University of Santa Clara - Redwood Yearbook (Santa Clara, CA) - Class of 1938 Page 1 of 166
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- . .,r5-----.- i ■|, !3fe,in ! :;Vi ' %is«  JM ' K..;i ' l «s ' THE REDWOOD 1938 PUBLISHED By ASSOCIATED STUDEI1TS, SAHTA CLAfifl UfllVCRSITy Edited by James A. Doherty, Editor; Arthur Meagher, Asst. Editor; Allan Hugh Smith, Managing Editor; Stanley Corriea, Sports Editor; John J. Walsh, News Editor; John O ' Hara, Business Manager; E. Francis Sanguinetti, Literary Editor; Rev. John P. O ' Connell, S. J., Moderator. n o u r !Bzfo%z a LPauituicj of Santa Claxa J [l±iL on—l8. jL H€ picture lives! and as I looli upon Its painted skjes, its Padres, Indian boys, — see the white clouds move, and hear a Don Qall to his rearing horse. The clattering noise Of the JVlission morning awa es the storied past. And in my mind, the stubborn Serra speaks And Qatala prays, while thoughts come thic{ and fast And ta e me to a day the spirit see s. So, subtley ring, towered bells! and from The waiting dust raise up the gathered dead! Marshal the sleeping, while the golden hum Of Spanish voices with music fills the head — Then fades! Another age has lived, and I Am forced to let it pass with but a sigh! FRANCIS SANGUINETTI DEDICATION Sixty years ago, Richard A. Gleeson began his Jesuit Novitiate at Santa C lara College. Thus began the life work of The Soul Hunter, the spiritual creditor of literally thousands of people. During that time, REVEREND RICHARD A. GLEESON, S. J., has covered California with his good works; from Loyola High School of Los Angeles, which he founded in 191 1, up the State to Santa Clara, where he was president, 1905-1910, through the duties of several pastorships, to the office of Provincial of California, and then back to his most beloved duties in the Lord ' s Vineyard, whence springs his title, The Soul Hunter. In the words of the poet O ' Day, Fever of city ' s jungle, plague of the streets of sin Bring no halt to our hunter — he bravely plunges in; No danger may stay his hunting wherever a soul ' s to win! ' To his associates there is no secret about his popularity. To them he is simply the most charitable, the most humble , and the most sincere person they have ever known. Santa Clara is proud as we humbly dedicate this book to a man who is a comforter of the afflicted in the only true sense of the term. ww 2 . . ': v ' :m3. ,., V- ,N ,., L Y V if-ggi' ,Q 1 , 1+':.m,- ..' f ,. 173, 1.5m vi ' if ' WJ-'fi' L. -- --5:11 - '. - 1: ,.,,!' ,-.glfztq Q., ' f-'l'l. ?!'-'w.:5.4,5,,'3 V 1 be , '52 'P'1:I',. 595?2'f'2-f-E-1 2'f , Jfiv' ' + Jw , , 55,515-1. .1 . H- , ...,,- V- . .V Y :' HE picture lives! and as I loolq upon Its j7KIZ'71l6Il skies, its Padres, 171076172 boysf- I see the white cloud: move, and hem' zz Don Call to his T'8lll'l'71g horse. The clnztterin g noise Of the Jl4i.fsz'o1z mornirzg azualqes the storieal past. LA1zzi in my mind, the stubborn Serra speaks :A 71d Crmzlzz prays, while lhoughts come thick and fmt vilnzl take me to fl day the spirit secfqs. So, subtley ring, O rozuered bells! and from 'The Zl'IllfI.7Zg dust mise up the gzitherezl rlearl! Jllrzrshzzl the sleeping, while the golden hum Of Spanish voices with nwxic fill: the heml- Then fades! :Another age has lived, mul I A112 forced zo let it pass with but zz sigh! -FRANCIS SA-NGUINETTI DEDIUHTIUH Sixty years ago, Richard A. Gleeson began his Iesuit Novitiate at Santa Clara College. Thus began the life Work of The Soul I-Iuzzzcrf' the spiritual creditor of literally thousands of people. During that time, REVEREND RICHARD A. GLEESON, S. I., has covered California with his good Works, from Loyola High School of Los Angeles, which he founded in 1911, up the State to Santa Clara, Where he was president, 1905-1910, through the duties of several pastorships, to the oflice of Provincial of California, and then back to his most beloved duties in the Lord's Vineyard, whence springs his title, f'The Soul H 141z1fc1'. In the Words of the poet O'Day, Fever of city? jungle, plague of the streets of .vizz Bring 110 halt to our lzufzzez-'-he brczzfcly plu1zge.vi1z,' N 0 6l76llZg6l' may stay his hmzzfizzg wlzerezfcr ez soul? zo win. To his associates there is no secretiabout his popularity. To them he is simply the most charitable, the most humble, and the most sincere person they have ever known. Santa Clara is proud as We humbly dedicate this book to a man Who is a comforter of the lzfflicterlu in the only true sense of the term. THE uni vcfssiTy THE MODERN ACADEMIC UNIVERSITY CAN BE TRACED TO AND THROUGH THE GREAT UNIVER- SITIES OF MEDIEVAL EUROPE TO THE ACADEMY OF PLATO, FOURTH CENTURY, B. C, WHERE STUDENTS AND INSTRUCTORS LIVED IN CON- STANT AND CLOSE CONTACT. OF SUCH IS SANTA CLARA. THE UHIVERSITU I) A university does not run itself. The profes- sors are not self-appointed, the schedule of classes does not simply fall into order; the system of bells, meals, and lights out does not arrange itself; the boilers do not auto- matically know when heat is needed; the laundry does not wash clothes of its own arrangement; nor do the gardens plant themselves. Behind all these functions there are many minds at work, there are plans and sched- ules. The smoothness and efficiency of university life depends upon capable man- agement just as surely as the construction of the Bay Bridge depended upon miles of premeditated blue prints. That is why Father Rudolph, as President of a modern univer- sity, has gathered around him the men who can see to it that classes are held, that lectures are attended, that the formalities of registration are observed, that the rooms are at comfortable temperature, or that the grounds supply students with an adeguate setting for the works of the mind. Thus life goes on smoothly, the wheels of administration turn, and Santa Clara builds on the past for the future. PAGE 12 « THE REDWOOD • 1938 REV. LOUIS C. RUDOLPH, S. J. President REV. WILLIAM C. GIANERA, S. J. Dean of the Faculties REV. JOHN P. O ' CONNELL, S. J. Vice-President REV. JAMES H. STREHL, S. J. Minister REV. GEORGE A. GILBERT, S. J. Curator of Museums GEORGE A. SINGEWALD Registrar THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 13 C L L € G € Of ARTS The Jesuit system of edu- cation starts in Philosophy with a foundation inquiry into the fundamental con- cepts and precepts that under- lie all knowledge. From there, it spreads out slowly into a con- sideration of the cultural arts, the physical sciences, and the social sciences.  All students in the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences take four years of philosophy; starting in their freshman year with logic, the science of correct thought; and epistemology, the science of the critic of knowledge. With this basis, the Santa Clara man passes into a consideration of the abstract realms of metaphysics, of cosmology, psychology, theodicy, and finally ethics.  The value of this mental training can hardly be overempha sized. Given the proper foundation in the science of thought and the proper critical appre- ciation of authority, the student approaches his other subjects with more orientation and stability; recognizing true values and detecting false colora- tions; with a more true and vital appreciation for the good, and a clearer disdain for the bad.  This system affects the college man ' s entire life. It is a subtle prep- ar ation for the intelligent love of the cultural arts, with the bases upon which to build their proper valuation in the man ' s life. It sets up a firm rational and ethical foundation for later life, directing moderation and deliberation in all things.  The system depends almost essentially for its proper operation upon the physical set-up of the Small University wherein there can be that personal, vital contact between the professor and his pupils. By offering the highest type of instruc- tors, and making them more truly available to their students Santa Clara realizes to the utmost the Jesuit ideal. . PAGE 14 THE REDWOOD 3 8 £ n C £ s THE REDWOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 15 THE f fl C U LT y REV. EDWARD SHIPSEY, S.J. Professor of English REV. WILLIAM C. GIANERA, S. J. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences REV. CYRIL R. KAVANAGH, S. Professor of Philosophy REV. EUGENE M. BACIGALUPI, S. J. Professor of Physics DR. LLOYD L. BOLTON Professor of Biology PAGE 16 T II E R E D W © O  9 3 35 Edwin A. Beilharz Rev. Edward R. Boland, S. Professor of Political Science Professor of History and History Rev. Francis J. Callahan, S. J. Rev. Arthur V. Coglan, S. J. Rev. Raymond F. Copeland, Sj Professor of English Professor of Philosophy Professor of Religion and Philosophy Rev. James Corbett, S. J. Camillo d ' Abruzzo Professor of Philosophy Professor of Spanish Dr. Joseph F. Deck Rev. Cornelius F. Deeney, S. J Rev. Patrick H. Deignan, S. J. Professor of Chemis ' .ry Professor of Political Science Professor of Religion Rev. Hugh C. Donovan, S. J. Rev. Francis Giambastiani, S. Dean of Men Professor of Philosophy J. Martin C. Glavina Rev. Herman J. Hauck, S. J. Rev. George E. Lucy, S. J. Professor of German Professor of English Professor of English-Journalism J. Fenton McKenna Professor of Public Speaking and Dramatics Umberto Olivieri Professor of French and Italian Rev. Henry L. Walsh, S. J. Professor of English Rev. Joseph C. Pohley, S. J. Paul M. Roll Professor of Latin Chemistry Assistant Robert W. Ward William M. Ingram Professor of Chemistry Professor of Biology Clemens Van Perre Professor of French CLASS Of 1938 The last class at Santa Clara under Father Crowley — one of the two classes to see Santa Clara defeat St. Mary ' s, Stanford, and California in football — this year ' s Seniors leave Santa Clara on the eve of what well promises to be the brightest pages of her history. The Class of ' 38 is the last of the depres- sion classes — and as such has seen Santa Clara rise from some of her darkest days. Responsible for much of her glory, they have been strong scho- listically, vigorous in support of school activities. Seven members of this class have been to the Sugar Bowl twice with Buck Shaw; they will be sorely missed next year. Seniors have starred in dra- matics — been consistently dangerous in debating and forensics — been valuable on the publication staffs. It was members of this class who, as Juniors, were re- sponsible for the revival of The Redwood. Heffernan, Cullen, Kelly, O ' Connor, Filippi, Corriea, Donovan, and Farasyn are honor names in every campus or- ganization. The Seniors, as a unit, bid farewell to Santa Clara when they presented their tremendously successful Senior Ball at the Claremont Country Club the first week in May. When next we salute them, it shall be as honored alumni. David P. Arata Leo R. Artana Harry M. Bayley Los Gatos San Jose Burlingame iy Scholars Assn. Day Scholars Assn. Sanctuary Soa, Rally Nobili Club Nobili Club Committee, Glee Club Bryce T. Brov n Salinas Treas. Assoc. Students ' 37 Football, Block S. C. Norman T. Burke San Mateo Pres. of Day Scholars, Boxing, Publications PAGE IS REDWOOD 9 3 8 Edward S. Cali Cupertino Day Scholars Assn., Nobili Club, Band, Orchestra Theophile Cerles, Jr. Orland Sodality, Publications, Intramural Sports Julio Chiaramonte Gallup, New Mexico Sodality, Sabers, Galtes, Nobili Club, Boxing, Block S. C. Leslie E. Cook Vallejo Mendel Club, Footbal Block S. C. Stanley A. Corriea San Francisco Sports Ed., The Santa Clara; Sports Ed., The Redwood; Sodality, Stephen M. White Donald Dodd Burlingame Day Scholars Assn. Tennis John G. Doll Santa Clara Literary Congress Day Scholars Assn. John J. Donovan Oakland Sanctuary Soc, Editor The Redwood, ' 37; Literary Congress, Rally Committee THE REDWOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 19 Philip F. Dougherty San Francisco Football, Block S. C. Louis M. Farasyn Palo Alto Sanctuary Soa, Sec. Assoc. Students, Literary Congress, Owl Oratorical Winner ' 36 Thomas L. Ferro John M. Filippi Alameda Hanford Day Scholars Assn., Literary Pres. of Band, Leader of Swing Congress, Nobili Club Orch., The Santa Clara, Nobili Club Everett E. Fisher Football, Block S. C. PAGE 20 THE REDWOOD 19 3 8 Andrew Garbarino Redwood City Day Scholars Assn., Publications, Nobili Club John Gordon Gearin Peter F. Gilmore, Jr. Jerald W. Ginney Portland, Oregon Ketchikan, Alaska San Francisco Boxing Mgr., Literary Congress Sodality, Basketball, Football, Block S. C. Stephen M. White, Block S. C. William J. Helfrich William W. Hendricks Patrick T. Jones George R. Kane Menlo Park Redwood City San Jose Seattle, Wash. ' Scholars Assn., Galtes, Publications, Football Day Scholars Assn., Editor of Owl, Rally Committee Mendel Club Tennis, Golf Boxing fl THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 21 Paul F. Kelly San Francisco Sanctuary Soc, Literary Con- gress, V. Pres. Assoc. Students, Rally Committee, Publications Anthony C. Louis Honolulu, T. H. Mendel Club John T. McHenry Sonora Day Scholars Assn., Mendel Club, Glee Club, Barchi (Science) Prize Winner Herman J. Mager San Jose Day Scholars Assn. Literary Congress Ryland Debate Winner ' 36 Edward H. O ' Connor San Francisco Sanctuary Soc, Sec. Assoc. Students, Literary Congress, Football, Golf PAGE 22 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 Angelo T. Pestarino John C. Petit San Jose Camarillo Nicholas Sanoff John J. Sheehy Day Scholars Assn., Mendel Club, Student San Francisco San Jose Literary Congress Congress, Sodality, Mendel Club, Football, Day Scholars Assn Nobili Club Track Grid Manager The Owl Anthony S. Turturicci San Jose Day Scholars Assn., Tennis, Band Raymond J. Volpe San Jose Day Scholars Assn., Clay M. Greene Pres Literary Congress Football Mgr. Francis G. Wagstaffe Burlingame Day Scholars Assn., Editor The Owl, Literary Congress Charles W. Williams San Jose Day Scholars Assn. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 2- JUI1I0R ARTS r r% i • ' i % ! ' : s Adams, Arata, Barlow, Barreiro, Bertolani, Bezore, « ® Bricca, Bruce, Campobasso, Cerutti, Coffer, K. Cogswell, M. Cogswell i ■' -.1 jnl Jiillt IP . ' Coles, Considine, Coughlan, Criswell, Cummins, Di Ricco, J. A. Doherty 1 C u, L Dusina, Felciano, Finigan, Gilbert, Gunther, Haid, Hanlon PAGE 24 HE RE D WOO n  :b 8 hod science diiL Hauck, Hill, Leake, Lemke, Linsenmyer, Locke, McDonough re H. McGowan, McGurk, Meagher, Nelson, J. O ' Hara, O ' Toole, Pavelko : Mik M Ok Perrin, Piuma, R. Ryan, Sanguinetti, Schmidt, Schweitzer, H. Smith J. Smith, W. Smith, Speciale, R. Sullivan, Sweeney, Thelen, Twohy, Wagner THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 25 SOPHOmOfiE ARTS a f p Anahu, Andre, Anello, Ball, Bardin, Biancalana, Billick, Blinn f f ' £ 0 f ! Bonilia, Bradley, Bucchianeri, Cipolla, Clack, Claudon, Davis, De Benedictis ; v 1 Depaoli, Diaz, J. E. Doherty, Edge, Filippi, Felipe, Filliponi, Finni Flanagan, Fretz, Giannini, Gore, Hannon, Hoyt, Hutcheson, Jobst i: PAGE 26 [urewicz, Lacey, Libbey THE REDWOOD • 1938 Alio sciEimnun Lilley, Lumley, R. tvlcCarthy, C. McGowan, R. MacDonald, Mahoney, Mathe . Ak; «ijU A A A Miraglia, Morey, Naughton, Nemecek, Nichols, S. O ' Connor, Odegaard, Partmann jp;p 73 p pi, Patterson, Porter, Prud ' homme, Rankin, Roche, Ryan, Sanor, Schiechl Sinclair, Snow, Stringari, E. Sullivan, Thorn, Tobin, Toomey, Treat P;fy ? Walsh, L. Williams, Zell THE REDWOOD • 1938 PAGE 27 FRes-H.nrcn arts i,e Alaga, Allen, Barlogio, Bettencourt, Bisordi, Bogart, Burns a. J mM i A i A SA Chittum, Clark, Cumming, Dittman, I. C. Doherty, Durand, Dwan f. r fi Eichenberg, Fitzpatrick, Flippen, Ford, Fox, Frances, Gagliardi I Geare, Giansiracusa, Grul, Hale, Hanna, Healy, Heiser M £!£! ajUBiiHa Hellman, Herzog, Holm, Horan, Kane, Kehoe, Kelly PAGE 28 Kimball, Klein, Lang, Lamer, Lawrence THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 mid s c i € n c £ m € n Lewis, Limpert, Lind, Linsenmeyer, Litschi, Lo Curto, Lorenzt Lounibos, McCabe, McGarry, R. M £ta£tJ cGuire, McSherry, Mandler ? v ;tr Dl f p P Marsteller, Morissey, O ' Connor, Ogle, Oliver, Olsen, Owen I -58F -fe Passaglia, Petrich, Power, Reilly, Ruiz, Sweetland, Stickel Telles, Tidwell, Tompkins, Topic, Tucher, Visalli, Weaver West, Wolcott, A. Williams, Youngman ' THE REDWOOD • 1938 PAGE 29 COLL€G£ Of Business fi d m i n istratio n Continuing its work in preparing its students to meet the specific and gen- eral problems of the busi- ness world, the College of Business Administration this year completes its fifteenth as a separate unit of the University. The success of this school is attested to by the fact that an exceptionally high percentage of its gradu- ates are employed and many of them have attained high positions in the financial and commer- cial fields. Headed by Dean Edward J. Kelly, the College is staffed by instructors fully competent to teach the se- lected courses in account- ing, banking, credit, labor conditions, statistics, mar- keting, commercial law, business organization and management, which com- prise a technical program of studies offered. Along with these subjects, the business students are also required to enroll in a lim- ited number of cultural and scientific courses in English, Religion, the physical sciences, modern languages, and the various branches of scholastic philosophy,. The broad background received by the business student is reflected in his varied interests in campus life. Several business men each year successfully fill administra- tive positions in the various student organizations and publications other than their own organization. Constant additions are being made to the eguipment of the business school. Library facilities have grown appreciably during the last few years, including a business documents library which is housed in Kenna Hall. PAGE 30 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 DEAN EDWARD J. KELLY has taught in the Col- lege of Business Administration since 1925. He was named Dean in 1929. Although for years a Certified Public Accountant, he was this year on leave of absence studying for a Ph. D. at Stanford. He has also taught at the University of San Fran- cisco, and at Stanford along with his Santa Clara duties. JOHN PAGAN! Professor of Economics MAURICE MOONITZ Professor of Economics v 5 k ■g, . ' i LORENZO A. McHENRY Professor of Economics iM JOHN D. FOLEY Professor of Commercial Law THE REDWOOD 3 8 J. MARIUS BECCHETTI Professor of Commercial Law PAGE 31 soiofi Busintssmen David J. Buckley Francis W. Cope Franklin W. Cullen Palo Alto Hayward Gilroy Day Scholars Assn. B.A.A., Football, Block S. C. Editor The Santa Clara ' Tennis, B.A.A. B.A.A., Sanctuary Soc, Clay M. Greene f fp5 Edward Ellis Robert L. Gibson Patrick C. Heffernan Portland, Ore. San Mateo Stockton i. A. A., Sodality Day Scholars Assn., B.A.A. Pres. Assoc. Students., B.A.A. Basketball, Sanctuary Soc. PAGE 32 THE R E H W O O D 19 3 8 Arnold A. Hughes San Jose Day Scholars Assn., BAA. Mgr. Basketball John A. Maier Parsons, Kansas B.A.A., Swimming Publications Robert A. Naumes Medford, Oregon Sanctuary Society BAA. Pres. Ivcn G. Thcmas Burlingame Day Scholars Assn., BAA. Pres. Senior Class, Owl Sylvio B. Vinassa Santa Clara Day Scholars Assn. B.A.A., Nobili Club THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 33 junior BusinessmEn 3arbaccia, Campodonico, Egense, Ginnochio, Hayes, E. Kelly ft jj y {7: |Jff! 1 1 ' Kinneally, Dick Lautze, Robt. Lautze, McCargar, T. McCarthy, Pellegri Schwerin, Shando, Shea, Walker, Waters PAGE 34 THE REDWOOD 3 8 Bailey, Battaglia, Case, Changala, Cronan, Cumming, de la Guardia JP t Kra r ill Dutton, Eyrond, Grisez, Hagan, Hamilton, Ingram, Kirkish Lasater, Loewe, McDermott, McGinty, Molinari, Scholk, Stubler soPHomofif BusintssmEn fl ± ■I.Sul THE REDWOOD • 1938 PAGE 35 f R£SHmfin Brown, Callahan, Carroll, Cassady, Chen, J. Clarke W zz |jL -St f H - 3 Conlin, Costello, De Coursey, Engstrom, Feerick, Folger Harvey, Higgins, Jessup, R. T. McCarthy, McFadden, McGovern MSI L. McGrath W. McGrath PAGE 36 THE REDWOOD 3 8 Businessmen McHugh McNerney MacDougall, Mape, Marengo, Minten, Noonan, Novakovich 4iM Mk Puncochar, Rednall, W. Ryan, Sequeira, Shorrock, Simmons Soanes, Squires, Stefan, White, Wilcox, J. Williams THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 37 COLLEGE OF EtlGWfEfiinG Great civilizations were road-building civiliza- tions. Egypt, Greece, and Rome rose through their systems of transportation, and fell when they could no longer maintain them. Fundamentally, good roads are for rapid transit and communication. The