Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA)

 - Class of 1935

Page 1 of 198

 

Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 198 of the 1935 volume:

VT - ' - i ยซ--โ–  P ' ' โ–  ' โ–  ' -i jM l ,v ' : v n (h }A I y ' , .. ' . V ย r f Sifv PUBย U UE.D VOODROW WIL ON ,,.,, UIGU . CUIOOU ;K.v: sQS i sS i S ii S iSg i J-Xm VA) ' ' 1v: y MANAGEPJL โ€ข โ€ข. โ€ข 5 f gsfs S sยซยซi ยซas as a eE3ยฃ?l iS6iim : s feยซ ยซ:f3 s ' : i smi Bffii GOODBYE TE.NT CITY. MUD, DU T, V TED . POUT ; CUALLE.NGfc DEMOCQACV, rPEEDOM ; OPEN - ' PACE TUEY V ADE. ALL IN TUI BOOK iยฎ5I MSS i i ? ilp i? St ' ยงIi i i S s A - f ' - Zy ' e ACK TO TME. BUILD- INC3s r V IXU TUEtlD ECURITY PDOTCCTION AND OD-DECl CAQD.V- ING V ITU jy N V r30v Ern, msNGTU IN ITIATIVE QU ly ERI NQ ' m r::..- s ' :: Wii ' yJ ' 4 4 _: -ix CX l-V c s m m !m ' im smss3 fmfm mi x:: ' โ€ข}::smasmwtยซmMBS Ufa gmwkm coca. EXPPlEyS IOM. AN ADDDKUmON TCymDIN- TOCm Uj ' lf (p P BOARD OrCDUCATION: CUAa CD VITU Dt- โ– Kt - .i ' PON IBILITY OC DRMINGr YOUTIJ rOD CUANGING CUAOTIC W0DLD.TUOK VI IONJUCIft UICU T ip(mil! INCCWTYpCPUIWty rOKCQD rOHWAM). IN ADM CIATION or M|(ย gygiE GW fcUILDING TUt LONG BCACU yCUOa TQM raiiOWING QUAtt CUIN ; LN SiS? :; ADPttCIKTION OPTHEia KEEN ANALY- TICAL JUDGMENT IN MAINTAINING ED- UCATIONAL T NDARD TUATWEttTUC s ? ' TOA TOCTUE NATION IN TUt PACE Of V ' i A ' RIGID kLTHENCUMENl jm TUDENT v V pC yODDBOW WIL pN EKPRE TUEICl INCEUE G ATITUDEANHPPaECPOli t , โ€ข In Appreciation of the great sacrifices which made the retirement of Super- intendent H. S. Upjohn necessary, we, the students of Woodrow Wilson, sin- cerely dedicate this, the ninth volume of Campanile. โ€ข To Seniors, a luminous memory . . . rich in tradition, beautiful, tragic . . . Principal and Contractor build Wilson anew. h- k โ€ข June Seniors, wandering nomads, in grand entran ce back in the buildings. ' li โ€ข Despite slush and rain and mirrored lakes, Wilson came through every inch a ' forty niner. ' I ' IMlii โ€ข Deep sea fishing . . . why go farther? In boats and rain coats they met tests and a real democracy. , jj c .s. M I โ€ข The track . . . for flying feet of cham- pions . . . Patio, promenade friendly cor- ridor for school. . โ€ข I ' ll count eleven . . . Don ' t shut your eyes! Don ' t look at the machine! AC h)7Ar) i -I ' ' V2? f i M.m 1 i โ€ข Forward to Greater Things. With this 1935 Campanile our tent city era is brought to a close. No longer will we be forced to carry on under difficulties imposed upon us by bad weath- er, poor lighting, distracting noises, and inadequate housing conditions. Let us hope we will not forget the lessons of adversity and that we will be fully apprecia- tive of the facilities and opportunities provided by our new buildings. Out of it all we have learned that the real spirit of an institution is not due to its buildings and other physical assets, but to its traditions and ideals. So rather than back to normalcy, let us say, forward to great- er things in the days to come in the new Woodrow Wilson High School. โ€” H. J. Moore โ€ข Principal Harry J. Moore. Dean of Girls Ida G. Nolds. Olds, Pinckard, Johnson, Whit Repp, Ballentine. โ€ข New Buildings . . . The wandering nomads of Wilson are home again! Adapting themselves to any situation, Wilson seniors return to the first mode of civilization ... the shining reconstructed buildings. โ€ข After the quake two years ago, these wandering tribes took up abode under blue skies, brisk breezes, and the burning heat of the sun in the patio. With improvised canvas tops, trees, and umbrellas for housing facilities, classes were held daily. Then came Tent City with all of its minor and major functions. Perhaps no other school in history has had more varied experience than this. And the seniors are th? only ones remaining who can relate the story. ยฎ The dazzling new buildings with their soft green coats of paint, their real glass windows, wide halls, โ€ข Math, Commercial โ€” Bakkcn, I. Hansen, N. Hansen, Blackman, Hiles, Meeks, Rumsey, Waddell, Makepeace, Nutter, Franck, Hennes, y 7- X? (y f lockers, and solid roofs, tower again as the challenge of progress that will not be defeated. With the ad- ministration and science halls occupied, Wilson stu- dents are under cover, with the exception of the physical education and the band departments. โ€ข The handicaps in securing funds from the gov- ernment has been slow, and state earthquake laws are vigorous. After the codes went into effect, prices changed completely, making bond finance insuffi- cent for the plans of reconstrution. Thus, delay was prevelant. โ€ข Now, however, tons of solid concrete, steel beams, safety devices, are molded together in the greater Wilson of today. Built on the same plan as before, the buildings are containers of a strange thrill to those who have longed to be in them. โ€ข Science, Home Arts โ€” Moon, Lowry, Shallenberger, March, Larsen, Dcnman, Tibby, Hunt, Olmsted, Symonds, Dunkle. C x โ€ข TENxljClfY I . . Bronzed, grim, and determined, veterans o Tent City complete another year of out do(z(r ife. With the same crude structures of last year, flemishing inadequate classrooms and offices, ad- ministrators, faculty, and students have marched victoriously through the Red Sea. Enveloped by shrouds of fog. drenched by heavy rains, dried by hot mid-day sunlight, whipped about by strong winds, and choked by smoke . . . until another week of rain . . . Wilson has come out undaunted. โ€ข Fired by the inspirational leadership of Princi- pal Harry J. Moore, Wilson moved through the two years of reconstruction with rapid progress and un- tiring activity. This informal atmosphere, has been all-important in maintaining the morale of the stu- dent body under such trying conditions. % Social Studies. Sophomore English Social Studies โ€” Eggenberg- cr, J. Garlick, M. Hansen, Robinson, Lee, Stuempel, Pierce, Dr. Smith, Woodwara, French, Wilcox, Hart. Q V D u H D u H D u H hJ D u โ€ข New Fields Opened โ€” Operating under the scru- tiny of national educational circles, Wilson ' s elabor- ate system of courses offered were supplemented and reorganized to meet the ever changing conditions. โ€ข The new Family Relations classes, open only to graduating seniors, were overfilled in all four per- iods. This enlightening subject, taught only at Wil- son, seeks to prepare youths for their later life. โ€ข The combined foods classes, in which boys and girls work side by side in preparing the choicest of culinary dishes, came in for its bit of praise. With an eye to matrimony of the future, boys learn the deli- cate art of cookery and even surpass their feminine co-workers in finished products turned out. Realizing the great pressure demanded by society on those who enter business, they came out with honors. 9 English, Languages โ€” Krythc, Townsend, Dougherty, W. Garlick, Grimes, Blackwood, Johnson, Harrison, Farnsworth, Scott, Oxiey. โ€ข Administration โ€” Continuing its di splay of ed- ucational advancement, unhampered in fortitude by the many difficulties which have beset her, Wilson this year added another chapter, her ninth, to the al- ready full book of achievements. More than 1800 students have increased their knowledge, and 500 have been turned out with the stamp, ' ' High School Graduates. โ€ข Principal Harry J. Moore ' s coveted brainchild, the A and B conference period plan, wound up its sec- ond successful year among the plaudits of local edu- cators. With students meeting only every other day for each class, this new system has opened countless fields for pupil advancement and freedom by permit- ting an enriched course and new interests. 9 Art. Library, Music, Industrial Arts โ€” Challcer, Iredell, Hopkins, Moore, Blanton, Lahrson, Connor, Burdick, Brecht, Morrison, Edwards, ovce. y l tu โ€ข Wilson ever the pioneer, cast another hat into circle. World History- English classes f lathered their scope in their second year of service to the sopho- mores. TTiis widely publicized course raises the class- room out of the usual droll routine, changing it to a laboratory in which the participating not only learn, but explore the why ' s and how ' s of subjects. โ€ข Its purpose is to orient the student to high school life and studying. This course makes English more practical because it is directly applied to current historical events. The students are given a deal of freedom in the choice of research problems. Inspira- tional, rather than vocational messages, were present- ed this year in the series of Monday afternoon lec- tures. Several Junior College instructors, ministers, students and city leaders spoke to the group. โ€ข Physical Education โ€” Davis, Gartner, Frazcr, Sergei, Archer, Hie- field, O. Smith, Reagan, Alguire, Breazeale, Whittaker. .Y Governors โ€” Rickman, Boswell, Ray, Mr. Mangold, Mr. Catlin, Duckham. โ€ข Governors . . . Pioneering in Tent City during the sec- ond year, the governors were faced with the same enomous problems that their predecessors had faced. โ€ข Wind, dust, torrential floods, marooned tents demanded their attention as did shrinking budgets and wavering school spirit. Since the auditorium, cafeteria, and gym, sources of student enthusiasm., were quake-ridden, governors had to de- vise other media to carry forward the ambitious program of a valiant Wilson to keep her place in the sun. Inaugurating the Awards Dinner Dances, the governors disclosed a new way of presenting awards. They have assisted in sponsoring the Alumni home-coming. Student Body Ticket Drives, as- semblies, and Athletic certificates. Mr. Mangold has stated, The first semester governors have done such fine work in cooperating with Mr. Davis on the Athletic Award Dinner Dance that great credit is due to their sponsorship. I X Athletes, journalists, debaters, aitists, and students active in numerous school activities turned out in a blaze of glory to receive their well-earned letters, em- blems, and certificates at the first Awards ' Dinner Dance to be sponsored by the Board of Governors. Perhaps genuine loyalty and spirit never reached a higher peak in Wilson annals than it did when Wilson ' s select reveled with each other. Governors โ€” Sublci. R.n. Mr. Catlin, Shallenberger, Duckham. โ€ข Progress . . . Full of vim and unprecedented vigor, the second semester governors staged an unusually heavy pro- gram and undertook many money-raising and expense cut- ting measures in an attempt to pull the budget out of the red. Sponsored by Leon C. Catlin, dean of boys. Governor of Af- fairs Douglas Duckham, Governor of Welfare Eloise Ray, Governor of Safety Tom Shallenberger, and Governor of Athletics Bob Stabler, sponsored the Minstrel Show and Costume Ball, as their main means of raising funds other than those derived from the new and less expensive student body ticket, which sold for twenty-five cents. The Second Awards Banquet, staged by the governors, was acclaimed a decided betterment over the former method. New awards were originated for pep leaders; song and yell leaders received uniform sweaters. Fire drills were staged and the new buildings patrolled. ' X 3 Dean Cromwell, renowned U. S. C. track coach and guest speaker for the eve- ning, thrilled students who heard and met him. Matching the finesse and polish of collegiate affairs, Wilson broke foith with her first spectacular Awards ' Dinner Dance. Flaunting her athletes, her spirit, and her awards, hundreds of loyal old fans turned mit fm rins uiuiui.-il affair. iKm m โ€ข Student Council โ€” First row: French, Dodge, Phreaner, Harris, Hunter, Arnold, McDannel, Probst. Second row: Edgecomb, Gushing, Spath, Stabler, Duckham, Brown, Frank, Mr. Catlin. โ€ข Student Council โ€” The aim of the Student Council is to perform the legislative powers delegated to it by the con- stitution of Woodrow Wilson. The Council this year has more than ever represented the great democracy for which Wilson is noted. Under many trying conditions, the Coun- cil has brought a feeling of unity to the campus. Acting as co-host with the Girls ' League of Woodrow Wil- son the Council entertained over one thousand alumni No- vember 9. The Council this year inaugurated the spectacular Costume Ball with the aid of the service organizations of the school. May 29. With the staunch cooperation of the various service groups of the school, the Council sponsored a gigan- tic Campus-Clean-Up Drive. Representing twenty different campus activities that promote life, initiative, and enthusi- asm, the Council has rounded out a well-filled year. โ€ข Under the able direction of Miss Chalker, art teacher, Wilson students turned the hall of the Awards ' Dinner Dance into one blazing pageant of crimson and gold. For weeks both boys and girls spent hour after hour of tedious work cutting and pasting dainty streamers which adorned the walls of both the dining room and dance hnll. Tables were decorated with massive block Ws and gorgeous flow- ers ulii.li .i.].. .-J in ilii etTcrtiveness of the beautiful decorations. ;!Jl! ' (i ivi t i ii:; ' n I ' P if .sA ' i Commissioners โ€” Front row: Pike, Harris, Mont) ' , Probst lolis Kahards, Holden. McArthur, Arnold, Quinn, Hooker, Ray, Bell. Second low Lord, Hunt- er. Collins, Hagaii, Norton, Spath, Shallenberger, Mallonee, Fast, Ramsey, Mas- terson. Anderson, Coach Gartner. Third row: Damskey, Mayson, Ireland, Rick- man. Brown, Miller. London, Standlee, Powell, Dorn, Hedges, Edgecomb. Fourth row: Martison. LeLacheur, Seares, Hughes, Jameson. โ€ข Gltardians of Safety . . . Watching over Wilson ' s well- being like eagles were the Commissioners, who were directly responsible to the Governor of Safety and led by Walter Hooker and Charles Arnold, head commissioners. Safety drills, assemblies, student control, conduct, discipline in the new buildings, all were under the jurisdiction of this active organization. The twenty-three commissioners conducted campus cleanup drives to preserve an aspect of tidiness about Co-operating with the Long Beach Fire Department, under the direction of Fire Chief DuRee, several fire drills were held under the inspection of fire prevention officials. Work- ing together with the regular commissioners were Virginia Flunter and Harriet Spath, head girl commissioners, and seven subordinates. โ€ขr Probably the greatest success of all the social events sponsored by Wilson this year was the first Awirds ' Dinner Dance held for the purpose of presenting ath- letic letters, jeweled and gold Ws, debate, journalism, art, and many other awards. Under the direction of Coach Roland T. Davis, the governors inaugurated this new and unique way of presenting awards which it is hoped will do away with the dull uninteresting assemblies held in the past. Executive Board โ€” Wilson, Miss Nolds, Henzler, Chesnut, Moore, Bovyer. โ€ข Girls ' League . . . The ideal Wilson girl . . the ideal American girl . . . what is she? Resourceful . . . executive . . . charming . . . considerate . . . thoughful . . . courteous ... in- dustrious . . . unselfish . . . discriminate . . . tactful . . . cul- tured . . . these and many other qualities that are found in an all-around girl were developed through the far-reaching program of the Girls ' League. With luxurious abandon girls carry their department work to the highest pinnacles of a- chievement. There is no phase of a girl ' s life which is not covered by the various committees of the Advisory Board. Flowers were sent to sick members; steaming cups of tea were poured for advisers and faculty; artistic invitations were turned out by the dozens; leadership in the pure developed as projects progressed. Girls, new to Wilson, were intro- duced to the life of the campus by a series of parties and teas. They add charm and grace to our informal campus life. 9 Advisory Board โ€” Front Row; Eselun, Spath, Hales, Wilson, Moore, Bovyer, Henzlei, Miss Nolds, Chesnut. Second row: Meyer, French, Corbusier, Schci- declcer. Miller, Hunter, Ryan, Cuihing, Gray, Thompson, Rumrill. Third row: Ray, Hoclc, Winter, Gibson, O ' Brien, Fickel, vonWedelstaedt, Pike, Wheeler, White, Bell. Executive Board โ€” Front row: Spath, Bell, Eselun, Bovyer, Moore, Wilson, Verne, Henzler, Miss Nolds, vonWedelstaedt, Chesnut, White. โ€ข Gracious Hostesses unfolded their talents; large groups work out their own organization, plan and accom- plish their elaborate schemes. Deprived of auditoriums, so- cial halls, committee rooms, and ether trappings of the now fallen buildings, thev continued their work in open air as- semblies, and committee meetings held in crowded tents. There was a chance for real leadership, real courage, and real character: 850 girls led by Mary Chestnut and her assis- tants met the challenge of tent city and conquered the diffi- culties, and various activities of this executive group were carried out as always. They are pioneers; they have met and conquered their obstacles, facing seemingly insurmountable stumbling blocks with equanimity, courage, fearless determi- nation, and an unbreakable will to succeed. The chairmen are chosen from the school at large, representing every class . . . Sophomore, junior, senior โ€” and every student body activity. Cabinet โ€” Front row: Forster, Eselun, Simmons, Morgan, Haughey, Cross, vonWedehiaedt, Miss Nolds, Fickel, Gray, Eckard, McFadden, Saitsman. Second row: Wagner, Mossman, Dorn, Hunter, Hoclc, Stevens, Keelcr. Woll, Kepple, Hales, Cowman, Robinson, Hoover, Love, Wallentine, Jones, Padelford. Third row; Campbell, Forbes, Naughton, Coverdale, Gallehcr, Gallegos, Romano, Cush- man, Dodge, LaMar, Gibbs, Bonds. LeBlanc, Harris, Hedel. Fourth row: Srhei- decker, Wilson, Miller, Laughlin, Cooper, Henzler, Hawkins, Tolbert, Selfridge, Kryche. Ellsworth, Lynch, Chapman, Oaks, Easterbrooks, Guptill. 44 1 4 Scholarship โ€” Front row: Brown, Baker, Krythe, Halverson, Klocksiem, Meigs, Murray, Barber, Armor, Coverdale, Geiss, Mayes, Miss Hansen, Rose. Second row: Cushman, Knight, Gilman, Gray, McArtor, Hopkins, Hilton, Fisch- er, Dye, Gebb, Beck, Foster, Hooper. Third row: Bertrand, Freeman, Meyer, Miller, CundifF, Cundiff, Gillespie, Fast, Gray, Chapin, Evans, Ellsworth, Gruben. Fourth row: Hoffman, Barrett, Jones, Copp. A Complete and far reaching re-organization of the Wil- son Scholarship Society was accomplished this year which lifted the objectives of the group to a plane commensurate with high ranking students. The society held several dances, established a tutorial bureau, awarded scholarships, and was host to the Southern California Federation of Scholarship. Under the sponsorship of Miss Mary Hansen, and a corps of assistants, the executives of both semesters handled the group in a remarkably efficient manner. These officers were: President, Georgea nna Rose and Robert Foote; Vice-presi- dents, George HoUingsworth and Lawrence Scott; Record- ing Secretaries, Jane Gray and Elaine Young; Correspond- ing Secretaries, Doris Dodge and Leda White. โ€ข Under the direction of Miss Grimes with her great literary appreciation and Miss Iredell with her broad information on libraries and the entire book field, the book review committee of scholarship, composed of approximately fifteen students especially interested in the study of good books, carry on interesting discussions about the latest books and best sellers. An endless variety of types are discussd and styles of various authors are studied. 9 Scholarship โ€” Front row: Townsend, Woolington, Bovyer, Knowlcs, O ' Brien, Spooner. Winter, Combs. Ryan, French, Wilson, Foote, Probst. Second row: Clark, Young. Nickson, Young, Watkins, Musser, Saltsman, Collins, Hock, Ral- ston. Robinson. Palmer, Wight. Third row: Winston, Rothbart, Stein, Olmsted, Wilson. Lloyd, Gaskill, White, Smith, Olson, Berger, Feller. Fourth row: Policy, Cole. Still, Petzold, Wilcox, Hanbery, Johnson. There are sixteen committees, governed by co-sponsors, that have accomplished many individual projects. They have ris- en to heights never before reached in their intensive reorgan- ization drive. One of the most active committees is the Book Review group which had many prominent guests and speak- ers present at their gatherings. The dance committee made it possible to hold several mat- inee dances this year; the sports committee contributed their part by staging a Variety Show which is becoming an an- affair. The Publicity and Boys ' Groups advertised and sold tickets to the show and many other affairs. TTie traditional university trip was taken to Pomona this year, May 10. This year ' s group has measured up to their standard of ideals. โ€ข Tutorial Bureau โ€” Front row: Zeller, Wallentine, Arnold, Eselun, Shcpard, Stimson, Manning, Young, Scott. Second row: Dodge, Smolowitz, White, Booh- er, Thorne, Robinson, Miss Hansen, Stevens, Turner, Galbraith, Spencer, Stan- ton, Kepple, Lamb. - Jt Jf -M y. - 1 RiffiL 1 Jl .i3 J i ' -. - โ– 1 -tnr! โ€ข p. T. A. โ€” Front row; Eloise Ray, Mesdames M. D. Atkinson, Mary E. Ludenig, R. D. Bowman, A. E. Hales, Roy Hilton. J. S. Bishop, G. B. Newby, Mary Chesnut. Second row: Douglas Duclcham, Miss Nolds, Mesdames Richard Good, E. H. Lore, Jay Cowman, M. C. Hepler, Mark Houghton, Melvin Bcr- bower. Third row: Mr. Moore, Mesdames Mansfield Hervey. Harry Cundiff, Margaret G. Connor, David Perkins, Gordon S. DeArmond, N. R. McCracken, Karl Saltsman. Appearing in two beautiful concerts each year, the Mothers ' Chorus of the Wilson P. T. A., consisting of fifty voices, has provided funds through their proceeds for the P. T. A. for student welfare. Under the direction of L. D. Frey, they were assisted by the P. T. A. Fathers ' Chorus and accompanied by the Wilson orchestra. Dressed in white, these mothers presented a lovely picture and rendered truly inspiring programs. โ€ข P. T. A. in an elaborate program planned to broaden the scope, vision, and various activ- ities befitting the changing conditions of the times, the Wilson Parent-Teachers ' Associa- tion has brought to a close another successful year. The major objective of the organization has been to provide lunches and clothing for unfortunate students of Wilson. At the month- ly meetings, challenging speakers were secured from all universities a nd colleges in South- ern California. The programs were colorful with music, drama, and student speaking, pre- sented by various departments of school. Each month a school department acted as host. Youth ' s problems were discussed in a Parents ' Forum led by Mrs. Pierce. A series of stu- dent dances and benefit teas were held under Mrs. A. E. Hales and her staff which have brought fun and funds to carry on the e.xtensive activities of the group. The Mothers ' Chor- us, both colorful and artistic, added zest throu jh its concerts. Perry, Hales, Privett, Haase, Rickman, Pike, Edgecomb, Naughton, Probst, Miss Blackmail. โ€ข Senior Officers โ€” Leaders of the majority . . . outstanding in di- plomacy . . . these are the senior officers. First in Wilson ' s balcony as sophomores, then on the wind-swept campus, Tent City, and finally the buildings again. No classes in history have had such varied obstacles to overcome, nor such challenging experiences in the great out-of-doors as the classes of February and June, 1935. FEBRUARY AND JUNEOFFICERS FEBRUARY SENIORS WRAY M. ANDREWS Social Service Basketball, Varsity Mgr. ' 34, ' 35; Water Polo Mgr.; Band ' 32, ' 33. WYMA G. ADEM A Commercial Transfer from Santa Ana; Honor Roll. VIRGINIA ALLEN Art Demos; Girls ' League; Fiesta Booth; Christ- mas, Thanksgiving Drives; Prcs., Sec, H.R. EDNA MAE ARNOLD College Sr. Glee ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Opera; Hi-Tri; Min- strel Show ' 32. College Gift Com. ROBERT WILSON BECK B Football ' 32; Big Brother; S MILDRED LUCILE BECKWITH College Orchestra 32, ' 33, ' 34; Friends of Music; G. L. Flower Comm.; Big Sister. CARLYLE C. BOSWELL College ' 33 B Track Bay League Champ.; 33 B Foot- ball; ' 34 A Track Champ.; Gov. of Athl.; ' 34 Loud Speaker; Lettermcn ' s; Transfer: Santa Monica: ' 32 B Track Bay League Champ.; ' 32 B Football Champ. ELDA FRANCES BERRY Art Pres., Vice-prcs., Sec, Museum; Sec. C.L.W. W.; Boosters; 2 G. L. Comm.; Armistice, Thanksgiving Programs; Honor Roll. INEZ CECILIA BERGER Hi-Tri. Commercial CHARLES R. BRANTINGHAM College Radio Club; Cognoscians. THOMAS BURRIS College Pres. Soph. A; Council; Junior Exchange; Ad Club; Baseball, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Baskettall, ' 33, โ€ข34. PHYLLIS SUE BRADLEY Commercial Transfer: Poly: Glee; Sec. H.R.; G.A.A.; Big Sister. WARD BREWSTER Industrial Arts Service Comm.; Capt. Fire Squad; Pres.Vice- pres. Ad Club; ' 33 Basketball. ROBERT C. BURNETT General Transfer: Shortridge High, Indianapolis, Ind.; Spanish Club; Physics Club. LaVERNA E. BROWN Commercial G.L. Rep.; Sec H.R.; G.A.A.; Big Sister. JACK CALHOUN College Lettermen ' s; Sec. H. R.; Asst. Mgr. Basket- ball; Opera; Glee, ' 32, ' 33; C Football, ' 32. LaVERNE CARON General Glee; Costume; Thanksgiving Drive; Big Sister. ROGER THOMPSON CASE College Editor Campanile, ' 35; V. Football ' 34; Loud Speaker; Press: Ad; Jr. Exchange; Demos; B Football ' 33; Track Champ. ' 34. I LLOYD STEPHEN CHAPEL College Letlennen ' s; Vice-pres. Radio; Track Champ. ' 34; Leddel Track Trophy ' 33; Lab. Asst.; Orch.; InrraMural Basketball Champ. ' 33. ELEANOR ANN CHEROSKE College R.R. Prog. Chr,; G.L. Rep.; French; Dra- matics; Ad; Friendship; Fiesta, ' 32, ' 34. EVERETT LYNN CHILD College Glee ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Architecture; Math. ART CHRISTENSEN College Sec.