53 67.5 9.2 'Lu 5.7 '59 :E M2 -La .M 3. E5 U2 .G EE CUC ii' 09+ 9 . UE BE C gli .-.G yu A,-F ,GJ IDS 255' .. f-n? Er '75 A 'nm 'O 'UH .EQ U E3 MG ,vi fn Ev: .Ev ::' rg 5, ..E ai C! hc: :P 'Er .. Th I' 5fJC'IIiTY SCHOLARSHI 5 5 a M sf :c fx v-4 Z, Aa v-. .5 - 11. P sz Ill In L. rd f-4 4 J 's s , s LII v LJ E FD 5 H 4 5 E u m 0 O Q m -1 4 3 cvs -'J LII Q C-4 55 5 2 : .1 rf P4 5 E E .A Pagels. Suzuki. VVuust, E rl rn r-4 5. 11 5 -L' Q Q 5 , CC ': .J 5 m za u 3 W P, 3 O H 4 5 I E m 2 ce 2 2.1 Q 0 w FJ 5 :S an cv v 2 5 : Ol U -4 A T, m rc H- - E IL 5 9 'C I 3 Q Q I Kinscll, Hart. File, Ke-clcy. Rossihurtulli, Y. Tzxkusagawa, Scott. Yount. Becker. Verrill, H annell, Hughes. l'CSfOllC. 5 1 LE .Q E Q 5 :o 5 .Q U .cz .2 L14 u -. 6 3 2 fn o K-4 A I 1 .I 4 'f o E 5 -14 O. E E -G z E.. ac E E Q is .I 2 a : - If E C: 5 .5 .-1 5 :rf 7 E .3 Z :J 3 1 'E -. i E 0 -4 5 as -1 U .2 'C A. .if 2 .Z 4 :J 'E is 5 5 Q in .4 o E E ce 9. 2 Q YD 11 E 1. 1. .E 'TJ JI 1: E -M Q ,s ES in .-1 5 1 P 2 'D : 2 U w .. 1 E 3 .5 .2 o In E E E-4 E5 :e 'P :5 5 F0 u 2 5 3 .: JJ 2 A-I i 5 fbrw Aiwa.. ASSOCIATION GI RLS' ATH LICTIC E T3 M it 0 O O cd u it 3 f- sf. 'E 3 4 bl S 5' U III 5 :JJ vu -31 H. i. GJ -C1 5 'Ju : o lie 3 ? E cn Z o PQ H551 B W'a ren, Newsome, Minnear, Muses, Pierce, Devermau, Eastman, Romer, fy , Rutte, R. Ulrich, Hend De l'0WZ Second eagney, Marquez, Stine, VVaguer. H J eagney, M. AH Acquistapace, B. l. Lunrlah Buuozzula, Jennings. Byars, Russell. Cornwall, rich, Rheiulander, M nikin. L, Sm th. ronata, D. Ul d row: Fc hir T :imp- Boc to. C er, lllancli Del Alva. atchpole, Pc ch, if an, Jacobs, riCl She Coulter, Kircher, Ford. Tinsman, Merrill. kerson, Dic 'arIsu11, a,l VVycsak Ullilll, lf Morrison, 3 llrcwstei Forward Ianslield, IX lings, oods, El VV 11, Hampto az .D I. S EV 5-4 17 U T fe I or vi E :Q 1, 5 Cl U 5-4 4 if : ZZ 9 I :7 'Ea -: '5 In 5: E 'i o .. -G' :o 5 rf o .. 'li : .Sl o P1 IH 3 me .c ill 5 P 2 P Q U ?' 4 3 'E Vo L. USH E R ETTES CLUB Bottom row: Tinsman, Hoyt, Ulrich, Ladd. Becker, Del Alva, Malis, Shaw. Second row: D, Miller, Bass, Cornwall. Smedley. VVuest, Romer, E. Calef. Third row: Nettles. Verrill, White, Johnson. Williams, Sheridan, Moser, Goodier. Rich. Fourth row: Coulter, P. Calef. Chapin. Miss Franklin. Caldwell, Lundahl. Moss. Merrill, Bartlett, the fifth, with a live act floor show, penny concessions, and dance prizes. Tada Sheridan, Girls' League President, and Dorothy Peacock are delegates to the an- nual autumn convention of the Federation of Girls, Leagues at Glendale, on Saturday the sixth, accompanied by Miss Patsy Bynum. A number of new ideas are gleaned. Wednesday the tenth, the Girls, League presents a Htelevisionn amateur hour entitled The Follies of l937. Clinton Loustalot is director of the orchestra and master of cere- monies, while Bill Hurst is the announcer. A well-deserved l3-0 victory over the Whittier High Cardinals is won by the Dons with two touchdowns scored in the second half, Armistice Day in the Peabody Stadium. The following week, Friday the nineteenth, the first game of the C.I.F. play-offs is won 9-0 over the Ventura Pirates. 'Cowboys fall before Dons, GIRLS LEAGUE VVELFARE AND EXECUTIVE BOARD Bottom row: Ladd, Sheridan, Jacobs. Smedley. Second row: Cornwall, Deverman, Meloling, Livingston, Del Alva, Slocum, VVuest. McCarthy, Chapin. Third row: Miss Gower, Merritt, Nelson, Williams, Hoelscher, Felger, Catchpole. aerial attack-Golden Tornado rolls up 27-0 victory. Thus read the headlines of the Forge following the Chino game, played on home ground, Thanksgiving day. The sophomores play but one game this month, and in it defeat the Oxnard B team 24-6. In fencing we find our R.O.T.C. squad challenged by the Los Angeles Junior College to a team bout fencing tournament Saturday the thirteenth at the Veteran,s Memorial Hall. This is the first time in the history of the high school that we have been challenged to a fenc- ing tournament by an out-of-town school. But the octet of C. fcncers proved too much for our team. defeating them thirteen bouts to five. J , Several C. men have won recognition in coast ' A.. fencing competition, but the visiting coach admitted that the competition was tough. In the Novice Epee Tournament held at the Los Angeles Athletic Club, Cadet First T11.m1sbm'x !ilf1ffinig2tPf1fifif CM-vf ff 1Cl'19 Lieutenant Sherman Thornsberry battles his way to third place, winning the right to enter the Pacihc Coast Novice Epee Championship Tournament, to be held this fencing season. The tournament is won by Hal Bauer, L.A.J.C. fencing team captain. The varsity tennis team under Coaches Stewart Paulin and Robert Wormser travels to Montebello Saturday the twentieth to defeat them six matches to four. This proves the Don netters to be worthy contenders for C.I.F. honors next spring, because Montebello won the championship last year and is recognized as one of the strongest teams in the southland. And another month finds its finish as high school students return to work refreshed and thankful for the Thanksgiving holidays. Upprr Irftz A split second in Ihr Fillmore game. Lower lrft: A llfliitrirv man got: stubborn. Lower right: Tho sort of Hay ' the Glendale game was full of. 1271 f Blu! ldilllglilggr.-i-gxx .K lil , K Q .Q QS! lla Me-5 1 Av' 1 i QC., ,. Q xx .-- tl ig 5' rsflilf ig- . , E 2 f L ff 55'- ' -f Tl -2 E ' ' . 'fe 4 i . A . . 'f 5 - s 7 G -in Q-' Y X K 4 g,' fi - A 4: sc 7 Q' If . - ' 5 ' f ' 5 '1 kia ff 1 fi ?:' ' R- , .5 ' i 'E '- ' .-1' 25557 lgliifg , ,I 4 ii? : . E gl -' . 4 1 N , :'5 ' Z L.: F E 7 P -. gl: ' a ' - 1: 5 5 g - . X , R E E I. I v , li I ' - - I-5: The last reel of 1937, shows in the fore- ground Mr. Leonard L. Bowman, vice-principal of our fair school, unanimously elected presi- dent of the Southern Section of the California Teachers Association. He will head the nine southern counties, which represent one half the state, and of which over 17,000 teachers are members. The main purpose of this organiza- tion is to try to serve the teachers in all ways, work for better working conditions, time, and salaries for them, and maintain a teachers, home. Ten boys and fifty-four girls have enrolled in the special course for Christmas employment offered for three special sessions by the Em- ployment Committee and given by Miss Tulita De la Cuesta, Mr. Wiley B. Tonnar, and Mr. James A. Woods. Good appearance and man- ners are emphasized. Plans for practical applications of the training received at the Garden Street cottage by girls of the second year Home Arts course, are discussed at a meeting of the Home Arts Advisory Committee, December 6. The plan suggests placing girls in ten households, all as different as possible, and rotating them, so that all will receive wider experience in household training. The two main objectives of the Com- mittee are to give better preliminary vocational training in school, with more opportunity for placement and to better the working conditions, and raise the wage standard. Mr. Earl Murray's progressive education experiment on his trig class continues to be in- teresting. While one row is in the Held doing a practical problem, the rest of the class is solv- ing original problems, reading math books to report on, or working on projects, particularly sundials. Notable among the month's outside speakers, we have Captain Tailleur, elderly sea captain of sailing vessels, who relates some of his adventures, and best of all, presents the school with an interesting and intricate model of one of his ships. After being displayed in the showcase. it Finds its permanent resting place in the library. The Santa Barbara High School band gives its fall concert Friday, December 3 at 8 :30 in the auditorium for the purpose of raising funds for the new uniforms they are so badly View-princifval Borvmazz eluted head of Cal- . :forma Tvacllvm AJ'Sl7L'1Ufl0iI, southern scclzuzl. in need of. An interestingly varied program contains several outstanding solos. As the last thing before the Christmas holidays, and as the most outstanding produc- tion of the semester, we have 'iBethlehem Road by Mary Ann Hubbard, a three act Christmas play given free to students and townspeople the nights of December 16 and 17, and involving the services of nine different divisions of the school. The music department under Miss Ardis Carter, which includes the A Cappella, Girls' and Boys' Glee Clubs, and the Girls' Double Trio, the cast, trained by Miss .lean Applegate, make-up in charge of Miss Catherine Poyntzg scenery by the stage crew and landscape gardening class under Mr. Melvin Wells and Mr. Peter Reidel, respec- tivelyg costuming, Miss Elsie Hastings and Miss Jean Marvin, music for one of the dances, composed by Mrs. Frances Kellg training the dancers, Miss Dorothy Cottong and the serv- ices of the Usherettes Club. Tuesday, December 7 at seven olclock, the A Cappella Chorus sings over KTMS for the first time, presenting a Hfteen minute program. SPANISH CLUB Bottom row: jenkins. Sheridan, Miss Bramlage, 1IilIer. Fowl.r, Second row: Cortez. Clark. Smedley. Bass, Del Alva. Fogata. limvman. 'l hird row: lhshrgns, Exner, Byars. Mapa. T1-iudle. Fourth row: Carlson. Wvilson. Moser. Longmire. Eichelberger. Cllauvel. Gage. Friday the fourth, the Usherettes have a Barn Dance in the Farm Bureau Barn in Goleta, inviting the 12A Hi-Y. Friday, December l0, the Spanish Club gives its annual Mistletoe Ball at 8:30 in the school gym, a sport dance with Clinton Lousta- lot's orchestra and Edward jenkins in charge. The Beats. Club holds it s a n n u al Christmas formal Saturday the eleventh at the home of Meta Ladd. An exhibition of the Balboa Hop is given by Mellis W'ylie and Andy Anderson by uaanimous request. The R.O.T.C. holds its annual Military Ball at Rockwood, Vtlednesday the twenty- second. In the spirit of Christmas friendliness, many of the school organizations do their part by donating food, clothing, money, and toys. The Scholarship Society is as usual helping a needy family directly by providing food, cloth- ing, and blankets. The Alpha Club is Hlling a basket with food for a family and the Usherettes otae to be turrezl over to the Neighborhood House., The Girls' League, the Beata Club, and the Alpha Club are working together making 200 stockings to be filled with toys, 100 HIQATA CLUB liuttmn row: Newsome, Rich. Lundahl. VVyllie. Seroml row: R. Ulrich, lfastinan, Moss. Tinsinan. Martin, Moses, Del Alva. Bass. A Third row: Deverman. D, lflrich. Cornwall. Cobb. Minxiear, Pierce. McC'artl1y, Romer. Doolittle, Smedlev. livurth row: Hoelscheir, Caldwell. Merrill. I'Ienclry, Peacock. Hunt. XYarren, Coulter. Sheridan, Miss Gower. Devaney. Settles. Ladd, Jacobs. Protant. 7297 , E . . i ff ai!! Lcft: Casfas about to Iatcral tall to Marlo zn Whittirr game. Right: A dog pile in the Glendale game. marble bags and 100 jack bags to be Hlled, and thirty dolls collected and dressed. These are all to be turned over to the Neighborhood House. The French Club holds a party where everyone brings a toy, all to be given to the Neighborhood House. The Hi-Y's merge in giving a party at which admission is charged. The proceeds are turned over to a local church. The Big S also makes stockings for the Neighborhood House. December sees the last of football for this year. The next to the last game is played in the Santa Ana bowl, where the Dons overcome the local team 21-18. At last the day of the championship game with Glendale arrives, and the stadium is packed. At the kick-off and various other times during the games, spectators are doused in showers of confetti and torn-up papers. Between halves, the bands of both schools put on a magnificient show. But, for the Hrst time this season, the Dons are doomed to defeat, losing to Glendale 15-14-. Itls hard to take defeat after such a victorious season, but the Dons played a good game and meet their setback bravely. Starting the pigskin season off with a bang, Latinee Gullatte, copper-skinned speedster, sprang into the limelight by scoring two touch- downs. He broke away for a romp of 70 yards for one score, the other being made from the six-yard line. The Compton game uncovered a new passing combination, Batzianis to Costas, which clicked for two touchdowns. Sylvester, southpaw passer, came to the front in the Hrst Ventura game. On his first play of the game, he rifled a touchdown pass to Gullatte. He made a habit of this through- out the season. It was in the Pasadena game that Tonv Spence, sub back, first got a chance to show his tricky change of pace and blazing break-away speed. Grabbing a blocked kick and racing 54 yards to a touchdown in the Inglewood game, Chuck Begg, husky Don guard, realized every linesman's dream. George Batzianis, ace sopho- more passer, had a field day against Santa Maria, He scored two touchdowns on line plays and passed the Santa Maria secondary defense dizzy. Gullatte broke away for a 54 yard romp against Phoenix. A pass from Sylvester to Val- entino clicked for a touchdown in this game. Peter Gutierrez replaced Cliff Wrightson in the Phoenix game, due to Wrightsonls injury. Gu- tierrez performed remarkably well. Don Tapie, six foot two inch tackle, who was injured early in the season, hit his stride in this game. The seven charges of dynamite-Valentino, Melchiori, Castagnola, Wrightson, Begg, Tapie, Keiper-which is the entire Don forward wall, earned their title for their slashing, bone-crush- ing type of ball playing. Ed Keiper, Don wing man, covered himself with glory in the Chino Fullback Joe Irlerlo-one of tht' but in Southern California, say Jndgvs. FOOTBALL TEAM Schoenberger, Ames, Gutierrez, Rodarte, Rameriz, Glahn, Spence, Romero, O. Robinson. G- Begg, Bottom row: rightson, Merlo, Charles Begg, Tapie, Keiper, Costas, Gullatte. W Castagnola Sylvester, Smith, Valentino, Melchori, cond row: Se I, Cullum, Spence. Westfal Zill- Hflm H I CYYCZ egg, Gu den, B azard, Car I. Robinson, H S'mith, Batzianis, C. Marostica, Olsen, WZ T0 hird T David, Coach Schutte. S011 VVilkerson', Arthur, Hartfeld, Donald Tower, Common, Schmitter, Duren, Kinsell, Swain, YOWZ Fourth Dario Caxtagnola, all Southern California tackle. game when hc made some circus catches which ended in scores. Jack Y'Vestfall, powerhouse tackle, broke into the line-up as one of the seven charges of dynamite and played that same type of ball displayed by all Schutte- coached linesmen, namely, that hit 'em hard, hit 'em low style. Captain Joe Merlo exhibited throughout the season that ability that made him one of Southern California,s finest Held generals. In the Santa Ana game he engineered his team to a 21 to 28 victory. It was the educated toe of Merlo and the piston-like legs of Gullatte which were mainly responsible for this sparkling victory. Johnny Costas, triple threat halfback, laboring under the handicap of an injured shoulder, performed brilliantly in this game. The Glendale game ended the season, after the Dons had reached the C.I.F, finals. All of the boys played excellent ball, but it just wasn't in the cards for them to win. Dario Castagnola, stellar Don guard, was named on the All-Southern California first team, while Captain Joe Merlo cracked out a fullback berth on the second team. The 1937 gridiron machine compared favorably with the Golden Tornado of 1927- the greatest team in the history of the school. In closing we say that these two teams will live forever in the hearts of Santa Barbara High School football followers. FOOTBALL Scoiuas Santa Barbara ........ 19 Fillmore ...., --------f 2 Santa Barbara ........ 26 Compton ...--- ---.-,--- 5 Santa Barbara ........ 10 Ventura ........ --------- 0 0 Santa Barbara .......... 0 Pasadena ....-- --------- Santa Barbara ........ 28 Inglewood ....------------ 7 Santa Barbara ........ 28 Santa Maria -..-----'----- 0 Santa Barbara ........ 13 Phoenix .....--. --------- 0 Santa Barbara ........ 13 Whittier ..... .-------- 0 Santa Barbara .......... 9 Ventura ..... --,------ 0 Santa Barbara ........ 27 Chino .........--- --------, 0 Santa Barbara ........ 21 Santa Ana ..-.-.-------- 18 Santa Barbara ........ 14 Glendale .............-..-- 15 Immediately, we turn to find the new season awaiting usfbasketball is under way. .Approximately 100 boys turn out for intra- mural basketball under the direction of Coach Skip VVinans. The league will be divided into two parts, one for those who are going out for varsity or lightweight basketball, and one for those who just want to enter the intramural league. Games are being played at the Com- munity Center gym. Among the teams, as far as names go, we find everything from vicious animals as Lions, Tigers, and Cougars on down to the less dangerous Rams, Buffaloes, and Gophers. Also, nuts, such as Buckeyes, and old toughies like Cornhuskers and Indians, and even Bluedevils. In fencing, we find our R.O.T.C. foil men accepting a challenge to an inter-school foil and epee tournament with U.C.L.A. to be held in Santa Barbara in the near future. Teams will be chosen from the varsity fencers who are doing best at that time. The fencing team defeats the Pasadena Junior College R.O.T.C. team Wednesday, De- cember 8, thirty-one bouts to fourteen in a forty-five bout challenge foil and epee team tournament held in the ball room of the Santa Barbara Biltmore Hotel. Reaching the finals before being eliminated, Cadet First Lieutenant Sherman Thornsberry tops the performance list of a quartet of fencers who entered a junior Epee Tournament Friday night, December 10, at the Los Angeles Athletic Club. Other Santa Barbara men participating are Honorary Cadet First Lieutenant ,lack Mur- phy, who defeats Hal Baer, L. A. C. fencing team captain, Cadet Sergeant Bonar Lockrem, and Cadet Corporal William Hurst. Reel IV winds up with the arrival of Christmas vacation and the prospects of a week of shopping, package-wrapping, card-sending, tree-trimming, turkey-stuffing, stuffing turkey and package-opening on the eventful day, and last but not least, a week of recuperation. 132, IJIIII.-lilll l 5: a I E' 'Qu !:J.i Y 45 S xi g 3 !lll if gm? REEL V - H, 4 -Q g 5 - : - ETZ 57 1 -H '--E.- -ra r S :IXXX I 4' ff. -- 'T - - Qx Y S SSX ., .N fp , ,T . V -, - 5 5255? 1 -s 9 gil 0' ' 3 ' ,1 V 'g -' ,.: -.,. t-A.- W -Q s -f Q X E r 5 ' r ' ' . L .. L E ' - . f 5 ' : - E' - : , T - - , I - nf il J'-' As the last reel of Part I is flashed on the screen, plans are seen for the construction of additional class rooms, to start soon, probably at the close of the spring semester. An archi- tect, Mr. E. Keith Lockard, has been hired by the school board to develop a master plan. Although all plans are still tentative, it is be- lieved that an addition will be built on to the present science wing and an arcade built to connect with the girls' gym. Existing condi- tions have been severely critized by the grand jury and many other organizations. In a ques- S. S. CSkipj VVinans. tionnaire submitted to the faculty, the teachers also expressed their need of more and larger rooms and more and better equipment. The Board plans to spend 350,000 a year for im- provements for a period of three to six years, the money to be raised directly from taxes. Actual construction of the Olive and Gold has begun, with plans for a completely different organization. This is the Hrst time since 1932 that faculty pictures have been included. The closing of this semester sees o-.e of the school's best liked teachers, Mr. Sterling i'Skip,' Winans, promoted to the position of Recrea- tional Director in Santa Maria as well as ath- letic teacher in the Santa Maria Union High School and Santa Maria Junior College. Skip has taught here since he first came, seven and a half years ago, and because of his success with city and high school teams, he soon became popular. He has coached many leading basket- ball teams and his successes with the sophomore football teams have been of great help to Coach Schutte. Santa Maria ofhcials are to be congratulated on their excellent choice of Skip as their director-their gain is our loss. Students interested in learning the sheet- metal trades may now do so by serving as apprentices to local skilled craftsmen, according to an announcement made by Mr. Roy L. Soules, supervisor of Vocational Education for the city schools. This plan, resulting from a series of conferences, will be a follow-up to the present pre-employment and co-operative classes now being taught bv Mr. James A. Woods. The proposed course will give boys a chance to enter this field without additional training other than that received in the school. Mr. Peter Reidel, head of the landscape gardening class, announces that there is an opportunity for forty boys to sign up for his class next semester, as several are leaving at the end of the term. The boys have already earned S350 doing odd gardening jobs aside from regular jobs. Mr. Reidel savs the garden- ing class is not large enough to fill the demands for helpers. He claims that if the planting continues to go as fast as it is now being done, it will be but a few years before the hillside that now looks barren from the neighborhood will be covered with trees and shrubs of many countries and climates. Mrs. Gertrude Dickerson's Radio Voice class starts broadcasting several plays, Thurs- day, January 20, over the high school magnavox svstem for the benefit of the students. Members of the audition staffs of radio stations KDB and KTMS are invited. The program includes an original play for the Community Chest, written by Francella Ericson. ..33.. Friday, the last day of the semester, Miss Jean Applegate's Beginning Dramatics class gives a one act play, 6'Weanies on Wednesday for a large and appreciative audience in Room 210. The Santa Barbara High School Orchestra gives its semi-annual concert Friday the four- teenth in the auditorium. Featured on the pro- gram is a solo for two pianos by Ellen Deverman and Lois Cobb and a violin solo by Betty Ern- mens, concert-mistress. Remember Me? is the eternal question asked by the Typo Club's popular autograph books, put out for the benefit of the graduating seniors. In its thirty-eight pages are sections for class ofheers, faculty members, club mem- bers, R.O.T.C. members, athletes, and students in general. The annual Senior Tea, sponsored by the Girls' League, is given Saturday the fifteenth from 3 :OO to 5 :OO in honor of senior girls and their mothers in the Library Study Hall. Women of the faculty are also invited. During the afternoon, Miss Eleanor Mary Henry and Miss E. Louise Noyes, senior faculty advisors, and Miss Dorothy Peacock and Miss Patsy Bass, class officers, pour. The Commercial Club offers one of the most successful of all-school talent programs in school history in '4Varsity Show, a nickel pay assembly given Tuesday, January 18, to buy awards for outstanding commercial stu- dents. The Beata Club holds a '4Mother Goose initiation VX'ednesday the twenty-sixth, Charac- ters of Mother Goose Rhymes or comic strips are represented by the fourteen initiates such as the Farmer in the Dell, Jack and Jill, Mickey and Minnie Mouse. Pat Rich, the graduating president, is presented with a corsage. The G.A.A. holds its semi-annual banquet at El Cortijo, Thursday, the twenty-seventh from six to eight, inviting all girls. The 12A Hi-Y holds its last party of the semester January 15 at the 'iGashouse. The group has agreed to keep together after gradua- tion. Saying farewell to football for this season, the coaches and members of the Don and Gaucho football teams are invited by the Elks on January 6 to what the guests claimed was the best and most entertaining banquet ever put on in Santa Barbara to pay tribute to athletes. Interscholastie basketball gets into full swing as the Dons go to Ventura to defeat the Pirate team 34--17, Friday, January 7. The following Wednesday, however, the barnstorm- ing Bears from the University of California win a fast-moving game 39-35. The Bear coach states that the Dons are the best high school squad his team, which is as yet undefeated, has met on its tour. Friday, the fourteenth, another fight is lost to the U.C.L.A. freshmen 27-21 at the Pan-Pacific Auditorium in Los Angeles. The following Friday, though, the TYPO CLUB Bottom row: Mr. Ingraham, Santo, Smedley, Gordon, Rhoades. Top row: Clark, Steinhauer, Grande, Triggs, Erwin, Romero. in M34- COMMERCIAL CLUB Bottom row: Mr, Tonnar. McNeil. Gray. Becker. McSlcimming. Fraga. Jennings, XVhitforcl, Margaret Somerville. Mary Somerville, M. J. Heagney. Second row: Butler, Hove, Erro, Schmeisser, Ludlow. WVright, Tonietto, Street, Guild, Kumpel, Zocchi. Third row: McGregor, Smith, VVok1.1rka. Griffiths, Miss Franklin, Milne. Lee, Mclfnlee, VVandell, Farrell, Rennie, XVooclbnrn. varsity overpowers the Santa Paula Cardinals 40-36. But the luck didn't last, and Tuesday the twenty-fifth, Fillmore takes the game 43-34 on their home court. The Dons try to retaliate Friday the twenty-eighth, but in playing with- out the services of Johnny Costas and Art Keithley, two stellar forwards who are lost to the team through graduation, they again bow to the Fillmore Flashes. In the meantime, the Donlets have been busy with their own victories and losses. First, IZA HIN- Friday the seventh, they defeat Ventura Junior High 29-8. As a curtain raiser to the Santa Paula varsity game, they are downed by the Cardinal lightweights 18-15. The Hrst game with Fillmore is lost 32-27, but they take their revenge in the second game, winning 30-25. The R.O.T.C. holds a practice graduation parade Thursday, January 20, during a heavy wind storm which really tests the cadets, dis- cipline. Although the boys didn't seem to enjoy Bottom row: Santo, Elliott. Smedley. Ludlow. Nelson. MacRost1e Top row: Poole, XV. Allen, Lauritson, Hone, XVaugh. Voss, Stevenson, Ii. Allen, Suffolk it much, Captain Carpenter was highly pleased FALL Cadet Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Miratti, with the parade, and believes it to be one of the most valuable lessons the cadets have re- ceived in months, from a military standpoint. Establishing the precedent of being the first R.O.T.C. student to earn a cadet lieutenant colonelcy at the end of the fall semester, Cadet Major Edward Mirratti is promoted to the highest of R.O.T.C. cadet ranks at the semi- annual R.O.T.C. graduation parade held on the drill ground, Tuesday morning, January 25. Twenty-three other cadets are also promoted. The result of the fencirg match with State College, held at the Biltmore Hotel. ,lanuary 19, is a tie. The Cadets take the foil division, while the Staters win the epee competition. The final score of the tournament is 13M bouts to llh, in favor of the High School. Marlin Nel- son, former Santa Barbara High student R.O.- T.C. oflicer, is the State teamls captain and coach. Tommv Kruger, the pride of Santa Bar- bara's tennis circles, finishes at the top of the list of sixteen of the most outstanding junior tennis stars of southern California, winning Hfty-three games out of seventy-two. The tournament is held at the Huntington Hotel in Pasadena, and is round robin in type. The following week, Tommy receives a letter notify- ing him of his appointment in the Southern California Tunior Davis Cup Squad. The climax to the month of January and to the fall semester, is, of course, graduation-- and the farewell to a group of friends that we hate to lose, It is a class that may well be proud of itself with its unusually large number of honor students-nine sealbearers and twenty- five members in the Scholarship Society. A thrill of excitement runs through the audience of the graduates' relatives and best friends as the orchestra starts playing the impressive grad- uation Processional March and the graduates start their march down the center aisles to the platform. The girls are lovely in pastel taffeta -36 semi-formals in pink, green, blue, yellow, and lavender, with delicate white corsages of gar- denias and sweet peas, and the boys impressive in dark suits with white carnation boutonnieres. The invocation is by Father Augustine of the Old Mission and is followed with two numbers by the A Cappella Chorus. The address, Let's Take Inventory, is by Dr. Percy L. Davis, Superintendent of Santa Monica schools. Music by the orchestra precedes the recommendation of the Class by Principal Harvey Holt. presentation of the Class by Superintendent of City Schools, Curtis E. Warren, and the award- ing of diplomas by President of the Board of Education, Leland Crawford. The class stands to sing ':Santa Barbara, Hail l and receive the benediction of Father Augustine. Afterwards it breaks up with shouts and congratulations- perhaps the last class to graduate from Santa Barbara High in January. Climaxing the evening is the graduation dance at Rockwood from 9 :3O to 12 230, a non- program dance chaperoned by parents of class oflicers, members of the faculty, and those who have served on the Parent-Teachers Association Committee. Doug Hoag's orchestra furnishes the music. There are several games, such as ping pong and monopoly, for those who do not dance, punch for thirsty dancers, and gaily colored balloons and serpentine for the delight of all. By one o'clock, all are starting on their various ways, to be separated after three years of school unity and friendship, but to be linked forever in each other's memories as members of the ,lanuarv Class of Santa Barbara High School. 1938. The curtains slowly close on the first part 'of our year of school life. Tops in tennis: .... Bobby McCampbell, Tom Kruger. IONE MAE BLACK Marysvale, Utah Q Entered from Excelsior Union High School, 3. . Business College in Long Beach RACHEL VVINIFRED BOOTH Santa Barbara, California Commercial Club, 45 lhe Bethlehem Road. 45 Scholarship, 4. Work, then Santa Barbara State Col- lege MARTIN KEOUGH BROVVN Fillmore, California Band, 2, 35 Orchestra, 2, 35 A Cap- pella, 35 Glee Club, 45 Rose of the Danube, 35 Trial by Jury, 4. Santa Barbara State College. lVIARGARE'l' A. CHAMLIEY Eureka, California Commercial Club, 2, 3. Business College and work CHARLOTTE MAE ALLEN Bedford, Iowa Scholarship Society, 3, 45 Secretary of Democratic Living Class, 4. Santa Barbara State College. ADOLF ANTHONY ARELLANES Santa Barbara, California Varsity Football Manager, 35 Sopho- more Football Manager, 25 Intramural Basketball, 2, 3, 45 Intramural Baseball, Z, 35 Circulation Manager of Forge, 45 Spanish Club, 45 Booster, 2. Typographical Arts MARY ELIZABETH BAILEY Burnsville, North Carolina President of Home Room, 25 Student Legislature, 35 G.A.A., 2, 3, 45 Big .iso 3 4 C5116ge' FRANCES L. BEDFORD Santa Barbara, California Seal Bearer, 45 Scholarship Society, 2, ,3 45 French Club, 3, 45 Secretary, 4. Studio Executive Secretarial Course at VVoodbury College e e, T li uv 9 38 in luv' SANTINA F. BONAZZOLA Santa Barbara, California Scholarship Society, 35 Big , 45 G.A.A., 2, 3, 45 Commercial Club, 3, Sports, 2, 3, Santa. Barbara Business College HS-,Q 3 MARJORIE EULALA BROGAN Wilson, Oklahoma Entered from Nordhoff Hi h School, S Ojai, 35 Scholarship Society, 4. Vtlork, then Seaside Hospital of Nursing in Long Beach. Barry RUTH CALDWELL Tacoma, Washington School Student Body Welfare Council, 45 Chairman of Mornin Monitors 4' E , . Growing Painsf' 45 Opera Matinee, 25 Senior Sweater Committee, 45 Usher- ettes, 3, 45 Costume Manager of Senior Play, 45 Beata Club, 45 Scholarship Society, 35 Budget Committee, 45 Float Committee for Olive and Gold Day Parade, 4. Dramatics and costume design HELEN LOUISE CLARK S'anta Barbara, California A Cappella, 2, 35 Gloria, 2, 35 . Rose Maiden, 25 'Rose of the Danube, 37 Glee Club, Z. Woodbury College of Costume Design ED ALLEN Maxwell, Iowa 12A Class Social Chairman, 45 Social Chairman of 12A Hi-Y, 45 Hi-Y, 2, 3, 45 Bouncer of 12B Hi-Y, 4, Cal Poly KENNETH HOWELL ARNEsTAD Santa Barbara, California Assistant Editor of Olive and Gold, 45 Scholarship Society, 35 Student Legislature, 35 Spanish Club, 35 Rose Maiden, 25 Quill and Scroll, 4. College ROBERT BAKER Portland, Oregon Alaska WILLIAM F. BENEDICT Santa Barbara, California Aeronautical School ELIZABETH E. EMMENS Santa Barbara, California Scholarship Society. 3. 43 High School Trio, 3, 43 High School Quar- tettc, 3, 4, Concert Mistress of Orches- tra, 3, 45 Vice-President of Orchestra, 3, 4. Music Conservatory or Symphony Or- chestra DAVID WILEUR ESSINGTON Santa Barbara. California Chairman of Senior Sweater Commit- tee. 45 Sergeant-of-Arms of Hi-Y. 43 Student Legislature, 45 Secretary of Hi-Y, 4. VVork, then College JAMES FAI.E'l l'l Santa Barbara. California Squad Leader, 2, 3. 45 Vice-President of Landscape Architecture. 35 Intra- mural Sports, 2, 4: President of Young Gardeners Mutual, 4. VVork FLORENCE FONG Santa Barbara. California Squad Leader. 25 Sports. 3. 45 G.A.A., 3. 45 Big S , 45 Volley Ball Captain. 3, 4. College FRANCELLA MAURINE ERICSON Okmulgee, Oklahoma French Club, 2. 3. 4, President of French Club, 45 Scholarship, 2, 3, 43 Quill and Scroll, 3, 45 Secretary-Treas- urer of Quill and Scroll, 43 Orchestra, 2, 3. 45 Equestrienrie Club, 4. Santa Barbara State College EDGAR L. EsTERwoLo Santa Barbara. California R.O.T.C. Second Lieutenant. 45 Var- sity Fencing Squad. 4. RCA Radio Institute of America in New York STELLA NATALENE FERONATO Santa Barbara. California G.A.A,, Z5 Assembly. 3. Beauty College SECONDO FORNER Santa Barbara, California President of Landscape Architecture, 45 Sophomore Basketball, 25 Varsity Basketball, 3, 45 Intramural Sports, 2, 3, 4. Work an 41 - A tn 5 519 as 'uno' Lois LANEAU Cosa Miami, Arizona Song Leader, 3, 45 Assistant Song Leader, 45 Representative of Girls League, 4, 12A Class Secretary, 43 Booster, 25 Program and Rally Commit- tee, 3. 4. Santa Barbara State College and Pomona College Jonxxm COSTAS Santa Barbara. California Student Legislature, 2, Lightweight Basketball, Z5 Class B Track, 25 Varsi- ty Basketball, 3, 45 Varsity Track, 3, 45 Sophomore Football. 23 Varsity Foot- ball, 3, 4, Baseball, 4. College KATHLYN LAVINE DOMINQUES Santa Barbara, California Rose of the Danube, 3: Squad Leader. 23 Dance Recital, 4g Chairman of Sick Committee of Commercial Club, 3. Undecided GEORGE IDRAMIS New York, New York Entered from Dumont High Dumont, New Jersey, 4. Santa Barbara State College School, t JACK IRWIN CORNVVALI. Santa Barbara, California Yell Leader. 2g Assistant Yell Leader, 4, The Bethlehem Road, 45 Sopho- more Football, 25 President of Home Room. 2, 35 Hi-Y, Z, College RUTH DARROYV Santa Barbara. California Gloria.'l 3: Commercial Club, 3, 45 The Bethlehem Road, 4: Sports, 2. Business College BETTY JOYCE DooL1TTLE Pomona, California Entered from Pomona High School, 33 Beata Club, 45 Spanish Club, 3, 4: Assistant Advertising Manager of Forge, 4. Santa Barbara State College VINCENT DURBIANO Goleta. California Monitor, 2, 3, 45 Squad Leader, 4. Dairying QS. JAMES VIRGII. HONE Santa Ana, California Hi-Y, 3, 45 Squad Leader, 4. College VVILLI.-XM M. HURST Santa Barbara, California A Cappella, 2. 3, 45 Glce Club, 45 Student Legislature, Z5 Rose of the Danube, 35 Trial by Juryf' 45 'AGIOI-iaf' 2, 35 The Bethlehem Road, 45 Hi-Y, 45 Treasurer of Hi-Y, 45 Clio Club, 35 Class B Track, 2, 35 R.O.T.C. Rifle Team. 35 Program Committee, 45 Fencing Team, 4. L'.C.L.A, College of Commerceg Stan- ford, Business Administration FRANCIS WAYNE JOHNSON Fresno, California Trial by Jury, 45 'AGr0wing Pains, 4: The Bethlehem Road, 45 Program Committee, 45 A Cappella. 3, 45 Mana- ger of A Cappella, 3, 4. College NANCY KERN Santa Barbara, California French Club, 45 Fquestrienne Club, 45 Squad Leader, 25 Orchestra, 2, 35 Band, 2, 3, 4. Santa Barbara State College JOSEPH THOMAS FREITAS, JR. Santa Barbara, California - R.O.T.C., 2, 3, 4: Bimbo the Pi- rate, 35 The Bethlehem Road, 45 School Dance Band, 3, 4. Santa Barbara State College or W'oodbury,s Business College ROBERT RAY GRAHAM Santa Barbara, California Lightweight Basketball, 25 Sophomore Football, 25 Intramural Basketball, 35 Varsity Track, 35 Junior League Basketball, 4. California Nautical School or Uni- versity of California DORIS MAE HANSEN Santa Barbara, California Squad Leader, 25 Rose Maiden, 25 The Bethlehem Road, 45 Archery, 2. Woodbury College, XVVONNE PATRICIA HAZARD Santa Barbara, California G.A.A., 4. Woodbury College, dress designer 1 ,Am ,,.! no mm n 9 ea 38 ' PHYI.I.Is L. HOUGH1'ON Santa Barbara, California Big S , 45 G,A.A., 2, 3, 45 Booster 25 Sports, 2, 4. College ELIZABETH CHRISTINA JENSEN Fresno, California Entered from Fresno High School, 3 Scholarship, 35 Spanish Club, 3. College, dietitian HENRY OWEN JONES Santa Barbara, California Band, 25 R.O.T.C, Corporal, Z5 R.O DORIS V. FURMAN Santa Barbara, California f'Rose of the Danube, 35 HGlO1'l?1,,, 2. 35 Squad Leader, 25 Sports, 25 The Bethlehem Road, 4. Santa Barbara Business College VICTOR HAROLD GU'l'IERREZ Santa Barbara, California Booster, 2, 35 Amateur Program, 45 Intramural Basketball, 45 Intramural Baseball, 3. Business College or Santa Barbara State College MERLE BERNICE HARE Oakland, California Orchestra, 2, 3, 4. College at U. C., Berkeley GEORGE HEROLD Goleta, California Monitor, 35 Squad Leader, 4. Cattle raising 1 y T.C. Sergeant, 35 R.O.T.C. Lieutenant, 45 R.O.T.C. Captain, 4. Business RITA LOUISE KUMPEL Hartford, Connecticut Vice-President of Commercial Club 35 Social Chairman of Commercial Club 2: Scholarship Society, 35 Commercia Club, 2, 3, 4. Undecided -39- i H, N 5 f -et .te f is : . . I, -- IA. Il.: E , . ' a -N UNA JAYNE MINNEAR Avondale. Missouri Senior RiIIg Committee, 25 Social Committee. 45 t'Rose of the Danube, 35 Assistant Song Leader, 3, 45 Chair- man of Girls League WelfaI'e, 45 Bcata Club, 4: Big S , 3. 45 G,A.A., 2, 3, 45 Gloria, 3. Triple Trio, 35 Trial by Jury, 45 'tLarId of Hearts Desire, 4. Santa Barbara State College JHSSIE PAULINE MOORE Kingman, Arizona Entered from Kern County Union High School, 45 A Cappella, 45 Glee Club, 45 Commercial Club, 45 Land of Hearts Desire, 4. Santa Barbara State College or Bakersfield Junior College IRENE VIoI.A MORNINGSTAR Langdon, Iowa Squad Leader, 25 Commercial Club, 2, 3. 45 Secretary, 3, 45 Social Commit- tee of Commercial Club, 3, 4. XVork, then Beauty College VIRGINIA BARBARA Moss Santa Barbara, California Beata Club, 3, 45 Usherettes Club, 3, 45 Secretary-Treasurer of Usherettes Club, 35 President of Csherettes Club, 45 Frncli Club. 45 A Cappella. 3, 45 Rose of the Danube, 35 Girls Trio, 45 Scholarship, 4. Santa Barbara State College and U.C.L,A. l f' '19 Ikea . . Ci VVILLIAM P. MOl.LER Santa Barbara, California Scholarship Society, 3. 4. University of California SHIRLEY LORENA MooRE Santa Barbara. California President of Home Room, 25 Major- ette, 2, 3, 45 Scholarship Vaudeville, 25 Rose of the Danube, 35 Land of Hearts Desire. 35 Manager of Dance Recital, 35 A Cappella, 2, 3, 45 Gloria, 35 The Bethlehem Road, 45 Squad Leader, 35 Monitor. 2. Secretary VVARREN CHEDISTER MORSE Santa Barbara, California R.O.T.C. Rifle Team, 3, 45 R.O.T.C. Sergeant, 4. Accounting CLARINE XVVETTE MUETING Santa Barbara, California Beata Club, 45 French Club, 3. 45 Scholarship, 3, 45 Quill and Scroll, 45 Usherettes Club, 3, 45 The Bethlehem Road, 45 Forge Staff. 4. University of California at Berkeley . ,RA ,.,, .539 4 19 as O 1- 'nip J.-xIvIES LUIS LAURITSON, JR. San Luis Obispo, California R,O.T.C. Corporal, 25 R.O.T C. Ser- geant, 45 Fencing, 45 Hi-Y, 4. College TH ERESA LORD Santa Barbara, California Commercial Club. 35 Scholarship So- ciety, 2, 35 Dance Recital, 3. Undecided MARGARET AN N LUNDAHL Santa Barbara, California Beata Club, 3, 45 Secretary of Beata Club, 35 Usherettes Club, 3, 45 Secre- tary-Treasurer of Usherettes Club, .33 French Club, 45 G.A.A,, 2. 3, 45 Senior Archery Manager, 45 All Star Archery Team, 3, 45 Scholarship, 4. College MILDRED MAXINE MEISENBACII Sidney. Montana i Majorette, Z, 3, 49 FlOW8r- Lom- mittee, 35 Assistant News Editor of Forge, 45 'tRose Maiden, 25 Rose of the Danube, 35 Senior Announce- ment Committee, 45 Verse Choir, 4. Santa Barbara State College -40-.- idwi lVIIl.DRED JANE LIVERMORE Pomona, California Secretary of Commercial Club, 35 Social Chairman of Commercial Club, 45 Rose of Danube, 35 Secretary of Home Room, 25 Dance Recital, 3 Undecided HRXRRX' RUSSELL LUDLOVV Needles, California President of Hi-Y, 45 President of Hi-Y Council, 45 12A Class Treasurer, 45 R. O. T. C. First Lieutenant. 4, Finance Committee. 45 R.O.T.C. Rifle Team. 45 Outstanding Non-Commissioir ed Officer of R.O.T.C.. 4: YVinner of R. O. T. C. Non-Commissioned Oflicer Manual of Arms, 45 Treasurer of Hi-Y, 4: Sticker Committee, 45 Spanish Cllll-7, 3, 4. College VIRGINIA LYN ETTE MfXI.IS Santa Barbara. California Majorette, 35 Booster, 25 Senior An- nouncement Committee. 43 Csherettes Club, 3, 45 Dancing Recital, 45 Vice- President of Usherettes Club, 4, Santa Barbara State College and Columbia MARIIXN lVIERRII.L Minneapolis, Minnesota Beata Club, 3. 45 President of Usher- ettes Club, 35 Treasurer of lfsherettes Club, 45 G.,-LA., 2, 3. 45 A Cappella. 35 Press Club. 45 Student Legislature, 45 French Club, 45 Forge Staff, 45 Sports, 2, 3, 43 Glee Club. 25 Rose ot the Danube, 35 Loan Fund. 35 Quill and Scroll, 4. College , np... vu. ,cy-. ED. E. POLLEI' Santa Barbara, California Track, 35 Intramural Baseball, 3. VVork ORPHA JEAN PRIGGE Lewiston, Minnesota Santa Barbara State College MAE LUCILLE RECTOR Monterey, California Band, 3, 4. Business College RICHARD HENRY RENNIE Santa Barbara, California Aviation Club, 25 Auto Trade Train' ing, 3, 4. College ESTHER D. NAVARRO Santa Barbara, California Christmas Committee, 4. Social Work IQATHLEEN ISABELLE NEWVSOME Edmonton, Alberta. Canada Feature Editor of Forge, 45 Assistant Sports Editor of Forge, 35 Vice-Presi- dent of Beata Club, 45 Chairman of Girls League Program Committee, 45 Treasurer of Big S , 45 Girls League Fxecutive Board, 45 Girls League VVel- fare Committee, 2, 35 G,A.A.. 2, 3, 4. College VVANDA A. OGsToN Santa Barbara, California G.A.A., 4. Secretarial Work CLIFFORD JOSEPH PECK Santa Barbara. California Student Legislature, 2. Theater owner ,mi ,.,, f r 19 as ff- CIP ARTHUR G. PooI.E Phoenix, Arizona R.O.T.C. First Lieutenant, 45 R.O.- T.C. Second Lieutenant, 3, 4, R.O.T.C, Staff Sergeant in Color Guard, 35 R.O.- T.C, Corporal in Color Guard, 25 Hi-Y. 45 Forge Reporter, 45 Nominating Com- mittee, 45 Sweater Committee, 4. Business College or Santa Barbara State College ANoELo RABUFFI Santa Barbara, California Track, 45 Intramural Basketball, 2. 3, 45 Intramural Softball, 2, 3: Secretary of Landscape Gardening, 4. Undecided FILOMENA HEI,EN REZENDES Hanford, California Scholarship Society, 45 Forge Typist, 4. VVorlc, then Business College PATRICIA LAURA RICH Santa Barbara, California W'elfare Council, 3, 45 Student Legis- lature. 2. 3, 45 Beata Club, 3. 45 Presi- dent of Beata Club, 45 Usherettes Club, 45 Social Chairman of Usherettes Club, 45 Girls League Executive Board, 3, 45 12B Class Secretary, 45 Growing Pains, 45 Forge Staff, 45 Scholarship. Society, 45 Chairman of Constitution Revision Committee of Girls League, 4. State College 14.1- MORRIS C. NELSON Portland, Oregon R.O,T.C. First Lieutenant, 45 Hi-Y, 45 Nomination Committee, 4. Los Angeles Junior College or U.C.L.A, JAMES VVILLIAM O'BRlEN, JR. Ogden, Utah Yell Leader, 3, 45 Student Legisla' ture, 25 Program and Rally Committee. 3. 45 Interscholastic Relations Commit- tee. 35 Hi-Y. 2. University of California Prep School ALICE DOROTHY PEACOCK Santa Paula, California Girls Athletic Manager, 45 Chairman of Program and Rally Committee. 41 12.-X. Class Vice-President. 45 Beata Club. 45 Big S , 3, 45 Girls League Welfare. Z5 Girls League Executive Board, Z3 Basketball Manager, 3. Dress designing at VVoodbury College FRED PERCAI, Santa Barbara, California R.O.T.C, Manual of Arms, 3. Business I ...' if-4 .., .,., . , 3' 4 nm is '-t At 45- Cir- .gf Q . -0.1 XS.. -A I EZJ4 WIT' pw ROSE EVELYN SAINSEURY Cleveland, Ohio Scholarship Society, 23 Commercial Club, 33 Tennis Manager, 23 G.A.A., 2, 3. 4: Sports, 2. VVork EVELYN VIOLA SARNES Chicago, Illinois Entered from Fremont High School in Los Angeles, 33 Scholarship Society, 4. Business College EDWARD R. SIIEDD Santa Barbara, California R.O.'l'.C. Non-commissioned Officer, 4: Forge Staff, 43 Press Club, 4, College KEN N ETH CHARLES SMEDLEY Pasadena, California R.O.T.C. First Lieutenant, 43 Vice- President of Typo Club, 43 Hi-Y, 3, 43 Noon Hour Committee, 33 Secretary- Treasurer of Typo Club, 23 Scholarship Society, 4. Work, then Santa Barbara State Col- lege. l l GILBERT EUGENE SANTO Santa Barbara, California Welfare Council, 2, 33 Hi-Y, 2, 3, 43 President of Hi-Y, 23 Student Legisla- ture, Z, 3, 43 Ticket Sales Manager, 23 Noon Committee, 33 Secretary of Typo Club, 33 President Of Typo Club, 43 Scholarship Society, 33 Basketball, 3. Santa Barbara State College LORRAINE MARGUERITA SHAW Santa Barbara, California Student Legislature, 2, 43 French Club, 43 Cv.A,A., 43 Secretary of Usher- ettes Club, 43 Rose Maiden, 23 Rose of the Danube, 33 A Cappella, 3, 4, Undecided JESSIE JEANNE SIMMONS Santa Barbara, California Scholarship Society, 2, 3, 43 Seal Bearer, 43 Rose Maiden, Z3 Rose of the Danube, 33 K'Gloria, 2, 3, The Bethlehem Road, 43 A Cappella, 3, 43 Glee Club, 2. Santa Barbara State College CLIFTON SMITH S'anta Barbara, California Squad Leader, 33 Monitor, 2, 3, 4. Accounting at the University of Michigan RN lv 43' :'1P' 4.9 42. 