twentieth century has thrown back the boundaries of more crude meth- ods, and developed new, wonderfully ingenious substitutes for the runner of Greece and the Im- perial messenger of Rome covering the long distance to Marseilles. But fundamentally, the old needs for rapid transit and communication are still there. The tremendous advancements along these lines in modern times may be laid substantially at the door of engineers and engi- neering. In a sense, they can be called the greatest bene- factors of mankind. They make sanitation pos- sible; they make air cooler or warmer. They make machinery, and provide the energy which runs the machinery. Automobile and airplane, tractor and battleship are all the culmination of thousands of years of knowledge brought to fruition by engineering skill. As knowledge grew, it became increasingly impracticable for the generic term engineer to be applied to the entire field of engineering. Out of the broad field developed the more spe- cialized branches of civil, mechanical, mining, electrical, and chemical engineering; they in turn have developed rapidly, and become more specialized still. They have all become so im- portant that it is almost impossible to name any convenience which is not indirectly at least the product of engineering skill. Since 1912 Santa Clara has conducted a school teaching three of the most fundamental branches of engineering — civil, mechanical, and electrical. Its thoroughness of training is evidenced by the success of its graduates in the field or in the great factories of the United States. PAGE 38 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 DEAN GEORGE L. SULLIVAN, at Santa Clara since 1912, and Dean of the College of Engineering since 1918, has been largely responsible for the excellent reputation of Santa Clara ' s Engineering College. Through emphasis on hard work, and firm grounding in fundamentals, Dean Sullivan has developed outstandingly successful engineers, now working in this country and abroad. EDMUND C. FLYNN Professor of Civil Engineering ERNEST F. PETERSON Professor of Electrical Engineering EDGAR C. SCHOTT Professor of Civil Engineering R. MANNING HERMES Professor of Mathematics FLOYD G. FISHER Professor of Mathematics A. LOUIS LONDON Professor of Mecha nical Engineering THE RE WOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 39 S € n 1 Ft € n G I n £ £ft s Emmet E. Brady Los Gatos Arthur C. Bravo Milton D. Donovan Engineers Society, A.S.C.E. Petaluma Seattle, Washington Day Scholars Assn., Band Engineers Society, A.S.C.E. Engineers Society, A.S.M.E. fl Norvin J. Lewis San Jose Engineers Society A.S.C.E., Tennis Leo W. Ruth San Jose Engineers Society Pres., A.S.C.E., Stephen M. White, Stage Mgr.; Day Scholars Ass Demosthenes M. Vanvales Mountain View- Engineers Society A.S.E.E., Stage Crew PAGE 40 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 sub - senions The Sub-Seniors in the Santa Clara Engineering College are those men, now in their fourth year, who enrolled in the special five year course in Engineering. More comprehensive but slightly less rigorous than the standard course, it pre- vents classification of these men as Seniors, still demands they be higher tnan Juniors. fNi F. MacDonald JUNIOR € n g i n £ £ r s Arismendi t AjM Mascovich Breen 0 Graham Dieudonne Gomes Freeman ' r c McCaffrey Papez Ruddy F. Ryan THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 41 soPHomoRE £nein€€RS G. Arata, Bates, Booth, Box, Bruntsch, Cambou Caserza, Cassidy, Collins, Elliot, Fisher, Gillhar Kahn, Kauffman, A. Nelson, Polhamus, Schad, Sylva iut t Von Tobel, Woo, Wood PAGE 42 K It E D W O O D 9 3 8 • si ' ?5 Alexander, Barrett, Benz, Bradfield, Braun, Cleary, Dentoni Echenique, Estelle, B. Feerick, Friedenbach, Gray, Guy, Hayes Holdiman, Hunter, Kelley, Kern, Masterson, Morton, Nagle G. O ' Connor, Olivier, Scott, Shay, Simon, Stephens, Stolarz D. Sullivan, Unsworth, Vaughan, P. Williams f r €S h m a n cneioEEos THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 43 COLL€G£ Of Lfllll The philosophic preparation offered by the under- graduate division at Santa Clara is one of the finest foundations for the study of Law known. Santa Clara, building on this foundation, has long offered out- standing training in the ethics and profession of Law. Instructions in Law were first given in 1907; but the school, slowly built up since then, fell into bad days since the War. In the new expansion and building program, however, it was slowly built up again, in 1930 becoming a full time day school. In 1934, Edwin Owens, Harvardman and professor of Law at Boston College, became Dean of Santa Clara ' s Law Col- lege. Since then he has built up the personnel, in- creased the enrollment, and last year finally gained recognition as an accredited Law School from the American Bar Association. The Law College at Santa Clara is hard to get into, but easy to leave. Reguiring a high scholastic aver- age and an enormous amount of work, it ruthlessly dismisses all unsatisfactory students. This constant policy insures not only the ideal small school, in which the indispensable personal contact between the professor an d his student is had; but also main- tains an unusually high scholastic average. The Law college uses the classical case system of instruction in the principles of law which, conjoined with the personal contact insured by the large fac- ulty and small enrollment, insures to the Law student an opportunity to gain a comprehensive and firm foundation in law that few other schools can offer. PAGE 44 r h e REDWOOD  3 8 DEAN EDWIN J. OWENS arrived at Santa Clara in 1933 after a progression through Holy Cross, Harvard, and Boston College, where he was an in- structor. In 1934 he became Dean of the College of Law, succeeding Clarence C. Coolidge, who had held that position since 1919. Under Dean Owens the Law College has been approved by the American Bar Association, and has steadily grown in reputation throughout California. fc- HUNTER S. ARMSTRONG Professor of Law JOHN F. BAECHER Professor of Law ROBERT E. HAYES Professor of Law GEORGE STEPOVICH Professor of Law JOHN M. BURNETT Professor of Law THE REDWOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 45 LAW senioRS Completing three years of graduate work in the Law College, the largest graduating class of Santa Clara ' s history now begin on the most important phase of their preparation — priming for the Bar examination. Always a worry, this hurdle offers less obstruction to the ever improving and fast grow- ing reputation of Santa Clara ' s first graduate division. Nine men of proven caliber about to follow one of the world ' s oldest callings. ... James Anthony Arnerich A. B., Santa Clara, 1935 Leo Louis Andriano S., Santa Clara, 1935 Albert Francis De Marco, B. S., Santa Clara, 1935 Louis Carl Doll Ph. B., Santa Clara, 1936 Alfred Davis Santa Clara, 1936 David Lawrence Ditto A. B., Santa Clara, 1936 Thomas Gerald Fitzgerald Ph. B., Santa Clara, 1936 Stanley Stephen Hasbrook A. B., Santa Clara, 1936 4M i Vi Richard Anthony McCormick B. S., Santa Clara, 1936 PAGE 46 I HE REDWOOD 9 3 8 SECOND yfflfi Lfl Bacon, Cronin, Delmas, Fenton, Harp, Joseph Morton, Sanfilippo FIRST yfOfi LAW 1 Arte, Cost, Dodd, Doll, Donovan Ferro, Green, Mager, McGee, Pestarino, Sheehy Turturici, Wagstaffe THE REDWOOD • 1938 PAGE 4 I O.T. C. To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace. — Washington. The outgrowth of the nation ' s lesson of unpreparedness, the Reserve Officers Training Corps has sought to correct the condition about which the first president warned the new nation more than a hundred years before. The National Defense Act of 1919 marks the beginning of the R. O. T. C. as part of the school life of thousands of young men of the United States. Chosen High Schools and Colleges throughout the country are eguipped with the facilities for giving young men the fundamental groundwork of an officer ' s training. The branch of training at Santa Clara is one of the newer types— motorized field artillery.With several hundred thousand dollars worth of eguipment furnished by the government, and officers and non-commissioned officers of the regular army as instructo rs, the Santa Clara unit is at present furnishing a three year course, shortly to be enlarged to four years; the first two years being reguired for all freshmen and sophomores, the latter two being optional. After the com- pletion of the four-year course, with a six-week period of summer training in special work, the student officer is granted a second lieutenant ' s commission in the Field Artillery Reserve. PAGE 48 T H E REDWOOD 9 3 8 3E l Qe 95St3 f f- Bottom row: Williams, Von Tobel, Lumley, McGinty, Clauden, Roche, Edge, McDermott, E. Sullivan, Zappelli. Second row: Whitehurst, Gillham, Hamilton, Molinari, Zell, McDonald, Bezore, Rankin, Partmann, Jurewicz, Whittle, Davis, Odegaard. Third row: Ingram, Patterson, Collins, Mariani, Bates, Lilley, Sanor, Booth, Pardini. Fourth row: Prud ' homme, O ' Connor, Treat, Finni, Clack, Speciale, Grisez, J. Sullivan, Bressani, Bradley. Fifth row: Andre, Ball, Barreiro, Cassidy, Blinn, Cronan, Walsh, Cippolla, G. Cumming. Major Ernest T. Barco, F. A., U.S.A., Professor of Military Science and Tactics Captain H. E. Sanderson, F. A. U.S.A., Asst. Professor of Military Science and Tactics Capt. Russell G Duff, F. A., U.S.A., Asst. Professor of Military Science and Tactics Benefits of discipline and respon- sibility developed through military training, though they may never be applied as such, are never wasted. They are fundamentals of better citizenship. fi EpL Front row: Elliot, Lucky, Fullbright. Back row: Von Auron, Dearborn, Gould, Lowe. THE REDWO II 9 3 8 PAGE 49 . i. . • Though relatively few students continue the course beyond the required two years, a large number are given the opportunity to handle men to some extent. This is done through the creation of student non-commissioned officers according to the rules of seniority and merit. Without actual facilities for firing, the training is accomplished through the use of actual standard equipment. Gun crews are trained, each man being required to learn all positions. Instruments for observation and computation of fire are supplied and instructions given. Courses teaching the use of maps, pistols, trucks, motors, and communication devices of military value make the course of value to the citizen population as well as to the military man. Trips are made at intervals to nearby military establishments where facilities for practical training familiarize the student with actual military conditions, and at the same time com- plement with practice what was before necessarily confined to theory. PAGE 50 THE R E D W O O 9 3 8 TH£ CflfTlPUS THE SCHOOLMEN HAD A SAYING, ACTIO SEOUITUR ESSE — THE INMOST NATURE IS KNOWN FROM THE ACTIONS. THROUGH THE ACTIVITIES OF SANTA CLARA HER TRUE NATURE IS KNOWN. THE CHIHPUS ffl Paul F. Kelly Vice-President of Associated Students gM Edward H. O ' Connor Secretary of Associated Students John F. O ' Hara Treasurer of Associated Students M t Patrick C. Heffernan President of Associated Students Harry J. Finigan Sgt. at Arms of Associated Students 2m, ! Thomas, Dougherty, Nelson, Leake, Hagan, Flanagan Cleary, McGuire, Naumes, Burke, Ruth STUDCnT COOGfifSS The Student Congress consists of those duly elected officers of the student body who are expected to represent the students in the field of student government. All activities of the student body as a unit are directed by these leaders. In addition to officers of the Associated Students, the president and representative of each class, and the representatives of the Engineering Society, the Business Administration Association, the Mendel Club, the Block S. C. Society, and the Head Yell Leader, and the Editor of The Santa Clara are those v ho constitute the full membership of the Congress. Thus, all phases of student activity are fairly represented. As The Redwood goes to press, the members of the Congress are attempting to pass a new Constitution. With President Patrick Heffernan, the Congress feels that a revised document can add much to the vigor of student activity in self-government. PAGE 54 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 business flDmiiusTRfmon essocifliion First row: Engstrom, MacDougall, Weaver, Sequiera, De Coursey, Noonan, Ellis, McCarthy, Shea. Second row: Naumes, Ginocchio, Kirkish, de la Guardia, Shorrock, Buckley, Molinari, Sullivan, Fanoe. Third row: McGinty, Thomas, Ball, Harvey, Shando, Gibson, Kelleher, Cassady, Campodonico, Lautze. Fourth row: Schwerin, Cronan, Eyrond, Cullen, Lautze, Loewe, Barbaccia, Folger, Scholk. Robert Naumes President The organization of the College of Business Administration in 1925 made apparent the need of an association in which the members of this branch of the University would have a supplement to their regular work in lecture hall and laboratory. And now, thirteen years after its inception, the Business Administration Association finds itself one of the most unified campus groups. Only students enrolled in the College of Business are eligible for membership in this organization. The B. A. A. ha s grown as rapidly as has the Business department, so that at present one-fifth of the entire student body belongs. It is sometimes claimed that business students need supplementary aid in obtaining a broader view of their field. For this reason the B. A. A. strives to complete the academic life of its members by sponsoring, under the guidance of Dean E. Kelly, outside lecturers and field trips into the metropolitan centers. During the past year this policy has not been allowed to die and an adeguate program has been presented. However, the B. A. A. does not confine itself to purely business activities; President Robert Naumes, early in the Fall semester, directed one of the successful social dances of the year. And at the conclusion of the term the annual banguet brought together in the traditional manner the members of one of the University ' s respected groups. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 55 EimnEEflinG Barrett, Bates, Brady, Bravo, Breen, Collins, Dentc . JI1U3 B. Feerick, Fisher, Freeman, Friedenbach, Graham, Kahn, Lewis A. Nelson, O ' Shea, Ruddy, Ruth, F. Ryan, Scott, Shay fl. s. c. t Simon, Von Tobel, Woo J C- £ . Cassiday, Geever, Gillham, Holdiman, Hunter, Mascovich, Masterson, Morton Nagle, O ' Connor, Papez, Olivier, Richter, Schad, Unsworth, Vanvales fl. 1, 1 1 PAGE 56 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 SOCIEM Acurso, Alexander, G. Arata, Arismendi, Benz, Booth, Box Bradfield, Cambou, Caserza, Dieudonne, Donovan, Gomes, Hayes ■I Kauffman, Kern, McCaffrey, Stephens, Sylva, Vaughan, Wolff fl. S. fll f . The Engineer ' s Society has long functioned as a nucleus for those activities, social, technical and fraternal, which do not come under the head of curricular engineering studies. Its members, in addition, have managed to acquire an ease in public address and a knowledge of parliamentary procedure. But perhaps the most remarkable achievement of the Engineering Society is the manner in which its members form a close-knit, loyal, hard-working unit, always the envy of less unified groups. This year has seen the regular series of lectures by prominent engineers, two large banquets, two highly suc- cessful dances, inspection tours of engineering proj ects calculated to give them first hand views of the monuments of their profession. Most organizations are content when they have done half of what has been enumerated above, but Santa Clara engineers have made of themselves a truly useful campus unit by further work behind the curtains of every dramatic production, by winning second place in the One-Act Play Contest, and by their supervision of the erection of the traditional Little Big Game bonfire. H E REDWOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 57 THE SOO First row: Ellis, Wood, Depaoli, Schwerin, Libbey, Walsh, Sanguinetti. Second row: O ' Hara, Jobst, Naughton, McCarthy, Hagan, McGowan, Cullen, Sullivan. Third row: Claudon, Meagher, Treat, J. E. Doherty, Booth, Andre, L. Williams. Bringing back thoughts of an older chivalry, the Senior Sodality has on its roll only men who have a special devotion to the Queen of Heaven. With this as their qualification it becomes readily understandable why the organization occupies a very particular place among campus groups. Vigorously, Senior Sodalists spread the cult of the Virgin through their own enthusiasm. Frequent reception of the Sacraments marks a typical activity. Of the traditional exercises of the Senior Sodality, the most noted are the regular attendance of Mass and Holy Communion in a body and the special Sodality Benediction held once a month. In all these observances Sodalists are distinguished by their colorful wearing of the broad ribbon and medal of the Virgin. At the meetings of this sodality it is customary for one of the members to speak on some phase of the life of Mary. In this way, examples of the virtue of the Queen of Sodalities are never absent from the minds of Sodalists. Louis Farasyn, Prefect, and Hugh C. Donovan, S. J., Moderator, have directed all Senior Sodality activities. Senior Sodality PAGE 58 I II E REDWOOD 9 3 8 TICS First row: Cassady, Litschi, De Co ursey, Noonan, Higgins, R. McGowan. Second row: J. C. Doherty, Bettencourt, Weaver, Holm, Gagliardi. Third row: Tompkins, Folger, McGarry, Shorrock, Eichenberg. Fourth row: Lounibos, Williams, Petrich, Healy. freshman Sodality Begun in 1930, the Freshman Sodality was established as a preparatory organization for the Senior Sodality. The aim and intention of its members is, quite naturally, to be admitted into the older group. Like the Senior Sodality, the Freshman organization functions to preserve the traditions of Our Lady with the same spirit of culture that prompted the builders of Notre Dame Cathedral. It is an understood part of the activity of the Sodality to encourage a representative attendance at the Sacraments and at all Chapel services. There are several activities which the Sodality observes in a body. These include the thrilling sight of the entire membership approaching the Altar together once a month, and the observance as a unit of the tradition of the monthly Sodality Benediction. One of the most interesting activities ot the Sodality is their joint assembly with the Senior group at which time open-house discussions of the Virgin are held. It would be injustice to omit Father Donovan ' s name from any attempt to summarize this Sodality. He has been the guiding agent of its activity. Under him, Prefect Patrick McGarry, Secretary Victor Stefan, and Counsellors Joseph Doherty, Dion Holm have finished a year which promises to be repeated next year when these men graduate into the Senior Sodality. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 59 snncTUflRy At once the oldest organization on the campus, the members of the Senior Society are the most select body of men in the University. The desire of every Freshman acolyte is to join this group which is so restricted in membership. There are three fundamental rules for membership in this organization — all of which are strictly maintained by Father Hauck, Moderator, and the elected officers. A member of the Saint John Berohmans Sanctuary Society must be a Sodalist in good standing; he must have a better than average. scholastic stand- ing; he must be a resident student. As only a member of the Senior Sanctuary Society is permitted to assist the priest on the main altar, the activities of the group are to assist the priest at the main and two of the side altars, and attend the celebrant at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. The functions of the Society were climaxed by the group picnic and cruise in San Francisco Bay in a chartered launch. Father Hauck presided on this, as on other occasions. Senior Sanctuary First row: Farasyn, E. Sullivan, E. McCarthy, Twohy, Father Hauck, J. A. Doherty, Roche, R. McCarthy, N. Bayely, Zell. Second row: Donovan, Meagher, Bruce, Stringari, O ' Shea, Sanguinetti, Adams, Felciano, Walsh, Kelly. Third row: Cullen, Naumes, Heffernan, O ' Connor, Thorn, Jobst, Robt. Lautze, Rich. Lautze. PAGE 60 REDWOOD 3 8 SOCIETIES EXPOSITION and adoration of the Bless- ed Sacrament, the beauti- ful custom of the Catholic Church that allows a direct contemplation of the Sav- iour ' s body, is doubly more beautiful here as cassocked students guard and pray in front of the Monstrance each First Fri- day from the moment of exposition in the morning till Benediction that evening, when the entire student body files into the shadowed church to praise God in the glorious strains of the O Salutaris Hostia. Unlike its father society, The Freshman Sanctuary organization was begun in 1930. It was founded for the express purpose of teaching the younger men the fundamentals and method of assisting the priest at Mass. It is the ambition of every freshman acolyte to receive an invitation into the senior group. In order to receive such an invitation the young server must maintain a B average in the scholastic field; he must be an honor gentleman on or off the campus. The duties of the Freshman Society are to serve and assist the priest on four of the side altars. They are seldom allowed on the main altar, or to wear cassock and surplice. Such privileges are reserved to the Senior group. Actively, this society meets weekly to establish fervor in execution of duties, and further develop an appreciation of the significance of the Mass. This is done under the supervision of Mr. Herman Hauck, S. J., Moderator. freshman Sanctuary First row: Flippen, Lounibos, Father Hauck, McGuire, Geare. Second row: Telles, Sweetland, Cassady, Thompkins, Burns. Third row: Eichenberg, Williams, McGarry, Folger, Holm, Litschi, Echenique. THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 61 ffl fa Kelly THE LIT The Senate Senator Haid debates on the Japanese question Modeled after the Congress of the United States, the Literary Congress of Santa Clara was founded in 1857. In the early years of its existence its upper and lower house met in joint session, each house defend- ing a different side of the guestion up for discussion. This original plan was such a complete success that Harvard University adopted the idea a few years after its inauguration here. Since the War the two Houses have split, becoming separate organizations and coming into contact with each other once a year in the annual Ryland Debate, held in honor of the distinguished Caius Ryland, ' 97. Twenty of these contests have been the prize of the Senate, the House of Philhistorians win- ning on fourteen occasions. The Senate is recognized as the senior debating society, and under the direction of Rev. Cyril Cavanaugh, S. J., has participated in many brilliantly planned intercollegiate discussions. Through Debate Manager Edward Bezore ' s efforts a new field has been opened to members of both the House and Senate in the freguent radio debates, most of them intercollegiate, which have been heard this year. Any conGAtss Although students must first be members of the House before they can be admitted to a seat in the Senate, the members of the House of Philhistorians need no further requirement than a desire to improve themselves in public speech. Byron Snow, Vice- speaker, directed the intra-society activities of the House under the supervision of Edward Boland, S. J., moderator. This year, more than ever before, and more so than the Senate, the House has been active in its participation in intercollegiate contests. These debates, spirited and intense, ranging from discus- sion on our naval policy to the consideration of the future of the Republican party, have merited the interest of a large body of students. An effort is being made, led by members of the Sen- ate, to restore to the debating societies their former campus position in directing the course of the activ- ities in student government. The Literary Congress has fallen far from this previous state of glory and it is the determination of a group of Senators and members of the House to elevate the Congress once more to the foremost place in student activity. Once each semester the Senators elect their officers. Louis Farasyn and Paul Kelly, as President and Secretary respectively for the Fall semester, were succeeded by Paul Kelly as President and Deb O ' Connor as Secretary for the final period. The House of Philhistorians Representative MacDonald debates on Labor fZ 00) Alaga Bettencourt Burns Cassady Cleary Dwan Eichenberg Engstrom Flippen Grul Healy Hellman Limpert Stickel Sweetland Telles Tompkins Weaver McGuire Mr. Engstrom addresses the Stephen M. White Stephen 111. White In 1871 there graduated from Santa Clara, a man destined to represent the state of Cali- fornia as a senator in the Congress of the United States. The name of this great lawyer and statesman was Stephen M. White, and it is in his honor that the debating society bearing his name was founded in 1922. The Stephen M. White Debating Society is a limited group to which Freshmen alone may be invited to belong. Its moderator, Raymond F. Copeland, S. J., presented this year a long list of topics for his men to dis- cuss. They ranged from the C. I. O.-A. F. of L. dispute to a consideration of the gifts of French culture. These same guestions were presented to the campus at large in the freguent meetings of the Society with members of the debating teams of all the bay region universities. Students who are interested in a great variety of practical guestions know that on any Friday evening they may go to Seifert Lounge and listen to flashing and guick- witted elucidations by Stephen M. White orators. Since the founding of the Society, the policy has been to develop t he individual speaker that he might be able to lead a discussion of any matter before the group. Each member, conseguently, in turn becomes chairman at a meeting, directing the activities of both sides of the debate. There are only two permanent officers, Donald Noonan, the Recording Secretary, and William Collier, the Sergeant-at-Arms. TH£ WOOLSACK 4Er S k Morton It is customary throughout human society to identify individuals with distinguishing or peculiar symbols. Thus, we speak of the scepter and the crown when we mean the king; the law when we mean an officer of the law; the bench when we mean a judge; and also, the Woolsack, when we intend the English Lord Chancellor. Actually, it is a sack or cushion of wool, covered with, red cloth, in shape like a divan, without back or arms. Through the years the natural human tendency to dramatize his resulted in the gen- erally accepted modern sense. At Santa Clara there is a third meaning. This is attached to an honor organization among the law students. All those who have maintained an honor rating for a year are eligible for membership, thus automatically limiting it to the upper two divisions of the College of Law. Through its meetings during the year such activities as the Coolidge Competition [ire discussed and handled. The Coolidge Competition, in honor of Clarence C. Coolidge, Dean Emeritus of the College of Law, is handled entirely by The Woolsack. This event is dealt with further on page 85 of this book. This year, with the largest membership in its history, The Woolsack, under the guidance of Dean Owens, is becoming more and more instrumental in the advancement of the steadily growing reputation of Santa Clara Law College. THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 65 G A C L H T £ Schweitzer S I An organization requires two things, a raison d ' etre , and a name. The reason for existence of the Galtes is the community of interest that exists between the chemistry majors of the College of Arts and Science. These men gather once a week to discuss the things that interest them in their par- ticular field; and frequently to hear lectures from men outside the University who are versed in the world of chemical matters. Occasionally, the Galtes spon- sors a public lecture. The name of the Galtes is drawn from one that appears halfway down the alphabetical list of Santa Clara ' s greats. It is that of Reverend Paul Galtes, S. J., whose work in the early part of the century in radio phenomena was so important that Marconi made a special trip to the University to study it. His other achievements are almost as noteworthy. He made major strides in general chemical research; one rather interesting item being the sign he built for the Golden Jubilee of the University in 1901 utilizing the Neon principle of illumination. THE RE WOO 9 3 8 Among the great scientists of the world, there have not been many who have per- manently influenced their particu much Gregor Johann Men- del, an Augustine Monk who lived in the middle of the last century. Through his teaching has come the highly developed science of heredity whose laws have made possible such great advancement in agriculture and animal husbandry. It is particularly apt that a society founded in honor of this great Catholic scientist should be found in a Catholic school. The Mendel Biological Society, composed of students of biology, is such a society at Santa Clara. In meetings through the year papers are read by the students, followed by dis- cussions, and speakers are often invited to address the ciety on subjects of s c i e n t i c KkJ interest. THE REDWOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 67 PUBLICATIONS ■■■T H £ OWL TH€ fSCDUUOOD THE SflRTfl CLflRfl Santa Clara does not possess a department or school of journalism but it does contain three very adequate channels for literary and journalistic expression, in its weekly, The Santa Clara, its monthly literary magazine, The Owl, and its annual, The Redwood. Students work on these publications not for credit points, for none are given, but out of spontaneous interest and enthusiasm. This is the attitude which has produced this year, as in no previous year, a condition of excellence in all three publications which at times has been brilliant and which has always been progressive. The Santa Clara aims to bring to its readers a weekly panorama of important campus events and current student opinion in crisp, journalistic fashion. On the other hand, The Owl is a literary review whose reason for existence is the giving to as many students as possible the education of preparing an intelligent paper for high-standard publication. The Redwood, of course, is the record of the year ' s achievements and the particular memory-book of the Senior Class. Many a fine talent has developed with the College press. Santa Clara gives its men the opportunities necessary for literary and journalistic growth with the assurance that these opportunities will be used to the best advantage. In the past certain of its students have proven that this assurance is not a false one. This year has indicated that the future will not be barren of a quality of talent creditable to American letters. PAGE 68 « THE REDWOOD • 1938 Stanley Corriea Sports Editor Franklin Cullen Editor in Chief Francis Sanguinetti Feature Editor WEfKiy Assistants not pictured: Jack McGinty, Walter Cummins, Joseph Schweitzer, Bill McGuire, Alan Williams, Bill Bruce, Bill Hendricks. THE Sfl nifl CLflRfl Meagher, Barreiro, Piuma, Prud ' homme, Treat, Smith, Engstrom, Miraglia During the first semester, the editors of The Santa Clara placed it in the vanguard of a trend among papers on other campi towards a program of streamlining . This action was in keeping with the position of leadership wh ich the paper has maintained with its consistently high national ratings. Smaller type faces, new and more variable heads, use of more cuts, and several other technical improvements were initiated under the direction of the editors and with the assistance of George Lucy, S. J., moderator. The result has been a welcome freshness and vitality of physical appearance. A more adeguate and thorough coverage of campus news and several new feature departments were developed as a means of pointing The Santa Clara ' s claims to being a progressive and representative school paper. More than one campus activity owed much of its success to the coverage given it in The Santa Clara pages. Opposite posi- tions in campus controversies were fairly presented that all sections of student opinion might be satisfied. And lastly, recognizing the common aims of the Catholic colleges and Universities in this area, a news exchange was inaugurated between St. Mary ' s College, the University of San Francisco and Santa Clara. THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 69 monTH Ly THf OWL Francis Sanguinetti Editor Assistants not pictured Bill Bruce, Joseph Schweitzer, George Kane, Walter Cummins, Bob Bettencourt, Manuel Felciano Meagher, Prud ' homme, Bayley Tobin, Smith It is now sixty-nine years since The Owl first appeared on the campus. At that time it was the publication of a class in English Composition which met in the evenings. Thus the title of the oldest campus publication and the senior expression of student thought. The purpose of The Owl was well expressed at one of the last meetings this year of The Owl Editorial Board by its Moderator, Edward Shipsey, S. J.: We must give to as large and as varied a group of undergraduates as possible the educational experience of preparing and writing an intelligent paper for a literary magazine of Owl standards. No subject is ineligible for treatment in The Owl. The review features essays on matters as varied as Gerard Manley Hopkins, Rossini, Justice Cardozo, and Hawaiian snails. At the beginning of the second semester, Francis Sanguinetti assumed the duties of executive editor. This was a signal for a reorganization of The Owl Editorial Board and for a complete change in the make-up of the monthly. Its new, smart format has been characterized by a reader as a happy fusion of elegance and simplicity, which should be a pledge of its per- manency. Together with managing-editor Arthur Meagher, the new editor proceeded also to sponsor a series of educational, entertainments including a travelogue by Hubert Coles, an evening of University musical talent, and a reading by the Clay M. Greene Players. During the first semester George Kane headed the Owl masthead as editor. PAGE 70 E REDWOOD 3 8 THE REDWOOD Assistants not pictured Paul Kelly, Jack Donovan, Charles Haid, Bob Shorrock, Manuel Felciano, Patrick McGarry, Jim O ' Toole, Joseph Schweitzer, Bill Bruce, Bill Box, Edward Sullivan Meagher, Smith, Corriea Walsh, O ' Hara, Sanguinetti James Doherty Editor An annual makes a valuable reference book for succeeding generations of students. It pre- serves for graduates the record of their last year and keeps fresh in the memory many inci- dents and faces that would be otherwise forgotten. For these reasons the staff of the 1938 Redwood felt that it must make a determined effort to make the book as representative as possible. Editor-in-chief James Doherty early appointed his large staff that the difficult problems ahead might be coped with in sufficient time . A quick marshalling of field workers and advertising men followed upon the appointment of John O ' Hara as business manager. There was a brief financial struggle at first that threat- ened the Redwood ' s existence, but as the staff ' s duties were made clearer work progressed again. Many annuals are content to follow an older type. Not so The Redwood. Arthur Meagher, Make-up Editor, was allowed the full play of his talents. Once his dummy had been ap- proved, News-editor Jack Walsh, Sports-editor Stanley Corriea, and Literary-editor Francis Sanguinetti immediately began their work. The photography in the Redwood, gathered by Managing-editor Hugh Smith, gives a vivid representation of university life at Santa Clara in a more striking way than can words. The camera, in a sense, gives all that the publications attempt to present — a true cross section of the student living. They show the Santa Claran at work, in the library, in classrooms, in laboratories; at play in the gymnasium or on the athletic field; and at prayer in his chapel. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 71 D. Arata, Bricca, Dusina, Bertolani, Barbaccia, Ginnocchio, Piuma, Miraglia Campodonico, Campobasso, Passaglia, Felciano, Sanguinetti, Cerutti, Speciale, J. Arata Wishing to bind itself closer to the traditions of the University, the Italian Club, formerly always recognized by that rather loose appelation, decided to invest itself with the memory of the famed Father Nobili, and late in the year became formally known as the Nobili Club. There could be no more auspicious title for a Santa Clara organization. To kindle the spirit of Italian culture and custom is the reason for the existence of the Nobili Club. The re-breathing of the finer ideals of the Renaissance and the cultivation of the time- honored arts of the soil and of the mind have been increasingly insisted upon by the very fine Italian gentleman, Umberto Olivieri, LL. D., who acts as moderator to the group. The Nobili Club is renowned for its occasional banquets where good food, good thought, and good cheer mingle. Members discuss the fine arts, debate literature, cement friendships. This is the spirit of Nobili men. At the convention of Italian organizations of bay region colleges and universities, sponsored by the San Francisco Italian Chamber of Commerce, Nobili was represented by Lester Bricca and David Arata. Another important activity was the attempt to form a nucleus for cm Italian Library for the use of Italian students of the University. And with the Spring the Club cele- brated in an open-air barbecue among Los Gatos ' rolling green hills. Culminating a year which has ushered in many fine Nobili projects was the participation, prominent and spirited, in the three-day Convention of Italian Clubs held in April under the leadership of the Maraschi Club of the University of San Francisco. The entire Nobili Club membership attended, adding the spirit of Santa Clara tradition to what was the most ambi- tious undertaking of bay-region Italian Clubs. a p o. Depaoli, Vinassa, Bo, Cali, Di Ricco, Ar Chiaramonte, Dwan, Hale, Anello Filippi, Gi I10BILI CLUB PAGE 72 THE REDWOOD 3 8 THE SflBRf Chiaramonte, A. Nelson, Waters, K. Cogswell, Toomey, Kelleher The Sabre Society, an honor organization, whose members are drawn from the cadet commissioned officers of the Reserve Officers Training Corps, although established only a year, is fast becoming one of the most active societies on the campus. As its object is the better ment of the unit as a whole, it is most important in the activities of the battalion. The cadet commissioned officers, who compose this society, act in the capacity of instructors, taking the battalion for a few minutes of close order drill at the beginning of each practical class, and then aid in the instruction of the unit, both on the guns and on the instruments. This being excellent training in leadership makes for experience and the perfecting of the cadets themselves. At present the commissioned officers of the battalion, numbering only eight, are entirely too few adequately to control the unit, but the effect of their leadership was shown by the brilliant parade on President ' s Day, April 28. This showing may be directly traced to the Sabre Society through the enthusiasm it gives to its members. THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 73 m DRAMA:. 