-Treas. Senior B Class; Jr. Exchange; Fireman; C Football, ' 32; C Basketball Champ. ' 32; B Football, ' 33, ' 34; Golf Champ.; B Basketball, ' 33, ' 34. RUTH VIRGINIA CLABORN Electi ' ve W. Club; G.A.A.; Cactus; Ba sketball, ' 33, ' 34; Baseball ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Speedball ' 33, ' 34; Hockey ' 33, ' 34, 35. NELLIE MARIE CLARK General Glee; A Cappella; Pres. Friends of Music; G. L. Sec. Chr.; Jr. Speakers; Poly-Wilson Dis- cussion; Boosters; Costume; Scripters. JAMES F. COLLINS JR. College Editor Loud Speaker; Commencement Sp.; Scr. Comm.; Matrix; Lamp; L. B. Sun; Var- sity Crew ' 33; Council; Electron Circle; Vaudeville. JOHN HOMER COMBS College Math Club; Chess Club; Water Polo, ' 34. AGNES JANE CRANEY Commercial Xmas Pageant; Fiesta; Ad; G.L. Rep.; Xmas, Thanksgiving Drives Chr.; Sec. H.R.; Senior Chr.; Museum; Skits. CLARENCE CULLY Elective Stage Crew; Chess Club; Rifle Club. DIXIE DICKINSON Drama French; Friendship; Vaudeville; H.R. Prog. Chr.; Uniform Rep.; Fiesta. HENRY C. DURANT College Pres. H.R.; Commercial Club; Golf; Fiesta; Intramural B Basketball Champ. ' 32. CARLOS E. DYER Art Campanile Art ' 33, ' 34; St. Council; Fiesta; Ad; Pres. Art League; Sketch; Scripters; Stage Mgr. ' 34; Design ' 34 Gift; Puppet Show. MARION EGGERS College G.L. Rep.; Spanish; Friendship; World; Fi- esta; Scholarship. WALTER FIEG College Loud Speaker; Pres. German; Chess; Senior Comm. Chr.; Game Announcer; Water Polo. HELEN FISHER Commercial Sec, Pres., ' H. R.; Hi-Tri; Cabinet; Uniform Rep.; Fiesta; Sec. to Dean ' 32. JUANITA E. FLACY College Capt. Playday Volleyball Team ' 32; 2 G.L. Comm.; Sec, Rhythms; Speedball ' 32; Fiesta- G.A.A. FRED T. FRAZER College Varsity Basketball, ' 33, ' 34; B Basketball ' 32; Varsity Baseball ' 33; Jr. Varsity Baseball ' 32; B Football ' 32; Jr. Exchange; Asst. Mgr. Baseball ' 31; Fireman, CO m Z o en CO m Z o CO CO m l-H o CO m Z Iโ€” ( o CO CO en Z o CO m Z o CO CLARENCE W. GILCHRIST College S.C. Pole Vault Champ. B ' 34; C ' 33; Life Pass, Leddcl Trophy; Track Champ. ' 34; Co- Capt. B Track; Capt. C Track ' 33; Capt. B Football ' 33, ' 34; C Basketball Champ. ' 32; Jr. Exchange. ADELAINE GENDRON Commercial Friendship Comm.; Costume; Adv. Orch. ' 32, ' 33, ' 34. ELSA MAE C. GARNER Commercial Jr. Glee; Fiesta; G.L. Rep.; Chr. H.R. Party ' 32; Thanksgiving Comm. LYLE R. GOLDING College Bus. Mgr. Loud Speaker; Pres. H.R.; Fiesta Comm.; Fireman; Demos; C Football ' 32; C Basketball Champ. ' 33; C Basketball ' 34. VIVIAN LOUISE GILMORE Commercial Fiesta; Big Sister; St. Body Store. JOHN DOUGLAS GORE College Sec. H.R.; B Football ' 32; J.V. Football ' 33; Biology; Rifle; Rowing; French; Fireman. PAUL NORRIS GUEST Commercial B Football ' 31; Varsity Football ' 32, ' 33; Track ' 33, ' 34. lOHN ERNEST HALES College Baseball, ' 33, Captain. ' 34; B Basketball, ' 32; Basketball, ' 33, ' 34; Pres., Vice-pres., Sec, Jr. Exchange; Pres., Sec, Ushers; Vice-pres. Senior B A Classes; Loud Speaker; Demos; Campanile; St. Council. VIOLET M. HALVERSON College Seal Bearer, Scholarship; G.L. Rep.; Scripters; Chr. of Comm. on Scholarships; Tutorial Bureau; Book Review; El Rojoro; Chr. Soc. Comm. Scholarship; Senior Gift Comm.; World Club; Discussion Group. NIALL JAMES HAMILTON College Math; Rowing; Rifle; Biology; Tennis; Big Brother. NATALIE HAWTHORNE College G A. A. ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; French; Costume; Stage Costume Crew; Stage Crew; Cactus. WILLIAM COLE HENSON College Tennis Club; Charter Member, Ad Club. HERMAN HILL College PAUL WILLIAM HILLSETH College B Football ' 31; Capt. ' 32; Varsity Track ' 33; Track Champ. ' 34; Captains; Lettermen ' s. DONALD E. HOLMES Aviation Club; Glee Club. Vocat SCOTT B. HOUGHTON College Comm.; Varsity Basketball, ' 34; Basketball, ' 33; B Football, ' 32; C Track, ' 32; Fireman; French; Math.; Fiesta. REX W. HUGGINS Elective Commercial Club; Stage Crew Club. BETTIE HUTCHINSON College Jr. Glee; French; Fiesta; Costume; Stage Crew; Guard of Honor; Tennis. ROSEI.I.F JOHNSON College Art; Entertainment; Thanksgiving Assembly; Junior Prom Comm. FRANK EVERETTE KETCHUM College Pres., Vice-pres. H.R.: Ad; Radio; Intramur- al; J.V, Football ' 33. ELEANOR M. KLINE College Glee Club; Friends of Music; Big Sister. ERMA ALLEN KYLE College Friends of Music; G.L. Rep.; Rhythms; Cactus. ARTHUR M. LaVROFF College Asst. Mgr. Track; Asst. Yell Leader; Vaude- ville; Glee; Fiesta; Intramural; World; Orch- estra; Rowing. ORAL LESTER College B Football ' 32; Varsity Basketball, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Baseball, ' 33, ' 34; Track; Football Throw Champ.; Ad; Pres. H.R.; Keep It Dark ; St. Council; Fireman. HELEN ELIDA LOGAN Elective Sr. Glee Club; Friends of Music Club. ROLLAND EUGENE LUCAS College B Basketball ' 31; Varsity Basketball ' 32, ' 34; Baseball ' 33; Pres. Intramural; Pres. H.R. MARY MAILER College C.L.W.W.; Tennis; G.A.A.; Hockey, ' 33, ' 34; Speedball, ' 33, ' 34; Basketball, ' 33, ' 34; Baseball, ' 33. ROBERT EDWARD MALLOY College Sec. H.R.; Program Chairman; Chess Adviser. JULE MALONEY Commercial Uniform Rep.; Sec. H.R.; Costume; Library Asst.; Basket Drives; Fiesta. TED P. MALQUIST Commercial Cafeteria; Pres. H.R.; Commercial Club. ELIZABETH P. McDONALD College Glee Club; World; Big Sister. BETTY JANE MARTIN College Glee Club. BETTY LOUISE MARTIN Commercial Glee Club; Uniform Comm. Alternate. SALLY MERTINS College Sec. St. Council; Loud Speaker; Pres. H.R.; Jr. Sp. Bureau; Costume; French; Debate. DOROTHY G. MILLER Commercial Girl Reserve; Big Sister. NICHOLAS E. MILLER College Water Polo, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Swimming, ' 32, ' 33, Capt. ' 34; J.V. Football, ' 32, ' 33; Electron Circle; World: Rifle. VERA MORRISON College BETTY ANN MOORE College Pres. Costume; Boosters; Adv. Bd.; Cabinet; Art Comm.; Pro. Comm.; Fiesta; Program; Decoration Comm. LORENA BARBARA MOSIER Commercial Vice-pres. W.; Spcedball ' 33, ' 34; Basketball โ€ข32, ' 33, ' 34; Hockey ' 33; Baseball ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Big Sister Comm.; Minor W., Major W., 1 star; Cabin Comm.; Soph. Pro. Chr. H.R.; G.A.A. DAVID TRIMBLE NAVE Elective Gov. of Safety; Water Polo, ' 32, Capt. Water Polo Champ. ' 33, ' 34; Swimming, ' 32, ' 33; B Football ' 32; Sec, Pres. Ushers; Jr. Ex- change; Ad; St. Council; Fireman; Demos. HUBERT MOSE NEELY Elective All Bay League Halfback ' 34; Varsity Foot- ball, ' 32, ' 33, Co-Capt. ' 34; Basketball ' 33, ' 34; Pres., Sec. H.R.; Ad; Lettermen ' s; Cap- JEAN A. NOLAN Transfer: Santa Barba High School. Elective PHIL NOLAN College Transfer: Santa Barbara High School; Loud- Speaker; B Track ' 34. SIDNEY PEIZER College B Basketball ' 35; C Basketball ' 33, ' 34; Elec- tron Circle. HILLARD LOWELL PERRY Engineering Pres. Senior A B Classes; Varsity Football ' 33; ' 34; B Football ' 32; Pres. Demos; Fire- man; Lt. Safety Comm.; Vice-pres. Ushers; Vice-pres. Jr. Exchange; Pres. H.R. ROBERT E. PERRY College Transfer: Poly: B Football; Wrestling ' 30; Ad; Sec. H.R. RUTH ELINOR PINE Art BETTY NADINE PREVOST Commercial Pres. H.R.; French; Ad; Friendship; Fiesta. ALBERT E. QUINZEL Big Brother. WILLIAM QUINZEL Fiesta; Intramural, ' 32. ERIC RASMUSSEN Chess; Ad; Stage Crew. Commercial Social Studies College MAX E. RICHARDS College Transfer: Edgar High, Neb.: Basketball ' 32; Track ' 32; Football ' 33; Basketball ' 33; Base- ball ' 33; Track; Junior Class Play. LENORE REDIN Commercial Orchestra ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Scholarship; Big Sister. ARNOLD L. ROGERS College Varsity Football ' 33, ' 34; J.V. Track ' 34; Sec.-Treas. Radio; Band; Scholarship. i ARTHUR J. ROSENLOF Elective Transfer: Whittier High: Swimming; Rifle; Rowing; Wilson: Glee; Minstrel Show; Pina- fore, Opera. ARTHUR M. RUDD College Sketch; Architectural; Vice-pres. H.R.; Fi- esta; Class Assemblies. CLIFFORD SCHAFER College Electron Circle; Pres. Radio; Scholarship; Lab. Assistant. RUDY SCHWEITZER College Asst. Football Mgr. ' 33; Varsity Football Mgr. ' 34; Pres., Sec. Cognoscians; Sec Ger- nian; Pres., Sec. H.R.; Lettermen ' s. LOIS MADELINE SEAVER Elective Tennis; Glee; Minor Major W, 2 stars; W; G.A.A., ' 32, 34; Speedball, ' 33, 34; Baseball ' 52, ' 33, ' 34; Basketball ' 32, ' 33; Hockey ' 33. ELAINE RUTH SEAWELL Art Fiesta; Opera Art Makeup ' 32; Makeup; Costume; G.L. Art Comm. RICHARD M. SHOOPMAN College B Football ' 33; Student Plays; Keep It Dark; White Collars; Jr. Exchange; Ad; St. Coun- cil; St. Assemblies. RICHARD S. SLIFF Industrial Scholarship; J.V. Baseball, ' 33, ' 34; Aviation. DONALD J. SMITH College C Football ' 31. ELAINE FRANCES SPRAGUE College Inglewood Transfer: Big Bear Lake Transfer; G.L. Rep.; Hi-Tri; Glee; G.A.A.; Rowing; Scholarship. MARK LeROY STEINECKERT College Sec.-Treas. German; Sec.-Treas. Dissecting; Intramural; Fiesta; Vice-pres. H.R.; Chess; Council; Fireman; World; French. LOIS CAROLINE STOUT Rowing ' 34; Costume Club. Ele GATHER YN JOYCE SUTER College Sec. Hi-Tri; Pres. H.R.; G.L. Rep.; Opera, Pinafore; Hostess Comm.; Sr. Glee. JACK H. SYMONS Intramural Baseball Cha Hi-Y. College ' 32; El Rojoro; LAWRENCE B. THIESSEN Commercial RAYMOND CARL TIGNER College World; Fiesta; Aviation; Tennis; Pres., Sec. H.R.; C Football ' 32; C Track ' 32; 2 Plays; Class Assembly. ROSE GERALDINE TURNER Commercial LOUIS LeROY UNMACK General Orchestra; Chess; Rifle. O ย โ€” ( z w CO LO O w O l-H CO O z w CO O Iโ€” ( z PJ CO O z VIVIENNE VAUGHAN College Vice-pres., Sec. Stage Crew Club; Campanile; St. Council; Lookout Comm.; G.L. Decora- tion Comm.; Vice-pres. Art; Sketch; Ink- slingers. ANNA MARGARET VIRGIN College Orch.; G.L. Rep., Treas.; Vice-pres. Hi-Tri; Minor W; Boosters; Electron Circle; Hockey Mgr. ' 33, ' 34; Outing Mgr.; G.L, Comm.; Hi-Tri Ring Chr. LLEWELLYN WAITE Industrial Arts Baseball Mgr. ' 34; Track ' 33; J.V. Football ' 32; Pres. H.R.; Hi-Y; Loud Speaker; Cam- panile; Press; Intramural. BETTY LEOTA WALLACE Commercial DAN H. WALKER College C Football ' 33; D Basketball ' 32; C Basketball ' 33; B Basketball ' 34; Tennis. HELEN BERNICE WALKER Co RUTH E. WALKER College Cos tume; Tennis; Big Sister. ZOLA BELLE WALKER Commercial G.L. Rep.; H.R. Rep.; Fiesta; Commercial; Cactus; G.A.A. ' 32. CLARK A. WARD College St. Council; Pres., Sec. Cognoscians; Glee; Choir; Transfer: Poly: Ad; Sales; World. FRED ELLIOTT WHITMORE College Varsity Track ' 33, Champ. ' 34; Baseball ' 33, ' 34; Vice-pres. Ushers; Electron Circle; Fire- man; Gift. Comm. HAROLD E. WILSON College S:ho!arship Seal and Lamn; C Water Polo ' 33, ' 34; Radio; Electron; Scholarship. JOHN WOMMER College WILBUR WOOD College Pres. Sophomore Class ' 32; Tennis; Pres. H.R. EDNA SUE WRIGHT Commercial Glee Club; Girls ' League Representative. HELEN ELIZABETH PRIVETT College Scholarship Lamp; Sec. Booster; Sec. Senior A Class; Senior Mountain Comm.; Pres. H. R.; Friendship; Sec. Comm.; Fireman. LUCILLE RUGGS Art Boosters; Sec. G.L. Rep.; Adv. Bd.; Ad; Fi- esta; 2 G.L. Comm.; Thanksgiving Drive; Art League. PEGGY GIBBONS Art Boosters; Ad.; Adv. Bd.; Fireman; G. L. Rep.; Sec, Vice-pres., H.R.; Fiesta; 2 G.L. Comm.; Thanksgiving Drive; Art League. BETTY MOORE College V. Pres. Boosters; Jr. Speakers; G. L. Cab- inet; Adv. Bd. CoiTim. Chr.; Fireman; Pres. H.R. I I JUNE SENIORS RUDOLPH ADLER, Aviation B Football ' 32, ' 33; Varsity Football ' 34; Fore- man Mech. Dept. Aviation; Electron Circle. MAXINE Y. ALDERSON Commercial DONALD E. ANDERSON Commercial Commissioner; B Track Bay League Champ. ' 33; Varsity Bay League Track Champ. ' 34; Cross Country So. Calif. Champ. ' 34; H.M. S. Pinafore; Glee ' 32, ' 53; Ad. CHARLES HENRY ARNOLD College Gold W; C Football ' 32; B Football ' 33; Varsity Football ' 34; Baseball ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Varsity Lettermen ' s; Vice-pres., Pres, Demos; Sec, Pres. Jr. Exchange; Sec. Ushers; Council. SARA ELLEN ARNOLD College Scholarship Seal; Chr. Scholarship Publicity Comm.; Book Review Comm.; Scholarship; Tutorial Bureau; Les Bons Vivants; S.P.Q.R.; C.L.W.W.; two G.L. Comm.; Electron Circle. RAY W. BARRETT, Elective C Track ' 33; Jr. Varsity Track ' 35; Vice- pres., Sec. Hi-Y; Scholarship. NORMAN BASKIN Elective 2nd Orch. ' 33; Sr. Orch. ' 34, ' 35; Instrumen- tal Group ' 34; Fiesta; Gluck Auf. PAULINE L. BAYLEY Commercial Pres., Sec. Les Dilettantes; Sec. H.R.; C.L. W.W.; Hi-Tri; G.L. Comms.; Costume; Boosters. RAYMOND W. BEARDSLEE College C Water Polo ' 33; Loud Speaker; Press; Chr. H.R.; Big Brother. HERMINE LOUISE BERGER Commercial Hi-Tri; C.L.W.W.; Sec. G.A.A., 2 sem.; W; Orch. VEE BELL College Chr. Friendship Comm. ' 34, ' 35; Uniform Bd.; Sec. Cabinet G.L.; One-act Play; Chr. Publicity Crew for Fiesta; Sec.-treas. Ad; Sec.-treas. Comm.; Song Leader ' 35; World. GORDON BELL Commercial Transfer: San Bernardino High: Sec. F.F.A.; Livestock Judging ' 33, ' 34; Agri. Letter ' 33, ' 34. DOLORES COX BIRKHOLM Art Uniform Rep.; Les Bons Vivants; Costume Crew; Courtesy Comm.; Uniform Bd.; C.L. W. W. DOROTHY BLACK College World; Sec. Euodia; Tennis; S.P.Q.R.; C.L. W. W. WAVE BLODGETT College Christmas Pageant; Fiesta; One-aot Play; World. VERYLE GAIL BLOSSOM Commercial Cognoscians; Friends of Music; Cabin Comm. G.L. FRANCES MYRTLE BOLL Commercial Mgr. Candy Dept. St. Bd. St.; Growlers; Costume. JOHN EARLY BOSTIC St age Crew; Stage Club 3 Sem. College IRENE ELLEN BAUGHEY Commercial Sec. H.R. PATRICIA LEIGH BOVYER College Jeweled W; Boosters; ScholarsKip Lamp; Corr. Sec, G.L.; Major W; Corr. Sec. G.A. A.; Vice-pres. Hi-Tri; Vice-pres. Girls ' Ten- nis; Electron Circle; Adv. Bd. NELL BOWDEN Tennis; Costume; C.L.W.W. Co RAYMOND D. BOWMAN College Friends of Music; Musical Programs; Sports; Art; Aviation; World; Glulc Auf; Boole Ex- change. GLEN HOWARD BOZARTH Music Jr. Orch. ' 33, ' 34; Sr. Orch. ' 34, ' 35; Sec. Music Study; Friends of Music; Band ' 33, ' 34. NICK HARRY BRAAKENBURG College C Football ' 32; Cognoscians. NAOMI L. BRADFORD General Vice-pres. Sr. Triangle Hi-Tri; Minstrel; Art; Friends of Music; Biology; 3 G.L. Comms.; Press; Glee. CRANDEL C. BRAGSTAD College Jr. Varsity Baseball 33; Chr. H.R.; Big Brother. MUBORN BRIGHT Art World; Costume; Tennis. CLARENCE BRAMLEY General Band ' 35; Aviation Shop. PRISCILLA A. BROADBENT Classical Vice-pres. Les Dilettantes; Transfer: Rogers High, Newport, R. I.; Chr. Pro. Comm. Les Dilettantes. MARITA E. BROWN College C.L.W.W.; Costume; Les Bons Vivants; Ra- dio; Math. WAYNE BROWN ' College Pres. Thespians; Pres. Cognoscians; Vice- pres. Vaudeville; Tennis; Lead in It Never Rain ; Jr. Speakers; Scholarship; Ad; Jr. Ex- change; Comm. VERA MAE BRUNS Commercial Pres. Commercial; Hi-Tri. BOB BRYANT Commercial Transfer: So. Calif. Military Academy; Stage Crew. FRANCIS H. CALLAGY Aviation Aviation Aircraft Foreman; Varsity Rowing ' 34; Pageant ' 32; Rifle. DOROTHY L. CARPENTER Elective Song Leader; Sec. Glee; Sec. Cabinet; Boost- ers; Jr. Yell Leader; Comm.; Demos; Ad; Refreshment Comm. G.L. MARY ELLEN CAMPBELL College Lead in H.M.S. Pinafore; Cabinet Rep.; Sec. Friends of Music; Sr. Glee. A. JACK CARR College Thanksgiving Assembly; Christmas Assembly; Awards ' Dinner Decorations and Bids; Cam- panile. BOBBIE REAGAN CATE College Scholarship; Council; G.L. Adv. Bd.; Sec. Thespian; Pres. Hi-Tri; Boosters; Jr. Speak- ers; Lead in It Never Rains ; Tennis; Les Bons Vivants. ELMER J. CASSENS Rifle Club. College Forestry FRANCES CAVANAUGH Nursing Transfer: Brakenigh H. S., San Antonio, Texas: Short Story; El Rojoro; Cognoscians. PAUL A. CHARLEBOIS College World; Navigation, EDWARD ARTHUR CHECK College Transfer: Monrovia H. S.; Varsity Football ' 32, ' 33; Varsity Track ' 33, ' 34; Bay League Champ. ' 34; Varsity Baseball ' 35. CLOE MARY CHESNUT College Pres. G.L.; Gold W; Chr. Flower Comm.; Chr. C.L.W.W.; Sec. Jr. Class; Pres. El Ro- joro; Treas. Hi-Tri; Boosters; Jr. Speakers ' Bureau; Scholarship. LOUISE J. CHISHOLM Commercial Minstrel Show. ROBERT CLARKE General Pres. Biology; Les Bons Vivants; Jr. Speak- ers ' Bureau; World. MARY JEANNETTE COFFEY Elective Les Dilettantes; Costume; C.L.W.W.; Re- freshment Comm.; Glee. DORIS LOUISE COLGAN College G.L. Comm.; Costume; Basketball ' 33; Hoc- key ' 33; Les Dilettantes; Fiesta. HELEN LOUISE COHEN Salesmanship Uniform Bd.; Cognoscians; St. Bd. Store. PATRICIA A. COLLINS College Electron Circle; Cabinet Rep.; Fireman; Lt. Commissioner; Scholarship; Demos. ELSIE OLIVE COMBS College Scholarship; C.S.F. Lamp; Electron Circle; El Rojoro; G.A.A.; Minor W; C.L.W.W.; Handbook Comm.; Hi-Tri; Book Review Comm. MARIE COOPER Commercial Girls ' Basketball ' 35; G.A.A. ANNE COOPER Elective FRANK MELVIN CORNELIUS College Rowing; World; Jr. Prom Comm.; Press; Loud Speaker. MARY H. CORBUSIER General Boosters; Pres. Jr. Glee; Sr. Glee ' 34; Chr. C.L.W.W.; Sec. H.R. Cabinet Rep. ri i College TED CORNISH C Tennis; Jr. Varsity Rowing; Jr. V, sity Letter Tennis. WILLA EDITH CRAIG Sec. Ad; Press; Costume; Tennis. MARJORIE CRAIN College Transfer: Compton: Sec. Soph. Class; Schol- arship; Orch. ' 33; Glee ' 33; Extemporaneous Speech ' 33; Wilson: Cognoscians; S.P.Q.R.; Scholarship; A Cappella; Sr. Glee. ROBERT DAVIS CRUM College Varsity Rowing ' 34, ' 35; Math.; Chess. GEORGENE LOUISE CRANDALL Art Lead in White Collars ; St. Director Keep It Dark ; G.A.A.; Makeup Crew ' 34, ' 35; Costume; Fiesta; Lead in Are Men Super- ior? ; Class Plays. RICHARD JOHN CUNDIFF College Scholarship; Prcs. El Rojoro; Gluk Auf; Tax- onomy; Cognoscians; Ushers; Shore Life; Plant Propagation. JUNE H. CUNNINGHAM College Office Comm.; G.L. Rep.; Fiesta. EVELYN J. GUSHING Commercial Jeweled W; Pres. G.A.A.; G.L. Adv. Bd.; Council; Boosters; W Club; Basketball ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Hockey, Speedball, Baseball ' 33, ' 34, ' 35. JEAN M. CUSHMAN College Transfer: Proviso High, Maywood, 111.: Vice- pres. G.L.; Sr. Guard; Finanre Comm.;Treas. H.R.; Dramatic; Social Comm. G.L.; Camera; Jr. Council; Entertainment Comm. JACK RAYMOND DALTON General Pres. H.R.; B Football ' 32; Varsity Baseball ' 32, ' 33; Jr. Varsity Football ' 33; Ad. FRANCES DABNEY College Transfer: Glendale High. RAYMOND L. DAMSKEY College Gold W; Nat ' l Ath. Scholarship Ce t. and Key; B Bay League Track Champ. ' 33; Var- sity Bay League Track ' 34; Pinafore; Loud Speaker; Jr. Exchange; Six Clubs. RUTH ESTHER DANE College Jr. Speakers; Dissecting; G.L. Comms. WARREN GLENN DAY College Sec. Tennis; Chess. BENJAMIN C. DEATHERAGE Aviation Captain Rowing ' 34; Navigation; Math.; Av- iation Shop. JESS DELONG Commercial Stage Crew ' 32, ' 33; Varsity Football ' 34; Varsity Track, ' 35. CHARLES M. DEMAREE Aviation Aviation Paint Foreman; Varsity Rowing ' 34; Pageant; Rifle; Chess. ANTHONY H. DOBSON College I โ–  FLORENCE DORN College Tennis; World; Costume; Cabinet Rep.; Cab- in Comm.; Social Coinm. MYRL GORDON DORN College Capt. So. Calif. Cro.ss Country Champ. ' 34; Lt. Comm.; Varsity Track Champ. 35; Jr. Exchange; Pres. H.R.; Lcttermen ' s; Captains; Life Pass So. Calif. 34; Ath. Scholarship Key. JANET DORR College Minstrel; Cognoscians; Girls ' Tennis; Jr. Glee; Hi-Tri; Vice-pres. H.R.; Ways and Means Comm. G.L.; Mixed Doubles Tennis. GALE B. DOUGHERTY College Stage Crew ' 32, ' 33, ' 35; Electron Circle; C Water Polo 32, 33; C Rowing ' 35; Gluk Auf; Navigation. BERYL ANN DUKE College Transfer: LA. High: Pres. H.R.; Blue- White Staff. Wilson: Les Bons Vivants; Uni- form Bd.; C.L.W.W.; Campanile; Press; 2 G.L. Comm. DOUGLAS L. DUCKHAM College Gov. Affairs ' 34, ' 35; Jeweled W; Vice-pres. Jr. Class; Council; Managing Editor Loud Speaker; Varsity Baseball 35; Demos; Ad; Jr. E.xchange; Jr. Speakers. GEORGE ARTHUR DYNES College Adv. Orch. ' 33,34, ' 35; Glee ' 33; B Track ' 33, ' 34; Varsity Track ' 35. JERRY A. EDGECOMB College Varsity Baseball ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Vice-pres. Sr. B Class; Commissioners; Jr. Exchange; Jr. Speakers ' ; Council; Ad; Loud Spcake;; P.ess. BETTY JANE ECKARD College Courtesy Comm.; Uniform Bd.; Cabinet Rep.; C.L.W.W.; El Rojoro; Ways and Means EMORY PERCIVAL ELDREDGE College Transfer: Southwest High, Kansas City, Mo.: R.O.T.C.; Track; Baconian Liter?.ry Society. Wilson: Navigation; Math.; Les Bons Vi- vants. JEAN ESTHER ELLIOTT Commercial Big Sister. BETTY ANN ENGLEMAN College MARY LEE EWER College Drac; S.P.Q.R ; C.L.W.W.; Les Dilettantes; Hi-Tri. MARY BARBARA ESELUN College Pomona Scholarship; Chr. Art Comm. G.L.; Chem. Team; Scholarship Lamp; Gold W.; Editor Loud Speaker; Campanile; Major W; Sec-treas. Scripters; Treas. Electron Circle; Aedile S.P.Q.R.; G.L. Cabmet; Boosters. DAN WILLIAM FARNHAM Stage Crew College VIRGINIA CLARE FAWSON Commercial Jr. Glee; Minstrel Show. ROY K. FERRIS College Mgr. Rowing ' 34; Glee ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Pina- fore; Graflex Editor Campanile; Minstrel Show; Press. EDWIN ROGERS FELLER College Scholarship; Council; Band ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Or- chestra ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Vice-pres. Program Chr. Friends of Music; Pres. Music Study; Electron Circle; S.P.Q.R. LELAND FINLEY College JANE SHERMAN FICKEL College Pres. Boosters; Pres. Cabinet; Adv. Bd.; Uni- form Bd. JEAN FITZHUGH College Transfer: Beverly Hills; Glee; Minstrel Show. ROBERT ANSON FOOTE College Scholarship Lamp; Pres. Scholarship; Vice- pres. Hi-Y; Jr. Speakers ' ; Les Bons Vivants; Pres. Boole Review Comm. Scholarship; Cog- noscians; Winner Inter-class Debate; Poly- Wilson Debate; 2nd Extempore. MARY BERNADETTE FORBES College Commissioner; G.L. Rep.; Ad; Loud Speak- er; Campanile; Press; Boosters; Lead in Sta- tion YYYY ; Social Comm. G.L.; Les Di- lettantes; Les Bons Vivants. LORRAINE FOSTER College Program Comm. G.L.; Hi-Tri; S.P.Q.R.; Rowing; World; G.A.A.; Minstrel Show; Cognoscians. RUTH TJESTINA FORSTER College Cabinet Rep.; Sr. Glee; Jr. Glee; Les Bons Vivants; Friends of Music; Christmas Con- cert; Fiesta; Cognoscians; Chr. Thanksgiving Drive. ROBERT W. FOX Commercial B. Football ' 33, 34; Varsity Track ' 35; El Rojoro; Cognoscians; World. EDWARD FRANK General Thespians; Pres. Vaudeville; Vice-pres. Coun- cil; Lead in The Big Idea ; Glee and Choir; Fiesta; Lead in Submerged ; Minstrel Show; Lead in Keep It Dark ; Lead in It Never Rains . DOROTHY E. FRENCH College Scholarship Lamp; Gold W; Sec. Council; Exec. Comm. Council; Electron Circle; Adv. Bd. G.L.; Loud Speaker; Campanile; Vice- pres., Sec, Les Bons Vivants; Sec. C.L.W.W.; Hi-Tri Cabinet. HUGO EVON FREY JR. College World; Glee; Biological; EI Rojoro; Rowing ' 34; Fiesta. JAMES E. FRINELL College C Water Polo ' 33, ' 34; C Swimming ' 33; Varsity Water Polo ' 35; National Ath. Schol- arship; Council; Music; Chess; Navigation; Mgr. C Swimming. JOHN FULTON College Fbotball ' 32; Golf ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Swimming ' 34, ' 35; Math. MAXINE MARIAN GALBRAITH College C S.F. Lamp; Scholarship; Electron Circle; Les Bons Vivants; Book Review. ROBERT JAMES GALLOWAY College Pinafore. JUANITA DOROTHY GANN Elective MAXINE GARLICK Accounting-History Museum; Tennis; Stamp. PATRICIA J. GAVAGAN Commercial Hi-Tri; Cognoscians; Biology. I ( ELSIE E. GEISS College Hi-Tri; Gluk Auf; Stamp; Music Study; Friends of Music; Scholarship; Courtesy Comm. G.L. PEGGY E. GHORMLEY College Cognoscians; Ei Rojoro; Tennis. BETTY LOU GIBSON College Adv. Bd.; Boosters; G.L. Rep.; Pres. C.L. WAV.; Les Dilettantes; El Rojoro; Cognos- cians; Press; Loud Speaker. JOAN GIBSON College Costume Club. DONALD R. GILLESPIE College Scholarship Lamp; S.P.Q.R.; Vice-pres. Elec- tron Circle; Math.; Scripters; Chem. Team 34; Book Review Comm.; Pomona Scholar- ship on Chem. Team. ALICE L. GILBERT Pres. Dialect; Fiesta. Ele DORTHY RUTH GIRARD General Glee 32, 33, ' 34; Chorus; Costume; Pinafore. ROBERT W. GOOSSEN College B Football ' 33, ' 34; Cognoscians; Les Bons Vivants. ALVIN RALPH GLASS College Transfer Bayonne High School, New Jersey; Jr. Varsity Basketball ' 33; Jr. Varsity Base- ball ' 33; Usher; Glee ' 33. Wilson: Varsity Basketball ' 34; Les Bons Vivants. CECIL RAYMOND GRAHAM College Cognoscians. REBA RAE GRAHAM Commercial St. Body St. ' 32, ' 33, ' 34. GENEVIEVE GRAYSON College Treas. S.P.Q.R.; G.L. Cabinet Rep.; 3 G.L. Comm.; Electron Circle. WALTER G. GREEN College C Water Polo ' 33; C Swimming ' 33; Varsity Swimming ' 34; Cross Country ' 35; Varsity Track ' 35. BETTY ANN GREENUP College Tennis ' 33, ' 34; World; Cabin Comm.; C.L. W.W. JANE GRAY College Adv. Bd.; District Sec. Scholarship; El Ro- joro; Sr. Glee; Cabinet Rep.; Team Leader; Boosters. NOREEN MAY GRAY College Costume; Commercial. RUTH GROSS Commercial Transfer: Poly High; Costume; Tennis; Cog- noscians. GENEVIEVE G. HAGAN College Pres. Vaudeville; Campanile; G.L. Cabinet Rep.; Adv. Bd. G.L.; Sec. Thespians; Comm.; Boosters; Loud Speaker; Lead in It Never Rains ; Scholarship. ROY HALBERT Industrial Arts Glee ' 34, ' 35; Rifle. DOROTHY LOUISE HANCOCK College Boosters; Trcas. Les Dilettantes; Campanile; Press; Loud Speaker; C.L.W.W.; Hi-Tri; Biological; Cabinet Rep. G.L.; 2 G.L. Comm. ROY HOLLAND HAMILTON Music Band Cup; Mgr. Rowing; Council; Pres. Li- brarian Orch.; Pres., Mgr., Sec. Band; Stu- dent Director Band and Orch.; Music Study; Minstrel Show. JOHN J. HAND College Vice-pres. El Rojoro; World; Cognoscians. ESTHER HANNA Commercial Fiesta; Lookout Comm. G.L.; G.A.A.; Cos- tume; G.L. Rep.; Commercial. CHARLES E. HARRINGTON College Vice-pres. Thespians; Vice-pres. Vaudeville; Leads in Keep It Dark, The Big Idea, and It Never Rains ; 12 one-act plays; 14 Assembly Skits; Sales Champ. I A I j I II HARRY EUGENE WARVEY Uommercial Varsity Rowing ' 35; Mgr. C Basketball ' 33; Asst. Mgr. Varsity Baseball ' 34. SARAH CAROLYN HAUGHEY College Hi-Tri Song and Yell Leader; Boosters; Cab- inet Rep.; Cognoscians; G.A.A.; Ways and Means Comm. ALEEN HAWKINS Commercial La VON BERNICE HAWKINS Commercial Hi-Tri; Courtesy Comm. GL. MERCEDES G. HAWKINS Commercial G.L. Rep.; Les Dilettantes; World; Fiesta; Tennis; Social Comm.; Lookout Comm. KATHERINE HAWKINS College Boosters; Sr. Orch. ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Friends of Music; Pinafore; Fiesta; C.L.W.W. ROBERT CLYDE HAYDEN College Cognoscians; Book Exchange. JAMES G. HEDRICK College Water Polo; Basketball; Track; Tennis; Class Rep.; Transfer: Roosevelt High, Seattle, Wash.; Transfer: Roger High, Newport, R. I.; Rifle. MARGARET E. HEINL College So. Calif. Jr. College Transfer. Math.; G.L. Cabinet Rep. CHUCK K. HEINZ College-Commercial Ad; Rifle; Stamp. WINIFRED MAY HEISKELL Commercial Scripters; Loud Speaker; Campanile; Jr. Speakers; C.L.W.W.; Hi-Tri; Press; 2 G.L. Comms.; El Rojoro. SHIRLEY LOUISE HENZLER College Rec. Sec. G.L.; Chr. Uniform Bd.; Council; Scholarship Lamp; Trcas. Electron Circle; Boosters; G.A.A.; Cognoscians; Hi-Tri; Les Bons Vivants. ROBERT HEROLZ College Transfer: John Brown College: Pres. Elec- tricity. VIRGINIA ANNE HICKLE College Yell Leader Jr. Class; Boosters; Pres. Les Dilettantes; S.P.Q.R.; Les Bons Vivants; Cabinet Rep.; C.L.W.W.; Minstrel Show; Costume. WILLIAM N. HESS Vice-pres. Radio. College BLANCH HILL Commercial Pres. G.A.A.; V; Umform Bd.; Tennis; Mgr. Supply and Fountain Dept., St. Bd. Store. ETHEL O. HILL General Cactus Club. ERNEST TEXAS HICKOX Commercial Biology; Monitor H.R.; Dialect; Dissecting. MEL J. HODGE College Transfer: Redondo; Water Polo ' 31, ' 32; Golf ' 32; S.P.Q.R.; Service Comm. GORDON M. HOFFMAN Commercial Scholarship; World. ADA P. HOCK College Gold W; Scholarship Lamp; G.L. Rep.; Adv. Bd.; Jr. Speakers; G.L. Comms. WALLACE HOLDEN General Captain Varsity Track ' 35; Captain Varsity Cross Country ' 33, ' 34; So. Calif. Cross Country Champ. ' 33, ' 34; B Champ. Track ' 33; Varsity Champ. ' 34; Vice-pres. Soph. Class; Captain Inter-class Track ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Capt. Commissioners. WILLIAM P. HOLDEN College Golf; Science; Math.; Jr. Varsity Football ' 33; Cross Country Track ' 34; Aviation ' 33, ' 34, ' 35. EDITH ISABEL HOLDEN Music Friends of Music; Jr. Glee; Hi-Tri. JEAN LORAINE HOOVER Science Cabinet Rep.; Vice-pres. Dissecting; Vice- pres, Hi-Tri; Hostess Comm.; Cabinet Hi- Tri; Lookout Comm. JOE HORTON Commercial Mgr. Track ' 32, ' 33; Mgr. Cross Country. HAROLD HENRY HOPKINS College World; Navigation. MIRIAM KATHLEEN HUGHES College Cactus; Hi-Tri; Orch.; Tennis; G.A.A.: G.L. Rep.; Big Sister. ISABEL HUDDLESTON Art Costume Club; Art Comm.; Lettering Club. JOHN H. HOWARD College Transfer: Fresno High: Boxing. m Iโ€” I o en m o CO m l-H o en en m 1โ€” ( O en en m Z o en en tn Z l-H o en VIRGINIA E. HUNTER College Pres. Council; Pres. Cabinet; Capt. Girls ' Comm.; G.L. Adv. Bd.; Loud Speaker; Cam- panile; Gold W; Jr. Speakers Bureau; Boost- ers; Big Sister. MARY LOUISE HURLEY ELIZABETH C. HYATT World; Tennis ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Cabin Comm.; Hi-Tri. College College โ– m Bd.; DOUGLAS IMHOFF College Varsity Tennis; Cognoscians; Tennis Team; Transfer: Alhambra; Bay League Tennis Champ. BEATRICE JACOBSON JANICE JOHNSTONE College College Electron Circle; C.L.W.W.; Costume Crew; French; Tutorial Bureau. H. WHIPPLE JONES College Pres. Chess; Navigation; Orch. JESSIE KAUCHER Commercial Cactus Club FREDERICK MERL KEMP College Transfer: Football ' 32; Baseball ' 33, ' 34. CHIYEKO M. KAWANAMI Home Econ. MICHEYE MARY KAWASAKI Elective World Club; Hi-Tri. JOSEPHINE ALICE KEELER College Transfer: Santa Ana: Swimming Team; Vice- pres. Girl Reserves; Wilson: Spanish; G.L. Rep.; Cognoscians; Hi-Tri; C.L.W.W. WILLIAM KERR Commercial C Football ' 32; B Football ' 33, ' 34; Capt. B Football ' 34; Track ' 33; Jr. Exchange; Loud Speaker; Campanile. EDWARD KILLINGSWORTH College Art Editor Campanile; Lettering; Pageant. HELEN IRIS KERWOOD Art Supply Mgr. Store; Designer Wilson Sticker; Costume Crew; C.L.W.W.; Sec. Music Study; Ad. Mgr. Store; Growlers. JAMES T. KIRKPATRICK Commercial Orch.; Big Brother. LOUIS EDWARD KNOWLES College Lamp; Scholarship; Spanish; German; Span- ish Award. HENRIETTA KRATZ Commercial I I ISABELLE N. KURTZ College Latin: Friends of Music; Hi-Tri; Drac: Sec. C.L.W ' .W.; 2 G.L. Comm.; Museum. LUCILE KATHRYN LANE College Tennis; Cabin Comm.; Pro. Comm.; Fiesta; Big Sister. LOUIS GERALD LcLACHEUR College Yell Leader; Bus. Mgr. Campanile; Adv. Mgr. Loud Speaker; Gold W; C Basketball ' 32, ' 33; Bay League Champ. Basketball ' 32; C Football ' 32; Comm.; Sec. Ushers; Jr. Ex- change. MARY KATHRYN LEVERS Music Jr. Glee; Sr. Glee; Friends of Music; Tennis; G.L. Comm. ROBERT L. LINGENFELTER Industrial DAGMAR LINGREN College Transfer from Poly. CHARLOTTE JEAN LINN College Campanile; Loud Speaker; Press. DOROTHY LISTON College Transfer Poly. Wilson: Stage Costume Crew; Ways and Means Comm. ROBERT I. LIVINGSTON College Varsity Football ' 33, ' 34; Varsity Track ' 35; J.V. Track ' 34; Scholarship; Lettermen. JEANETTE E. LLOYD College Tennis ' 32. ' 35; Hockey ' 33; Specdball ' 33: Program Comm.; Cognoscians; Uniform Bd.; Music: Sec. H.R. MARY OPAL LOGAN Commercial World; Tennis; Social Comm.; Cabin Comm. HENRY THOMAS LOGAN College Scholarship; Cognoscians; Varsity Track ' 35; Electron Circle; Scripters; Latin. HELEN MARIE LONG College G.A.A.; W Club; Cabin Comm.; Big Sister Comm.; S.P.Q.R.; G.L.Rep. HAZEL MAE LOUNSBURY Commercial BETTY LOUISE LORANCE Elective KATHERYN P. LOVE Commercial Big Sister; Publicity Comm.; Refresh. Comm.; Costume Club; Tennis. BERNICE M. LUNDHIGH Hi-Tri; G.L. Rep.; Electron Circle; Museum; Rhythms. Nursing Rowing; KATHERYN MAITLAND College World; Tebbis; French; Fiesta; Big Sister; Makeup Crew. MARY MARGARET MANNING College Lamp; Scholarship; Electron Circle; Book Re- view Comm.; Tutorial Bureau. PEGGY LENORE MARTIN College Loud Speaker; Campanile; Press; Les Bons Vivants; German; Publicity Comm. FRANK V. K. MASON College Loud Speaker; Scholarship; Asst. Mgr. Foot- ball ' 33; Campus Players; Rowing; Hi-Y; Campanile; Press; L.B. Sun. MAXINE DELORES MAYES Commercial Scholarship Seal; French; Friends of Music; Hi-Tri; Tutorial Bureau. ARDATHMcCOY , College Sr. Girls lee. 3A.,- rri ' i bWARD C. McCOLLON College Loud, Speaker; Cognoscians; Math.! Aviation. HARRY LAWRENCE WELCH ' General C Football ' 32; B Football ' 33; Varsity Foot- ball ' 34; B Bay League Track Champ. ' 33; Varsity ' Track Champ. ' 35; B Bay League High Jump Champ. ' 34. WALLACE McDANNEL College Council; B Basketball ' 32; Varsity Basket- ball ' 33; Jr. Varsity Track ' 34; Spanish; Vaudeville; Rowing ' 35; Glee ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Orch. ' 35; Minstrel Show. MARGIE M. McDonald Sister. ommercia BOYD McGINN College Yell Leader ' 34, ' 35; Coxswain Varsity Crew ' 34, ' 35; Jr. Exchange; Campanile High Point Salesman; Pres. Growlers; Campanile; Press; Pageant; Loud Speaker. BETTE LOU McINTYRE College Transfer Roosevelt High, Honolulu, T.H.; Wilson: Treas. C.L.W.W.; French; Press; G.L. Comm.; Pres. Les Dilettantes; Boosters. ROD LARRY McINTIRE College CATHERINE JEAN MacMILLAN College G.L. Rep.; Adv. Bd.; Tennis; S hVa-ship; French; Cognoscians; C.L.W.W.; Pinafore; Speedball. MADOLYN E. McKENZIE College Boosters; G.L. Rep.; Treas. C.L.W.W.; Treas. Les Dilettantes; Scripters; S.P.Q.R.: Hi -Tri; Costume Club; Friendship Comm.; Scholar- ship, RANDALL CHARLES McNARY Rowing ' 34, ' 35; Big Brother. College MARGIE AVENELL MEGOWN Nursing French; Hi-Tri; Dialect. HELEN MERRILL Art Cabinet; Fiesta. B. FRANKLIN METZ Trade School Golf J Loud Speaker; Campanile. CHARLES CLIFI-ORD MIl.LCR Collpgr R.rie Club; Rirtc Team; Band. ELIZABETH JANE MEYER College Scholarship; Glee ' 35, ' 34, ' 35; Tennis Mgr.; Adv. Bd.; G.L. Rep.; Boosters; Pinafore; G. A. A.; Minstrel Show; Cognoscians; Friends of Music, HELEN MARIE MILLER College Vice-pres. Boosters; Pres. Cabinet; Adv. Bd.; Jr. Speak. Bureau; Comms.; Scholarship; C. L.W.W.; Tutorial Bureau; Uniform Bd.; Bi- ology; 5 G.L. Comm.; French, THORNTON MILLER Coll VIRGINIA LOUISE MILLER College Costume Club; Cognoscians; Mgr. Store. MELVIN D. MINER College C Football ' 32; B Football ' 33, ' 34; C Water Polo ' 33, ' 34; Chess; World. GEORGE H. MITCHELL Commercial Golf ' 34, ' 35; Demos; Jr. Exchange; Varsity Lettermcn; Yell Leader ' 35. HELEN M. MONASMITH Commercial Transfer Chino; Wilson: Glee ' 34; Big Sister; Fiesta; Growlers. MARGARET LOUISE MONTY College Council; Adv. Bd.; Boosters; Uniform Bd.; Comms.; Demos; G.L. Rep.;Big Sister; Fiesta. DAVID G. MOORE Engineering RICHARD PARKER MORGAN College Track ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Football ' 33; Cognoscians; Basketball ' 33. EMILIE VIRGINIA MORGAN College Pres. H.R.; Costume Club; G.L. Rep.; Friends of Music; G.L. Comm. ROBERT N. MORTON Engineering Capt. Rowing ' 32, ' 33; Football ' 33, ' 34; Elec- tron Circle; Math. BETTY MAE MORRIS Commercial Store; Jr. Glee; Costume Club; Minstrel Show. B. BILL MOSSBERG College German Club. ALEX MYERS College Rowing ' 35; German; Math.; Navigation; Football ' 33. BETH MARIE MURRAY College Jr. Speak. Bureau; Costume Crew; Hi-Tri; Fiesta; Rowing; French; World; Scholarship; Cognoscians. AMY LOUISE MUSSER Commercial Scholarship; Cognoscians. BRUCE THOMAS NELSON College Cognoscians; Stamp; Radio; C Football ' 32, โ– 33. SHIRLEY MAE NAUGHTON College Council; G.L. Rep.; Ad Club; Loud Speaker; Publicity Comm.; Refreshment Comm.; Yell Leader Senior B Class; Boosters. GREGORY NICHOLS College Band ' 32; Capt. C Basketball ' 33; Letter- men ' s; Mgr. B. Basketball ' 34; Cognoscians. ROBERT T. NICHOLS Commercial C Track ' 32; Scholarship; Campanile. CLIFFORD NICKLE College C Track ' 33; Big Brother; Cognoscians; Bas- ketball; Jr. Varsity Track ' 35. GENEVIEVE D. NOLAND College Big Sister; Pinafore; Costume Crew; Costume Club; French; G.L. Rep.; Sr. Glee. LOIS OAKS College Hi-Tri; Cognoscians; G.L. Rep.; Transfer Seward High. MARY GARFIELD O ' BRIEN College Lamp; Adv. Bd.; Boosters; Sec-treas. Schol- arship; Sec. French; Council; C.L.W.W.; G. L. Comm.; German; Museum. ALFRED M. O ' BRIEN College Varsity Golf ' 35; Cognoscians; Biology Re- search. GORDON OLSEN College Big Brother; Electron Circle; World. RUTH L. OLSON College Scholarship Lamp; Spanish; German; C.L. W.W.; Handbook Comm.; Hi-Tri; Book Review Comm.; Costume: Big Sister. CLAIRE BARBARA PEARLSTON College Big Sister; Pres. Jr. Glee; Fiesta; Ways and Means Comm.; Friendship. ROBERTA PIERCE College MARJORIE D. PETZOLD Art lONE JENNIE PIKE Commercial Jeweled W; Adv. Bd.; G.L. Comm.; Hi-Tri; Lt. Comm.; Treas. Boosters; Sec. Boosters; Sec. Senior A and B Class; Pres. Tennis; Sec. G.A.A.; Pres. Junior A. PASCAL RAY POWELL College Commissioner; Tennis ' 34, 35; Tennis Club; Cognoscians; Big Brother; Track ' 33. GEORGE EDGAR PROBST College Pres. Senior A; Jeweled W; Vice-pres. Thes- pians; Vice-pres. Calif. Scholarship Federa- tion; Pres. Scriptcrs; Lamp; Debate; Council; Pres. Jr. Speak. Bureau. JERADINE PRITCHETT College Program Comm.; Decoration Comm.; Tennis; Costume; G.A.A.; Store; Big Sister. . I 1 I PHILIP QIUNN College Bay League Champ. Water Polo 53; Water Polo ' 34, ' 35; C Football ' 32; Comms; Jr. Ex- change; Lcttermen; Swimming ' 33. SHIRLEY JEAN RAFFERTY Commercial Inkslingers Club. WILFORD CLARE RANSOM College Aviation; World; Fiesta; Loud Speaker; Big Brother. BEATRICE MARY RAUE College Flower Comm.; C.L.W.W.; French; Friends of Music; Les Dilettanti; Navy Jr. ELOISE AILEEN RAY College Gov. Welfare ' 34, ' 35; Pres. G.A.A.; Jeweled W; Chr. Fiesta; Comm.; Adv. Bd.; Boosters; Jr. Speak. Bureau; Major Sports W; Hi-Tri. ALBERT CARLING RENE College Track ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Football ' 33, ' 34; Intra- mural Basketball ' 33; Cognoscians. JACK RICHARDS College Comm.; Varsity Track ' 33; Ad Club; Varsity Football Letterman; Transfer Fairfax High: B Football ' 33, ' 34; B Track ' 33; Pres. H.R.; Tumbling Club. VIRGINIA LEE RICHMOND Commercial Tennis Club; Sr. Orch. ' 34; World Club; Big Sister. VIRGINIA R. RYAN Hi-Tri; G.L. Comm.; Schola College ship. MARY RICHBART Elective Transfer Bell High: Vicc-pres. Kodak Club; G.A.A.; Prep. Club; Vice-pres. H.R.; Wil- son: Chess Club. RUSSELL RIDDELL General Cognoscians. JAY MYRON RICKMAN College Gov. Safety; Pres. Soph.; Pres. Jr.; Vice-pres. Sr. A; Pres. Ushers; Treas. Demos; Gold W; Sergeant at Arms, Jr. Exchange; B Football ' 33, ' 34; B Track Champ. MARY ELIZABETH ROBINSON College Pres., Vice-pres. Friends of Music; Cabinet; Sr. Glee, 4 Sem.; C.L.W.W.; Pianist Wilson Trio. LONA ROMANO College Transfer Oak Park High, 111.; Cognoscians; Cabinet; G.L. Committee. GEORGANNA ROSE College Pres., Sec. Scholarship; C.S.F. Lamp; Pres. Friends of Music; Vice Pres. C.L.W.W.; Boosters; Council; Cabinet; Electron Circle; Cognoscians; 4 G.L. Committees. MAYNARD ROTHBART College H.M.S. Pinafore; Jr. Varsity Football ' 33; Scholarship; Electron Circle; World Club; S. P.Q.R.; Les Bon Vivants; Biology Club. ANNE JEANNE RUMRILL College Vaudeville Club; Tennis Club; Adv. Bd.; 2 G.L. Comm.; Fiesta; Campanile; Loud Speak- er; Cognoscians; Glee ' 32, ' 33; Press. PATRICIA MARIE RYAN College Adv. Bd.; Boosters; Scholarship; Tennis Team ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; S.P.Q.R.; Council; C.L.W.W.; Tennis. THOMAS JOSEPH RYAN Commercial JOHN A. SALTSMAN College Sec. El Rojoro; Biology Club; Scholarship; JAMES GARFIELD SCHAEFFER College Varsity Water Polo ' 34, ' 35; Rifle Club. LESLIE PAUL SHAFFER College Jr. Varsity Football ' 33; Fiesta. JEAN SCHEIDECKER Elective Jeweled W; Treas. Boosters; Debate ' 33; De- bate Mgr. ' 34; Interclass Debate Kiwanis Cup Winner; Adv. Bd.; Cabinet; Les Bon Vi- vants; S.P.Q.R.; Museum; Poly-Wilson De- bate. 1 HOWARD W. SCHEIE Golt Club. Ele, WILLIAM FRED SCHERER College Cognoscians; Radio Club; Math. Club; Stamp. VIRGINIA MAE SCHLOSSER Commercial jr. Glee; World Club; Jr. Prom Comm.; Fiesta. ELWYN M. SCHULTZ Commercial World Club; Cognoscians. AGNES SCOTT College S.P.Q.R.; Hi-Tri; Transfer Poly: Chemistry; Tennis; Golf. Transfer, Des Moines, Iowa. WINIFRED JEAN SEDGWICK College Glee, 4 Sem.; Minstrel Show; G.L. Cabinet. LAWRENCE BRUCE SCOTT Sott C.S.F. Lamp; Vice-pres. Scholarship; Chief Chemist Electron Circle; Asst. Chem.; S.P. Q.R.; Book Review Comm.; Tutorial Bureau; Christmas Pageant ' 32; Math. Club. MARIE E. SENST Commercial Sec. Sr. Glee; Minstrel Show; Gluk Auf; Cognoscians; Pinafore; A Cappella. JANE ELIZABETH SHAFFER Elective Friends of Music; H.M.S. Pinafore; Fiesta; Sr. Glee, 6 Sem.; Music Study Club; Christ- mas Pageant; Minstrel Show; St. Bd. Store. ELMO ELTON SHAVER College Scholarship; Scripters; Les Bon Vivants; El Rojoro; Biology Club. VANCE W. SHAW Elective HELEN GRACE SHIELDS College Loud Speaker; Campanile; Press; Costume Club; Fiesta ' 32, ' 34; Rowing; Cabinet; Make- up Crew; Hockey. ROBERT C. SHERMAN College Stage Crew ' 34, ' 35; Transfer San Diego. J. V. Football ' 33; R.O.T.C. Comm.; Rifle Squad. I JOHN SISNEROS Commercial Cognoscians. MARJORIE AVALON SIMMONS College Winner Essay Contest; Pres. Dialect: Vice- pres. Vaudeville; Thespians; Scholarship; St. Body Play ' 33; Cabinet; It Never Rains ; Jr. Speaker. Bureau; Extern. Speaking Con- test; Boosters. GRETCHEN SIEBERT College Se.-.Treas. Chess Club; Gluk Auf; Tennis Club; Dissecting; Scripters; Transfer Seattle; Poly: Tennis Team. MILDRED SHONTS Elective Pres. H.R.; Vice-pres. H.R.; G.L. Cabinet; Fiesta; Costume Club. GLADYS MAE SMITH General Costume Club: H.M.S. Pinafore: Sr. Glee ' 32, ' 33; Les Bon Vivants; Makeup Crew; Christmas Pageant ' 32, ' 33; Tennis Club: Rhythms; Ministrel Show; Sec. H.R. HAZEL MAE SMITH Elective Museum: Sec. H.R.; Student Body Store; Big Sister. MARJORIE CECELIA SMITH Commercial Transfer; Meeker, Colo.; Cognoscians. RUTH E. SMITH Elective Asst. Fountain Mgr. St. Bd. Store: Vice- pres. Dialect Club; Sec.-Treas. Dialect Club: G.L. Comm.; Growlers Club. BILL FRANKLIN SMITH College C Football ' 32; Rifle Club; Stage Crew ' 32; Aviation; Rowing. WOODROW W. SMITH College Sec.-Treas. A Cappella; Sec.-Treas. Glee ' 33, ' 35; Orch.; World Club; Music Study Club: Rowing Crew; Band; Friends of Music: B Football. College ;.; Homeroom JACK SOMERS Thanksgiving Drive Chr Chr.; Fiesta Comm. DAVID B. SONTAG Electron Circle; Math. Stamp; Chess Club. Club: College Navigation; JULIA SPARKS Elective A Cappella; Friends of Music; Minstrel Show; Pres. Sr. Glee. HARRIET E. SPATH College Pres. H.R. ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Cabinet; Sec. Council; Capt. Girls ' Comm.; Adv. Bd.; Loud Speak- er; Campanile; Boosters; Ad: Treas. Demos: 2 G.L. Comm. NEIL SPENCER College LOUISE STANTON Commercial Vice-pres. Soph.; Council; Vice-pres. G.A.A.; All Girls ' Sports ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; St. Bd. Store; Hi-Tri; 2 G. L. Comm. IMOGENE MARIE STANTON College Cabinet; C.L.W.W.; Les Dilettantes: S.P.Q. R.; Les Bon Vivants; Friends of Music; Fi- esta: Drac; Hi-Tri. WILLIAM AUSTIN SPOONER Elective C S.F. Lamp: Pres. Electron Circle; Chem. Team; Chr. Scholarship Ticket Comm.; Vice- pres. Book Review Comm.; Scripters; Math.; World; Cognoscians; Hi-Y. CO m โ€” o cn CO m Iโ€” H o CO m o en m o LO CO m z O CO en m Z o en BRUCE JAMES STILLWELL Transfer: Wells, Nev. College KATHLEEN STEVENS Commercial Vice-pres. G.A.A.; Vire-pres. W Club; Min- or, Major W; Basketball ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Speed- ball 33, ' 34; Tennis Club; Baseball ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Hockey 33, ' 34, ' 35; Adv. Bd. GEORGE SUMNER STEELE Math Club; Rifle Club. College DOROTHY BEATRICE STILTZ Elective World Club; Big Sister. WINFIELD WARREN STIMSON College Friends of Music: Math Club; Biology Club; Electron Circle. THELMA LOUISE STOOP Com ROBERT BARBER STULL College C Football ' 31; Basketball Champ. ' 32; B Basketball ' 33, ' 34; Co-Capt. Varsity Basket- ball ' 35; Lettermen ' s; Varsity Baseball ' 35; Captains. FLORENCE G. STOTTER College Tennis Team ' 33, ' 34; Scholarship; El Rojoro; Loud Speaker; Cognoscians; C L.W.W.; Tu- torial Bureau; G.A.A.; Mixed Doubles; Ten- MARTHA ALTHEA STOUT Commercial Madonna; Big Sister. WILLIAM A STURDIVANT C Track ' 33; Intramural Basketball College Cognos- ELSIE MAE STURKIE Commercial Transfer L.A. Belmont High. Hi-Tri; Dra- matic Club; Reading. ERNEST G. SWANSON Transfer Samohi; B Footba ' 33; Hi-Y. Commercial ' 33; B Track WINNIE MURIEL SWEET General Vice-pres. Stage Crew ' 34; Stage Crew Club; Cognoscians; Transfer Bakersfield. HUGH WESTON THARPE College NADENE THOMAS Commercial Transfer, Huntington Beach; G.A.A.; Fiesta; Capt. Hockey; Swimming Team. FREDERICK WICK TOD College Demos; Ad Club; Press; Campanile; Jr. Prom. Comm. ONETA E. THOMPSON Elective Costume Club; H.M.S. Pinafore; Friends of Music; A Cappella; Glee ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Fiesta; Minstrel Show; Vice-pres. Glee. HELEN E. TOOMER Commercial Cabinet; World Club: Jr. Glee. I RONALD JAMES TRUMBO General Football ' 55. ' ?4; Biology Club; Rowing ' 34, ' 35; St. Bd. Assembly. MARJORY TRUEX Commercial 2 G.L. Comm.; World Club; Les Dilettantes; EI Rojoro. ROBERT TOWNLEY TURNER General Treas. Scholarship; Sec. Book Review Comm.; C.S.F. Lamp; Electron Circle; S.P.Q.R.; Cog- noscians; Tutorial Bureau; Chr. Sales, Finance Comm. JEANETTE J. VANDER HAAR Com ' ! Office Committee; Friends of Music. RUBY E. VAUGHN College ROBERT VAUGHAN Commercial Stage Crew; Big Brother. LOIS ANN VEDDER Elective Art League; G.L. Comm.; Transfer Poly; Campanile. FLORENCE VAN WAGNER College C.S.F. Lamp; Treas. S.P.Q.R.; Tutorial Bu- reau; Transfer Clinton, Okla. OLGA VON WEDELSTAEDT College Gold W; Inter-class Debate Kiwanis Cup 34; Boosters; Chr. Office Comm.; Jr. Spealc. Bu- reau; Pres. World Club; G.L. Comm.; Les Bons Vivants; Gluk Auf; Cabinet. .N AUDREY ROBERTA WAGNER Elective Costume Club; Costume Crew ' 34, 35; Glee ' 33. ALMA WALLACE College Scholarship; Adv. Bd.; Pres. Hi-Tri; Boosters. JOE WALSH Elective Navigation Club; B Football ' 34; J. V. Track ' 35. WILLIAM IRION WATSON College Golf Champ. ' 33, ' 34; El Rojoro; World; Math.; Chess; Honor Roll. JEANETTE LEONE WEBB G.L. Comm.; Friends of Music Commercial C.L.W.W. JACK ELSWORTH WEBB College Glee ' 34, ' 35; Orch.; Cognoscians; Minstrel Show. MAE WEBSTER Elective Stage Costume Crew; Minstrel. ETTA ELISE WEDEMEYER College World Club; Gluk Auf; C.L.W.W.; Hi-Tri; Transfer Denver, Colo. BARBARA ALLAN WEEKS College C.S.F. Lamp; Uniform Bd.; G.A.A.; Tennis Club; Cabinet; World Club; El Rojoro; Cog- noscians; Les Bon Vivants. C 5 O z O (โ€”1 z w CO GO O z O Z w CO o O z PJ CO o Z CO RAYMOND G. McCONAHAY College Jr. Varsity Football ' 32; Varsity Football ' 34; Woodshop. MARJORIE STRONG WEIR Elective Cabinet; Sec. Jr. Glee, 2 Sem.; Boosters; 2 G.L. Comm.; Friends of Music; Costume Club. THOMAS LLOYD WELCH General B, Varsity Track; B, Varsity Football. HORACE WEST LEDA WHITE College Gold W; C.S.F. Lamp; Sec. Scholarship; Adv. Bd.; G.L. Comm.; Sec. Electron Circle; Boosters; G.A.A.; Council; Les Bon Vivants; Chr. Social Comm. Scholarship. RUSSELL J. WHITTLESEY College Cactus Club. BRUCE WILLIAMS College Electron Circle; Navigation Club. JEAN PORTER WILSON College C.S.F. Lamp; Trcas. G.L.; Adv. Bd.; Uni- form Bd.; Hi-Tri Cabinet; Les Bon Vivants; S.P.Q.R.; Cabinet; C. L. W. W.; Electron Circle. ALLEN PARKS WILLIAMS College C Football ' 33; C Basketball ' 33. LINDLEY SOTHERN WILSON College Math. Club; Navigation; Electron Circle; Scholarship; Tutorial Bureau; Tennis Clu!: ; Honor Roll. MARGUERITE LOUISE WILSON College Transfer Poly: Les Bon Vivants. ROBERT STANSILL WINGO College Tennis Team ' 34, ' 35; Tennis Club Tourn. Director; World Club; Jr. Prom Comm.; Basketball Squad. MARGARET JANET WINTER College Jeweled W; C.S.F. Lamp; Pres. Hi-Tri; Sec. G. A. A.; Sec.-Mgr. Tennis Club; Treas. Scholarship; Electron Circle; Council; Adv. Bd.; Boosters; Major W; Gluk Auf. HELEN MARGARET WITTER Elective Costume Crew ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Costume Club; Les Dilettantes; Cognoscians. VERA ELIZABETH WOLFE Commercial SAM S. WOOLINGTON College Scholarship; World; Growlers; S.P.Q.R.; Drac; Cognoscians; Tennis; Book Exchange; Jr. Prom Comm.; Latin Play. WILLIAM F. WOODWORTH College Loud Speaker; Press; Mgr. Baseball 33, 34, โ– 35; Mgrs. Club; Sec. Rifle Club; Cognos- cians; Lab. Asst.; Sec. H.R.; St. Bd. Store. lOE H. YANKIE College Ticket Salesman St. Office; Vice-pres. Rifle; Dissecting; Math; Les Bon Vivants; Naviga- tion; Press; Cognoscians; Electron Circle; Rifle Team. MARGUERITE YOUNG College Electron Circle; C.L.W.W.: G.L. Comm.; Jr. Prom Comm.; S.P.Q.R.; Les Bon Vivants. VICTOR S. ZAHN Elective C Football ' 35, ' 34: Biology Club. FRANCIS FISHER ZIMMERMAN College Tennis Club โ– 34 35; Rifle; Navy Junior; Glee Club; Chess; Music Study; Dissecting. lONE MONA YOUNG College G.L. Comm.; S.P.Q.R.; Costume Club; Fi- esta. NANCY JANE KELLY Drama G.L. Rep.; Jr. Glee; Vicepres. Thespians; Premier Assembly; Vaudeville; 9 One-act Plays. JUNE M. DORAN General Thespian; Costume; Vaudeville; Hi-Tri; Ten- nis; Lead in Under the Earth ; Thanksgiv- ing Assembly; Lead in It Never Rains ; Art League. FLORENCE SALTZMAN College Campanile Art Staff ' 34; Sketch Club; Art League; Stage Crew ' 34, 35; Stage Crew Club; Cognoscians; Inkslingers. โ€ข EDITH FLORA College While cheering for the footba ' l tei;n a: S-nti .Monica, Edith was stri:l;cn a:id she died four Xours later. RICHARD WHITLOCK MILES College Transfer: Franklin High, L. A.; Basketball; Spanish; Voice; Rowing, ' 34; Track ' 33; B Football ' 32; Athletic Contest ' 32; Fiesta. - Senior B Officers, Upper Picture: Masterson, Wells, Dean, Miss N. Hansen. Junior Officers, Lower Picture: Hooker, Stabler, Shallenberger, J. Harris, Hedges, Mrs. March, K. Harris. โ€ข Senior B and Junior Officers โ€” Versatile leaders in out- standing school activities . . . active members of athletic, dra- matic, advertising, and musical organizations . . . Junior spon- sors of P. T. A. dances and the spectacular Poly-Wilson Junior Prom . . . enthusiastic supporters of all school function. in m o a z o ' pa CO m Z o m Z Iโ€” I o DO G Z Iโ€” ( o CO m Z o Farnsworth-Bakken โ€” 12B โ€” First row: Commons, Bauer, Hess, Barker, Mos man, Halverson, Hartman, Bachtelle, Tipping, Cutler. Lewis, Rockwell, Wilson. Second row: Moody, Dickinson, Robinson, Fisher, Dunn, Horton, Eshelman, Smith, Smith, Camp- bell, Miss Farnsworth. Third row: Mr. Bakken, Chamness, Jones, Hewby, Simmel, Fatout, Rittmayer, Gray, Herring, Shields, Phillips, Bramley, Albright, Agee. Fourth row: Davis, Vesely, Ponting, Perry, Seckington, Jones, Graham, Garrett, Fast, Myers. โ€ข Chalker-Grimes-Shallenberger โ€” 12B โ€” First row: Hammond, Rolph, Gebb, Beauman, White, Wight, Wise, Proctor, Dean, Kepple, Wheeler, Williams, Wagner. Second row: Jewett, Merithew, Hedel, Cobler, Moore, Conkins, Warner, Warren, Newton. Richart, Trowbridge, Howe, Purcell, Barett, Ross, Romano. Third row: McAfee, Masterson, Amann, Gibson, Keyes, Colburn, Erickson, Rocheville, Hackett, Steele, McGinnis, Herrewig, Thomas, Whitmcr, Dawson, Scott, Ham. Fourth row; Buck, Onley, Cro.vson, Harrington, Connor, Hill, Small, James, Burford, Wells, Burt, Albright, Ferris, Clark, Threlkeld, Work, Liedholm, Mr. Shallenberger. 