19 as GEORGE RICKETFS, JR. Santa Barbara., California Gloria,', 23 R.O.T.C. Corporal. VVork JAMES ROBINSON Santa Barbara, California Sophomore Football, 23 Track, 23 Varsity Track, 23 Varsity Football, 3, 43 Varsity Basketball, 43 Intramural Baseball, 3, 43 Intramural Track, 3, 4. Undecided HENRIETYA RUDOLPH Hayden. Arizona VVork, then Business College KATIIERIN E S. RUTHERFORD Kansas City, Missouri Secretary of Home Room, 23 Gloria, 33 Secretary of Band, 33 Stu- dent Legislature, 43 Scholarship So- ciety, 3, 43 Orchestra, 2, 3, 43 Glee Club, 3. Business College -42- EVADNA ROBBINS Santa Barbara, California G.A.A., 43 Squad Leader, 2. College LORETTA FRANCES ROLLINGS Long Beach, California Student Legislature. 23 Seal Bearer, 43 Scholarship Society, 2, 3, 43 G.A.A., 2, 3, 43 All-Star Hockey Team, 23 Commercial Club, 33 Squad Leader, 2, 33 Hockey Captain, 43 Archery Award, 23 Sports, 2, Business College VIRGINIA MAE RUSSELL Santa Barbara, California A Cappella, 2. 33 G.A.A,, 43 Rose Maiden, 23 HRose of the Danube,', 33 Equestrienne Club, 3, 43 Big S , 4. College PEARL E. SAINSBURY Cleveland, Ohio Scholarship Society, 23 Squad Leader, 3, 43 Commercial Club, 33 G.A,A., 2, 3, 43 Sports, 2. VVork RUTH EVELYN THOM PSON Ventura, California Scholarship Society, 2. 3, 45 Seal Bearer. 45 G.A.A.. 2, 3, 4: First Team in Archery, 25 First Prize in Diction Contest, Z. University of California at Los An- geles EVELYN GLENNrX TINSMAN Santa Barbara, California President of Usherettes Club, 45 Beata Club, 3, 45 Girls League VVelfare Council, 45 A Cappella, 3, 45 Trial by Jury, 45 G.A.A., 3. 45 Booster, 25 Girls League Loan Fund Committee, 45 Rose Maiden, 25 Rose of the Danube, 35 '4Land of Hearts Desire, 3. Santa Barbara State College HELEN ERNESTINE TUCKER Santa Barbara, California Undecided MARIA VEDOVOTTO Thurbur, Texas Big S , 45 G.A.A., 3, 45 Scholarship Society. Z, 4. Work ANTHONY D. SPENCE Santa Barbara, California Varsity Football, 3, 4: -Sophomore Football, 25 Foreman Electricity Shop, 4. Northwestern University JOHN ROBERT STEVENSON Los Angeles, California Band, 2. 3, 45 Aviation Club, Z5 Rose of the Danube,', 35 Hi-Y, 3, 45 R.O.T.C. Sergeant, 4. College VVILLIAM STRONACH Goleta, California Baseball, 4. Work LAWRENCE V. SWAIN Santa Barbara, California Student Legislature, 35 Home Room Chairman, 25 R.O,T.C. Sergeant, 35 Varsity Football Manager, 4, R.O.T.C. Rifle Team, 35 Welfare Council, 35 Lightweight Basketball, 2. Business College RA ,zz C gyms 4.l's 19 as ILAMAY ELDORA TILLISON Salida, Colorado Rose Maiden, 25 Social Chairman of Commercial Club, 2, 35 Treasurer of Commercial Club, 4. Business College Maru! LOUISE TOMPKINS Santa Barbara, California Program Chairman, 25 Decoration Chairman of Senior Party, 25 A Cap- pella. 25 l'Rose Maidenf' 25 Dance Recital, 45 Scholarship Society, 4. Marymount School for Girls MARY LOUISE VAN POPPEL Santa Barbara, California Commercial Club, 45 Dance Commit- tec of Commercial Club, 4, Undecided EUNICE MILDRED VERRILI, New Haven, Connecticut Treasurer of G.A.A., 3, 45 G.A.A., 2, 3, 4: Big S , 3, 45 Usherettes Club, 3, 45 Press Club, 45 Treasurer of Big S , 45 Forge Staff, 45 Baseball All- Star, 3, 45 Baseball Stellar Eclipse, 25 Hockey Stellar Eclipse, 39 Scholarship Society, 3, 4. Stanford 14.31 DELMAR SMITH STEELE Santa Barbara, California Work CECELIA ,TESSIE STRAUGHN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania French Club, 45 Lunch Ticket Sales girl, 3, 4. U.C.L.A. ARTHUR JOSEPH SUFFOLK San Mateo, California Hi-Y, 3, 4, R.O.T.C, Cadet Major- 45 Student Body Social Committee, 4. Santa Barbara State College DONALD L. 'ISAPIE Santa Barbara, California Hi-Y, 2, 3, 45 Welfare Council, 3 Varsity Football, 2, 3, 45 Varsity Basketball, 2, 3, 45 Student Legislature 2. Work, then college GEORGE B. M. Voss Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Hi-Y, 43 R.O.T.C. Corporal 3, 4. Travel, then college CASPER P. WARNEKROS Santa Barbara, California iencing, 43 R.O.T.C., 2, 3, 4, Presi- dent of American Litizen Class, 4. Dental lechnician WALTER R. WAUGH S'anta Barbara, California IZA Class Fresident, 43 R.O,T.C. Sergeant, 4, 12B Class Treasurer, 45 hi-1, 3, 45 Scholarship Society, 4, Stu- dent Legislature, 2. Santa Barbara State College RONALD J. VVOOD Fort William, Ontaria, Canada College IsoEEL MELLIS WYLLIE Port Arthur, Ontario, Canada Booster, 2, Sports, 2, Girls League VVelfare, 4, Beata Club, 3, 4, Treasurer of Beata Club, 4. Undecided LINA JOANN BORTOLAZZO Santa Barbara, California G.A.A., 33 Squad Leader, 2, 3. Santa Barbara State College .44-. FRANK ST. CLAXR WALKER Los Angeles, California Spanish Club, 3, 4, Hi-Y, 43 Press Club, 4, R.O.T.C. Editor, 45 Fencing, 4. College MARNA RUTH WARREN Los Angeles, California President of Press Club, 4, Beata Club, 4, Quill and Scroll, 4, Big SU, 4, Society Editor of Forge, 45 News Editor of Forge, 45 Scholarship Society, 45 G.A.A., 3, 4. Santa Barbara State College DEAN KENT WILEER S'anta Barbara, California Scholarship Society, 2, 3, 43 Seal Bearer, 45 R.O.T.C. Officer, 4. California Institute of Technology CLIFFORD E. WR1cHTsoN Santa Barbara, California Varsity Football, 3, 4, Varsity Basketball, 3, 4, Track, 4, Baseball, 4, Press Club, 4. College ANDREW O. COTA S'anta Barbara, California Sophomore Football, Z, Varsity Foot ball, 3, 45 Intramural Baseball, 2, 3, 4 President of Landscape Architecture, 3 Intramural Basketball, 2, 3, 4. University of San Francisco V L , lil.. Cllllllnlill F ya' is Z .sl Masai 4395 5 35 g-galil' if NS 4 NNI 55.4 Q., , PART II , - e B' F-A . f f Q ' ' A I .. :,, fe- , B , ,, fv ' -' ,- Tx 'T Q W, g I Wig ,Q X 5 A gas' f 5 2 1 3 253' EEE2' :iff f A+ e Ei r E55 -2 - 5 , LE-ff I ,S . 17 ggi' ,Y FF 5 6 - 2 2 P.: - : P . P ali a' '- 1 li - E E f' ' REELI After a brief intermission of two days, the curtains part on the second half of The Pass- ing Show as the participants begin to readjust themselves to new ways of living. First, as al- ways in a new semester, we have the infusion of new life as 223 l0B,s replace 125 graduates. This is the largest incoming midyear class in four years. Again we find the names of new teachers added to our faculty list, this time in the phys- ical education department. Bob Worrnser, chairman of the Junior Development Commit- tee of the Santa Barbara Stadium Tennis Club and former instructor at Santa Barbara Junior High School, is the new tennis coach. He will consider the first twenty ranking players as the varsity, which will be divided into two teams to compete in interscholastic competition. Two girls' teams are also being coached by Harwood White and Hal Gorham. Clarence E. Bishop, former athletic di- rector at Valencia High School, is to take over the position left vacant by Skip Winans, that of assistant to Coach Schutte. Mr. Leonard L. Bowman, vice-principal of the high school and president of the Southern Section of the California Teachers' Association, leaves February 20 for Atlantic City to attend Bob Wormser arrives to handle tennis. Clarence Bishop replaces Winans. a national convention of school administrators. He travels with other educators from California on a special train from Los Angeles, visiting New Orleans, Jacksonville, Florida, Richmond, Virginia, and Washington, D. C. Mr. Wiley B. Tonnar, Commercial De- partment head, has been appointed as co-ordin- ator of the Distributive Occupation Education Program, a plan made possible by an act of Congress whereby those people are trained who come in direct contact with the consumer, as those conducting a commercial business. The length of each class will depend on its nature. Classes may be held at night school and are for employers as well as employees. Mr. Tonnar will use one-half of his school day time and give additional time evenings and Saturdays, This semester for the first time, a thirteenth year commercial course is being given for those who desire advanced commercial training. The course will be open to high school graduates, but they need not be from this high school. Penmanship, spelling, arithmetic, shorthand, typing, bookkeeping, accounting, and personal development are the courses being offered. In the Personal Development Class, taught by Mr. Stewart Paulin, many topics will be discussed which affect one's development in the social and ..46.- l FORGE STAFF EDITORS Bottom row: Wuest, Smedley, Ulrich, Warren. Newsome. Bass. Second row: Eaves, Devaney, Wagner, Kincaid, Hoyt, Eberts. Third row: Cortez, Walker, Benton. business world. The purpose of the course is to afford each student the opportunity of reading and discussing a variety of human traits and abilities in order to better fit himself for actual life situations. Due to the growing interest in commercial courses, it has been necessary to enlarge the Commercial Department Staff to include some of the teachers in other departments. These are Mr. Roy Thompson, Mr. C. H. Pruitt, Miss Mary Schoenborn, and Mrs. Bertha Jacobson. It has also been necessary to form a second class in Ofiicc Practice. American Civilization I is now being of- fered to 11B students in place of 11B history. It emphasizes living of the present and future, with its main objective to guide youth to a better un- derstanding of all of the social and economic problems that arise in their daily lives. After next semester, the civics classes will be discon- tinued. Instead of civics, students may choose between Social Problems, International Rela- tions, and Economics. Another new class this semester is Romance of Language, taught by Mrs. Marguerite Blair. The purpose of the course is to stress the prac- tical side of foreign languages, such as Germon, French. and Spanish, and to give a bird's-eye view of the entire language field. A new course added to the curriculum of the Home Arts department is one in personal hygiene, taught by Miss Pasty Bynum. In- cluded in this are instructions and practice in giving home facials and manicures and general care of the hands, with stress in cleanliness. Members of the Advanced Dramatics Class are presenting daily skits of their own construc- tion and direction from the stage in the audi- torium. The purpose is to teach them to be .47- quick-witted in any situation which might arise in a play. Because, says Miss Catherine Poyntz, director, in the senior play, there is no prompting. You either sink or swim according to your ability to meet the situation. Tuesday, February 22, a joint faculty meeting of the high school and the two junior highs is held in the auditorium for the purpose of acquainting the teachers with improvements in methods of teaching English and foreign languages, Doctor Holland Roberts, chairman of the Stanford Language Arts Investigation, is the speaker. Tuesday the eighth, an, Inventory of Stu- dent Problems in the form of a questionnaire is given to a number of students during home room by the High School Curriculum Commit- tee. The test is divided into two parts, Part I deals with personal problems, Part II, with social problems. New editorial appointments to the Forge staff have been made to fill the vacancies left by graduating staff members. Madalyn Wagner replaces Kathleen Newsome as Feature Editor, Lawrence Cortez replaces Frank Walker as R. O. T. C. Editor, Marilu Royal replaces Ed Shedd as Exchange Editor, Tony Belmonte re- places Ed Vassar, who left school, as Circulation Manager. Patsy Eaves replaces Bob Benton as Copy Editor and Barbara Jo Paxton and Frances Edwards have been added to the busi- ness staff . A new door has recently been cut in the end of Study Hall 7 into the cafeteria, and a new plan initiated whereby students in the library and study halls who buy their lunches will be dismissed ten minutes early. A nutrition class for under-weight and over-weight girls has been formed by Dr. Helen Hart, school nurse. It meets on Monday and Thursday during special period. Nearly fifty per cent of the January grad- uating class are not going to college, They are either working or trying to find work. Thirty- two are definitely going to college. The High School Placement Committee of seven, headed by Miss Tulita De la Cuesta and Mr. James A. employment. An application blank is filled out by the student stating the kind of work desired. Woods, has interviewed all seniors who wish This blank is kept on file in the Employment office, and an effort is made to place the student. A new special period group is a class in baton twirling directed by Lucille Marquez and Barbara Naumann, with Miss Alice Wiesen- danger as adviser. Mr. MacAllister teaches the signals and baton twirling fifth period. First of importance in the social whirl, we have the second annual Student Body dance at Recreation Center, February 26. A five-act floor show, games, balloons, serpentine, con- fetti, and Fred Lambournels orchestra are fea- tured, with Edgar Becchio as master of ceremonies, A Latin Club has been organized by Miss Mary Schoenborn to stimulate a greater enthus- iasm for Latin and to learn more about the customs, traditions, and history of the language. Jack Wuest is the newly elected president, Sey- bert Kinsell, vice-president, Louise Johnson, secretary-treasurer. A Stamp Club has been organized by Mr. Roy Thompson for students who have collec- tions and want to trade and gain a more com- plete understanding of stamp collecting. Several new special period groups have also been organized. First is the Pro and Con Club organized by Mrs. Gertrude Dickerson for the purpose of discussing world topics and hav- ing debates. Another is the Poetry Club di- rected by Miss E. Louise Noyes. The purpose of this organization is to gain a greater appre- ciation of poetry by reading and studying it. Many groups are electing new officers, new members, and having iniations. The Press Club elects Barbara Wuest, 12A, president. The Commercial Club has its semi-annual initiation, February 7, at the home of Ivy Mae Jennings. The Typo Club's new president is John Gordon, 12A. In the line of fads, we find half or more of the girls wearing spiders, bugs, or frogs-a strange occurance considering the general fem- inine attitude toward such things. Also, a great many are wearing lockets or crosses around their necks-some plain gold, some decorated, some jeweled. Another pet is Charlie McCarthy pins. Mexican sandals continue to be squeakingly popular, and peasant dresses are certainly in-w particularly the dirndl dresses of hopsacking with their bright patterns, As to hair, a new quirk is to wear a little pigtail braided down the back of the head with a bow on the end. With the boys, bright colors seem to be getting more and more popular. February basketball starts out on the wrongfoot as the Dons are defeated 27-24 by the Carpinteria Seagulls as a preliminary to the Santa Barbara State-Occidental College game. The following Tuesday, however, Santa Paula is hopelessly defeated, 42-l4. Saturday the VARSITY CLUB Bottom row: Keithley. Kent, Kruger, Melchiori, Merlo. Shoenberger, Valentino, Gordon, Carden Begg, Hazard. Second row: Dal Bello, Cullom, Yarbrough, Rogers, D. Smith, Charles Begg, Gutierrez, Donaldson, C. Smith, Westfall. Third row: Gullatte, Batzianas, Haupert, Gregory, Duff, Bthrens, Bernasconi, Hartman, Sylvester, Ayala, Coach Schutte. .48- W 2 g fs VARSITY BASKETBALL Bottom row: Minah, Donaldson, Keithley, Valentino, Keiper, Merlo, Duff, Second row: Coach Schutte, Dal Bello, Bernasconi, Gullatte, Rossi, Batzianis, Behrens, Kent, Cmanagerj. twelfth, the Dons are turned back again by the U. C. L. A. Freshman squad, 34-20. Tuesday the fifteenth, they get back at Carpinteria, winning a thrilling 30-28 victory. Friday the eighteenth, the Santa Maria Saints are defeated 32-15. Showing a great improvement over their past games, the Vaquero varsity wins an easy 37-18 victory over the San Luis Obispo Tigers. February basketball is finished off with a game against the graduating seniors who defeated the varsity team 51-38. Meanwhile, the lightweights down Santa Paula 34-29 on Tuesday the eighth, Ventura, 53-16 on the eleventh, and Carpinteria 38-23 on the eighteenth, thus winning an unofhcial claim to the tri-county championship, been listed in the with outstanding players at the head of each. Each team con- total of ninety-six Twelve new teams have intramural basketball league sists of eight players with a in all, an enrollment surpassing that of last semester, showing an increased interest in the program. The tournament has started and com- petition is good. Our varsity tennis squad plays host to eight members of the Southern California Junior Davis Cup team, Saturday, February 19. The matches are in no way inter-scholastic-their sole purpose is to give our boys the feel of stiff competition and to brush up on the finer points of the game. The boys gave a good account of themselves in such high class competition, par- SECOND TENNIS TEAM Bottom row: German, Dall'Armi, Moss, Bochenheimer, Perry, Renga, Adameck. Second row: Gage, Richardson, Wilkinson, Wheeler, Bartlett, Hickock, Nakayama. Q 5 g i' 15 tr... ...QQY VARSITY TENNIS Bottom row: Silva, Fair, Doty, Kruger, Oeschler, Haupert, Mr, XVormser. Second row: Denton, Olsen, Basham, Gregory, Motto, McDonald. ticularly Tom Kruger, who is a member of the Junior Davis Cup team himself. Coach Bob Wormser states that it is very doubtful if any high school or college team could down these boys in a series of matches. This month, the E'Racketeers defeat OX- nard High seven matches to three, and on Feb- ruary 17 lose to Ventura Junior College five matches to two. Saturday, February 26, they open their first C. I. F. matches of the season by winning a victory of 8-l points over Glen- dale High School. In the meantime, the second team loses to Ventura 10-0, and to Oxnard 7-3, but wins over Santa Paula. Tuesday, February l, the girls of Mrs. Joyce Muench's individual physical education classes give a unique foot circus demonstrating poise before P.-T. A. members in the audito- rium. Dawn Loomis is ring master and Pauline Weston acts as reader. And February closes amidst a very unus- ualn season of California rain. Foot Circus Act: Samoa, A. Feathers, Ntttles, Gibson, Ulrich, R. Feathers. , . gil I-lllll li'lgg!. g -X15 .. lil, 5 gig? kara Wmwi dl UF?- fs S G Mar mth A ,fi flllfl if N3 f n Q , 4 I - I Rainy weather continues through the first part of the month, not only fiooding several southern cities and taking roads and bridges out, but putting our own Milpas Street knee- high in water and Spring Street up to its neck. The following season of dry weather is most welcome. March 31 the annual diction contest is sponsored by Mrs. A. B. Higginson and Miss Amy DuPont in Room 210, and is won by Hazel Brewster, who receives 21510, and Bob Per- ry, second, who receives S5. There are twelve contestants, two from each of the three Eng- lish literature classes, the Radio Voice Class, and the Beginning and Advanced Dramatics classes. The purpose of the contest is to in- crease student interest in better speech. This month also, seven new books are do- nated to the library by Miss Deborah Maxwell, a graduate of this school, who has made several donations in the past. Friday the twenty-fifth, Alpha Phi Gamma, national honorary journalistic fraternity of Santa Barbara State College, holds its annual Journalism Dayf' inviting high school and col- lege journalists from all over the county. There are more than a hnudred representatives from the high schools of Santa Barbara, Carpinteria, Santa Maria, and Ventura Junior College. Luncheon is served in the cafeteria, at which time Harold Jacobs, managing editor of the News-Press, and C. A. Storke, associate pub- lisher, speak. John T. Porter, printing instruc- tor, speaks on the Relationship of the Composing Room to the Editorial Department. Round table discussions follow. Also on the twenty-fifth, the Industrial and Vocational Arts classes hold open house in the form of an At Homen day, when they give for parents, students, and others interested in their work, a chance to observe their various classes. The exhibit of their actual day-by-day class- work is to show what the school offers in this field of work and what opportunities there are for a career. Mr. Howard Walter's Social Studies period II class takes a trip to El Capitan, March 30, to take food and clothing to the pea pickers and study their condition. The class finds it a very interesting and profitable trip. They visit the m r- 1. ' P .1 1, Q 5 n t- :Jil .' .,-C J H .5 u il ll H ' 1' F11 iv ii QM. ' ilu I A , x ll' , ltll 'nu lli lx, ul rn , 4 ' rn im' J Ulu' I in, I 3 . nm! J ix., ffm!! .1 I by lily!!! ll A D W, ,. Inn, l W' qu. , , I ,Jmld 'x W J .lllll I W x Q' M '-, 'lllll i.. . iv- I -sim ,J 1 ,I 4 In IIN 'QQQ3 'QM' tent schools and find conditions there generally very poor. An oscilloscope, an instrument used to check and analyze all types of electric waves, has been added to the equipment used in Mr. Melvin Wells, Radio classes. In a few weeks Mr. Wells expects to have a microphone hooked up with the device so that voice waves may be visualized. This ,is one of the more spectacular uses of the instrument, its main purpose being to find diflicult troubles in radio and electrical mechanism. Mr. Wells and his radio classes have as- sembled a new public address system which will soon be put in operation at dances, noon activ- ities, minor athletic events, and occasionally in the auditorium. It will also be used to teach certain radio principles to the shop classes. If this smaller system works out as well as planned, the construction of a set-up for the stadium will be attempted. A feather in our cap-Mr. Ben Reddick, salesman for the Coast Engraving Company, states, that as a group, our senior pictures are the best of any of theiseventeen annuals the engraving company is handling this year. Outstanding in the way of assemblies this month is the demonstration given by Miss Grace Phelan of Pennsylvania, World's Cham- pion amateur typist. She is able to type ap- proximately 150 words a minute. In addition she holds several typing titles, and intends to enter a professional contest at the first oppor- tunity. Monday, March 7, the high school Hi-Y has its spring induction service at the Trinity Church when twenty-eight new members are inducted. At this time also, a plaque is pre- sented by the boys to Frank G. Wykoff, Olym- pic sprint champion and present principal of the Carpinteria High School. The week-end of the nineteenth. twenty-five or more Hi-Y boys at- tend the Tri-County Conference in Paso Robles. Friday the twenty-fifth, an all Hi-Y barn dance is sponsored bv the 12A Hi-Y. Friday the fourth, the Commercial Club makes its annual pilgrimage through a Santa Barbara bank. this year the First National Bank. The club is shown all the details of running a bank, including the hiring and firing of help. ..51.. 