0 ft ft r ft - : - Ja — Ja J THE C Lfl t | i p i £ £ P L fl y e R 5 ■i Top row: Adams, Bayley, Bettencourt, Cullen, Cummins, Cumming, De Coursey, Depaoli, J. A. Doherty, Dwan. Second row: Felciano, Frances, Healy, Holm, Kern, Kimball, Lilley. Third row: Lorentz, McCabe, McGarry, McGuire, Morrisey, Odegaard, Ogle. Fourth row: OToole, Piuma, Polhamus, Prud ' homme, Sanguinetti, Smith, Speciale. Fifth row: Sullivan, Tobin, Twohy, Volpe, Walsh, L. Williams, A. Williams, Weaver, Wood, Gagliardi. m — «i L Every great advance — political or medical — has always been made over the resistance of selfish minded men. In Major Reed ' s brave fight against Yellow Jack, there was no exception to the rule — Colonel Tory, a bigoted Marine officer, opposing the work in pride of a reactionary system, frequently battles Dr. Lazear, Major Reed ' s idealistic, hot- headed assistant. J. Fenton McKenna Director Facing the problem of maintaining the outstanding reputation of the year before, the Players were handi- capped by a considerable narrowing of the possible number of plays they could present. This was because it wos no longer possible to present plays containing feminine roles. The difficulty was met during the Fall semester by Sidney Howard ' s Yellow Jack, a roaring historical play of the experimental type. Spring saw The Amazing Doctor Clitterhouse on Dr. Clitterhouse the boards, which was well received and complimented by all who witnessed the two performances. A series of lectures by prominent men of the Bay Region, the annual Dramatic Art Contest, numerous entertainments, the One Act Play Contest, and the weekly radio program filled the schedule to almost overflowing. Plans for next year ' s program are already under way — some of them tentative, but finally climaxing the year with the gigantic Passion Play of Santa Clara. : t: !: There is, among the musically-gifted students on the campus, a small, select group of musicians who form the University Orchestra. They struggle against a factor which would have forced a less devoted and enterprising organization to collapse. A regrettably small and inade- quate string section necessitates the curtailment of the number and variety of compositions which can be used by the Orchestra. Nevertheless, more than a little praise has been directed to the musi- cians for artistic work at the dramatic presentations, at prominent debates, and at those other University functions where a high type of music is required. Professor Clemens Van Perre, directing the Orchestra, is faced with the task of enlarging the group and of discovering on the campus many more players of instruments of an essentially orchestral nature. The proximity of the Passion Play makes Director Van Perre ' s problem all the more acute since the background music for that traditional drama of the University is essential in setting mood and atmosphere. This difficulty is one of major importance and must be solved at the begin- ning of the Autumn Semester. Professor Clemens Van Perre Left to right: C. Van Perre, Jr., Campobasso, Hanlon, Stefan, Brady, Sequeira, Mariani, Prof. Van Perre, Lemke, Mascovich, Morton, Davis, Turturici, Shorrock, Snow, Lilley, Woods. ORCHESTRA PAGE 76 THE REDWOOD • 1938 Bfl n d Leading: Ingram, Stefan, Prof. Van Perre. Row 1: Wells, Silva, Mellow, Litschi. Row 2: Chandler, Snow, Turturici, Considine, Sharrock. Row 3: Campobasso, Lilley, Flippen, Hanlon. Row 4: Mascovich, Lemke, Morton, Davis, Sanor. Row 5: Mariani, Brady, Sequeira, Telles, Mellow. Row 6: Woods, Filippi, Ryan, K. Cogswell, Chilva, C. Van Perre, Jr. During the half-time of a football game what is it that sustains the enthusiasms of the spectators, holding their spirits high? The Band! playing stirring music with stirring vitality! This season saw the innovation of the new and popular swing music. The reception of this by the student body and the general public was so enthusiastic that very little of the conventional band music found time to be played. Out of the Band came a small, ten piece, Swing Band under the direction of Johnny Filippi. This group, independent of the parent organization, has been one of the entertainment features of the school programs. They have been called out on numerous occa- sions to supply part of a program for some organization in the vicinity of the school. The final major appearance of the band was made on April 28, when they assisted the Block SC Society in the production of their show. THE REDWOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 77 Block S. C. DE PROFUNDIS tolls every night at eight- thirty, as it has for years in commemoration of Santa Clara ' s dead. A cus- tom so strong, so deeply engrained in traditional Santa Clara ' s life, that when the old chapel burned, and it seemed that that night the De Profundis would not ring, the entire student body worked fran- tically to set a temporary scaffold, so that the Mis- sion Bells, cast in 1777, might still ring out their deep-toned prayer. First row: Gunther, Ayers, Coughlan, Fisher, R. McCarthy, Schiechl, Barlow. Second row: Locke, Brown, Farasyn, Bertolani, Cope, Dougherty, Anahu, Bricca. Third row: Nelson, J. Smith, Anderson, Shando, Coffer, Cook, Selenger, W. Smith, D. Lautze. Fourth row: Stringari, H. McGowan, Blaettler, Roche, Schmidt, McDonough, Perri, Changala. Blockmen of the University of Santa Clara occupy a peculiar position. Because of the small size of the university, they remain an integral part of the student body and actively participate in all the other campus organizations. Consequently, their own society finds itself almost without duties. That despite this, the Block Society remains as one of the most influential of the campus organizations is a tribute to the energy and resourcefulness of its members and leaders. After an active fall, when most of the organization was taken up with the victo- rious campaign of the Bronco Championship Team, they passed the leadership to Lawrence Bertolani, ' 39, who energetically undertook the promotion of the traditional Block Show, dor- mant on the campus for some years. Its tremendous success speaks for itself and the organization that presented it. PAGE 78 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 Norman T. Burke President ofly SCHOLARS nssociflTion Patrick T. Jones Robert G. Hill Vice-President Secretary- David J. Buckley Treasurer Most small universities whose enrollment includes a substantial number of non-resident students face the problem of uniting the interests and activities of these with those of the boarders. Already having well entrenched home interests before beginning col- lege work, the day-scholars do not have the incentive found in the resident students to join in the activities and interests peculiar to the college. As a result, most of their contact with resident students is confined to classes and few, if any, extra-curricular activities. Uni ty of interests and spirit within a school, however, is not beneficial to the school alone, but to the students themselves. The solution of the problem of uniting the interests probably varies wherever it is met; at Santa Clara it is solved by the Day Scholars Association. Its purpose is to encourage participation of non-resident students in the school activities, create new activities, and, in general, instill the spirit of Santa Clara into those whose less broad contact with it has delayed its development. In the past year, president Norman Burke, assisted by his officers, has accomplished much along this line. The participation of the Day Scholars in the One Act Play Contest marks a new point in common between the Day Scholars who make up nearly one-third of the enrollment and the boarding students. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 79 CHflPfL CH IF! First row: Geare, Cummins, Sanguinetti, Dwan. Second row: Smith, Bayley, Cullen, Schmidt, Prud ' homme, Ryan. Third row: Felciano, Sullivan, Litschi, O ' Connor, Piuma, Williams. Last year the Student Chaplain, feeling that the religious exercises in the Chapel could be considerably enhanced, made a request for a group who could develop of themselves a student choir. The request was met with an enthusiastic response and Chapel services were made thrilling with the classic line of Gregorian melodies. The pioneer work being completed, the Choir this year has increased its membership and extended its repertoire. Under the direction of the Senior Organist and Choirmaster, Francis Sanguinetti, assisted by the Junior Organist, Edward Sullivan, the Choir filled the Chapel with the polyphonic sound of a group of Eighteenth Century motets by Cordans, Martini, and Casciolini. Works by more contemporary composers were sung during the later part of the year. The radio series is never complete without a program by the Choir. Traditional Lenten motets were heard this year in a radio recital out- standing for its balance and tone. Every Wednesday evening at twilight a small group gathers in Chapel to hear the rich harmonies swell to the ceiling as the male choir blend their voices in weekly rehearsal. A stroke of the baton and the music of Handel, Mozart, and Dubois lives again! PAGE HE REDWOOD 9 3 8 BLCC CLUB The Glee Club has existed almost as long as the University itself and seems destined to be one of those organizations which will never die as long as it supplies outlet for one of the most natural of human desires — to sing. Last year the Glee Club drew up its first constitution, but with the abandon sometimes imputed to musicians promptly proceeded to disregard it. Perhaps that is the reason why this year has been one of comparative quiet for the Club. Usually the Glee Club assists the band at its annual concert by singing a selected group of male choruses, but since that activity of the band was curtailed this year in favour of more pressing musical activities the Glee Club gave no formal recital. However, under Professor Clemens Van Perre, the Club did do very notable work by assisting the Choir in its traditional Chapel functions. Certain members of the Club have been organized into quartets and other small combinations of voices to lend color and harmony to school activities. Organizations in San Jose and Santa Clara have been pleased to have Mr. Van Perre bring a soloist and quartet to entertain their members. One of the most successful numbers in the Block S.C. Show was the Waiters ' Chorus composed of members of the Club. Front row: Geare Piuma, Sanguinetti, S. O ' Connor, Litschi, Bayley, E. Sullivan. Rear row: Felciano, Cook, Schmidt, Cullen, L. Williams, H. Smith, Toomey, Bezore, Dwan, Prud ' homme, Prof. Van Perre. REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 81 The miraculous cross of Father Catala The CATALA CLUB was founded in the Spring of 1930 for the purpose of keeping alive the traditions of Mission Santa Clara, to interest itself in its history and stimulate enthusiasm for the educational and social activities of the University. The members in- clude the mothers, sisters, or guardians of the stu- dents past or present, the wives of the alumni, and all ladies interested in the Mission of Santa Clara. Descendants of the early day Spanish families are a chosen group, since they help to link the Catala Club with the traditions of the past, when the donnas were the zealous helpers about the Mission in the days of the saintly Padre Magin de Catala after whom the club is named. CATALA Father Catala is the personification of Santa Clara ' s past and tradition. Named El Santo by the inhab- itants of the Mission, Father Catala lived the life of sanctity which in 1909 resulted in the granting of the title Venerable to the Holy Man of Santa Clara. The movement for his beatification has begun in the present term. It is the prayer of all Santa Clarans in fact or by adoption that it will not be long delayed. PAGE 82 THE REDWOOD 3 8 Dean Sullivan addresses the Catala Club on Engineering Each Thursday through the year is marked by the regular meeting and lecture sponsored by the Catala Club. Open to all, this series has been growing in popularity and interest since its inception several years ago. Members of the University Faculty are featured as speakers; topics of cultural and general interest are chosen, and have included history, law, political science and chemistry,, as well as philosophical, military, engi- neering and literary subjects. Since the time she took office as president of the Catala Club, Mrs. Edmund Flynn, wife of the engineering instructor, has kept the meet- ings regular, interesting, and highly instruct- ive, which, after all, is the life-blood of such an organization. Assisting Mrs. Flynn have been Mrs. Sarah de Quevedo, Mrs. Guy Smith, Mrs. H. G. McCormick, Mrs. Herman Budde, Mrs. Lauren La Hue, Mrs. Walter Fitzgerald. THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 83 Santa Clara Presents. . . . each Tuesday night, the Radio Program. Founded last year under the fond wing of the Clay M. Greene Players, it belatedly continued this year under the aegis of Hugh Smith, sup- ported by an able committee set-up of four men. The most ambitious of wholly student activ- ities, the ideal of the program managers was to mirror Santa Clara; at the same time pre- senting an interesting program. Not the only public function is the Radio Program. Close to it in purpose and method is the Clay M. Greene Players ' custom of presenting to outside groups a selection of one-act plays. Most oft-played was the Moliere comedy that won the Dramatic Art Contest for James Doherty in 1936. With the coming of a Publicity Director and Executive Secretary in the person of Anthony Hamman, Santa Clara ' s public relations have taken a more regular swing. Santa Clara has furnished many a Peninsular High School with a program in the last year; Dutch arrang- ing programs for the swing band, the Quartet, and a bevy of speakers, including Deb O ' Connor, Hugh Smith, and a host of football stars from the Championship Bronco Team. But fortunate Santa Clara has been most often proud to present the two Freshmen troupers who have worked the whole year through, almost a publicity department in themselves. Headliners in every school program, tenor Dick Dwan and piano-tickler Tom Healy always win the heaviest applause. PAGE 84 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 Dramatic Art Contest Y.M.I., and Owl STUDENT CONGRESS m Francis Sanguinetti Hugh Smith Hugh Smith, John Walsh RYLAND DEBATE Walsh, Williams, O ' Hara McDonough, Smith FOCH DEBATE Smith, Sanguinetti, Meagher COOLIDGE COMPETITION . . . Santa Clara carries on her great traditions in speaking and acting. Among Those Present . . . Francis Sanguinetti carried off the prize in the Dra- matic Art Contest with one of the most brilliant per- formances of its sixteen-year history . . . Hugh Smith couldn ' t quite win the Sullivan Memorial Oratorical Contest (Y. M. I.) but he found his stride to sweep the Owl Oratorical Contest (winning the Foch Medal in the Foch Debate, shining in the Ryland Debate, makes him the forensic figure of the year) . . . Typical legislators, Santa Clara ' s representatives at the Stu- dent Congress in Berkeley, held to gauge intelligent student opinion, introduced, lobbied, and spoke for bills; failed to get one passed . . . Three best speakers and a unanimous decision was Santa Clara ' s record this year in the annual Foch Deba te, as Santa Clara won for the third straight time from St. Mary ' s Col- lege . . . Winning the annual Ryland Debate and capturing first speaker, the Senate broke a four-year drought, in which the House threatened the upper body ' s leadership . . . The busy Law College ' s only competition, The Coolidge Competition, a mock trial before regular California judges of the Bench, found Richard Morton and Marvin Joseph finally the victors. Harp, Cronin, Joseph, Morton THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 85 ' km y t.v Kelly, H. Bayley, N. Bayley, Kane The rah-rah age of the coonskin-coated college man is definitely passed, if indeed it ever existed. It left, however, one definitely good influence that has solidified and controlled college spirit. To use and direct this spirit during athletic competitions is the duty of the Rally Committee. It is they who arrange rallies and speakers — who organize the cheering sections and plan game stunts ; and upon their shoulders must devolve much of the responsibility for keeping up the fire and enthusiasm of a uni- versity for its athletic teams. This past year, the Rally Committee has had little trouble with student enthusiasm, has consequently done fine work with rallies and stunts. When the St. Mary ' s bonfire prematurely burned, their energy it was that directed its reconstruction in 12 hours, saved the traditional rally, turned it into one of the biggest of Santa Clara ' s history. BOB COWARD genial, jovial, and friendly, has sat in his chair watch- ing generations of Santa Clara students grow up and pass through school. He greets them each with a friendly Good Morning, keeps closely in touch with school affairs; following the success of the football team as eagerly as the rawest freshman. Known by all the grads, and known to all the students, he and his dog sit quietly, interested in Santa Clara growing, living, fighting, learning. PAGE 86 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 n o n o n jl D i, It ' s Like This.. Your first impression, like thai of the casual visitor, is one of astonishment and interest at finding your- self in surroundings which look more like a semi- tropical park than a college campus. You will go from one building to another, for classes, meals, library study, or chapel services, on walks across which are cast the slender top-tufted shadows of regal, century-old palms. Early in your freshman career, initiation indignities may force you to shine senior shoes. You register twice a year, moving in slow file past a registrar who supplies you with cards on which you write in the courses you want, then past the Dean, who inspects the cards, to see if they ' re the courses you get. The sun, in six months of the academic year ' s nine, will make geometric pat- terns outline your mathematics instructor, make you wish you were bathing in it. PAGE II E REDWOOD 9 3 8 Bells, next to radios, make the sounds you ' ll hear most frequently. The one pictured at left is in the tower of the Mission Chapel, was presented by ex-King Alfonso of Spain, rings the Angelus morn- ing, noon, and evening, tolls at eight-thirty at night for deceased alumni. Besides its deep and comparatively infrequent tones, there are those of the chimes on the Carmelite Monastery half a mile from the campus, a parish church one block away, and the hall- bells in every residence and class-room corridor of the university. These latter, controlled from an involved robot mechanism geared to an electric clock, get you out of bed, send you to class, to meals, to bed, with their insistent clangor. Not practicing the Nazi salute, but in- specting the student corps is the ROTC commanding-officer, flanked by a sword- carrying student commissioned man who is also a Pacific Coat Boxing champion. You hear the famed witticisms and sharp observations of Rev. Cyril Kavanagh, S. J., in philosophy classes, or around the Library, of which he is head. To the frosh working at the base of the giant St. Mary ' s rally bonfire, this is h ow a crate-full of waste looks as it is swung inside the railroad- tie framework. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE you Live ... in Nobili Hall, if you are an upperclassman. Its tower, the belfry of which is occupied by owls, has a room on the third floor reserved for the President of the Associated Students, no other residents. Nobili ' s upper three floors house Juniors, Seniors, and a few Law-men; its ground level is the student dining-hall, the kitchens, the faculty dining-hall, the office of the Vice-president, and the post-office, shown below, right You meet Fr. Shipsey, S.J. of the English Department, who, like Socrates, cross-questions students to make them answer their own inquiries. , As in 1777, life at Santa Clara in 1938 centers around the Mis- sion Cross, a replica of the one planted by the Franciscan friars who founded the original settlement. Most popular man among the resident students carries the U. S. mail to Santa Clarans, who twice a day come from classes to look, read (if lucky), moan (if not). PAGE 90 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PS You attend Mass in Chapel on Tuesdays and Fridays, stand around and talk, when it is finished, until breakfast. O ' Connor Hall is your address while a Sophomore, and you scramble for one of the large, balconied end-rooms on the upper floor. Oldest residence hall for students, it is of the same period and design as Bergin, the office and residence building of the Jesuit faculty. O ' Connor ' s ground floor has classrooms for Artsmen, Moot Court for lawyers. Its basement houses the University Book-Store, the pool-tables and ice-cream counter of the Co-Op. You have a metropolitan daily newspaper delivered by a student salesman, read it, be- fore breakfast, concentrating on: 1) sports; 2) comics; 3) world affairs (reluctantly). The spiritual director and chaplain supervises reli- gious devotions, delivers monthly inspirational lec- tures. T H REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 91 you Study . . . and study hard, in any college in the university. Law-men, who sludy all the time, consider them- selves, with justice, the most inten- sive students of the lot. The Engi- neers, whose technical courses de- mand long hours or laboratory work, minute records of observa- tions, spend more time in class than any others, never make dates much before four o ' clock in the afternoon. Business-men and Arts- men, who engage in an endless, three-way controversy with the En- gineers about which college has the toughest schedules, do about the same amount of studying, but the business-students are given longer assignments of outside work on commercial problems, econom- ic research. The result is that Arts- men dominate extra-curricular ac- tivities, control campus debating, dramatics, publications, and aca- demic programs. The majority of Santa Clarans do their studying to the accompaniment of subdued radios in the compulsory study-period from seven till nine each evening except Tuesday and Friday, when upper-classmen are exempt. The real work of the year is done in the days prior to period examinations and semester finals, when radios are off, alarm-clocks set for early-morning cramming, and vast quantities of coffee-and-cigarettes consumed. Though not compulsory, you will probably type most of your written themes, as do three out of five college men, for the sake of time saved and neatness, which brings better grades. Engineers spend their surveying practice time in going over ground that has been squinted at by generations of Blue-Shirts , then relax and talk of their results. PAGE 92 REDWOOD 1  Then ft e I a x : Pool and snooker tables in the Co-Op store are a favorite pastime when winter rain prevents outdoor sport, or the short time between lunch-hour and afternoon does not permit more leisurely amusement. ... on your bed after crammin ' for an exam, or eating a large meal. ... at the Junior Prom, where you jam into the ball-rooms of one of the near-by country-clubs, dance conservatively for the most part (with brief periods of trucking for the adventuresome), behave with more decorum than usual. Next to the session , magazines are a favored indoor sport. Light fiction, and the new photo books are seen oftenest. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 93 Where your center of operations is a book-filled desk, whose volumes are ■generally accumulated texts and refer- ence-works. Novels and magazines are usually tossed on the bed, read in a more relaxed position. . . . where you take lecture-notes in a room whose windows give onto a sun-filled campus, and admit the drowsy, fragrant atmosphere that makes concentration an extreme problem in all but the rainy weeks of winter. Where the real melting-pot of divergent scholastic and activities-interests is the Dining-hall, before which engineers, business and arts students, and a lawyer or two mingle for rough-house and conversation, while waiting for luncheon; or listen to a professor enlarg e informally on the lecture he has delivered in the class just finished. . . . where you can get famed enough, as a mem- ber of the smashing, unde- feated football team, you have requests for your autograph from respectful moppets. .That ' s Santa Clara PAGE 94 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 ATHLETICS THE ANCIENT IDEAL OF MENS SANA IN CORPORE SANO SHOULD BE COMBINED WITH THE EQUALLY ANCIENT MODERA- TION IN EVERYTHING . SANTA CLARA ACHIEVES A BALANCE IN THE EMPHASIS ON STUDIES AND A VARIETY OF SPORTS SUCH THAT ALL MAY PARTICIPATE. f OOT BALL .til f % ■v Bottom row: Locke, Stubler, Anahu, Lasater, W Pavelko, Pellegrini. Second row: Trainer Schn dictis, Blaettler, Gilbert, Brown, Bruce, Barlow, C Ft Toomey, Wolff, Sinclair, Stringari, Lumley, Coffe ig| DeRosa, Gunther, Roche, Clarke, Hendr lU Nichols, % J§ - % m % y . ? ' m wwm 14 21 53 27 k ' Ih, Fisher, Dougherty, Perrin, Hanners, O ' Connor, IBillick, Thorn, McCarthy, Hagan, Lacey, DeBene- I Falaschi. Third row: Hamilton, Mazzina, Ginney, Baghlan, Schiechl, Coach Shaw. Fourth row: Coach If. Smith, Cope, Farasyn, Cook, Andersen, Al Ruffo. U n D £ f £ fl T £ D and u n T I D Prospects are fair. Manpower seems stronger. But seven posts left vacant by graduation have to be filled. These three statements show the prospects of the Santa Clara Broncos when Buck Shaw, the miracle coach, took over practice for the rigorous fall schedule last September. True, Santa Clara had risen from mediocrity in 1936 to the rank- ing position of Sugar Bowl Champions. But that squad had been riddled by graduation; and the replacements at hand seemed green. People failed to believe that the Broncos could repeat. The record of the ' 37 squad, however, is Shaw ' s answer. An early season win over Stanford failed to impress the Silver Fox of Prune Valley. He held the Broncos were far from invin- cible. Revamping the first two teams, he sent them against USF. They conquered the Dons, but showed poorly doing it. The next week they trimmed Portland, but still didn ' t impress. However, in Los Angeles they showed signs of playing the ball of which they were capable. And the following week they really shot the works against Marquette. The rest is history. The miracle man of Santa Clara had come through again. But this time he had brought the Broncos not only to the Sugar Bowl, and back with the championship; but he had mentored them to their first undefeated, untied season in the annals of Santa Clara. To Buck Shaw, his assistants, and the squad of 1937 goes Santa Clara ' s salute. The team has estab- lished an enviable record; and Shaw has made himself as a pigskin mentor. Coach L. T. Buck Shaw PAGE 102 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 WITH SHflUJ First assistant to the Silver Fox , Coach Al Ruffo proved a laudable asset to the Bronco aggregation in his second year as Assistant mentor of the varsity squad. His brilliant work with the backs, as well as the center trio in the line, was shown in the every move of the men he labored with tirelessly. The fiery Italian, a graduate engineer and lawyer, proved he was capable of handling the squad, when he engineered them to a 27-0 win over Gonzaga, when Shaw was unable to leave his sick-bed with the flu. He was responsible in great measure for the local eleven ' s success on the greensward. In his second year as Freshman Coach and varsity assistant, Len Casanova developed a worthy Frosh squad, and proved an able conditioner of the squad that trekked to New Orleans in quest of a second Sugar Bowl Title. Coach Al Ruffo Also assisting Shaw in coaching the varsity and freshman pig- skin elevens were two members of the championship squad of 1936, namely, All - American Nello Falaschi and Halfback Don DeRosa. Falaschi proved an able coach of the backs, especially in teaching blocking fundamentals. He will be sorely missed when he leaves to play professional football next fall. DeRosa was first assistant to Casanova in mentoring the Frosh team, and was a huge success in his first undertaking. The mental attitude of every Bronco team is largely due to the en- thusiasm and loyalty of their trainer of eleven years standing who has seen them rise from nothing to a ranking power. Also not to be forgotten is the post of Student Manager, which was capably filled by Wm. McDonough. Coach Len Casanova Nello Falaschi Trainer Henry Schmidt Mgr. Bill McDonough THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 103 mfg, ,I f' ' ' x- ':1'x . .XTR - T' -1m--'Q A., f, Q , : ' 'VL . Q. .Q - f A ' vVi',. A'7f-5529+-.. ' ,, .1 1911-Lp,-f , ,nlfiigt-5, ' K I ' GV L .42?4Sf HT. Q' ?fEfj'?f:Z'sf 1,171 412'-. ' ' ' YEQLW' Xl.: ,Nb '. 1 -gf 'L :,, W ., . - y,g4.f2 fE ' -A-'QFIVL '- xii- 'i3'i'L, .f ,t7',i'n'F'7f'1.'f.'?il 'T W' A N -. uv' -via -, - ENE 'iii' ,wi- i,.l3f.., . , w , f lim, 1:1 -ms R he A 'ff'i6ff, -ff, 1 5' Ffh I qty. -L ,,. f X Q5-Q-bzga-,,, Q, lc . ff -qmaimwiw. -sfglezvram .,. gag, Q ,., .. WPT U .J A rn 1 1 12. .J hx 5441. V, ,A Mk .---'Alf . ,, ' 'Y' Q 1 . .-f. , -eg. , A Bryce Brown End Les Cook Guard ± : Mjk Francis Cope Tackle ' . ' : Lou Farasyn Guard Tony Mazzina Tackle Sfoioe Phil Dougherty Center Everett Fisher Fullback Vfl R S I t y THE REDWOO 9 3 8 PAGE 105 13 Santa Clara 1 Anahu End A heady, determined, powerful Bronco grid team opened its 1937 compaign in Palo Alto, trimming Stanford ' s Indian eleven, 13-7. Under a hot September sun the Missionites from Santa Clara ushered in their season with a well-earned one touchdown win over Tiny Thornhill ' s Cardinals from Stanford. Showing finesse in the pinches, the Shaw-coached Broncos eked out their victory in the fourth quarter, after the game seemed destined to end in a 0-0 tie. The fast finishing Broncos started slowly. They sparred around for position ■:■..,■■' ,,, throughout the first two periods; and couldn ' t seem ' to maneuver out of their H-; ' : ' ; -. own territory. The main highlight of the first half was the fact that Groves of the Cardinals was consistently outpunting Santa Clara ' s Chuck Pavelko and Jim Barlow. Twice during the opening half the Broncos moved toward the Cardinal goal, but both times were repulsed by a hard-charging Stanford line, and a failure of their own backs to block efficiently. Late in the third period the Mis- sionites intercepted a Stanford WBB MjIM pass, but were unable to move forward with it. With the change of quarters the Shawmen changed teams; the second squad replacing the Broncos ' first aggregation. Six minutes elapsed before the Broncos ' got the chance that they had been waiting for. Jim Barlow punting from the Stanford forty-seven yard line kicked long and brilliantly, the Fisher hits a wide hole in the left side of the Stanford line PAGE 106 THE REDWOO 9 3 8 7 Stanford George Locks Tackle This time the conversion was good, and But, with only two minutes left to play, with machine-gun rapidity. First, a short toss from Groves to Stone clicked for a fifteen yard gain. Then another proved successful, and the Broncos took time out. On the next play, however, Groves shot a pass to Stone in the right flat, and he raced thirty yards, outguessing Jack Roche, for the score. Luckett converted, and the score stood, 13-7. But the game ended shortly after the kick-off, and the Missionites escaped unscathed. ball curving out of bounds on the Stanford one-yard line. On the next play, with Hamilton back to kick for Stanford, Moe Mazzina and Gunther cleared a lane for End Jess Coffer, who crashed through to block the Cardinal punt. Phil Dougherty recovered the ball in the end-zone for the touchdown, and was immediately tackled by the Broncos-own Larry Stringari. Bruno Pellegrini missed the conversion for the Broncos. But a few minutes later, after Dougherty had intercepted a Stanford pass, the Broncos tallied again. This time Barlow crashed over his own right guard. Perfect blocking moved Stanford ' s Dakan out of the play, along with Fullback Groves. Tackle Al Wolff cracked down the Cardinal ' s last hope, when he crashed Joe Vigna away from any chance to mess up the play. the Broncos led 13-0. the Cardinals opened up with a passing game that started to click Locke and Coughlan clear out the Stanford interference THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 107 13 Santa Clara Close on the heels of their Stanford triumph, in their initial San Francisco appearance, Buck Shaw ' s battling Broncos trimmed their Jesuit rivals from U. S. F. 13-0. The men from the valley of Saint Claire started slowly, but late in the first period they broke the ice, sending Fisher booming into the end zone from the five yard line. From the outset the Dons of the metropolitan area were on the defensive; and only brilliant work by Alex Schwarz and Blaz Miatovich kept the score from rising in the first half. After their convincing win over Stanford the Broncs were hailed as wonders ; but ragged play in pay-off territory, and sloppy blocking, together with poor quarterbacking marked their battle with the Dons, making the general public leery of their capabilities. But all this was to be ironed out, and sharpened up, as the season progressed. All of the statistics favored the Missionites, and the final issue was never in doubt after the first few minutes of play. It was in this fray that the Bronco guards and backs showed precisioned finesse in taking out the ends and fullbacks, allowing Roche, Gilbert and Barlow to race for consistent gains. This procedure split the Dons ' defensive set-up, and on numerous occasions Fisher and Gunther cracked the center of the San Francisco line wide open. Although in spots they looked like champions , an acute case of fumblitis, along with lack of practice in down field blocking stopped many a touchdown drive. The game was advertised as a wmam Roche rounds right end with Pavelko clearing the way PAGE 1( II E REDWOOD 9 3 8 San f rancisco battle of passes, and a battle of passes it was. U. S. F. tossed fifteen, while the Shawmen pitched five. Odd as it may seem, none were completed. The main highlight of the game came in the third period, when Schwarz broke through to block Barlow ' s kick on the Bronco thirty, pick the ball up, and race to the Santa Clara five before he was hit from behind by Barlow, skidding to the two yard line. At this point the Missionite defense stiffened, and the S. C. second squad smeared the first Don try for a seven yard loss. On the next play Kondrative of the Hilltoppers attempted to pass, but the charging Bronco forwards, led by Coffer, Clarke and Schiechl cracked him to the ground on the twenty-three yard line where he fumbled, Santa Clara recovering. Brilliant line play, such as this, evidenced the superiority of the Shaw-coached Santa Clarans; and proved too much for the Dons to cope with. Gunther tallied the second Bronco touchdown in the same manner as Fisher had scored beforehand. Cracking between guard and tackle from the five yard line he went over with yards to spare. Adding Tommy Gilbert ' s kick from placement after Fisher ' s score, the Broncos totaled thir- teen digits during the afternoon. After being completely smothered in their only scoring chance the Dons failed to threat- en the rest of the afternoon; and had to content themselves with trying to stop the hard-running S. C. backs. Standouts for the Broncs were linemen Ginney, Schiechl, Clarke, Farasyn and Coffer. Kondrative about to be hit by any of ten S. C. men THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 109 27 Santa Clara In a sparsely settled Kezar Stadium, vying with the Portland Pilots, little satisfaction did Buck Shaw ' s cohorts afford him, although they managed to overpower their Rose city rivals, 27-0. Looking ragged and unsure most of the time, the Missionites, even though they tallied once in every period, fumbled all of twelve times. In the opening quarter, after they had driven deep into the Pilots territory three times before, only to lose the ball, the Broncos finally connected for a score. With the ball near the Portland thirty-five, Roche streaked to the right, stopped and heaved a diagonal pass deep to Coffer for a thirty-two yard gain, placing the ball on the Portland three yard line. From that point Roche carried the ball over on the next play. Gilbert added the extra point with a perfect kick from placement. The next period, after Barlow had returned many a Portland punt back twenty finally started a sustained drive which resulted in their second score. Moving from the thirty-two yard line on three successive line plays to the twelve; f fe- sAjlSct, i mm  f wr ' v- .-.- mm si or thirty yards, the Broncos Barlow then drove off tackle for ten yards; being nipped by Westcott of the Pilots two yards short of the last white stripe. Gunther drove over guard for score. The try for conversion went wide. The half ended with the Mis- sionites leading, 13-0. Lucky breaks gained Santa Clara its third score twelve min- utes after the half time intermis- sion. After Phil Dougherty had inter- cepted one of the numerous Pilot Gunther crashes Portland line for a touchdown PAGE 110 HE REDWOOD 9 3 8 Portland Jerry Ginney Guard passes on the Portland twenty-one yard line, he attempted a lateral to Bill Anahu. The backward pass went wild, but the Hawaiian sensation picked up the rolling pigskin on the ten, and trotted the remaining yards to paydirt. Santa Clara ' s most accurate convertor, Tommy Gilbert, added the extra digit again; raising the Bronco total to twenty points. After three periods of ragged play, the locals eventually got their attack functioning for a few minutes, and drove seventy yards in seven plays. With Roche and Hanners alternating at running the Portland wingmen to death ; forty-eight yards was paced off in five tries. Faking another end-sweep, Hanners shot another long diagonal pass, which Roche snagged in on the eight yard line, and rambled into the end-zone with the fourth score. But the officials claimed Roche had stepped out of bounds on the one-yard line, and brought the ball back to that point. Hanners drove over on the first play; and Pavelko, attempting his first conversion, split the cross-bars to conclude the locals ' scoring for the day. In this one offensive move Santa Clara showed its best football of the day, using power, smoothness, and finesse to outmaneuver Matty Matthews charges. Led by Jack Roche who aver- aged 4.1 yards per play carry- ing the agate sixteen times; together with the brilliant work of Anahu, Coffer and Hanners, Santa Clara outgained its opponents three hundred yards to one hundred and twenty-five, while marking up fourteen first downs to the Northerners ' seven. Barlow goes off right tackle, McCarthy leading as Ginney looks on THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 11 7 Santa C lara Battling an inspired Loyola Lion, Santa Clara had to play its best game of the year up to this point to down the Liebmen, 7-0 in the Los Angeles Coliseum. For three quarters the Broncos were held even by their Lion rivals; and with less than ten minutes to go the game seemed destined to end a scoreless tie, when Bill Gunther leaped high in the air, picked off a diagonal pass thrown by Aquerelli of Loyola, and raced fifty-four yards to paydirt. Twice in the first period the Missionites moved deep into Loyola territory; but ineffective passing, with receivers in the clear time after time, proved fatal to each offensive drive. After muffing their first two chances, the Shawmen were unable to move out of their own territory, and the game remained a punting duel the rest of the half. Once the Loyolans moved past the Bronco forty yard line; but were thrust back, to the air. Shortly before the half Gilbert faked a Loyola defender out of position, while going out when they tried to take for a forward pass; but he failed to handle a low-thrown Barlow toss, and the half ended without either team threatening again. After the half-time intermission, Los Angeles people expected Santa Clara to unleash a strong running attack; but bucking against an eight man line, the Broncos couldn ' t move forward. Instead, following instructions, they took to the air again. The only thing that kept the Mission varsity from scoring two or three Tom Gilbert heading for substantial gain, Fisher on the side PAGE 112 THE REDWOOD 19 3 8 Loyola - : ' - .Ai- im Coughlan End times during the third quarter was inability of the passers to hit their targets. In this game Bruno Pellegrini, Santa Clara ' s one-man passing attack, was withheld from the game due to an aggravated shoulder injury. Roche, Barlow and Gilbert were far from right; and hence any hope of a clicking aerial barrage was lost. With Fisher, Roche and Gilbert alternating at packing the ball, the Broncos moved for two first downs in succession, shortly before the end of the third quarter. But this attack was stopped by Acquerelli of the Lions; when he intercepted a wild toss of Roche on the Loyola forty. The quarter ended before another play could be run off. After two Loyola running plays failed to gain, the Southerners tried to outguess the Bronco defenders, attempting a diagonal pass from Acquerelli to McCowan in the right flat zone. Gunther broke up the pass, held on to the ball, and behind quick gathering interference raced to the only score of the game. Tom Gilbert place-kicked the extra digit, and the scoring was concluded for the afternoon. Twice, in the closing minutes Loyola was in position to score; when clipping penalties called against the Broncos gave them the ball within the Santa Clara thirty yard line. However, each drive was repulsed; as charging Bronco forwards rose to the occasion. Roche, Fisher, Gun- ther, Coffer and Dougherty, along with the four guards did more than their share for the Broncos; Acquerelli and Scott stood out for the Del Rey men. snw Roche about to be thrown for a Pavelko and Fisher cutting back REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 113 38 Santa Clara Piling up points with monotonous regularity, the locals overwhelmed the Hilltoppers from Marquette, 38-0, in their first Mid-Western appearance. The red-shirted Santa Clarans, with another