9 Dunkle-Blackwood โ€” 12B โ€” First row: Knight, Mason, Krythe, Rowan, Unruh, Cowman, Markell, Higley, Houloose, Beck. Second row: Smith, A., Gruben, Ellsworth, Townsend. Marsh, Smith, Wallace, Thorndike, Pearson, Lane, McKelvey, Hartman. Third row: Gilmore, Frerksen, Walker, Hoffman, Scanlan, Reed, Poper, Pearsen, Burris, Gowans, Wedemeyer, Marsh, Fasnacht, Coyour. Fourth low: Youngson, Schroeder, Miller, Arnold, Smith, Johnson, Ramsell, Hall, Linder, Carney, Montgomery, Mr. Dunkle. c o CO G Z l-H o C o โ€ข HuNT-TiBBVโ€” UA โ€” First row: Sele, Snead, Cowan, Robertson. Haag, Ayer, Bolander, DuQuette, Oliger, Meigs. Klocksiem, Shaffer, Way, Stevens. Second row: Mrs. Hunt, Glasier, Young, Templeman, James, Guptill, Wallace, Kent, Sadler, C, Sadler, Hand, McConahay, Reed, Duncan, Dee.Thienpont, Gray. Third row: Burgess, McArthur, Cooper, Hamren, Parker, Miner, Clark, Levers, Kiblcr, Beeks, Hight, Forster, Phillips, Murray, Lovell, Dedrick, Mr. Tibby. Fourth row: Jameson, Swcetland, Boots, Walsh, Davis, Becker, Evans, Bradbury, Silvershield, Pryne, Hermann, Davisen, Finnerty, Barton, Weeks, Thurston, Hooker. โ€ข Hiefield-Smith โ€” II A โ€” First row: Barnes, Gibson, Horton, Berggren, Milbutn, Buck, Douglas, Martin, Strauser, Leech, Hall, Tillson, Kircher. Second row: W hite, Howe, Brewster, Dodge, Woll, W,irren, Eggens, Fatzer, Echternacht, Hales, Joplin, Grubb, Mrs. Hiefield, Knight, Kawanishi. Third row: Holland, Barnes, Ramsey, Shallenbetger, London, Thompson, Lynch, Marks, Jensen, Kato, Lingwood, Recksick, Craig, Norton, Barden. Fourth row: Mr. O. Smith, Langsford, Kittleman, Wachter, Nanscawcn, Hughes, Ward, Yates, Hetzel, Christensen, Brydges, Orr, Turner, Daniels, Brinn, Thome, Vorhies. โ€ข Harrison-Townsend โ€” 11 Aโ€” First row: Lawrence, Pitts, Peterson, Verne, Schofner, Fischer, Weeks, McKee, Hilton, Atwater, Thomas, Pruett, Wilder. Second row: Dalot, Blessing, Armstrong, Blair, Cooper, Jones, Ballard, Hoeven, Lamed, LaMar, Barton, Gallagher. Third row: Miss Harrison, Love, Gould, Corwin, Ireland, O ' Hagan, White, Meyer, Rankin, Smith, vonWedelstaedt, C, McDowell, Gifford, Service. Fourth row: Gibbons, Leoni, Dempwolf, West, Ferguson, Montgomery, Rookus, Elliott, Hendricks, Ireland, Hoy, Hudson. โ€ข Hennes-Morrisonโ€” llAโ€” First row: Malquist, Freeman, Leonard, Petri, Whittccar, Caudle, Luther, Elliot, Moreno, McArtor, Hawthorne, Wise, Wanless. Second row: Mr. Morrison, Pilchard, Shepard, Cevalier, Parkhurst, Lamb, McLeod, Black, Pieper, Clapp, Addaway, Hopkins, Toland, Scoonover, Braithwaite, King, Tidwell. Third row: Wetzel, Dodge, Hock, Mousel, John, Watkins, Bays, McCombs, Shoddoy, Naeve, Crittenden, Friel, Fresks, Holdcn, Kemner. Fourth row: Hedges, Abshire, Redpath, Reynolds, Vance, McClellan. Goggins, Hoffman, Stitzinger, Nieblas, Marshall, McGarry, Guihrie, Mr. Hennes, Stabler. โ€ข Larsen-Wilco: โ€” IIA โ€” First row: Snyder, Reiff, Petzold, Gaskill, Downey, DeLap, Munson, Bonds, Mallonec, LeBlanc, Mayson, Cain, Covey. Second row: Stanley, Crager, Thomas, Baskin, Martison, Lothrop, Andrew, Ernst, Miller, Winquest, Thompson, Har- rison. Third row: Miss Larsen, Miss Wilcox, Hoist, Culbertson, Chapman, Ryan, Bays, LeRoy, Beck, Schrandt, Dyer, Graham. Fourth row: Dorton, Dunbar, Cameron, Hayter, Clay, Wilson, Wattelet, Barber. โ€ข French-Han5EN-Brechtโ€”1 IBโ€” First row: Fliesbach, Benno, Hadley, Adams, Kelly, Rumsey, Beekly, Bolander, Rankin, Hrlliard, Moran, Cowman, English, Cox, Scrlin. Second row: Utter, Campbell, Winston, Padelford, Wallace, Dye, McMillan, Wonder, Lane, Rodman, Miller, Mclntyre, Hendricks, Knowles, Cutler, Darnell. Third row: Randall. Miss Hansen, Vitek, Dodd, Shelley, Victor, Henshaw, Wright, Northrop, Smith, Lorge, Gill, Stimson, Morris, Mineau, Watr, LeRoy. Mr. French. Fourth row: Jackson, Kad- ing, Lloyd, Erickson, MacLagan, McCaffrey, Potts, Holden, Abbott, Sinclair, Plymell, Martinson, Knoll, Kendall, Beck, Weissblott. Fifth row: LeBlanc, Geissner, Haughey, McKeever, Motlow, Walsh, Ryan, Home, Harris, Lipe, Zoff. โ€ข Hart-Woodwardโ€”1 IBโ€” First row: Wood, Saltsman, Egan, Cowles, Douglass, Williams, Crandall, Singleton, Rose, Rinclla, Col- lier, Troy, Englc. Second row: Greenwood, Tavolara, Wilder, Somers, Doyle, Whiteneck, Harrington, Hand, Kurth, Hodges, Ste- phens, Fornachon, Frank, Bishop. Third row: Mr. Woodward, Sellers, Green, Souders, Tutkus, Daniel, Crail, Guidet, Putnam, Underbill, Fishman, Wilson, Mr. Hart, Cole. Fourth row: Hettle, Albertson, Graef, Turner, Stribley, E. Cundiff, Boyd, Harr, Ferris, Jeffers, Davis. โ€ข Hiles-Eggenbergerโ€” IIB First row: Miller, Judson, Strausberg, Zion, Kubovcc, Ball, Lovaas, Berger, Ikerd, Moore, McAfee, Harris, McKern. Second row: Baverstock, Bigelow, Jordan, Martyr, Herzberg, Miller, Melendy, Todd, Nakamura, Mitchell, O ' Hag- an, Thompson, Uisick, Pearson. Third row: Nelson, Wyckoff, Bawden, Berbower, Johnson, Yancy, Robinson, Masters, Yoder, Mac- Pherson, Sprague, Aguilar, Miller. Fourth row: Ryan, Ball, Krafft, Dodd, Shelley, Moorhouse, Buntrock, MacLeod, Schafield, Ken- nedy, Wyatt, North, Miss Eggenberger. CO c O O :n a. O CO pj O o o CO w Di O o i: a. O CO w O o X o CO Goularte, Singleton, McKenna, Stribley, Lord, Harris, Seynei, Standlce, Brown, Mr. Hart, Johntson. โ€ข Sophomore Leaders . . . Inpiration of Wilson ' s biggest most enthusiastic class . . . dynamos of power . . . willingness . . . loyalty quivering for outlets of expression ... to prove their faith in their new alma mater . . . everv chan- nel of activity finds them pushing upper classmen to reach their place in the skies . . . Would that their divine spark might never cool . . . Their Stand- lees, Browns, Craigs, Young are a legion. Robinson-Gartner โ€” lOA โ€” First row: Galbraith, Roa, Shelter, Hannah, Stober, Boohcr, Millar, Weir, Barlow, Hollar, Blossei, Carpenter, Gaulartc, Williams. Second row: Leiby, Lach, Caldwell, Caruso, Sellers, McGinnis, Olson, Beach, Riordan, Zeise, Wingo, Kawanami, MaUimoto, Manley, DeLong, Lane. Third row: Goodfriend, Swanson, Conley, Jennison, Harvey, Potter, Thompson, Pat- terson, DeBord, Peterson, Mozingo, Trout, Steward, Mardock, Borden. Fourth row: Blinn, Lord, Standlec, Seares, Johnson, Spitzer, Bonzer, Laughead, Burch, McKee, Kilby, Gandy, Love, Mr. Gartner. Krythe-Stuempel โ€” lOA โ€” First row: Cooper, Fenwick, Horton, Lcmmon, Crawford, McCracken, Girard, England, Millican, Hat- tenbach, Leake, Irving, Martin, White. Second row: White, Hedrick, Cox, Wood, Crum, Gann, Walbridgc, Gastelum, Parks, Mc- Guire, Chapman, Koto, Leonard, Baroldi. Third row: Jordan, Burke, Chowning, Rider, Rochford, Thompson, Sayers, Benish, Hen- don, Olmsted, Blanchard, Timmerhoff, Wise, Walker, McKenna. Fourth row: Scruggs, Mitchell, D ' Angelo, Spencer, Johnston, Mc- Combs, Spencer, Graham, Sharp, Yorba, England, Swaik, Stewart. Blanton-Edwards โ€” lOA โ€” First row: King, Lang, Wade, Melvin, Wilton, Shepherd, Bobbe, Garver, Selfridge, Smith, Halbert, Brown, Reynolds. Second row: Wilcox. Dufresnc, Grommon, Brock, Tolbert, Hargis, Merithew, Mitchen, Ham, Rominger, Craw- ford, McGinnis. Third row: White, Litchman, Payne, Summerilj, Newton, Slingsby. Ellis, Kitts, Carr, Beckman, Hamilton, Russell. Fourth row: Mr. Edwards, Thome, Gardner, King, Normington, Newlon, Graves, Lemmon, Wonder, Becks, Dodge, Gardinier, Mr. Blanton. C 5 O โ€ข ScoTT-LowRYโ€”lOAโ€” First row: Grain, Hood, Thomas, Mokuda, Chuck, Worthington, Spencer, Maitland, Poffenbarger, Ogan, Balliett Ande rson, Pauba, Duncon. Second row: Mr. Lowry, Wcyant, Iftigcr, Finlayson, Baker, Robinson, Williams, Smith, Munger, Wilcox ' Moreno, Eginton, Cobb, Thorne, Smolowitz. Third row: Ellis, Small, Hill, Propst, Cross, Brown, Coates, Pope, Layne, Stab- ler, Robinson, Smith, Hershman. Fourth row: Boggs, Harkins, Lach, Root, Whitman, Jones, Still, Morris, Stone, Johansen, Brown, Gordon, Mr. Scott, Porter. โ€ข Franck-Makepeaceโ€”IOAโ€” First row: Oilman, Fischer, Moore, Ernst, Ward, Doyle, Hammer, Mendell, McQuillen, Schroeder, Easterbrooks, Brewster, Uehling. Second row: Marti, White, Leach, Smith, L. Clark, Bundy, Crooks, Norris, Ralston, Lang, Serbme, Houghton Kiesau Isaacson Third row: Mr. Makepeace, Chapin, Tracy, Stuart, Stanton, Gothberg, Van Horn, Emery, Sears, Thorp, Guggenheim, Harshbarger, Wallentine, Franck, Brown, Gushman. Fourth row: Smith, Robins, Moore, Johnston, Bachtelle, Cravaih, Routh, West, Kline, Beranger, Dailey, Newbury, Livezey. โ€ข J Garlick-Pilrceโ€”IOAโ€” First row: Schoenwetter, Doty, Cushman, Humphreys, Kepple, Brand, Whittlesey, Carlson, )yalsh, Todd, Scratchley, Gates, Young. Second row: Robmson, Morgan, Jackson, Plymell, Landon, Crivello, Osborn, Patterson, Huffme, Greer Dale Hankins, Sheppard. Barton. Third row: Mrs. Garlick, Myers, Seynei, Grommon. Smith, Randall, Wilson, Ashcratt, Gifford, Conwa , Marshall, Gilbert, Freeman, Gray, Sesma. Fourth row: Bainbridge, Young, Ross, Berirand, Allison, Copp, Twes- dell, Chamberlain, Beaver, Roberts, Johnson, Mr. Pierce, โ€ข Hansen-Leeโ€”1 OBโ€” First row: Hayden, Turtle, Hester, New, Carl, Bryant, Palmer, McMurphy, Early, MacArthur, Lambert, Williams, Connell. Second row: Clark, Dreckman, Bacyens, Bladen, Lewis, Johnson, Vance, Park, Warner, Clarke, Townscnd, Wilbcr, Smith, Hyde, Johnson. Third row: Roane, Hackett, Holmes. Hight, Bird, Reid, McGuire, Roddy, Coverdale, Galleher, Roper, Kruse, Richardson, Gentry, Jasper, Barden, Ausburn, Bennett. Fourth row: Lee, Sowden, Dyer, Haines, Florida, McDonald, Pierce, Peek, Moreland, McKee, Boswell, Sisson, Runston, Miss I. Hansen. BuRDiCK-JoHNSON โ€” lOB โ€” First row: Blake, Hume, Adams, Watkins, Nickson, Young, Haines, Hooper, Paul, Smith, Sturgill, Ringler, Barker. Second row: Callis, Aldrich, Thompson, Hutchinson, Hampton, Kaiser, Bayan, Pitman, Borrcgo, Hampton, Cros- by, Ramage, Bean. Third row: Maze, Birkholm, Gescheider, Cummins, Coyour, Foster, Cole, Marshall, Vosburg, Kelso, McAdams, Jensen, Connor. Fourth row: Miss Johnson, Pardee, Cassens, Jenkins, Ogilby, Turner, Self, Fergurson, Madison, Savaya, Wertz, Durant, Hansen, Miss Burdick. : 9 Nutter-Smith โ€” lOB โ€” First row; Mr. Nutter, Levers, Karii, Cole, Gaines, Foster, Brown, Beck, Harris, Swartz, McClellan, Ko- vacevick, Simmel, Redpath. Second row: Padelford, Hudson, Carroll, Olson, Armor, Cruchley, Poper, Hanbery, Harris, Crawford, Black, Reed, Fern, Moore, Rieger, Schock, Jay. Third row: Tead, Long, BlaOkman, Baud, Hunter, Weisser, Hall, Bergcr, Kerth, Uempsey, Christensen, Sontag, Pringle, Wilfers, Brooker, Wilson. Fourth row: Matthew, Ferver, Carpenter, Allen, Haake, Gava- gan, Lockhart, Miles, Craig, Parent, Trane, Jenkins, Dr. Smith. .7 โ€ข. -v ' -;S ' i ' . ,o iX โ– : โ€ข Mammy! Did youse ebber see so many shmin ' black niggahs . . . and mulatto girls . . . and cake walkers . . . and dancers and torch singers and Topseys and Evas. . . Oh, boy, here comes de Halle- lujah chorus genuplemen wid Cereva and de hebben gang . . . Lawsy, lawsy! Dere ' s de Louisiana hay riders. Whoopee! Whoo- pee ,. . Mr. Interlocutor. If you was to gib me? If you was to gib me? If you was to? โ€ข Minstrel Show โ€” A hilarious minstrel show with a cast of one hundred and fifty entertainers, disguised as shining blackfaces, was successfully presented at the Poly Auditor- ium, June 7 and 8. This musical extravaganza, a revival of the old time shows, was composed of a cast of singers, danc- ers, specialty numbers, end-men, and the interlocutor. A great deal of the success was due to the support of the or- chestra, stage crew, make-up and costume crews, and the group of faculty directors who coached the show to perfec- tion. These were Chariot Brecht, Harold Driver, George C. Moore, Margaretta Reagan, Dorothy Chalker, Ruth Bur- dick, Marjorie Dougherty, T. J. Kelley, and D. P. Hennes. The combined glee clubs were transformed into a chorus of ninety-five dusky singers. Groups of tap dances, buck and wings, cake walks, soft shoe, and clogs flashed across the stage between laughs at the downfall of Mr. Interlocutor, played by George Probst. Lawsy! Watch them cake walkers strut! . . . Fresh from coal smoke of Haar- lem . . . Cumon, Boy! Dat ' s it . . . dat ' s it . . . now shuffle, atta boy . . . Des ladees of cullah, and der gemplemen crash all de records for rhythm . . and syncopation in all de ole southe ' n towns and ballrooms. -rm - . A- J.?5% mS it m k L9 โ€ข Ol ' Man River ... He just keeps roUin ' . . . rollin ' along . . . Hallelujah . . . Dat ' s why Darkies Were Born . . . Louis- ville Lady . . . catchy tunes and harmonies from the great shining black faced Minstrel staged by scintillating, synco- pating crooners and dancers from ' way down south in Dixie, ' fore dey all moved north to Haarlem and Chicago. Yes suh, dese 250 entertainers, singers, dancers, magicians, specialty actors, orchestra, stage crew, costume and makeup crews, and a ' hole battery of directo ' s and loads of dem rhythm yaller gals and mullattoes who learned der shuffles ' long de African great white way . . . Mammy! dere ' s Ga- briel . . . and Eva . . . and Topsy and de cake walkers all draped out in der Chalker finery and der Reagan steps . . . Did vouse ebber see so many swanky gowns? De Contin- entals and de Louisiana Hay Riders . . . and de Five Team specialties dancers in der own creation . . . Hallelujah, Dat ' s iWhy Darkies Were Born. โ€ข Louisiana Hay Riders . . . Can dcse mulatto girls hoedown and shake a foot . . . and Hotcha . . . hotcha can dat gul dance . . . cumon gal, dese yallo niggahs will all clap for yo ' . . . jump on de hay wagon, Gabrill am a cumin wid his anguls and his horn. IKJte Be H Bovs ' Glee โ€” Front row: Jewett, Johnson, Walker, Brown, Doyle, Herrewig, Mincau. Second row: Miss Brecht, Pearson, Zimmerman, Jackson, Cornish, Miller, Frank, Driver. Third row: Smith, Boggs, Halbert, Webb, McDannel, York, Ferris. โ€ข Bright, young voices . . . high sopranos, deep, resonant basses . . . clear, vibrant tenors ... in ensembles, choruses, duets, trios, solos . . . melodic harmonies in simple tent set- ting, a deep bass voice carries the verse . . . altos, sopranos, tenors repeat the refrain . . . five girls grouped about a piano, practicing a Christmas anthem. The echo lingers as though some unknown presence sought to keep it always. Christmas concert ... the rich sunshine of Southern California for its setting . . . jolly, tinkling noels that tell of snow, sleigh bells, yule logs and Christmas trees . . . sacred, worshipped carols that tell of a star, and of the Wisemen and Shepherds who followed the star . . . outside programs . . . entertainment at service clubs . . , city-wide praise awarded them ... a year of superior achievements ... A year to be long remembered. ,1 9 Attired in flowing vestments of black and white, the combined chorus of the Girls ' and Boys ' Glee Clubs rendered an impressive Chrittmas program in Recre- ation Park. Beneath the blue skies the ensemble lifted their voices in the Halle- lejah Chorus and many old and beloved carols. m , nt - ' Ai ; y A (5X i O Senjor GiKLs ' Gleeโ€” First row; Beekly, Watkins, Shaffer, Braithยซ Thompson. King. Bailey, Nickson, Hattenbach. Armor. Second row: Young, Meyer, Tolbert, Hilliard, Hollar, Duncan, Miss Brecht, Whittecar, Olmsted, Coverdale. McCoy, Hartman, Hargis. Third row: Brock, Robinson, Lytle, Sparks, Campbell, Cobb, Senst, Sele, Galleher, M. Smith, Tucker, Mozingo. Fourth rowr Singleton, Berggren, Cutler, Coffey, Smolowitz, Fitzhugh, Girard, Duncao Cram, Horton, Bolander, Mr. Driver, โ€ข Because of the complicated rehearsal schedule, necessary for an opera, this traditional biennial event was supple- mented by a minstrel show, and the combined glee clubs sur- passed their usual ability as the Blackbirds of Merriment. This was their outstanding achievement, and it proved to be a rollicking, rhythmical success. At both the mid-year and June Vesper services the glee clubs sang sacred music which added to the beauty and solemnity of the occasion. In the building music cabinets were available and a place for the splendid gathering of autographed pictures of famous mu- sicians. The director, Miss Chariot Brecht, with the able as- sistance of Harold Driver, accompanist, has coached another musical group to success this year. V ' B?7;:5ย . โ€ข Vespers, graduation, formal vestments ... jet black, adding a dignity, a set- ting apart, a unity, an old world flavor reminiscent of old universities . . . Oxford, Cambridge, pristine whiteness of flowing gowns, sweet young voices, their own sincerity is their constant prayer during commencement services. 9 Junior Girls ' Glee โ€” Front row: Gilman, Leach, Cushman, Gifford. Morris. Dorr, Girard, Wilson, Smith, Barlow. Second row: Ward, Bradford, Black, East- erbrooks, Gibbs, Palmer, Miss Brecht, Bolton, Siebert, Lane, Rockwell, Sedgwick. Third row: Mr. Driver, Olson, Pearlston, Moore, Llpright, Swartz, Sontag, Wil- der, Vosburg, Fawson, Jackson. โ€ข Hold that tone! Softly . . . now more volume ... all to- gether now! An ardent and lyrical group of young singers, under the direction of Miss Chariot Brecht, gave many both poplar and artistic performances during the year. Back in the building once more the girls have responded ad- mirably to Miss Brecht ' s wish for a superior Junior Glee and have worked long and painstakingly to perfect recitals and concerts for both the school and outside affairs. The Junior Girls ' Glee has entertained at many affairs both at school and away the past two semesters. They have sung for assemblies, P. T. A. affairs, Women ' s City Club. Besides singing a great deal the Junior Girls ' Glee has also had many social activities throughout the school year. Per- haps the most important of these was a Breakfast, May 15. The Latin Club beneath are having a rollicking good party at a member ' s home; under Miss Johnson all kinds of fetes are worked out. Under the direc- tion of Dr. Klopp, a Journalism Symposium for Junior College and High Schools was led by representatives of the West Ways and the Press-Telegram. โ€ข Ushers โ€” Norton, Home, LeLacheur, Arnold, Stabler, Martison, Hooker, Damskey, Ireland, Brown, Birkholm, Shallenberger, Hedges, Johnston, Stand- lee, Dr. Smith. โ€ข Ushers . . . Smart formation . . . polished performance . . . finished service . . . thoughfulness . . . courtesy . . . Wil- son ' s ushers deluxe. In representing Wilson as host to out- side schools and general public at varied performances, these well groomed masters of order have retained their popularity with the entire school. The scene is set at an impressive Vesper Service just before graduation. The ushers, attired in black and white, greet the parents and friends of Wilson seniors with fini shed and courteous poise. They distribute programs, maintain quiet throughout the evening, and help persons find comfortable seats. During the more informal assemblies held in the band- shell at Recreation Park, they have used discretion, showing their ability to meet life in the open at Wilson. As a school of the first order, Wilson has come into the limelight. โ€ข Boosters, pom poms . . . marching stunts between halves . . . wild delcrium . . . It is the Poly game . . . with its million thrills ... the magic moment when the coin is flipped that determines which good Wilson will defend . . . J. B. and Neely co-captains watch fate deal it out. 9 Band โ€” Front row: Hamilton, Gordon, Douney, Lawrence, Herrc- wig, Templeman, Crawford, iVlilburn. Second row: Wegter, Poper, Mc- Dannel, Vance, Abshire, Scruggs, Ranlcin, Zeise. Third row: Gandy, Kittleman, Feller, Cole, Mr. Moore. โ€ข As THE Crimson and Gold file across the field playing a stirring military march, the tense crowd in the grandstands comes to its feet with a tumultous cheer. The Wilson Band is on the field again, urging the athletes on to victory. With a true school spirit they offer their cooperation and with unequalled en- thusiasm they back all school functions, and in civic projects they willingly represent Wilson. Harmon- ious melodies, peppy marches, patriotic songs fill the air when the Wilson Band gets together. Besides furnishing enjoyable entertainment at athlet- ic contests and student body functions, the band members are receiving training toward professional proficiency. They make a serious study of good band music and composers. The members of the band each year look forward to the Bay League Band Concert, in which over two hundred students perform. Un- stinted praise is due Roy Hamilton, band president, for his masterful leadership of the band during foot- ball games and Homecoming Day when Mr. Moore was ill. Officers are: Evelyn Downy, Rheva Temple- man, vice-president; Virgil Hempel, Roy Hamilton, secretary - treasurer; Owen Spring, Don Gordon, managers; Burdette Gandy, librarian; Rheva Tem- pleman, publicitv manager. George C. Moore is the sponsor. โ€ข Orchestra โ€” First row: Templeman, McArtor, Ogan, Plymell, Win scon. Cox, E., Shofner. Hughes, Baughey, Duncan, Hock, Horton Second row: Cobler. Hopkins. Booher, Armstrong, Moore, Hales, Mc Guire, Lynch, Esheiman, Crawford, Smith, L., Co.x, M. Stober, Til den. Third row: Kirkpatrick, Hodges, Young, Wonder, Barber, Bas kin, Webb. Laughead, North, Wood, Milburn. Fourth row: Downey, Poper, Robinson, Kelsy, Dynes, ReifF Burgin, Cob, Scruggs, Feller Fifth row: Davison, Crawford, Brown. Sixth row: Smith, Gordon Hamilton, Bozarth, Zeise, Kittleman, McDannel, Mr. Moore, Young โ€ข Adding gaiety and solemnity, as the occasion de- mands, the Woodrow Wilson Advanced Orchestra is always ready to serve the school. Perhaps its great- est service is the impressive atmosphere it creates at Vespers and Graduation. Members of the orchestra look forward each year to the concert they present at the Women ' s Club. A beautiful trophy was pre- sented by this group to the band and orchestra sev- eral years ago. Annually the orchestra honors the Student Body with a concert dedicated to them. At the biennial operetta and Spanish Fiesta the orches- tra adds much to the enjoyable entertainment as they tirelessly supply musical scores for hours at a time. The orchestra this year has made a departure from the usual classical scores. Popular music has been in- troduced into their course and this has been received with great favor by members of the orchestra and student body. Smart and professional in their modern white uni- forms with red and gold trimmings, they add dig- nity and poise to many Wilson programs and re- ceived ovations from the musical minded of the city. Wilson ' s orchestra, over sixty pieces strong, extends joy at the return to class of George C. Moore, vet- eran orchestra leader who was forced out of school for two months due to serious illness. ยฎ Put more feeling into those last two lines! Come on now, there ' s your cue. Where ' s the understudy? Under the capable direction of Miss Dougherty, budding young dram- atists have packed a season with innumerable dramatic thrills . . . They organized the Navy Day coronation of the queen for the Chamber of Commerce, put on a program every week for the Old Age Pension, and June first, they presented a tableau for the dedication of the new postoffice. Much of the success of school activities is due to the cooper- ation and enthusiasm displayed by the dramatists. They were in charge of Vesper services for graduation and gave many plays at school assemblies and Girls ' League affairs. Perhaps the most outstanding of their plays was The Prin- cess Marries the Pauper. This successful play was given June 3, in the patio for the P. T. A. Banners flying, these mem- bers of the dramatic classes have given a series of fine per- formances all over the city. Miss Dougherty ' s troupers in Submerged, a realistic one-act drama, gave the performance many times before enthusiastic audiences. The young Shakespearians took difficult roles, of frenzied men who were doomd