12A HI-Y-SPRING Bottom row: Elliott, Cortez, Belmonte, Loustalot, Hughes. McFadden, Weber. Second row: Miratti, Eckles. Nixon, David, Gordon, Falxa, Halferty. Third row: Kohrs, Gage, Mr. Paulin, Basham, MacRostie, Tozier. Saturday night, the twenty-sixth, the club gives a party of dancing and games for members and guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wiley B. Tonnar. March 31, during special and third periods, they visits the Golden State Dairy. They are taken through the plant by the sales manager, who explains the routine office duties and what is required of all the employees. Wednesday the sixteenth, the quill and Scroll has its first meeting of the semester at 10B HI-Y Bottom row: Marvel, Rossi, Stow, Goto. Second row: Grant, Glahn, VVarren, O'Neill, Rumsey. Third row: Griggs, MeDaris, Gradle. Deaderick. X E5 vc, the home of William Ashworth, to initiate ten new members and elect new officers, with Wil- liam Ashworth as president. The nineteenth, the Usherettes give a party at the home of Tessie Cornwall, featuring dancing, ping pong, volley ball played with balloons, and shooting paper cups with a Bebe gun. This month the Equestriennes change stables. They now patronize the San Marcos Riding Club, where they are taught to put their own saddles on and take them off, the proper way to mount and dismount, and how to ride Western style, all for fifty cents an hour. In the R. O. T. C. battalion, six cadets are named for the William Randolph Hearst rifle trophy matches: Cated Private Bill Sains- bury, Cadet Sergeant George Hartnett, Cadet Master Sergeant Edward Verhelle, Cadet Ser- geant Clifford Clark, and Cadet Second Lieu- tenant Jack Westfall, with Cadet Corporal Glenn Parks serving as alternate. Also noteworthy for this month is the coming of Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs which sets half the population singing Heigh-Ho and Whistle While You Workf' wearing dwarf pins, and comparing their companions to various ones of the dwarfs. Most outstanding in the world of sports this month is the Senior-Faculty basketball game, in which the Faculty Five are defeated 36-28. A crowd of 1200, the largest of the hoop season, witnesses the contest, cheering madly throughout the game. From the stands' point of entertainment, the Faculty steals the show be- fore the game starts with their dramatic en- trance and humorous costumes. Harvey Holt, principal, and Earl Murray enter on crutches, and Coach Schutte, with a big mustache and beard is rolled in lounging in a wheel chair. Other members of the faculty team are Clarence Bishop, Wiley Tonnar, Stew Paulin, Jake Turn- off, Bill Hilbert, and Earl Plescia. Captain Carpenter is yell leader and Chief Wallace acts as water boy. Art Keithley leads the seniors, assisted by Dave Eberts, Charlie Bern- asconi, Joe Merlo, Henry Behrens, Box Nixon, and Fred Duff. The game itself is hard-fought throughout, and in celebration of the F aculty's defeat, an informal ujubileel' is held for the team at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Blair after the game. The last of 1938 basketball and the only varsity basketball game on record of March is one with the Santa Barbara State College Freshmen, which is lost by the Dons in a 48-46 decision. This is the third game of a three- game series. The Vaqueros won the Hrst game 38-33 and tied the second 38-38. Playoffs in the first half of the intramural basketball league are held Friday the fourth, with the Los Padres quintet capturing the league pennant. RIFLE TEAM Bottom row: Clark, Baugh. P Second row: Hampton, Tozier. M ller, Sainsbury. Third row: Sergeant Dunn, Thornsberry, Verhelle, Hartnett. VVilcler. .-53m VVh:re the faculty plays: basketball team, managers, rooting section. REVIEW OF THE BASKETBALL SEASON At the start of the '37 '38 basketball sea- son, hopes were exceedingly dull until Coach Schutte announced that he would use Johnnie Costas and Art Keithley, high scoring forwards on the '36-'37 outfit, until their graduation late fin January. At the start of the season, Coach Schutte had two full teams which could relieve the other on a moment's notice. The first team lined up with Costas and Keithley, forwards, Valentino, center, Merlo and Keiper, guards. The second quintet had Jack Donaldson and Jimmie Minah at the forward berths, Fred Duff at center, and Charles Bernasconi and Frank Dal Bello holding down the guard positions. Giving indications of being a fast little ball club at the beginning of the season, the Don lightweights went on to prove it by winning the Tri-County League Championship. The same quintet which took the floor for the first contest played as a unit right up to their last game, with the exception of Harley Brannan who replaced Bob Mann at one of the guard spots. The starting five which was so successful throughout the season lined up with Rabbit Ra- bufli, otherwise known as Archie, and Tony Chavez, forwards, Tex Anderson, center, and Box Nixon and Harley Brannan, guards. Bob Nixon was appointed captain. In their first inter-scholastic contest the Vaqueros drubbed their old enemies, the Ven- tura Pirates. The score was 38-19, and it was the worst beating suiiered by a Pirate five in a number of yearsfthat is, a beating by a Don quintet. Johnnie Valentino was high point man with 13 points. While their big brothers were downing the Pirates, the Don lightweights smashed the Ventura Junior High, 29-8, with RabuHi capturing high scoring honors by tank- ing six field goals and a charity toss. The barnstorming 145-pound cagers from thc University of California came to town and turned back the locals 39-35. It was mainly in- ability to cash in on free throws which robbed the Dons of a sure-fire victory. Joe Merlo, powerful Vack guard, led his team in scoring with a total of eight points. Engaging the U. C. L. A. freshman five on the Pan Paciic court, the Don basketeers fail to click and return home nursing a 27-21 defeat. It was Valentino who again won high scoring honors and displayed excellent defensive work. Fred Duff, lanky substitute center, turned in a bang-up game along with Valentino. Johnnie -54- LIGHTWEIGHT BASKETBALL Coach Schutte, Bianon, Rabuffi, Anderson, Chavez, Nixon. was appointed captain after this game by Coach Schutte. By scoring a victory over the Santa Paula Cardinals, the Don varsity hung up their third win of the season. Jack Donaldson, rangy for- ward, hits the hoop for a total of 14 points to walk off with individual scoring honors. Falling before the unbeaten Santa Paula live and the high scoring Fillmore quintet, the Don midgets experienced the bitter pangs of de- feat twice in one week and saw their hopes of an undefeated season crushed. Rabufici was the individual star of the Santa Paula contest, while Bob Nixon captured this honor in the Fillmore game. With the graduation of Costas and ineligi- bility of Keithley, the Don line-up was changed around considerably for the second Santa Paula encounter. Jimmie Minah was placed in the line-up as a forward and delivered by pouring through the net six field goals. The Dons emerged the victors, 42-14. Sparked by Tex Anderson, flashy midget center, who accounted for three field goals and two free throws in the last minutes of play, the Don lightweights turned the tables on the Santa Paula lighties and down them 34-29. By virtue of two field goals scored in an overtime period, the Don varsity cop a thrilling 30-28 victory over the Carpinteria Indians on the losers' court. The Dons were determined to win this encounter as they had dropped a close decision to the Indians the week before on the -55- Armory fioor. Charlie Bernasconi, starting his first game of the season, proved to be truly a great find. Jimmie Minah and Joe Merlo pulled this game out of the fire. Displaying that same brand of team-work which made them one of the finest lightweight quintets in Southern California, the Don mid- gets rolled over the Carpinteria B team 38-18 late in the season. Tex Anderson led the scoring parade with twelve points, but it was excellent passing on the part of team-mates which made these scores possible. In their next encounter the lightweights went on a scoring spree and trounced the Ven- tura Junior High quintet 53-16. Anderson ac- counted for 23 of the points. With a complete reversal of form, the U. C. L. A. freshman basketball squad turned back the Dons 39-20 to win the second of the annual two game series. Captain Valentino led the Dons, as usual, with six digits. Showing great improvement over their past games, the Vaquero varsity basketeers won an easy 38-17 victory over the San Luis Obispo Tigers in a game played as a preliminary to the House of David-Broadway Clown tussle. Coach Schutte used three lightweight players, Rabufli, Chavez and Anderson in this contest. All of them showed up to good advantage and made a big hit in the scoring column. Due to their smashing victory over the Santa Maria B quintet, Santa Barbara High School's crack lightweight five wound up the hoop season in possession of the Tri-County Title, The starting five composed of Rabufid, Chavez, Anderson, Captain Nixon and Brannan, were hailed as the greatest little players to wear the Olive and Gold since Greg McDonald, Joe Nunez, John Johns, Johnnie Costas and Mouse Lorenz went to the Southern Division finals a few years back. Playing an after season three game series with the State College Freshmen, the Don var- sity won one and lost two. In the final game Captain Valentino ended his basketball career in a blaze of glory by tanking eight field goals and three free throws against the Freshman five. The highlight of the entire season came with the scheduling of a Senior-Faculty game. It was the first contest of its kind to be staged at the local high school in more than ten years. A crowd of 1,200, the largest of the hoop season, witnessed the battle and cheered madly throughout the entire game. Pouring in field goals with machine gun like rapidity in the final minutes of play, the Seniors conquered the hard charging Faculty to win 36-28, and avenge two defeats suffered by senior teams in past years. Art Keithley, former varsity high scoring ace, was easily the outstanding player of the evening. He accounted for 19 of his team's points and got them when they were most needed. He was given a close run by Bishop and Tonnar of the Faculty. As soon as basketball is finished, track is all ready to swing into line, coached by Clarence Bishop. Tuesday the twenty-second, the sopho- mores meet the juniors and defeat them 167VQ- 136M. The First meet of the season is held in Peabody Stadium, Friday the twenty-fifth, with the Ventura Pirates. Although the Santa Bar- bara High School class A lose a 61M-512 de- cision, the class B comes through with an 85M- 18h victory. Johnny McGowan, new addition to the Don spike team, is outstanding in the A meet, while Tony Zucco captures the class B 100 yard dash. Tuesday the twenty-sixth, the seniors turn back the junior class A team 85M-265 and the class B team 55-32, but lose an 18-10 decision in class C. Don netmen meet Santa Monica High School on home ground, Saturday March 19, but are defeated by them, 7-2. The following Saturday they play Beverly Hills High School at the Stadium Tennis Courts, again facing de- feat, 6-3. The second team wins over Thatcher School 5-4. And March slips smoothly into April with scarcely a ripple as all eyes are turned toward April and its prospects. Valentino ntts a basket. DQ rife DQ do 564- f i-:QEIJ I-Ili!! lil2l7. i 1 S . 1, 4 '4?Ei? J E bf S Wm dl? ,Q s 1 563 - ' WH Mk t l!HW ! Ss i .'lp ? . u : r Sunshine, springtime, and 'iSweethearts,' and you have a combination to make anyone happy. Under the direction of Miss Ardis Car- ter, and with the assistance of the A Cappella Chorus, the glee clubs, the orchestra, the danc- ing class, the stage-craft class, and the stage make-up class, we have a production that couldn't help being the biggest success of the year. The lovely singable melodies of the Victor Herbert music, involve the ever-favorite prince and princess, played by Michael Mapa and Jo- sephine Zocchi. Francis Johnson, Barbara Simpson, and Gene Slaybaugh add much com- edy by their excellent acting. The other main characters are Rachel Walker, Martin Brown, Jimmie Fowler and Jack Wuest. April 27 and 28, during Better Homes and Public Schools Week, Miss Patsy Bynum's Home Arts classes hold open house in their Garden Street cottage, serving tea from two to four to any who are interested in the project. Furniture for the cottage has been selected en- tirely by the girls in the classes. In addition to the regular home art classes are three groups of girls of different stages who go through the course in individual groups taking up the serv- ing of meals, budgeting, serving, renovation and care of the clothing, child care, and house- hold work. Every problem brought forth in the Josephine Zocchi and Michael Mapa had leads in Operetta. ll ' l L II , 7, mil 1 - - :ll he g . it l ,RM I lv . X lf'l:i... lm' l lx -x In ill ' y , H X ,lm Z nvl Xp nl rn A . I l I1 'tj -im' i 1 lin' 'HI' M . I - '. I 1? . 1' Ill . lj H., yn: ll I X I'-'-u BQ 'mf ffl!! I li 'Wulf y X ,071 51 'RL ll ---l ll -ixxiulvgy ' f M ' iff, mllml K Wim -Aff' classes is a personal problem because nearly all the girls expect to get a job in the near future. The week-end of April 23 and 24, the fac- ulty has a get-together in the form of an outing at Camp Drake, with Mr. Roy Wickstrum as general manager, Mrs. Marguerite Blair in charge of the menu, and Miss Alice Wiesen- danger and Mr. Earl Murray in charge of en- tertainment. There is hiking, swimming, and horseback-riding, with a campfire at night and ghost-stories. Wednesday, April 26, the whole Industrial Arts Department makes a visit to the Industrial education department of the State College, the main purpose of which is to broaden the boys' knowledge by showing them the regular func- tions of classes in higher shop training. Wednesday, April 6, Miss Noyes takes her fourth period Builders Together class to Gilles- pie Gardens to study Italian art and architec- ture, and the week following Easter vacation, Miss Tessien and Mrs. Myers take their Builders Together classes there also. Mrs. Myers also takes her American Literature class to visit a home that is furnished entirely in early Ameri- can. The class is making an anthology of American poetry as well. Mr. Rossier's Build- ers Together class has dinner at The Viking restaurant in the latter part of April in connec- tion with their study of the Scandinavian countries. April 30, Mrs. Dorothy May takes a group of girls from her spring foods classes to Los Angeles to visit a de- hydrating plant. Dehydrat- ing is a process by which water is removed from fruits and vegetables, enabling them to be preserved for sometimes as long as a year. Friday, April 1, during third period, Mr. Turnoff takes his 10A Biology class to the museum, and after vaca- tion to the bird refuge and the beach to study marine life. Also, the week follow- ing Easter, he takes his 11B class to the botanical gardens, and Mrs. Wood takes her bot- any class to the beach. -57- wecthga1'ts. ..S Act I Cast of 58- hearts. II Cast of Sweet ct A 5555 iq. Qi 5 2 il: 5 235' K. 117525 Q' it S151 31 533 sis, wi P' s t 1 Q if it F A 1, if I IQ , E X is A CAPPELLA Carter. enbach Miss oore, NL is Tuttle, Knowles, Kelly, Saunders, M apa, Baudino, Meter, M 3.I1 V Nelson Adlam, Meng, P. l'0W Bottom Cl fton. az, ,Di urch, Wallin' Ch ebb, owler, Prince, W uest, F well, Woods, W row: Heagney, Heagney, Hollo ond Sec Miller. Deverman, L Zocch oodburn, W W ll YD Loustalot, B oniker, Banks, Fraser, Sl Fa r, Wolfe, Staples, Cornwall, gS in Jenn l'0WT hird T Tapie. Farrar, Rom er, McReynolds George, Ash Tozier, Johnson, er, Walk Crookham Potier, Frey, Hannell, YOXVZ Fourth GLEE CLUB Carter. Miss S dam mpson, A Si lie, Rees, CS ams, Drumm, Tillotson, L , Wim Card, Lambourne dy, OO row: M Bottom CH. a, All ths, Pined iffi Gr Tozier, Henderson, Miller, Fisher, Pitman, Booth, Catchpole, pton 2.111 w:H Second ro en, Linker. Kile. Cronan. YC Wallace, G Naum ann on, DS hom T artrell, Hayden, G ke, FEI mlage, D F3 oulds, B d row: M hir T Anthony, Hollinger, aiu arney. Glover. M H onvold, G 1' Franco, au, cGow M artfeld Common, H Fourth row: Begg. ham T3 win, G Er dei-ink, Eberts, CH 11D Drenne TOWZ fth Fi The last week in April, Mr. Walters takes his Social Studies English class to the filtration plant, and his civics class to the courthouse to study trial procedure. April 8, Miss jean Applegate's Beginning Dramatics class gives a one-act play at La Cumbre, entitled Farewell Cruel VVorld. On the twenty-seventh, it gives its first assembly play here, The Valiant' by Halsworthy Hall. Those students not working on the plays are making individual projects on some phase of drama other than acting, as make-up, stage design, lighting, costumes, and histories of the lives of great actors. The first part of April, members of Miss Mildred Gerer's Ofhce Practice class interview several of the down town secretaries, Iinding much interesting information in this field. They are also making special notebooks on the Held of secretarial work-personality traits, special skills needed, letters of application, education re- quired ,and proper clothes, as well as studying live different calculating machines. April 28, members of Mr. Melvin Wells' Period I Radio Class visit the police radio sta- tion, KGZO, where Mr. George Grening, chief radio technician of the police force, shows them around, and explains the use and operation of the two-way radio of the motorcycles and cars. Friday, April 29, is the annual R. O. T. C. Federal Inspection with the boys all on parade in their dress uniforms, looking handsome and all alike to the crowd of spectators gathered on the hill during special period. The last two years they have won honor rating, and Captain F. F. Carpenter has just cause to be proud of them today, as Major john C. Newton, graduate of 1913 and head R. O. T. C. instructor at U. C. L. A. conducts inspection. Riflle marksman- ship, first aid, mapping, reading, scouting, and patrolling with the writing of field messages, the National Defense Act, and military courtesy and discipline are reviewed as well as regular drill demonstration. April Fool! A Forgery for five cents- imagine forging a nickel! But due to the extra expense of a six-column paper, the Forge staff finds it necessary. Patsy Eaves, copy editor of the F orge, acts as editor with Dorothy Ulrich and Leroy Perry as her assistants. Material has been contributed from the newswriting classes, and as a special feature, outstanding humor writers of past Dizzy Editions are asked to con- tribute. A two-page regular news edition is put out also. It is also during this month that the Olive and Gold holds a contest to Hnd the typical high school boy and girl, whose life is pictured at the end of these pages. Candidates are sponsored by different clubs and a hundred votes given to each person buying an O. and G. Friday, April 8, the Aviation Club travels south and goes through the Douglas Aircraft Corporation and Reginald Denny's Model Air- plane Factory and visits the Los Angeles Mu- nicipal Airport and the Aircraft and Boat Show at Pan-Pacific Auditorium. Saturday, April 9, the Quill and Scroll has an alumni party at the home of William Ash- worth, president. Most of the alumni guests Major Newton inspects R.O.T.C, battalion, -51-4 Captain F. F. Carpenter. jr., and Sergeant C. .-X Dunn head local R.O.'l'.C, unit. are from State College, but many interesting letters have been received from others all along the coast. Saturday, April 2, the Pro and Con Club has a beach party at Edgecliffe with swimming flj, supper, dancing, games, and a bonfire. Saturday, April 30, several members of the Scholarship Society go to Santa Monica as dele- gates to the annual State C. S. F. Convention. Before lunch there is a business meeting followed by panel discussions on Roads to Peacef' Wil- liam Ashworth, local president, and Dorothy File are speakers for Santa Barbara. The latter part of the month, the Typo Club has a skating party at the Ventura skating rink, and also about this time, the 12A Hi-Y has a picnic at Tuckcr's Grove. In the middle of the active whirl that is April, is the usual week of freedom from work that precedes Easter-and it is heartily wel- comed. Saturday, April 16, of this week, the circus makes its yearly visit, and, as usual, a large percentage of the student population is present. In varsity track, the Dons go to Carpinteria April 23 for the annual Russell Cup Meet, in which they take seventh place in Class A, and fifth place in Class B. With the appointment of Clarence Bishop as head track and field coach, track was des- tined to become a major sport once again at Santa Barbara High School. Coach Bishop, former all-around athlete and great track per- former at Pomona College, made the school track conscious upon his arrival here early in February. He required every boy in his gym class to take a hand at running all of the track FORGE STAFF Bottom row: Eberts, Bass. llelmonte. VVurst, Bernasconi. Firestone. Clark. Benton. Second row: Mr. XVallace. Cortez. Hurlbut, Ncttles. Devancy. Kincaid, Verrill. Booth, Nicholas, Becchio, Hoyt. 'lillird row: VValker, VVagner, Eaves. Royal. Murphy, Mclfntes, VVandell, Ashworth, Kruger. l -62 w. Q :Q --F --,- ':...w, ..... .....,.