Sugar Bowl bid in view, com- pletely bewildered the Golden Avalanche by the most dazzling display of forward passing ever witnessed in the confines of Soldier ' s Field, in the Windy City of Chicago. Although outgained and outplayed throughout the first period by an inspired Marquette eleven, the Broncos began to function shortly after Schiechl ' s . : Snipers were inserted into the game at the start of the second quarter. From this time on the game was entirely Santa Clara, with Pellegrini leading the forward passing display, chucking touchdown passes to Gilbert, Barlow and Gunther — as well as numerous other setting-up passes all over the field. After a scoreless initial period the Broncos counted twice in every period thereafter Chuck Pavelko Quarterback marking up their largest score of the year while winning their fifth game in as many starts. Santa Clara was advertised throughout the mid-West as a power team; and completely took the Hilltoppers unaware when they passed them dizzy quarter after quarter. Following Pellegrini ' s lead, Gun- ther threw a scoring pass to Barlow; and Roche enjoyed his greatest passing day of the year. Cope and Coffer dump Busch of Marquette for a ten-yard loss PAGE 114 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 dlarpette Larry Stringari End Using their running attack to draw the Driscoll-coached Marquette eleven out of position was the sane strategy used by the Santa Clarans to make their passes work time after time. Passes of every variety were employed by the Missionites against the hapless Milwaukee men. A typical example of the alertness of the squad from the West Coast was the final score, when George Locke, Bronco tackle, picked up a loose ball after a kick of the Hilltoppers and scampered over the goal line while the Marquette men stood amazed. Expecting their toughest competition of the year, the Shawmen gave their greatest show of the year. Though some may disagree, although it is the general consensus of opinion around Chicago, the money player of the Bronco aggregation, Bruno Pellegrini, proved himself the sparkplug of the Santa Clara team in the Soldier ' s Field classic. It was also in this fray that Shaw ' s second squad became known as the scoring punch of the Broncos. This team literally tore the Hilltoppers to pieces, and continued their rout in the final quarter. Chicago wanted to know how good the Broncos were, and the score shows how the locals an- swered them. 1 I I Pellegrini snowed under by Marquette; McCarthy, Stringari, and Walt Smith coming up THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 115 25 Santa Clara Before an overflow crowd of seventeen thousand people, the largest to ever witness a game in San Jose, Santa Clara overpowered a stubborn valley rival in San Jose State, 25-2, on the Staters ' own Spartan Field. The game, the last in a series of two started in 1936, carried particular im- portance for the Spartans were undefeated at the time, and the high scoring team of the nation. Santa Clara didn ' t wait long, for shortly after the game started Ev Fisher set off the fireworks. Starting from his own twenty-three yard line, with Gilbert faking an end run, Fisher drove off his own left tackle, and raced fifty-four yards before being dragged down from behind by the speedy Spartan half- back, Walt McPherson. After one line-play failed, to gain, the Broncos took to the air. Roche took the pass from center and threw a twenty-yard diagonal pass to Coffer, which the tops on the Spartans one foot line, in a sensational catch. Santa Clara ' s road-runner , Jack Roche, tallied on the next play, diving over Vallejo end snagged off his shoe- a State pile-up for the initial score. Gilbert converted, and Santa Clara led, 7-0. In the second period more passes and outstanding receiv- ing were responsible for two more Bronco scores. A brilliant Pellegrini to Coffer pass set the locals up for their second score; and then a shaky pass, tipped by a defensive Spartan into the hands of an awaiting Jim Coughlan accounted for another Santa Clara touchdown. Pellegrini making substantial yardage; Coffer about to make a murderous block PAGE 116 E REDWOOD 9 3 8 1 San Jose State Don Presley, colored Spartan guard, on with a thud and traveled over the end flying pigskin. The game ended without an- other threat being advanced; although Benny De Benedictus gave all Bronco rooters quite a scare when he was knocked out in the fourth quarter. San Jose was completely out- classed from start to finish; and were never in the running once their far-famed passing attack failed to function against the Bronco defenders. Opening up with double and triple laterals while trying to spring men into the clear, the Spartans were thrown for numerous losses throughout the second half. Crashing ends stopped all of these maneuvers, as the Bronco centers, tackles and backs had a field day cutting down Spartan backs. Tony Ma zzina, mammoth tackle, captained the locals in this contest; but was unable to play for long due to a painful ankle injury. Late in the third period the Broncos marked up their final touchdown; and were content to ease from that point on to a twenty-five point win over the heretofore cocky San Jose eleven. Mid-way through the fourth period Bruno Pellegrini ' s kick was blocked by the Santa Clara thirty-five. The ball bounded off the negro ' s chest zone before the racing San Jose linemen could catch up with the Roche scores over a State pile-up THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 117 7 Santa Clara Al Wolfi Tackle Matching a surprisingly strong Gael running attack with as brilliant an aerial attack as has ever been presented in San Francisco, Buck Shaw ' s Broncos outrallied their ancient rivals from the hills of Moraga, on a sunny November afternoon, winning 7-0 in Kezar Stadium. The game was a typical Gael-Bronco classic, a tough one for the Madigan- mentored Gaels to lose; and a victory doubly-sweet for the Missionites to cop. It meant a disastrous season for St. Mary ' s; and another leg on their most successful season in history for the Shawmen. After a promising start, which saw the Broncos literally smash their way out from their own thirty yard line to midfield, the Gaels recovered a Pavelko fumble, and ploughed through a rattled Santa Clara defense to offensive territory. On the Bronco thirty-seven they were bottled up, and Ferry was called on, attempting a field-goal from the S. C. forty-three. The kick was short and wide. However, the Broncos couldn ' t seem to get started, and less than ten minutes later the Gaels put on their greatest offensive bid of the season. From their own forty- two they marched, with Rimas- sa and Whitey Smith leading the way to the Missionites ' nine yard line. At this point the second team came to life, and spilled Smith hard, after a bad pass from cen- ter. The Gael fullback fumbled, and Coffer scooped the ball in, stopping the Moraga drive. Awakening from a first half nightmare, the Shawmen went suddenly mad in the middle of the third quarter. Roche sneaks into the St. Mary ' s secondary with Pavelko out in front PAGE 118 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 St. diary ' s John Schiechl Center With Pellegrini and Barlow rifling passes all over the field, the Broncos marched deep into St. Mary ' s territory twice without result. r ;.. 7 ' y Suddenly, like a comet striking from the air, the Broncos struck from their ' ; 3E ' ■' ' ■' ■T ' j F own fortY-five yard line. Pellegrini received the pass from center, raced to the left, stopped, and then shot a sensational thirty yard pass to the arms of an awaiting Jesse Coffer. He was immediately tackled by the Gaels ' Lou Rimassa. From there the Broncos tried two line plays, but they were of no avail. Then, repeating a play which should have gone for a touchdown earlier in the game, Barlow received the ball. Running to the left as if he intended to sweep the Gaels ' right flank, he drew Jerry Dowd, brilliant Gael center, out of position. Then, rifling his arm, he tossed a bullet-like pass to Fullback Ev Fisher, who caught the elusive pigskin just inside the playing field, and stepped over into the end-zone. Bruno Pelleg rini missed the point after touchdown; but Wolff, alert and wise, picked the ball up and raced over for the extra point; this literally broke the spirit of the inspired Gaels. Later, in the fourth period, Roche and Barlow combined to run the Gael ends and tackles dizzy. But the attack stalled on the St. Mary ' s one-foot line, with less than a minute to play. To signal out any hero is practi- cally impossible, but the bril- liant play of Coffer, Pellegrini, Wolff, Dougherty, Fisher and Barlow stood out above the game; as did the great play of St. Mary ' s Lou Rimassa. Fisher crosses the goal line for the only score E REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 119 27 Santa Clara Ray McCarthy Quarterback Flashing a brilliant offensive attack, the men from Santa Clara completed their regular season with a 27-0 victory over the Gonzaga Bulldogs in Sacra- mento ' s Municipal Stadium. Before many of the fans could get comfortably seated, in the game sponsored by the Sacramento and San Jose Elks, Ev Fisher, the Santa Rosa rocket, had started the Bronco parade, by scoring standing up from four yards out. Sure-footed Tom Gilbert added the extra-point, with Pellegrini holding. For the remainder of the first period, and through eleven minutes of the second quarter, the Broncos failed to dent the last chalk-stripe, as the Karamatic-led Bulldog defenders repulsed Santa Clara drives time after time. Starting a determined eighty yard drive, with four minutes left in the half, the Broncos culminated the offensive maneuver when Pellegrini tossed a touchdown pass to Bryce Brown. The Missionite wingman taking the pass over his right shoulder, crashed into the cross-bar, but held the ball for the six points. Never once were the Northern- ers able to penetrate the stout defense of the Santa Clara for- ward wall during the first half; and as a result had to rely on defensive tactics to remain in the game. The second half was a repeti- tion of the first, in which the Bronco backs romped all over the turf with comparative ease; while the linemen pushed the Zags back without any appar- ent effort. UU- Barlow sends off a pogo-pass against Gonzaga PAGE 120 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 Gonzaga ■■-■■■% Jack Roche Halfback Early in the third quarter, Bruno Pellegrini, after slashing through gaping holes opened up in the Bulldogs ' line, crossed the goal line standing up. This feat was duplicated in the fourth quarter, after another sustained drive, „ when Bill Gunner Gunther smashed his way over for the last Missionite Playing without the services of their regular varsity mentor, Buck Shaw, who was confined to his sick-bed with a severe attack of the flu, the Broncos carried on like masters of the game, winning almost as they pleased. Not only did the Santa Clarans stop their opponents from Spokane, who gained but sixty-three yards all afternoon; but they amassed two hundred and seventy yards themselves, while piling up sixteen first downs. All in all, practically every man able to play was used in the Bulldog tussle; and yet the Broncos seemed to be threatening all afternoon. No matter whether it was the first or fourth team (if there were that many full ones), all of the squads pushed the Zags back time after time toward the goal they were defending. This game marked the first that the Broncos played under the guidance of Coach Al Ruffo; but there didn ' t seem to be any dif- ference in their play than at any other time during the season. All during the game, however, Buck Shaw directed maneu- vers over a direct wire from his home in Burlingame. Any attempt to choose a hero would be futile, as every Bronco showed well against the Gon- zagans. against Gonzaga; Karamatic coming up for the tackle THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 121 6 Santa Clara Returning to the city of March Gras for their second successive Sugar Bowl game, Santa Clara started the New Year right by downing a fighting, clawing Bayou Tiger from Louisiana State 6-0 in New Orleans. One lightning-like thrust late in the second quarter sent the Broncos into the lead, and proved the difference between the two great teams. In downing the LSU eleven the Missionites became the only team to ever win two successive Sugar Bowl tussles, and finished their season undefeated and untied. At the outset the Tigers went on the offensive, and kept knocking at the Bronco goal until the West Coast representatives took advantage of the break they had been waiting for, moved down to the Tiger thirty, and from that point moved steadily forward to paydirt. On the thirty yard line the Missionites moved to the ten on a pass from Pellegrini to McCarthy. From there Jim Smith bucked the ball to the five in two tries; and on third down Pellegrini passed sharply to the left, where Jim Coughlan took the ball, stepped into the end-zone, and marked up six points. Pellegrini ' s place-kick attempt for the extra-point was wide. Later on in the same period the Broncos moved deep into LSU territory, but lost the ball when Coughlan crosses the goal line for the Sugar Bowl ' s only pay thrust PAGE 122 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 Louisiana State Walt Smith Tackle Fielding two teams of equal strength, the plete masters of the situation, stopping they moved within the Tiger ten- yard line. Playing their last game as Broncos, Lou Farasyn, Dough- erty, Cook, Brown and Cope did yeoman work, while their class- mates Fisher and Mazzina sat on the sidelines, due to injuries. Jerry Ginney, Jim Coughlan, Jim Smith, Al Wolff, Ray Mc- Carthy, Jim Barlow and the money player, Bruno Pelle- grini, were easily the outstand- ing Shaw-coached men on the field of play. Pellegrini attempted a field-goal from the twenty-three yard line which sailed to the right of the uprights. From the very outset it was evident that the game was destined to be won or lost in line play, and it was here that the Broncs showed marked superority for the second successive year. In the first quarter the LSU eleven moved to the Santa Clara one; but after four tries relinquished the ball at the same spot. Again, late in the game, the Tigers from Baton Rouge battled their way to the S. C. four. But here the Shawmen steadied themselves, and repulsed another touchdown drive, only major undefeated, untied team in America proved themselves corn- two determined LSU drives, while marking up six points the lone time Fisher motors thru against ' Zags THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 123 26 27 34 48 r,18 9 7 20 28 14 3 05 16 ■22 21 24 4 32 23 17 29 Second row: Johnson, Alexander, McHugh, P. Williams, O ' Connor, Paglia, Echenique, Bisordi, Barich. Third row: Jessup, Hellman, Hanna, Visali, Scott, Grul, Barlogio, Clark. Fourth row: Bogart, Kramer, Fox, Dittman, Simmons, Collier, Stanfel, Heiser, Coach DeRosa. ffifSHfflflP FOOTBALL Although failing to match the records established by their two predecessor freshman teams, the 1937 yearling eleven, after dropping their first two contests, suddenly found themselves, and battled their way to three consecutive victories toward the close of the year. As a unit they were disorganized during the first part of their campaign; but Coach Len Casanova mended this situation after the Sacramento Jaysee debacle, when he found a smooth- working unit, which proved too powerfu l for the freshman squad ' s last three opponents. Opening their season against USF ' s team of destiny, the Santa Clara Colts were handed their first setback, losing 13-6. A set of hard-running backs, together with a brilliant defensive forward wall, proved too much for the Bronclets. Sammy Johnstone and Masconi stood out for the frosh from San Francisco, who accounted for two touchdowns from passes before the Colts were able to mark up their only touchdown. A beautifully executed pass from Dick Clark to Sammy Alexander went for six points late in the fourth period; but the Colts couldn ' t follow this up, and hence met defeat. Matching Sacramento J. C. in the Capital City, the yearlings played their poorest ball of the season, fumbling constantly, going down to defeat, 7-0. The disappointing outcome was due to a bad case of fumblitis in the backfield, and the lack of a first-class quarterback. Traveling to Eureka for their third game, the Santa Clarans, although outgained and out- played, refused to be outfought, and brought home a close 7-6 verdict over the Humboldt State varsity. Trailing at half, 6-0, due to the sensational one-man work of Merriweather of the Staters, the first year men went into the lead when Harry Sanders raced seventy yards to score. The tie was broken by Grubesic ' s perfect conversion. After trimming Crockett A. C. 57-0, the yearlings met their ancient rivals from St. Mary ' s in Kezar Stadium, and repulsed them, 13-7. Sanders, Clark, Heiser, Alexander and Stanfel looked best for the Colts. PAGE 124 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 !Jell Leaders Roy Jones, Jack Hayes, Joe Tobin A great part of the animation and color that is witnessed by the thousands of fans who attend the various intercollegiate games is provided by the rooting sections of the competing institutions. No small part of the success of the football and basketball teams at Santa Clara is due to the support given by the Student Body, the greatest part of which the yell leaders bring out at the several functions. These men have a task to fill each and every fall and winter. This year Santa Clara was extremely fortunate in having a highly capable yell king, in the person of Jack Hayes. He, together with his assistants, Joe Tobin and Roy Jones, fulfilled to the highest degree, in a capable manner, the function that they undertook. They played an important part in the undefeated football year; and are to be congratulated for their extreme unselfishness in giving their time and interest in preparing hat stunts for the Stanford, USF, and St. Mary ' s games; as well as leading spiri ted rooters in pre-game rallies. Hayes is also to be congratulated for the splendid job he did in Los Angeles at the Loyola football game; and again later on at the Stanford basketball tussle at Palo Alto. 1 BRONCO BENNY came to Santa Clara as an official mascot, succeeded in becoming the official pet. A puppy with a puppy ' s faults, he chalks up each day dozens of students ' shoe-strings, pants-legs . . . still wags his hind-quarters earnestly to show it is all in fun. He has acquired a Simmons mattress and a monogram, can recognize the entire student body by the sound of their steps, is thoroughly spoiled by Father O ' Connell, thor- oughly loved by everyone else. T H REDWOOD 19 3 8 PAGE 125 BOSK r B ft L L THE S € fl SOP George Barsi, making the cycle of life, returned to Santa Clara three years ago to coach the varsity basketball team of this institution. He came back to coach the Bronco cagers, which team acted as his first stepping stone to fame ten years before. He came back to keep the team at the level it had maintained during his playing days, until Harlan Dykes ' resignation at the conclusion of the 1935 season. In his first year he had a veteran team to work with, and did exceptionally well. Last year, with an inexperienced five, he coached them to second place in their conference. The title they should have won, had not they faltered in their last games. This year, confronted with a lack of capable centers, and few experienced guards, they landed in the second spot in the conference. They learned fast, and proved a whirlwind aggregation in the first two months of play. Again, when they had the champion- ship in their hip pocket, they seemed to fall apart. But the fact that the Broncos did not win the championship can not be traced to any fault of Barsi ' s. He gave all he had; and his team did exceptionally well considering the obstacles, in the form of injuries and the playing condition of the court in San Jose, facing him. Not only was his attention devoted to the varsity, but George also took an active interest in the winning freshman team, and did much to mold the yearlings into capable material for next year ' s varsity. Leaving Barsi this year are Captain Pat Heffernan, regular guard, and Alaska Pete Gilmore, reserve center. These men will be missed, Heffernan for his directing ability, and Gilmore for the