in a submarine, in a highly creditable manner. โ€ข Thespians โ€” Front row: Hairington, Gate, King, Phreancr, Simmons, Dodge, Probst. Brown, Hagan. Second row: Miss Rumsey, West, Frank, Doran, Kelly, Masterson, Molten, Hadson, Moran, Thomas. Thespians โ€” Pres., Phreaner, Brown; V. P., Kelly, Probst; Sec.Trcas., Cate, Hag- an; Sergcantatarms, Harrington, Sponsor, Miss Rumsey. โ€ข It Never Rains โ€” seriously, It Never Rains. And while the Thespians were carrying out elaborate rehersal schedules, rain fell in bucketfuls over the campus. Paint dripped from their ads, and saturated posters hung dismally on rain- soaked tents. The major production of the Thespians . . . the success of the year . . . was the three-act comedy, It Never Rains. The leads for this play included Bobbie Cate, Bill Phreaner, George Probst, Genevieve Hagan, Marjorie Sim- mons, and Wayne Brown. Minor parts were played by Nan- cy Kelly, June Doran, Qiarles Harrington, Gwen King, Ed- ward Frank, Orrine Dodge, and Horace West. Tlie club had several parties at which prominent guests were entertained, including Albert Van Antwerp, author of Black Damp, and Mrs. Robert Cate, formerly of the stage. โ€ข The Thespians and Miss Rumsey had the audacity to present their annual three-act play, It Never Rains, during one of the year ' s most torrential rains. Ev- ery rehearsal was somewhat dampened, and every ad succumbed to the downpour. aJLi JM ' ' j 4 Stage Crew โ€” Front row: Bryant, Sherman, Sweet, Whittecar, Watlcins, Saltz- man, Johnson, Houloose, Dalot, Rookus, Graves. Second row: Bostic, Pardee, Dougherty, Miss Burdick, McGinnis, Love, Durant. โ€ข Stage Crew . . . The lights go out . . . the curtains part ... the play begins . . . and the audience admires the beau- tiful settings . . . comments on the natural atmosphere which is presented to their casually appreciative eyes. They never realize the back stage artistry which creates the scene. The stage crew produces this vital magic for any and all perform- ances staged by Wilson. The members try out various individual schemes using every sort of weird lighting; all ramifications of stage sets are worked out to achieve the de- sired effects. Under the direction of Miss Ruth Burdick ev- ery angle of prop manipulation is studied; crude props be- come medieval castles; coarse muslin lustrous satin; the nor- mal amount of equipment is necessarily curtailed in the in- formal set-up of our school since the quake. The crew has been denied the use of their modern stage equipment. In spectacular pageantry, memories of the World War were flashed before the student body in a series of tableaux and ensembles in an Armistice Day assembly. Flags of all nations were massed in a great processional of white-robed figures. โ€ข Modernistic . . . Naturalistic . . . Medieval . . . design- ing of the finest type . . . goes into each project carried out by the stage crew which so amply supplies the stage settings for all student body plays and assemblies. The stage is set. Designed to train our students systematically in the fascin- ating craft of staging shows in a professional manner, and to gain actual experience, sets for the Armistice Day pro- gram, the three-act Thespian production, It Never Rains, and the Guild play, Through Many Waters were de- signed and built by members of the stage crew. The lighting for picture day was handled by this group also, as well as its annual work of commencement and Vesper service decora- tions. At Christmas a medieval chapel was constructed in Miss Burdick ' s tent, the headquarters of the crew. Accurate and historic to the most minute detail, this miniature sanc- tuary was the most spectacular of the creative display given by the art department this semester. w A medieval chapel, quaint, picturesque, and historical was worked out by the stage crew for the Christmas season. Visitors could imagine themselves trans- planted to far away Italy where one appears in almost every village block. โ€ข Costume Crew โ€” Front row: Eselun, Johnson, Birkholm, Dednck, Markell. Second row: Smith, Crandall, Reed, Craig, Loughran, Huston-. Third row: Shields, Witter, Shonts, Wagner, Gibson, Kerwood, Murry, Simson, Vedder, Liston. โ€ข Stage Costume . . . Hebben! . . . Hebben! . . . Fresh from New York with all the rhythm, melody, and syncopa- tion tuned to shiny black vaudevillians and yaller girls . . . Miss Chalker ' s tent has been completely covered with splot- ches of artistic color combinations. Her budding designers have dra wn faces of leads in the Minstrel and all bizarre col- orings of old Africa. On first thought, one would think he had been transferred to some great designer ' s hall. There is more designing of costumes than there is actual construction. Costumes carry the ryhthm and colorings of the specific song numbers. The glee clubs and entire dancing troups of the show have displayed the splendid array of line and color, designed by the Costume Crew. In this great feeling for cre- ative pattern, Wilson has been able to put forth many unique performances. โ€ข Teddy Roosevelt, Dante, Admiral Byrd . . . Lindy and Ann .. . Joan of Arc, Amelia Earhart, Socrates . . . Abraham Lincoln . . . Madame Curie . . . these, and a host of kings and queens in their ermines, rubies, and emeralds made one grand parade of great characters in history who appeared on the turning pages of a mas- sive history book during an assembly staged for the Girls ' League Drive. ' ยซ;โ–  ' โ€ข โ€ข Hail Queen Elizabeth! In all her bejeweled, impos- ing finery she appears before us in Grejt Characters of His- tory. The ghosts of War return. The grim and stark reality of war is strikingly portrayed and depicted at the Armistice Day pageant. What goes on behind the scenes? Where do the elaborate head-dresses, the simple monk ' s garb, the jewels, the angels ' dresses, and the queen ' s robes come from? They are the creations of Miss Chalker ' s Stage Costume and Makeup classes. The untiring efforts and artistic inspiration of her capable crew are responsible for the miraculous trans- formations of common-place materials into effective and real- istic costumes. How little the audience knows of the hours of hard work which are necessary to produce the splendid effects of the many plays, tableaux, and pageants which are given at Wil- son each year. Behind the play N-ever Rams, the Minstrel, and a score of skits, was the personnel of the Costume Crew. โ€ข Christmas in lowly Tent City was strikingly portrayed by Elda Berry in Miss Chalker ' s art class when she painted a life-sized picture of the Madonna with considerable skill. The repose and dignity which great masters have givcii to this subject were in evidence in Elda ' s work. The atmosphere was further bu.lt up by great drapes, candles on pedestals, and Christmas anthems on victor records. 9 Speakers โ€” Front row: Footc, Simmons, Scheide ker, Stem, Meigs, Brown, vonWedelstaedt, Probst. โ€ข Junior Speakers Bureau . . . Can you supply us with a luncheon speaker for the club tomorrow noon? . . . Can you furnish us with a panel of speakers on some current pro- blem for our next meeting? These are the questions that come to the Junior Speakers ' Bureau almost daily from large civic groups throughout the city . . . and every week bud- ding orators are telling their Dads in clubs assembled what Youth thinks about things . . . and Youth does think ... no problem is too big for them to go to the bottom of it and come out with a clear, well-thought-out talk . . . and do business men take notice? Why Junior Speakers are in con- stant demand; every one wants them. They are one of Wil- son ' s biggest tieups between school and business; students get to do things in life situations and their information, vis- ion, judgment, and sound common sense have done much to steady thinking about schools. โ€ข The second annual Poly-Wilson Speakers ' Dinner was one of the Jr. Speakers ' most outstanding activities this year. A brilliant program was given by Poly mem- bers, presenting a burlesque on candidate speeches. At another meeting. Poly and Wilson, represented by four speakers, discussed many phases of war and peace. โ– : 5 5 n %4r . ' akJ iJli โ€ข Junior Speakers ' Bureau โ€” Front row: Brown, Simmons, Scheidecker, Foote, Probst, Murray, Spencer, Duckham. Second row: Stein, vonWedeUtaedt, Hunter, Miller, Masterson, Chesnut, LeBlanc, Edgecomb, Meigs, Mr. Pierce, Evans. โ€ข They have met the challenge of the elaborate objectives set up for themselves, namely: to provide a community wide speech service ... to broaden students ' training and ex- perience in social problems . . . and create and interest in stu- dents in the community. Major contests sponsored by the Bureau include the Kiwanis interclass debate, Poly- Wilson Discussion, Extemporaneous Speaking Contest for the Fri- day Morning Discussion Club and complete programs for city clubs. Robert Foote and George Probst, seniors, won the traditional Kiwanis debate trophy from the Juniors, Betty Meigs and Mortimer Stein. In a sweeping appeal for peace the annual Poly- Wilson Discussion with four representatives from Wilson used, Youth Looks at War and Peace as a theme. Probst and Foote won the extemp. contest of the Fri- day Morning Discussion Club. โ€ข The perpetual Kiwanis Trophy was contested before the Kiwanis Club on the question of Should the Private Manufacture of Arms and Munitions be For- bidden by International Agreement? The negative side was upheld by the wm- ning seniors, George Probst and Robert Foote. I Ad Staff โ€” Case, Chapman, Craig, Dodd, Tod, LeLacheur. โ€ข Campanile . . . Wilson ' s publishers and makers of rare books . . . Have you had your picture taken? . . . Have you bought your Campanile? . . . Pad that story and make it two lines longer . . . Get some atmosphere ready for your club picture. . . . Is your group ready for picture day? . . . Call the photographer and the Famous to see if they can take that beach ad picture at 8:30 in the morning. . . - It ' s going to reek with life and action! . . . This book is going to be informal . . . Don ' t look at the camera! . . . Are you set with flashlights for the Girls ' League Dance? Teachers get shot with atmosphere in their own tents . . . Big sales drive staged . . . Rain tries to drown out sales drive; almost does Wednesday; nearly does Thursday; Fri- day school is dismissed as promenade track goes into a surg- ing river. McGinn swims out as high point salesman . . . Staff struggles with rising prices . . . โ€ข Campanile โ€” Front row: Case, French, Hagan, Hancock, Spath, Heiskell, Mar- tin, Forbes, Stotter, Hunter. Second row: Yankie, Wotherspoon, Duke, Metz, Perry, Ferris, McGinn, Miss Harrison, Mason, Phreaner, Rumrill, Edgecomb. Campanile Art โ€” Front row: Wright, Killingsworth, Carr, Engle, Vedder, Rockwell. Second row: Fliesbach, Barrett, Huddleston, Smith, Frank, Purcell, Fatout, Markwell, Eselun, Craig, Case. โ€ข Work on a layout for the senior panels . . . Mary get that pica paper and work on the club section layout . . . Jack, do you have those pictures trimmed? Get those football singles and work on some kind of an arrangement . . . That lower picture is 17 picas by 46 picas โ€” Cut that one so it will bleed bottom and left . . . Those club names are set 23 picas long; the paragraphs will start with those little dots . . . . . . Verticles are good โ€” so they are carried forward with streamline precision. Ferris put on rubber boots to get rain pictures for atmosphere pictures . . . Case carted campus he- roes all over town to model for business men ' s ads . . . Doro- thy Hancock posed with the publicized rooster . . . Gray, Dorn, and Work modeled smart beach toggery . . . Virginia Hunter was draped in a lustrous fur coat . . . The Art Crew posed for a deluxe DeSoto. โ€ข Whoopee! Here they come, Case ' s Follies in the show for the Campanile Drive! Dressed in feminine ruffles and frills, eight dainty ingenues danced before the stu- dent body in routines that would put Ziegfeld to shame. What grace! What litheness! Buck Arnold astounded the audience with his agilitr, and Paul Master- son, carrying a tiny basket, won recognition as the shy pianist. โ€ข Loud Speaker โ€” Front row: Hagan, Rumrill, Spath. Second row: Eselun, Hunter, Mason, Duckhnm, Hancock, Shields. Third row: LeLacheur, McGinn, Phrcaner. โ€ข The Largest circulation in its nine-year history, twelve hundred copies, were sold this year by the Loud Speaker. The tremendous increase was occasioned by the inclusion of the Loud Speaker with the new, low priced student body tic- ket. Every Friday during the lunch periods there was a grand rush of students clamoring for their Loud Speakers, now published every week because of the occupancy of the newly reconstructed print shop at the beginning of the fall semester. Special issues published were the Poly game edition. Home- coming game issue. Thanksgiving number, and a profusely colored Christmas special. James Collins held the editor ' s post during the Fall semester, while Mary Eselun headed the staff during the Spring. Through the courtesy of Walter H. Case, a crew of twelve cub reporters broke into the profes- sional class when they assisted on the Long Beach Sun. Can the old grads click? Did they come home in droves? Watch them stepping out to the band shell . . . Hear Roy Hamilton ' s band giving them a fiery welcome, and the Council, Girls ' League, and Governors receiving in a tent pavillion. i Printers โ€” Jones, Stanley, Mr. Morrison, M โ€ข Print Shop . . . Burr of running presses . . . Clatter of linotypes . . . Buzz of compositors ' voices . . . Clank of paper cutters . . . Whining of the type saws . . . All these noises parade together to herald one ' s entrance into the ultimate home of all copy ... the Print Shop. The Loud Speaker, Campanile, regular school forms, such as library permits, demerit slips, programs, tickets, and track tallies are all set up and printed here. Robert Sperrv, head makeup man, may be seen working far into the night setting and placing heads for the Loud Speak- er pages. Franklin Metz sets type and delicately cuts and places rules and borders for various jobs, as well as working on the makeup of the yearbook. Campanile. Jimmy Stanley, Bud Thomas, Raymond Souders, Bill Barton, and Gordon Gray are others who contribute in a big way to the output of production work in this shop. 9 Dozens of boys spend all their spare time in designing and building beautiful pieces of furniture. At any time you may happen along, you can hear machinery humming and buzzing and see, as a result of their efforts, lovely inlaid tables, bookcases, and other attractive articles. A f? I I โ€ข Library . . . Amid long rows of books, newspapers, magazines, and encyclopedias, students and faculty browse in the library at various periods of the day. Whether infor- mation for a five-minute report in economics or a lengthy document on how to end the depression is desired, it is on file in the care of Miss Iredell and her assistants. There stu- dents go to get the best seller, the best current magazine or the rating of the League track teams. โ€ข The librarian, so helpful and valuable in her service to Wilson, has transformed the crowded, simple tent into a place of dignity and refinement. One fern, or a classic pic- ture, in her hands lifts the whole atmosphere into a stately hall of wonderful design. And nearby, just across the way, comes the soft, sweet strains of an orchestra. It is no wonder that the students do not complete their assignments in a per- iod of browsing. The library is perhaps the most used of any facility at Wilson. โ€ข Monogrammed rings . . . smart wooden buttons . . . distinctly original Christmas cards . . . book ends . . . chic scarfs, bags, wallets . . . leather and textile weaving, clay, paper, belts ... all of these enticing words furnish the drive that makes Miss Connor ' s craft classes work their he.ids off for the pure joy of getting to accom- plish what they wish to do. t TTsar โ€ข Store โ€” Front row: Kerwood, Hill, Ball, Rank, Smith. Second row: Sherman, Morris, Hartman, Wise, Smith, Emery, Wegtcr. โ€ข Student Body Store ... In affording practical sales training accommodations for students, the Student body store has courageously carried on in the center of Tent City. The salesmen and women, attired in green smocks with matching caps, under Mrs. White hurry about from one counter to another, in an effort to serve the stampeding mobs of fellow students at lunch time. Shining display cases reveal the clean, business-like method of attracting the eye of the public. Real salesman neatness, politeness, service, and co-operation can best describe the personnel of Wilson ' s Student Body store staff as they turn out Foamy Malts, Big Bears, Milky Ways, and a host of tasty confections to hundred famishing Tent City dwellers. For over the spotless counter, delicious drinks, tempting concoctions, chewy nut bars, and ice cream greet the eager hands of students. 9 Cookies . . . piles of cookies . . . mountains of cookies! And not only delicacies, but more practical foods are prepared by the cooking classes. How could they be anything but successful with such illustrious chefs as Neely, Cochran, and Lester wielding spoons and reading recipes with a vengeance? โ€ข Sophomores are inducted into Wilson in orientation classes which are a combination of World History, English, and Current Events. In their work, they connect English studies with present day history, creating more interesting relations. Under the direction of Miss Mary Hansen, the students have access to hundreds of valuable books. โ€ข There is no Santa Glaus, in other words, don ' t believe in magic. The best philosophy I can give you is, Nothing in excess and. Are you always honest with yourself? Mr. J. K. Shallenberger delivering his yearly maxims to his beginning Physiology classes thus initiates them in the study of health and the human body. Proving that the average high school student is virtually interested in health, literally hundreds of pupils enrolled, or tried to, in this very popular labora- tory science. Due to the overflow, there have been six Physi- ology classes the past semester. In this class, the students are trained by actual work on a life-sized clay anatomy. ! 9 Members of Mr. Shallenberger ' s Physiology class examine the works of Oscar in order to find out what makes them go. To be in good running order one need only follow diligently the sound advice offered by Mr. Shallenberger. if! PT mis ย . โ– Pt. โ€ขโ€ข i ' โ€ข Office Appliances . . . Click, click, click โ€” 2, 4, 6 the comptometer is in the process of adding a bill. Tick! Tick- tick! Tick โ€” the dictaphone carries on amid typewriters and filing cabinet. Members of the Office Appliance classes, under the managership of Miss Gyrene Blackman, keep booking accounts, records, and receipts with the same effici- ency as the commercial world in which they live. Tables . . . desks . . . modified by the presence of proficient commercialists โ€” provide the mannerly, business-like appear- ance of Tent 21. Arranged in order and neatness, the facil- ities for office work instill good business habits in these young employees. With the training they have received, the business world opens to them all types of work and experi- ence. On Student-Merchant Day, one of the celebrations of Public Schools Week, dozens of Wilson students took posi- tions in the commercial departments of Long Beach stores. Their experience provided the success of the day. โ€ข Home Nursing โ€” Front row: Kawasaki, Kawanami, Stanton, Geiss, Rich- hart. Monasmith , Bergcr, August, Miss Moon, Wheeler. Second row: Hanna, Greenup, Gilbert, Wilmer, Gross, Wonder. Patient, Hadley. ypK. Water . . . One Day It Rained , ; ::-v T, vr = ' vr ? fmm z ' Jyff Varsity Crew โ€” Front row: Trumbo, Work, HofFman, Crum. Second row: Albright, McDannel, Captain Morton, Davis, McGinn. โ€ข The Wilson Varsity Crew is a miniature of the colorful and picturesque Olympiad oarsmen who once stroked their fragile shells in our own Marine Stadium. During the present season Wilson oarsmen rowed in the shadows of the Golden Bears of California, the Dragoons of Sacramento, and the Baby Bruins of U. C. L. A. โ€ข September โ€” 17 โ€” It feels great to be back to school! At least for the first few weeks. 18 โ€” Mighty seniors wait six hours to have their programs changes. 21 โ€” Thank heavens the signing of classes is finished. 23 โ€” Student body mourns the death of Don Corfield, star athlete. 25 โ€” P. T. A. holds reception for new sophomores. 26 โ€” G. A. A. inducts new girls into Wilson activities with gala party. 28 โ€” First Loud Speaker thrills sophomores. 29 โ€” Reconstruction has started on main buildings; shop open to classes. 30 โ€” New Wilson sticker is ready to decorate those Fords, Buicks, and what-have-you. I Headed for a championship! Wow! the first one in years . . . Did we get set for Redondo with her Lenahans, Haddocks and Colmers? We beat pep out of cloudb ursts. Did we stop them? Time after time we downed them. Redondo won. -a rr ,r iill } - - , ' I ii โ€ข October โ€” 6 โ€” The Wilson Bears hold Poly Champs to 6-0 score. 11 โ€” Salesmen continue to annoy us with student body tickets. 12 โ€” Today is the day we are supposed to be installed in the science biuldings. P. S. Still in the tents. 13 โ€” Sympathy in the death of Edith Flora, senior; stricken at the Santa Monica football game. 17 โ€” Submerged . . . yet, it never rains. Oh, no? 19 โ€” The science building turns green . . . not with envy, however. 2A โ€” Standlee wins sophomore presidency. 25 โ€” Wilson is host to Southern California Scholarship Chapters. 3 1 โ€” Halloween has left its mark on the O-so-easily marked tents. 1- 4 9 The Poly football game! There ' s nothing in the sports ' calendar like it; people sit on the edges of their seats or rant in midair, hanging in clear space . . . mobs . . . and mobs . . . and mobs of fans shout for the red and gold. J li ' . ' โ€ข November โ€” 2 โ€” Beat San Pedro, first home game. 3 โ€” School spirit reaches peak as baskets pile. 6 โ€” Congressman Byron N. Scott comes home in farewell speech before leaving for Washington. 9 โ€” Shrill chuckles of infants . . . gay laugh- ter of old grads . . . the Alumni of Wil- son came home for a visit. 1 1 โ€” The campus turned traitor to its colors . . . red and gold ... by coming forth in red and green for the holidays. 21 โ€” Service Through the Ages presented to open the Thanksgiving Drive. 22 โ€” Gala Scholarship dance proves success. 28 โ€” Brother, can you spare a carrot? was the popular greeting today as Tlianks- ing Drive closed. โ€ข December โ€” 1 โ€” Twenty-three days till Christmas. 2 โ€” Venuses, Adonises, Romeos, Lotharios dreams come true, when they see proofs. 3 โ€” Rickman is all excited over Santa Claus. 5 โ€” Loud Speaker cubs want more tinker toys erasers, clips, for mental challenge. 7 โ€” P. T. A. and Demos in grand initial hop. 10 โ€” The secret service detectives of the K. K. K. are on our trail. Don ' t get excited. 10 โ€” Tent City rings with carols. 1 1 โ€” Bill Holden, licensed pilot, warms mot- or for Christmas flight. 1-1 โ€” C.L.W.W. carry Christmas to nursery. 15 โ€” All-Language group throw Christmas jamboree. 17 โ€” Super salesmen put over record sales down town. โ€ข January โ€” 1 โ€” Me sleepy? Hones ' teach, I got to bed at four. 2 โ€” Maybe, perhaps, probably, but . . . 3 โ€” It ' s impossible, after all this time . . . โ€” Hurrah! Huzah! Green Science building finally opens. 7 โ€” Wanna buy a duck, I mean a Campanile? 7 โ€” Case ' s Follies don costumes to sell Campaniles; bring cloud burst. 10 โ€” Old speed records go; students dodge water spouts. 10 โ€” Young Ad crew tell city club how. 11 โ€” Jimmie Collins and Betty Moore toast of class. 17 โ€” No, taint Peer Club, jes Poly-Wilson Discussion. 24 โ€” Hurrah, Dean Cromwell ' s coming. 25 โ€” Fresh air school raises test scores . .why have houses? 26 โ€” Coach Gartner pulls tricks out of a bag (helmets). 26 โ€” Letters de luxe . . . Awards Dinner Dance. 27 โ€” Vesper services. 29 โ€” Betty A. Moore goes a la Chinesa to danca. 30 โ€” Promenade just reeks with graduation. 29 โ€” Mr. Garlick pases Dan Walker ... in self defense. 30 โ€” Is this new fence to keep us in or others out? โ€ข Seniors, in Vesper Hour in Candle Lighting Ceremony; Gold Book is signed. โ€ข January โ€” 5 โ€” Eloise Ray says the new sophomores need looking af- ter .. . upper classmen changed it to at. 6 โ€” Athletic Captains are culinary experts of tasty cookies. 8 โ€” Seniors have been practising valiantly in front of the mirrors for ages now in preparation of having their pic- tures taken โ€” we hope that they didn ' t forget that tooth- paste smile. 8 โ€” Lookie, Lookie, lookie, here comes cookie . . . and they came in torrents at the big cookie sale. 12 โ€” From cob, to ball, to calories, as G. A. A. sponsors popcorn sale. 13 โ€” How about some brand new buildings tied up with a Happy New Year greeting card, (filler) 1 โ€” Book review committee confesses making 17.00 on a pop corn sale. 18 โ€” Juniors Dance at Recreation Center. Didunt go ' cus I wasn ' t ask ' ud. 21 Official track practice started. 