- .V4, , av VA .,,,. gi 3 5 ,.f',,,,,e,:. . QUILL AAD scRoLL Bottom row: Galbraith, VVucst. Kincaid. Nettlcs. Second row: Miss Noyes, Ulrich, Eaves, Hughes, Wagner. Third row: Benton Ashworth. Firestone, Arnestad. events and performing in three Held events. By so doing he developed several top notch per- formers. Among those discovered in the gym classes were Fred Seymour, colored jumper, and john- nie McGowan, sprint star. Seymour broke the Class B high jump record in the 25th annual Russell Cup meet with a magnificent leap of 6 feet to better the old record by one-half inch. Previous to this meet, Seymour's best jump was 5 ft. 9 in. which shows what competition and coaching will do, A boy who proved to be a big surprise in the Russell Cup meet was lanky Art Basham, who copped first place in the hop, step, and jump by virtue of his marvelous leap of 41 ft. 9 inches in this event. He also placed second to Bugbee, Southern California champion, in the broad jump competition. Basham churned his body 21 ft. 5 in. through space to grab the second place honor. The Russell Cup meet and the C. I. F. Di- visional meet share the distinction of being the two biggest track and Held competitions which the Dons enter each year. They have not won either for quite some time, but with track on the up-grade at the local institution the time is not far distant when the Olive and Gold banner will be hoisted to the top of the victory stand. This year the Dons scored a total of 19 points in the Russell Cup meet, 10 of them were recorded by Class B spikemen and the rest by Class A performers. Meets have been run off against Ventura High School, Carpenteria and Santa Maria. Both Class A and B men scored heavily against Carpenteria and easily defeated them. Class A summary was 761f3 for the Dons and 38 2f3 for Carpinteria. In the Class B division it was even worse499 for the Don midgets and 5 for the Red and White of Carpenteria. In the Ven- tura meet the Class A spikesters were defeated and the Class B cinder aces won as they pleased. Following is a summary of outstanding team members and events. CLASS A 100 yard dash: Johnnie McGowan, Char- lie Bernasconi, Lattinee Gullatte. McGowan is the best of this group. He has traveled the century twice this season in 10 flat. Bernasconi and Gullatte are rated a toss-up, as both of them have reeled off the distance in about 10.2. Bernasconi has been bothered by shin splints all year, which has slowed him up considerably. 220 yard dash: Keithley, McGowan, Bern- asconi. Art Keithley was clocked in the fastest time of the year in this event when he hit the tape in 23.7 in an intramural meet, Gullatte was right behind him, being clocked in 23.8. 440 yard dash: Curtis Smith was con- sidered the best quarter miler in school, but if Bob Nixon, Class B 660 yard ace, had cared to run this distance he could have relieved Smith of this honor. 880 yard run: Bill Hazard was the king of this distance when he felt like running. Mile run : Johnnie Valentino, star wingman on the football team and basketball captain, was easily the outstanding miler in high school and probably Southern California, but he did not care to compete in any of the big meets. With- out Valentino, Bishop was left without a man who could break live minutes. 120 yard high hurdles: Walt Meier, Steve Melchiori, Bill Statler. Walt Meier was con- sidered the best of the trio, having taken a fourth in the Russell Cup meet. 220 yard low hurdles, McGowan and Meier. McGowan was best of the two as he has M634 VARSITY TRACK Bottom row: Bernasconi, Cullom, Zucco, Spence. Becker. Robinson, Vlfebb, Rabuffi. Second row: Reichard, Mason, J. Smith, Rogers, Nixon, Behrens, Macias, Kciper, Seymour. Third row: Ciolli, Irvin, Dal Bello, Stevens, Gullatte, Hazard, Lopez, Haruki. Fourth row: Coach Bishop, McGowan, Somtrs, C. Smith. Ritchie, Basham, Meier, Merlo, Kent Cmanagerj. ' had more experience running the long flight of hurdles and has more speed between the wooden sticks. High Jump: Steve Melchiori was the only Class A man to clear 6 ft. He became ineligible near the end of the season due to the C. I. F. age requirement. Broad Jump: Art Basham and Johnnie Mc- Gowan. Basham, the school's best, due to his leap of 21 ft. 5 in. in Russell Cup meet. Mc- Gowanls best mark was around 20 feet 8 inches. Shot Put: Joe Merlo, Henry Behrens, Jack Westfall. Merlo is undoubtedly the best of the group, but Behrens has showed the greatest im- provement. Discus Throw: Hank Behrens shares indivi- dual honors in this event. He has heaved the platter over 120 feet to come close to the school record set by Mike Dimas in 1929. CLASS B 100 yard dash: Peter Zucco and Bill Becker. Zucco better of the two, has been clocked in 10.3. 220 yard low hurdles: McGowan and er and Webb were point winners in early season, but Mason walked off with honors during the latter part. 660 yard dash: Bob Nixon and Doug Spence. Two of the Hnest runners of the year. Each race was hotly contested and very close. Nixon proved to be just a shade the better, as he de- feated Spence the greater part of the time. Nixon has an official mark of 1 :30 and an un- oflicial one of 1 :28.5 made in the Russell Cup meet. 1320 yard run: Jimmie Sommers and Jerome Smith. Somers, easily the better runner, cap- tured a fourth place in the Russell Cup meet. High Jump: Seymour, Rabufli, Macias. Fred Seymour stood head and shoulders above the field in this event mainly through his record breaking jump at Carpinteria. Pole Vault: Archie Rabuffi, Bill Behrens, Jerome Smith. Rabufli had little trouble in eliminating his team-mates in this event. 10 ft. 9 in. was his best mark made in the Russell Cup Competition. Due to the fact that the Divisional meet had not been run off until after the Olive and Gold had gone to press no results could be obtained. Varsity baseball games are played April 22 at Santa Paula, when the Dons lose in a tough 7-5 contest, and April 30 here with Santa Maria. Saturday, April 2, Coach Wormser's Rack- eteers play Los Angeles High School at Los Angeles and receive their third straight defeat of the year in a close contest. The doubles teams are able to win easy victories, but Los Angeles, single players proved too strong for the Dons, winning five matches to four. April 13-16 they enter the Dudley Cup Tournament, and April 28-30 the annual Ojai Tournaments, with Tom Kruger, Paul Haupert, Ray Silva, Edward Doty, and Bobby McCampbell entering. A girls' team also entersglda Churchill and Doris Mae Moses for singles, and Elizabeth Del Alva and Nilletta Coulter for doubles. Sherman Thornsberry, captain of the var- sity fencing team, goes to Los Angeles to repre- sent our school at the Pacific Coast Champion- ship bouts held from April 8-10 and wins third place in the novice duelling sword competition. And Reel HI comes to the finish with May Day just around the corner, and a full month ahead. -64- f ma l-I -I-l.tEiEj3 lx X Q' U34 ,Q Z sf? 'SS 5 A I Z Z' 'T' M is 6 E 761 Y if Q. mth :': N ll REEL IV - 1: 5 : 21 Of first importance in the merry month of May is invariably the senior play, this year that outstanding success of stage and screen, c'Stage Doorf' in which Mary Bartlett and Maxine Sudbury share very capably the leading role, that of Terry Randall. Though the prevailing tone is that of comedy, there are moments of dramatic tension as the large group of ambitious girls seek their way to the footlights. The fem- inine lead, Jean Maitland, is played by Georgia Blanchet. The masculine leads are played by Sherman Thornsberry and Francis J o h n s o n. Other leading roles are taken by Pauline West- on, Jane Miller, and Alta Ruth Eichelberger, with Edna Forward, Rosalie Guild, and Charles Begg in the character parts. A host of congrat- ulations to the cast, Miss Catherine Poyntz, di- rector, and Robert Rivera and Dorothy Smed- ley, student directors, for attempting such a production and carrying it off so magnificently. Deserving honorable mention right here, is Miss Catherine Poyntz' special period class in stage make-up, which always has an upper group or trained crew to answer any make-up 'fall X ffm' ls N W, w 'mil l Nl Y'.,9l,l'l W X . . n--mx C . x li' , ln! uu ll I l 1 . In QL, I l ' I, I i , ,t H1 1 I W . ,..I ll' ,ily ll an I ll l ' I' ,In fl' ,' ff! l ' 1 H ffvxxf ,L WW X ul' 4 . 11, hand X W Uv, fill: lllln Q ' hy, im hi JI! will -uri ,fp 'Q ':gUi'qK! calls in the school, principally the operetta and the senior play. In this class certain stock methods of make-up are taught, but the real finesse comes from the students' own study and observation of living faces and expressions. May 2 and 4, our band gives a concert for Groups I and II, respectively, in which several good comedy and group numbers are offered. The purpose of these concerts is to promote in- terest in the band and their campaign for new uniforms. May 20, the Fourth Annual Band Festival of Southern California is again held in our sta- dium. There are guest bands from Lancaster, San Luis Obispo, Lompoc, Carpinteria, Ven- tura, Fillmore, Santa Paula, and Oxnard. From four to five o'clock they parade up State Street to the Court House, where they are served sup- per by the P.-T.A. The big evening concert is like a pageant, as one by one the bands march down the hill from the flag pole in their hand- some uniforms of various colors and play upon their arrival. Mr. Herbert Clark, director of the Long Beach Municipal Band and consider- SENIOR PLAY CAST Bottom row: F. Johnson. Sudbury, Blanchet, M. Bartlett, Thornsberry, Miss Poyntz, Second row: Wallace, Booth, E Miller, Hall, Guild, Begg, Coulter, Graham. Third row: S. Bartlett, Travis, Brewster, Royal, Rivera, Weston, Nettles, Denton. Fourth row: Drennen, Mary Somerville, Margaret Somerville, M Johnson, VVuest, Smedley, Forward, I. Miller, File, Eichelberger. -55- Q-A BAND ZDPCT, T Fowler, arvel, . Caver, M M er, Baxter, Nelson, Ehrenborg. Takusagawa, On redlund, Spo anley, Fink, F H Ros, O'Neil1, H. Gaver, Da TOVVI Bottom son, E. Raw HCC Lawre ls, McDanie Miller, Eaton, ms, VVil ors, s. ehurg, Doty, W. Hughes, George, Maj rfurth, O'Connor, Fri LIC Mr. McAllister, Q TOVVZ Second Slaby, Marquez. Hughes, Coony, Rue. oley, Banks, Pearson. Co ge, Longmire, od Lowe, Wolcott, Fillippini, Ervin. H Third row: Minotto, Hazard, ORCHESTRA Cava- , Tunger Hancock, David Church. Kircher, and Bea dsleyg sccond violin: Benedetto. Franco, -in Th Var ES mistress, Cagoulid Emmons, concert F rst violin: .Q L.- L3 E 5 CLI 5 E ca M 1 EE 5 o fn ec. fu LJ Q6 O v E o 2 3 T. : sv if m :J -1 uf 0 2 E N! O 2 .E o :E .: U U. D4 vm F4 E T5 U H GJ E -: U w E E 3 U O U U -4 A E. E : : I Sf 7: .2 A :Z il' .2 Spoonerg t1'ombon'e: and Gross, Frecllund. Goodman, Cu nningham. arinet cl Carlsong and oody. M klin, 311 1: horn: Gotug Motto, Baudino, Marvel pet Ill S0113 tru .Q .Q o U 31 9' VE rf TJ : m LZ N Q E -54 -LT A 'E CH C- C 3- , 'U C IG 'U E E G5 2 97 2 an Q ci o m F U E .J cn : H 5 E E O .Zi U L E E 5 : L1 C1 .n I 1: rs .v Ld TJ 5 ..- .. o .2 to 5 ed one of the most outstanding band masters in the United States, honors us by coming as guest conductor to lead some numbers by the massed bands-a band that really is a band. Also fea- tured is Virginia Cushman, noted solo cornetist, who presents Trixie, a selection composed and dedicated to her by Herbert Allan Clark. Con- gratulations to those who had part in putting over such a splendid performance. Friday, May 6, the orchestra presents a very fine concert featuring a number by the high school instrumental trio, a selection from the popular Thais,', which is very beautifully done by Betty Emmens, violin, Jean Tapie, 'cellog and Flora Engelbertson, piano. Also featured is a 'cello solo by ,Iean Tapie. The music is very good, and lighter in type than the one presented in January. May 20 is the annual R.O.T.C. Field Day, at which time the cadets show off their abilities in the stadium for many interested spectators. First is a graduation parade following which the graduating cadets receive their military training certificates. There is competitive drill among the companies and platoons, manual of arms for platoons, non-commissioned officers, privates, graduates, and light weights, manual of the saber for officers, tug-o-war, wall-scaling, fin- als in the fencing tournament, and awards for the most outstanding ofiicer, non-commissioned officer, private, and bandsmen of the year, also markmanship awards. We're pretty proud of ou1' battalion and its members. Outstanding in the way of assemblies we have again this year, Jack Rank, a one-man show with his lightning changes of clothes and character in a Shakespearean Revue. In classwork, Miss Noyes' Builders To- gether class has a Mexican luncheon at the home of Ed Platz, and also visits the Monte- cito Catholic Church, which is of Mexican architecture. Mrs. Myers' Builders Together class has been having several speakers who have made recent trips to Mexico. Mrs. Gertrude Dickerson's radio voice class has been doing skits in advertising for the senior The Trio: Elizabeth Emmons, Flora linglehcrtsorr, Iean Tapie. l play, and is preparing a fourteen minute com- mercial advertisement for KTMS. In projects they have had some good program material- dramatizations of famous stories, interesting stories of men of the navy, and a children,s hour. There is a growing request for a second semester course in radio voice, Mrs. Dicker- son's 10A English class has been having panel discussions on many things, including the de- merit system, the monitor system, and the wel- fare council. The topics are chosen by the students and an attempt is always made to have other faculty members present to correct any chance errors. Mrs. Marguerite Blair's Romance of Language class has an 6'International supper for which members of the class are divided into nationality groups-French, Spanish, German, Italian, Latin, and Scandinavian. Different items on the menu and program, as songs and dances, which are in charge of Gloria Cope- land, also represent the different nations. Mr. james Woods, Occupation class takes the prize for numerous activities. For every subject they take up, they either take a trip, have movies, or outside speakers, sometimes all. In studying agriculture and forestry, they visit the gardening class, make projects, have movies, and a talk by someone in the forestry depart- ment, for mining they have films, for manu- facturing, they visit a dairy and a bakery, in building construction, they visit an unfinished house, for transportation, they go to the Southern Pacific round house and the freight depot, for communications, the post office and telephone company, for foods, packing houses and wholesale houses, and also the filtration plant, the Westwick Iron Works, and the St. Paul Dye Works. Mr. Melvin Wells' electricity and radio classes visit the Edison substation, the electro- plating works, and the'Biltmore Hotel power plant. Mr. L. L. Ingraham takes his printing classes to the News-Press plant, also to Schaueris Printing Studio to see the Olive and Gold run off. Mr. Merritt Slonikerls mechanical drawing classes have been making blueprints of things for Mr. Wells' electrical drawing class. Some of the boys in his architectural drawing class have entered contests for making plans for small houses or roadside stations, following certain rules and specifications. The first part of the month, Mr. Stewart Paulin takes his advertising class to the News- Press plant to study the process of printing papers, and to some engraving plants to study photo-engraving processes. They have also been having some of the leading business men in town as speakers. The last two months, lX4fr. Roy Thompson's commercial arithmetic class has been having several speakers, such as spe- cialists in the line of insurance, bank merchants, and a Building and Loan representative. D, s , 3 J .4 J 1 5 NON-COM MISSIONED OFFICERS Zanini, Thompson, atz, Pl hellc, Cl' V stef, cb W os, Surey, R Ludlow. Yarbrough, Da hodes R 05 Ri I nlenez, de ick, FC F urlhut, H Dunn. Scrgeant VV ttom ro Bo raniklin. Clcuclenny. VVall, Takasagawa. F ockrem, Favro, L lllman, St alkcr, Langmack, W Green, DEH n, Drsn I0 EH D Banks, Riecard, I. Stich Josselyn, Hiller, vks, Giacommoto, VVoodwarcl, Hollinger, Pa WV ond ro EC S ri:-st. P Quiddy, Hugh:-s, Mac Cooks, tlett, iller,Daniels. Tenney, Ca M erg, Sowell, rb V ands 1, Gil Mc ollensteiner, Julian. Nesbitt, Chauvel, Howe, iller. H M Third row: Franco, Begg. Wilder, - - - Q Q, COMMISSIONED OFFICERS Captain Carpenteir, Cortez, MacFadden, Darrow, Thornsberry, Miratti, VVeber, Belmonte, Eckles. Bowman, Hughes. Longer, Elliott, Fraser, Firestone, Loustalot. Ienkins, Fowler, Tozier, Motto, Merkel, Ashworth, Westfall, Gregory. Mrs. Edna Schuttels and Mrs. Dorothy Mayls boys' and girls' cooking classes have a picnic at Tucker's Grove toward the last of the month, doing all outdoor cooking. About the middle of the month, Mrs. Schutte's Child Care class makes visits to nurseries in town. This month Miss Jean Marvin's advanced clothing classes have as speakers, the depart- ment head of the Hughes store, a professional buyer talking on what to look for in buying ready-made garments, and a stylist. They also Visit a fur store to learn how to buy furs. The first part of May, Mrs. Olive John- ston's Household Science classes visit a bakery, The peoples choice: Arthur Chauvel. , V ,. . si. .fi K . . we z gp Q -Qs as is J X S' W ins ,.,, mf' 9542 v . 0.43 3 2, if mlxwpif 7,25 s ' fs ? w.... f ..-'. I 3 ' ee about the middle of the month a dairy, and toward the last of school, the filtration plant. As to class projects, they have had some in- teresting ones on glass-making and cellophane and its uses. Thursday, May 12, Art Chauvel is elected student body president for next year, with Ra- chel Ann Walker as vice-president, Nileletta Coulter as secretary, Chuck Rothert as treas- urer, Barbara Gray as girls' athletic manager, Jack Mora as boys' athletic manager, Margie Eastman as song leader, and Allan Clark as yell leader. The chief social event of the month is a Queen Mary Elizabeth Johnson I. -70... .... , i Queen and Attendants: Frances Romer, Rachel Walker. Patsy Bass, Queen Mary. Mary Bartlett, Betty Nelson, Maxine Clark. May Day dance in the girls' gym on Friday, April 29, featuring the coronation of a May Queen by President Wayne MacRostie. Can- didates for queen are voted on by the boys, who select Mary Johnson. The six girls next highest, Maxine Clark, Rachel Walker, Frances Romer, Patsy Bass, Mary Bartlett, and Betty Nelson, are her attendants. The other eight are garland girls, who march directly in front of the procession to clear the 25 foot aisle leading from the orchestra to the flower laden throne, Mary and Margaret Somerville, the two court- iers, enter next, followed by Janice Wilson, the crown and scepter bearer. Immediately after the procession, President MacRostie crowns the queen, who reigns at the floor show. Wayne then dances the first dance with her to start the evening ofi' again. The dance is semi- formal, girls-ask-boys, admission by buying bids, and is one of the most colorful new social high- lights of the year. In celebration of National Boys' Week, May 2 to 7, the girls of the school elect a mayor-Wayne MacRostie, a city attorney- Howard Eckles, and a police judge-Bill El- liott, who take over the affairs of city govern- ment for one whole day, with junior high and grammar school students filling the councilmen's seats. Many civic improvements are discussed and finally, Mayor MacRostie introduces Mr. Conley Davies, director of the program on Sat- urday for National Boys' Week, who outlines the activities of the day. May 7, the Aviation Club has its annual picnic, which is a barbecue at Tuckeris Grove. May 5, the high school Hi-Y has a party, and the Spanish Club has a barbecue after school at West Beach. May 13, the Commercial Club has its Spring Sport Dance in the girls' gym with Dory Hidalgo's orchestra, and later in the month a beach party. The Usherettes and the Beata Clubs have spring formals the fourteenth and twenty-first, respectively. The first week in May, the Alpha Club gives a tea for the mothers of its present mem- bers at the home of Bettey Ashley, and later in the month, a semi-formal party. The French Club also has a spring dance, May 14. Mr. Roy Thompson's Stamp Club has an ex- hibit in the main hall showcase the middle of the month. They have been having different speakers who own specialized collections of stamps, and have worked out an interesting ex- periment of sending an envelope to cities by the names of Roy and Thompson so that when the envelope is returned it bears the two postmarks. In sports, there are varsity track meets at Santa Maria, May 13, with Santa Paula here, May 20, and the final C. I. F. meet here, May 21. The varsity baseball team meets Ventura May 7, at Ventura, and May 28 here. Coach Schutte's 1938 edition of the Don varsity baseball team proves to be a very form- idable outfit, boasting victories over some of the finest nines in Southem California. Although not a baseball man himself, Schutte took over -71- ALPHA CLUB Bottom row: Saunders, House, NVagner. Sweetser, Moore, Lambrtcht, Kircher. Second row: Nelson, Kessler, Rhodeamel, McCarthy, Bartlett, Metz, Hirt, McNeil, Chapman. Henderson. Third row: Fridell, Hartfeld, Farrar, Cayce, Filling. McNab, McKinnon, VVoods. Ashley, Mathiason. the head diamond job with the leaving of Skip Winans, who formerly coached this sport. Schutte was greeted with excellent matc- rial as practically every player in the starting line-up has had experience, either on the high school team or on some town team. Charlie Sylvester, southpaw first-baseman and home run king, has been scouted by a major league ball club and has been termed an excellent pros- pect. Last year Sylvester was awarded the Daddy Robertson bat for completing the season with the highest batting average, and he appears certain to walk off with this honor again this year. The Don varsity squad was sent an invita- tion to participate in the Southern California Invitational Baseball tournament, which was held at Pomona over the Easter holidays, but due to a misunderstanding of dates the Santa Barbara team was not entered. Several spec- tators who viewed the tournament stated that the Dons would have had a Hne chance of winning. Games have been played with the Japanese VARSITY BASEBALL Bottom row: Valentino, Arrellanes, Chavez, Anderson, Hartman, Clary. Sceond row: Batzianis, Rogers, Beaudette, Gordon, W'estfall, Renga, Stevens. Third row: Coach Schutte, Sylvester, Merlo, Kent, Cmanagerj, Bodie, Cmanag.rJ. 172, Boys Club, Santa Paula, Santa Maria, San Luis Obispo, Carpinteria, and Ventura. The Dons easily turned back the Japanese Boys Club but were not so successful in their Hrst encounter with the Santa Paula Cardinals. Sylvester pounded out a homer in the seventh inning of this game but that didn't stop the Cards from chalking up a 7-5 victory. In their next meeting the score was almost identical, but this time the Dons were on the winning end, 6-5. Tony Chavez, slender third baseman, belted a two base hit to drive in two runs late in the ninth inning and save the game for the Dons. Johnnie Valentino, ace shortstop and relief pitcher, received credit for this vic- tory as he replaced Johnnie Cordon in the eighth inning. Gordon pitched air tight ball, limiting the Cards to three hits. Pitching duties were usually evenly di- vided between Eynon Rogers and Gordon, with Valentino available to hurl when needed. Joe Merlois bulky frame was always to be found behind the plate signaling the Don pitcher to put the old horsehide right across the middle. The team lined up with Merlo behind the plate 5 either Rogers or Gordon on the mound, BEGINNERS FENCING Bottom Lrow: Goodier, Captain Carpenter, Bonazzola. Second row: McRae, Ludlow. Third row: Halferty, Furlbut, Oliver, Ash. Fourth row: Chauvel, Darrow, Merkel, Stratton. CLASS B FENCING TEAM Bottom row: McFadden, Captain Carpenter, Eckles. Top row: Giacomotto, Longmire, Hughes, Denton. Charlie Sylvester, first base, Henry Arellanes, second base 3 Johnnie Valentino, shortstop g Tony Chavez, third base, Jack Wfestfall, left- fieldg Maynard Hartman, centerfield, and Renga, rightfield. May 6, there is a three-team fencing meet at the Biltmore Hotel, with Los Angeles Junior College, Santa Barbara State, and Santa Bar- bara High School competing. May 1.0, the B Squad meets the Middleland Private School team at Los Olivos. The Racketeers travel southward the morning of May 7 to play Montebello High, 1937 C. I. F. champs. That afternoon, they meet Fairfax High, one of the two contenders for the Los Angeles City Championship. Thursday, May 12, they play Ventura, the fol- lowing week the State College Freshmen and the Santa Barbara Stadium Club seniors. May 21, Tom Kruger, Paul Haupert, and Bobby Mc- Campbell enter the Southern California Junior Championship Matches. The girls have a spring play day at Santa Paula, May 6 and May 21, The G. A. A. has a play day for tennis, badminton, and table ten- nis, which will be started off with a breakfast for the guests who come from Ventura County, Antelope Valley, Carpinteria, and Santa Bar- bara. With swimming days, beach parties, and light dresses prevalent, summer is known to be not far off, as May and Reel IV fulfill their capacity. -73- Z! ri xlglillllx lilllfl- 719' ae Q ' ' 'Q 6 3 ale-L Z X -1 ,fi I lslilf if . ' W if 1 REEL IV 5 1 In . If-:ie I' i . B- A -. 