spirit he kept instilled in the team, on the practice court and in the various games. But coming up are four brilliant freshman prospects in Hale, Passaglia, Mandler and Feerick, men who should more than fill the vacated positions. With them, and the returning varsity veterans, Barsi should see his ambition realized next year, with the Santa Clarans winning the Northern California Con- ference title. Coach George A. Barsi PAGE 128 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 VRRSITy SQUAD Front row: Mgr. Hughes, Shando, Scholk, Heffernan, Ayers, Felipe. Second row: Jurewicz, Kerwin, Case, Giannini, Claudon, Gilmore. Third row: Coach Barsi, Andersen, Lautze, Nelson, Lautze, Asst. Mgr. Nemecek Measuring the season as a whole, Santa Clara enjoyed a highly successful year this spring, winning more than seventy-five percent of their games; and showing exceptionally well in most of those that they failed to take. It should be noted that Santa Clara lost but one game, outside of the San Jose Auditorium, and this to the sensational Stanford five, in an overtime game at Palo Alto. Using a sharp pass and cut system of play, the Broncos were stymied on the slippery, waxed San Jose floor. Their system could not function on such a court to the degree which it should; and this fact, more than any other, accounted for their loss of the league title. Outside of the games recounted in further detail in the succeeding pages, the varsity won two games from the powerful Olympic Club quintet, the first in Santa Clara ' s own Siefert gym, and later on in Kezar Pavilion. They also took the measure of the San Francisco YMI, the Athens Club of Oakland, California Aggies; and a pair of games from Humboldt State; while losing a 33-31 game to Loyola in the middle of the year. Mgr. Arnold Hughe THE REDWOOD 9 3 PAGE 129 Capt. Pat Heffernan Peter Gilmore Stan Andersen st. mfiey ' s series Outpassing and outcutting the greatest exponent of the pass-and-cut style of play, Santa Clara won both games of the St. Mary ' s series from Dykes ' colorful Gaels, the first in San Francisco, and the second later on in San Jose. Both games were raggedly played, but the Broncos proved themselves superior in all phases of play, winning the series with greatest ease. Led by Ed Nelson and Toddy Giannini in the first fray, they used a deliberate slow break, working the ball in for close shots, to conquer 39 to 33. Only sensational shooting on the part of Minehan and Anderson kept the Gaels close in the first half, while the Broncos poured in for set-up shots. Changing their style of play with ten minutes to go in the second half, they outspeeded the Moragans to win by six points. The second game found a hot Bronco five playing their best game of the year, winning easily, 57-47. The return to form of Stan Andersen, coupled with the consistent play of Giannini and Nel- son, proved the margin of difference. Gaining a 26-23 lead at the intermission, they opened up with a fast break after the ejection of the Gaels ' Anderson on fouls. Adding set-up after set-up, the score mounted to 50-31, from which point the Barsimen eased on to a ten- point victory. Bob Lautze leaps to defend as Cat ' s Van Horn reaches for the ball. A.GE i; II E REDWOOD 9 3 8 Toddy Giannini CO. -P. SHIES Marking up two victories in as many starts, the Bronco cagers won their annual series with the College of the Pacific, taking both games by wide margins. The Barsimen opened their league competition by trimming the Tigers in Stockton, 35-23. All through the first half the game was slowed up by numerous fouls, with both teams trying to outbreak each other, and work the ball in for set-up shots. In the second half the Broncos went on a scor- ing spree; and were never in danger of being overtaken. The outstanding man on the floor in the first COP contest was Captain Pat Heffernan, who broke up numerous Pacific scoring threats by his alert guarding. Giannini led the Mission scorers with ten points. The second game of the series was a repetition of the first, with Santa Clara winning, 48-35 in Siefert Gym. In this game the Tigers tried to outrush the S. C. five; but the Barsimen had too much power for them. After a slow first half, as far as scoring was concerned, the Broncos tallied seventeen digits before their opponents could break into the scoring column, at the opening of the second period. Giannini marked up 14; and was followed by Nelson with 12. College of the Pacific ' s Ripon was the out- standing Tiger basketeer on the floor. Heffernan shoots against State as Case rushes to follow THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 131 Dick Lautze Bob Ayres U. S. f. SC1IIES After trouncing the Dons in the first game of the series, with the conference title at stake, the Barsi-coached Broncos dropped the second game, which caused a split series, and in the final outcome the loss of the Northern California Intercollegiate Basketball Conference title. Playing the first game in San Francisco ' s Kezar Pavilion, the Broncos, after a dull first half, unleashed a smashing last period drive to squelch the U. S. F. Dons, 44-37. Using a slow-breaking offense in the first half, the Broncos effectively stopped the Dons ' fast break, matching the Hilltoppers point for point for the first ten minutes. In the closing minutes of the half the Missionites pulled into a slight lead, which they never relinquished. Shortly after the opening of the second half Toddy Giannini dropped five baskets in six attempts, while Nelson was adding three buckets to his total. In this way they quickly obtained a comfortable margin, and coasted to victory. ■I fc ' ' ' With the conference title virtu- ally tucked away, the Broncos lost a 42-39 listless contest to the Cameronites, in the San Jose Auditorium. Due to brilliant shooting on the « . $ hI part ° Andersen and Heffernan HEmS the locals managed to lead 23- 20 at half-time. But the Dons quickly overcame this after the intermission; and even though the Missionites came with a rush at the close, the gap was never closed. A slippery floor, together with poor ball-handling and the loss of Heffernan in the thick of the struggle spelt certain defeat for the Barsimen. Nelson and Stoefen square off in the Stanford game. PAGE 132 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 Joe Felipe Felix Jurewicz sun jose S£R its After copping the first game of the series easily, the Broncos slumped to drop their first basketball series in history to San Jose State, and with it the conference title, losing the last two games to the Kotta-led Spartans. In the initial contest, the locals completely outclassed their valley rivals, winning in a dry, unexciting game, 44-27. Playing his first game as a regular, Joe Felipe led the victors with his unerring eye and beautiful ball-handling. The second game was entirely different. Leading all the way, the Staters subdued an off Bronco quintet, 42-39. Only once did the S. C. men threaten the lead, breaking the Spartans defense to tie the score 19-19 at half-time. Chubby Kotta, diminutive forward, was the dominating spark-plug for San Jose, while Toddy Giannini led the Broncos. Too soon after their titanic strug- gle with the Stanford quintet, the Barsimen lost the third game of the series to an unerring Spar- tan team, 50-44. Hampered by a slippery floor, which broke their prepared at- tack, the Missionites couldn ' t match the San Jose scoring bar- rage. Again Kotta led the Spartans to victory, teaming with Captain Carroll to spill the Bronco apple-cart. With 5000 in the audience, beau- tiful ball-handling, phenomenal shots, and tireless defensive work kept the Santa Clarans bottled up throughout the driv- ing championship tilt. J lllMJ - VA V Lack of a competent center to match Radunich, together with the slippery floor, proved fatal JP WL H W to the Bronco cause. ■d over Radunich; Ayers waiting in back THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 133 Bob Lautze and Hunt reach for the ball while Heffernan waits and Andersen hovers nearby CflLIFORnffl-STflnfORD GflfflfS Although the Santa Clara basketeers dropped their first tilt to California ' s rangy Bears, after amassing a great lead in the first half, the Broncos came back to split the series with a decisive 37-23 win in the second game at Berkeley. In the opening game, the Bears, early in the second half, caught up with the Broncos, who had held a 25-19 lead at half. Giannini made spectacular shot after shot in the first period; but couldn ' t find the range in the last half. Depending on his marksmanship, rather than team play, cost the Barsimen the game, as the Bears moved the ball in for close shots, and made them good, as the game drew to a close, winning 54-41. The well-planned strategy of Nibs Price, Bear mentor, went wide of its mark in the second game, as he thought his second team could best the Broncos. In a hard-fought, ragged contest, the locals, despite a tendency toward ragged play, stayed in front all the way. In the waning minutes, with the insertion of the Bear first team, the Broncos surged on to a greater victory, opening up the margin as the Bear first string fought to gain the lead. I Playing their greatest game of the season, the Santa Clara cage machine dropped a thrilling, gruelling overtime battle to Stanford ' s Pacific Coast Conference champions, 56-55, at Palo Alto. Due to the clever work of Toddy Giannini and Pat Heffernan, Santa Clara held a 28-19 lead at half-time. The Indians ' great Hank Luisetti, tossing through almost impossible shots, marked up sev- enteen points in the last half. Breaking up a S. C. stalling game, he gave the Cards a two- point lead with seconds remaining. As the gun popped, Giannini arched in the tying bucket. The Cards won on two shots by Calderwood in a smashing overtime period. PAGE 13 4 T II E REDWOOD 9 3 8 ?. 3 A € .© .,, feSiu TfV ' r % ' ; 3 1 Front row: Mandler, Bob Feerick, Hale, Morrisey, Passaglia. Second row: McCabe, Puncochar, McGarry, Rednall. Third row: Coach Barsi, Bryan Feerick, Mgr. Biancalana f R£SHfTifln BASKETBALL Fulfilling pre-season expectations, the 1938 freshman quintet proved themselves one of the strongest yearling quintets ever to represent the Mission school, marking up nineteen victories in twenty-one engagements. Jointly coached by Charlie Bannan, star of the ' 37 varsity five, and varsity mentor, George Barsi, the Kenna squad scored victories over the California, Stanford, St. Mary ' s, San Jose and USF freshmen; and also trimmed the Marin and San Francisco Jaysee teams. Only two losses marred the otherwise perfect record, one to St. Mary ' s Frosh; and the other to San Jose ' s Frosh team. The Gaelet loss was probably due to the fact that the Bronclets played without the services of their star forward Marty Passaglia; and when the Colts dropped a decision to the San Jose team they had just returned from a two weeks vacation, and lacked the speed to keep up with the Spartan five. However, in subsequent tilts, the Broncos downed the Spartans twice; winning the series easily. The Bronclets split the series with their rivals from Moraga, winning the first game easily in San Francisco, and losing in San Jose. The series was never completed. Besides trimming all Frosh and Jaysee competition, the freshman squad also downed St. James, St. Ignatius, and other San Francisco fives; as well as the Olympic Club 145 ' s, Chaminade Hi, Santa Clara Hi, and Bellarmine ' s high school quintet. Showing phenomenal court brilliance, and m arking themselves as certain varsity performers within the next three years, were the high-scoring forwards, Bruce Hale and Marty Passaglia; and the dependable back-court pair, Pete Mandler and Bob Feerick. Of these men, Hale looms as the most probable to scale the highest peak of basketball fame; although neither of the other three should be far behind him. Other numeral winners, and men who gave evidences of varsity potentialities, were Pat Mc- Garry, Dick Morrisey, Henry Puncochar, and Bob McCabe. These men should prove capable reserves in their coming years as varsity basketeers. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 135 ■-■_ BflSf ' - 1 %§ ===. ' cr- BALL l C BASEBALL V ; ' , ' To Justin Fitzgerald, who upon meeting a candidate for the varsity baseball squad for the first time never fails • to say, To the boys I ' m just Fitz! was entrusted the ( 1 task of constructing from the rawest of materials a rep- resentative baseball team. Fitz, nationally known for Coach Justin Fitzgerald his fifteen years in professional baseball, aware of the fact that his material was comparatively crude, never lost sight of the fact that whether his team win, lose or draw, his men would learn to play inside baseball. He began by laying down the principles of inside baseball, and carried them into execution through- out the season. All he asked was that players remain on their toes, and hustle all the time. Errors were excusable at all times; but to fall asleep and miss a sign was not tolerated. This process, although none too successful in the won and lost column, taught every man on the squad that the game of baseball consists of something more than swinging a bat and throwing a ball. The Bronco mentor had less manpower to work with than any other coach in the conference; and those men who were counted upon to bolster the 1938 squad fell down pitifully as the season progressed, retrogressing as the baseball campaign advanced, instead of showing signs of improvement. The first shock came to the baseball leader when Santa Clara ' s No. 1 pitcher, Roy Patterson, broke his little finger just before the conference opener. To top this off, Bricca injured his ankle, and was unavailable for the first four games. This, together with heavy seasonal rains, sent the Broncos off to the worst start they ever had at Santa Clara; and they failed to shake the slump during the whole campaign. Junior-businessman Charlie Haid managed the varsity baseball squad, and handled the thankless chores with greatest efficiency throughout the season. The capable way in which he handled local trips to San Francisco, Palo Alto and Berkeley, together with the way he managed the five-day stay in Los Angeles, showed that he knew how to take care of a collegiate baseball squad, especially at Santa Clara. Assisting him in the Northern California WSB m games was Joe Tobin, assistant yell leader. Mgr. Charles Haid PAGE i: THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 BflStBHLL VflRSITy Front row: Coach Fitzgerald, Hayes, Pellegrini, C. McGowan, Bertolani, Edge, Case, Blaettler. Second row: Patterson, Schmidt, Bricca, Nelson, Roche, Selenger, Claudon, Asst. Mgr. Tobin. Third row: Mgr. Haid, Filippi, H. McGowan, Changala, Ruddy, Morey, Battaglia, Naughton, Trainer Schmidt Discounting conference games, Santa Clara en- joyed a truly great year, in America ' s favorite pas- time, the ever-popular game of baseball. In their opener against the Pacific Coast League Oak- land Rookies, the varsity eked out a 6-5 victory in the last inning on Bags Bat- taglia ' s pinch double. Fol- lowing this fray, the Bron- cos split two games with the Keneally Seals and Marv Owen ' s All-Stars. The Seals won, after the Broncos had led all the way; but the All-Stars faltered before a local hitting barrage in the final two frames. In the only other practice games played, Santa Clara emerged victorious. They trimmed San Jose 3-1 in the first game of that series; and were leading 15-13 in the abbreviated second fray on Ryan Field. Taking advantage of numerous Spartan miscues in the first game, behind the best pitching performance ever turned in by Les Bricca, the varsity was never behind. The second game was a free hitting contest, with Santa Clara batting harder than their rivals. In one inning the Broncos marked up ten runs on three homes, one each by Naughton, Case and Roche. USF was blasted all over the field, in their match with the locals, losing a 20-9 decision. Pat Patterson and Jack Hayes pitched for the Broncos; and although hit freely, had the situation well- in-hand at all times. Patterson and Harry McGowan were the hitting stars for the varsity, with Joe Gerar- din starring for the metropolitan team. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 139 St. Illari ' s Series Bertolcmi, Blaettler, Selenger Case slides into first against Gaels, pitcher Andrade looks on. Santa Clara opened its conference baseball season dropping a 10-2 decision to the St. Mary ' s Gaels on Ryan Field. The game was raggedly played from start to finish, with numerous errors being made by both teams. Ruddy started on the mound for the Broncos, but was batted from the box in one and one-third innings. He was followed by Dooley Bertolani, who was later relieved by Lefty Selenger. Neither pitcher fared any better than Ruddy. The Bronco pitchers were continually in hot water, and since their hitters were far off form, they at no time threatened O ' Neil, who went the route for the Gaels. The second and third games of the series were played in Seals Stadium in San Francisco, being spon- sored by the St. Mary ' s Club of the Moraga institution. Santa Clara was slaughtered in both games of the double-header, dropping the first 16-3, and the night- cap 10-2. Patterson started for the locals, but a walk, and an error, coupled with pitcher Merrill ' s double, and Butler ' s home run over the left field wall, spelled his doom. Bertolani, Ruddy and Selenger followed, and none could seem to stem the continuous barrage of Gael runs. In the last game of the series the Missionites gained a 1-0 lead in the first inning on hits by Roche and Blaettler. But the Gaels retaliated by blasting five runs off Bricca in their half of the first. Nelson relieved him in the sixth, and he was followed by Pellegrini, who finished. ' KS L. Bricca, Changala, Patterson PAGE 140 T H REDWOOD 9 3 8 Stanford Series Ruddy chases Sullivan back to first. Although they split the first two games of the series, Santa Clara was no match for the Cardinals in the third game, played on Ryan Field, and conseauently were defeated, 16-4. On Stanford ' s sunken diamond, the Broncos met Stanford in the first game; and proved superior for seven and one-half innings. But the eighth inning, during which period the Cardinals pounded seven runs off Selenger and Ruddy, proved the fatal frame. The game ended with the Cards victors, 10-4. Distinct underdogs in the second fray, since they had failed to win a game in conference competition, behind the effective pitching of Roy Patterson, the Broncos came through and won their only league game, 6-3. Highlights of the fray were the consistency of Patterson, the long homer pounded out by Changala over the left field wall, and the flossy defensive work of the varsity infielders. Battling for a series win, the locals were thumped by Stanford in the final game of the year. Glen Hamilton, although hit freely, was doubly effective with men on the bases. While neither Ruddy, Patterson, nor Selenger could stop the Palo Altans, the Broncos were also weak at the plate, and were never in the contest. Hitting stars were Bill Filippi and Dale Case, both whacking out extra-base hits. Battaglia, Ruddy, Case THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 141 California Series Claudon, Hayes, H. McGowan ' • ..-. - ' c4 Claudon tries for a close one at After dropping a close 9-6 decision to California in the first game of the series, the Bronco horse-hide squad traveled to Berkeley to close the series, losing both games, the first 4-1, and the nightcap, 12-2. Pitching his first game of the year, in the series opener, Roy Patterson held the Bears even for five innings; but was relieved by Coach Fitzgerald at the start of the sixth, Les Bricca replacing him. The Bears gained a three-run lead in the eight; but the locals came back and tied the score in their half of the inning. Cali- fornia won the game with a three-run barrage in the ninth. Playing sensationally for five and one-half innings, the varsity led the Bears in the first Berkeley en- counter, 1-0, before the Bears got to Bricca, and the Broncos blew up in the field. The third game was a nightmare. Pounding out two runs in the first on hits by Edge and Blaettler, and a sacrifice by Roche, Santa Clara rooters eyed their first conference victory. But the Bears sent these hopes ablast in their first time to bat. Hitting Ed Nelson freely, the California men pounded out six runs before the inning was completed. Joe Ruddy did some brilliant relief work; but the California team went on to win with ease. ! Schmidt, Edge, Nelson PAGE 142 T H E R E D W ! 