22 โ€” Future maestros are being trained in Mrs. Larson ' s music reading class. โ€ข Staff makes Merry nt Campanile Dii All-American is toasted. โ€ข Gold W Winners. e โ€ข February โ€” 1 โ€” Crowd roars cheer as Neely takes sheep skin. 3 โ€” 1500 rabbid fans stick in snow at moun- tains. 4 โ€” Registration spirit considerably damp- ened by unusual weather. 5 โ€” New sophomores devour over 2000 dis- carded books. 8 โ€” Well, anyway rain makes more snow at Arrowhead. 11 โ€” Junior B ' s watch enviously as sopho- mores go to their first World History- English assmbly. 12 โ€” Mary Eslum crashes Pomona with a scholarship. 13 โ€” By Ology! Wilson has a new club. 15 โ€” Sophomore boys state preference for Big Sister. i โ€ข The Scholastic Elite 1-1 โ€” Wilson ' s own Sally Mathews snooks away with cupid. 15 โ€” Neil Spencer pulls a rabbit out of a bag. 18 โ€” Record catch landed as weeping heav- ens water track. 19 โ€” Seniors prove gift of gab by winning Kiwanis Trophy Debate. 22 โ€” Track team takes city championship bv cleaning Poly 71-33. 23 โ€” Executive Board of Girls ' League starts trek to cabin and discovered it ' s way up thar. 25 โ€” Thespians admit four new members. 26 โ€” Campanile Picture Days! What more need be said? 27 โ€” R. D. Woodward ' s announce a brand new very literary-minded guest. 28 โ€” Seniors last Probst, Rickman, and Pike win. โ€ข Keep the home fires burning. โ€ข March โ€” 1 โ€” Completed building ready for big shots to o.k. it. 2 โ€” A. A. U. Relays postponed as gulls have swim workout on track. 5 โ€” More students shot for Campanile. 8 โ€” Superintendent Upjohn ' s resignation announced with deep regret. 9 โ€” Wilson relay team wins A. A. U. divi- sion race. 10 โ€” No reminder is needed of the terrified screams, tumbling walls fear of earth- quake of ' 33. 11 โ€” Congratulations, Miss Mathews, on the announcement of your wedding to Rol- and W. Schoettler. 15 โ€” Wild flowers are topic of every conver- sation-posy-minds from living out-of- doors. 22 โ€” Juniors and seniors disagree on Prom plans. 25 โ€” Last call for seniors to take their ' maps ' back to Strombergs ' . 28 โ€” Scholarship sponsors matinee hop. 29 โ€” Everyone seems a leetle tetched with the yo-yo craze. โ€ข Parade of Nations. โ€ข April โ€” 1 โ€” Wilson High moves into new buildings โ€”April fool! 1 โ€” Students hurry home to help with the housework . . . report cards today! 8 โ€” The weather man dishes out one last downpour before we go back into the buildings. 10 โ€” By saying one last downpour, mean- ing we knew it would last. 1 2 โ€” Two hundred and sixteen hours of free- dom! 13 โ€” Three hundred Long Beach students assist local merchants. 15 โ€” Catalina, Palm Springs, Lake Arrovv ' - head resorts swarm with Wilsonites. 22 โ€” Students can ' t get back to school quick- ly enough. 2 ' โ€” Louise Kennedy wins two prizes in the Scholastic contest . . . makes school puff up. 26 โ€” Minstrel show plans continue as cos- tumes are completed and specialty num- bers worked out. 28 โ€” Out-of-door education proves health- ful, anyway. โ€ข Mayโ€” 1 โ€” Uniforms out; spring dresses in. 2 โ€” Girl goes out with a student! (Navy gone.) 3 โ€” Mary Chesnut ' s name again misspelled in Loud Speaker. 4 โ€” Sentinels on guard, Bruins find. 7 โ€” I eats my spinach, crys Soph, break- ing popsicle stick. 8 โ€” Seniors look back to day when they looked ahead. 9 โ€” Fuller brush man Harrington has audi- ence in aisles, (ready to walk out! ) 10 โ€” Max Bridges has airplane sickness over campus. 13 โ€” Dame Rumor says building is ready. 14 โ€” Dame Rumor prevaricated like the rest of the women! 15 โ€” Five fire drills in one day; stiff training; Blanton breathless. 16 โ€” Deficiency slips . . . and how! I I Little Theatre in French. 17 โ€” Senior kicks about piece in Static . . . not long enough! 20 โ€” Date bureau established for Spring hop. 20 โ€” Navy Juniors to ports North, East, South, and West. 22 โ€” Poly-Wilson hosts to uniform boards. 22โ€” 28โ€” Poly-Wilson Love Fests. 24 โ€” Poly- Wilson Scholarship groups in in- tellectual fest. 28 โ€” J. C. music fest for Poly and Wilson Pans. 22 โ€” And the buildings still LOOK good. 23 โ€” Seniors wonder what they ' ll be doing in five years. 28 โ€” Tennis player runs amuck, objecting to dance location. 29 โ€” Mendelsshcn, where art thou? cry Spring Dancers. 30 โ€” Ah-h-h-h, Memorial Day ... no school! 31 โ€” Doug. Duckham gives expert imitation of seal at Catalina. โ€ข June โ€” 1 โ€” Things seem sorta (heart) balmy. 3 โ€” Fairy Princess, cookies, ice cream in patio as P. T. A. makes merry. 5 โ€” Hey, why don ' t I get a letter? I played 17 seconds at Hynes. 6 โ€” Rhythms class train for Minstrel Show. 7 โ€” A.W, I didn ' t want to graduate anyhow! 8 โ€” Interlocutor Probst splits sides on (or- iginal) joke. 9 โ€” Students uneasy. 10 โ€” Students uneasier. 11โ€” 12A ' s guests at J. C Campus ground breaking. 11 โ€” Seven hundred pupils become sick . . . final exams. 12 โ€” Who invented tests anyhow? 18 โ€” And a jolly good time was had by all at the prom. 16 โ€” What is a vesper, and who orginated it? 17 โ€” Seniors check out; faculty heaves sigh of relief. 18 โ€” What! Senior Breakfast and no coffee spilled? 19 โ€” Seniors find book-fine slips in diploma cases. 20 โ€” Grand milestone for Seniors reached. 20 โ€” Rosica Amarilla, Jeradine Havana Avalona Von Waggengerger! Come and get your diploma! 21 โ€” All aboard; school ' s cut. your diploma! ' _-ยซiK f---ai r.โ€”., . . Illโ€” - - โ– -โ– -โ€”โ–  โ€” โ€” ai - - ' ย --โ–  . ' fr ' t. it - โ€ข Bird Men . . . Merry Makers Hockey Stars Between Halves Li ? - ' m. Sw- K ? , โ€ขv ii i,- i ft % | i ' ! . ;ย ij ' m -โ€ข โ€ข 1 ? i I โ€ข Hail! to Woodrow Wilson ' s captains . . . Hail! to the boys whose grit and stamina have made them the leaders in every sport . . . To a group of boys whose patriotic, fighting spirit has been the heart of Wilson life . . . To the boys who have led their team- mates to thrilling victories on the gridiron . . . To the boys who urged their teammates on in the grueling track events . . . Wilson ' s captains โ€” nucleus of the school โ€” Hail! . . . Hail . . . Hail . . . I tV Varsity Lettermen โ€” Front row: Livingston, Stull, Crum, Cochran, Phreaner, Boswell. Second row: Mc Ginn, Gray, Damskey, Edgecomb, Richards, Stabler, Dorn, Jones, Seares, McArthur. Third row: Frinell, Green, Quinn, Burris, Mitchell, Perrin, Arnold, Love, Lord, Case. Fourth row: Putnam, Anderson, Check, Brown, Holden, Standlee, Garrett, Lane. Coaches โ€” Davis, Gartner, Smith, Frazer. Dunkle, Archer, Morrison. Coaches ... In the opening of this wonderful sports section may we offer a toast to the men who guided Wilson athletes to cham- pionships and near championships m 34- ' 35. Coaches Roily Davis. Oak Smith, John Gartner, Fred Frazer, Pete Archer, M. B. Dunkle. and Max Morrison ... we salute you Your teams, because of their cham pionship caliber, are known and re spected throughout Southern Call fornia. In the fields of sports hun dreds of boys have developed char acter, leadership, sportsmanship and sound health under your guidance. was tan, peril 4 โ€ข A Season packed and jammed with foot- ball thrills . . . that was the ' 34 pigskin sea- son. The Redondo game rolled around and with it hundreds of rabbid fans from both schools were worked up to a fever pitch over the crucial tussel. A championship dangled in the offing. Stop Nielson and Lenahan! was the Wilson battle cry. Neely and Coch- ran, the two best halfbacks in the League and perhaps the best this school will ever see, did much toward bringing back lost school spirit as their flashing, spectacular plays and runs kept the grandstands in mid-air. Stand- lee, sophomore fullback, was the ballpacker when a few precious yards were needed. In the line, Arnold, Perry, and Thomas thrust off opponents. Stabler, Pcrrin, Gray, Ncely, Cochran, Perry, Arnold, Scares, Richards, Lord, Standlec, Case, Thomas, Livingston, Adler, Seckington, Jones. MLli y iir vBH%i iik ยซr Varsity Football โ€” Front row; Nieblas, Stabler, Thomas, Adler, Neely, Cochran, Crittenden, Lord, Livingston, De- Long. Second row: McKeever, Case, Arnold, Perrin, Perry, Gray, Damskey, Seares, Richards, Albertson, Rogers, Mgr. Schweitzer. Third row: Coach Gartner, Hoffman, Shallen- berger, Edgecomb, Liedholm, Greening, Jones, Standlee, Seck- ington, Crawford, Graef, Coach Smith. Fourth row: Mgr. Culbert, Hettle, Morton, Mackie, Sperry, Giessner, Ireland, McConahay, Welch, Goggin, Welch, Mgr. Jost. โ€ข Wilson ' s 1934 Varsity football edition will go down in the history of the school, along with that memorable team of 1927, as coming nearest the Bay League crown, the goal of all Wilson teams. Opening the season with Poly always a col- orful spectacle, the Bears held a stronger, heavier So. Cal. Champ team to a 6-0 score. In the Bay League opener with Santa Mon- ica Frank Lord pulled a Merriwell by catching a pass in the last two minutes of the game to put Wilson ahead 6-0. Ingle- wood, in the next encounter, taking advan- tage of the breaks and the Bruins ' errors, won 19-0. The previous week ' s defeat made the team come back with a fighting spirit to push Pedro all over the field even though the score was only 7-0. Alumni Day with the traditional foe, Com pton, brought the squad to a frenzy when they sank the Tartars 27-0. Came the Redondo game and a glimpse f f the Champ trophy ... the Bay League title was tangled up and Redondo was the team that did the untangling when Held blocked a kick, fell on it over the goal line;score 13-7. Perry, Cochran, Gray, Seckington, Perrin, Standlee, Lord, Seares, Schweitzer, Jones. i i H โ–  . 1 iJ B Football โ€” Fron row: Amann, McArthur. Har Miner, Seynei, Captair Turner, Goossen. Third Fox, Baskin, Bays, Captain Ke is. Second row: Kawanishi, Brown, Christensen, Martison, Havter, row: Coach Smith, Henley, M inson, Davis, Buntrock, Burgess, Jackson, Storch, Culbert son, Mgr. Plymell, Coach Gartner. Fourth row: Still, John ston, Gilchrist, Billings, Henshaw, Phreaner, Hedges, Yancy Sellers, Thompso n. A j jlA i e l w - ' ' ' โ€ข The Bruin B team which finished third place in the title race was the most versatile in Wilson history. A palm to coaches Oak Smith and John Gartner. Co-Captain Christensen and Baskin. dimin- tive linesmen, proved to be the backbone of the team ' s defense, while Bill McArthur, Jack McKenna, Co-Captain Bill Kerr and Martison were brilliant triple threat backs. The cubs got off to a good start, winning their first two practice games by trouncing Hoover High of Glendale 12-0 and by beat- ing Long Beach Poly for the second straight year by the identical score of 7-6. The Bruin teams hope for a championship was some- what dimmed when the strong Santa Mon- ica aggregation rolled up a 20-7 score against the Cubs. Wilson ' s lone score came on a pass from Paul Martison to Jack McKenna. In the next game the Cubs came into all thei r crlory by defeating Inglewood 26-0, thereby avenging last year ' s upset. In the next two games the Wilson Cubs lost to San Pedro and Compton and wound up the season with a victory over the Sea Hawks. Thomas, Neely, Adler, Case, Livingston, Richards, Arnold, Stabler, Cochran, Neely, Coach Smith. UO M f - ' Varsity Basketball โ€” Front row: Co-captains Stull, Lester. Second row: McCracken, Coach Frazer, Burris. Third row: Standlec, Lord, Love, Home, Scares, Frazer, Lucas, Hales. โ€ข For the first time in Bay League history, basketball games were played on a round- robin schedule. Wilson played ten league games and won four to finish in fourth place. In the Compton thriller Wilson was trailing 25-26 when Fred Frazer, Jr., sunk a field goal, just as the gun went off to end the game, making the score 27-26 for Wilson. Going into the final quarter of the Ingle- wood game, Wilson was leading by a score of 16-10, nevertheless, it was all the Wilson men could do to stave off the whirlwind at- tack of Inglewood. The Sentinels brought up the score to 16-15, but lost their chance to tie the score when Calkins missed two free throws, giving Wilson the game. Wilson lost its most heart-breaking battle when it was nosed out by Poly in the final quarter. The Bruins were ahead with a score of 15-13 when Mose Neely, ace guard, was forced out of the game on personal fouls. He had been the backbone of the de- fense during the entire game, and when Neely went out of the game it gave the Poly team new life. In the final three minutes of play they ran the score to 29-18 for Poly. Lester, Hales, Coach Frazer, Lord, Burris. B Basketball โ€” Front row; Martison, Harris, Ireland, Jones. Second row: Spencer, Steele, Asst. Coach Proctor, Coach Smith. Ball. Third row: Silver, Piezer, Ramsey, Jameson, Nichols. โ€ข Like the varsity, the B ' s plaved a round robin schedule. Coach Oak Smith ' s basket- ball Bruins won their first game from Santa Monica 23-20, but dropped the return battle 25-12. They took Inglewood to the cleaners twice in a row to the tune of 25-14 and 25- 22. San Pedro upset the Bruins twice, the first time 21-11 and the second time 15-13. The Bruins took their final win of the sea- son from Redondo 16-10. In the year ' s ti- tanic tussle, the team lost to Poly in a hair- raising thriller by a score of 19-17. The usual starting team was composed of Jameson and Christiansen, forwards; Harris, center; Ramsey and Piezer, guards. In Art Christiansen, diminutive, heady forward, could always be counted on for a consistently smooth game. Jameson, Art ' s running mate, came from a long line of pedigreed Wilson athletes, Les and Ralph both having been in the parade of champions. The Bruin babes did not show the class at the end of the sea- son that they had at the beginning. The team seemed to be on the road to Bay League Championship after the first two games, but misfortune overtook them. Lucas, Stull, Frazer, Standlee. m 1 1 Varsity Track โ€” Front row: Scares, Logan, Anderson, Mc Arthur, Green, Gray, Phreaner, Harris, Captain Holdcn Second row: Mgr. Chamness, Edgecomb, McGinty, Dorn, Shallenbergcr, Hedges, Damskey, Dynes, Laughead, Fox Richards, Jones. Third row: Coach Gartner, Welch, Ryan Livingston, Standlee, Lord, Love, Putnam, Gandy, Culbert- son, H. Welch, Smith. โ€ข Capturing the city title was the first thing the Bay League dual meet champions accom- plished at the beginning of their most suc- cessful season. Rated to wax Long Beach Poly, but not by such a margin, John Gart- ner ' s tracksters went into action, winning 71- 33. The next week Wilson sent their four- man mile relay team into the A. A. U. re- lays, held on Stephens Field, against the best runners in the country. The team was made up of McArthur, Phreaner, Gray, and Lord. ITiey won an unexpected victory, winning their respective events. The Sea Hawks of Redondo were the Bruins ' next victim. Wil- son trounced them 88-16. Inglewood came the closest to defeating the Wilson spiksters, but Wilson ' s strong distance runners suc- ceeded in bringing home the bacon. The next week Bruins took SanDiego 81 2-3 to 22 1-3. The 880 and mile featured victory over the Tartars with a score of 70 1-6 to 33 5-6. In the final dual meet with Santa Monica the Bruins won 60 1-6 to 43 5-6. During the vacation the Wilson Spiksters journeyed to San Diego to face the Hillers for the first defeat in two years, 63-41. 1 I Track Champs ' 34 โ€” First row: Bosch, Frederick, Gilchrist, Collier, Holden, Dorn, Bennett, Putnam. Second row; Case, McGinty, McColloh, Murray. Anderson, Crain, Damslccy, Russell, Whitmore, Check. Third row: Mgr. Shallenberger, Beeson, Welch, Jones, Turtle, Corfield, Chapel, Cochran, Gray, Boswell, Larzelere, Coach Gartner. โ€ข John Gartner ' s Southern California cross country championship team ended its season by taking Hoover high of San Diego, Manual Arts, Hollywood high. Long Beach Poly, and other schools in their division on the U. C. L. A. cross country track. Led by Holden, Anderson, Green, McGinty, and Captain Dorn, the Bruins placed one, two, three, nine, and ten. Dual meet champions, the Bruins primed for the League Preliminaries, placing 20 men, and trailing slightly behind the Liglewood Sentinels who placed 24 men. Giving Wil- son a good start towards the championship, Green of Wilson won the 880, Hedges run- ning fifth. Gene Putnam won the 100-yard dash, Phreaner took second in the high hur- dles; Gray of Wilson second in the 440. Then the winning stopped. The Bruins lost out in the mile and high jump, Anderson, taking second in the mile, and George Dynes taking second in high jump. The final score being 59 1-2 to 46 points. Dorn, McGinty, Ande Green. Love, Coach Gartner, Holde โ€ข More outstanding athletes than Wilson has ever had blessed Stephens Field this last track season. It made up one of the greatest track teams that John Gartner ever coached. Probably the most outstanding Bruin was Gene Putnam, Bay League 100- yard dash king. Gene brought home more points per meet than any other athlete. George Gray, outstanding athlete, was commonly called an iron man because of his tremendous program; he ran the 100-yard dash, then the 440, and to top it all, ran a fast 220 on the relay team. Burdett Gandy, sophomore, a member of the relay team, will do big things for next year ' s team. Bill McArthur and Frank Lord were always close behind George Gray in the 440. hi the hurdles Bill Phreaner and Rav Dam- skey proved a combination that was hard to beat, Phreaner dominating the highs and Damskey the lows, usually placing one be- hind the other. Ray Seares, up-and-coming high hurdler, will bear watching by all Bay League next year. The mile was completely Phreaner, McGintv, Anderson, Shallenberger, Gray, Fox, McArthur, Ryan, Scares, Dorn, Morgan. II . under control throughout the dual meet sea- son with the trio of Captain Wally Holden, usually leading the field, closely followed by Don Anderson and Lloyd McGinty, Love was also successful in the mile and promises to he Wilson ' s strongest distance runner next year. Walt Green, 880 Bay League star, went undefeated throughout the Bay League season. Myrl Dorn, running the 880, could always be counted on for some points. The field events brought out many next year ' s stars. Harris and Laughead will re- turn next year to enter in the high jump. Dynes proved the most finshed jumper of them all. He came through in the last of the season for a second in Bay League. Standlee, Wilson ' s shot putter, improved so rapidly during the season it was hard to keep up with him. Fox, broad jumper, first year out as track man came through with an unexpected third in Bay League. Most of the outstand- ing men of this year ' s championship team will be back next year. Kerr, Putnam, Laughead, Green, Damskey, Holden, Gand . H. Welch, Love, Lord, Standlee. C Trackโ€” First row: Walbndge, Randall, Craig, Maze, Aldrich, Padelford. Sec- ond row; Wells, Rene, Miller, Miles, Pierce, Stanton, Grommon, Mgr. Wegter. Third row: Gartner, Benish, Clark, Kaiser, Robinson, Lewis, Wilcox, Smith. โ€ข Bay League Champions, the Class C midgets headed for the Southern California championship . . . Coaching of John Gartner always pulls one championship out of the bag . . . This time a Class C championship squad. The midget Bruins went undefeated throughout the Bay League season, headed by such stars as: Walbridge, Bay League 100-yard dash star; Randall, 50-yard sprint king and local low hurd- ler; Pierce, 50-yard sprint star who later pulled a leg tendon and was out of the Bay League finals; Craig, Bay League high jump champion and record holder; Long, shot put champion; and Benish, pole vaulter. The Bruins also had a good relay team taking second in Bay League. โ€ข Class B track was weakened by a championship varsity team; all B ' s that had any ability were turned into varsity material. The outstanding middies were: Hayter, 660 man and broad jumpers; and Murray, shot putter. Although Jim- my Harris was a Class B, he jumped varsity until the So. Cal. finals, in which the varsity did not participate. B Track โ€” First row: Bicker, Moore, Morgan, Sturdivant, Hayter. Second row: Newton, Graef, Ryan, Friel, Herimann, Holden, Sinclair, Sharp. Third row: Coach Gartner, Greening, Nicklc, Montgomery. Barrett, Watkins, Walsh, Coach Smith. i I Basebali โ€” First row; Mgr. W ' hiteneck, Buich, Ramsey, White, Capt. Graham, Ed ecomb. Bachtelle, S. White. Perez. Second row: Coach Frazer, Coach Davis, V. Ireland, Burt, Arnold, Stull, G. Ireland, Nicblas, Mgr. Adema, Mgr. Wood- worth. โ€ขIn a banner program of twenty-three games the Wilson baseball team had one of the most strenuous seasons in the history of the school only to come out with one league victory. In the opening game of the season Wilson defeated Santa Monica by a score of 5-3. Captained by the sparkling Jack Graham of big league caliber, it looked like the team was on its way to the championship, but tough breaks and min- or difficulties stalked the team for the rest of the season, making the Santa Monica game the only one in which they came out victorious. The second tussle of the season was lost by a score of 9-7 to Redondo, League winners; the Inglewood contest was lost by a score of 6-5, while the Pedro game was dropped 8-5, and the Compton counter was lost. Those who played their last game for Wilson were, Captain Graham, Duckham, Stull, Burt, and Edgecomb. โ€ข Captain Jack Graham comes from a long line of pedigreed big leaguers; he is a heavy hitter; covers the first sack m an errorless fashion and takes over the pitching assignment when called upon. Fans expect to see him making the major leagues in a few years. iiiwr %ยซm1 iiaunnioiwip Tennis Team โ€” First row: Moody, Imhoff, Garrett, Love, Wingo, Llo d. Se:ond row: Dunkle, Miller, Powell, Smith, Brown, Evans, Masterson. โ€ข Sweeping toward the championship flag as this goes to print, Wilson has experienced her most brilliant tennis sea- son. Memories of Hutton, Mathews, McCutcheon, and Hughes veterans, of ' 29, are recalled as the ' 35 edition forg- es to the front. In preparation for league matches, the squad played flocks of matches with defending champs in var- ious leagues, defeating many of them. Charles Lane and Douglas Imhoff captured the State Inter- scholastic doubles title. Lane paired with Hamilton Moody won the Southern California Class B doubles title; and Moody won the class C singles championship in the same tournament. Many other members of the team were selected as best players in the Bay League in their respective fields. In the first league match of the season, Wilson lost to the strong and feared Santa Monica squad 13-12, led by the crack player of Southern California, Bernie Coughlan. โ€ข These chaps below satisfy the California state law which states that every stu- dent in high school must take daily class in physical education; paddle tennis is the sport through which hundreds build health and strength. Golf โ€” Coach Morrison, Mitchell, Fult Coach Daivs. Watson, Miller, J โ€ข In the league tournament held at Lakewood Wilson and Redondo tied for league honors, although Wilson had de- feated the Sea Hawks in an earlier match. Bruins were awarded the privilege of entering So. Cal. playoffs. Wilson golfers played a series of tough matches with op- ponents ranging in distance from San Diego to Catalina. In seven matches the Bruin squad lost two, those matches with Catalina and Glendale. Winning games and scores are So. Pasadena, 4-1; Redondo, 4-1; Huntington Beach, 5-0; San Diego, 3-2; Inglewood, 5-0; defeats: Catalina, 1-4, and Glendale, 1-4. First man position was filled by Johnny Fulton; second man, George Mitchell; third man. Bill Watson; fourth man, Al O ' Brien, and fifth man, Louis Miller. Red Van Hall, first man on last year ' s championship team, and now bidding for city title, was lost to the team through ineligibility. 9 At the time of publication, the Bruin Junior Varsity crew had won two out of their three races, putting themselves in a commanding position for the per- petual trophy offered as a reward for the city championship. Stroked by Vesley and coxwained by Greenwood, the Jayvees deve ' oped consistently in that aquatic sport. Varsity Water Polo โ€” Firsc row; Fmnerty, Spencer, London, Capt. Quinn, Frinell. Rirtmayer, Hoffman. Second row: Johnston, Schaeffcr, Pawson, Ramsell, Hedrick, Wilcox, Burris, Mgr. Plymell โ€ข Ranking fourth in the strong Southern California water polo league, composed of FuUerton, L. A. High, Poly, Ing- lewood, and Wilson, the Bruin Mermen finished a heavy season in the fifth year of the sport. Led by Captain Phil Quinn, first string forward of the mythical All-Southern California team, and coached by Pete Archer, new comer to Wilson, but a veteran water polo coach, the Bruin water dogs showed up well throughout the season. Following a round robin schedule they held the powerful L. A. Romans to two ties; won over the Inglewood seven twice; lost two hard fought games to FuUerton, three-year South- ern Cal. champs; defeated the strong Pasadena aggregation; and were taken for two losses by the famous Poly swimmers. In their practice game the Wilson Bruins defeated the San Pedro Pirates. 