1 v - -f ' . . . ' 6 X X , 3 1, ! ' lr . . Sf 5' Q ling ' V5 Ex. j x . ' FF f I . 'A 405 , f 1 ' , 532 E- , .5 ' if 'i- --97' EESE' Eg!! f fi Eg: FEE? F 1 1 -12'-Q T: -9' ' -f - - ss . 4 V 3 4 :'gE',2 - , - ? 'Q t i E . I I 1 ' f J i 1 June, Reel V, the last reel of the show, finds Miss Pasty Bynum's two home arts classes giving their annual party as a part of their project. The girls bring all the food and do all the prep- aration right at ,the cottage. They are organized as a family group with host, hostess, children, and waitresses, and act their parts accordingly. Also, each week as a part of their classwork they plan, buy, prepare, and serve meals to invited guests, with one girl in the class taking charge. At different times they take up the various types of table service. A trip is taken to the Cali- fornia Employment Bureau to acquaint the girls with the set-up in Santa Barbara for getting jobs and the qualifications necessary for holding jobs. Members of Mrs. Dorothy May's girls' cooking classes serve the senior tea to the grad- uating girls and their mothers. Miss Marvin's advanced clothing classes have a beach picnic the last week of school with hot dogs and pancakes. Miss Eleanor Henry's French classes have made a number of projects on such interesting subjects as French archaeology, costumes, dogs, history, and biographies of famous F renchmen. During the last two weeks of school, Mr. Roy Wickstrum takes his physics II class to the telephone company and KTMS, his physics I class to the round house, and his chemistry classes to the ice plant, the filtration plant, and 2. modern dairy. Mr, Charles Pruitt's Fusion Math class has been studying permutation, commutation, the probabilities of the slot machine and games of ten, and has had reports on the mathematics of investments and insurance and the plans and study of finance. Mrs. Beatrice Truesdale's geometry classes have been studying the relationship of geometry to design and working on a non-geometric log- ical system. Mr. Earl Murray's class in solid geometry has taken up the study of the comparative measurements of the simple types of solid fig- ures as cylinders, cones, prisms, pyramids, 11-A HI-Y Bottom row: Thompson, Clark, Chauvel, Hickock, Priest, Jolly. Second row: Reichard, Kruger, Schwatzberg, Osborne, Winder, Denton, Third row: Bartlett, Woolworth, Hartley, Nesbitt, Minah. 12-B HI-Y Bottom row: Yarbrough, Motto, O'Brien, Franklin. Hatland. Second row: Parks, Young. Glahn, Moss, DaRoss. Rasmussen. Favro. Third row: Miller, VVestwick, Van Den Bergh, Goeglien, Harteld. spheres, and cubes, and the most economical shape for each figure. The course also includes a little work in navigation and astronomy. During a good share of the semester the high school Hi-Y has conducted a series of radio programs entitled i'What Do You Think?,' when a discussion is carried on debating various angles of questions concerning the youth of to- day. As the last event in June for the Hi-Yls is a Ladies' Night Dinner given in honor of the eighteen graduating Hi-Y members. The Hi-Y will continue to be active during the summer with its ofiicers training course at Camp Com- fort, attendance at the National Hi-Y Congress at Bered, Kentucky, June 25-29, a pack trip in thg High Sierras the last half of August with Mr. Murray and Conley Davies in charge, and the Southern California Hi-Y camp in the San Bernardino Mountains. In addition to each individual Hi-Yls pro- gram, are group discussions, social activities, ser- vice projects, and educational features. Some of the types of discussions are the Hi-Y's on the highways, conduct of high school students in social activities and public affairs, studies of vacations, leisure time activities, problems of marriage and home building, personality de- PRESS CLUB Bottom row: Smedley, Eberts, VVarren, Benton, Xewsome. Second row: Bernasconi. Hoyt. Kincaid. Edwards, Merrill. Booth. Tllircl row: Cortez. Verrill. Ulrich. Devaney, liaves, Rich, xxvEilkC1'. ,75- BIG S SOCIETY Bttom row: Newsome, Minnear, Gilbert, Felger, Bass. Gray. Second row: Fong, Romer, Verrill, Peacock, Moses. Acquistapaee. Mrs. Mucnch. Third row: Langlo, Dickerson, XVarren, Bonazzola. F., Murphy, Hill. Finster, Marquez, Kelly. velopment, and Christian ideals and church ac- tivities. Friday, June 10, is the annual Press Club banquet which is given for everyone who has ever been on the Forge staff. Also on June 3 is an R. O. T. C. dance in the girls' gym. Toward the end of the semester, the French Club has its annual farewell beach picnic. June 9, the G. A. A. has its spring sport banquet, with Dorothy Finster in charge. BOYS' TENNIS A very active tennis program has been car- ried on this spring. Early in the school year four additional courts were completed on the old R. O. T. C. drill ground, making it possible to double the number of students in tennis classes. In developing the program emphasis has been placed on increasing the number of participants in the game and raising their level of skill, rather than turning out a championship team. Team play, however, has not be neglected. More than thirty boys have participated in inter- school competition this semester. Three teams have been organized. During the year the var- sity will have played fourteen matches, thc sec- ond team nine and the third team eight. In addition, thc high school sent representatives to the five most important Southern California HIGH SCHOOL DANCE ORCHESTRA Marvel, Long, Motto. M. Gutierrez, D. H Loustalot. idalgo, Sylvester, Clark, R, llitlalgo, P. Gutierrez -76-- -un ,..f v .os W.. FRENCH CLUB l, Englebertson, Walker. askel H son, Kincaid, Pierce, ad Staples, Pl row: Denton, Bottom orfant, Martin, Dei Alva, P ard, Hannell OYW r,F Brewste Ashworth, Nettles, Goodier, F. Secou d row: YCSKOHC. ths Hoelscher, Romer, Devzmey, Grifh Williams ford, ed B l, eston, Blake, Fel Bartlett, W l'0WI ird Th Tozier. interscholastic tournaments. Fullerton Mid- winter, Dudley Cup, C. I. F. Class B, Ojai and Fullerton Spring, as well as the Long Beach Mid-Winter, Beverly Hills Spring and the Sounthern California junior Championships at Midwick Country Club. The outstanding indi- vidual achievement of the year was Tommy Kruger's success in winning a place on the Southern California Junior Davis Cup Squad in january. Bob Wormser, who for some time has been identified with junior tennis development in Santa Barbara, became tennis coach and in- structor at the beginning of the spring semester. His tennis classes will now be conducted throughout the year. The number of boys en- rolled this semester has never been less than eighty. More boys than could be accommodated have applied for instruction. A good many boys who failed to show interest and earnestness in the work were dropped from the rolls. A summary of team activity may be of in- terest. During the fall semester, the varsity made an over-night trip to Taft, where Santa Bar- bara defeated the local high school eleven matches to none. Oxnard was defeated on our own courts and Montebello High School, 1937 C. I. F. champions, lost to us in the south. This was our most notable victory and presaged a successful spring season. Unfortunately, how- ever, two of our best players, Ray Smith and Bob Odman, left Santa Barbara at mid-year. This left us facing a stiff schedule with an un- expectedly weakened team. In order to reach the C. I. F. play-offs, it would have been necessary to defeat four of the following five schools: Glendale, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Los Angeles and Montebello. Of these, Santa Barbara defeated only Glendale. In fairness it should be said that the illness of Eddie Allen during a major part of the season, coupled with the loss of Smith and Odman, proved a handi- cap too heavy to overcome. Toward the close of the season, we defeated Fairfax High School, conqueror of Los Angeles High School, so that the quality of our team is not far below that of the leading schools of Southern California. As this is written, matches with Ventura High School, State College Freshmen and Santa Bar- bara Stadium Club remain to be played. The line-up of the Varsity is as follows: First Doubles--Tom Kruger and Paul Haupert. Second Doubles-Ed Doty and Ray Silva, Singles: Wally Gregory, Eddie Allen, Cam- eron Fair, Bobby McCampbell, jerry Motto, Rip Oeschler. Of these letter-winners all but Gregory, Doty, Motto, and Oeschler will return for 1939 Varsity competition. The second and third team matches have been arranged to furnish practice and secure development of the players through difficult competition, rather than in the hope of winning. The second team has played Ventura, Oxnard 1781 and Santa Paula Varsities, Beverly Hills second team, Cate and Thatcher Schools. Three addi- tional matches will be played before the close of school. This team defeated Santa Paula and Thatcher, lost to Beverly Hills by one point and was defeated decisively by Ventura, Oxnard and Cate. The boys who will be recommended for Junior Varsity letters are Lorenzo Dall'Armi, jack Adameck, Bob Perry, Bobby Knowles, Leon Moss, and Reese Wilkerson. Others who may qualify before the end of the semester are Bob Wheeler, Jimmy Vendrame, Dick Bachen- heimer and Ralph Renga. The third team has played in an informal league with Ventura, La Cumbre and Santa Barbara junior High Schools. It also met and defeated the recently organized Santa Maria High School Varsity in two matches, Boys who have played on the third team are: Ed Ger- mann, joe Nakayama, Harold Rodness, Jack Hickols, Stanley Bartlett, Ray Gage, Howard Hicks, Elmer Bailey, Akira Endo, George Graves, Bob Pyle, Tommy Hamilton and Bob Voyan. The last week of school is a lazy one for most Santa Barbara High School students- warm weather, no books, few assignments-just time to chat, play cat and hangman, read, amuse oneself, and above all, O. and G. auto- graphing. For the seniors itis a strenuous week, rehearsing for graduation-walking up and down the hill in the hot sun, but at least there are no classes. It is their week, the one envied by all under classmen. And finally, june 17 rolls around- The graduation Processional March rings through the stadium which is nearly filled with excited relatives and friends of the members of the graduating class. The long double line starts its journey winding down the hill from the flag pole. Two hundred and twenty-five of them pour into the platform surrounded by Santa Barbara greenery. Attentively they listen to the ceremony that is much the same as in other graduations, but they know that for them it marks the end of one of the happiest and most carefree Deriods of their lives. The long awaited diplomas are awarded, and one by one the recipients walk nervously across the long length of the platform. Finally comes Santa Barbara, Hail!,', the benediction, and its all over but the shouting, hand-shaking, and the graduation dance at Rockwood. We, the Senior Classes of 1938, are at once glad that this period of work is completed, yet sorry to think of the unforgettable good times, friendships, and experiences that have done everything to make us happy. We acknowledge our debt of gratitude to teachers, underclass- men, each other. and all who go to make up the term school', and all it means. While the future holds for us much in hope and promise, high school, as a stepping stone, is indispensable. So, with the spring behind us and the summer of our lives ahead. we say good-bye. The curtains close, the lights go up. The show is overNwe hope you enjoyed it. .,D,,,,.V,i?4g?.. . 1 Q gi P if gil HQ up 4 . ll.. 2 V ' . ,I 4 'J , ' ' ,V , 1 - ' 1 fi!! , , .5 A ' PATSY O'Blf'Y'h'N' BASS f Tulsa, Oklahoma . 'i J' ' IZA Class Secretary, 4, Big S President, 4, Beata Executive, 4, Press Club, 4, G.A.A., 2, 3, 4, Usherettes Club, 3, 4. Woodbury College ESTELLA OLENA BEARDSLEY Ashland, Oklahoma Entered from Visalia Union School, 4, Forge Reporter, 4. Visalia College De Beaute High CHARLES WTLLIAM BEGG Goleta, California Varsity Football, 2, 3. 4, Glee Club, 4, Sweethearts, 4, Stage Door, 4. Work ANTHONY JAMES BELMONTE Santa Barbara, California R. O. T, C. Second Lieutenant, 2, R.O,T,C, First Lieutenant, 3, R.O.T.C. Captain, 4, Circulation Manager of Forge, 4, Rose of the Danube, 2, Trial by Jury, 3, Glee Club, 2, 3, Hi-Y, 4: Forge Staff, 4, Military Training at U.C,L.A. DoRoTHY INEz ALLEN Los Angeles, California Land of Heart's Desire, 4, Sweet- hearts, 4. Public school nurse FLORENE MARGARET ANTLES Selma, California A Cappella, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 2, 3, Trial by Jury, 3, Land of Heart's Desire, 3, The Bethlehem Road, 4, Triple Trio, 3, 4. Undecided A - . t a ar TI T i I Var f 4 .. all, , The ethlehem ' .- 4, Ad r' 1 g Co ittee, 3, ' ork 04- MARY EVELYN BARTLETT Santa Barbara, California Chairman of Election Board, 4, Lead in Stage Door, 4, Usherettes Club, 4, G.A.A., 4, Service Committee, 4, Election Board, 3, Dance Recital, 3. College P3-A 1., l fx Q2 J all WTS 1 38 , yr. , ,, ,A ' , ifffgff, . f., ' i ERNESTINE M. BATAsT1N1 Los Angeles, California ' Dress shop owner BETTY JANE BECKER Denver, Colorado Usherettes Club, 4, Beata Club, 4, Scholarship Society. 4, Commercial Club, 3, 4, Equestrienne Club, 4. Court reporter WILLIAM HENRY' BEHRENS San Francisco, California Varsity Track, 3, 4, Varsity Basket- ball, 3, 4, Spanish Club, 4, The Beth- lehem Road, 4, Baseball, 3. College BEULAH LoUIsE BENNETT Grenn, Kansas Undecided -7 9.. VVALTER HERBERT ALLEN, JR. Santa Barbara, California R.O.T.C. Corporal, 2, 3, 4, Hi'Y, Z, 3, 4, Hi-Y Social Chairman, 3, Hi-Y Song Leader, 2. College KENNE1'H DALE ARNOLD Santa Barbara, California Spanish Club, 4, Intramural Basket- ball, 2, 3, 4, Intramural Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Intramural Track. 2, 3, 4, Meat Retailing Business VVILLIAM AsHwoRTH, JR. Santa Barbara, California Business Manager of Forge, 4, Scholarship Society President, 4, Schole arship S'ociety, Z, 3, 4, Seal Bearer, 4, Press Club, 4, Quill and Scroll President, 4, French Club, 3, 4, Fene- ing Squad, 3, 45 R.O,T.C. Second Lieu- tenant, 4. Pomona College s Je:-.f5J.4 ' 2,567 4, ' EDWARD ARTHUR BASHAM Indianapolis, Indiana Varsity Tennis, 4, Hi-Y, 3, 4, French Club, 3, 4, Legislature Representative, 3, Pro and Con Club, 4, Entered from Laguna Blanca School for Boys, 3, College ' ' fi g ,,-, 5 , t .,, ' f- fa ' fi .., . : 53 A .. ,.,.. L 5 :I X 8 12 ,-..- 1 ' . se wi QA. 'H' A . or .. .. SQ' F ,: D - v : , zmiiw' ROBERT FRANCIS BENTON Copy Editor of Forge, 45 Scholarship Society, 2, 3, 45 Seal Bearer, 45 Quill and Scroll, 45 Press Club, 45 Forge Reporter, 3, 45 Phine Photo Phinishers, 45 Senior Scout Club. 3. Santa Barbara State College5 Uni- versity of California -L CHA E: DWARD RNASCONI Barb 1 ,aifornia 4.1! Varsity Bagg 2, 3, 45 Varsity ' rack, 2' 3, 4, Assistant Forge Sports NEd'tor 41.-l'The Bethlehem Road 3' g ,V ,. , , , u e R Legislature, 45 Sophomore 2. College CHARLOTTE BLAKE Berkeley, California French Club, 3, 45 Scholarship So- ciety, 25 Equestrienne Club, 35 Foot Circus, 45 Christmas Toy Mending Committee Chairman, 35 Poetry Club, 4. University of California at Berkeley DONALD EARL BOWMAN Mangum, Oklahoma R.O.T,C., 2, 3, 45 R.O.T.C. Second Lieutenant, 45 Scholarship Society, 2, 3, 45 Seal Bearer, 45 Band, 2, 35 Spanish Club, 45 The Bethlehem Road, 45 Senior Scouts Club, 3. STEPHEN A. BERGZTK Adron, Ohio College LILLTAN B,-XBE'l l'E BIRRELI. Chicago, Illinois Scholarship Society, 3, 45 Sweet- hearts, 45 Latin Club. 4. U.C.L.A. GEORGE DAVID BOOTH Los Angeles, California Olive and Gold Staff, 45 Press Club Treasurer. 45 Forge Staff, 3, 45 Phlne Photo Phinishers Club Treasurer. 45 Senior Scouts Treasurer, 35 Growing Pains, 35 Sweethearts,', 45 Gloria 35 K l'he Bethlehem Road, 4. l'lAZEL FRANCES BREWSTER Santa Barbara, California Student Body Vice-president. 45 D.A.R. Representative, 45 Scholarship Society, 2. 45 ILA..-X., 3, 45 French Club. 2, 3, 45 Student Legislature, 2. 3, 45 Toast Masterts Contestant, 25 Diction Contest, 2, 45 Home Room President, 25 Opera Matinee, 25 Girls League Delegate, 4. Law at Stanford RM I-f Q- s'2' c f ,Ewing ,,, CIP Q 519 Q55 38 P JANETT YARS ' e, ash' tot I' rls Le Y ' cu ive rd, 25 i School. O lan 0 'gon, 5 is l 45 F St it red f it ., , 4. ra State Coll I5 U, C. Y MARGARET GIl,I,ARD CALEF Oxnard, California Service Committee. 45 Ring and Pin Committee. 45 Usherettes Club, 45 Forge Staff, 45 Sports, 2, Santa Barbara State College EDWARD STYLES CARRILLO Santa Barbara. California Booster, 25 Student Legislature, 3. ROBERT CHARLES CARTER Bedford, Indiana Entered from Ventura Iunior High School, 2. California Polytechnic Engineering 1 'ti' 5 l -. or . .t. A A A 'L at Berk ' iii iii l . . . , il Xftsfg 5 be W s i Z' ...,,.,.,. fr ii sl VVork , . S, .,.. : :i q ,,,, .,.,- A , . . ' Sfifs .5 1.: 2 '..r -, Qi Rf il .. M f i. . W, LL., .-80,. ELEANOR PARK CALEF Santa Barbara, California Usherettes Club, 45 Christmas Toy Committee, 4. Santa Barbara State College5 nursing school DAVID CARLSON Lompoc, California Scholarship Society, 2, 35 Spanish Club, 3, 45 R.O.T.C., 2, 45 Ring and Pin Committee, 3. College EDGAR CARSKADEN McMechen, VVest Virginia Home Room Vice-president, 25 Sweethearts, 45 American Citizen Class Play, 35 Beginning Dramatics Play. 4, College DARIO CASTAGNOLA Santa Barbara, California Sophomore Football, 25 Varsity Foot- ball, 3, 4. Undecided NELLIE MAE CONNOR Dallas, Texas Entered from Booker T. Washington High School, 4. Santa Barbara State College JULIETTE CONSTANCE CORTEZ Santa Barbara, California Chairman of Costume Designing Com- mittee for Spring Dance Recital, 3, Secretary of Home Room, 3, t'Sweet- hearts, 4. VVoodbury Business College Q! -K 065 E ' R AY RA Santa bara, ' ' r 'a G.K ., 3, 4, Sports, 2. Nu sin 5 HOWARD ANDREW CUNNINGI-IAM Santa Barbara, California Monitor, 4. Undecided RosE ISABELL CASTAGNOLA Santa Barbara, California Business college JOSEPH S. CHENEY Santa Barbara, California Sophomore Football, 2, Varsity Foot- ball, 3, 45 Intramural Basketball, 3. College LEXLA ELIZABETH CLARK Portland, Oregon Entered from John Muir High School, 3. Costume Designer DARRELL E. CLENDENNY Le Dalles, Oregon Rose of the Danube, 3: The Bethlehem Road, 42 R.O.T,C. Corp- oral, 4. U.C.L.A. C PARA 17, f e 19 as 'CIP MARY E. COOPER Kanval, Colorado Entered from Kanval Public, Kanval, Colorado, 4. Work K LAWRE CHAR sCoRrEz, . Sant ar ar alifornia Ol v an old Assist Business Man er, Forge St , R.O.T,C. ' r, R. O, T. . Corporal, 35 .T, ergeant, 3, .O.T,C. First ergean 4: R.O.T . Lieutenant, 4, . mmittee. ' P e Photo Phinishers, , 45 Ticket Sales 4. , S ta Barba a State College FRANK LEONARD CULLOM Santa Barbara, California Sophomore Football, 2, Varsity Foot- ball, 3, 4, Varsity Track, 4, Varsity Club, 3, 4. Mechanic ROBERT HIRAM DAVID Los Angeles, California Student Legislature, 2, 4, Sophomore Football, 2g Varsity Football, 3, 4: French Club, 3, 4, Election Board, 43 Hi-Y, 3, 4, Orchestra, 2, 3, 4. Electrical Engineer ..81.... DOROTHY LEE CHAPIN Colorado Springs, Colorado Stage Make-up, 2, 3, 4, Usherettes Club, 4, Student Legislature, 4, S'ec- retary of Girls League VVelfare, 4, Latin Club, 45 Service Committee, 35 Noon Committee, 4. College yd V .K - I J I ,. ' if LILLEQELA H Boy V, Q' X753 a Ba ara, ' rnia l L' V0Orcliestr , . ,z Sc rship Sp- ciem Stag, Iak - p 5, 9Bargains ' f In ' th ',j.f3, KS ' earts,'Ai4. ' - ,sf -!Santa. jbafa ate C egfMMji,, Z - y , ef I . X f . fl. ' 4 .f , JJ X . r iff .Jfffy 2 f J MAXINE CLAIRE CLARK Vlfeldona. Colorado Forge Reporter. 3, 43 Senior Sweater Committee, 4, Olive and Gold Assistant Business Manager, 43 Program Com- mittee, 2g Girls League Election Board, 3, Home Room President, 2, 3. College JAMES ALLISON COMMON Santa Barbara, California Sophomore Football. 23 Varsity Foot- ball, 4, Lightweight Basketball,, 2. Merchant Marine l I J'JEmz Deir ,sa K . MABEII CHARLOTTE DEWEBER Santa Barbara, California Rose of the Danube, 25 Sweet- hearts, 43 Spring Dance Recital, 3, Production Manager of Spring Dance Recital, 3, Costume designing school EDWARD ROBERT DOTY Santa Barbara, California Varsity Tennis Team, 4. College or business college EDGAR VVESLY DUI-'F Omaha. Nebraska Scholarship Society. 2. 3, 4, Seal Bearer, 4. Construction engineer MAJOR DAVE EBERTS Santa Barbara, California Entered from Polytechnic High School. San Francisco, California, 3: Assistant Sports Editor of Forge, 3: Sports Editor of Forge, 4, Press Club Vice-president, 3, 4, Lightweight Bas- ketball, 33 Scial Committee, 35 Student Legislature, 4, The Bethlehem Road, 4, 'tSweethearts,', 4. Iournalism 11 ar f ,-. 'ai 3 Y Q s . 