3 « Playing hard luck baseball, the Santa Clara diamond team dropped all three games of their annual series with Sam Berry ' s USC Trojans, losing the first two in Los Angeles, and the last contest on Ryan Field. The first two games went ten and twelve innings, respectively, before the men of Troy were able to take the measure of the Broncos from Santa Clara. Ed Nelson, Lefty Selenger and Les Bricca pitched for Santa Clara, while left fielder Petrushkin went the route for the Trojans, in the first game. Pinch-hitting, although stopped twice before-hand, proved successful when Captain Hal Sieling, hitting in the pinch, singled to break the 2-2 deadlock. Starting Roy Patterson in the second game, Justin Fitzgerald changed chuckers in the sixth, inserting Les Bricca into the fray. But Fate decided against the Broncos in the last of the twelfth, the Tro- jans winning, 6-5. Jack Brewer, fire-ball artist, chucked twelve innings for the men of Troy, and sent 15 Boncos down via the strike-out route. Although inclined to be wild, the Angeleno pitched sensationally with men on the bases. In the last game of the series, played on the Bronco ' s home grounds, the Trojan batters hit everything the Bronco pitchers had to offer, winning 11-4. Jack Roche ' s long homer in the first was the only Bronco highlight of the day. i u. s. c. and U.C.Lfl. Series Unable to shake their full-season slump, the Bronco nine dropped three consecutive games to a hard- hitting UCLA club, 11-6, 11-8 and 17-14, in ten innings. Pitching Selenger, Bricca and Bertolani in the first game, the locals were unable to stem the Bruin hitters; while Jack Carter slow-balled the Missionites for nine innings. Changala ' s long homer over the Sawtell Field wall was the standout performance for Santa Clara; while Zaby, left fielder, led the Uclan attack, hitting two for two, walking in his other three attempts. In a second free-hitting contest, UCLA bested the Broncos by three runs. Zaby and Washington homed early in the game; but the locals came back to lead by one going into the eighth. With the bags loaded, and two down, Washington lofted a high fly in back of second base. Edge, going back to take the ball, lost it in the sun, and Washington raced around the bases, three team-mates scoring before him, as the ball dropped to earth. This proved the margin of victory, as the Broncos failed to hit in the ninth. The third game was by far the most exciting of the series. Ruddy started, but was batted from the box in the first. Selenger took over, later Bertolani replaced him, and Patterson finished. Seven runs behind entering the last half of the eighth, the Broncos went on a batting spree. High point of the game came when Blaettler drove a homerun with the bags loaded to tie the score. But the Uclans went on to win in the tenth. THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 143 freshman B a s e b a Back row: Heiser, McGowan, Alexander, Hanna. First row: Echenique, Masterson, Owen, Carroll. Handicapped at the outset by the continual rains, and later by Spring football practice, Len Casanova ' s freshman baseball squad, nevertheless, completed a most successful schedule late in April. During the course of the campaign the Bronclets won games from San Jose State Frosh, San Mateo J. G, Commerce, Polytechnic and St. Ignatius High Schools from San Francisco, and a pair of games from San Jose Hi. A mid-season batting slump cost the Colts defeats by St. Mary ' s Frosh, Sequoia Hi, and San Francisco Jaysee. The best played game of the year was the last game wtih the St. Mary ' s Frosh, which the Casanova-coached yearlings lost, 2-1. Gene McFadden let the Gaelets down with three hits and no earned runs; yet he was bested in his mound duel by the great Gael freshman hurler, Bill Johnson. At times the Frosh showed great power at the plate, and ran up several large scores. Out- standing among the hitters were John Hanna, catcher; Sam Alexander, first baseman; Jim Johnston, shortstop; Henry Punchocar, second baseman, and Wally Carroll, center fielder. Of these Carroll, Hanna and Alexander loom as the best varsity prospects. The remaining regulars were Lee Stanfel, third baseman; Ward Heiser, left fielder, and Bob McGowan, right fielder. Tex Owen and Masterson were the only frosh utility men; and both saw lots of action. Gene McFadden and Lefty Echenique handled the pitching chores, and at times showed great promise. PAGE 144 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 m i n o r fly n i fi a m u fi a l y i, l | n | m i i SPORTS THE REDWOOD • 1938  PAGE 145 Chiaramonte, Puppo, Gomes, Bruce, O ' Hara, Smith, Mascovich, Mariani, Lacey BOXIHG Under the inspiration- al leadership of Julio Chiaramonte, and the tutelage of Assist- ant Football mentor, Al Ruffo, boxing real- ly came into its own at Santa Clara, and was finally recog- nized as a minor sport. After holding the annual intramural smoker to decide the school champions, the squad met and defeated their first outside opponents, the San Francisco Y. M. C. A., 3-2, in Siefert gym. Later on in the year they met an experienced Cal Aggies squad, and dropped a close match to them, although many of the Bronco mittmen showed better than they had beforehand. Representing Santa Clara were Jim Badame at 129 pounds, Johnny Puppo and Frank Gomes at 139, John O ' Hara at 149, Joe Mascovich and Paul Mariani at 159, Julio Chiaramonte and Bill Bruce at 169, Joe Lacy in the light-heavy class, and Walt Smith in the unlimited division. One man, however, was responsible more than anyone else for the team ' s success, as well as his own. This man was Julio Chiaramonte. The New Mexico middleweight toiled long and patiently with other boxing candidates, and the work he accomplished deserves the admiration of all Santa Clara. For the second time in as many years Santa Clara was represented in the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate Boxing Tournament by Julio Chiaramonte. And for the second time in as many years he came home with a championship. In successfully defending his middleweight title he became the first man in the history of the tournament to accomplish such a feat; and in doing so, defeated three opponents, two of which had never tasted defeat before. Rushing his opponents in his usual wind-mill style, The Champ proved too tough for those who faced him. He won from McSweeney of Cal Aggies in his first match, decisioned Bolich of San Jose in his second encounter. And in the finals he hit Homer Mead of California, who had never , .„ __ TO lost in 102 fights, with everything but the ring-post while winning all three rounds, the match and the title. PAGE 146 T II E REDWOOD 9 3 8 Tennis Starting slowly, Santa Clara ended a mediocre season in the net sport, winning six matches, while losing an equal number. Dropping the first two contests to USF and San Jose put the varsity in the hole from the start; but a sudden re- turn to form of Don Dodd and Bob Sullivan sparked the team to come- back trail, which they followed through the rest of the year. The squad split their two matches with USF and San Francisco State; won both meets with St. Mary ' s, and lost both encounters to the cham- pions from San Jose. Trimmed by the Spartans 8-1 in the first contest, the Broncos closed the gap in the second meeting, losing 5-4 in a long, hard-fought match. Don Dodd, Dave Buckley, Tony Turturicci and Norvin Lewis pass from the portals of Santa Clara this June, so the tennis squad will really be hit hard by graduation; but the return of Ken Leake, Fred Eyrond, Bill Kauffman and Manager Bob Sullivan should balance the team for their next campaign. Dodd, Sullivan, Kauffman, Buckley, Lewis, Turn Golf O ' Connor, Brown, Olsen, Jobst, Finigan, Mar Playing under the handicap of no home course upon which to practice, the Santa Clara golf team did not fare as well as was expected of them this year. They dropped two matches to USF, one to San Jose ' s champs, and split a pair with St. Mary ' s. It was mainly inexperience and lack of facilities that kept the Broncos from turning the tide on their opponents on at least two occasions. With the loss of but one man, Ed Debonair O ' Con- nor, Santa Clara should turn out a top-notch club next year. This year ' s squad was led by Jim Hutcheson and Jack Flanagan, who proved the ablest point getters, along with Dick Jobst. Other members of the squad were O ' Connor, Locke and Finigan, and utility man Art Olsen. They were managed by Paul Kelly. THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 147 Intramura Touch Football Backs: Scholk, Felipe, Edge, McGowan. Line: Claudon, Booth, Flanagan, Case, Sylva Mentored by Canvas Back Flanagan. Paced by Les The Great Edge. Pushed forward by a brilliant Felipe to Filippi passing combination. These advantages, together with a hard-charging forward wall, proved the difference between the Sophs and the other entrants in the annual intramural touch-football tourney last fall. The O ' Connorites waltzed through the first half of their schedule, nosing out the Frosh 14-6, trimming the Seniors 20-8; and easing over the Juniors, 12-6. They continued their winning ways in the second half, downing the Frosh in a re-match, 12-0. The Seniors fell a second time, losing 18-0. But the Juniors refused to be repulsed — and went on to conquer the seemingly invincible Flying A ' s, 18-14. In the game which sent the second half into a three-way tie, since the Seniors had also won two and lost one, the Juniors overcame a fourteen-point lead in the final period to win on a long O ' Hara to Schmidt pass in the final seconds. But the play-off proved easy for the Champions. The Juniors fell before the Seniors. And the Seniors bowed to the Sophs, giving them the title, 30-6. Intramura Bask etba Schwerin, Fanoe, McGowan, Campodonico, Hayes A slow-starting Junior quintet, capably handled by Spider Campodonico, Dink Hayes, and Lit Schwerin, after dropping all of their first half matches, came with a rush in the second half to win that, and the play-off, going away. The Sophs started off strong, winning their first two; but the Frosh took the play away from them at that point, and went on to capture the first half. But the Juniors suddenly came to life, being rejuvenated by the belated addition of Campo and The Dink in the final drive, to capture the second half, and win the play-off, 29-15. The Sophs were their first victims, losing 31-22. Patterson, Lacey and Booth couldn ' t stop the Fascist drive. The Frosh fell next; and the Seniors followed, losing, 30-22. The play-off game was hard-fought, but the Junior five had the upper-hand throughout. PAGE 148 II E REDWOOD 19 3 8 ntramura Sof t b a ' i r m.. Staging a determined comeback in the final half of the schedule, the Junior softball ten annexed the softball crown, downing the Lawyers, 1 1-4, in the playoff game. The Barristers won the first half without losing a game. Behind Ditto ' s great pitching, together with the sensational fielding of McCormick, Bacon, Delmas and Arnerich, they proved themselves far superior in the first half. But, in the first game of the last half, they were knocked over by the Seniors, led by Kelly, Filippi and Sanoff. The Seniors lost to the Juniors, in a free hitting con- test. And the Lawyers took the measure of the Nobili third floor, to send the league into a triple tie. In the first game of the playoff, the Seniors dropped a sloppily played 10-6 game to the Lawmen. But, the men of Dean Owens were not so fortunate against Campodonico ' s Flying A ' s, and lost the second half, 6-5. This was the closest played game of the annual tourney. ntramura Tennis Geare, Guy, Holm, Yoell, Flippen For the second time in as many years the Freshman tennis men took the fall intramural tennis title, when Dick Friedenbach and Sleepy Yoell led them through the competition without defeat. As the annual goes to its final resting place the spring tournament is tied between the Frosh and Sophomores. There is little to choose between the two teams; but in the play-off, if the Frosh can get their best six on the court at one time, they should retain the title they copped last semester. Outside of intramural competition tennis has continued as a popular sport for exercise on the S. C. Campus. During the course of the year many splendid prospects for the ' 39 varsity team performed on the courts, and it is in this way that Manager Sullivan gets a line on the members he can choose for the tennis ladder competition, which determines in the final outcome the varsity squad to represent Santa Clara in its outside competition. THE REDWOOD 3 8 PAGE 149 Front row: Kelley, Sullivan, Haid, Filliponi. Back row: Ci. Shorrock, McDonald, Chittum ing, Lilley, S uu i m m i n g This spring the first organized swimming team in Santa Clara history was founded under the leadership of Sophomore Bourke MacDonald, and through his efforts, mainly, it has become a winning Minor Sport at the Bronco school. After an auspicious inaugural match with the College of Pacific team in Siefert plunge, the Mission swimmers have improved phenomenally, and in their last two matches have taken the measure of both the San Mateo and Menlo Junior College paddling aggregations. As The REDWOOD goes to press they have return matches scheduled with San Mateo and the College of Pacific; and are trying to arrange meets with other Junior and State college squads. Swimming as started in 1938 bids fair to advance with the years, and in time become a dom- inant sport at the Mission school. Charlie Haid, MacDonald, Lind, freshman Kelley, Simon, Shorrock, Filipponi and others are the mainstays of this year ' s charter team. Hand- At the start of the fall term, one of the semi-annual intramural handball tourneys was started. When the meet was concluded it became evident that the Seniors had won the title. Manned by Larry Kirsch, Jerry O ' Shea, Jack Donovan and Jack Sweeney, they swept through all competition. In the spring play, a rejuvenated Soph team, led by Bill Box and Lou Depaoli, took the title — and loom as the real championship team for next year ' s events at Santa Clara. Handball, outside of being played in the term tourneys, is one of the most popular condition- ing and pleasure sports at Santa Clara. It has long attracted a great number of sport loving students; and has continued through the year as a daily routine for students who enjoy the manly thrills of competitive games. Horse-shoes is a new innovation at Santa Clara, enjoying its first year of popularity at the Mis- sion school due to the general interest of George Barsi, minor sports mentor, to enlarge the intra- mural program. It was started as intramural competition; but due to the early spring rains which ruined the playing grounds, it was dropped from that pro- gram, and became one of the many diversified sport games offered to students on the campus. With many of the students it has become one of their daily workout spots; and Coach Barsi hopes that its popularity will increase with time so that it will become a regular spring intra- mural event. Horse shoes PAGE 150 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 CHflfiHR Dfly Due to weeping California skies of Charter Day, this page which was to have been termed Charter Day Activities now becomes the Track and Field section of the Yearbook. Every year at the school of the Padres, the student enthusiasts in track and field trot out on Charter Day, weather permitting, to show their wares before the students, in intermural com- petition. This year, for the first time in the history of the school, The REDWOOD was held up until these events were to be com- pleted, so that they could be set down herein. But a necessary postpone ment has stymied our plans; and so the competition remains a question mark as this page heads for the press-works. The Frosh loom as the probable winners because of their sup- posed depth in most of the running events, especially the sprints. The Sophs are next in choice; with the Seniors and Juniors following in that order. Les Cook, three-time winner in the shotput, will be making his final put, in an attempt to break his 46 feet 7 inches record; Tony Mazzina will be tossing the disc and football for the last time; and John Petit, lone senior track entrant, will be running the 440 for the last time. These men we salute for their consistently good performances. Also not to be forgotten is the Block S. C. show of Charter Day. This revival production was the real highlight of the Bronco athletic and stage year. Before the Big Game — Jeep starts a sit-down — no pay, no touchdown — Bronkitis — 1938 ' Nostalgic Memories of Yesteryear ' The band swings out as the curtain opens on Gould ' s Snooker Parlor — Bronkitis — 1938 THE REDWOOD 9 3 8 PAGE 151 pflTR ons Mr. and Mrs. George E. Abel Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Amaral Mr. G. F. Bacon Mr. H. M. Bayley Mr. and Mrs. Phlip Bannan Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Blake Block S. C. Society Hon. Charles R. Boden Mr. George H. Casey Catala Club Class of ' 39 Class of ' 41 Clay M. Greene Players Dean and Mrs. Clarence C. Collidge Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Cuthbert Mr. and Mrs. A. Doll Mr. and Mrs. John J. Donovan Mr. James E. Dunn Mr. and Mrs. J. Dutra From a Friend From a Friendly Institution Mr. Walter J. Gearin Dr. and Mrs. Fred C. Gerlach Mr. and Mrs. Peter Giannini Dr. O. D. Hamlin Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hart Mr. and Mrs. Leon Jacobs Dr. Harold P. Moloney Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Meagher Mr. Charles M. O ' Brien Dean and Mrs. Edwin J. Owens Mr. and Mrs. William Panopulos Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pipes Mr. Phil Reilly Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Sanguinetti, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Settergran Mr. Richard B. Shippey Dean and Mrs. Geo. L. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Trabucco Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Volpe, Sr. fiEDUIOOD PICTURES are credited under name, by page number and po- sition; each page divid- ed left to right, top to bot- tom, into six sections (a, b, c, etc.) Studio Portraits in the RED- WOOD by Bushnells, San Jose. Photomontages, pp. 14-15, 30, 38, and 44, by Hugh Smith. 58a; 59b; 60f; 6 If; 73a BUI Walton: 49a-f, 55a, 58a, 59b, 6of, 6 If, 73a, 76c, 77a-d, 78b, 80a, 81, 100- 101; Football Individu- als, pp. 106-123, 124, 125a, 129a, 135, 139, 146a, 147a-e, 148a-d, 149c. Bob Shorrock: 1 1, 48, 50a-b, 62b, 63e, 64b, 66e, 73b, 83, 84b-f, 85a-d-e, 86a, 89d, 92a, 93b-d, 94a, 126, 127, 131f, 144, 145e, 149b, 150a-f, 151. Hugh Smith: 6, 8, 44c-d, 58b-e, 59a, 61c, 67e, 78c, 80f, 84a-e, 86b, 88a-c-d, 89a, 90a, 91c, 97, 125b, 143e, 145a, 149b, 150c. Don Engstrom: 88e, 91b. Gordon Gearin: 89e, 90d, Joseph Schweitzer: 90f, 92e. David Prud ' homme: 90e, 91a. Arthur Meagher: 89f , 94b-c. James O ' Toole: 92f. Harold Harvey: 93e. William Bruce: 9 4d. Franklin Cullen: 53. Roger Dieudonne: 77b. Stan Corriea: 138a; Base- ball Individuals, pp. MO- Ken Leake: Football Indi- viduals, pp. 120, 121, 122, 123. San Francisco Chronicle: 98, 99, 104, 107f, 108e, HOe, 120e, 121f, 123f, 130e, 140c, 141c. San Jose News: 9 Id, 106e, 132e, 133f, 146f. San Francisco Examiner: 109f, 11 If, 119f. Los Angeles Examiner: 112e, 113f. Worldwide: 114e. Marquette Hilltopper: 115f. S. F. Call-Bulletin: 116e, 117f, 118e. Associated Press: 122e. Webbs, San Jose: Basket- ball Individuals, 130-133. PAGE 152 REDWOOD 19 3 8   «, ' ■,-,■:, , « «? A Hs, r ,-4, Jn .,4 Q1 ,uv Y' 4 ,vi , ...1-..-:Q-1-1, .,-,... V fi 4 . ma., . ,I ., 1 : , , - , L - - 9 ga?-fy -Q-f,::u?.....z,........L........ ,....1-4...--f.. nfs- ' ' . . 9 - -, 1 3- ff - -1, I -f..-4,.,,wx.g,,3:-,-gg.-, ' Q Q-sue.--... ' .-w- F, - r - . . V F . -.. -.-. ,:, 1-el,-.:.-4 'r ani' STM Y rf' ' ,, Y - N N ' ----- ..q 1.1 :Hx ..,. 4.11 .-,. - ' V V 'L' H- 4-Av-.w-459-4u....',.-,,..v -,,l ,H , , 3 as- Q - - -1'-.1-gif? ,' 1-: 'E-4 K .w I -pm sw' . I 2 15, T14 ' f . ui , lie-. fldk '51 if .L . x' .1 F . v w 1 m ., SN Pt 5 ., vi' ' ,J wi, f if 1 ,., 112 . xg. ti Ei rl fl fl' . Yi ff: ,v H 4 Rf ,ig . FQ: 4-I 15' ir I . Q 1 ra. 1 , 'L .g' gn. wr , Htl, . ,V , .f., 1 4: 1, -. My 7 .2 ' IJ I J H21 111' L iii v r n if 1.1. uv rf ,Q I N v ' n 1. I fl! li' x ,M X 2 H : L 1 1 - F 'W 1- ' X
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