1 . L ' โ–  C Water PoLO-14 irst low: Robinson, Kitts, Kelsey, Callis, Hani. Second row: Kemncr, North, Patterson, Bainbridge, Mgr. Buntrock. โ€ข Going into its second year of competition, after being one of the very few high school crews in the country, the Woodrow Wilson crews marked a new era in rowing. This year the glamour of rowing touched the other schools, and following in the footsteps of the trail blazing Bruins, Poly, Compton J. C, Compton High, along with J. C. had crews. Five lettermen greeted Coach Pete Archer and this year Wil- son has a Varsity, Junior Varsity, and Lightweight crews. The majority of the races were held in the colorful Olympic Rowing Course with the oarsmen rowing in the Sakura and Teyee, fragile shells loaned to them by the Recreation Commission. The Red and Gold was represented in races along with such crews as California, U. C. L. A., and Sac- ramento J. C. The Wilson crews all hold victories over Long Beach Poly and Compton high schools, as well as a varsity victory over the U. C. L. A. frosh-reserves. i ff?? โ€ข Coxwained by Greer and Cobb, the lightweights displayed championship form in their five races with Poly and Compton Jaysec. T stalwart eight, stroked by McLaglan, annexed the city lightweight title following their consistent traming and expert tutlagc unde the directi Varsity Backfield J. V. Tennis Thomas, Standlee B Basketball Track Boudoir 1 First row: Long, Gushing, Barton, Stevens, Pike. Second row: Thompson, Bcrger, Miss Reagan, Virgin, James, Winter, Mrs. Alguire. โ€ข Capable and efficient, these girls have clone outstanding work as executives for the Wilson G. A. A. They played host at a play- . day for Poly and Jordan and were in charge of Wilson girls at the Compton and Alhambra playdays. Evelyn Gushing, an ex- cellent president, was masterful at the Award Banquet in June. G. A. A. โ€” First row: Girard, McCracken, Wallentinc, Eselun, Combs, Lem iiion, Moore, Beck, Zeller, Aitkcn, Fatzer. Second row: Smolowitz, Cowlcs, Pike. Thompson, Stevens, Gushing, James, Berger, Barton, Winter, Tolbert, Bovyer. Thorne. Third row: Carlson, Mardock, Crandall, Wray, Connell, Kovacevich, Young, Reiger, Leake, Melvin, Brand, Weyant, Roddy, Crum, White, Ray, Shel- ter, Robinson. Fourth row: Peterson, Smith, Grain, Duncan, McGinnis, Hilton, Hock, Goverdale, Gaskill, Hess, Barker, Freeman, Levers, Prithett, Gentry, Verne, Cooper. โ€ข Happy hours . . . Clean, wholesome fun . . . Interclass competition . . . Enthusiastic, proficient . . . Energetic, the girls of the Wilson G. A. A. have had a very interesting and active season, consisting of volleyball, tennis, basketball, hoc- key, speedball and baseball. These girls, besides having in- terclass games, have also been incompetition with many oth- er schools at playdays. Wilson entertained Poly and Jordan on our own field and also went to many other schools for workouts. Perhaps the most outstanding of these playdays was the one held at Alhambra May 11. Over eight hundred girls from high schools all over Southern California partici- pated. Wilson sent a bus load of fifty girls up there where they had a very enjoyable day. The day included contests in tennis, baseball, baseketball and volleyball, a group test, a program and many honors in all events. โ€ข Wilson Coachesโ€” Sergei, Alguire, Reagan, Hiefield. Although having only limited facilities to work with and using a tent as their headquarters, the girls ' gym teachers have coached them skillfully in many different sports. Miss Reagan also coached the dancing for the minstrel show and Mrs. Hiefield was active in Scholarship. 1 .V ( I โ€ข Girls ' Basketball โ€” First row: Bovyer, Gushing, Moore, Pike, Ray, Gombs, Fatzer, Winter, Aitken, Gooper, Berger, Thompson. Second row: McCracken, Girard, Tolbert, Barton, Lemmon, Gowles, Zeller, Freeman, Hess, Barker, Hock, Wallentine. โ€ข Crimson side out . . . Two free throws . . . Shoot from where you are . . .With an incoming tide of sophomores hav- ing as equal chance as the upperclassmen because these new- comers had played some basketball in Junior High, this ex- citing game appealed to everyone and interest ran high. Classs began studying the rules of the games and teachers coached them the rudiments. More girls than ever before turned out for after school playground. Although the Sen- iors won the championship in interclass games, there were many outstanding players from all of the classes. Marianna Gerard and Thelma Barton, guards, led the Sophomore con- tingent. Strong forwards on the Junior team were Florence Curly Thompson and Jerry Aitken. Leading the parade on the Senior championship team were Eloise Ray and lone Pike. Basketball, perhaps was the most popular sport. โ€ข Gaptains, MANGEnsโ€” Fatzer, Aitken, Coverdale, Grandall, Gushing, Wallen- tine, Moore, Pike, Eselun, Berger, Lemmon. โ€ข Ouch! How about kicking the ball instead of my shin . . . Time out . . . Kick the goal . . . Flying down the field, red, yellow, and green markers made the scene colorful, as the feminine contingent of Wilson entered the spirit of speedball with lavish enthusiasm. What does a bruised knee or a bump on the head matter so long as you have made a goal? Scores of girls came out for this fascinating sport every week. Each girl doing her utmost . . . Hoping to make the class team ... In this game there is a great d eal of opportun- ity for individual playing. Lenore Connell, Cortez Freeman, Kathleen Wallentine and Peggy Zellers did spectacular playing for the Sophomores and Edith Crandall and Carol Cowles won recognition for their superior work on the Junior team. Elsie Combs and Evelyn Hefty Cashing did out- standing work on the winning team of the Seniors. Many of these girls also journeyed to other schools to represent Wilson in Speedball. โ€ข Rain . . . Floods . . . Muddy Fields ... It seemed the elements were in conspiracy against the success of the girls hocky season and consequently there were no captains or teams chosen and few after school games were played. However, the airls became well acquainted with the rules of the game. t mmm โ€ข Safe on first . . . Pitcher up to bat . . . It ' s a foul . . . Don ' t lead off your base . . . That great American sport, Baseball . . . The girls as well as the boys play it in Physical Educa- tion classes as well as after school ... G. A. A. girls turn out en masse for it . . . each striving to make the team. The play- day at Alhambra . . . Wilson wins both of her scheduled games with Glendale and Alhambra. Gym teachers and stu- dent stars coach the girls during their physical education per- iods. They show them the correct way to hold and use their bat. Don ' t chop at it . . . Off of your shoulder . . . Too close to the base . . . Sore wrists and sprained fingers, synonymous with baseball season are avoided. Donnee Backtell, Niletta Tipping, and Mary Louise Moore led the Seniors in technique Bess Lemon is prominent on the Sophomore diamond, and Edith Crandall is outstanding iii the Junior class. โ€ข Blazing sun . . . The crack of the bat an ball . . . Thud of the ball in the catcher ' s mitt ... A Ry soaring high in the air ... A bright-eyed pitcher winding up professionally . . . Girls cheering a teammate on to a home run . . . The Golds lead six to three . . . Spring is here and so is baseball. Tennis Mixed Doubles โ€” First row: MacMillan, Lloyd, Pike, Imhoff, Winter, Moody. Second row: Meyer, Bovyer, Sadler, Dorr, Stotter, M. Smith, Ryan. Third row: Wingo, Ellis, Evans, Smith, Garrett, Barnes. โ€ข Dazzling courts . . . Immaculate white . . . Statuesque poses . . . The twang of a fuzzy ball on a taut racquet . . . The courts at Recreation Park were the setting for a mixed-doubles tournament among the boys and girls of Wilson. Douglas Imhoff and lone Pike climaxed this event by winning the trophy and Margaret Winter and Hamilton Moody were runners-up. Wilson girls were also active in challenge matches and playdays. The six most outstanding girls on the ladder were Marion Roberts, Florence Stotter, Pat Ryan, lone Pike, Pat Bovyer, and Margaret Winter. ' โ– iiCS V โ–  โ– r INKSLINGERS First row Williams, Ashcraft, Buck, Thurston, Frank, Pike. Wright, Wingo, Norris. Second row: Bobbe, Miller, Bishop, Weeks. Pres, Wright; V. P., Norris, Wingo; Sec- Treas., Williams, Frank. Sponsor, Miss Connor. โ€ข Watch your step ... the future Walt Disneys are ready to cartoon everything that you do and put it on a poster. They are all chuckles since Frank Train, former president, is working in the studio for the real Walt Disney . . . Wright poses for a cartoon. Front row Winter, Gushing, Meyer, Bolander, Monty, Haughey, Hickle, Bovyer, Miss Connor, Scheidecker, Hancock, Miller, Pike, Fickel. Second row: King, O ' Brien, Gibson, Hunter, Rose, McKcnzie, Ryan, Hales, Moore, White, Ghesnut, Wallace, von Wedelstadt. Third row: Dean, Mallonee, ' Henzler, Hagan, Weir, Corbusier, Ray, Hawkins, Carpenter, Cutler, Gate. Boostersโ€” Pres., Haase, Fickel; V. P., Moore, Miller; Sec, Cutler, Pike; Treas., Pike, Schei- decker; Sergeant-at-arms, Cutler, Hancock. Sponsor, Miss Connor. โ€ข Gallant manuevers . . . true serviciability . . . These two phrases best illustrate the Boosters who entertain both Wilson and visiting schools with professional smartness. Songs, yells, and formation, all prove their worth to the standards of the school as they flash down the field with a swank and beauty that brings the stands to their feet. They are selected from girls who have held positions in Wilson. CQ D u CO o UP Q ' Front row: Harris, Bolander, Monty, Duckham, Linkem, Mallonec, Spath, Stabler, Rickn . Masterson. Le Lacheur, Arnold. Second row: Lewis, Le Blanc, Collins, Home, Norton, Car- penter, Shallenberger, Phreaner, Ramsey, Damskey, Crittenden, Lord, Brown. Third row: Mr. Shallenberger, Mitchell, Onley, Starky, Dunn, Merithew, Martison, Tod, Standlee, Hams. Demosโ€” Pres., Perry, Arnold; V. P. Arnold, LeLacheur; Sec, LeLacheur, Masterson; Treas., Spath, Rickman. Sponsor, Mr. Shallenberger. โ€ข School spirit in all its phases ... two successful student body dances to their credit . . . candies, goodies, cakes, to raise funds for the needed propa- ganda . . . result. Demos achievements, peppy ideas, brilliant arrangements, successful organization ... a well-liked group. Front row: Masterson, Bolander, Bell, Cutler, Carpenter, Richards, Harris, Brewster, Wright, - Second row: Edgecomb, Spath. Tod, Craig, Case, Ramsey, McKenna, Dalton, Stabler, Hunter. Third row: Dunn, Naughton, Phrcaner, Brown, Forbes, Duckham, Crittenden, Hayter, Turner, Dodd. r-j An Club โ€” Pres., Brewster, Masterson; V. P., Phreaner, Harris; Sec, Bell, Craig. Sponsor, Mr. Hennes. โ€ข Watch Wilson Take Poly, Keep it Clean, Welcome Alum- n ni . . . these signs and hundreds of others shouted their messages to all corners of the city as the Ad crew painted Wilson red to boost her ac- tivities. The crew gave programs before the downtown Ad club which recognizes Wilson ' s crew as the Junior Ad Club of the city. Loyal to their craft the Wilson Ad men have sold Wilson to her students. 0 r- C Front row- Arnold. Stabler. Probst, M.-.sterson, Duckham, Edgecomb , Hedges, Qumn, Hooker. Shallenbe--ger. Second row: Coach Smith, Damskey. McGmn, Norton, Ireland, Ramsey, Mc- Arthur, Jameson, Brown, Blair. Third row: Mitchell, Le Lacheur, Dorn, Mart.son, Case, Hughes. Jr. Exchangeโ€” Pres., Hales, Arnold; 1st V. P., Quinn, Ramsey; 2nd V. P., Stabler; 3rd V. P., Dorn; Sec, LeLacheur; Treas., Masterson. Sponsor, Coach Smith. โ€ข A Re. l service club like those downtown . . . They have their own lunch- eon meetings when their sponsors and big brothers, the East Long Beach Ex- change Club, sit in and discuss civic problems. Their major project was acting as officials during Spring track season and were the van in leading pep rallies. m X n X z o m m O D Front row: Lane, Rumrill. Second row: Gibson, Brown, Hagan, Dodge, Engle, Zion, Wood. Third row: Meigs, Masterson, Harrington, Halverson, Doran, Simmons, Probst, Kelley, Stras- berg, Newlon. Fourth row: Cundiff, Frank. Vaudeville โ€” Pres., Frank, Hagan; V. P., Hagan, Brown; Sec, Dodge, Meigs; Sergeant-at- arms, Harrington; Pub., Rumrill. Sponsor, Mr. Woodward. โ€ข Curtain . . . Curtain . . . last Curtain! The Vaudeville artists are on! Snappy dancers, jazzy blues singers, tricky magicians, wizards of the ivories, dramatic stars . . . the club is complete. Developed talent, provided experience, given joy and pleasure! Wilson is not without en- tertainment. Their big Variety Show for Scholarship was the toast of comedians on and off the campus as well as specialty numbers given on demand. Neil Spencer is a magician of professional character. nMfni HI At table: Coibusicr, .Arnold, Milntyre, Gibson. Wilson. Front row: O ' Brien, Chesnut, O. von W edelstaedt, C. von Wcdelstaedt, Moore, Stanton, McMillan. Second row: Gilman, Heis- kell, Olson, Smith, Verne, Hock, Robinson, Thompson, Kurtz, Dye, Ewer, Oliger. Third row: Bayley, Leach, Hickle. Wight, Brown, Mason, Krythe, Rose, McKenzie. C. L. W. W.โ€” Pres., Corbusier. Gibson; V. P., Rose, Stanton; Sec, French, Kurtz; Treas., McKenzie, Mclntyre. Sponsor, Miss Grimes. โ€ข Happy faces . . . new toys . . . small children joyous . . . such are the re- sults from another year of activity by the Civic League. Aiming to help the un- derprivileged of the citV; the league has carried on in the true spirit for which it stands. Gay Christmas trees . . . Chummy dolls . . . happy cherubs . . . tangy fruit boxes. ' I First row: LeLacheur, Craig, Tod, Case, Phreancr, McGinn, French, Eselun, Hunter, Thomas, Sperry. Second row: Duckham, DamsU ey, Hagan, Woodworth, Spath, Edgecomb, Mclntyre, Heiskcll, Shields, Ferris, Rutnrill, Hancock, Metz, Stanley. Third row: Martin, Miss Harrison, Linn, Bradford, Laughlin, Love, Gibson, Mason, Yankie, Wotherspoon, Forbes, Perry. โ€ข Features, copy, two-inch holes on the front page . . . these are the sorts of problems confronting the members of the Press Club each week throughout the year. Editing the school paper and the annual, Tent 49 is turned into a newspaper office, and lovers of hard work, mix to- gether to form the two staffs, who work tirelessly day and night to put forth prize winning publications, the Loud Speaker and Campanile. C These students are the journalists and newspapermen of tomorrow. Front rou : S.ivayi, Kiioll. Oshorn, Chowning. Second row: Yankie, Wotherspoon, Woodwotth. C. H. French. Thud row: McCombs, Miller, Schaeffer, Steele, Carpenter, Hackett. Rifle Clubโ€” Pres., Wotherspoon; V. P., Yankie; Sec.-Treas., Woodworth. Sponsor, French. โ€ข Ready . . . Aim . . . Fire! This club gives the boys a chance to promote in- terest and skill in target practice under able leadership and instruction. It is a newly formed group but is already a member of the National Rifle Associa- tion. Many competitive contests are planned, there ' s to the success of this new club. Following the urge of their pioneer antecedents who lived by the gun, these lusty chaps take theirs out in target practice. โ– n m n r C CO v p Front row: Dye, McMillan, Forbes, McKenzie, Gibson, Mrs. Garlick, Mclntyre, Bayley. Second row: Truex. Hawkins, Hancock, Raue, Kurtz, Ewer, Stanton, Hickle, Garlick, Coffey, Bailey, W Wanless, Meigs. r, Les Dilettantesโ€” Pres., Mclntyre, Bayley; V. P., Broadbent, Wanless; Sec, Bayley, Hickle; Treas., McKenzie; Pub., Forbes; Custodian, Gibson, Mclntyre; Sergeant-at-arms, Hickle, Miegs. 2] Sponsor, Mrs. Garlick. โ€ข Interesting word, isn ' t it? It means, lovers of beauty. This cul- H tured group of girls feasts on such wonderful objects as paintings. Goe- H blin tapestries, rare statues, old furniture of the Huntington Library and the Wayside Colony. The club has obtained ideas through these excursions to the various show places of Southern California which they Q visit eagerly in search of new and delightful treasures. J Front row Verne, Miller, Easterbrooks, Combs, Kepple, Wallace, Keeler, French, Lemmon, ยฐ Moore Horton, Hancock, Wallentine. Second row: Isaacson, Blessing, Winter Stevens, Jones, D Robinson, Plymell, Carpenter, Hoover, Clark, Bawden, Ledtord, Bovyer, Hayden, M ' Wad- 1 dell Mrs. Meeks, Bishop. Third row: Foster, Dare, Carl, Doty, Chesnut, Wilson, Marti, Ray, Smith, Bradford. Leach, Brown, Barker, Henzler, Miss Franck. Fourth row: Hawkins, Ryan. Hi-Tr ' iโ€” Pres., Winter, Wallace; V. P., Virgin, Hoover; Sec, Moore, Marti; Treas., Verne, B. Winter. Sponsors. Miss Franck, Miss Waddcll, Mrs. Meeks. 2 โ€ข Gr- CIOUS in manner . . . Impartial in judgment . . . Ready for service . . . H Loyal to friends, Reaching toward the best . . . Earnest in purpose . . . Seemg ' the beautiful, Eager for knowledge . . . Reverent to God . . . Victorious over X self . . . Ever dependable and Sincere . . . This is the code of the Girl Reserves. Front row: Carlson, Bawden. Malquist, Freeman, Parkhurst, Troy, Miller Kubovec Stephens, Miller Second row: Millican, Miller, Sprague, Fasnacht, Miles, Haake, Blackman, Whittlesey. Cactus Clubโ€” Pres., Malquist: V. P., Chamness; Sec.-Treas., Freeman. Sponsor, Mr. Nutter. Do You know the difference between an old Hen and a Chicken Plant? If you don ' t, then step right this way to the Cactus Club mem- bers. What ' s in a name? Research includes how to grow plants from seed, proper soil mixture, and control of pests. Make way for bigger and better cacti . . . They all have gardens of their own . . . some have tiny fragile bowls . . . Yale Dawson ' s is the toast of the Southwest, t He toured old Mexico with a truck . . . Collected many odd and rare ( species of cacti . . . Paid Mexican duty.Expects to go to So. America. xx Front row: Cobb, Ireland, Foote, Barrett, Chamness, Fast. Second row: Emery Crag Gd- more. Barber, Black, Mr. Lowry. Third row: Erickson, Hoy, Clark, Baskin, Good. Fourth row. Scanlan, Burgess. Fifth row: Mason. Hi- Yโ€” Pres., Chamness; V. P., Foote; Sec, Barrett; Treas., Fast; Sergeant-at-arms, Black. Sponsor, Mr. Lowry. โ€ข Wh. T boy doesn ' t love a snow f ght, a hike in the woods or a romp in the gym? These are the vehicles on which the Y mamtains high standards of Christian living. Wonderful programs, including mountain outings, games, publications, feasts, fun, and plenty of work are planned. Clubs sponsored by the Y offer a range of activities which appeal to every boy. n r CO PQ Front row: Payne, Howard, DeBord, Zellcr, Robinson, Siebert, Robinson, Whiteneck, Threlkeld, Smails. Second row: Crawford, Thorp, Hart, Wilson, Blinn, Jones, Van Horn, Graham. D Chess Club โ€” Pres., Jones; V. P., Hoffman; Sec, Siebert. Spo . , โ€ข Silence. Weighty problems hanging in the balance . . . the fate of nations are about to be decided as the real thinkers on the campus con- tO centrate over a game of chess in the shadows of tent 10. Unconscious of ) campus clatter and society and the din of A period, these future diplo- U mats are lost in thought. This subtle old game, always the sport of X kings and strategists, has been a mania for two years in Tent City ... it Qj is the atmosphere you know. CO First row: Mrs. Hicficid, Stottcr, Smith, MacMillan, Moore, Dorr, Bowden, Dorn, Horton, Berger, Rumrill, Lloyd, Garlick. Second row; Tolbert, Matheson, Lemanski, Wallentine, Stevens, Levers, Smolowitz, Smith, Lane, Salesman, McCiacken. Third row: Horton, Gibbs, Greenup, Logan, Peterson, Carlson, Gilbert, Bolton, Smith, Sheppard, Girard. Fourth row: Nickson, Mc- Ginnis, Armor, Harris, Adams, Keko, Crain, Hester, Cole, Goularte, Selfridge. Fifth row: Ringlet, Reid, England, Isaacson, E. Smith, M. Smith, Crawford, Robinson, Fenwick, Balliett, Richardson. Barnes, Cole. Sixth row: Townsend, Weyant, Crum, Sheller, Martin, Blanchard, Chalmers, Mardock. In costume: Meyer, Ryan, Bovyer, Winter, Mallonee, Pike. Girls ' Tennis โ€” Pres., Pike; V. P., Bovyer; Sec, Winter; Mgr., Meyers. Sponsor, Mrs. Heifield. โ€ข Court strategy . . . improved strokes . . . technique . . . tournaments ... are 0 the aims of the Girls ' Tennis Club, under the supervision of Mrs. Hiefield. (J These girls have been very active in challenging for ladder ratings this year. z m H CO At table: Gillespie, Eselun, Olson, Combs, Foote, Arnold, Wight, Serbinc. Standing: Galbraith, qq Turner. Scott, Manning, Young, Halverson, Spooner, Book Revifvi ' โ€” Pres., Foote; V. P., Spooner; Sec.Treas., Turner. Sponsors, Misses Grimes and Iredell. Q โ€ข Book Review ... A broader knowledge of books and of their J authors . . . stimulating interest in book lore . . . has been the purpose of the Book Review Committee of Scholarship, under the leadership of Miss Grimes and Miss Iredell, sponsors. Sixteen members make up the group which has served the faculty at tea and sponsored many delight- ful parties- Good books, best sellers, modern trends, evaluating modern m fiction and prose ... the joy of smart new covers. First row: Masterson, Miller, Evans, Kading, Day, Lloyd, Romingcr. Second row: Ralston, Woolington, Threllteld, Frerkren, Ellis, Love, Lemmon, Ferguson. Third row: Brown, ImhofF, Powell, Lane, Dunlcle, Spitzer, Corwin, Glasicr. In costume: Smith, Moody, Garrett, Wingo. Boys ' Tennis โ€” Pres., Lloyd, Moody; Sec, Evans, Rominger; Treas., Cornish, Dar; Tour. Dir., Imhoff, Wingo; Pub. Dir., Hughes, Brown. Sponsor, Mr. Dunkle. In a B. ' iiTTERY of tournaments that included the best teams in Southern California, M. B. Dunkle ' s racqueteers played on courts all over the southland. |- Tense enthusiasm reigns during the challenge ladder, the handicap, the mixed 2 ning doubles, and novice tournaments which decide standings. Lane, Imhoff Z and Moodv brought recognition to Wilson by winning So. Cal. champs. OS cr5 Front row: Kurtz, Robinson, Petri, Walsh, Van Wagner, Elliott, North, Turner, Eselun, Hed- rick, Hess, Cushman, Scatchley. Second row: Wilson, Early, Hermann, Woolington, Witwer, Grieg, Scott, Wilson, Kitts, Holland, Gillespie, Arnold, Grayson, Miss Johnson, McDowell. S. P. Q. R.โ€” Consul Sr., Elliott, Kitts; Consul Jr., Kitts, Scott; Sriba, Hess, Hedrick; Quaes- ter, Grayson, Greig; Aedile, van Wagner, Cushman; Aedile, Walsh, McDowell, Eselun. Spon- sor, Miss Johnson. โ€ข Senatus Populusque Romanus . . . entrenching behind this impossible title, the members of S.P.Q.R. proceed to investigate the pri- vate life of the Romans, their customs, history, and a few hundred other things pertaining or related to them and their language. Twice a month their meetings and parties are held. Under Miss Johnson classic Roman beauty in all its allied forms breathes anew. . i tjbk: Lovfll, Lauson, Goossen, Brown. Front row: McAuo., Hawthorne, Caudle, Shall enberger, McArthur. Second row: Gray, Gray, Hermann, Holland, Smith, Leonard, Echter nacht, Haag, Rankin, MacDonald, Miss Eggenberger. Third row: Weeks. Tidwell, Romano, Sisley, Darnell, Thompson, Rumsey, Covey. Fourth row: LaMar, Kelly, Hilton, Fischer, Doug las. Dyer, Cowman, Mouscl, Oliger, Kircher. Fifth row: Sisneros, Barnes, Braithwaite, Mac Millan, Stotter, Cavanaugh, Gebb, Foote, Williams. CoGNOSciย .Ns โ€” Pres., Brown; V. P., Lawson; Sec, Lovell. Sponsor, Miss Eggenberger. โ€ข Meaning, to know. World-minded, yes . . . Broad-minded, yes . . . intel- lectual, yes. B or better grade in Miss Eggenberger ' s U.S. and G. classes. These ambitious students keep track of what is happening in this fast chang- Qj ing world of today. Front row: Hadley, Cundiff, Krythe, bla.r, Forster, Olson, Campbell, West, Armstrong, Mrs. Krythe, Haar. Second row: Siebert, Knowles, Carroll, Davis, Clark, Toland, Crawford, Mason, Dempwolf, Myers. Third row: Probst, Bovyer, Albright, Winter, Goggin, Thome. Gluck Auf โ€” Pres., Fieg, Harr; V. P., Mason, Probst; Sec, Schweitzer, Knowles; Treas., Blair, Hadley. Spon.sor, Mrs. Krythe. โ€ข Deutschland . . . past and present . . . has been delved into by members of Gluck Auf, the German Club. Current events concerning the status of affairs under Hitler ' s regime, typical life in the old coun- try, customs, myriads of color, all were wrought out in skits, lectures, and songs. At regular meetings of the group, speakers were secured who related experiences within the pictorial boundaries of Germany. Clubs like this make for better international understanding. n r- ' C n C T! In costume: McArtor, Moreno, Cundift, S,iltsm.in, Noi.rMii. 1 roiu row: Cavanaugh, Knowles, Combs Barker White, Olson, Saltsman, Halverson, Underbill. Second row: Scoonover, Cow- man Joplin,w ' mquest,Woll, Weeks Lamb, Leonard. Third row: Swanson, Jordan, Pearsen, Cun- diff Martyr Wood Smith, Wight, Foster. Fourth row: Miss Oxley, Cox, Klocksiem, Straser, Young Gru ' ben Gray, Dye, Beck. Fifth row: Zeise, Pryne, Stevens, Lawson, Campbell, James, Morreli. Sixth row: Serbine, Brewster, Booher, Ellsworth, Eshelman, Gibson, Berggren, Mc- Dannel Seventh row: Weeks, Dodge, Barton, Elliott, Spencer. El RojOROโ€” Pres., Cundiff, Moreno; V. P., Knowles, Norman; Sec.