1 messes ' AL '. Q Q :t Ylk , 4' ' i f . .:.g-5 ', ' A I DORIS MAE DICKERSON Avon, South Dakota SBIg LSE, 43, 4, G.A.A., 2, 3, 45 DUNS, 3 y . College , 6 W Aw 9 V 9' ' 4, . AE LIZABETH UMM Paso Robles, California Student Legislature, 4, Commercial Club President, 4, Commercial Club Program Chairman, 33 Home Room Secretary, 23 Sweethearts, 4. Undecided FRED CI-IARLI2s DUFF Boise, Idaho Intramural Basketball. Z: Intramural Baseball, 2: Varsity Basketball, 3, 4. College JOSEPHENE MARTHA EBLE Baker, Montana Entered from Hubbard High School, Hubbard, Nebraska, 3. Beautician Q, P A , :WV v ,Q GMRS as 5. 4 5' R19 f Eb .R i t HOWARD HAL ECKLES Porterville, California Student Legislature, 2, 3, 4g Welfare Council. 4, Olive and Gold Sales Mana- ger. 4, R.O,T.C., Z. 3. 43 Sophomore Football, 23 R.O.T.C. Second Lieuten- ant, 4g R.O.T.C. First Lieutenant, 4. Agriculture College MARGUERITE HARFIET EGGER Casey, Iowa Scholarship Society, 35 Entered from Dixon Union High School, 3. Santa Barbara State College FRAN cas ELIZONDO Santa Barbara, California Undecided FRANK CARL EMMENS Santa Barbara, California Machinist -32- Q 2 ii 1' we ' fur ,P J --5 ' 'f .arra 4- f 11 2 25 it' ' A .Q E 11-' 11 ... , . , L .,.. ,,,, :Liv- l0'2f nal gn QM . Y ' 3 D, Q gJJCAJ1 , g Repoi , , 9 . Assi t usines Manager of Forf, -icago, Illin ll A ' ' f ni-'Q'FB'baI'miiQ' Los 'VLHSSQA wud- 4 fr. D. Y. ALTA RUTH EICHELBERODR Boise, Idaho Scholarship Society, 3, 43 The Beth- lehem Road, 4, Spanish Club, 45 Ring and Pin Committee, 39 Stage Door, 4. Santa Barbara State College WILLIAM PETTIGREW ELLIOTT Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada Chairman of VVelfare Council, 4, R.- O.T.C,, 2, 3, 43 R.O.T.C. First Lieu- tenant, 4: Election Board, 35 Hi-Y, 2, 3, 45 Hi-Y President, 4, Forge Re- porter, 4g Student Legislature, 2. 35 The Bethlehem Road, 4, Constitu- tion Revision Committee, 4, Chairman of Monitors Awards Committee, 3, Civil Service AKIRA R. ENDO Santa Barbara, California Gloria, 25 Glee Club, 25 Intra- mural Basketball, 3, 4. Santa Barbara State College: Hemp- hill Diesel Engineering Institute. fff'MEmfaf.015. E!! .. KI ' ' L Barbara alifor ' Home Roo ecretary. 3 chol s 'p Sixciet , 33 C Lea' e , ' S a in 3 C , 3 e ' ,iti n ss ecre- , , fi. I ed RW MARY LOUISE ETURY Santa Barbara, California Sports, Z3 Commercial Club, 2. Beauty College JoHN DUFAV FALXA Santa Barbara, California Student Body Treasurer, 43 Athletic Committee, 43 Finance Committee, 43 Student Legislature, 3, 43 Intramural Basketball, 33 Intramural Baseball, 33 Hi-Y, Z, 3, 43 Hi-Y Vice-president, Z3 - Hi-Y Sergeant-at-arms, 43 Home Room President. 2, 33 Booster, 2. Santa Barbara State College ALICE MAY FEATH ERS Bottineau, North Dakota Scholarship S'ociety, 2, 3, 43 Copy Editor of Olive and Gold, 43 Home Room Secretary, 3: Foot Circus, 4. Secretarial Work 'l J GN f N Q . ,July I g A Y 2 I .fe 19 4555 38 Q 1 mst! i 72 4 X c? l rx' -If A sw I Santa Maria, al' iia A Big S , 3, 43 'g S Vice-presi dent, 43 G,A.A., Z, 3, ' . .A. VI president, 43 Financia Adviso S ROBERT FILLIPPINI Santa Barbara, California Hi-Y, 3, 43 Band, Z, 43 Orchestra, 2, 3, Intramural Basketball, 43 Intra- mural Track, 4: R.O.T.C., 2. Marines D I . BEITY JEANNlZ IXEIELQR 1 League, 43 Student Legislature, All Star Hockey, Volleyball, Baske ball, Baseball, 2, 3, 43 Scholarship Society. 3. Santa Barbara State College ANGELA JOYCE FIN Ii DoRoI'HY ALICE FINs'rER Fellows, California Big S , 3, 43 Baseball Manager, 43 Cahone, Colorado Big S Sccretary-Treasurer, 43 G.A.- Band, 43 Entered f m Dove 'ret-k, A., 3, 43 All Star Teams in Sports, 2, Colorado, 4 3, 4. t Undecided ., i Davis College it 'W A W ' f- I I IU , Y iw! u xl ' Ur' I ' j N AN LWYNXFLRES A EDNA MAY FORWARD ttc ntanal Santa Barbara, California li d Gold 'i 'sines k nager. 42 Scholarship Society, Z, 3, 43 French Cho s ip 'r. e , 43 Seal Club, 3, 43 G.A.A., 3, 43 Big S , V43 B , 3 ' -' h Ii, 3, 43 F ici , Election Board, 43 junior and Senior 3, 3 R. , ' , Firs 1eutenant,4. . Ring Committee, 3, 4. niyei ' of K ornia. N College v V -I J DOLORES CATHERINE FEHRENBACHER Oxnard. California Undecided w ' . JESS RUBEN FRANCO ' Trinidad, Colorado Orchestra, 2, 3, 4: SwSf:fheart. 4: R.O.T.C. Corporal, 23 R.O.T,C. Sera geant, 4, College -33- VVILLIAM J. ERVIN Douglas, Arizona Secretary-Treasurer of Typo Club 4 R.O.T.C, Platoon Sergeant. 4. Y I Printing JEAN C. EXNER Milwaukee. VVisconsin Spanish Club, 4, Girls League Eltc tion Board, 33 Opera Matinee, 2 Equestrienne Club. 4. NVoodbury College JANE M. FARRELI. Fresno, California Commercial Club, Undecided 3, 4. . Rl IXTHERS ottii au, N -thaglakota Sc lars' ' icty, , 3, 43 Seal Bea , , c nd ' Archery, 23 F t Circus, 4 Secretarial or f I gf - in by Utes-k9'Ul ',f- if . 'UO X IKQ FUKUZAWA i, JJRAY AL J GE ' a n X ' ' n, W m' rf 145511 FSH' ciety, 2, 3, 49 Home S holarship , 45 Soci Lom- Q og cret , 35 Latin Club, 4. mittee, 4, spa lub, 3 , ii-Y, 45 A '-1 lege T T ethlehem Roa . f e Cf MORRIS F. GAVER, JR. .l Monrovia, California Band, 25 Orchestra, 25 Rose of the Danube, 35 R.O.T.C. Corporal 3. Landscape Architecture MYRTIS JANET GOODIER New York, New York Entered from Santa Barbara Girl's School, 35 Stage Make-up, 35 French Club, 3. 45 French Club Vice-president, 45 Usherettes Club, 4. University of California at Berkeley SYLVIA Cr0'l'TLIEB Syracuse, New York Entered from San Bernardino Junior College, 4. Business college l 1 l E HARRIET LUCXLLE GILBERT Santa Barbara, California All Star Hockey, 25 All Star Basket- ball, 35 Big S , 3, 45 Big S Presi- dent, 45 G,A.A., 2, 3, 45 Home Room Secretary, 25 Home Room President, 35 Volleyball Manager, 4. Dress designing school JOHN HENRY GORDON Santa Barbara, California Student Legislature, 2, 3, 45 Hi-Y, 3, 45 Hi-Y President, 3, 45 Varsity Baseball, 35 Typo Club, 3, 45 Typo Club President, 45 Booster, 25 Ticket Sales Committee, 4. College WESLEY H ENDERSON GRAY Santa Barbara, California College RM lv . ,59 4 19 3 'Cx' mo' W7AL'fER D. GREGORY Weatherford, Texas Varsity Tennis, 2, 3, 45 Hi-Y, 2, 3, 45 Ticket Committee, 3, 45 Wheels of Progress, 35 R.O.T.C. First Lieu- tenant, 4. Gas engineering MADELEN E E. GRIFFITHS Santa Barbara, California Glee Club, 2, 3, 45 French Club, 3, 45 Commercial Club, 45 Rose of the Danube, 25 Land of Hearts Desire, 35 Sweethearts, 4. f Scimta Barbara State College5 Stan- or DANxEL A. T'IALFER'I'Y Klamath Falls, Oregon Hi-Y, 3, 45 Hi-Y Council. 45 Scholar- ship Society, 25 The Bethlehem Road, 45 Phine Photo Phinishers, 45 Fencing, 4. Medicine ROBERT E. HAZARD Santa Barbara, California Typo Club Vice-president, 45 R.O.T,- C. Sergeant, 3. Printer -84- 8 P 'E - DUANE GREX'TAK Bremerton, Washington Hi-Y President, 35 Entered from South Gate High School, 2. Santa Barbara State College PETER N. GUTIERREZ Santa Barbara, California Rose of the Danube, 25 Trial by Jury, 35 Sweethearts, 45 Program and Rally Committee, 45 Varsity Foot- ball, 3, 45 Glee Club, 2, 3, 45 A Cap- pella, 2, 3, 45 Gloria, 45 The Beth- lchem Road, 4. College, ANNA WORTH HANNELL Santa Barbara, California Scholarship Society, 3, 45 French Club, 45 Land of Hearts Desire, 35 '1he Bethlehem Road, 45 A Cappella, 45 Sweethearts, 45 Gloria, 3. Santa Barbara State Collegeg Wood- bury College ROBERT EARL HEAGNEY Santa Barbara, California Typo Club Vice-president, 45 R.O.T.- C. Sergeant, 3. Printing it CHARLES MONTEZUMA PIUGHES Clay Pool, Arizona Orchestra. 2, Rose of the Danube,' 2, Glee Club, 2, R.O.T.C. Lieutenant, 4, Hi-Y, 4, Intramural Basketball, 4, Entered from Hope High School, Hope, New Mexico, 2. College v CLARA E. IvERsEN Buellton, California Glee Club, 2, Dance Recital, 3. VVork HELEN FRANCES JOHNSON Santa Barbara, California GA.A., 2. 3, 4, Sports, 2, 3, 4, Bad- minton Club, 4. University of Redlands LART T. KEITH LEY Alhambra, California Lightweight Basketball, 2, Light- weight Track, 2, Varsity Track, 3, 4, Intramural Track, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Basketball, 3, 4, Intramural Basketball, 2, 3, 4. Humbolt State -C. 1541 vm B ara ifornia oph re F all 2 Sc Ool Iass Orchestra . Sant ara State College ix, , bf' T M 'EN oo,JR . b . . 530. , 5 h HELEN MARIE HINSPEROER Chicago. Illinois Glee Club, 2, Dance Recital, 3. Undecided EARLINE ARTIE HOPKINS Los Angeles, California Scholarship Society, 4, G.A.A., 2, 3, 4, Band, 3, Big S , 4, Santa Barbara State College, Howard University: Medicine GERALOINE LUCILLE HOYT Oakland, California Usherettes Club, 4, Forge Staff, 3, 4, Assistant Editor of Olive and Gold. 4, Sports, 2, News Press Correspond- ent, 4, Press Club, 4. College NRA 17, f e 19 as ft- Il! PHYLLIS JEANETIE HUGHES Santa Barbara, California Editor of Olive and Gold, 4, French Club, 2, 3, 4, Equestrienne Club, 4, Scholarship Society, 4, Quill and Scroll, 4, Forge Reporter, 4, Press Club, 4. University of Redlands EDWARD CHARLES JEN KINS Santa Barbara, California R.O.T.C. First Lieutenant, 4, Rifle Team, 4, R.O.T.C. Sergeant, 3, R.O.- T.C. Armorer, 4. Architecture and General Building FRANK B. JULIAN, JR. Santa Barbara, California Scholarship Society, 2, 3, R.O.T.C. Corporal, 2, R.O.T.C. Sergeant, 4. University of California COLLEEN MARIAN KELLY Arroyo Grande, California Commercial Club, 2, Drum Major Club, 4, G.A,A., 3, 4. Business College 185.. VIOLA MARIE HILL Bakersfield, California Girls Athletic Manager, 4, Home Room President, 2, Scholarship Society, 3, Big S , 3, 4, Student Legislature, 2, 3, 4, G.A..-X., 2, 3, 4, G.A.A. Presi- dent, 4. College 3 ER .VIN HOL R ar. VVash' n ose o ubef' ' ' j'ury, Swee 4 1 ria, 2, 'tThe thle Road, , C-, 2- , . Coll X WANITA MAE HOPKINS Long Beach, California Squad Leader, 2, 3, Home Room Sec- retary, 2, Sports, 2, Commercial Club, 3, 4. Business College: secretarial work LORRAIN E AN'l'OINET 1'E HOWARD Santa Barbara, California A Entered from Oceanside High School, 4. Secretarial Work 4 BETTY KELLER The Dalles, Oregon Entered from The Dalles High S'chool, 3. Civil Service RAY PALMER KENT Saginaw, Michigan Boys' Athletic Manager, 4. 55 Varsity Basketball Manager, 35 Boys' Athletic Committee, 4, S5 Finance Committee, 4. Civil Service Work IoNA ELIZABETH KILE Santa Barbara, California Glee Club, 45 t'Sweethearts, 45 The Bethlehem Road, 4. Fashion Designer ORPHA KIVELL Lynden, Ontario, Canada Scholarship Society, 2, 35 Commercial Club, 2, 35 Student Legislature, 25 Loan Fund, 35 Reentered from Hunt- ington Park High School, 4. Undecided JAMES HOWARD KEI,LEY Santa Barbara, California Home Room President, 25 Student Legislature, 2, 35 Band, 2, 35 Intra- mural Basketball. 35 Intramural Base- ball. 35 Orchestra, 2. 3, 4. Los Angeles Junior College: U.C.L.A. EARL KIDWELL Wenatchee, YVashington E n t e r e d from Wenatchee High School, 4. Forestry Service BERYL CEVVENDOLYNE KINCAID Stretham, London, England Rose of the Danube, 25 French Club, 3. 45 French Club President, 45 Scholarship Society, 45 Quill and Scroll, 45 Press Club, 45 Sweethearts, 45 Forge Staff, 4. University of California JEANNE ELINOR KNIPPER San Francisco, California Advertising Committee, 2. 35 Girls League Advertising Chairman, 3, 45 Latin Club, 45 Girls League Executive Board, 3, 45 Scholarship Society, 35 Rose of the Danube, 35 Certificate of merit, Latham Foundation, 3. Commercial art of design v, 19 3 8 i f ROBERT VV. KNOWLES Santa Barbara, California Sweethearts, 45 Tennis, 45 A Cap- pella, 4. University of Idaho MARIA KUNHARDT Urga, Mongolia Scholarship Society, 25 Commercial Club, 45 Home Room Secretary, 2: G.A.A., 3. Dress designing MARY INEZ LANE Santa Barbara, California G.A.A., 45 Commercial Club, 3. Business school GLADYS MAE LEE Eugene, Oregon Commercial Club, 3. 45 Sports, 21 Commercial Club Program Committee, 4. Business college, Eugene, Oregon HERBERT R. KOHRS Santa Barbara. C 'fornia Hi-Y. 3. 45 Stage row, . College 0, J I ' . L '-'LAD rt regon 1 ed from Catlin School, Z5 Sec- 1 a of Girls League, 45 Usherettes President, 45 Beata Club, 45 Equestrienne Club, 45 Financial Coma mittee, 3, Cornell College LYXETTE C. LANGLO Santa Barbara, California G.A.A., 2. 3, 45 Big HSN, 3, 4, Poetry Club. 45 Latin Club, 4. Nyack Bible Institute: China ALEXANDRIA LEVEY New York, New York Scholarship Society. 35 Commercial Club. 45 Stage Make-up. 35 Rose of the Danube. 35 A Cappella, 3. College5 law school WAYNE MACROSTIE VELMA LUCILLE MCGREGOR Santa Barbara California LESTER STEWART LIBBEY Santa Barbara, California Evangelistic work MARIAN EVELYN LONGMIRE Santa Barbara, California Spanish Club, 4. Santa Barbara State College5 Knapp Nursing School HELEN MIXRY LYNCH Los Angeles, California Entered from Visalia Union High School, 3. College ,- 1909, Reg ewan Canada '- , 5 Hi-Y Sergeant-of -Arms, Zglfli- ice-president, 35 Hi-Y Treasurer, 45 R.O.T.C, First Lieuten- ant, 45 Fencing Team, 45 Glee Club, 2. Medicine D . . v- BE Al fa- 3 a , H1 2 PARA fy, 52' Q WMS .T 19 3 ALFRED MCNULTY Meadville, Pennsylvania Commercial Club, 3, 45 Dance Ref Sqllad, Leadef, 4- cital, 35 S'we:thearts, 45 Home Room AV1afl01l Secretary, 2, Business college ET ' 5 . f-.45 arba a' 1 - , ir s Leag A ' e Chairm ' itt ' ' Stud I D-,G e , 3.3 Bishop, California Student Body President, 45 Scholar- ship Society, 2, 3. 45 Seal Bearer, 4: Hi-Y, Z, 3, 45 Hi-Y President, 33 Stu- dent Legislature, 25 Merit System Re- vision Committee, 35 R.O.T,C. Private, 2, College MMM l T 1 ' J ' E si x f 1 ' I ' li I G f d,. 1 G1 M g f ' n ' Sc o:' l ,'. 1 VERNICE MAJORS Waco, Texas Band, 2, 3, 4. Santa Barbara State College, Califor- nia College of Chiropody ANGELO MAROST'ICA Santa Barbara, California Varsity Football, 4. College MICHAEL S. MAPA Hilo, Hawaii, T, H. ' Entered from Hollister High School, 35 R.O.T.C. Band, 3, 45 Track, 35 Football. 45 A Cappella, 3, 45 Lead in Sweethearts, 45 Spanish Club, 4: Student Legislature, 45 Trial by Jury, 3. . Santa Barbara State Collegeg Um' versity of Hawaii LUCILLE MATTIE MARQUEZ San Luis Obispo, California Big S , 45 G.A.A., 3, 45 Band, 2, 3, 43 Orchestra, 3, 45 Drum Majorette, 45 Sports, 2, 3, 4. Santa Barbara State College ,37- LLOYD LEONARD LINDWALL Astoria, Oregon Sophomore Football, Z5 Home Room President, 25 Intramural Basketball, 2. California Polytechnic CLINTON GRANT LOUSTALOT Santa Barbara, California Student Body Dance Band, 3, 43 Student Legislature, 35 R.O.T.C. First Lieutenant, 45 Hi-Y, 45 Sweethearts, 45 Football, 2. University or merchant marine ELODYE IAYNE MCENTEE San Francisco, California Commercial Club, 3, 45 Forge Re- porter, 45 Commercial Club Program Committee, 45 G.A.A., 3, 45 Sports, 3. Undecided Joi-IN P. MCGOWAN Santa Barbara, California Track, 3, 45 R.O.T.C.. 2. 45 Football, 35 Baseball, 45 Sweethearts, 45 R.O.- T.C. Private, 25 R.O.T.C. Corporal, 4. Aviation R ' 5 -' , , Q , .... we - Q ? A Q iiRfg ,,st Yi e iQ-L Ei X ,,,,, ...Q ?'-'rm at Y - .,:,. ,, XX N 0' 1 s ' X 1 ' 1550 reasur 4' udent I at ' B e Co 4 XE ARTIN If . K C't ' ' ' a Cl , '3, , ' f t he, 5 U af, Gita b , e ' l 31 lu 4. S a a ra e f 1 WALTER H. MEIER Omaha, Nebraska Entered from Omaha Technical High School, O1 aha, N raska, 45 Hi-Y, 45 Varsity Tr ck, 4. N . ' C ' 0 Ros ELo . STEVE MELCHIORI an Bar ra t ornia! Santa Barbara, California 'c shr S l y, 2, 3, 45 al Sophomore Football, 25 Varsity Foot- , er 45 ' . unci , 3 Sec- ball, 3, 45 Track, 3, 45 Stage Craft etary o N u- Q - la 5 Chair- President, 3, 4. m n Bi' -U Litt ister Com- Undecided -, t , ram and Rally Commit- , 4. DALTON E. MERKEL College Koblenz, German R.O.T.C. Serge , 25 .O.T.C. S - ond Lieutenant, 5 Fenciiafg Team 3, 4, f'G10ria, 3. Army on I f . X I . fc. if X P E E . D S a ara, alifornia Sophom re C ss Pr sident, 5 ey Cyrstxlia , 3, U5 Gltee l b 5 H ,ose Sai jose tate Colle e 4 JOE MERLO Rivarollo, Italy Varsity Football, 2, 3, 45 Varsity Basketball, 2, 3, 45 Varsity Track, 3, 45 Varsity Baseball, 3, 45 Student Legislature, 25 Athletic Committee, 3, 45 President of Varsity Club, 3, 4. University of California DOROTHY ELLEN MILLER Ventura, California Spanish Club, 3, 45 Spanish Club Vice-president, 43 Usherettes Club, 3, 45 Big and Little Sister Committee, 45 Scholarship Society, 43 Sweethearts, 4. College B lj RM lv Yfpffthe anub, 3, TI a-l ,Hifi f 5, ft ? ,A H! Agxv- C Y T SQIIIQ .,. Q- I-5. X n 19 aa ELLEN MARIE MILLER Glendale, California Gloria, 25 Trial by Iuryf, 35 A Cappella, 2, 3, 45 Glee Club, 45 Scholar- ship Society, 2, 3, 45 Sweethearts, 45 Stage Door, 4. Undecided ROBERT J. MILLET VVhittier, California R.O.T.C., 25 R.O.T.C. Guard, 25 Ticket Crew, 3, 4. , Workg college EDWARD ALFRED MIRATTI Santa Barbara, California R.O.T.C. Corporal, 25 R.O.T.C. Ser- geant, 35 R.O.T.C. First Lieutenant5 R. O. T. C. Captain, 35 R, O. T. C, Major, 45 R, O. T. C. Lieutenant Colonel, 45 Hi-Y, 45 12-A Class Treas- urer, 45 Student Legislature, 2, 4, ALFRED MoNToYA, JR. Montebello, California Intramural Basketball, 2, 3, 45 Soph- omore Football, 25 Intramural Baseball, 2, 3, 45 Intramural Track, 2, 3, 45 Stage Crew, 4. ' ,,.. -.., , I 83.1211 .,'.:. 1 .:, 5 ..,,. - H - V I . , ' '1'1 - ,I .55 sm MRA V-S :I S , fee 1 5. - 1 S . 6' 'A .,'. ...'...- 5 --- r - ':,.' .. , College ,-,, -I T ,, A ,---f ii., ,,,, ,...., . Q: f ' ' K - ' We ,- ...I E I , 5 ' 1 . : - ',:,:: fz f Work -33- . .tm 5 ,,. . , . 1' 2:1' x i gif' x .,.,,. 3 t X' , t t A ' 'T f- . K ,. -,143 ' I .. ,,, . ' .N .I ' cret -. - Hit: . ant - ' 5- . l ' A 1 .. N , la ' 1 E vu ,' . 4. 0, C I o . ' urs Ev I A I 5 oot rcus, 4, f X X 4 S ar a K 1 ly Co e C Xs I EVELYN CARROLL MINIKIN Kirby-in-Furness Lancashire, England G.A.A., 2. 3, 45 American Citizen President, 45 Sports, 2, 35 G.A.A. Carnival and Dance Committee, 4, Santa Barbara State College WALKER KENNEDY MITCHELL Dryden, Michigan Hi-Y, 2, 35 Hi-Y Treasurer, 35 Intra- mural Basketball, 45 Ticket Crew, 3, 45 Senior Scouts, 3. College OLIVE GERTRUDE MOQUIN Burlington, Vermont Band, 2. Santa Barbara Business College :-' :SX A I. zgwg . gi -if ' sqll -1- ': Tm , -' if it Q ' ' fi 7' ' ine ,silk . -I I. L ,,: -,. .. 9? N, J, . qq 5 I' i, ' N-we-It . ,. I 2 X . ,V :,, t. , . :,b 9 5 .W 'A: 5 4 3 . .: . , A , '- ' til MARIAN MARGARET MOSER DORIS lf 'C , ' ' t lu ,'54: Scholarship Society, G ?A 3 a Peoria, Illinois arbar California Entered from Central High, Peoria, Illinois, 35 Service Committee, 3, Elec- , ig ' 4 Studs T Legislafllffi 313 tion Board, 35 Spanish Club, 3. 4, ,I.' , , 3 nnual Tennis Usherettes Club, 3, 4, Usherettes Club T ment, , . . Vice-president, 3, Welfare Council Sec- o lege and ti retary, 4. College GENEVA MAY MOTHERN Boise, Idaho Commercial Club, 2. Business College GEORGIA ALICE MURPHY Santa Monica, California Forge Reporter, 45 Home Room President, 4: Commercial Club, 25 Home Room Secretary, 2. Santa Barbara State College RAY E. NELSON Fayatteville, Arkansas American Citizen Play, 3. Work GEORGE NICHOLAS Dallas, Texas Student Legislature, 2, Sophomore Football, 2, Stage Door, 4, Forge Staff, 3, 4, Forge Columnist, 43 Press Club, 3, 4. College CHARLOTTE GENEVIEVE NORDLI Salt Lake City, Utah Commercial Club Secretary, 4: Sweethearts,'l 43 Trial by Jury, 33 Program Committee, 3, Girls Double Trio, 4. Secretary MARIE OELAND Denver, Colorado Eentered from Ontario. California. California School of Los Angeles. Embalming, RICHARD OESCHLER, JR. Santa Barbara, California Imitations Committee, 4, Varsity Ten- nis, 4g Scholarship Society, 3, 4, Hi-Y, 43 Phine Photo Phinisbers, 4. 1 FRA fy, f t 9 3 8 to -If ROBERT K. NIXON Santa Barbara, California Student Legislature, 43 Finance Com- mittee, 43 Lightweight Basketball, 45 Hi-Y, 4, Intramural Sports, 2, 33 Track, 43 Scholarship Society, 4. College PETER C. NYE Santa Barbara, California Hi-Y, 35 Hi-Y President, Room President, 2. Work 25 Home ROBERT LEE O'CONNOR Colorado Springs, Colorado Band, 2, 3, 4, Adertising Manager of Band, 35 Home Room Vice-president, 2. Telephone construction engineer MASANAGA OKUMURA Santa Barbara, California Varsity Baseball, 43 Intramural Basketball, 3, 4, Intramural Baseball, 3. Work -39- EUGENIA EVELYN MURPHY Santa Ynez, California G.A.A. Secretary, 4: Big US , 3, 41 G.A.A., 3, 43 Home Room Secretary, 2. Business College JOE M. NAKAYAMA Santa Barbara, California Adertising Committee, 3, Trial by Iury, 35 Gloria, 3, Glee Club, 3: Track, 2, 33 Intramural Basketball, 2, 3, Tennis, 4. College MARY CLAUDIA NETILES ' Lexington, Missouri ' Beata Club, 43 Quill and Scroll, 45 Forge Reporter, 43 Usherettes Club, 4, Scholarship Society, 3, Lead in The Bethlehem Road, 4, French Club, 4, Stage Door,'l 4, Quill and Scroll Sec- retary, 45 Press Club, 4, Foot Circus, 4. Stephens College, Columbus, Missouri I l JACK W. OLSON Santa Barbara, California Varsity Football, 3, 45 Sophomore Football, 25 Student Legislature, 4g Varsity Tennis, 4, Gym Squad Leader, 2. College ROBERT AI. EE '. pq reenw , iana tered ro Ti,n Hig chool, K v' e 4, enn' 4, o a n 1 . olle travel ROBERT FREDRICK PYI.E Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Limitations Committee. 45 ship Society, 33 Gloria, 3. College Scholar- ROSEMARY RHEINLANDER San Francisco, California Scholarship Society, 2, 3, G.A.A,, 3. 43 Sports, 2, 33 G.A.A, Carnival and Dance Committee, 4. Junior College ROBERT VV. PATRICK San Jose, California Student Legislature, 2, Gym Suad Leader, 45 American Citizen Class Play, 3. Santa Barbara State College, Uni- versity of California la!- PERCY ALVIN PIN NEY Teton, Idaho Intramural Baseball, 2, Intramural Basketball, 2, Gym Squad Leader, 43 American Citizen Class Play, 3. College: ranching WILLIE R. QUERFURTH Germany R.O,T.C, 2, 3' R.O.T.C.' I 1 32 R.O.T.C. Serge 1, 3. ' E U. S. Navy o work 1' X os ' , ' CARDS oodwar lah - Class ' siden ociety , ' Seal arer 4' Hi-Y, Spanish Club, ' ' holarship A I X 1 F7 J 1 U 3 U ZA 3 . , 3, i Pr ent, 4, ' 'ations Com ee, 4, Phine P hinishers, 4. LA FRA ,.,, 5 + 19 as 3' ' DENNIS F. RICHARDSON Ventura, California Treasurer of Pro and Con Club, 4: Spanish Club, 4. SEWELL J. SANFORD Los Angelg, California Veterinary medicine MARY SCRUGGS Miami, Oklahoma Rose Maiden, 29 Social of Commercial Club, 3, Chairman HELEN SHERMAN Santa Barbara, California Advertising Committee, 23 Campaign Advertising, 3, Dance Recital, 4. College l 5,53 '- --R f :tg w x f M E Lawyer -::':j ' - , me T ' .,. ..... ,- -.. , .. .,,.,. - gf ., , --IQI 4 -1 -521.2 ' Undecided A t S T K vnl, ,. H .: . A E . . .... -Q t 1 -90- , ..,.,,, Www. . , , 1 T I Jil I t K i , -- ' .5 Q an e f' -est. . ,.,, , V T i s- , -3,0 .' A-' . RUSSELL ROBLES Santa Barbara, California Rose Maiden, 2, Rose of the Danube, 3. Undecided EVELYN M. SCHMEISSER Fort William, Ontario, Canada Home Room Vice-president, 2, Big and Little Sister Committee, 3, Com- mercial Club, 4. Junior College MARY VIRGINIA SHERIDAN Blyth, California Girls League President, 45 Girls League Welfare Committee, 3, Spanish Club S'ecretary, 43 Beata Club, 3, 4, Usherettes Club, 3, 4, Art Editor of Olive and Gold. 4, Forge Reporter, 4. Santa Barbara State Collegeg Uni' versity of California CHARLES G. SI-IOENBERCER, JR. Santa Barbara, California Scholarship Society, 3, 4, Varsity Football, 3, 4, Finance Committee, 43 Gloria, 2, 35 Varsity Club Secretary- Treasurer, 3, 4, Hi-Y, 4. College W9 FRANCIS EDWARD SONGER GAEL ETHLYN SPENCER ! ,., time rf ,- A E 1 ...i ii t , . . gf -: . , ,j ..,,.,. 