-Treas., Saltsman, McArtor; Sponsor, Miss Oxley. โ€ข Vivid skirts . . . lovely senoritas, gallant senors . . . tinking tabour- ines, strumming guitars . . . atmosphere of old Spain. El Rojoro, red and gold. Here Spanish is spoken and studied by interested students of this tongue. m r ' O O O Front row: Onley, Thurston, Wavne, Weeks, Sprague, Mozengo, Rothbart, O. von Wedel- stacdt. Second row: C. von Wedelstaedt, Cary, Pearson, Moore, Weeks, Charlebois, Somers, Mr. Robinson. Third row: Mason, Krythe, Riordan, Lamb, Guptill, Young, Frey. World Club โ€” Pres., O. von Wedelstaedt; V. P., C. von Wedelstaedt; Sec.-Treas., Cary, Gup- till. Sponsor, Mr. Robinson. โ€ข World Club . . . Doing things? . . . yes. Going places? . . . yes. The name tells the world all about these international scholars. Tuning in on foreign affairs ... the World Club receives its name rightly. ' ' With a globe that revolves, the members gather around and let the world minded speakers who address them give that sympathy and per- O spective so vital to this period of distrust. This club helps students be- come world-minded and helps break down many racial barriers. c 5 w u At table: Miss Farnsworth, Krythe, Holden, Heiskell, Halverson, Petzold, Eselun, Probst. Standing: Cassiere, Hood, Kennedy, Spooner, Logan, Gebbfi Housley, McKenzie, Gillespie, LaMatr. ScRiPTERS โ€” Pres., Probst; V. P., Work; Sec.-Treas., Houloose, Eselun. Sponsors, Miss Trail, Miss Farnsworth. โ€ข ScRlPTERS: meeting here! No sign is needed to announce the fact, for the sheaves of manuscripts lying about, the tweny-five ambitious writers chewing the rubbers from their pencils, and the deep silence ... or rising moments of hilarty . . . snatches of color fall from fragile pens, dream stories, snatches of poems, flights of fancy; all striving to attain far away heights Wotherspoon. Dawson, Yankic, Evans, Hales, Martin. Second row: Young, O. von Wedel- In costume: Krythe, Mason. Front row: McDowell, O ' Brien, Petri, Raue, Hawthorne, Smith, stacdt, Rose, Mclntyre, Stanton, Perkins, Singleton, Dedrick, Brand, Smith, Fatzer, Winquest, Davis, Gray. Third row: Houghton, Weir, Baker, Gate, DeArmand, Brown, Herzberg, Moran, Broadbent, Blossei, Hilton, Housley. F ourth row: Galhraith, White, Olmsted, Stimson, Mc- Millan, Jones, Grubb, Hoeven, C. von Wedelstaedt, LaMar, Dean. Fifth row: Sratchley, Hooper. Haines, Goossen, Rothbart, Silvershield, Holland. Sixth row: Stein, Arnold, Shcpard, Hock, Bishop. Beekly, McQuillen, Humphreys, Kepple, Matheson. Seventh row: Hagan, Gas- siercAyer, Dodge, Wanless, Meigs, Howe, Hartman, Thurston, Foote. Les Bon Vivantsโ€” Pres., Parker; V. P., Dean. Sponsor, Miss Blackwood. โ€ข Madames, messieurs, et mademoiselles. The members of Les Bons Vivants welcome you to their merry round of holiday parties and color- ful masquerades, their work in dramatics . . . These students have real enjoyment from their knowledge of the French language. rn 03 O Z Z H en Front row: Yankie, Siebert, Horton, Goularte, Elliott, Spooner, Weeks, Thurston, Mr. Den- Q man. Second row: Blessing, Plymell, Hoover, Clark, Carpenter. _ Dissecting- -Fres., Elliott; V. P., Weeks; Sec.-Treas., Iftinger. Sponsor, Mr. Denman. โ€ข Slimy . . . crawling . . . containers filled with the tiny creatures, as well as en larger ones, occupy the time of young dissectors. Frogs, cats, crabs, sea snails, m all go to make up a venturesome group under the direction of those well-versed in science. Budding young scientists, embryo young doctors ... are getting the feel of greater things to come as a host of small prey satisfy their drive to un- 21 fathom the mysteries of the why of science. Ci in Front row: Gillespie, Scott, White, Eselun. Second row: Feller, Williams, Morton, Wilson, Turner, Dean. Shepatd, Combs, Stanley, Spooner. Dougherty, Bovyer, Collins, Holden. Third row: Krythe, Johnstone, Galbraith, Manning, Forster, Stevens, Henzler, Winter. Mrs. Hunt. Electron Circle โ€” Pres., Spooner, Scott; V. P., Scott, Gillespie; Sec, Winter, White; Treas., Henzler, Eselun. Sponsor, Mrs. Hunt. โ€ข Food . . . textiles . . . fuel . . . explosives . . . medicine . . dye . . . these are the mysteries of the chemical universe explored by ambitious young chemists of the Electron Circle. Armed with a handful of as- sorted glassware and a shelf of chemicals, they face the world. Trips . . . demonstrations . . . lectures feature their meetings. As a result of the earthquake many labels were torn from the chemistry bottles thus pro- viding a wealth of material for numerous experiments. Front row: Frey, Bart u I lo ton Gouearte, Martin, Cundiff. Second row: Guidet, Lcnh.ut, Harris, Beelcs. Smails, haltsman SoENCE Clubโ€” Pres , Williams, V P., Vesely; Sec.-Treas., Hess. Sponsors, Mrs. March, Mr. Dunkle, Mr. Shallenberger, Mr. Denman. โ€ข Divided into plant taxonomy, entomology, ornithology, plant propagation, and shore life, this club appeals to every scientific urge. Field trips to Lake El- sinore, Arroyo Secco, Palos Verdes, and to various places in private yachts to study rocky and sandy beach life and mud-flat life occupy the time of the members. This club provides a background for vocational as well as avocational studv and opens many new fields to its members, of which they know little. Front row: Rittmaver, Wilscn, Forster, Spooncr, EMredge, Wotherspoon, Yankic Mr BakLcii Second row: Scott, Deathotage, Petri, HeinI, Blown, Weeks, Carney, Barber, Sontag Third row: Stimson, Lloyd, Herrmann. โ€ข Math Club . . . The future engineers of Uncle Sam ' s Army and Navy . . . The future Millikans and Einsteins are getting the funda- mentals. This club is made up of the ranking students in abstract theories of higher mathematics. Mr. Bakken says these boys are the best thinkers on the campus, and fired by the desire to make the Naval Aca- demy in higher math, this selected group is a brilliant example of mod- ern youth. Here they obtain additional help which they would be un- able lo get in regular classes. H X n C CO Front row: Ferguson, Beck, Wilson. Cllarlebois, Motlow, Yankie, Wotherspoon, Damskey, El- -7 dredge. Second row: Black, Dougherty, Lipc, Ferguson, Chamberlain, Sisley, MacLagan, Gla- โ–  sier, Ireland, Rittmayer, Lloyd, Frinell, Mr. Bakken. Third row: Walsh, Williams, McCombs, [ Hopkins, Sontag, Forster, Cassiere, Erickson, Deatherage, Miller, Morrcll, Shodday, Albright, Gibbons, Barber. N.4v;gation โ€” Pres., Albright; V. P., Rittmayer; Sec.-Treas., Eldredge. Sponsor, Mr. Bakken. 1โ€” ( โ€ข Ahoy there, you sailors of the briny deep . . . Gather round and hear of C) the problems concerning navigation. This is a study club of the practical appli- cation of navigation, and the mathematical problems concerning it. Members of the Club make studies of subjects concerning this work and deliver lectures Q to the club. 2! u D o Q 2 w a Front row: Rose, Morgan, Levers, H.irgrave, Bauman, Kurtz, Raue, Forstcr, Shaffer Second row: Meyer, Stanton, Robinson, Campbell, White, Vander Haar, Bradford, Milburn, Holden. Mrs. Lahrson, Hattenbach. Third row: Evans, Bowman, Blair, Stimson, Bozarth, Feller, Johnson. Friends OF Music โ€” Prcs., Robinson, Rose; V. P., Zeller, Blair; Sec, Rose, Campbell. Sponsor, Mrs. Lahrsen. โ€ข Friends of Music . . . Audience is expectant, as young virtuosos and prima donnas are about to appear ... a hush . . . the concert is ready to begin . . . city artists in gorgeous programs are adored by jun- ior artists . . . rooms 304, 306, and tent 2 are musical centers of first order . . . despite the daily exposure to radios of jassmania, Wilson ' s musical clientage enjovs the fine things in music. A genuine apprecia- tion of music is also gained from the opera, and the concert via radio. m ' โ– โ–  โ–  ' ' ' S โ–  ' - ' ' m m โ– โ– โ– K m v HH ii mm K tAi A f โ€ข V( oops. We ' re off. So long, you land-lubbers, yelled Ted Tod as the Craig yacht, Somona II, steamed out loaded with Wilson kids. Look! There ' s Wally Holden, WiUa Craig, Mary Frances Gifford. Leslie Mason, and Ted, all off for a grand week-end cruise. And they ' re all dressed in those popular Dungarees. These kids are absolutely correctly dressed for cruising and deep-sea fishing. You know Dungarees were originated here in Long Beach by Mr. Gus Kroesen, in the Ocean Center Building, and they ' ve become so popular that he sends his orders out by the fastest express to all of the smart resorts of this country and Hawaii. The fashionable clientage of the Miami Biltmore are in favor of them, and Mr. Kroesen is having a time keeping the fashionably correct world supplied with his vivid Copenhagen blue Dun- garees. Mr. Kroesen says, I want the whole nation to be Dungaree minded. Wilson has a keen start. Everyone in the know is wearing them. =Giis Kroesen= โ€ข Tent city days are over! The new Wilson is now in full swing in your new building. I am positive you will all enjoy studying in the security of your new home. .- W. Horace Austin, Architect 532 Chestnut Avenue I =W. Ilorafe Aii itin; โ€ข I am proud to have been the contractor in charge of rebuilding the Woodrow Wilson High School. Your new buildings are absolutely quake-proof, and I am sure they will be satisfactory. Andy Sordal, Contractor 722 Magnolia Avenue iAndv Kordal= โ€ข Be careful, Mary, didn ' t you see that inside tray lift when we raised the top before? That ' s Harriet Spath tipping Mary Forbes. Isn ' t it unique. Yes, and isn ' t the rich walnut veneer finish of the new Lane cedar chest carved beautifully? Oh, that cedar lining is so refreshing and tangy, raved Mary. Just think of all the lovely treasure its spacious- ness could hold. Doesn ' t Bogle ' s store at 434 Pine Avenue have the grandest selection of furniture you ever laid eyes on? said Pat Collins. Bogle ' s are the leaders in the business for different and beautiful furniture. โ€ข Hello, Dick Lawson, Burton Perry, and Jerry Le Lacheur. What are you fellows doing? Oh, we ' re having our daily malts, the big giant kind, made up with Magnus Root Beer. Boy, do those big trucks of Glenn L. Clark Co. back up here and empty loads of Magnus Root Beer and confections. โ€ข Boy, what a classy looking outfit. We must be on million- aire row. Why no, there is a crowd of Wilson kids. Hello, Kay Harris. Gee, what smart beach togs. Are you kids trying to put Hollywood in the shade? Don ' t be comical, answered lone Pike. We ' ve all been outfitted by Famous, at Sixth and Pine. This is a pretty darling layout, isn ' t it? Say, Mary Louise, pour me some more lemon- ade, commands George Gray. Gee, those white slacks and that yellow sweater look keen on him. Come on, Myrl, coaxed Le- Roy Work, and take a dip with me. LeRoy is running Tarzan a race for the perfect physique, and man, he shows it off well in those trunks. Doesn ' t Myrl look comfortable in that swank beach robe? We ' re all for the Famous, added Kay, when it comes to smart and comfortable beach outfits. =Tlie Famous โ€ข Mummmm. Gee, isn ' t this Superior Ice Cream at the Long Beach People ' s Ice and Cold Storage Company, 3027 East Ana- heim, perfect? murmured Bessie Bolander as she munches some cream in front of their brand new modern building. Why, Harry Turner and Ed Ramsey, you ' d think you fellows hadn ' t eaten in weeks. Don ' t make such pigs of yourselves, reprimanded Betty Beck. Betty, let them enjoy it. This is the best ice cream I ' ve eaten; we eat loads of cups at school every day. Go to it, fellows, said Betty Linkem coming to the rescue of the famishing boys. We ' re getting some fancy ice cream molds, said Dick Amann. I never saw so many molds, turkeys, lions, grapes, ap- ples, pears, bananas, strawberries, corn. And they have every flavor, maple nut, maple pecan, carmel pecan, mint candy, and nestlerode ice creams that are sold reg- ularly. Whew, make mine the Superior mint candy. ESii| ยซ rior ! โ€ข ย OeantE โ€ข Hold Everything! Who ' s that on our auditorium steps? Why its Dorothy Hancock, introducing her little Hancock pal, CoCK o ' THE Walk to her friends, Douglas Duckham, Jean Schei- decker, Myron Rickman, and all of Wilson High. Why, hello there, Dorothy. What ' s going on? Well, says Dorothy, you ' ve all heard so much of this little friend of mine that I wanted you to meet him in person. Of course you know he symbolizes Hancock gasoline, for it too, is ' CoCK o TPiE Walk ' . Don ' t you agree with me? We certainly do, says grinning Doug. And that ' s not all we know, either. Both Hancock Five-Point and Regular gasolines give such economical mileage that any student can afford to use them. And, add Jean and Myron, as the wise old bird says, You may drive into a Hancock Station, but you ' ll STRUT out! M-= EHancot ' k Oil ' oinpanv: โ€ข As we travel down Anaheim who should we see but those dyn- amos of pep . . . the song leaders . . . Vee, Dorothy, and Flva in- specting a new V-8 at H. O. Melone ' s. It looks as though Mose and Roger are selling these girls one of those snappy new cars. These cars are just about the fastest thing on wheels, Mose ex- plains. In fact, it ' s next to flying when you drive a Ford V-8. Downdraft carburetion, aluminum cylinder heads, a safety steel body, and a cushion ride that can ' t be beaten, isn ' t that right, Vee? You bet it is, this is the most comfortable car I ever was in, and now that I ' m here I don ' t want to get out. The V-8 is that vacation car for everyone, continues Roger, combining speed, power, and real economy. But before we say more, come on, let ' s go for a ride and then I know you ' ll be con- vinced. I am already, admits Elva. I hope my folks get one, they ' re planning on it, and they ' re going to buy it from H. O. Melone, the Ford Square Deal Man! =H. O. Melone Corp. I โ€ข There ' s John Craig working in Reimer ' s Mar- ket, at Broadway and Pacific. Ah, customers. Here ' s Betty McAfee and Bee LeBlanc. May I help you? asked John in his most professional manner. We want a good canned fruit salad, said Betty, and you have such a big line of good things . . .fresh things, all new goods, canned fruits, vegetables, pic- kles, vegetable salads, an endless array of salad dress- ings, fruit juices, pickles . . preserves . . everything. Yes, said John, we have all the nationally ad- vertised brands and we cater to the people who want the best, and our services match our goods, too; take a look at the people who are in here. โ€ข There ' s Ginny Starky and Mick Chapman. Whatcha doin ' over there at Dodd ' s Meat Market. Oh, we ' re looking at these delicious baby beef roasts. Yes, said Virginia, and these luscious hams and tender golden hens! Can ' t you see them crun- chy, crispy brown, all piping hot in their own juices? Look at that thick juicy steak. Boy, could I go for that? Not me, I ' ll take that nice spring leg of lamb. Everything here is the best . . . Swift ' s, Armours ' . Dodd ' s is located right in the business section at Broadway and Pacific. =Dodd ' s Meats= iReimer ' s Markets โ€ข why, there ' s Eleanor Cheroske, and Marylyn and Virginia Hunter modeling some of the new fur coats in Hill ' s Fur Shop, 3316 East Broadway. Say girls, what gr-rand looking coats. Isn ' t that a Japanese Weasel, Virginia? Right, and Maryln ' s modeling a new Brown Rus- sian Pony. Eleanor ' s wearing the grand new Musk- rat she bought here. We ' re all modeling the swagger style which is the tops for fall fur fashions this year. Want to see a real sight? asked Eleanor, and she opened up a case filled with the most glorious mink, kolinsky, ermine, weasel, squirrel, and caracul coats and capes you ever laid your eyes upon. And you know, Hill ' s have the only conditioned air ice- cold fur vault in the city. โ€ข Introducing . . . George Hollinsworth, winner of the men ' s sportswear prize at the Wilson High sport dance, who views with a practiced eye and enthusi- astic approval, the ultra modern, up-to-the-minute window display of sportswear at the MlDDOUGH- Meihr Men ' s Shop, at Broadway and Locust. The best wear from the best store at the best price. Snap- py stuff, Eh George? The well-dressed man at the well-dressed store . . . Middough-Meier FOR THE Men! โ€ข Hello, Helen Miller, Marguerite Hedel, and Ray Damskey. What, are you crack commercial students down here at the California College of Com- merce at Sixth and Pine? Oh, we ' re looking this college over, says Helen. You know this is a glorfied Wilson down here. Everybody who wants good training from Wilson comes here. Did you see LeRoy Bush, Allen Walker, Roberta Hopkins, and Betty Jean Metzger in yonder? Anyone Mr. Smith puts on a position you can count on him taking it through, Damskey declared. Yes, and did you know Naomi Burkhardt, ' 30, was his private secretary. He said he had never had one who did things so well without being told, Marguerite added. The college offers four courses: a complete business course, a secretarial, stenographic, and commercial courses. You can take your choice between them at the rates payable by the month: full day, 20; half day, 13.50; night school, 7.50. Or you can secure cheaper rates by paying three to six months in advance. Just think bookkeeping, rapid calculation, spell- ing, shorthand, salesmanship, calculating machines and a host of other subjects are all covered in the first year of the business course. Don ' t they sound complete? Yes, and they know everyone in business, so you have a chance to get a job if you are good enough, Damskey said. California College of CommereeE โ€ข Say, Frances, is the candy counter well supplied? asked Helen Rank. The Student Body looks hungry today. We can ' t keep enough of those Mr. Good Bars on hand. This Wilson certainly go for that candy in a big way, answered Frances. Blanche, you and Helen be prepared to make hundreds of those delicious, giant malted milk shakes. It ' s good and warm, warned Helen, the general manager. We have plenty of nice cool pop for Wilson ' s thirsty, and these frozen bars always sell out on any day. Are you ready, girls? We ' ll be swamped any minute now. And as the whistle announced the beginning of a conference period the girls all put on their loveliest smiles to greet and serve Wilson ' s ravishing kids with loads of sweets and icy drinks. Ei tudent StoreE Sears are SPORT-RITE and STYLE-RITE โ€ข Don ' t Buck Arnold and Bill Kerr look like a mil- lion? Is Hollywood bidding for you, Buck? No, I am modeling one of Sears swanky new shirred back suits. Doesn ' t it have style? And does- n ' t Bill look like the money in those new check slacks, that zipper polo shirt, and that swank jersey swathed about his neck? At Sears you can always get a suit priced right, in fabrics that look right, and wear . . . fabrics that hold their shape. In the new draped styles, sports back and shirred backs. It takes Sears to do it. Sears. Roebuck To. AMERICAN AVE. AT 5tH LONG BEACH, CAL. .. ' ,. 5, |p f tj EVERY JAY ' S A HOLIDAY AT THE CASINO Beginning May 18 BEN BERN IE and his orchestra Beginning July 2 JAN GARBER and his orchestra ACCOMMODATIONS TO SUIT ALL PURSES Tickets and Information, Pacific Electric Station Phone Long Beach 619-74 SANTA CATALINA ISLAND Well, look over there at the typing wizards, Jane Fickei, Marjorie Smith, and Delores Mayes. Yes, said Jane, We ' re seniors and we have come down to look over the Long Beach Secretarial Business College on American at Fourth. Eileen Schleiper, a grad of last year, is inducting us into all the throbbing mysteries of the dictaphone, and Betty Caldwell, also of last year ' s class, is operating P. B. X. switchboard for us. I can hardly wait, said .Marjorie. They have specialized training, good practical teachers, and an efficient employment bureau, too, said Delores. I I โ€ข All Wilson ' s on the beach today, and did you ever see so many clever bathing suits? There ' s Elva Cutler, Jack Rittmay- er, and Bobbie Cain. Where did you get those chic suits, kids? What a question to ask, Elva said disgustedly. Don ' t you know where to find the smartest suits in town? The Knit Shop, 242 Pine, of course. Wil- son students are flocking to the place. No wonder Wilson swimmers are the fashion plates on the beach. โ€ข Say, just look at that swell DeSoto coupe over there. Boy, isn ' t that a honey? But look, those are Wilson kids over there, aren ' t they? Yes, there ' s Miss Chalker and her Campanile art staff, Mary Eselun, Ed Killin sworth, art editor, Lois Ann Vedder, Jack Carr, and Isabel Huddleston. They must be admiring the new modern lines of the up-to-the-minute air- stream DeSotos. Tewsley Boulter, at 1212 American, is the place to buy these swell cars, and they ' re more than attentive and courteous. Hello, fellows, Ed shouts, isn ' t this a beauty? And what a motor to go with it. We have just been trying it out, and nothing compares with it, not even a higher priced car. Hey, Mary, how does it sit? Is it comfortable? Comfortable is no word for it, exclaims Mary, I ' d just as soon spend the rest of my life right here behind the wheel. As we leave. Jack, who is com- pletely delighted by this automobile, is too dazed to talk. All he can say is OooooooooH ! Tewslev Boultei Tops! Boy, look at Jerry LeLacheur, Dick Home v and Harry Norton fitted out in those smart COUNTRY CLUB STYLES AT WALKER ' S, Pine at Fourth Aren ' t they collegiate with shirred sport backs, zipper trousers and those swank popular plaids? Jerry, that ' s a good looking sports outfit you ' re wearing. Yes, said Jerry, everything at Walker ' s is smart and exclusive . . . they stand up, and their prices are right. โ€ข Hello, Larry Hendon, what are you doing with that new National Cash Register, going to be a banker? No, said Margaret Marti, Watch me close this sale; see that itemized receipt for customers? Isn ' t that service for you? Yes, rang out Margaret Park and Florence O ' Hagan, Navy Junior, this new register prevents mis- takes in addition, saves time and furnishes a sep- arate cash drawer for each period. Mrs. White in the Student Body Store wants the sophomores to be store wise so we ' re beginning on her new machine. โ€ข So this is how you fellows on the relay team get your nerves, vitality, and endurance for those tense, grueling spurts . . . drinking Mountain View Milk? Yes, piped up Putnam, we know our milk, it ' s rich and full. Why, the whole track squad mob the cafeteria for it. Boy! you should watch them! Uhrm, gurgled Mc- Arthur between his straws. We don ' t stop with one quart either. said Gray and Gandy, we of- ten drink three or four when we ' re training hard. Forsyth AND SON OPTOMETRISTS Established in Long Beach Since 1906 129 West Broadway Telephone 644-97 J. M. Forsyth E. M. Forsyth developing printing Venlarginc โ€ขKODAK HEADQUARTERS Kodaks Fountain Pens Picture Frames Greeting Cards WINSTEAD BROTHERS. Inc. 244 Pine Avenue U5E THE MILK SELECTED BY THE OLYMPIC CHAmCSI l ARDยฃN MIIK. PWNE-(342.-03 5ERVED BY THE STUDENT BODY 5T0RE More Users Than Any Other First Prize State and County Fairs 1934 COSTS XO MORE iHOTO SUPPLIES Fountain Pens Stationery Greeting Cards F. J. SCHINNERER CO. 9 Pine Ave. Ph. 668-162 THE AIR HOSTESS Corner Seventh and Ximeno Ave. model airplanes CAFE fountain ENJOY THE AIR - HOSTESS Happy Landing Place jor Wilsonites Bill Dale, Mgr. i ss:r-7:r: 3 ' Changes in Administration; Mathews on Absence ' Leave; Mangold Adds Counseling; Dean of Boys ' Post, Finance Goes to Catlin j ,,JU. WONDER WOW m MATHEW:) ' :)HOEO FIT MR MANGOLD, KND HOW HR .CATLIN LIKE5 MR, MANCOLO ' 3 5HOE5. , FREEMAN A MCKENZIE T je heading Ford Dealer of Long Beach Dependable Service in Long Beach for Thirty Years. Sub-Station . . . 4625 East Second Telephone 804-44 LJsed car office dept. 530 American Ave. Telephone 623-234 218 Locust Ave. Telephone 632-71 JOLF CLUBS Letus show you our new Golds- mith Espinosa Golf Clubs. โ€ข Triangulated Blade. โ€ข Spring Action Shafts. โ€ข See them at . . . CLARK BROS. SPORTING GOODS STORE 128 WEST BROADWAY LONG BEACH, CAL. %. . . x? WARREN ' S DRUG STORE 3102 E. Anaheim Street Long Beach, California A nnouncttn New Location, July 1 Group and Ad Photos JOSEPH B. STIMSON, 16 Pacific, Ph. 640-90 โ€ข ROGER CASE, Editor GERALD LeLACHEUR, Business Manager EDWARD KILLINGSWORTH. Art FRANKLIN METZ, Printing DOROTHY C. CHALKER, Art Director RICHARD M. MORRISON, Pr nting Director KATHERYN HARRISON, General Director STANLEY HILL, Long Beach Engraving Co. STROMBERGS ' , Senior Portraits JOSEPH V. STIMSON, Groups and Ad Photos 9 Just for Fun. ' Campus Clowns . LOOK FOR THE FISH SIGN 1 HE place of variety in Sea Foods. Steak and Chicken Dinners. Prepared by Experts. Moderate Prices โ€ข Belmont Sea Food Grotto 5118 east second st. phone 84973 Long Beach, California L- ? U A t LOUIS B. BALL CO. 818 E. Fourth Street Telephone 629-49 iiobesaK Dealer of oJL uii AjoJ ckji jL -. ' .V.. ' ' fy ' N ' -:s u .A -- -,i . J -M, ' ' ?? ' - 1 . 7?


Suggestions in the Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) collection:

Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Woodrow Wilson High School - Campanile Yearbook (Long Beach, CA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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