313 ,' A - ,, : . ,I w -' . ,.:.:. . . .,., i T351 , fanb A ' Q 'N ll 'f' . Y 4 , Warner, Pennsylvania Entered from Mesa Union High School, Mesa, Arizona, 2, R.O.T.C. Staff Sergeant, 3, R.O.T.C. Lieutenant, 4. Diesel engineering school CONSTANCE SPRINGER Salt Lake City, Utah G.A,A., 2, 3, 4, Big SU, 4. Undecided DOROTHY ELIZABETH STAPLES Pasadena, California Scholarship Society, 3, Land of Hearts Desire, 3, Gloria, 3, Sweet- hearts. 4, Program Committee. 2, French Club, Z, 3, 4, The Bethle- hem Road, 4. Santa Barbara State College Uni- versity of California MAXINE HEI.EN SUIIEURY Huron, South Dakota Too Many Marys. 2, 'tRose of the Danube, 2, Loan Fund Committee, 2, Scholarship S ocie t y , 2, 3, 4, Seal Bearer, 4: Lead in Stage Door, 4. Santa Barbara State College, Uni- versity ot' Southern California School of Optometry TOM SKEHAN Portland, Oregon Work DALTON WILLIAM SMITH Montpelie . Sophomore Football, Z, V a r s 1 t y Basketball, 3, Varsity Football, 3, 4. Forestry HENRY MARWIN SMITH Santa Barbara, California The Cherry Blossom, 2. Santa Barbara State College MARGARET HASTIE SOM ERvILLE Morenci, Arizona Spanish Club, 3, 4, Spanish Club Treasurer, 4, Commercial Club, 43 Scholarship Society, 4, Rose of! the aDnube, 2, Sweethearts, 4, Stage Door, 4, Booster. Z. l University of California at Berkeley RA Q- ,gif C f 4' -IPX C .J f T AI Qu. 19 as DOROTHY ELIZABETH SMEDLEY Santa Barbara, California Forge Reporter. 3, Forge Society Editor, 4, Forge Feature Editor, 4, Press Club Secretary, 4, Girls League Treasurer, 4, Beata Club Secretary, 4, Usherettes Club, 3, 4, Spanish Club. 3, 4, Stage Door. 4, Sweethearts, 4, Rose of the Danube. 2, Stage Make-up, 2, 3, 4, Hom Room Secre' tary, 3' Quill and Scro , 4. Sa Barbara 't e College, Uni- vers of VVashing n: journalism X ERN SMITH t' A ' R ' ,' Aw mf an -qxpfbx Y , BIak , 3- ommercial lu , , Lan ea esirej' 3. S ta Barb 'tat ollege LAURINE ANNETTA SMITH Santa Barbara, California G.A.A,. 2, 3, 4, Commercial Club, 3. 4, Girls League XVelfare Committee, 4, Christmas Service Committee, 2, G.A,A. Carnival and Dance Committee, Z, 3, 4, Badminton Club, 4. University of Redlands MARY MCARTHUR SOMERVILLE Morenei, Arizona Spanish Club, 3, 4, Commercial Club. 4, Scholarship Society, 4, Rose of the Danube, 2, Sweethearts, 4, Stage Door, 4, Booster, 2. University of California at Berkeley Santa Barbara, California Squad Leader, 4, Home Room Presi- dent, 2. Santa Barbara State College 'Tb l MARC R A STAEFO Barbara,, l' 'Th Bet e oad, 4, Glee lub, riean Cititn a Play, a Barb r e llege, Woods b y olle ANNABELLE LILLIAN STREET Los Angeles, California Commercial Club, 3, 4, Sports, 2. Business college . Q., E I I sf Q JE,-, MARo'AREaTAPItl Q X' ta BaTbara,',Calit'o nia 1 ' tudent egisla.ture,,'g, 4, , ose of thee Dan , 2, S'weethei3ts, 4, tri Trio, 2,N3, 44'-Scholahship So- 2,?, 4, ..iSealxBearer, 4, 'Girls Lxuexn ict-aside t, '3, S t ri n g tet,'2, Gir Double Trio, 4. ' Music college T ..91.. SHERMAN ANDERSON THORNSBERRY Des Moines, Iowa R.O.T.C. Captain, 4, Fencing Team, 3. 4, Rifle Team, 3, The Bethlehem Road. 3, Stage Door, 4. Cal Poly at San Luis Obispo EVERETT LANE TOZIER Long Beach, California Assistant Business Manager of Olive and Gold, 4, Varsity Fencing Squad, 4, French Club, 3, 4, Student Legislature, 4, Sweethearts,'l 4, Scholarship So- ciety, 4. Forestry JAMES JUSTIN rIiRlNDLE Hugoton, Kansas Entered from Chaffey High School, Ontario, California, 4, Spanish Club, 4, Phine Photo Phinishers, 4. Engineer MARGARET VIRGINIA VAN METER Riverside, California GlOria,i' 2, Home Room Secretary, Z, Rose of the Danube, 2, Land of Hearts Desire, 3, Sweethearts, 4, The Bethlehem Road. 4. Santa Barbara State College .,,, I .,,,,.,. - 'W ' I ., .- ' ,, , f ' ,225 -.,.,, - ea,I.I s 'V Q . N CHRISTINE TONIETTO Albia, Iowa Home Room President, 2, Home Room Secretary, 3, Commercial Club, 2, 3, 4, Big and Little Sister Commit- tee, 3, Rose of the Danube,'l Z. Santa Barbara State College VIVIAN ELAINE TOZIER Long Beach, California Rose of the Danube, 2, G.A.A., 3, 45 French Club, 3, 4, Home Room Vice-president, 4, Sweethearts, 4, College DOROTHY HAZEL ULRICH San Diego, California Editor of The Forge, 4, Beata Club, 4, Usherettes Club, 3, 4, Press Club, 3, 4, Quill and Scroll, 4, Student Legislature, 2, 3, Forge Staff, 2, 3, 4. College M. ROBERT VAUGHN Santa Barbara, California Seaman s e, A L f ? ,thunk . 19 fees 38 f I 1- o -A , ' . J 'mn f' .T .rv ,J ' ' ' 5 1 ' ' , LV' I l E ' K fl . if r Ll STANLEY CARSTEN w7ADE J , , V NRE XVfLKER Santa Barbara, California fl Lios,AQe s, C ifornih Aviation Club President, 4, Aviation sb.A.fu', l 3, 4, Sports, 2, 3, 4, glub Vice-grelssidegtb 43 fviation Club . !?,-LA. C and Dance Committee, ecretary, , an , , , . 2-ascmg' . Curtis Wright Technical Institute rf f, 'uI:y,.College , -. , ,A ,J OV., r I DONALD DINEs VVALL Kansas City, Missouri Entered from Whittier Union High School, 3, R.O.T.C. Sergeant, 4, Phine Photo Phinishers Club, 4, Mathematics professor DOROTHY LEAN VVAsI-IINGTON Chicago, Illinois Stenographer tgfff' AMS QW J. I IA F 'Eta R S' rb ra, ifali nia R , .C. Fi t Sergeant, 4, R. .T.C. a t, 4, S dent Legislature, 3. nta Barbara ,State College I J X. ...gg- JEANNE GERTRUDE WANOELL San Diego, California Forge Reporter, 4, Commercial Club, 3, 4, Saturday Market, 2, A'Growing Pains, 3, Entered from Roosevelt High School, Los Angeles, California, 2. Secretarial work PETER KEM WEBER Santa Barbara, California R.O,T.C. Corporal, 3, R.O.T.C. Ser- geant, 3, R,O.T.C. Second Lieutenant, 4, R.O.T,C. Captain, 4, Hi-Y, 3 ,4, Home Room President, 2. Davis Agricultural College PAULINE EDMEE VVESTON San Francisco, California Chairman of Senior Announcement Committee, 4, First White Women, 2, Glee Club, 2, Foot Circus, 4, French Club, 3, 4, Stage Door,'l 4, Chairman of Girls League Election Committee, 4. College l ROBERT S. WHEELER Los Angeles, California Student Body Social Chairman, 45 Student Legislature, 2, 35 Gloria, 2 35 The Bethlehem Road, 45 Varsity Road, 1'ennis, 4. U,C.L.A.5subtropical horticulture ELIZABETH ANNETTE VVHITING Burbank, California Spanish Club, 3, 4. Library work BESSIE MARY' VVILLIAMS Dallas, Texas Girls League Eecutive Board, 45 French Club, 3, 45 French Club Secre- tary, 45 Usherettes Club, 45 Scholar- ship Society, 3, 45 Home Room Secre- tary, 35 School Daze, 25 Latin Club, 45 Poetry Club, 4. Santa Barbara, State College SHEILA WxLsoN Edinburgh, Scotland Big S , 3, 45 G.A.A,, 2, 3, 45 Home Room Secretary, 2. Business college MAURINE E. WHITESIDE Detroit, Michigan Band, 2, 3, 45 Drum Majorette, 4 Band Secretary, 45 Orchestra, 2. Secretary LARRY VV 1cRs Summit, Idaho Forge Staff, 45 Lightweight Basket ball, 3. Entered from Santa Ana High School, 3. Undecided FRANK A. W1LL1AMs Santa Barbara, California Agricultural college JAMES VERNON WRXGHT, JR. Los Angeles, California Booster, 25 Sophomore Football, 25 Varsity Football, 35 Intramural Sports, Z, 3 4. Wlorkg college 'Z7YNR A,,G' AY-Q, JWIIKSS 4 n 1 9 1523 3 4' -Ill fs '- . . -. X 'er-' 5' M,-W-qwv,,,,, W, BARBARA Rose WUEsT UOHN YYOUST gg. 1 ez , Seattle, Washington flQand,fCalifoiSn1a , A M Press Club President, 45 French Club fagecfaftr fl' , ' - 'W Vice-president, 45 Usherettes Club, 45 Und5C1dedRl -a ' P' ' bg' ' , Chairman of Program and Rally Com- f -t ...- -' mittee, 45 Chairman of Girls League ' t o Service Committee, 45 Quill and Scroll, ' .53 45 Too Many Marysf' 25 Special .- Feature Editor of The Forge, 3, 45 Student Legislature, 35 Stage Make-up, 5 - Z, 3, 45 Sta e Door, 4, E - i-Sgnta Barbara State College5 Stan- 5 I . or :Zig V- E -L 5 E '22, ' ' -. Q: 'f .:f' MARIO FRANK ZANINI I01iilDE:Tg3?firlig10N Qywqbv g S'anta Barbara, California ' . 1 - -' R.O.T.C. Sergeant, 45 R.O.T.C. Cor- Band' 2' 3' 4, Pro and Con Llub 'S Law School poral, 3, 4. ,. ,,.,, ,E Carpenter or cabinet maker z 1 . JACK BENJ.-XMIN VVESTFALL Lui-E V1L1.EoAs . . Kendallville, Indiana Santa Barbara, California , I ' Home Room President, 25 R. O, T. Undecided A C., 2, 3. 45 R. O. T, C. Second Lieu 3 -EE tenant, 45 R. O. T, C. Rifle Team, 2. -P ',,,, . gb 3, 45 Sophomore Football, 25 Varsity ig ,Q Football, 3, 45 Stage Crew, 3, 4. 4 3:54 1 , Petroleum Engineer g ' H H rs- 1 1 WR M93- VVALTER H. DOCKER London, England Band, 23 R.O.T.C. Band, 2, Mechanic BEATRICE MARGARET GARciA Clifton, Arizona College JOHN A. LEY Cleveland, Ohio Entered from Ventura Senior High School. 4, Undecided RAYMOND GENE SLAYBAUGH Yale. Oklahoma Rose of the Danube, 35 Trial by Jury, 33 Sweethearts, 45 Growing Pains. 3: Gloria, 2, 3. Radio Plays X' of' , f' JOHN H. DowsETT San Francisco, California U. S. Navy Lois B. KAP? Covina, California Student Legislature, 25 Forge Re- porter, 49 Home Room President, ZZ Glee Club, 3. Undecided KEN NET H XVARDE Santa Barbara, California Iunior college THOMAS P. MAIER Santa Barbara, California W'ork f f WM ffffyfwl ' - -' Olive and Gold presents WALDO MACIAS'S 3 :E K Q Follies of 1937-1938 Script by Jane Galbraith Youqll Find 'em In Every Roofing Secflon l z, S T ' ' I WW XQQGEPHQS A we g -W Wm, le! J I N T ' , NDN f 1 rx fx L x 'T I , 'I-'N N: Q I9 A fill' ly 1 'S H Q 50' A' by W' f, -A WX . Pl f ! f --X 'J f ,R , HH XM. l X X xQ-mag vf fy' m , , , we . ' -N 'z X I Q75 Z: ' ,acc Zi y vi, 71 x Q19 The Contortionist qu' The Sourpuss ix V011 Il X fkuth Ulrich, vpn fGx-eg McDonald, 'IQ The Fingemail Br X- '.' Cy fEllen Deverman I h TEA Teafn as-IX Q3 Z ,.,,.f The Babe fMaxine Clark, ThM E l x f , GQSK XQY19 10329 A 7 fxfa XA .. . fx! 1 . 1 M The Girl Who Doesn't K The Score fDot Staplesj HOW L x., ,4 ,Q The Ceaseless Talkers Mary Ellen Needles and The Glu!-on qchubby Arthur, om' IS Wah H20 196-. STUDY HALL W D DAY DREAIVIS T F, wx op oor A, L ff !Av-'f En fish 50 U F d NL Q! lgplngfliln X Xi! FgSS:t'3?nsa fx ri V54 ver 3 Locafed I g F5 m The 4 LX A ywff Halls Lsrm ga 3, , .M Y X , CUM? ww Elevafors +0 gy 60,5 I 9 fQLReplace Those QS flglwx X Aqfm 5 Blasfed Ramps F 3 ,Easy Chairs rn Sfud. Hall 'M and a Snr! wfrlv a an ,X on Hof ec s x f' X -f Muzzles X S6 X X For Teacbe ' Q f who Talk g X f V X fha Much 1 ZX C l X J ff fwgsme XX Q 2 2 Z fp get X 1941 gf ,N Cghangbeis A f, 0 fx 1' Or er am gif Sgdjfvyf wg Teachers ff? ,Q 3 1 J rms: - Q g Taz? ,C rs, 5 dl 5 V J We X Q.. 'Z Nix If D?mGYl fdwg' 55 'P l-J I ' it -2' C 1 EE, ' 1? :illfx 'm V A -': in We Q 4 if 'f 'K lm 'V ' H 1 g ,f M., lc 4, V gl . nd xf 1291 K' -- 'sf' '7 V X U E- L 7, - V, . - qw f ,ff 2 f d Q' X dint? 'Q f ' - Y ff J ' K 1 J X 'f 5 I ' Q l . B 8 K i h ff 4, I 6 -.-. Q.. F s?'-v-:ff , , O X 33ifi1iisiE, K Q f ff ff ff ff ' L I f fx- ff ,' , Off ja f , , 3 ,W ,f X ,L L' 4 I I 'X : - X Avg ? S q 5' ig ' M O A ' .fy Z l '5 X V ' f ,u f .1 22 X , 'wg 'W li..f YA. if x G1 . X4 X , :Tw -I ct, - j- .. Q- I X X 5 X X K . . FY A T V, ' I xl' :TCR K I ZK 1 ' 'ut' fr N N Xu' Q D Y -Q I ? I W1 'J '5Qf't.:'g., f ' 67 H? ' SX . ff X x +1 ,1',,.,gbA: ML' I in X IWW xx ig , ,f X 1 - X XX I V f A ff' 'W 'A' fo I K V wi 1, , f f L j 1 , 'M if . 5 x W WW' wife. M 1 N X .u - - f. xx, 1 ' A I M -. , 7 Q , X K I V I5 f N- Qi 25- V I ,f' ' ' 11 ' 4? f f Xxff GE f f f P ,Q y t ff, EX, If ff! X K ' H Y E A V f Jf x A V i Q f If L14 A , fs A of :I - fmfwwfff 1 f- V o ,9 rl ,o,f,- 1. I - 5: X ff? '41 1,5 1 V Qx K Z T fb ' 't' ?o'f if llfvqfl - 'V 3 -T' - 5 M if 1 , Jw' WJ' 6 1 s . NN vw N4 mf' 2 JW. X W -X '- P ik X M NFX - I -'gf ' -f'- 'ffff' li L- lf X . E,-, g... , , , , C' ' ' K I' -- . kg J ' , r- :: 'f ff 5 '. ,r .. H, , E51 wx - if X 'Mfr 4 A' F I :L f ' is 2..- ff , C -f 5: 5 4 . 'ss' ai' x .4 VT. . xx i wi' 5 ' 1 1 Si Q E db 5 L ' -1. JU - O 4 -. - - - . .. Q -XL, f- ' E f, 4 f' 517 I+-31. 'JI ul if -97, N' , A --' 541- 1 Aff it 0 , , mega if, L , Q 'll' 0 ' K f'N 5 1-.-UQ. .,s'- fl, L ,- -1 .1 '-- ' f. .:1,s 5:1-.Lx 1' xi , o,Qg,f,u'XI '- ' - X A e'n.u,1 -':.- ' 1-,-:.Z.x-Q. -. .,,f 1 4 'V Q -. , ---'p .v . .,.. T ,. ., 'QW I, a 1.1 '4.-- b 9 3' tr We f .f. ,qfq --fu ' ,, '5 :fs '- E714 ff ,fi ,1 ,fn ffigeo T 2225? Q c, D if 5 0 '93 SPG A rg Q I 'f' 3 PN y 3 is , ca ft C f C CDC D G7 'N Scoop is a rare nut- Or did you hear? Scoop got a hair cut From ear to ear! But the bCl7'l76l',5 dead-- He died from the strain Of shearing Seoop's head T0 his wooden brain f 9 ' K T II. Q9 'Q 'fo ' -V' I' - Spring has now come, 'Qox Ca , Bringing loads of fresh air , 'Ze 4 K- To Kcaress' every bum f I ,:,. Who runsm-semi-bare. 32 fn D453 , MU-U-lil UVM' - X 'Hounds of the pack, X , f 3, x Qgxlw . ,f f x y No one is a foolg , 1 .TN ':.-,il-..f. By racing in track, Xxx '- 7 H lr, lf 'SR M ,',' ' e can eel? coo XXXMIIRQQI I -'II-'T 'lf LLM lM:::ff,?4E?A fgflilg f f X w 5 if , - -J y N X We never have rain Z? j AAN In Land of the Sun! fd x Alf 3 Q J To top HurricaneU X QQ , The flood was some fun f f f SSN- But then ever ' bo X xg J J y -ws J A 31 kga J Agmlf Showed of to his Dolly ,' M4 LX qs I Cause she-so coy- ig J , ig Admired Vlfalt Raleigh! . 1' :N it rmfltllllll afard4t.ia1i?t'kZ!?22,17dL V I - I X51 hh 60 'EL ' E nf . 40 .459 Hurrah-open season! S l T I MQ :Z That game's here again. 7g J Baseball? the reason W ' SQ '- For lack of men l Q agvx ' l5 For when Ma 'ells 'Tirnff 'R'- J f Come shell the peas. The ball bugls got himf He's gone with the breege nfl rr ' - 1 ! SB' l 3 T D T ' 2' -'S 'T' 1 5 -5 'N f'7l,X 5 'T-7 ' . . 'r :.2.-:N M- . J I . ' 1 l Lf' QXA Z Q - kffwe, - ' s We mourn a great fellow Althof he's not dead. He said Saints-hellofj' Gust teched in the head.j Skip, have you left us For our rivals, the Saints? Teach them, heaven rest us The worst of our feints! J VI. We trip them here, We tease them there, We meet the Liill scrubs Everywhere. Now theyfre in trouble Now theyjre at ease. These non-elusive Tenfderfootj Bjs. Z eff ,V ff fs K2-'ff VIII. Quoth the band-boys, NeUermore, Shall we make noise At each scoref' Quoth the band-dames, Up-to-date! Or tuneless games Shall be your fatcfu Y Mes-fvrlflf 5 Q Qxvrqis ' E Z Qi, p x bg X 5 ' me t l f fp 4 ri W 1 J - 0 X ' xg J Z2 G I Median I X. Meet Butch the Copg Tou know his beat? He hisses, 'fStop! Sit in that seat! He watches the lib Ana' shushes loudies, Will accept no bribe, And ousts the rowdies. f K I Aa? K si lb Ill! r is W 'ft if 'en a X , X ng?-.-' ',, fn' bi' X 1' w 1 X li' cf g' ' 'ily 'E . V ,'h'gp'ef- 1' Wa 4, J .-ffl .5 'ff vi - Zogmg f nf.:- ' sfssltfivwj ,uni -.:- -.3515 L- -' ' A r f-2122! N Q4 -' '-4 ' -1 VH. Alirattils the big guy In the army, you know, From his correct black tie To his polished toe. ' Hels lieutenant-colonel? Tops in the lot. So he rates this journal Which you've bought. . - D W sf' 9 NY Maj Q 'ix vw ft I 'asf A -A lm f ., . - I f l 9. - ' ' , . , X xx S XM? ,Y: 4kH' j LN n . Y A ' o J 1 L ,l 1 It '- mx Q . ' N154 f 1 c Win? fs ' ' ,, .1 . X 1, Z! ' 'ZR vqlf C' C 'Z fl- 4 ' ku r -' fi it I 1 XS' fl ' W7 s I in W1 rx - IX. 'Queen of the May!- Wow, what a dance! All of us gay In best dress and pants! And as for the Queen, Male hearts were stirred, For Mary was keen As sovereign, wefve heard. f 4 og gr: X 'Hel I f- W XR X ss vi I7 , ll ,,... V fl ' f 1 fl!! 2, X' ..L .sl Ja? 'T' '- 51 ' - IL , Q - .Rig 1 'f fk ivy X97 if , 1, - - 3,0 'I Nl I' Al' 1 n- ,lex . Xl 'N -gbffigjllzili A Q ' v - f ' - '53--'IG' f' X l-. C . f 1 K ,np ta x I I I'-M A f 0121 YL, ff .ll' 1, 'ff' si-Vi X xx NUT 5' Q Q, E 1 . 11- ' 431415 g I I J' ' 'r hav' jg. 4 ' 351 - s ' LA J . ff I ' , 'YY' QA , A , J , , ' ' r jj Q rv !'4' 'L o ' 'r iff 01, N' .ef , :' - , 3, ':ffi'Cyffg1,,,,: ' S Q - 2' 1, 0 ' ' 1' X Q 1 ,Ir 4 I, ,V 'X Q , I ' I 1 37 F' J i . X W 1 4 r Q XII. It's a dance crazlyj The latest fad. Not for the lazy! It drives you mad! Cut the Apple And truck on down! Peel the Apple And go to town! S f H ..'t1n1aQ ,'gW?, XX l CTU it I , y and rg do J X fr A X f , WWI ' 4 -N .0 A 'I' : I .sl gr Q l , GN! X1 'f A r I , ' I gf' I ' '4 r d nr' ml, I: I ...L- 6 gl? I'?l!lll:i'J'ft,f hx J? ml. Q 1515 Spriirm 1 ,f ,J . x 1 f I X 'I S? -I . X is D fo 'J fg s , X C13 , , S kj yhl-ID S Y, 1, -Q1'g -- - Zi.-723' F f 3 I O bah 1, XIV. Ninety little scholars Standin' in a row With tidy little collars And noses, you know! Ninety little scholars And all on Scholarship Spent a lot of dollars On an excursion trip! w-957' Y QM3R'S.e 03,01 Q my -en, W yi. 5 j!! N A101557 , ....kL1qf,1f V ff-f..zv 4 I X :L A , VIH, 1.j A-:H N I 0 .' A'it - f R! ' QI H 1 gc' - I ,git ' fxflgjzi O Q ', I . ' .J U V, V fs' V I I S I 'ik i'af'l!l-ffm:--'if' A I I 1 1 ',.:l:f!-2532 S !'- I I,.-14 rw iff IV iff L' ,qw ,Mg - S- . , I'f 'H' .Qui V, T.'Xj-,Q-I p,t,!s1g:,f.,, W' .1 fl. flfvgll Mg f' 4 . ',.,M-ffbl fre. ' J , 'I ':'u W ff S J I I ff! ff' ,sq I in ',, A NK 7 XI. I Love You Trulyv Warbles Number One. Came the gong duly To end her Itjs Amateur Night At the High School, boys! Wow, what a sight, And, gee, the NOISE! L f 4? l ,,. A mega! Gi? , 411 9135 Ji AVP . r -ni -1 A '53 I V - fl ' ' ' X 'fl H VZ' Wifi? iw? 1 nl Q tg 1 :X A Ilifl-1 'H' . 1 'Ri nv YV 1' I ' 1 2.57 f ,gffaibffw 1511 E '. ff .f Q , MAD ' gf she' .1 ' gl f 1 A tim-1-'d?7 r 'Min XIII. Kryl and his Sym-phoney Played for the school. With music so toney, I felt like a fool. 'Cause classical rhythym No feeling dia' bring. But I'd of swayed with 'inz., If he'd only played swing. I 33, ?G,f31,:x?'yYa ace-og Ox 7'--X YI V5 fag y X X ' C, 'fjfk fbi. - I og Vm I Wi I Q? Lil' Jn, f We I x lv Ao :A X AA slot, MM, :, I 8.2: Ji ll, 2.1. 1 ,eb b 1 'J Q XV. Here's your degree, And there's the door. Donit let us see You anymore! Come on, my lads And stop this grieving Like the winter grads, Weill soon be leaving! 9, ff. .GW M, , ki.-QXL II' '7':.!:: , 'V 'f 7 ' 5 f I I f I , Tommy Kruger-for earning f I Sherman Thornsberry-f o r a place on the junior Davis ,txt winning third place in the 1 Cup team and for maintainin 9'4 Pacific Coast Novice Epee , 7 iv if g M9 , . 'vc' '., ' his position as first singles 'AQ fencing tournament in his first ff' player on the varsity tennis V year of competition. EQ ,nf team for two years. ' :Egg 2755, Wig fC' i X ' 5-ig.: o f N it ' ' I-l54...,1'jfj - ' , J ,e X ,ot f Ihffiffflf . 1 sa-vp K., ,yy 1' figs: s x 1 ' X 2 X ' WJ ZW J ' H X1 X X ' if lil X iiviiig W X - f' ig . 1- P- ., x 1. i, Vs? ff - f . If , t, . -1 , Aif-CC,-izxif-. will 'WE' W- -e fs 1 - I --ls fs 9 K ' 1' A 755572 V-:fb-Qi: 'A E5 vi? ' 'aw ' t ff ff T-49 5311 . . 3' ,V Zi l ef ll: Joe Merlo-for being chosen v 'i RQ W f wi ' 1 fullback on the All southern Q, , fm' I l Y 3 California Second Team and Z . A for his :clk as lguard on the hggt ts ,tx A ', 1,1 Jigf '-' f varsity as et a team. 'Ml 42:1-. fi M-f ' x 1 K.-:i ,iujlgi Dario Castagnola-for being ,,.f-' f ', , l-Q' .lf chosen as tackle on the All -l rw 1' -in Southern California High I liygif School football team. X ' xx fd, Nr , . M, . . I Q .Q-1-, 4, C 5' if In i ,QQ x l AN Ilifm'f177l7l77 gywginlllqg 'V I 9 - 1' N 'f 3365155155 fx J - F-Q21 1 C 1 sb ffev X -1 e ...S sf, X fly-1 0 2 lf, 4. X . . 1 fl Dorothy Ulrich-for bemg the Ljf' ,Ni l ,f A Sql! first girl editor of The Forge 5 Q' ff in four years and for success- -H129 8 I 1 ff, ,f ,. ,A fully piloting the paper x'i'fg13!'Ef.'f 5 I Victor Gutierrez--for being through its first year as a six u f-Q11 1 nlfwjn the first boy ever to receive a Column publication- , I ' varsity letter for participation I. A ' Johnny Valentino-for his ex- cellent work as end on the var- in intra-mural sports and for his unfailing school spirit. sity football team, for being 0 inf ,mx 'X high point man on the var- ' sity basketball team, and for L his ability as a track man and fql! b ' 5 aseball player. l ' 'fl' X2 y ,l 1 'J ' '71 Ka 1 601 I tina , ax if ,lf 44 1 ,M .- i .,-4 1.V,' Ax:: QLA A 7 y ,1 fir , 44 ifefw ., aff ' f Wayne MacRostie-for suc- . Ei9'fg ZZ, 0 M if cessfully filling the position of of KN 4 president of the Student Body 1-7' Q? during the past school year. -l01- .E .c O 3 -O-I on 2 A CID 0 on Hop f F. Champi U sz 0 .- .IE 3 O C CD 'U 0 I- 'a N 'U .C U 5 E N .: 2 lh 'U I: nz: IN 0 dl I-I :v .c u UI .c 0 fu 0 U Nl m C E I- Rl .c U 0 u : ': 0. 1 511515 Q - ea H W' Qmifm Lacy 110011 lzonrx in flu' S1171 .,., Riflf jvraftfco ,,,, , Jlllllfllj' lllzzzall . , . , T611 B035 ,.,, Clc'o111'C Illvloling at work 011 an oral r1'j1o1't , , , Gro, jus! loolcit, kicl' . . . Anothrr jvfisr wifzfzirzg float 111 Olivo and Gold Day j1a1'r1fle , . . , LZ'BllfC7ldlZf Colonel lWi1'atti f1lT'l'lIg rookie some I'L'1'.Y0lILll attention ...,, S lfllflj' jvcirod 111 Room 106 .... Cafvtain 1111111121 41 thrust L . . . Room 7 ..., Bfulcrtball practice . . . Madrrlyn Wag111'1'111'cj1a1'rs for her ulcxt clam . . Roscoe Lyons, che11zistry .shark . . . Hozvarwi l'L7dllL7'S, social scioncc. --IDEN- Y INK., W A Day in im: Life of Typiieai High Gif! ' 2004? OH fn: wimoi - .- P 1.. ,,.-.NAL .n RM. Hn ijzjg-fxgyhfda 'WM ,I L., 4 3 mms sp.-.,.r Ummm 5-:mf H,,m.Mniw 1 Num' M Rum lxs, 4' :K Ih4fd5.w.x.xff1mf.,.U-, 1.,w,..m lu. mm Som -ms..,L1.,. .ms . 1 1 is , imu zu. M l xg v--v ,..., mo mm, pfwil ..Q.,g.,,L,..g m lem... Q arm p 3wn,1.-np, fm rm wks, mmm-- NGH4: swap my ram,-0 :im sm, 1-Mandi yn aulnxf Qu dm low: mm ,,S...,,. -104- held. vamp.. -Q. ,..-W. K. W Hmmm sms xfwfst mmxz mm ...nn in aww l0'. A Dag' in the iafn ci Tjfgoiwl High School B05 w ,W 1 fm HRW Nm Lum-h s Lrhln SZ 5 3 Hormwwrd Hmmm' Chu Af, Hmm- Rowvx4Mvs, uw gang, cnc. rvxffxo. ww: may in Liam, Sway zu An N.7ui.if,n aero PM p.f,,..m, pn,.m an Hmm zu. um-s 'uma pf...1.u baaiogw su Rom me 2.50 Sixth Fund: phywicai eduumion Bon rr-im lor me swam-A nm. O W l l Fl1CI,lll'QY-.Yt'7Zl07' ganm .... fcalz Tafic, 'Cclllst and Sl'l1gL'?'. , , , SC001 ' .'Y1fl1ola.v, fllllllj' boy ,. , . Mznirl Wolfe, girl albzmt school . , , , fhw' Bfggs boys, Pride of Golvta . . . Eyfs right , you bums ..... VV! llj' Qurmz Dazzcf' , . . , Faculty rooting section and 'EZ' few chixclvrs .... Quran Mary and attcndants ..., Praym' Sfmt ,... Big 5l10ts'f,Wt1j01' Newton, Cafmlvll CfU'f'f lfF1'- -Wdyvr M0l11 ', Und P?'f'1L'1'l'Hl Hull .,,. Foot Cirrus girls Buffy Blair, F1'a11rz'x Imdlozu, Ruth l-low' . R.O,T.C. band ,,,. Profafnt and Dzzrrozv . . , ilu' Colm' guard . . Prisr ll7I7I71l'7' in Olin' and Gold lilly 1z11'111'z1t111'r faradc ,,,,, Mf's. Kcllvm, Gcrmzln and lilzglish .,,, Brick Pruitt, Hlllfll .,,,, Illl2'1'tl Hnrlbui .,.. fllmx in Iran maslrx. AUTOGRAPHS CX ' X L' J f - .3 , ,V Qs! .fir bsww RLY 'Q' ,Q Evil' NQEXQ.. Qfy- was 8395. if Qylgf R YQ ' Z5 QJYEQAY New Sb, N Qkvsx '?'b4. Qs? Z? 4 .J ,,,f '- 1 in ' Q fy 'X r ,ffl r WMJWMFQQ M JW I ff' J -My 1 ' s ,ef ' H
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